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                  <text>12-The

Sentinel

Man found dead
in Waterloo home
Aggravated murder warrants
have been tiled against two men Identities as yet unknown - In connection with the death of a Waterloo
man at his mobile home a mtle
south of the village on Ohio 141.
Arnold Ray Anderson. age unknown. was found dead In a bedroom In the trailer at 10 a.m.
Thursday.
Lawrence County authorities believe Anderson· s dea th may have
arisen out of a child custody dispute. They were alerted by Kentucky Stat e Poll ee when
Anderson' s 1-year-old daughter
was taken to Our Lady of Bellefonte
Hospital ln Russell, Ky., for treatment of a gunshot wound. She was
later admitted to St. Mary's Hospital In Huntington. W.Va .

Police probe
2-car mishap
A two-car accident occurred on
East Main St., Thursday, causing
some damage tG both vehicles according to Pomeroy pollee.
Qlnton Batley, LongBottom, told
pollee he swerved to miss another
car pulling from a parking meter,
hitting a car traveling east, belongIng to William Carlton, Racine. The
driver of the third car Is unknown.
The matter Is under Investigation
by Pomeroy pollee.
Two Incidents of vandalism were
also reported to Pomeroy pollee
yesterday.
The front storrn door of the parsonage of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ. Lincoln Heights, was vandalized sometime recently. The
date the vandalism occurred Is not
known because the pastor has been
out-of-town. No damage estimate
was available.
In yet another Incident Thursday. Raymond Andrews. Ebenezer
Street, Pomeroy, reported a
broken back Iuber on his 1980 Pontiac. The damage apparently happened while the car was parked at
his home. Nodamageestlmatewas
available.
'

Authorities said Anderson had
gone to his wife's home In Argillite,
Ky., Wednesday night and took his
daughter and 4-year-old son back to
Waterloo with him.
Sometime between 2 and 3 a.m.,
It's believed two men broke Into the
trailer and shots were fired. The
children ·Nere apparently taken
back to Kentucky by the two men,
who discovered enroute that the
girl had been wouttded.
A spokesman for the Lawrence
County prosecutor's ottlce said Information gathered by the Lawrence sheriff's department and the
KSP show the men left ArgiUlte after dropping ott the chtldren.
The spokesman sald Anderson
died of multiple gunshot wounds.

Area deaths
Adam S, Krahel
Adam s. Krahel, 35, died

at his
residence. 609 Jackson Pike, Gallipolls, at 7:15p.m. Thursday followlng a short lllness.
Born In Brunswick, Germany, he
married Sharon Persinger on June
14, 1980, at New Life Lutheran
Church. She survives with his parents. John A. and Katrzyna (Kott)
Krahel. of Dover; two sisters, Lyla
McCray, of Dennison, and Tonia
Krahel, at home; three brothers,
George. of Dover, Andy, of Baytown, Texas, and Mike. at home:
and two step children, Kip and Andrea, both at home.
Krahel graduated from Dennison
High School In 1965 and Ohio State
University In 1969. He had taught at
Kyger Creek High School since
1970.
Funeral services wlll be held at 1
p.m. Sunday at Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home. Gallipolis,
with Rev. Roland Trolke oUiclatlng:- Burlal will take place at Gravel
Hill Cemetery ,. Cheshire. Calling
hours at the fune~al·home are from

Probe accidents
The Gallla-Melgs post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrollnvest(gated
three single -car accidents
Thursday.
At 3:30p.m., Susie N. Abbott, 22,
Shade, was northbound on U.S. 331n
Meigs County when she lost control
of her ca~ln a curve. She reportedly
sUd around the road and went backwards Into a ditch.
There was light damage to her
car.
..-A car driven by Joseph D. Tipton,
23, Gallipolis also sustained slight
damage In a wreck on Mt: ··Zion
Road In Gallla County at 7:35p.m.
Tipton was southbound when he
apparently went off the right side of
the road Into a lawn. striking
·
shrubbery.
He was cited for not having his
driver's license.
Susan · G. Griffin. 16. Gallipolis.
was Involved In an accident on Ohio
141 at 10: 20 p.m.
She reportedly was blinded by an
oncoming car's bright lights and
ran ott the right side of the road Into
a ditch.
Her car sustained moderate
damage.

2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Saturday. In
lleu of fiowers, lt Is requested dona-

lions be made to the American
Cancer Society.

_Co~~inued

•

STATE FAIR REPRESENTATIVES-·
Representtnc Metp Coun&amp;y ulhe 8tiUe Flllr In bone
compeWon wiD be, 1-r, Cindy RUIIe, Mldcllepori,
daupter ol Mr. and ~- Chuck Rlllle; Tiunmy
Kennedy, diWihter ol Mi-. and Mrtl. J. ,R. Kennedy,

County Board of Education will be
held at the county office Tuesday,
July 'n, at 2 p.m. for the purpose of
dlscuss_tng petsonnel and any·o1her
business to come before the board.

$2'195

PAIR

7.88 pr.

Joggers

1

Pony Style

1

ELBERFELD$.1N POMEROY

r1; ltllll I I'' Ill I II IIIII

.,. ·

Stale No. WX

LIABILITIES

'4695
'71' FORD LTD II

'iiLSinn~'

2-dr. Low Mileage. Must
see and drive.

··u• LE CAR

'3495

'71', FIESTA

Like New.

'7495
I lEW AIIC CARS
Eagle wagon

'11' IAIIIT
(2) V.w: DEMOS
Re'1hicet1

2-tone paint V-6 engine.

SX-&lt;1 4-speed trans.
Sptrlls
.
COnt;ords .

Renault Fuego

.

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$8.2 million In their bids lor the govmocrats. Brown's most recent conernor's office. And still to come is
trtbutlons of $351.175 brought hiS
November's main event between
overall total to $2.1 million.
Youngstown businessman Edthe winners, Democrat Richard F .
Celeste and RepUbliCan Qarence J. · ward J. DeBartolo Jr. was a major
Brown.
contrtbutor for Brown, chipping In
Campaign finance reports filed $75,000 In the latest report.
with· the secretary of slate Friday
Brown was defeated in the June
showed Atty. Gen. Wllllam J.
primary by Celeste. His flnallce reBrown raised the most among De(Contlnued on·A-4)

.

I

piimar)r election ,c ampaign
By KEVIN KELLY

~Staff

GALLIPOLIS - 'Ibe apparent
big 8pellder In the June prlrnaiy In
Gallla Coimty wliS Verlln L. Swain,
' RepubliCan candidate
a su~
fo1 county cornmtssloner.
A pre-el~tlon report filed by
Swain, a Rt. 1, Crown City resident,
shows he had $2,127.55 set ~ide for
his campaign. In his post-election
report, he said $423.35 had been
spent directly before the primary.
In contrast, Swain's Democratic

opponent In November, J.E.
"Dick" CreJ:Ileens, Eureka Star
Route, .spent $726.82 on his bid for
the 'corruit!ssloner's seat.
. All candidates were scheduled to
rue their post-election reports with
the county board of electlons by 4
p.m. Friday, the statewide deadline for thOse who had run for Party
nominations IJi June. 'Ibe only candidate who had not rued by then
was Marlin G. Kerns, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, who was one of six Republican
candidates for the conpntsstoner's.

job.
Failure to tile, according to election officials, means that when the
fi&gt;ur-year terms on the one commission and auditor's positions are up,
the candidate who didn't file Is
barred from running again tor that
position.
Officials also said Swain and
Marlin Wedemeyer, another GOP
commlssloil hopeful, were the only
two candidates to file pre-election
reports. Swain listed no contrtbu(Contlnued on A-4)

By B. .JOSEF HEBERT
"IIOCWed Pl'ellll Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Calling
!he ~jiB)~ of deatbs' ~fyoungpeq­
plei Iii 'traffic _accidents a "national
cllsgrace," tederal safety lrivestlgators are urging all states"to establish a lillnlmum 21-year drlnklng
age.

The National Transportation
Safety Board sent letters Friday to
t1ie aovernors and legislatures of 35
states urging them to Increase their
m!Dimum drinking age to ~­
.-Fifteen , states .already prohibit
' anyone ui1de!' 21·from purchasing
alcOIIOllc bevi!ragi!s.
' ..
25,~ people

.
alcohol-related traffic accidents
last year, more than one-third were
between the ages of 16 and 24, the
government says,
. ''This is a national tragedy and a
natioilal scabdal,'' declared James
Burnett; thEi NTSB's chairman and
a former municipal judge who fawred ITI8Ji!atory jail sentences for
dnmken driving when he was on
. the bench •.
The safety ps.qel Said its recommendatiQn was prpn)pted by a
nlimbeJ: ot recent alcolwl-related
auto crashes In which there were a
large ·nutnber ol yOung people
kllled,
crash on Long
Island,
. nine

Phorw 11-1b 9800
·-

There waa plenty oiiCIIvttf alone lhe Gallipolis park

front -~y SaWnlaY. for areafawters parilclpatlng

the Old French Clty'sfann market. "Bow~e~abu
been real good aD week," one participant remarked.
Selling Item above Is Mrs. B.R. King, right.

"great debate" that erupted re-

drinking laws and the number or

The government 8aid of the 25,000 deaths in·
volVing alcohol-related accidentil}ast year, 3;750
of the VictiiD8 were between'l6 years and }9 years
,. 760
bet
.
20 d
of age and anothei' ~,
were
ween
an
24. The safety board· said a number of studies
have demonstrated ..a direct correlation" between state drinking laws and the number of auto
fa talI't'le8 I'nVol Ving YoU ng peopIe.

cently when New York state Increased ltsdrlnkJngageoneyearfrom 1s 10 19.
Burnett discounted attempts by
the federal government to Impose a
national law prohibiting the purchase of alcoholic beverages by
young people
The government said of the 25,000
deaths Involving alcohol-related acctdents last year, 3,750 of the vicUrns wete between 16 years and 19
years of age and another 4,760were
between 20 and 24.
The safety board said a number
of studies have demonstrated "a direct correlation" between state

auto fatalities Involving young
people.
The bo;ml's recommendation to
raise the drinking ages Was sent to:
Alabama. Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, F1orlda •.Georgta, Rawall, Idaho, Iowa,
Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota. Mississippi,
Mont an 11, Nebraska, New
Hampshire.
New Jersey, New York, North
C;).rollna, Ohio, Oklahoma. Rhode
Island, South Carolina. South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont,
Virgtna, West VIrginia, Wisconsin,
Wyoming and the District of
Columbia.

· lowered their laws to 18 and
lives.
A number of states recently have · another six to 19.
Increased their mtnlmum dttrik!ng · "The board realiZes thiS recomage from 18 to 21, In sharp contrast mendatlon will not be popular,"
to tiMl early 1970s
:U states Burnett acknowledged, citing the

FBI weapons expert testifies
officer killed with own gun

•

IWNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) fired three or four shots.
An FBI firearms expert says pollee
Angela Kay Norman told a Ca. ·~ Paul Harmon was shot to bell County Circuit Court lury that
. death with his own weapon.
she witnessed the shooting from a
Special Agent William f\lbrecht windoW In her grandfather's house,
of Washington testified Friday that about _140 teet from the scene.
testsshllwedtbatflarmonlwhqsuf·
The girl said that while looking
tered four gunshot wounds to the ·out the WindOw she "saw somebody
bead, was shot to death wltb his wrestling with the cop." Site identlbwn service rewlver.
flell the ttetendant as the man
\. Albrecht's testimonY caine .i n tbe c;roucb!ng' over the police officer.
"I bollered. to my grandfather,
1 flrlt-dearee murder trial ot Bobby ,
peiD Stacy, :11, me of t1w Colurn- 'Get UJl, get up. Somebody' a robbus, Oldo, men cllargle4 In Har- bing soniebody,"' Mils Norman
;non;, murder. A separate trW haa -test!fled. iddlng that she saw no
. illemorderedb'Stacy'sa'l aeaac- ~~~made by the IJl8ll on
Wilbert Mayle. . I .
tbe ·ill"DUDdEatller Friday, a 10-year-old
She said she saw the man on top
Runtinltoogirttestllled tbat,_ man place ag1111 totheotberrnan'ahe!ld.
.. ilte ilao/ ~·with~ "After three-or lour shots we saw
· P!lt a gun to the ~·· held ~ Bobby ·$tacy come toward our

•;om,uce,

,·

G;tllipolis, Ohio

BV8INESS BRISK -

_ _" _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,___

. THEREON JOHNIION
FRED R. CARIIEY,JR.- Diredon
BEN,RI!:WOO •
.

•

FARMER'S

Slates ·u rged to mandate higher drinking age

We, the undersigned directors, at~ the~ of this report of~
. tion and declare that It has been exiunined b)' 111 and to the best ·of our
knowlecllle and beUef has been prepared in~ w1t11 the u.tructton•
issued by the Boanl o1 Governors of the Federal R
" ~ and the State
Banklng,Authority and is true and comc:t.
'
'

.

"If the guilty but mentally Ill bUlls ready we may
consider that one, .. Glllmor said. "We'll take a look
when we come back."
He referred to a measure pending In the Senate
Judiciary Committee which would establish tbe plea
and verdict of guilty but mentally ill.
Supporters say It would give juries another option
ln addition to finding a defendant not guUty by reason
of Insanity. Opponents say the measure Is unneeded
In Ohio.

'

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•

t

credit could cost employers at least $400 mllllon. The
bill does not address the S3 billion problem the jobless
fund Is anticipated to face by June ~. 1983.
Industry and union representatives have been
meeting at the direction of legislative leaders In an
attempt to hammer out a comprornlse measure to
deal with that.
"The discussions are still progressing," Stein said,
with a goal of reaching an agreement ln ttme for the
September session._'!"-_ _ _ ___

Recession.nOt evident
in campaign·spending

I, .Roger.W. Hysell, Cashilir, of the above-named blink do hereby declare
· that this report of coodition has been prepared in ccinfom'l811Cie with the instruc- .
ti0111 ilsul!d by the Board o1 Governors of the Federal Reserve Syatern and 'the
State Banking ~uthority and is true II! the best of my mpwledge and belief.
Roger W. HyieU

12,000 MILE
IATIO.IWIDE
'
"

Ctlnton, said. the chief reason for the session Is take
action on an unemployment compensation bill.
Administrator Gary E. Stein of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services said the measure conforms
Ohio law with recent changes In the federal jobless
compensation act: Without Its adoption, Stein said
employers would lose an existing federal tax credit
originally aimed at encouraging theirpartlciP.Btion In
the state system.
He said non-compliance and the resulting loss of the

.Sl\tain bjg ~p-ender : in Ga_,ia

Demand deposits of individuals,
' partnerships and corporations
2,437 tooo.oo
.•Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations . ........ .. ....... ..... , ... .. 25,899,000.00
Deposits o!United States Government ........ .. ... .. ......... . .... 7,000,00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the United States ..... : . .................. .... . .......... 1,365,000.00 .
All other deposits .. .'....... . . . .. . ...... ..... . , .................. 5,000.00
Certified aitd officers' checks
153,000.00
Total Deppsits .
.
29,8116,000.00
a. Total.demand depQsits .. ....... .. . , .• . . , ... .... . 3,670,000.00
·
b. Totaltime and savings deposits . .. ... .. ..... .. . 26J96,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
'
under agreements to repurchase . .................. : .... ..... . 750,000.00
All other liabilities .............. . ...... .... .... ............... 683,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES (excludinK subordinated notes
and debentures) ................................ .. .... .... 31,299.000.00
•
EQUITYCAPlTAL
Common stock:
a. No. shares authorized 16,000
b. No. shares outstanding 16,000 ................ (par value)
400;000.00
Surplus ........... ..... .. ...... .. . .......... ... .. . . ... . ..... .'600,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for
1,426,0()0.00
contingencies and other capital reserves
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
2,426,000.0
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL ...........·............................ 33,725,000.00
·
MEMORANDA
ArnoW) Is outstanding as of report date:
b. Time certificates of deposit ih denomilljlti(\lls,
· of$100,000 or more ....................................... 350,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
·
ending with report date :
a. ToW deposits ......... . ...... ·........................... 30,5911,000.00

'11' CHEVIOLET
lultE CARLO

..

'

of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business June 311, 198%, a stale bankiDC institution organized and operating under the baDklng laws ol lhll Stale and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. PubUsbed in accordance with a call made by the Stale Banldng
Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions ... ... . .. . ... . . . ...... 2,648,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . ............ .. .... . ..... ... . ..... . .. 6,053,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
·
agencies and corporations .... . . ... .. . . .... ................. 4,610,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States .... ... ........................... ...... 3,502,000.00
All other securiries ..... .. ...... ... ..................... . ...... 311,000.00
Fe'deral funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .......... ...... ....... . ..... ..... 1,250,000.00
a. Loans, Total rexcludingunearned
income) ............ . ................... .. .. 14,94ll,OOO.OO
b. Less: allowance for possible loan losses . . . .. .. ...... 112,000.00
c. Loans, net .................... ... ........... ,............. 14,828,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises ... .. .. . ... . ... . ... .... J411,WU.W
All other assets ............ .. ....... ........ .... ... .. ..... .
TOTAL ASSETS

399 w. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy, Oh.
The Store with "All Kinds of Stuff" for Pets - Stables Large &amp; Small Animals- Lawn &amp; Gardens.

' .
By .JOHN W. CHALFANT
1\IIOOiated p,e. Wrtter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohlo legislative leaders
have tentatively agreed to end the General Assembly's current summer recess"tnearty September with
a llmlted wttng session.
"We bave looked tentatively at the first Wednesday
after Labor Day," House Speaker Vernal G. RlfleJr.,
.P-New Boston, said.
Rltfe and Senate President Paul E;Gillmor, R·Port

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
A'IIIOcllled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (AP) - Recession? What recession?
There's Uttle evidence of Ohio's
economic downturn In the postprtmary cal'lpaign finance reports
filed by candidates for governor.
They show the seven Republican
and De!nocratlc contenders r~

The Farmers Bank &amp;

9 Sections, 72 Pages 35 Cents
A Multimedia tnc . Newsp!lperr

Middleport-Pomeroy- Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, July 25, 1982

Lawmakers to hold limited session

....

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

Inside...

Along tbe M~er .. .. .. .. .. . B-1-8
Area deatba ................ A-8
Buslneu .... ............... E-l
ClaaaUied ads ............. 1»7
Editorial ...... ...... .. .... A-W
Farm .... ................. . E-%
Local .................... A-4-8
State-Nadonal .... .. ...... 1&gt;-1-Z
Sporta ......... ...... ... .. C-1-8
Talle-One .. . .. .. .. . .. . .. . IDBert

tntint

tmts
..

5.99 pr.

RAil rY SSHOES

MODERN SUPPLY

nicest

•

Vol. 16 No. 23
Copyrighted 1982 . .

SUMMER CLOTHIHG FOR
WOMEN, MEN, TEENS .
AND CHILDREN.

PONY SHOES

.'

the

...••

Y2 Price Sale

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

Cattle Halters - Horse &amp; Pony Halters - Whips Leads - Stock Caries - Blankets - Fortex Tubs &amp;
Buckets- Galvanized Tubs &amp; Buckets- ShampGGsFly Sprays &amp; l!epellents- Brushes- Curry CombsGrooming·S'opplles- Veter~al'lan Supplies - Saddles
- Rabbit Feed &amp; Supplies - Purina Feeds &amp; Animal
Health Aids lor All Farm Animals.

One •of
. around.

SAVISAVI

·

1). special mi!Etlng or the Meigs

FOR ALL OF YOUR FAIR
NEEPS AND- 4-H PROJECTS

l•MAtiS COUPE

'77' MAVEIICI

aemllllllllp and lbowmaDshlp.

Savings Company

'79' POITIAC

ao•ur
.
: '1i' 'ASPEI

lnccompellllon, whlchwaaheldulheMelpCoanty ,:
Fairp'oundl. Members olt-H club8 com~ In bor- ~;

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Meigs board to meet

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC -JEEP

'70' M.JISTANC
'7f' COLT
'75'

t:

and Mrtl. Roo Conley, Coolville. 'l1le aehcdo. olt-H !'
rep.,..lailvee waa made 'lbunday eveabla follow- ,:

Tuppen! Plains, and Mlkld Conleyr,d;au;;g;hler;:;of;Mr;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
··

Goldie B. Rollins

Goldl e B. RoIllns,· 87., Let a rt , W. EMS has quiet night
Va., died Thursday night at PleaMeigs County Emergency Medlsant Valley Nursing Care Unit.
cal
Service reported a relatively
She was born April 10, 1895, In
quiet
night Thursday, responding
Letart to the late WIUiam T. and
to
only
three calls.
Allee Minks Merritt. She was preAt
6:34
p.m., Tuppers Plains
ceded In death by her husband, Josquad
took
Pamela
Cross from Belsepb L. Rollins. who died In 1954.
leville Locks and Dams to St. Joand Bert Rollins, a son, ·
Rollins was a member of Guiding seph's Hospital, Parkersburg; at
8:12 p.m., Rutland EMS transStar Advent Church.
Surviving are two daughters, ported Raymond Myers from HarZelia Colligan, of Walworth, Wis., risonville to Veterans Memorial
and Ailee Brinkler, of Y/tart; three Hospital; at 11: 25 p.m., the,Pome·''Sisters. Maggie Wlenbrenner. of roy unit treated Joe Riser at LinSyracuse, TUlle Kinzel, of Mt. Alto, coln Hill. He was not transport~.
and Sly;-Ja·Kay, of Chesapeake; 16
gra ndchildren a nd 26 great - Hospifal news
grandchildren.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Funeral services will be held al
Thursday admissions-Charles
Foglesong Funeral Home on ~unday at 2 p.m. with Rev. James Loa- Kiser, Racine; Julia Barton, Maney officiating. Burial will be held son, W.Va.; Robert Smith Jr:', Raat Evergreen Cemetery, Letart. cine. Discharges-Anna Sprague,
Friends may call the funeral home Michael Bar.rett, Nina Sanders,
Randall Friend, Tammy Bable.
between 6-9 p.m. oii Saturday.

James Kilpatrick examines that distilictly American species, the political
candidate•••A-2
continues to
for a replacement for Murray L
Weidenbaum... D-8

..

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Mideast·. fighting.••A-4

(AI'

house, and he come around our
house to our porch," she said, adding that she still was watching
from the window but her grandfather had moved to the front door.
On Thursday, an assistant stale
medical examiner said Hiumon
was beaten as well .as shot, but
added that the beating woukl 'not
have been fatal. However, Dr. V'.K.
Kshlrsagar said an autopsy Indicated that Harmon probably waa
already lying on the ground when
shot.

.

Norman llv~ about 140 feet from
the ~ne of the shoOt!Ji&amp;, wblch
took place at JetrenmAyenue and
19th Street. He test10ec1 earlilr that
be saw Stacy shoot Hannoa!tbn!e
times after he was ,' J'OUied. ~ ~
Initial~. .
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July 25, 1982

Commentary ana perspective .
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·Thinking of candidates
A~

~m~

A Division ol

WASHINGTON - In the wake of gains. Support begins to mobilize.
the Democrats' recent minicon- Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of
vention in Philadelphia, we are Massachusetts now standa head and
talking once more of presidential shoulders above other Potential
candidates. It is therefore ap- . Candidates. He te~~da the pack.
propriate, especially in these dog Already he .is attracting a 'Stop Kendays when nothing much is going on·, nedy movement. He faces both a for·
to examine the species and to define midable challenge and a tough row
the terms of the forthcoming to hoe. He has his job cut outforhlm.
discourse.
.
From tiMl Potential Candidate we
We begin with the Unlikely Can- progress to the Undeclared or Unandidate. Their 118(1le is Legion, for nounced Candidate. Former ,Vice
they are many. It seems unlikely, by President Walter Mondale is the fir·
way of example, that former sttoattain this position for 1984.
President Jinuny Carter will enter
But two stages remain. •By the end
the lists, go for the nomination, or of the year, unless veteran obthrow his hat in the ring. He servers are off the mark, Mondale
probably will sit this one out 11r, like will become an Avowed Candidate.
former Sen. George McGovern, wat· Finally, in the political ritual that
ch the game from the sidelines.
must be observed, we welcome the
At a second stage we meet the Announced
Candidate.
Possible Candidate. Such candidates Automatically he becomes the front·
are best known for lofting trial runner. He also becomes the target
balloons. Usually they are no more to attack.
...
than flashes in the pan. They are
among those mentioned.
Democratic Sens. Sam Nunn of
Georgia, Bill Bradley of New Jersey
and Lloyd Bentsen of Texas are
Possible Candidates. Rep. Morris
Udall of Arizona, a Fonner Can. didate, Is a Possible. All of them are
hoping that lightning will strike.
The next level sees the Probable
Candidate. He,re we approach that
embryonic point from which the
larger life forms will emerge. The
Philadelphia convention was
crowded with Probable Candidates.
There they were undergoing inspection. They were passing ' ·in
-review. They were wall!lng around
the paddock, pressing the flesh. One
could become a Comprorillse Candidate.
·
From the Probable Candidate we
proceed to the Potential Candidate.
Now the action quickens. Our
political stethoscopea detect a
palpable heartbeat. Momentum

~'---.-.~dls=:::t

~v

825 Third Ave.. Gallipolis, Ohio
1614144&amp;-2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1614) 992-2156

ROBERT I.. WINGETT
Publ isher
HOBAR1 ' II SON .JH .
Ex t·culJ Vl

htur

PAT WHITEHEAD
Ass1slllnt Publish.cr-Controller

A 1\olt-: 1\11\t~ H ul Th•· i\ ~ M" ' Ultt'd l' n ·ss, ln hmd lla ily Pn•ss AHIWt•latlun1111d Ihe· Amrr ic'Mn
Nt•\jospupt•r l ' uhl b hc·r~ A~1i n•rlati nn .
1 t TTt- RS Ot' fli'I NiilN

11 1t'

"dn•mrd . Tht·}· Hhuuld be k-tls thurt 300 wurds lm•K· All

h· l lt'~~ · urr · suhj•·•·t 111 t·ditiu~ dntl mu:o;t bt- NiKnt'd with numt, ad~-~~''"' und ~~lt'ph'!'w

numht·r. Nu Ull~ i K IWtl (1'111'111 will ht· vuhlishetl. l .dtt·rli should bt.· ln Kvuu Lllllk , 11
l~sUt' !i. nnt pasmw litit•s.

'""H mK

Corporate profits
generally bleak

____

'

James

J.. Kilpatrick

,}

This js the normal progression.
Along the path, on some of· the
numerous bywi.ys, we may meet' a
Reluctant 'Candidate, such as Adlai
Stevenson In 1952. Of, aeademlc i~
terest is the }'ereilnial, Candidate,
immortally exempiUitd by Norman
Thomas, who ,ran six times. on the
ticket of the Socialist Party. Harold
Stassen of MinneSotil holda a title not
likely to be soon surrendered: He Is.
the all-time Unsuccessful Perennial
Candidate. A palising cheer may be
voiced for the Fringe Party Candidate. Let us htar it for the
Prohibition ,Party's candil!,&amp;te ·in
1904, a gentleman with the' mar·
velous na'lle c:l Silllll Comfort
Swallow.
.
So It goes. ~fore long we will be
off to the presidential races. We will
talk ·of dark horses - Gary Hart of
Colorado, Reilbin Askew' of Florida.
At some point John Glenn of Ohl~

may .break from the pack. He might
also fail to match the pace and fall
out c:l the running. In fields of
. metaphor we pundits play. Some
candidate will fold his hand, drop out
of the race or throw· in a .towel. A
more fortunate ·candidate will win
all tlie marbles; pitch a Shutout or ·
steal march . .
Ve~ well. Af this point, ·truiy ail
camp&amp;Jgns ~ flushed with success;
may ail receptions be warm and all
applause be rousingi'We are only at
batting practice oo the campaign
trail; plans are still under wraps
before. a countdown to blast off;
juggernauts have yet to roll; no candidate's train has left the station.
The likely; possible, probable, potentjal and unavowed candidates are
moving towanj the starting blocks,
dipping their toes in-political waters.
Let the fish fry proceed!

a

·
''All right,· ·.class, Journalism
105 · vices· Committee." ·
will come to order. Today we will
"Correct. If .Miss Taylor had
deal with invasion of prtvacy, which separated from singer Eddie Fisher
is one of the most Important lessons to -marry actor Richard Burton,
you will have to team if you wish to would it have been a news story?"
succeed in your profession. First,
"No, sir. That would be considered
why should the rn.edia invade gossip and no one would wantto read
someone's privacy?"
about it."
"Because everybody likes to read
"Fine. Now let us take ·the case of
about it or see il on TV." .
Sophia Loren, who went to jail in
"I ca~ see where you would arrive Naples for not paying her taxes.
at that · aruiwer but it is not Why was this newsworthy?"
neceSsarily 'the correct one. We in"It showed the Italian people that
vade someone's privacy because noonewasabovethelaw."
"lben, the idea c:I·Mias. Loren, ooe
the·a·r conduct may affect the public
hli
of the ost bealltiful omen in the
" What's the latest from up on the H/117 On sec.good. Does anyone ve any examm
.
w
pies where the press~ COI!tributed worl~. goingU jail Willi not a news
ond thought, forget it! I'd rather not know."
to the people's rightto ~ow?" ·
story m itse .'·
"I do sir. When Elizllbeth Taylor · "No, sir. Jt ooly became a public
separa~ from Jobn Warner."
' mattl!r when her taxes were ill'"l'hilt'sa good eDJIIII)e. Why wllll ·valved." • . ·
·
thisarilmp~rtantstory?"
"Now let!J Ileal with . a
"Because John warner Willi a bypothetlcalcue.~iai!IVing
TO&lt;)ay Is Sunday, July 25, the206thday of 1982. Therearel59daysle!t in· United States aenator, , and Miss a•lavlah part7 to honor Mn, Jackie•
the year.
·Taylor's departure could have af· Onusia. 111e holteiJiannouneea that
Today's highlight ln history:
fectedMr . Warner'sperfonllllnceu lbe~lrillnotbe.nowedtoc:over
on July 25, 1943, Benito Mussolini resigned as premier of Italy during
a member of the Senate Anned Ser- ·114 w_batdoyoudq!" '
·
'

t:'

-Today in. history

few anti-Marcos exiles.
time the Israelis had identified Eain,
TI.e American Civil Ubeties U!llon 1 from the confession of an associate,
has already registered · a stern the young men had fled to the United
protest. In a letter to Thurmond, States.
reviewed by my associate Lucette
He claimed inn~nce, but also
·Lagnado, the ACLU warned that the argued
, that the
bomping· w~
['
'H
•
propoSed law :.'would estab~h an political act, which w9uld make
extradition process undoubtedly exempt under the extradition law.
subject to political manipulation .:. The judge rejected his plea and Eain
(It) is a direct assault oo the con- was extradited; tried 11nd sentenced
stitutional protection c:l American to IUe in prison.
· .
citizenS, as well as those more
The other case was that of
limited rights afforded foreign Desmond Mackin, an adriutted
nationals."
' ·
member of ' thi outlawed Irish
In response t~ such objections, Republican Army. The British
Thurmond had added a provision to demanded his extradition for the at·
the bill that would require a court tempted murder of an off-duty
review of the secretary of state's British officer.
decisions in extradition cases. This
Mackin claimed sanCtuary llll a
does not, however, satisfy the political refugee, ·and a federal
ACLU.
.
judge agreed with him and forbade
Administration ,offlcia!B argue his extradition. ·
,
that the (\Xisting extraditioo process
Both cases attracted only
is cumbersome and the reSults 11re moderate attention in the American
uncertain. ·They - pointed' to two press, but were causes celebres
recerit cases llll evidence of the cour- among the various political and
ts' inconsistencies.
national ~ntities involved., In sim.one involved a Palestinian named plistlc terms, the t1oco cases seemed·
Ziad Abu Eian, whom the Israelis to mean that an Irishman could get
charged with a marJtttplace !!om- away with·attempted murder but a
bing that killed two people and ,_ Palestinian could not.
wounded several others. But by the

;,No. That w~uld IMl ul~a.i•M
_.., .. her .
privacy. WhatyoushoJI)ddojashout
to her that you have film in your
camera, and ask her to cover herself
up so you won't embarrass her." ·
"Suppose I'm working in TV and
I'm ordere,d to stake out the house of
someone who has just beeR ·indicted
fora bigwhl~llarcrl!ne. What do
I do it he refuses to be interviewed
on television?"
. "You turn. otf your cameras and
report to your prodUcer that lhe per·
sondldnotwant.tobequestiooed."
"Shouldn't I film .his neii!hbors
and his wife?" ·
.
"That woUld not t.e cricket, as
unawares!"
peopl.e who are not directly involved
.
.
.
"You do not: ~ llliR'a home ia,hil
to exaggerate and~ things
· ,. castle, and if he~, want to talk up.
,
~ ~~ Jl!U O'ile bim 1 'No
"Professor, have you ever woried
Wliulllf;;;. · .
.
4lll1!l'l"'PBperorforteleviaiO!I!"
"I haw 1 ~ llli'.l'in plan- • "I can't say that I have. I much
· ningtogolnto~.SiiJI~~ prefer to teach joainau.n 10 I C:an
I see Bo Derek toplea-oa the )leach, prepare studeniJJ. for when they go
. · and I Jaave a te~~ooplc lena._. [)o.l outintothe~lworld.:'
•
. ~the~? ·,
•
·'·
"Youtrytocrllllhit?" •·
.
"WhatabeasUyide11,Waters.The
ethical·thing to do is to stand on the
sidewalk and hope .that someone
leavine the party will talk t9You.lf
this doesn't wcn:k, you go P&amp;ck to
your editor. and ·tell h!m you can•t·
write an,w-•
•.tl.rng about the party,''
· "Won'thegetmadatme!':
, "He l'lliy, for the moal'enl B11t in .
the ton~:~. run 'le'll ~ )(OU for n.~
going toaparty 'Where,you were not
invited." ;
•· .
"Professor, suppose I ha_ve a hot
story llOd t\lll guy I'm after.•won't
talk to me llil the phone. Do I cUmb
into his:~ 8l)d ~. to catt~'l!lm f

ten:!

fi~~~~~l~. r~~~~~~lr_......__...;..~....::;.-""1 r.;-o.......:.-"'·'~...;..__;.;....::,•.,.;

· On this date:
World
War'll.
• In 1956,
the Italian ocean liner Andrea Doria collided with the Swedish .
imp Stockholm off the coast of New England, and 50 lives were lost:
: In 1968, Pope Paul VI banned aU artificial birth control methods .for
Boman Catholics. ·
·
• .•
In 1971, Dr. Chrlstiaan Barnard successfully.transplanted two lungs ap,d
heart into man in Cape Town, South Africa.
_
In 19'18. the first known "test tube" baby was born to a woman in Bristol;
England.
• Ten years ago: Democratic vice presidential nominee Tbomaa Ea·
iteton of Mlssouri'dlsclosed that he had once 1IJider&amp;one ~chlatt1c treat- ·
ment tor depression, a revelation tha:t ult!mlltety led to hla wltbllrawal
.
'
from the party' 5 ticket. .
• ttve years ago: A Senate panel accepted bud&amp;~ director Bert Llllce'a
cioritentlon that there Wll8 nothing llnproper . bl his penmal ~ ~ ·
1 .~~and decided not to investigate them further.

a

'

( -·'--' -.. ~--' -~

::r

ll

, 1\U,

Be skep~~t~ic~a~l~· =====R=o=be=rt=~=a=lte=rs

Invasion of privacyk:=::;;;;:;=======A=·r=tB=u=l;h=.=wa=?ld

Berry's World

w. Va .

.

Political .refugees endaneg~er~e~d:;=,=====J=ac==k::::::::=An=de=rso=n
tyranny. Their right to remain here ,
they fear, would be compromised by
the proposed law.
The Philippines·, for example, Is
ruled by dictator Ferdinand Marcos
who is the darling of the · State
Department. He turns a smiling face
toward Washington, but a snarling
face at his political enemies. Many
of them have taken refuge in .this
country.
Marcos has pursued them relentlessly. He has tried some of them in
absentia and convicted them oo
trumped-on charges. Now he is
seeking an .extradition treaty with
the United States so he can bring
them bilck to the Philippines.
Doubts about Marcos 11nd
misgivings over his human rights
violations have kept the extradition
treaty from becoming ratUied. But
the Thurmond bill, if epacted, would
make the F,ilipino dissidents even
more vulnerable. Their rights to
asylum, they fear, would be subjected to anguished but doomed
diplomacy.
Their very lives and freedom are
at stake. They wonder, for example,
whether U.S. mJlitary bases woilld
be considered worth the lives of a

Middieport ·Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page--A-3

Soviets ·as No• .~=1===;;;;;;;;;D=o~nG==ra~iff

atiJ,r

In contrast to the dramatic jumps In ali company profits In late 1979 and
l!l&amp;l, major u.S. oil concerns now are experiencing the biggest earnings
declines In the h)story ol their Industry.
And much of the rest of U.S. Industry, whlle generally showing less
startling drops than the oli companies, also Is reporting lower earningsor meager Increases that are not keeping pace wtth Inflation.
Exxon Corp. , the world's largest oll company and the biggest lndustrlal
concern in the United States. reported on Thursday a stunning51.5percent
decline In second·quarter prollt compared with a year ago.
Exxon's profit of $885 milllon lor the three months, while more than most
other companies wUl show for the period, Is $940 mUllon less than It earned
In last year's second quarter. That decline of $940 million represented
more than the century-old Exxon has earned in any quarter before the rtrst
quarter ol1979. when Its profit was S955 million.
Texaco Inc., the third-ranking U.S. oll company, reported a 45 percent
decilne In profit. Standard 011 Co. (Indiana ) said It was off 31 percent.
Not aU the major oll companies have reported their results for the
April-June quarter. Standard Oll Co. of California, the lourth·l~.rgest oll
company, Is expected to show a greater decllne, in percent terms, than
Exxon.
Constantine Filakos, who analyzes oll companies for Merrill Lynch &amp;
co .. said he thinks the major oll companies have hlt bottgm in the current
earnings slump, and he expects healthier profits later this year.
..
"I am really convinced that the second quarter was the real low point,
he said.
As grim as-many corporate profit reports for the second quarter may
appear, some could be even worse if not for some one-time gains that
helped soften the blow to shareholders.
,
WASHINGTON - The Reagan adOne of the most popular techniques for eleva Ung reported earnings Is the
ministration
is. constructing a
repurchase of the company's own low-coupon debt at a st-r ~l!cou!"t from
gangplank
for
political exiles who
face value. The' difference between the low buyback price and the par
have
fled'
to
this
country for sancvalue at maturity Is Included in reported earnings but produces no cash.
tuary.
The
historic
protection ~t
Exxon, using a modified version of that technique, added $136 million to
America
has
always
granted theme
earnings through extensive debt-restructuring. And the sale of excess on
could
be
stripped
away by
and chemical products !rom Exxon's Inventories added $ll8 mllllon.
legiJiation
Wh\Ch
the
adlnlfllstration
011 concerns were not the.only group to show weak results for the second
is quietly pushing.
.
quarter.
The proposed law, sponsored by
Two of the nation's biggest bank holding companies, Chase Manhattan
Senate
Judiciary Chairman Strom
Corp. and Continental llllnols Corp. posted net losses for the three months.
Thurmond,
R"'.C., would remove
mainly because of their entanglements with failed financial companies ..
political
extradition
cases from the
Chase Manhattan had .an operating loss of $16.1 million, and after acjurisdiction
of
the
federal
courts. Incounting for losses on securities transactions the overall net loss for the
stead.,
the
fate
of
dissidents
would be
quarter was $ll milllon. Chase was hlt particularly bard by the !allures of
deeide&lt;l
tiy
the
secretary
of
state.
Drysdale Government Securities Inc. and Penn Square Bank.
This has set off alarms inside the
Continental Illinois said ll'iost $61 mlllion, much worse than expected
Senate
· Foreign ' Relations Comand the result mainly of the $1 billion In loans It !!ought from Penn Square, _
mittee,
whose members understand
which was declared Insolvent July 5 by federal regulatOrs.
.
the
lllructured,
controlled-fromAfter including the effects of securities deals, Continental's net loss was
.
above
'plllltiCf
of
the
State Depart$63 million.
ment.
They
foresee
the
possibility ·
. Chase held about $212 mllllon in Penn Square loans, and It took an
that
a
secretary
of
state
would
base
alter-tax loss of $117 million from covering the obllgations of Drysdale.ID·
Ills
extradition
decisions
on
strictly
May, Drysdale defaulted on $1ffi million in lnteresl payments on securities
political considerations, even to the
It borrowed from other securities firms through Chase.
poi~ of trading hwnan lives for
In the struggling alrllne industry, most ol the major carri~rs.reported
diplomatic adyantage. ,
weak resulls. led by Pan American World Airways Inc.,with a loss of $56.2
The State Department ' s
million.
unabasHed
championship of despotic
American Airlines earned $466,000compared with a gain of$27.8milllon
regimes,
as
if it were an exercise in
a year earller; UAL Corp., parent ol United Airlines, earned $5.5 million,
statesmanship,
does not reassure .
down 36 percent Irom net Income of $8.6 milllon a year earlier, and Trans
those · who came here to escape
World Corp. reported profit of $41.6 mllllon, down 27 percent. Western
Alrllnes said It earned $3.1 million compared with a $8.4 million loss.

Pomeroy

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In
evaluating the current spate of lurid
tales about drug abuse and sexual
misbehavior among members of
Congress, it's Important to keep in
mind the cardinal rule of assessing
such reporiB:
Any Washington "scandal" that
occurs in midsummer must be
initiiilly approached with maxlmwn
skepticism.
In other words, the likelihood that
any political contretemps will actually develop into a serious scandal
is inversely proportional to
Washington's temperature and
humidity during the month in which
the brouhaha first surfaces.
That's because the politicianS,
journalists, lawyers and lobbyists
responsible for keeping the pot
boiling in this city labor under the
misapprehension that they have a
year-round responsibility to entertain (and sometimes even to
educate and enlighten) the rest of
.the country.
That task isn't especially difficult
during the _ autumn, winter and
·spring when almost everybody is at
· work, but the pickings become very
slim during the summer (especially
notoriously muggy July and August)
'when there really isn't much
matertal with which to work.
The capital's priciest lawyers flee
to Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard
for month-long retreats,
bureaucrats use their accumulated
weeks of "annual leave" and the
' Ho'use of Representatives
· methodically recesses for protracted''diBtrict work periods."
· They're aU on vacation, a very
. sensible pra'cttce shared by mast
other citizens. Those remaining. in
the city, however, frequently
· become·victims of the phenomenon
· firSt identified in the 18th century by
·. English clergyman Isaac Watts:
"For '·Satan finds some mischief
. (always) for.idle hands to do... '
· This is not an attempt to dismiss
·--as wholly baseless the allegations
about sleazy behavior on Capitol
Hill, but tnose charges ought to be
· placed in their proper conteld.

Human

Homosexual conduct in Congress
dates back at least to the early years
of the 19th century, when Rep. John
Randolph of Virginia, a leading O()'
ponent of President Thomas ~ ef·
ferson's policies, became notorious
for his erractic behavior in general
and his kinky sexual proclivities in
particular.
Homosexuals undoubtedly remain
within the House and Senate, but c
they also work in almost every other
Institution in our soci~!Y. Sanctimonious critics l'pplying
hypocritical double standards will
hardly change that situation.
Any form of sexual liaison (hom()o
or hetero -) with teenage
congressional pages is a very
serious matter, but the credibility of
the few pages willing to discuss the
matter with law~nforcement of.
ficials is virtually nonexistent.
Recreational drug use is an
equally serious issue, but the widely
publicized seizure of 1,200 pounds of
cocaine (enough to destroy the nasal
septums of all 535 members of
Congress and their 18,000 employees) in southeastern Tennessee
(more than 500 miles from
Washington and heading in the opposite direction I provides the most

recent evidence that the problem is
hardly limited to Capitol Hill.
Although the sex and drug "scandals" remain to ' be resolved, their
emergence has highlighted the need
for the long-overdue abolition of the
congressional page system.
The system's fundamental flaw
lies in the fact that the senato111 and
repre.sentatives who appoint the 14to IS-year-old sons and daughters of
former law partners, political
cronies and generous campaign contributors are thereaft e r
automatically absolved of any
responsibility for the youngsters' integrity, safety and comportment.
High school students cannot - and
should not be expected to - cope
with the high-pressure political atmosphere oo Capitol Hili. The
solution, however, does not lie in
using public funds to provide additional supervision, guidaoce,
living quarters or around-the-clock
chaperone service.
Instead, Congre:;s ought to terminate the ' current operation and
replace it wit)J~ystem under which
young people at least 18 year old are
hired as full-time professional employees rather than selected as
patronage appointments.

Berry's World

Back in the heyday of competitive
coexistence, Nikita Khrushchev
used to thunder that the Soviets
would soon be burying us
economically.
They are stili a very long way
from doing so. If anything,' they have
fallen even farther behind in most
respecls than they were in Khrushchev's time .
In no area is the Soviet failure
more dismslly apparent than in
agriculture. Not only has the planned economy been unable to realize
its expectations, but it has fallen so
short that it has become a chronic
importer of food essentials.
And the situation is getting worse.
The U.S.'Agriculture Department is
out with a new forecast of world
grain production for the cunent
year that would undoubtedly make
distressing reading for the planners
in the Kremlin if they had not
already gotten pretty much in the
same disastrous news from their
' own source.
The June projection shows a poor
Soviet harvest for the fourth straight
year- at 185 million metric tons, 23
percent below the target. By comparison, total grain production in the
United States is expected to top 313
million tons.
The worst figures of all are in the
most important category. The wheat
acreage to be harvested this year is
expeced toile the lowest in 30 years.
The potential crop is put at 38 million
tons tops, which looks good at first
glance next to the 73.9 million-ton
U.S. forecast.
But the bulk of the Soviet harvest
is livestock feed - a role largely
filled by corn in the United States.
That means the Kremlin planners
must again go shopping in the We~1
for the high-quality wheat needed to
feed the Soviet population.
Nothing seems to go right. Part of
the problem is dry weather, in the
Ukraine, the North Caucasus and
the "new lands" of Central Asia, tht&gt;
Agriculture Department says .
Elsewhere it was persistent rain,
delaying spring sowing in northern
crop areas. In Belorussia it was low
temperatures and scattered late
spring frost.
The planners ·can't be blamed for
the weather. But they can for other
shortcomings of the Soviet
agricultural system - such as poor
quality and inefficiently distributed
· seed su()plies, substandard and
inadequatel y
maintained

to get the most out of what they agricultural importer.
Freer societies, of course, also
realistically have to work with.
have
their agricultural problems.
But, as evaluated by Western exThe
experiences
on hoth sides of the .
perts, there is no indication that the
Atlantic
with
price
supports, crop
new food policy being developed atsubsidies,
acreage
allotments;
surtacks the ,real problems - a pon·
plus
storage
and
the
like
are
the
derous agricultural bureaucracy
evidence.
that cripples initiative down on the
But as a consequence of our less
collective farms and a rigidly inefthan
perfect planning, we are in
ficient distribution system.
danger
of being buried by nothing
The result has been th e
achie.vement ·or Khrushchev's goal but our mounting surpilllles.
The Soviets should have such a
in a totally negative respect: The
Soviet Union leads the world as an problem.

Letter to the editor
Civil law vs. consctence
By the time this gets printed I will
have finished my 20 day sentence in
the Franklin County Workhouse.
You may remember that on May
181 entered the lobby of Rockwelllnte rnational' s
Administrati on
Building in Columbus to read a
statement saying their previous
arrest of another peaceful protest
and their continued work on the B-1
bomber and the M.X miSl!ile was con·
trary to God's instruction that we
love one another.
The proteste~ arrested previously
had been charged with criminal
trespass. So was I.
When !liken to trial, I argued that
tho very idea of any property ownership apart from God's ownership is
invalid and that our on ly obligation
is to be obedient to God - to love one
another. I argued that Rockwell was
the guilty party because their
product was totally unfit to be used
in the expression of love, that it
would in fact be used to express the
dark spiril of retribution, destroying
whole cities full of relatively in·
nocent people.
However, the court found me
guilty anyway. l realize that the
authority ol civil laws and courts
will not simply be handed over to
any one who claims a special
relationship with God. We ca n all
rejoice in that.
But, I also realize that civi l law
does not really seck to a llign iL-;elf
with God's will. Its actual intent is to
preserve economic privilege.
In the kingdom ol God, however,
the only privilege desired is to be of
service to others - to initiate others

into the privilege of sublllissior. to
love.
·
In the kingdom of God there is no
need for a privileged position,
economic or otherwise.
·
There is a constant tension bet·
ween citizenship in the wor ld and
membership in the kingdom of God.
We can not ha ve two masters. W'J!
must choose whom we will serve.
If we choose civil law and the courts of this worldly nation, we will end,
in ruin. There is not really much di(ference betwL&gt;en, on the one hand,
arresting a person for praying or
preaching in a bomber factory, and
on the other hand, threatening to kill
millions of innocent people to.
prevent thci r lea der s from
trespassing our ~~national sovereign-

ty." Both action:; serve fhe sam e
wil lful spirit of violence and war. If
we serve that spirit we serve death..
If, however, we forsake all othe~s·
and serve only love, then we are
ushered into life. When we stop,
being afraid that we will lose our
status as economically privileged
people, as massively powerful
people, as legally righteow; people
- when we abandon these fears,
then we are really free, then we ma y.
love, then we may live.
,
All we have to do is trust' God and
we can enter into love's kin gdom . If
we stay outside, we'll have to trust
ourselves and our own strength. If it
is our own strength we trust, we'll
end in war, and thus will lhe ea rth
be spoilc'&lt;l.
ErnyDavis
Rt. 1, Box 42
Langsville, Oh. 45741

machinery,
pesticide shortages and I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=================~
fertilizer
waste.
In a study of the 1982 Soviet harvest - so bad that official grain
totals were never made public - the
137 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
Agriculture De partm en t' s
Economic Research Service noted
Lunch served 11: 30· 2: 00
that delivered fertilizer is often left
Dinner served 5:30-9: oo
unused and uncovered until it
Soup &amp; Salad Bar, Sandwiches, Dinner Entrees, Hous e
coagulates into an unusable conSpecialties, Scrumptious Desserts and featunng:
crete-like mass.
The basic problem is recognized in
FRIDAY-SEAFOOD
SATURDAY-RIBEYE
the Kremlin, at the very top. Leonid
&amp; Meat f;ntree Buffet
Steak Specia l
Brezhnev has told the planners to
'6.95
'5.95
stop blaming the weather, which is
Both include soup and sa lad bar vegetable and
rarely cooperative in the Soviet
potatoes.
Union, and to change their planning

THE LaSALLE

Re5taurant

1i

;

s

JUST ARRIVED

!!
g

" We wan{ to see the call boys an ' the guys who
use CQCB/nel"

FRESH PEACHES
%BUSHEL
1

giveawayeb.===J=u=Lia=n=B=on=d

1-6.50

FAST STOP

Ope n I o: DO to 2:30
This week's entertainment 9·1
Monday -Thursday - Randall Mullins
(of the Last Shot Band)
Friday- Saturday ~ Sounds of Country
( 5 piece band)

Lounge

THIS WEEK'S "HAPPENiNGS" AT THE LaSALLE
Tuesday-7 :30- Middleport Chamber of Commerce
Meeting in the Meeting Room .
Friday-7: 3D-C ountry &amp; Western Dance lessons
Dance Room , Instructor - Gig Powell

The 1\epublic of South Africa isn't be increased to a $450 fine or six ments has pressed for independent
Jet. St. Rts. 7 &amp; 218
content with taking citizenship montha in jail from the current $18 status for these areas; t~ree have
Phone 44~-3977
Phone 992· 9917 for information regarding
rigbts away {rom the majority black fine or two months behind bars.
accepted independence, although no
any of lht: above item s.
popiJJatloo of·that'lrlliite-ruled couoThe government is proceeding other nation eil:cept South Africa ~==::::::::::::::====J.!~=========:::=::::::::::========
try. It nciw wanta to "give" nearly with its plans for the establishment recognizes their sovereignty.
· one million South African blacks to of separate black states in which all
South Africa has now proposed to
another African nation.
South African blacks will eventually "give" Kangwane's people and
South Africa's attitude toward its have ci~p.
territory'to the neighboring nation of
native-born blacks is well-known.
If this project is successful, no Swaziland along with a portion of
Through a policy called "apar· . black will have a legal right to be in another homeland, KwaZulu.
theid," or "separate development,'' any area of the country reserved for
Overnight, these , unwilling
South Africa relentleasly oppresses whites. An estimated two million residents of artHicially created
a majority 1!1 its population on the Africans have already been states would ~me citizens ci
basis of race.
'
relocated to these homelands, Swaziland and subjecta of King
~. The white minority ·has reserved although most have never seen or Sobh\)ZII n, a flZ.year-old monarch
1fT percent of the land for itself and
lived in the areas .that the South who rules by decree.·
•
receives 79 percent of the national African gewernment says is their
Swaziland would gain the satisfacincome.
native land:
tion of land claims dating from
It · is an authentic . pollee state,
Africans are assigned to homelan- African colonial history. This
spending 20 percent of the naton's ds by ethnic afflltation. In recent prospect is opposed by the
budget on control and repesaioo c:1 ·.:..y_ears_:'_th_e_Sou_th_Afrl
__
can_.:..go_v_ern_ _Or_.:..garuza_
· _ti_oo
__c:~__
Af_n_
·ca_n__
u_ru_ty_.,
the black majority. '
.
~
The majority cannot vote, CBJUIOt
. ,- obtain the education that is given
free to whites, cannot own land, CBI)' not travel within South ~rica
; without a pass ·book and can work
; only at jobe not "reserved" for
whites.
Recent American headlines about
· strikes by' black mine-workers in
.Soutb Atrica pinpointed race:based
, f wage cllfferenc~s: Black, un·
'
derground rDJneworten ~ve
sWtlng wages . of $116 •a month;
wldlel worting underground begtn
at.- a month.
installatlpn [ Financing .
ne gcwernment bas uked the
Available.
Soutb African parliament to tighten
IYIItii*IOO~
.. J'eltrkti- 011 blac!b by pualng
. '"ftte OnlerJ)' 11-.nt and Settlement c:1 Bladt
Bill." 1be
teplatilln wwld rdlce lbe time
',
tbat blaeb IIIII lllaJ In urbui 81W·
.QISclallr Afdca fnJIII Ule pr! I !nt 7J
bCiun to
llDIDl oaly•.

FINAL WEEK
OF OUR

JULY

.CLEARANCE~
SALE
.

sgggoo

.

~~~~~~==~~il!;'2F~~

rw..

datU,..

f'wtW• for Pill vlolldlonl.Wllllllt
l' .~

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�-Weather:~-------------,
Agricultural weather forecast

&amp;a.m. EDT

By 'The Associated Press
Synopsis: High pressure will move slowly east to the east coast
Sunday morning. A cold front tn the plains wUI approach northwest
Ohio late Sunday.
•
Temperatures: highs Sunday in the Ills and lows in the 60s.
Precipitation: none.
Sunshine: 70 to 90 percent of possible Sunday.
Relative humidity: 50 percent Sunday.
Dew: moderate with rapid dissipation Sunday morning.
Winds: light east to southeast around 10 mph Sunday.
Livestock safety Index: may reach the alert category SUnday.
Extended forecast Monday through Wednesday: showers and
thunderstorms Monday. Fair Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs in the
80s and lows In the 60s .

w....... SeMce

Nai&gt;Onll

NOAA. U.S.

. ol

eo.n.-ce

Fronts:Cold..., WarmW.

••

Occluded~

WEATHER FORECAST- The NaUoaal Weather Service forecasts a
band of showers for Sunday from tbe Great Lakes Into the Rocky MOIIIIIalns, along the eastern GnU coal and In the Southwest. IAP Laserpboto
Map).

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY - showers and thunderstorms Monday. Fair Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs In the &amp;ls and
lows ln the 60s.

Cold front approaches Ohio
Skies will be'Cloud free throughout Ohio Saturday night because of
ll high pressure system.
The high preSsure wtll drift slowly east to the Atlantic coast late
Sunday while a weak cold front approaches northwest Ohio.
Sunday wUI be another fine day with partly cloudy skies and high
temperatures again ln the &amp;ls.

Clear skies over nation
The Nation's Weather
By 'The Associated Press

Thunderstorms continued over eastern North Dakota and northw·
estern Minnesota early Saturday, as showers and storms also fell
over the Carolinas, southem Florida, and along the central Gulf
Coast.
Partly cloudy skies prevailed from the northern Rockies to the
southern plateau and the central Pacific Coast. and from the eastern
Gulf Coast to VIrginia.
In general, the rest of the nation had clear skies.
For Sunday, the National Weather Service predicted scattered
thunderstorms over the Gulf Coast and southern Atlantic Coast
states.
Widely scattered showers and thunderstorms were expected from
Minnesota and upper Michigan through Utah and eastern Nevada to
Arizona and western New Mexico.
Temperatures around the nation early Saturday ranged from 47
degrees in Sault Ste. Mane, Mich., to 90 degrees In' Phoenix and
Yuma, Ariz.

Habib rejected in Syria, PLO accuses
'Israel of attempting to sa~otaging talks
By The

As!locillted Press

open direct talks with the United elated Press during an Interview In
States and wln U.S. recognition as a a Palestinian bomb shelter In west
price for abandoning Its 12-year-old Beirut.
power base In Lebanon.
Labadl said direct talks with the
The Israelis lnv aded Lebanon United States would "be a major
June 6toobllterate the PLO and are step toward settling .. . the Immethreatening to storm the organlza· diate problem of the Beirut siege
t!on's west Beirut redoubt It Yasser and also the other problem, which
Arafat's 8,00! guerrUlas do not Is the more Important - the Pales·
leave. The Jewish state Is growing tlnlan question ."
Increasingly weary of the six-weekold, U.S.-led effort to mediate the
In Washington. a prominent Lebstalemate.
anese, Roger Edde of the Neutral
"They want to destroy every Lebanon Movement, said Israel
peaceful effort which wtll lead to had threatened to "Increase Its
the (U.S.) recognition of the self- , pressure" on west Beirut It Wa·
determination light of the Palesti- shlngton recognized the PLO. The
nian people," PLO spokesman State Department said Edde's asMahmoud ·La bad! told The Asso- sertion was "without foundation ."

The PLO accused the Israelis of
bombing west Beirut to sabotage
Its effort to win U.S. recognition,
and President Reagan's Lebanese
envoy new to Saudi Arabia after
Syria rejected his pleas to provide a
haven for the trapped guerrUias.
Lebanese pollee said Friday that
at least 84 people were killed or
wounded In two days of Israeli airraids on Palestinian positions In
west and south Beirut.
Israel said the attacks were designed to end what lt claimed were
PLO and Syrian cease-fire viola·
t!ons. But the Palestine Liberation
Organization charged · Isra el
wanted to deraU the PLO's effort to

Iran agrees to Algerian mediation
By The i\ssoclated Press

"We said we accept mediation as
long as It functions In the direction
of our terins for ending the war,"
Foreign Minister Mlr Hussein Musavl told Tehran radio after meet·
lng with Iranian leader Ayatollah

Iran today announced Its agree. ment to an Algerian mediation effort to end the war with Iraq but
Insisted that any settlement must
be made on Iranian conditions.

Ceramic used to help
fix, replace bones
By MARCIA DUNN
Press Writer
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - · Surgeons at the University of Pitts·
burgh are replacing patients'
broken or missing bon~ with a ceramic material that eventually decomposes and aids normal bone
growth.
"We've done dog experiments,
using It to replace segments of
limbs. And now we've used It with
chlld.ren," said Dr. Dana Mears, associate professor of orthopedic
surgery at the University Health
Center of Pittsburgh.
" It appears to work very well,"
he added.
The bone substitute, manufac·
tured In Columbus, Ohio, Is better
than Its alternatives - bone grafts
or bones from donors, accordlng to
Mears.
He first used the bone subs,tltute,
a ceramlc-llke material made of
tricalclum phosphate, to help leng·
then the legs of two 9-year-old girls
with birth defects. He pertormed
the delicate operations about two
months ago at Presby terlart·
University Hospital. ·
·
The surgery marked the first
Ume that the bone substitute had
ever been used to replace major
segments of human bone.
"The substitute had been used for
facial oral surgery" In other parts
~

Assoc~

NOW ~PPEARING

...

of the country, Mears said. "But It
had never been used IJJ.the limbs or
pelvis. That's an area we have just
started, and we plan toeniarge on It
during the next weeks."
Mears expects the bone substl·
tute to be used at hospitals nationwide within a few years.
Until the bone substitute became
available, Mears used bone grafts
In a series of operations on more
than 50 accident victims who had
lost large segments of bones In their
llnnbs.
Grafts, as well as donated bones,
are subject to rejection by the pa·
tlent's body, according to Meal'9.
And neither procedure Is as sterile
- or convenient - as the bone
substitute. ·
"One can have the material on
the shelf of the operating room.
What we have In the hospital ls in
powder form available for Immediate use. There's no lisk of lnfectlon, " he said.

Ruhollah Khomelni.
The announcement came as both
Iran and Iraq reported lieavy fight ·
lng east of Iraq's southern port of
Basra with each side claiming vic·
tortes on the front.
Iraq said It repulsed a new IranIan offensive, killing 2,24,5lnvaders,
but Iran said Its forces charged
across mlneflelds to smash Iraqi
defenses, killing 700 Iraqis.
Iraq Invaded Iran In September
1~ In an attempt to take the Irantan east side of the Shalt ai-Arab
estuary, Iraq's only waterway to
the Persian Gulf. But Inin" beat
back the Iraqis In a number of offensives earlier this year, and on
July I3 Invaded Iraq.
Iran's conditions for ending the
war have been the complete withdrawal of Iraqi forces from Iran
and war reparations. It has also
called for the overthrow of Iraq's
government.
An Iranian leader today called on
other Moslem nations to help build
an army of "50, 60 or 70 mUllan" to
march on Israeli· held )erusalem It
Iran succeeds in Its drive to topple
the regime of Iraqi President Sad·
dam Hussein.
The official Iraqi News Agency
said the Iraqi field commander
sent a message early today to Hussein saying· the Iranians tried tc
cross the border Friday night, but
were repulsed before they reached
Basra, about 15 miles west of the
frontier.

.-----------------------:---1

..

STEVE YATES
BAND
Tuesday thru Saturday
9:00 P.M. • 2:00A.M.
NO ONE UNDER 21
ADMITTED

French Q~arter
. ~ I.OONGE &amp;CARRYOUT :· ,

July 25, 1982

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

Page-A·4 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Campaign...
(Continued from Page AI)
port; flied !!arller. showed he had
generated $1.6 mUllen for his
campaign.
Gerald N. Springer, the former
Clnolnnatl citY councilman who fin·
lshed a distant third to Celeste,
raised just over $2 milllon. His report showed late contributions of
$57,897.
The reports submitted to Secretary of Sta~ Anthony J . Celebrezze
Jr. showed all three Democrats
ended their campaigns with large
debts.
Celeste reported outstanding
loans and debts totlillng $422,00!.
most of !tin loans; Springer's loans·
debts were placed at $312,00! while
Brown's totaled $129,763.
. Republican Cia ence Brown of
· Urbana outdistanced his opponents
In fundralstng as he won the GOP
gubernatorial nomination.
Brown's latest report showed
contributions of $433,!Il0 which,
added to previous ftllngs, brought
the total raised to $1.1 million.
That compared to total contrlbu·
tlons of $818,904 tor Seth Taft, who
llnlshed second In the race; $574,074
for Sen. ThomasA. VanMeter; and

sandals
'
NOW

50% 0F
..::' REG •
'

PRICE

$176,621 for Robert Teater.
van Meter's effort received a
last-minute financial · boost · of
$200,00! from Russell and Debra
Spitz of Boardman. ·
In other raees for statewide of·
flce.t,. Celebrezze has a comparatively Impressive war chest
heading Into his battle for attorney
general with Republican Charles
R. Saxbe. Both were unopposed In
the primary.
Celebrezze reported a balance on
hand of$327,670, compared to a balance of $1,379 for Saxbe.
Incumbent Democratic Auditor ·
Thomas E. Ferguson, unopposed In
the primary, has no cash shortage
with a balance of $395,963.
His Republican opponent, Vln·
cent Campanella, also had a free
ride In the primary. He showed a
balance on hand of $5,339.
Democratic treasurer candidate
Mary Ellen Withrow said she
raised $17,:m and spent $11,584 In
winning a seven~andldate race.
Her November GOP opponent,
Dana G. Rinehart, reported contributions of $42,488 and expenditures
of $47 ,1'n In winning a threecandidate race.

(Continued from page AI)
the board of elections.
In the auditor's race, Arthur A.
tlons on his report.
"Pete" Nibert, Gallipolis, who won
Wedemey~. presently In his second term as Rio Grande mayor, the Republican nomination over Rl·
informed omctats In pre-election chard A. "Dick" Lakin, reporti!d he
statement he hail $1,293.21 on hand spent $1,529.12 In his race. The
at the beginning of the campaign. amount. according to the report,
The report also showe&lt;l he had re- was expended on ads, posters,
cards, sample ballots and broceived $1,400 in contributions $1,300 of which was conrtlbuted by chures. He had no contributions
Wedemeyer. 'The remainder was listed.
Nlbert's- Democratic countercontributed by several Rio Grande
residents and donors wishing part, Ronald K. Canaday, Rt I,
anonymity.
Gallipolis, spent $1,368.65 on signs,
On his post -electlqn report, Wede- radio spots and newspaper ads.
meyer, who placed second In the
Lakin, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, said he
GOP race, said he spent $231.79, spent $649.71 on cards and radio
mostly on gasoline and printing. He and newspaper ads. He received
had also received another $1.25 in $491.98 In contributions.
contributions from an unnamed
The other Democratic hopefuls In
source.
the auditor's ~ace were Gainpolls
Myron L. "Bud" McGhee, Rt. 2, City Commissioner Richard A.
GaUlpolls, who trailed Wedemeyer, Moore, $288.!18 (with$881n contribu·
spent $1,335.43 and received $25 In tlons); Michael Fenderbosch, Galcontrlbuttims. His money was llpolls, s:nt.~ and George E.
spread out more than Swain's and Woodyard, Gallipolis, ,.$85.53. All
Wedemeyer's on stamps, signs, was spent on advertlsfllg, placards,
badges, advertising, cards and posters and cards.
sample ballots.
No repc)rts were filed on the three
The other Republicans filing Issues which faced Gatlla voters In
\"ere J . Robert Evans, Rt. 4, Galli· the primary - the proposed Gallipolls, $796.34 (on ma1llng and ad· polis recreation complex, the Guill' ·
vertislng) and Robert J . Rippey, ing Hand School levy and the
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, $19.81, spent on renewal levy for the Gallla·
advertising.
Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational
Although Cremeens' report ap- School District.
pears small compared to the Re- . - - - - - - - - - - : - ' publicans, he led the field In his own
party. Lonnie W. Burger, Rt.2, Bid·
well, the Incumbent commissioner,
reported he. spent $296.45 In radio
and newspaper advertising. I»
nald f1,. Wright, Rt. 4, GalliJllllls,
spent $55.90 on posters and news- .
paper ads. Neither candidate listed
contributions.
James N.M. Davfs, Eureka Star
Route, who placed third In the commission race, flied a statement of
no receipts and no expe~ with

r;;;;;;;;;;;========il

•

WHOLESALE-RETAIL

GARLANDM.
DAVIS

512 sec. Ave.·

SWI.MMING

446·1235
Hom• PHon•
388-9691

POOLS

HOLIDAY POLLS, Inc.

Compa:t.ny· Mullhnt:dia, Inc. St.'Cund daM
pust.a~r pt~hl at Gtt~!lipoll:J, Ohio, 45631.

. A!liUcillllnn,

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At!Yl'rlbin~ ,I,

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SU88CRIP110N KATES
By Cll'Ti&lt;r
to
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OneMoolh "" ............... : . -. .~

01\et)'Ctlf .•....•• ~ ••• ' . . • ' ••••• W.IO~

SINGLE COPY
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· No !IUbscriptions by mall ptnnilled in
towns where htJne c• .-rit!r ~rviCe il

•vallable.

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fMnwl l.ift ,.,.,._,

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t.lood. lllloolt

Olflco - -

lte 'Mlist1er Z·?O.In labcratc)y tests, ij outper-

Tim~lln.l will aot be
l"'!'lqmmibleJor advanoo paymenb 1n8Mpe
' tnc.rien.
'
.
~

11ie Sunday

...

'

•

• "'"l .. ,

··-··-

C. P. Smith, who lives with his
sister-in-law, Nellie Winston, on
Middleport's South Second Ave. ,
surprised neighbors this year by
failing to put In his garden.
For years ~ Sm!th has spaded up
his own space, planted his garden
and harvested the produce ... just
wasn't able to do it.
Well, I'd say he's earned the
vacation, wouldn't you? He'll be 103
years old in October.

Through. the years, a lady, Kitty
Skeels, Columbus, has been in touch
on various matters.
I understand that Mrs. Skeels is
now confined to a wheel chair as the
· result of a heart condition. She con. tlnues to live alone and gets along
• fairly well. A highlight of her day is
the mail and Mrs. Skeels would.appreciate cards and letters from hei' ·
Meigs County friends. Her address
is 2675 Summit St., Columbus, Ohio
f3202.
··:. Although M'rs. Akeels has resided
in Columbus for many years, she
' reaDy never left Letart Falls in
Meigs County. She stiU calls )t home •
and holds dear many memories of
goOd times down on the river. Incjdentally, Mrs. Skeels has
• requested a tape recording of thend
; i ringing of the Letart School bell a

Inflation has hit the Meigs Co.unty
Fair.
1bls ·year membership tickets
have been raised from $5 to ~ '
However, it's.the first increase the
board has put Into effect lor some
five or six years and the Meigs Fair
does maintain a small membership
ticket charge. A number of other
lairs do not. The way prices are,~ is
still a good deal.
We're boarding a puppy at our
house these days until we can find it
a nice home. Strange, but the pup
gives the impression that she's
smiling every minute. Now - lf she
can do it, so can you. Hardly any of
us lead a dog's life, so do keep
smiling ...
.

CU:VELAND (AP) - Cheaper
labor 005ts are [\Ot the main reason
companies deckle to Invest In foreign countries, says the director of
the World Trade Education Center
at Cleveland State UniverSity.
The lower Cll5t ot'unsk111ed labor
In other nations Is often ollset by
tratnlng Cll5ts, said Ivan Vernon.
In addition, u.s. llrmS have a
number of lisks with foreign lnyest·
ment, Including possible political
lnstablllty, potential nat:onallza·
tion of the private sector and currency exchange problems, he said.
But "for some overseas markets,
the U.S. firm really has no choice,"
Vernon wrote In an article for CSU
World Trade News. "Many lesser

UNION ·
- Motorbtbt travellu&amp;
alOJII Union Aveaue are finding the slippage there a
real traffic hazard. While one-way traffic II mal&amp;-

,.~ta~l~ned~a~rouo~~d:th~e~ba~rre~la~,~th~e~sl~lp~pa~ge~ba:s~alrea~~dy:..~=:~lA~s~o~f_:Frl:da~y~,_:th:e~ma::tte:r~re:ma:ln=ed=-

~

MAIL..,.._

Brlrig thlsad in and •
save.en11tfler $10.00

.
....
..
,_Oiolo., .....
..
· IIOb'slladronles ·
······:... ..... .309. .Upper
Alver Rd. ·
Gallipolis, OH,
....." ...... ,.. "

P,W- :.!............ .. .. , .. fH.Il
Rio too

·~" "" " "
· ··~····/"~....
· ~ ·· .· fli.D .
tiWnb: ................
""

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9 am til· 9:30 pn
CLDSED SUNDAYS

WIENERS

Arrests Gallia man

31 court cases

:i

*239
LB.

Lli.
Pkg. 59~

Answers 4 calls

o.

•

:r

,

I

STORE HOURS:

Fri.·Sat. 9 am bl 10 pm

POMEROY - Keith McDaniels,
22, Gallla County, was arrested In
connection with the breaking ~nd
entering
of the Full Gospel Light
.~
. .
. . '
House Church, Highland Road,
.·,
·:• GALLIPOLIS - Thlrty·one son, GaUI[iolls.
John P . •swain. 49. Gautpolis, Pomeroy.
cases were tern\lna~ F,flday in
The church was broken Into last
charged with no permit for over•, Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Friday night or 11arly Saturday and
, • Each charged with faUUJ1! to pay width trailer, forfeited $40 bond.
a public address system was taken.
Charged with disorderly conduct
:• 'a parking violation and tlni!d $10
The stolen goods are valued at
arid found not guilty was James L. $1,500, according to .the the Meigs
'.; were Carl Hill, Gallipolis, and J;lar·
Wood,
Richlands, Va.
::: bara Glassburn, Rt. I, Gallipolis.
County Sheriff's Department.
Leeland
Kemper, 19, Groveport,
·: • Each charged with fallul)! to dis·
McDaniels' arrest came In con·
: ." play va)ld registration and lorfett- · charged with open container, forfe- nectlon with an investigation by the
•
lng $35 bond were Cllff A. Clay, 28, ~$40bond .
Athens police, where the equipEach
charged
with
failure to
. West Columbia, and Robert L. Conment was recovered. Shortly after
yield and forfeiting $40 bond was his arrest, McDaniels was taken to
. .. dee, 24, ZanesvUie.
;
Rcinnle G. Smith, 44, Rt. 2, Crown Joan C. Elkins, 31, Rt. 1. Crown Meigs Co. Common Pleas Court in
: · City, and WUllam 0. Quails, 21, Gal- City; Teddy F. Martin, 30, Grove- front of Judge John Bacon on a bill
port; and James G. Cox, 24, Eureka
, ' llpolls each charged with assured
of Information.
·
Star
Route.
' clear distance, forfeited $40 bond.
' M&gt;Danlels was released on his
Forfeiting bond for speeding own recognlance, pending a preCharged with Improper lane us·
, age .and forfeiting $40 bo~d was Pa·
were:
k sentence investigation.
· trida 1(, Flint. 35, Rio Grande.
Roger D. Carter, 28 • Rt. 3' 0 a
••
Hill, $38; David F. Walker, 40,
23 Rt 4
•
Jeffrey
Patterson, • . • Westchester, $43; Jodi D. Lang, 22•
' Pomeroy, charged with unsafe veh·
W
e., bo d
Columbus, $39; VIrgil . MUier. 25 •
lcle, forfeited """ n ·
$39 H0 Ills
Charged with unsafe vehicle and
Kings Mountain, N.C.,
;
POMEROY - Four calls were
flnl!d $15 was Paul J. Gibbs, 20,
E. Brown, 20, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, S43. answered Friday by local units, the
Richard A. Lorenz, 33, Stow, $38;
Gallipolis.
John M. Neal, 34, Eureka Star Meigs Emergency Medical Service
•
; • Evelyn Noble, JU. I, Gallipolis,
Route, $40; RICky L. Grl!flth, 29, reports.
Middleport
at
·3:!18
p.m.
took WUcharged with insufficient funds, Ashland, Ky., $38; James W. But: case dismissed at request of the
Ils Davis to Holzer Medical Center
r
wt
• trick, 33, Rt. 1, Crown City, $39; with a leg Injury; at 7 p,m. took
complalnipg , tness.
Max w. Haftelt, 41, Ri. 1, Crown
'\
Charged;"wJthsedtnsli1flclent funtdst
City, $39; Jeroll'lll
. f!'elll)d, 34, Elk· Keith MCCarty to Veterans MemorIUid case dlsmis
at reques o
Ial Hospital and at8: 00 p.m. treated
,the proseeutor was Walter Morrl·
View, W.Va.,~~-.·
Mary Ann HendrlcliS.for a bee sting
at the ~pe. The Rutland unit at .
10:54 a.m. took ~wrl . EU!s to .
1{
Hblzer Medical Center with a 'possl~;
;&lt;
.. PoMEROY- Seveflleen c~ Dash cash.
ble foot fracture.
.
"
·
Will be offered at tbe • No melnbe~ tiCket Is required
I I Of ccPqietitlon
.
for pa,rtlclpaitl
. on, but a .., entry fee
;. MetP(:oUirtyf.llropeql!onesltow,
..
;' ~edfor'J'huraclay,Aitg.l9at7 w111 be~ The t!llrY fee "is
l: , p.in.tn t~~e,llhaw ring: They are: . · red!Jced to$1forlead111a.
.
HOBSON-Hobson Church of
: ,.. Lead bj, opel!; ~r Pony,, , ~premiums of fl2, first place;
In Christian_ Union will have, . ,
' ; llngllsh,Plea.sute;'PonY Pleasure, 56 $tO,'second place; ... tlird place; ~.
; · incbeis ·and \ll)der; Regi~tered fourth place; aad tf, fifth place, wiD a guest speaker, W~y. July
• · PleUure Hone, NoD-registered . ·lit awarded In each cateRorJ, "cept 28 at 7:00 p.m. The ReV. ,Dorothy
·
:. PleUure Hone, '1foJ'IIelll8ll8hlp - for 1~ J10111, ~will receive a Whlttlngt'?n W11l ~ak.
~ Uilder '18' LaciWe PleuUre, ·,Youth ,, tr:ophyforeicbe!ltrJbeiDij~ed. .
,. '
' &gt;Open fleuure, ·youth . Cllll!lng time for e$iei will be
..
~Open ~,,Coile aaee. ~ . s,,p.m. thedayoltlieahow.
Trusi~ to meet
:, P'all Bend, Stake RICe, ~ Ra~. .
.
:
PAGEvlw: - ~lplo Twp.
:~
~
trustees will hold a regular meeting
': "'
.... 14'
WedDesdaY at 7 p.m. at P~
: ' } '"
I }
•
GALLIPOLIS - 1be Galllpo~ ·tDWnhall.
:.• R~meew to • .• otftceofthe Fannen \loftle.Admln·
l.ltriatloll, !129 Jadllon P*e, will be
;: i · MIDDLEPoRT · - Foliowtng ciDIEd Monday tllrouP '1'111lnday,
QCC01'!11i18 to Terrance A. Murnane,
• ~ at Heath UDIJed Methodist
,.
1
.: Cbqrch. members of the countysupervllor.
.
'
Admitted:...,. Shelly ~.
Le-.
;! ~-Pomauy . Rotary Club
omce ~will be attelld:
tart;
Wtnfleld
ReedMne;
:• llclariled tile boat of GeDe Riggs lor ing a traiDIDIBI lor In r,farletta on
.
,
~· t an111e.Qll die Ohlb River rrtd&amp;Y ' thoee clays, ~ 1814.,Tbe,of. I4a Y~. Rutland.
~
I,.ucy McCune1
t1ce
will
reopen
at
Ill
re(lllar
boun
'• id&amp;bl ~ . . - were George
Hattie Sellers, Han'y Smith. .
~ Hadri!tt J~. aad Ben twlniJ.
on Frlday.
' .

:!~ Ends

matter was dlsCWiaed
Moaday Dlgblltlld John ADderson reported
met with soU and water co~~~ervaUon penoonelln au
effort to determine I! the slippage 11 related to mine

developed
nationscategories
forbid the of
lmportatlon of entire
pro- claimed the benn and a foot or so of the pavement. The
ducts, usually consumer goods. To
be sold In such a market, the Item
must be manufactured there.
"Few would argue that direct Investment In such a country has any
major effect upon U.S.levels of employment," he said, adding that dl·
rect foreign Investment Is needed to
keep this nation competitive In the
International market.
Companies Invest overseas
mainly because they can make
GO TO CH RCH £VERV SUNDAY
Wo "••••• tho
more money In other countries, he
said.
. PRICES GOOD
u .s . operations often are too lnef·
111RU JULY ZB
!lclent to compete, Vernon said.
Superior
Rather than closing operations and
All Meat
throwing all employees out of work,
such firms will move part of their
business out of the country. That
saves the remaining jobs, he said,
adding that the situation has occurred most often In the automotive and electronics Industries.
Vemon said In a telephone Inter·
view Friday that foreign countries
also are Investing in· the United
States and are bringing new management Ideas here.
The Japanese employer philosophy locuses on winning the loyalty of employees through
participative management " In
which the top-level executives work
directly with their work force and
seek opinions of the work force on
how to Improve the work," Vernon
said.
"Many firms ln the United States
are trying to Incorporate participative management," he said.
"They're finding that, cornpeu..
tlvely, they're forced to give it a try.
Oearly there's a trend In that
direction. "

. ..'· ·

, Omrle ·closed ·

,

lllW- "',' , ................ fll.•

'

Speaking a'f being helpful, is there
a couple around who would be interested in providing a home for a
HI-year-old girl who would like to attend Meigs High School this fall? She
· presenpy Is in the children's home in
GaUia County IUtd with the summer
moving right along plana should get
underway. If you are ·interested
. please contact, carl Hysell at the
Meigs County Juvenile Court Office,
99U205.

..

MAILSIJ88CRIP'I10NS-·.
-yo.Jy
Oneyear ~ . . . ... .... .. . ... . .. ,. Pl.•
Six rount.Jw : . .................. tlt:l4
,

· Keeping Arnold and Florence
Richards young this sununer has
been tbelr grandson, Miles Keel of
Denver, Colorado.
Niles is the younger son of the
Richards' da,ughter, Rosetta Jo.
Now, al;4put talented Rosetta. She
has been associated with Colorado
State University for several years
and only recently opened her . own
cultural arta center In Denver. The
establishment Is called the
"Cultural and Perfonnlng Arts Center" and Jo • employs some 15
teachel'll Instructing In karate,
aerobics, dance, voice, stage, composition and play writing, advanced
jaz:z, African dance, ballet and
general exercise.
Some of you probably remember
that Jo and her older son, Brett, appeared locally with a dance demon·
stration a couple of years ago. I
heard such favorable comment
about their appearance.
Brett, also a talented dancer, has
been appealing In shows in Colorado
for the past several years. This summer, he is in Chicago where he
originally went to attend a dance ,
workshop and.While tbere secured
employment so he could stay In the
Windy City, Brett has applied for a
scholarship with a da1Jce school
there while working full time with a
food chain. He's completed his first
year of college in Colorado.

tbe bell at the Letart Methodist
Church. June Ashley Is taking care
Of that request.

Christ

dler yotJ a better radar detectcr fa the l"rlCre'f.
• Ea-)iest warning. Receives statiQ1ary, moving and
.trigger rcrllls • Picks ~ both Xcf'ld Kband
trcrlsmissions • Pulsirg vrual a,nd audio alarm • No .
@Ising·• SirTJlle setting ta maxlrn.itn sensitivity • · . •
FuiJy I'll t::mnteEl(l
·
· ~ .._.

· ~·ti,e name Arooica's. ~~ ·
·
trucka's trust. 'Mlistler.
t[, ) .. I

By BOB HOEFLicH
I Willi going to say lhat here I 111"
- returning like Ule bad
However, on second ~light, ,I'd ll:ke
a little better
Image, so let'.s
just say I keep
coming back like
a song.
Last Monday, I
retumed to wort
m a · full time
basis - filled with
vim and a Uttle
BOB
vigor:"By Wednesday,! was itagglng
in the middle; By Thur8day, I bad
developed an Infection which refuses
to quit. So .it's back to a part-Ume
basis for a while.
·
Meanwhile, back at the ranch,
leaders of the Meigs High School
class of 1972 planning their lOth anniversary ~union are baving
problems locating some of the class.
Those who are "among the
missing" include Joyce Elaine
Arney, Doris Eileen Barnhart,
Olivea DeLene DeLegar, Harvey
Wallace Erlewille, Howard Miles
Erlewine, Sandra Louise Gloyd,
Sherry Marie Gloyd, Oley E. Herdman, Jr., Charles Lee Lane, Kenneth Edwin Norris, Samson Darst,
Mike Hysell, Dwight Mcpaniel, Kenneth D. McCune, Daniel 118y Ellis,
an~ Rebecca Scaggs Rowley.
II you know the addresses of any of
those named would you be' good
enough to' corllact Susan AndreW!l
Karr at 985.1909 and pass on that information.

Guest spea k e r set

. loons the other brandS agaJn cf'ld again. No ooe ca'l

.~

Back in the saddle .

Urges
overseas
investing

u~rse show ·cia8ses.set

d'teeto"
•n
its-class.

Entcr1.-d u l~tlt'ofld clus rl'\lllilinl( IHMlkr

at Plllllctny, Ohiu:.Post Offit.~.

Newt~papc r

.

Outfoxes
everyradfir

-.....~~--·­
USPS:&amp;~
A Multln•t..'dia New!lJMI;pcr
Publi:;hed \:MCh Sunday, 82$ ,Third
AvcrlUt', by the Ohio Vulley Publi ~hin,.:

Arnerh:~m

·"'*·

MODERt. WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

1-I~==========~~===========

Mcmlkr: The .bw..:~tl'\1 Prc811, InlantJ
Daily Pres.~ . Auol'ialiun and the

LARGE SELECTION
CHILDREN'S

Beat.o f the Bend

Gallia primary•..

A department spokesman dld not
deny the Reagan administration
was trying to arrange direct contact with the PLO, but he repeated
the official position that Washington would not recognize or negotiate with Arafat's group until It
formally acknowledges Israel's
light to exist.
U.S. presidential envoy Philip C.
Habib met for four hours with Syrian President' Hafez Assad In Damascus Friday, the official Synan
news agency SANA said. But Assad
still Insisted Israel withdraw Its Bel·
rut siege force of 35,(XX).4(),000
troops as a precondition for talks on
giving sanctuary to the PLO.
SANA said Assad "stressed the
Syrian position of principle and relt·
erated that the major problem in
Lebanon Is the problem of the Is·
raeU pccupatlon and how to end It."
Habib new on to Saudi Arabia
and also planned to visit Israel and
possibly Egypt in an effort to per·
suade the Arab world to accept the
guerrillas.
Till! refusal of Syria and other
Arab nations to take the entire
guerrilla army has stalled Habib's
peace efforts. Sources In Washing·
ton have said the Reagan admlnls·
tratlon Is seeking a.settlement that
would distribute the Palestlnlans In
several countries. ·
At least 52 people were killed or
wounded Friday when Israeli warplanes pounded. west Beirut for ~
minutes, pollee said. A one-hour.
raid Thursday left eight dead and I
24 wounded, they said.
Releasing hot-alr balloons to mls·
lead heat-seeking SAM-7 missiles
fired by guerrillas, the Israeli jets
strUck the Fakhanl neighborhood
housing Ararat's PLO command
. center. along with guerrtlla . posl·
WAiiEHOUSt CLEARANCE
· tlons In the Bourj ei-Barajneh refuSALE ·
gee camp and near the city's
"' gr "11.n!11&lt; its from Sl6lS.!HI
paralyzed airport.
PLO military centers in and ·
around the
sports
stadium
also war-shattered
were seen taking
dl·
rect hits.
•

1982

Veterans Memorial

BaoeY,

'12
gal. 99~'
Ctn.

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Page- A-6- The Sundav Times-Sentinel

Area deaths
Milton Carter
GALLIPOLIS - Milton Carter,
86, Rt. 2, Patriot (Cadmus community!, died at7: 10a.m. Saturday
In Holzer Medical Center, having
been In failing hea lth for the past
two years.
Born Jan. 8, 1896, In Patrtot, son
of the late Charles W. and Mary E.
Slagle Carter, he was a World War I
veteran. attended Sandfork Baptist
Chu rch, and was a m&lt;'mber of Redman Lodge Tribe No. 259and Shawnee Tribe No. i8 for more than 67
years.
He married the former Mildred
Patterson, who survives, on June
29. 1921.

surviving are two sons, Joseph of Patriot and CharlesofGien'1ew, IJJ. ; two daughters, Mrs. Don
(Mary) Jenkinsoflronton and Mrs.
Gomer (Doris) Evans of Columbus; 12 grandchildren and seven
:great-grandchildren; three sisters,
Mrs. Emmett (Stella) Loomis of
. Bowling Green, Mrs. Henry (Lucille) Grube of Croton and Mrs.
.. James (Beatrice) Strtehler of Rey·noldsburg; and a .brother, Joe of
:Gaillpolls.
: Funeral services will be held at
·uo p.m. Tuesday In the Waugh. liailey-Wood Funeral Home, with
: !Jle Rev. Joseph Godwin and the
·. Rev. Bruce Unroe officiating. Bur. _lal wUI be In Sandfork Cemetery.
-Friends may call at the funeral
:home from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
Also

:·:Watha Farley
: • : VINTON- Funeral services wtil

:. !Je held at 3 p.m. today In the Fel,: lowshlp Chapel Church, VInton lor
:: Watha Farley, 68, Rt. 1, Ewtnglon
: •)l'ho died Thursday.
'
:: : The Rev. Elmer Geiser will offl.;ciate and burtal will be In VInton
: Memorial Park.
::: The body will lie In state In the
·:church one hour prior to the
:service.

Wendell James
GALLIPOLIS- Wendell James,
61, Rt. 1, GaUl polls, died at 7: ll
p.m. Frtday tn'Holzer·Medlcal Cen-

1·

ter, having been In falling health for
the past year.
Born Aug. 15, 1920, In Cheshire
Twp., Ga!Ua County, son o!the late
Corble and Alberta Lemley James,
he retired from Gall1polls State Institute In 1974 after 29 years' service. He attended Poplar Ridge .
Church.
He married the former Esth~r
Reynolds, who survives, on July 31,
1941, In Gaillpolls.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. David (Martha) Kelley and
and Mrs. Robert (Gerry) Rothgeb,
both Rt. 1; Gallipolis, and three
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
at 1 p.m. Monday In the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home, with
the Rev. Chester Lemley officiatIng. Burtal will be In Gravel Htll
Cemetery. Frtends may call at the
funeral home from &gt;-9 p.m. today.

Paul H. Lewis
POMEROY - Paul H. Lewis, 90,
317 Mill St., New Lexington, formerly of Pomeroy, died Frtelay
night at the Scenic Hills Nursing
Home In Gaillpolls.
Born Jan. 5, 1892, at Locke, son of
the late Ben and Ne!Ue Rowland
Lewis, he had lived In New Lexington lor 30 years. He earlier had resided at Casey, ill.; Nashport,
Pomeroy, and Dawes, W.Va. Heretired as a production foreman of the
Penn Oil Co., having worked lor the
company lor 48 years.
He was a member of the Middleport Church of Christ and attended
the Baptist Church In New
Lexington.
Surviving Is hls wife, Lola, a patient at the Holzer Medical Center;
a daughter, Mrs. Milton (Annabel)
Houdashelt of Gallipolis; two
grandchildren and a great grandchild; and a brother, Carl of
· McArthur.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday In the Roberts Funeral Home, New Lexington, wtth
the Rev. James Allison officiating.
Burial will be In Eden Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Roberts
Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. today.

w. va.

~~~!:i~~m repo~~...~~~isf~~~?pu, _
man Is In satts!actory condition at
Holzer Medical Center for wounds
herecelvedlnafightnearCJ'sbar
on Ohio 7 early Saturday morning.
Donald E. Sheets reportedly Qecame Involved In an domestic dispule between a man and hls wife
across the street from the bar when
he was stabbed In the chest and cut
on the arm by the man.
A suspect has been detained by
the Gallla County Sherlff's Department, but hls name h '~ not been
released pending the rutng of

The GaUipolls City Pollee report
that County CommiSsioner James
Saunders' car, stolen Thursday
from Smith Buick-Pontiac on Eastern Avenue, was recovered In
Athens Friday night.
According to reports, Athens poUce were Investigating a break-In
at a Buick dealer there when they
found Saunders' 199:l Buick Skylark, minus license plates, parked
nearby.
Saunders' car was at Smith
Buick-Pontiac for repairs when It

The sheriffs department Is also
Investigating two recent thefts.
Lawrence Henery, Crown City,
told deputies an out building at hls
residence was broken Into sometime Thursday night.
A power saw, battery charger
and tool box are missing. Total
value of the stolen merchandise Is
$465.
Jay Shepard reports that a hand
gun Is missing !rom the kitchen
drawer at his Jackson Pike restdence. The gun was taken some-

.

~~son

break Into the field ," said Columbus NAACP ~ldent C. Norman
Collins.
"Ohio contractors have traditionally discriminated against blacks,"
Collins satd. "If they had not discriminated In past years, there
would not be a problem now. " He
said a cOUrl decision ruling the act
unconstitutional would have a devastating effect on minority
enterprises.
Meanwhile, Jackson called for

blacks to use a self-help formula of
the ."ballot, buck and book" to
achleve equality wtth whites.
He said It Is critical for blacks to
elect leaders willing to enact public
policy aimed at racial equality, to
use thetr economic pull to Ioree
equal opportunity tn the business
world and to use educailon to build
a strong base lor the tuture.
"You can be destitute economically and you still have one vote,"
Jackson told a news conference af-

reported.

Pollee cite,:! the following persons
Friday:
Usa Gelgk 18, Gaillpoils, warrant on complaint; Patricia C.
Sword, 21, Northup, theft; Larry D.
Wells, 23, Crown' City, theft; Ter·
ranee R. Flnney,.:if, Dexter, speedlng; William Armstrong, .20,
Gallipolis, Open container; Doug
Bloomer; 19 GaUipolls, open contatner; Mlc'hael Waggoner, M,
ProctorvWe, speeding; Bill H.
Hood, 21, Gaillpoils, speeding.

.

residents protest court decision

ter an address to the Ohio Minority
Business Development Division's
fifth annual forum .

Thursday. The legislature has considered two possible constitutional
amendments during the session,
one Ot which would put the 100 percent assessment ruling before the
vote~ on the November ballot.
Delegate Charles H. Damron, DMason, said he was angered by the
Supreme Court ruling and was confident legislation would be passed
which would give voters an opportunity to overturn th!' ruling In
November.

Oplm Daily 10-9;
Sunday 1-6

Allowing minority businesses to
compete on an equai basis lsn 't only
good morally and ethically, but It
helps everyone by having more tax
producers and fewer tax consumers, he said.
He said the Reagan administration has encouraged just the
opposite.

'l1IE BURDING AT lite rtgllt waa orlgiJ!ally tuown .aa tbe FeliDel'
block 118111ed afler F. P. Fenuer, wbo llwDed tbe Gallipolls lllaDd aaWallll
In tbe Uth century. Housed here tbrougll the yean bave beeD 1lloWIIDg
alley, 1 military sbop, Kroger's, 81111 Moore's Auto. (See
8aDds
colaiDD OD E-3),
.
I

Jam"

others."

The Columbus branch of the
NAACP has urged the Ohio Contractors AsSOj!latton to drop Its U.S.
District Court civil suit against the
Ohio Mlnortty Business Enterprtse
Act.
Passed In 199:l, the act requires
state agencies to set aside 5 percent
of construction contracts and 15
percent of procurement contracts
lor award to mlnortty firms.
"The suit Is only the contractors
association's attempt to capture
the entire market and not leave any
room lor mlnortty entrepreneurs to

If' -.r]"iT.;.,~

We

~ .......

Hon or

..Jl:_

1

J

Youth hurt
GALLIPOLIS - A 16-year-old
Columbus youth was treated and

1.97.- ~·

~~~"a':r~: ~:{esM~:a~~':
from hanging on to a moving auto.
Aq:ordlng to the Ga!Ua·MI!Igs
post o~ the Ohio State Highway Patrol; Arvlile Robinette was running
alongside and -holding onto a car
driven by' Bradley Woodruff,18, CoLOOKING AHEAD -It may be a iiGt day In Jaly, wbea lbe tempenture dips. PUes of wood suellaa thla
lumbus, on Ohio 218 at 7: 55 p.m.
but
more
IIIII more people remember the e.1c1 da)'ll 111 • 0111! at tbe Merlbl'l'rllcy residence on Wript Street In
. Woodruff stopped suddenly and
JIIIIIIII'Y,
lbe 111gb beltiD&amp; billa IIIII are malrlag Pomeroy
appearlug everywbere. Here Sieve Tracy
Robinette feU to the pavement. RopreperaU0111
for
a
leN
upea~tVe way Ill teeplq warm leudlla bllld In unloadlnc aDGlar load of logs.
binette was taken to HMC by the
Gailla County Emergency Medical
Service, where.she was treated for
contusions, laceratlpns and
..... ·
abrasions.
The patrol also lnv:estlgated a
GALLIPOLIS - The following
two-car collision on Huntington
couples filed for marriage licenses
Twp. Rd 50 at 6:15p.m.
Robert A. Caldwell, 17, Kerr, was · this past week In Gallla County ProweStbOund and Alva H. Martin, 69, bate Court.
William N. Morris Jr., 2ll, GaUlEwtngton, was eastbound when
they met In, a curve and struck polls, Rax employee, and Brenda
N. Chappelear, 19, Gaillpoils, Rax
head-Qp.
Both cars were slightly employee.
Thomas M. Wilson, 36, Rt. 2,
damaged .
'
.
A car driven by Teddy A. Leon, fanner and construction
Wooten, 18, Bidwell, received mod- worker, and Burletta S. Under'
erate damage In a sln~le-car !ICCI- wood, 38, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant, hatr
·
dresser.
dent on CR 2 at 4: 55· p.m.
Wooten was reportedly south- --Jeffrey L. Daniels, 2ll, Rt. 3, GaUlbound when he lost control on a polls, truck driver, and Jenny F.
.curve and went off the right side of Fullll!, ·16, Rt. 1, Crown City,
\l"employeil. '
the roact, Mklng a tree.
•
Robin J . Daniels, 25, Rt. 1, VInton, carpenter, and Lisa A. Ward,
16, Gaillpolls, student.
Write for
brochures showing
full
Robert J. Goucher Jr., 2ll, Rt. 1,
color with sizes and prices listed:
GALLIPOLIS - A set of keys Galllpoils, carpenter and cook, and
was found at \be roadside rest off Kathy S. Woods, 19, Patrlot, Star
upper Ohio 7 Friday. A keychaln Route, Ponderosa employee.
has the name "Susan" on lt. The . Rick Q. Dailey, 21, Rt. 4, GallipoW. Main St., V·inton, Oh.
owner may clatm It by caillng 446- lis, student, ·and _Jacquellne A.
JameS"Q, Bush, Mgri
9456. - Sanders, 16, Gallipolis, student.
Phone ·3ee:a603 - .

FIRSl' WINNER - 1'1111 ~ RL %, Gllllpolll, reeelvet 1 $25
chect lrvm Tom Skinner, tbe GatUpolla Trllxme'a advertlsiDg IDIDiger,
8fter ~ IIIIJied winner of paper's flnt "FIDd the Ads" eoatesL Fowlnmdred IIIII dghteeu IDdjvldaali perUelpeted Ia tbe Jnltlal evenL AI of
-&amp;tardily, 1S4 people bad entered lids week's c011tesL DeaclllDe for

Ia. 11 11ox11 13/t•"

Sale Price

Men's Pocket T·shlrts·

Paper Luncheon Napkins

Cotton crew neek In solid colors.

Pkg. of 140. 1ply. color choice . .

the_lleeOIIdcoatestllmfdalghtMoadly.

tOGAN MONUMENT CO., I~C.

Sale
Price

Ufebuoy- Deodorant Soap
Bath-size bar soap, 4.75 ounce·.
•Hefwt,

OurReg.5.97

(

502

)

3.57eo.
Your Choice Of
Lounge.r Pillows

Lorge 14V2x20" pillows
with polyester I cotton
ticking and polyester 1
cotton/rayon filling.

---------------------

ss

117

Reg. 6.96

.

Keys found

3 For

(500)

Files ·f or·
•
marnage

a

Gov. Jay Rocke!!'ller called fQr
the special legislative session on

'.

are

RETIRING - Letta Spencer, 'secretary, court reconler aad baiiHf
lor Meigs County Judge John C. Bacon, Is rellring alter '1:1 years of
service at the courthouse. A surprise party was held lor Mrs. Spencer
Frld!'Y at the courthouse. She WaS presented cake and gilts.

Times·Sentinei-P

The

CHARLESI'ON, W.Va.- ComThecourtruledthatltwasuncon- W.Va. 'asked. "rve been working
. plete with a petition signed by 1,500 stltutional to allow a county's as- for 40 years and If thEiy want to take
!J.eOple and a desire to stOp skyrock' .. sessed valuation totals 1n each It au, I'll just sell au of my
etlng property lalces, so~ 20 Maproperty class to be only 60 percent property."
son County residents traveled to· of tlle appraised values of the tax
Sen. Mike Shaw, R-4th District,
Charleston Friday to appear before commissioner.
presented the residents' ·petitions .
a special session of the West Vlrgl• · The Maaon County residents who ori the floor of tiMi state Senate as
nlllleglsla~.
',' · made the bus trip to Charleston the group from Mason County
. Theywerethere"toprotestaWest, feel. a:s many West VIrginians do,
looked on.
VIrginia S~preme Court decision.· that the ruling will make property
"Our people In Mason County
whlchorderedpropertytaxesbeas- · laxe!ttoO steep lor most citizens to can't afford this,'' he said. "II the
sessed against the full marltet,. at(ord.
court decision would stand It would
value of a property, a value whlc!{ , ':what's the use In a man having . mean the posslbUity of some people
was to·be determined In appraisals . anything If the government Is going losing their homes and we can't let
conducted by the state tall' to take It ail? " Bill Hudnall of Leon,
that happen."
commissioner.
;

00

Jackson says challenge to set-asides doomed
COLUMBUS, - Ohio (AP I Former Atlanta Mayor Maynard
H. Jackson Jr. says he beUeves a
court challenge to an Ohio law that
sets aside a percentage of government contracts to mtnortty busl·
nesses will fall.
"There Is nothing wrong wtth set·
aside laws," Jackson said Thursday. "They've been challenged
unsuccessfully before and shown to
be a reasonable, rational method to
overcome Injustice. There have
been subsidies for ·farmers and

W.va.

ldd

: July 25, 1982

•

(503)

Pkg.
Our Reg. 1.57

Save On Utility Dishcloths

Men's Sport Shirts

Pkg. of 3 colorful cotton dishcloths. Each 12~14" size. Save.

Styled In polyester I
cotton. Selected plaids.

Our Reg. 4.96

3.77

Mlues' Baseball Shirts
V- or crew-neck looks.
Polyester I cotton. Save.

Choice Of

•

.;

~

. SHARON BEEBE

Colon

- .• 1

'

WINNERs -

19·55

/IC.JWC/

'

Gladys E. Wafler, ' G Garfield Ave.,
' QeDJpolll, IIIII Sbaroa Beebe, !58 Debbie Drive, GaiUpolll, were 111111ed
: ~biiw.'l of tile Gallipolll FoodlaNI's reeeat gi'IIId opeulag coatesL Wlilter
;received ~ aecolld prize, a TV seL Beebe recel~ed 111e· top J!rize, a
: lllleroftvnDIL, ,

Local Briefs:
Meigs Mines idle for additional week
ATHENS - Due to unexpected delays In completing work on Its
new Meigs .Mines No. 1 preparation plant, Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s
Meigs Mines No. 1 and No. 2 wtll be Idled lor another week.
Persoli!U!~ at those mines should not report to work on Monday.
Those who are needed to work will be called ln.
All Southern Ohio employees working at Raccoon Mine No. 3 as
well as the Meigs Mine No. 1 preparation plant crews will return to
work as scheduled, starting with the Monday a.m. shift.
Harry Lester, vice president and general manager lor Southern
Ohio Coal, said the company has been unable to process c~ through
Its preparation plant at Mine No. 1 this past week due to floodlng'Of
the tunnel feeding coal Into the plant.
.
,
As a result, the company couldn't complete work to tie tn the new ·
fine coal Cleaning addition to the old plant and consequently. no coal
was processed, Lester said. The tie-In was scheduled to be com·
pleted during the recent shutdown.
The work Is expected to be finished during the next week and
Meigs Mines No. 1 and 2 are scheduled to resume'productlonat 12: 01
a.m. Aug. 2.
,
·
, Approximately 1,000 employees wlll be affected by the extended
partial closing of the operation. Local union officials advise that aqy
members receiving unemployment benefits should contact their
local el)'lployment office. ·

Su#s filed ·
POMEROY - A suit In the amount of $33,0ll.31 has been !lied In
Melp County Common Pleas Court by First Family Mortgage
Corp., I&gt;Oiyners Grove, .DI., against Ray E. Justis, Porileroy, et al,
A suit for.$23,596,74 was filed by Delbert H. Stel!l'llS_, Rt. 3, Pomerey, for itiO!Iey,due. hlin agatnst.John Burns, Logan. ·. •:
Julie A. HySell, Racine, and Roger W. Hysell, Pomeroy, !lied tor.
dlssoluttoa of lll8l'l'lqe and Nancy Hayes~ tor supportundertbe
• ' .Reciprocal AlP telneot Act' apJnat WWlam Hayes.
gra~~ted a dlwrce troa J~ Harvey Wiles
..: { Judltll Ann \\'Des
•• and Patricia' j\lin V1upn fiom Ronald
·
. 'D. VauthD.
' ' .... , ... ' .~ . .. '

wu

..

Jl

(

{

Our Reg. 1.88

1.44Pr.

lllppen.Fqr.Women
Knitted cotton/ nylon
terry rubber soles.

·. ourReo. 3.47·

csos&gt;

2..2'9

Dry·roaited Peanuts
.Jumbo 24-oz." jar of
·delicious peanuts.
•NefWI.

.

(506)

Sale Price

(507)

Sale Price

Our Reg. 10.97

6.47
I

1.57

(508)

P1roararnmaab•le Timer
Cool Iced Tea Mix
Natural lemon flavor Push-button 24-hr.
and sugar. 32-oz." con. timer with cord.
·Netwr.

8.97

LC.D. Calculator

Hand-held. 8 digits
· with memory and
batteries.

20-exp. Slide Film,
8mm Or SUPer 8mm
Movie Film

1.24..
'

'

'

36-exp. Slide Film

2.08-

•

Our

Ritg, $~28

~$204

Our Reg. 3.47

.&lt;_slo&gt; 2.27ea.

Hard·ahell Car Waxes

14-0z."· kit or iS-oz." llqulc'
hard-shelf wax. Save.
•rwt we. •·ft. oz.
·

�.'J

•.
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July 25, 1912
. .
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Section~

river

I0

J

25, 1982

LEFT: Large animal repUcas made by Rick BoUn,
vice president, are used by
members of 'Rutland Bow hunters Association In
practice shoots on the safari
range. BELOW: Jamie
Kennedy and Burt Kennedy,
"cubs" of Rutland Bowhun·
ters, assist PhD Weaver In retrieving arrows after 'a
practice session for an upcoming safari shoot. It will be
held next Sunday at the Ru·
tland range site.

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By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Staff

A~· '

IIIII llll
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RUTLAND- Want to go on a safari?

,.

One will take place on a 44-acre tract in rural
Meigs County (and you thought Eastern Africa! l on
Aug. I.

...

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RJGirr: a.-T. Stewlrt •

........ Bowllull&amp;en .wool!Ide&amp; i\BOVE: a.
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Organized only a few months ago, the Rutland
Bowhunters Association will sponsor the all-{)ay safari
shoot with 30 different targets over the range and ex·
peel 150 or so bowhunters to join in the expedition.
The safari shoot with eight classes will gel underway at 9 in the morning and conclude just before
dusk with the awarding of trophies to the hunters accwnulating the most points.
The bowhunters wiU shoot their arrows at life-sized
animal replicas created by Rick Bolin, an active member of the Rutland Club.
,
Officers of the club which has 36 members are R. ,
T. Stewart, president; Rick Bolin, vice president; Paul
Searls, ~retary.-treasurer; and Mark Pierce and Tim
Spires, the range office!l.
·
.
When they first organized 'nd were without a place
to shoot, the club rented the Rutiand Civk Center and
· set up an Indoor range. From there they moved to the
outdoor range located at· the end of winding, narrow
dirt I'OIId and owned by John Utslnger, uncle of the
PI'I!Sidenllbey're oow looking for a large buildln'g to
· rent for a wjnter practlce ra1J8e. '
· While a few 'ot the l'tutland ·Bowhunters had
belqed to clubl in either counties, 111011t are now in an.
Dllan~~Uon.
·
And there's
·no
discrimination
when
it
comes
to
.
~

'

membership. Several women belong and there are also
"cubs," the youngest just over four.
While most are from the Rutland corrununity,
there are several members from Gallia County and a
few from across the river and other sections of Meigs.
Shoots take place' every Tuesday during the summer and visitors to the range can watch the action any
time after six. Regular business meetings are once a
month, the second Saturday of each month.
While many seem to associate bow hunting with
killing deer, Bolin explained that there's really much
more to the sport.
Bow and arrow fishing is great sport, as is hunting
small game, like groundhogs, chipmunks and even
crow in season.
And the competition, Bolin :;ays, improves the skill
and gives bowhunters the proficiency needed in a hunt.
He credits tlie unskilled bowhunter with giving a
"black eye" to the sport charging that sometimes they
wo'¥1d instead of kill. "Practicing all year long, not
just taking out a bow once a year is the only way to
become proficient," Bolin commented.
Bolin reported that bowhunter' clubs are organized
statewide and that during the summer "round-robin
shoots" take place once a month at different ranges.
Theee, he said, arnanctioned through the state with
the top three clubs going into state competition.
To· get into that competition is one of the goals of
the new Rutland Bowhunters. ·
Butfor now, they're concentrating on having a top.
flight shoot next Sunday, and,to those proficient in bqw
and arrow ...
"Interested in going on a safari?"

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�'.

1982
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Page-8-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

,,,July 25, \982
and white lace streamers.

Cluiatl L. James, niece ~ the bride.
She wore a flool'-lengtb gown ~pink

Weddings
Osborne, son of Sue Osborne, Lima,
was ring bearer. He also wore a light
blue tu.xedo.
Beth Teaford, Chester, sang "Endless Love"

and

"The

Lord's

Prayer." The letter was signed by
Crystal Osborne, Columbus, cousin
of the groom. The music was
provided by Zelia Siivus, Athens,
and Mary June Bumgarner, The
Plains, organist. Edith Van Dyke,
Athens, adopted mother of the bride,
and Helen Osborne, Chillicothe, aunt
of the groom, lighted the unity candies preceding the ceremony. Each
was given a rose by the bride
following the ceremony.

NEW YORK (AP) - Rock star Joan Jett has flied a $5.25 milllon suit
against Playboy JTlllgazlne, claiming it published a phony :tude photogaph that pubUcly presented her in a falae light. .
Ms. Jett sa1d in her suit, flied Monday in M41lhattan Supreme Court,
· that the maS¥~ne carried a "fabrication of a photograph to show 1her)
engaging in deviant sexual behavior.''
'
The photo appeared In the May tssue "with others showing prominent
show busin~s personalltles, mostly rock stars, In ridiculoUS postures
and activities, often with a sexual connotation," the suit said.
The photo is of a woman sfttlng nude in a bathtub.
• Ms. Jett, rormer star of the all.female Runaways, now performs wtth
the Black Hearts band.

baby dotted Swiss, accented with
ruffles and lace, and carried a white
lace· basket filled with pink r011e
petalS.
.
1be bridegroom wore the grey
aacot tuxedo, with wing-tip shirt and
grey striped aacot.
Best man was Charles.N.?tertle of
· New Haven. Groomsmen were Greg
Kaylor, Kevin Scott of N~ ·Haven,
Scott Barnitz of Mason, W.Va.
1be best man and the ushers were
dressed in Dorian grey tuxedos, with
wing--tip shirts, iiiKf60W tie.
Rlngbearer Cor the ceremony waa
Phillip R. Williams ~ New Haven.
He wore an outfit similar to tiH!

Dawn Goeglein; Athens, and Sue
Taylor, Middleport, registered the
guests.
A reception coordinated by Mrs.
Van Dyke followed at the Senior
Citizens Center. Assisting were
hostesses, Crystal Osborne, Ju!ly
Conkle, Wheeling, W. Va.; and Connie Scott, Chillicothe.
The new Mrs. Wilhelm is a tescher
of vocal music in the Federal
· Hocking School District. Mr.
Wilhelm is band" di~t and Instrumental music tescher in the '
Eastern Local School District.
After a honeymoon at Sarasota,
Fla., they will reside al!69 E. State
Street, Athens.

'Space Day' honors ast.ronauts
BAl.TIMORE (AP) - Astronauts Thomas i&lt;. Mlitttngly and Henry
W. Hartsfield were honored here with a "Space Day" declar11tlon as
they kicked off a natlonal tour.
. Accompanled Friday by their famUles, the astronauts visited the uss
Consteilatlon and walked through the city's Inner HarbQr area.
The astronauts, who piloted the space shuttle Columbia on its last
mission, which ended July 4, drew lots of attentlon- especially from
chUdren.

gtoom.

1be reception, catered by Wilson's
Bridal Service, was held Immediately following the ceremony in
Scott Hall
Serving as hostesses were
Merrilyn Pridemore, Betty Ca~r,
Karen Johnson, cousins of the bride,
Sarah Elias, Ruth Sisk, Dorothy
Cartwright, and .Lora Smith.
Registerin'g the guests were Beverly
Williams and Amy Williams.
A rehea~ dinner was held at
Brian's Steak HoW!~!, by the
bridegroom'smother.
Mr. and Mrs. Parsons
Following a honeymoon trip to the
Bahamas, the t'OIIpie now reside at
NEW HAVBN, W.Va.- Jennie New Haven.
403FourthSt.,NewHaven.
Jeananne _James and Joseph Allen
They wore floor-length sheaths of
The new Mrs. Parsons is a
Parsons were united in marriage in Tlnasetta jersey, sli!.. to the knee, graduate of Wahama High School
a May 1 ceremony at New Haven with matching · ~verblouses ·Of and Marshall University, and is ernUnltedMethodlstOmrch, W.Va.
crystal-pleated chiffon that· tied at ployed as a registered nurse at
1be bride is the daughter of Mrs. the waist with self-belts. The maid of Pleasafll Valley Hospi~l. The
Dorothy S. James and the late honor was dressed In daphne I'Cllie, bridegroom ie a graduate of
George B. James of New Haven. The while the bridesmaids wore pink. Wahanna High School and Marshall
brldegl:oom's parents are Mrs. They each carried white lace fans · University and ininployed by New
Dorothy V. Parsons and the late adorned with pink baby carnations Haven Police Department.
Larry H. Parsons of New Haven.
r;::==:::::=;;:;:,;;::::;:;:;:::;::::;;:;:::;=:;;::;~;=::;:;:;:::;:::;
The church was decorated wi.th
..Jw 8 SALE e SALE e SA_L E e SALE e SALE e SALE e "'J&gt;
twin candelabras and the unity can•
dies entwined with white satin rib-4:
,
$pedal on Select Gr'Oup
~
bons and greenery. Large vases of
:
Buy one pair of shoes it the regular price, and gel the :
pink and white roses, gladioli, and
f · I I
1• · _.. ;
carnations were placed on either
~
secon pair o equa or esser value
side of the altar. In front of the altar
;;l !Bring Your Neighbor
tr\et;!9I' ~
were double kneeling benches ador.
•I'
·
·
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8
ned with greenery.
1ilt
a,"f
1
I_lev. John Campbell performed
W ~'lil&gt;' "-r. I ,I
300SecoitdAve. "'
the dQuble-ring ceremony. Nuptial
~
Lafayette mall ~
music was presented by Mary Jane
VI
.
Gallipolls,
m
Gress, organist, imd Ka)l Hoffman,
•
•
soloist. Selections included "H,"
SALE e SALE e SALE e SALE e SALE e SALE e SALE
"Endless Love," "A Wedding~==~===================:;:=.
SQng," .. Evergreen" and HThe
Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelm
Lord's Prayer."
roses, pink sweetheart carnations,
1be bride was escorted down the
silk 'stephanotis, violets and
aisle by her brother, William C.
crnflowers, accented with baby's James. She wore a bridal gown with
breath and lace streamers.
a Queen Anne neckline in chantilly
The maid of honor wore a Ught
lace, double sheer sleeves ending in
blue gown with a double ruffle at
ruffled wristlets, and a cathedral
the hem. The bridesmaids each
train with cascading ruffles of chanwore gowns of ·the same style In
tilly lace caught up on the sides with
yellow, pink, lavendar and sea
satin bows. Her matching headpiece
green, completing a pastel rainbow
was covered with chantl)ly lace and
ensemble.
trimmed with lace, pearls, and
F1ower girl was Cara Abell, at- · sequins. Her bridal bouquet was a
nosegay of pink sweetheart roses,
tired In a blue vollle gown trimmed
with white lace and stain rtbbon, white asters, ililes of the valley and
with a white sweetheart rose ln her
baby's breath, with lace streamers.
Attendants were Amy Wright of
FOR INFORMATIO" CALL 992-3507
hair. She is the daughter or Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Abell and step-niece of
Charleston, W. Va., maid of honor; OR 985-3564 ·
the bridegroom.
Anna Parsons,- sister of the groom;
SPONSORED BY SHEAVES FOR CHRIST
all of
The bridegroom and best man
wore charcoal gray tuxedoes with
black trim and white shirts, while
the bride's father and ushers wore
AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE ...
silver gray tuxedoes.
The mother of the bride wore a
floor-length antique white gown.
The mother of the bridegroom wore
By-.., B. Kughn
a Door-length gown of Sljimon-pink
\
.
overlaid with chiffon.
1.- ls there scripture for baptism ot ttle Holy Ghost, and do~ it apMusical selections included
ply to us today as it did the apostles?
"We've Only Just Begun," "AnThere are only two accounts of ttoly Ghost baptism in the New
Testament, and they are recorded in Acts, chapters two and ten. Each
rue's Song," "A Time For Us,"
one wa~1or a partlculat purpose.
"You Light Up My Llfe," among
· ' a .- T~.e apostl~(: Christ h~d promised the · :-toly Spirit to the
others. Voca~t was D. Merrill
apostles, And I will prav the Father. and he shall give you another
Comforter, th~t · he ml!'f abide with you for• ever; Even the Spirit of
Davis.
. truth .. .': .(Jno. 1~ : 16, .17) .. The H.oly Spirit was IQ _tea&lt;h them all t~iMs.
The sanctuary was decorated
bring all thmgs to the.r remembrance whatsoever the Lord ti~d
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
with. white satin bows, twin sevenspoken unto them, and that he woul~ show them things to come CJno.
Health Tex, Carter,
1~ : 26. 16: t3) . The promise would come upon them in Jerusalem at
branch candelabra with white canDon Moor.
WhiCh time they would be endued with power from ·on high "And·
JACKSON
Pamela Gay Adams, Joy Dllion and Donna Dll- dies, . and two arrangements of
b~hOid,. l send the promise of my Father upon you : but larry ye in th~
OPEN MON.-SAT.
: cooper and Marvin !Pete) Wilson Jon. Rhonda WUson attended the gu- white and yellow flowers. Organist
-c•ty of Jerusalem unt.l ye be endued with power from high" (Lk.
9:30-5:00
2~:49). The Lord's fast instructions given the apostles were to "not
: were married at ·Christ United est register.
for the occasion was Peggy Foster.
depart from-Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, whlch
The couple's table was adorned
Ushers were Chuck Dixon,
: Methodist Church on June 19. The
... , ye have heard of me ... ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not
-bride ls the daughter of Mr. and Randy Heath, Doug Kimsey and by a "Happy Hearts" wedding
many day_s hence" (Acts t :4, S). The apostles being baptized with the
cake. ·
Holy Splr.t was the fulfillment of the Lord's promise, r&lt;!veallng the
: Mrs. Kenneth Cooper, Jackson, Rick Billman.
word (!ruth 'of gospel) by inspiration unto them so that they might ·
: and the groom, the son of Mr. and
The bride was escorted down the
The newleyweds spent their horecordttforus! ·
.
'
· Mrs. Edmond Henry and the late a!sle by her father In a gown of neymoon In Flortda.
. b.-.-Cor~elius : ACcording to Pe.t er, the Holy Spirir came upon cor : Robert Wilson, also of Jackson. He white chiffon, with a curving VThe bride is a a typesetter at
neliUS and ~IS household (the uncircumcision) as it did the apostles" at
the beglnnong" !Acts,11 : 15). that is on Pentecost in Jerusalem (Acts
. Is the grandson of Mrs. Ellen Wll- neckline, pleated chiffon cotiar, Jackson Publishing Company. The
2:1 ·4} . It, too, was administered by the Lord, for Peter said thah when
sheer bishop sleeves and a waltz- groom is editor for the Pike County
, son. Pomeroy.
he saw the Holy Ghost falling on them, that·he "remembered the word
: The couple were wed ln a doublt&gt;of the Lord .. .- John indeed baptized with water; but ye shall be bap·
muslon.
trimmed
Venlse veil
laceof and
caught
onto ina r:ne:ws:pa::pe:r~·~"~N:ew:s~w:a:tc:h:m:a:n~.'~'_jl~~~;~~~~~~~u . tozed With_the Holy Ghost" (Act~ 11 : 16) . The Gentiles had been rcgar·
: ring ceremony by Rev. James length
de~ as _be1ng common or unclean. and were not in CO\Ienant relation ·
: Kuhn, with Dan Morrow, friend of raised bandeau headpiece, covered
sh•P w•th the ·Jews. The Jews had to be convinet~d that the Gentiles
, the groom, serving as best man. w! th lace and seed pearls. She wore
were being called Into fellowship with them Ul)to God, therefore, while
1 Peter was speaking unto the Gentiles (Cornelius and his household )
: Maid of honor was her cousin, her mother's diamond engagement
God Poured out th_e gilt o_f the 1-:toly Spirit upon the!" (Acts 10 : ~5. 46):
: Tammy Adkins, Oak Hlll. Brides- ring and necklace.
The Jews _!the c.rcumciSlon) }IVere astonished at what they were
She carried a bouquet or yellow
: maids were Sherry Adams, Julie
se~mg , for 1t was truly of God, Peter, witnessing ·the demonstration of
the l;toly Spirit, asked, "Can any man forbid water, that those should .
not be baptized. which have received the Holy Ghost .s well as we?"
, (Acts tO:4_1) _Beong convinced that the ,Gentiles wer ~ now being called
into_fellowshtp wlth·t~.e Jews, ~'He c~mmanded them to be baPtized in
the ~a me olthe Lord (Acts 10:48) . Cornelius ~nd his household were
baptized with the Holy Ghost to convince the Jews that Gocl' was
A~ Adalral de~u•ldlfier CIR _•aki'JOUf ~...••••
c~fllng them into !lis fold I
.
Holy Spirit b~tlsm was not designe~ to benol.it any individual by
or other d1111p
coafortablt bJ tlkllll·
promlllng faith, producing the new b1rth. purifying the soul or
bringing therebetlious heart into subjection to God! · ·.
·'
't ill IICisi IIIO~Ufl ~It ·lht
It
lliiPI
·
. ·Holy Spoqt baptism, accorqing_ to scriptures, is~not for us today. as
I'
''was during t(le aposllest
·
, •
,
·
'
· protect
11d
(For ~roe Bible Correspondence Course Write ... 1 ,
·'

Youngest Gibb wants fans to know
NEW YORK lAP) - Rock singer Andy Gibli says he wants to go
· pulillc about his no-y·flnlshed romance with actress VIctoria Principal
so his fans wW understand what he's been through.
Gibb said Friday on ABC's "Good Morning, America," program that
his relationship with Miss Principal, of the TV series "Dallas." was
"very much-a sweet dream of a relationship, and It was also a nightmare at pOints."
When the two finally broke up, satd Glbb, he suffered a nervous
breakdown and "gave up everything ... I didn't care about llfe.'' After
flirting with heavy cocaine use, Glbb said. he ended up one night
"crying my eyes out" to his parents, who urged him to see a
psychiatrist.
Since then, Glbb said. he has stopped using all drugs and he wants his
fans to know "exactly what happened to me." He also said his fans
"should not do thls to themselves.''

GUERNEVILLE, Calif.

REDUCING HUGE .INVENTORY WITH SPECTACULAR LOW
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.. HOLY SPIRIT BAPTISM

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woo•werk ,,.. •••
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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

TORONTO (AP) -Actor Hal L.lnden, who lor eight years starred as
a pollee captain In the "Barney i\:llller" television series, says he's "a
big ran of cops."
Linden was made honora1y chief of detectives of the Metropolitan
Toronto Pollee at a light-hearted ceremony Friday.
Brought to Toronto with his wife as guests of the Toronto pollee
amateur at hletic association, Linden told reporters that playing the
sertes has made him apprecl~te pollee work.
"It's a very difficult job and, of course, an Immensely Important and
necessary job," he said.

Chancellor confronted by demonstrators

3 Piece

FlEA mRRHET

ADMIRAL

A big fan of cops

f RE. E

d·

I

carrying picket signs, greeted the motorcade of West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt as he arrived at the summer encampment of the
elite, ail-male Bohemian Club, held on a 2,700-acre estate.
"Herr Schmidt: Please.Say 'Nichl' to Reagan," read one placard.
"No War," said another.
Officers o-f the California Highway Patrol held back protesters as the
motorcade sped into the redwood grove where the Bohemian Club holds
lts secretive annual get-together. It was the German leader's second
vtslt to the camp. He was staying the weekend as the guest of Secretary
of State George Shultz.
..l
Besides Shultz, the club's membership list includes !-'resident Reagan, Iarmer presidents Richard Nlxon and Gerald Ford.

People

Jett files suit against Playboy

Flower girl fer the ceremony waa

POMEROY - Ann Whiteside
Bwnpass and James Litter Wilhelm
Jr. were married on June 19 at the
First Baptist Church, Athens.
Rev. Paul Silvus performed the
I :30 p.m. ceremony for the daughter
of the late Sebastian and Elnora
Whiteside of Portsmouth and the son
of the late Flora Wilhelm, Columbus.
Escorted to the altar by Fred
Goeglein, Athens, the bride wore a
gowrr of white silk organza and chif·fon featuring a sweetheart neckline
and a natural waistline. The full
:bishop sleeves were trimmed with
lace motifs. Cascading tiers of lace
formed the full skirt which flowed in•
_to a cathedral length train. Her
:waltz-length veil edged in matching
-lace was secured to a raised ban:deau covered with chantilly lace and
:bead work.
- She carried a silk cascade bouquet
:of dusty rose, blue and lavender
:flowers. The bride wore the pearl
:necklace and earrings ci the
-groom's mother, a gift to her from
:the groom.
·
: The maid of honor was the bride's
·daughter, Beth Bumpass. She wore
:a gown of lavender polyester and
:carried a silk nosegay of lavender,
·blue and dusty rose flowers. Other
:bridal attendants were Beth
:Wilhelm of Columbus, sister of the
;groom, who wore lilac; Barbara
·Goegiein, Athens, who wore plwn ;
:sue Osborne of Lima, who was in
:dusty rose. Each attendant carried a
·white silk rose which matched her
•gown.
: The bride's daughter, Lynne Bum:pass, in lavender organza, and Mr.
-and Mrs. Danny Scott's daughter,
:Erin, CI'illiicothe, in blue organza,
; were the flower girlS. Both tarried
•white baskets filled with rose petals.
: Kenton Hughes, Fairfield, was the
;best man. Ushers were Philip
Wilhelm, Columbus, brother of the
:groom; Danny Scott, Chillicothe,
:cousin of the groom; John Gregory,
· Uma, and Jon Theobald, Cleveland.
:All of the groomsmen wore light blue
:tuxedos trimmed in black. Jeff

The Sunda

· Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

-

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

'279

...

I
{
'

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

Sug. Retail $476
Larger Family Size 42" Round Table extends to 66"
with _two 12" le111ves. S~t includes six heavily braced

Cllllll:tillllr• .....

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.,udnt.'\dty
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f :.

f ''~l!Slol'ttlrett l .

lhe 01bte" '

.

C.uly -INJEH

ti :U"'M

M.iddlepc)rt, Ohio

-·

••

f

)

•.

�..
Sentinel

Enqt~gements

Engagements

(continued from page B 4)

Winters-Morgan

a bolter monitor operator.
The groom-to-be Is a 1972 graduate
of Eas!em dlgh School and Is selfemployed.
The open-chlll'th ceremony will
take place 7:30p.m. Saturday, Aug.
21, at Grace United Methodist Church, GallJpillis. The music will begin
at7p.m.

AbeIs-Cline
GAU..IPOUS - Dr. and Mrs.
Gene Abels, Gallipolis, announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their Claughter, Sara
Ellen, to John W. Cline, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Rufus Cline, Reedsville.
The bride-elect Is a 1979 graduate
of GaUia Academy High School and
attended St. Andrew's College In
Laurinburg, N.C. She is employed as

announce the approaching wedding
of their daughter, Kelly Nibert, to
Mark Lee, son of Margaret Van
Sickle, Gallipolis.
The couple graduated !rem Kyger
Creek High School. Lee is employeo
at Georges Creek Auto Sales.

241 Third Ave. Gallipolis

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
SUN., JULY 25
THRU
SAT., JULY 31

DAILY &amp;SUN.9 TO 10:00 P.M.

If you love a bargain and would love to glv~ your
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MERCERVILLE- Mr. and Mrs.
William Stitt announce the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Karen Louise, to Michael
Keith Waugh, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Lee Waugh.
The couple will be married in an
open-church ceremony on Saturday,
Aug. 14, at 7:30p.m. at Mercerville
Baptist Church.
The bride-elect and groom-elect
are 1982 graduates of Hannan Trace
High School.

Sq. Yard

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Installed Ove1 Heavy Pad

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you can be sure of it's quality. The static
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welcome addition to your home. Rich tone
on tone colorations and low prifle easy to
maintain good looks have made this pattern
very popular.

DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49' IN FACT VALUE.

ODD COFFEE TABLE

PRE-SEASON SALE
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PORTABLE KEROSENE HEATERS
7,000 B.T.U •.....• .•. • . •. '129.95
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·. COME IN AND REGISTER FOR A WATER BED
-TO BE GIVEN AWAY-:-,
, POMEROY. ·- The approa~hlng ·
' marriage of Troy Brooks .OOSberry
WC!irs on Aug. 21 at the Silver Run
Road Freewill Baptist • Church at
Hobson is.being annOIIIICed, ·

. ,can League team (tile Jirowns),
our llhoes went to Taiwan and Ko-,

rea. God, do not take out beer from

-WHITE
GRAPES

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HEAD

socr.'39e
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1be Senate voted to double the

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"With.respect to my horne city of
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WASHINGTON (AP) - A suggestion to raise the fedEiral beer tax
brewed up stonn In the Capitol,
prompting frothy arguments from
one lawmaker.
.Sen. Thomas Eagleton, from
''the great brewery state" ol MJs:.
sourt and the home of Anheuser- .
Busch, on Friday praiSed beer as
"the mother's mllkol American Le' ~on picnics, the sine qtia' non of a .
summer evening of proleilslonal

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GRAHAM, N.C. (AP) - What
has eyes but cannot see, no hands
hut tells time? Bill Borst's potatoJlPWered electric clock.
Borst, an auto mechanic, hopes
bts "Tater·time .Qock'" will earn a
share of the novelty market previously held by the likes of pet rocks
and the head·held umbrella.
Electricity Is created when metame terminals pw;hed Into the potatoes react with acid to create a
weak current, powering a liquidcrystal clock display.
Any acidic fruit or vegetable
would power the clock, Borst said, ,
hut potatoes last the longest and
look more novel.
Borst's current power sources
have been keeping time since June
24. and his last test, using half a
potato, lasted almost four weeks.
The clock Is now housed In a clear
p~sptay case for Tom's Toasted
Peanuts, but the Inventor wants to
make a case that Is clear on the
bottom - to reveal the power
source - and dark on top to hide the
clock works.

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Beautiful velvet covered
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The Magazine pouch gives
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THURSDAY ONLY
JULY 29, 1982

POLISH SAUSAGE

FREE!

MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 9 TO 10

•REDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY-SAVING
COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V AND
RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU PUR·
CHASE TliE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER
ITEM. NO UPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED. DOUBLE
REDEMPTION OffER DOES NOT APPLY TO "FREE
MERCHANDISE" COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER 49'
IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH REFUNDS WHEN DOUBLE
COUPONS VALUE EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM.
CIGARETTES AND CERTAIN OTliER ITEMS ARE
EXLUCED BY UW. TO INSURE PRODUCT TO AU
OUR CUSTOMERS, WE ARE LIMITING OUR "DOUBLE ·
COUPON" OffER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFfEE
AND ONE CAN OF GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
FAMILY. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD JULY 29,
1982.

COUPONS

Antron Ill Saxony

at the First Churcfi of Nazarene,
GallipolJs, at 7:30p.m. It will be an
open church wedding.

~~_rboatlrui.

ATTENTION HOMElOVERS!

Stitt-Waugh

POMEROY - Brenda Kae Chappelear, daughter of Mrs. Patty Hoffman, Pomeroy, and the late Wayne
E. Chappelear, and William Nelson
Morris Jr., son of William A. Morris,
Racine, and Mrs. Joan Heckert,
ParkerSburg, W. Va. , announce
their engagement and upcoming
wedding.
The event will take place August 7

Nibert-I..ee

MON. &amp; FRI. - 9 TO 8; TUES., WED., THURS., SAT 9 TO 5

RIO GRANDE - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Winters of Rio Grande announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Sally, to Stuart Morgan,
son of Mrs. Lee Taylor and Arthur
Morgan of Columbus.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
Ohio State University. She is employed as registered nurse at
University Hospital. Her fiance is a
graduate of Whetstone High School
and attends Ohio State University.
The couple will be wed Sept. 5 at
Mountview Baptist Church in
Colwnbus. The custom of open churth will be observed.

Chappelear-Marris

The bride-elect is the daughter &lt;1
Joanne Wears, Wolf Pen, and the
prospective bridegroom is the son &lt;1
John and Bertha Hawley, Route I,
The wedding will be at 2:30p.m.
Cheshire.
July 31 at the home of Margaret and
Wears is a student at Meigs High
John Van Sickle on Georges Creek
School. Her fiance graduated from
GAUJPOUS- Janet Nibert, Ad- Road. A reception will follow the
Meigs High School and is currently
dison, and Jerry Nibert, Gallipolis, open-church ceremony.
serving In the U.S. Marines.
Following the open church r--------,------~------------------ ·--------------a reception will be held at

R

Morgan, Winters

The sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-8-S

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

July 25, li82

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

•

�•

---------------Page-B-6-The Sundaj)-Times-Sentinel
LAURINBURG, N.C. - .,Jtaci
Lynn Clark of Laurinburg, N.C:1and
Rodney Lee Maynard of Kinston,
N.C. were united in marriage on
July 10 at 3 p.m. at St. Luke United
Methodist Church, Laurinburg, N.C.
The bride is the daughter ol Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore W. Clark Jr.,
Laurinburg, and the granddaQahter
of Mrs. Mary Lucas of Gall~~Qis.
Parents of the bridegroom are' 'Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Maynard of Swlslde
Beach, S.C.
The bride wore a formal gown of
chantilly lace over satin fashioned
with a scalloped neckline and accented wfth clusters of seed pearls.
The long lace sleeves were peillted
at the wristS and the full skirt held a
chapel train . The gown ·. "as
originally worn by the bride's
mother. Her floor-length chapel veil
of illusion was attached to a lace
Juli.et cap with chantilly edging,
Escorted by her father, the bride
carried a cascading bouquet of .pink
miniature carnations accented with
white bridal roses.
Bette Grady of Laurinburg · was
maid of honor. &amp;he wore a l~lue
gown featuring spaghetti straps,
scoop neckline and chiffon blluson
waist. The skirt featured a mock
asymmetrical wrap draped to one
side with a string belt. She canied a
colonial bouquet of mixed spring
Dowers with flowing streamera.
Bridesmaids, who wore gowns
identical to the honor attendant's except in pink, were Carol I1I!J,ips.
Sandy Phillips and Diane House, all
of North Manchester, Ind. ~ Their
bouquets were also identical to the
honor attendant's.
Flower girl, Kimberly Frederick,
carried a basket of rose pel!lls and
wore a white lace gown and veil.
Organ music was provided by the
bride's grandmother, Mary Lucas.
Included in the selections was an
original song written and al'l'lilged
for the bride by Mrs. Lucas. Soloist
· was Larue Price.
•
, Officiating minister was Rev.
James Lee.

,.

·Pomeroy-Middleport-(;iillillolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant.-W. Va.

.
a mechanical engineer

'

.I

employed 14
for Imperial Clevite.
•
ji'oUowing a wedding trip to the
New England sta~. the couple will
reside in Akron .
Among out-of-town guests were
the bride's maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Mobbs from Ket·
terlng, England, the groom's pate,r. nal grandmother, Mrs. F. E.
Wetherholt of Gallipolis, also Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Fulton of ColUmbus; Mr, and Mrs. F. C. Welherholt
and Mrs. Charles Sherlock of
Marietta; Mrs. Melvin Mooney and
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Orebaugh
and daughter Tla of Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Richard Smeltzer of Wor·

bie McCartney, sister of the bride,
Heather Lee Bright, the bride's
American Field Service sister, a
senior at Wickliffe High School, and
Martha Susan Wetherholt of
Lakewood, sister of the bridegroom.
Scott Number of Akron, Karl
Wetherholt of cOlumbus, brother of
the groom and Tom McCartney Jr.
of Wickliffe were the bridegroom's
attendants.
A reception was given in the
Brown Derby, Kirtland.
The bride ill a student at Akron
University. The bridegroom is also a
student at Akron University and is

'450

Compare •no

TAWNEYS
JEWELERS

GALLIPOLIS - Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library will be at
the following places the week ,of July
2l&gt;-30:
Monday- C&amp;S J;lank, Route 35, 12
noon-12:15 p.m.; Lewis Drive, 12:1512:30; 35 West Apts., 12:35-1;
Meadowbrook, '1:05-1:30; Scenic
Hills Nursing Center, I :~2; Gallia
Metro Estates, 2:0!h1; Pinecrest
Care ~nter, 3:15-3:30; Rodney"
Village, 4: lr.4 :45; Crousebeck Rd.,
~ : 30; Northup, 5:4.5-6:15.
Tuescjay- Mitchell Rd., 1:45-2:15
p.m.; Centenary, 2:30-3; Graham
School,
3: 15·3:45 ; " Sanders/Adelaide, 4-4:30; McGuireSubdv., 4:45-6:15; Le Grande, 5:~;
Neighborhood"Rd., 6:15-6:45.
Wednesday - Chatham, 1-1 :30
p.m.; Young's Trailer Court, 1:452:15; Silver Bridge Shopping Center,'
2:»3:30; Venz Road, 3:45-1:15;
Kanauga '5th, 4:».5; Johnson's Tr.
Ci., 5:1~ : 30; K&amp;K TratlertCourt, 33:30; Patriot,t-4:30; Gallia,S-6.
Friday - Sluiter, 12 noon-12: 15
p.m.; Crown City (senior citizens),
12:30-1:30; Sl Rt 18, 2:30-3; Hannan
Trace Rd. (Junctin 775), 3:45-1:15;
Waterloo, 4:45-6:45.

424 Second Ave •.

WAlK IN OR CAU fM
AN ~I'OIN fM(NT

448-9510
'A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN"

12-PRICE

1

SALE!

.

""
COOLVILLE - The 40th wedding
anniversary of Albert R. and Doris
Chevalier Eastman will be observed
with an open house on Sunday, Aug.
I, from 2 to 4:30p.m. at Royal Oak
Park Archery Building, Route 7,
Pomeroy.
The couple was married OII'A:ag. 2,
!942, by Edward White. Their
children and grandchildren, Mr. and

Mr&amp;. Ron Eastman and Nora and
GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. •
Laura, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck East·
William
(Buss) Cromlish, Route 2,
man and Jesse, and Mr. and Mrs.
GallipoUs,
were presented with a
Sonny Haynes and Myca, are
cake
in
honor
of their 50th wedding
hosting the celebration.
aMiversary
at
a recent family
Friends and relatives of the couple
reunion.
are invited to call during the open
reception hours. The couple requests . Mr . Cromlish is a retired
Gallipolis Development Center emthat gifts be omitted.
ployee and he and hb wife usually

ANQ

spend win~rs in Elorida.
They are the parents of six
children, Larry, Route 2, Galllpolls;
Thelma, Route I, Crown City;
Josephine, Route 2, Gallipolis;
Correna, Route 1, Northup; Hilda,
Route 2, GalltpoUs, and Roger,
Route 2, Galllpolls.

'

~·

. ,,

....

SAV"E UPT0 .75%

ON SP.ECIAL ITEMS

---

GALlJPOUS - In an effort to
. assi.&amp;t with the Gallia County Junior .

-

I

SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY
"Serving Ohio with 48 offices lie ross the state."

216 w. Main St.,
· POmero.y

'.

Phone: 992-6655

H

I~

I ·

''
I

f

t

I

l

~

J

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Got a tree game
td.et al"d collectof card at an~ parttctpallrlO stOfe
You may also recewo a !roe game ticket andlor
. collector card (please specify) by matting a sell ·
addressed, stamped envelope to Fabulous Fortune
ot Pnzes. P.O Boll 26272, BlrmillQI"'am. AL 35216
Ltmit one IICkot per request, one request per person
per day Each reQuest must De matled sepa rately
Stmply punch out tho portoratod aechons on the .
game !lcket 10 reveal lour gama marX~trs to play un
yoor colloctm card . Some game ttckels conta1n a
marker which states "YOU QUALIFY FOR GRAND
P~IZE DRAWING " II you obta1n one ot these
markers you are eltQtble to efiter the Grand Prue
Drawmgs and the chance to w1n one ot SIX tri ps lot
•
two 10 tiawau or $3 ,000 cash Two Gtand Prize
Drawings w1ll be held AJI valid entnes receiVed by
May 27, !962 Will be olig1tHe for !he hrst draw1ng on
May 28. 1982 Three Grand Pnzes will be giVen
away at th1s li me Al1 valid entries re&lt;:eived within 1-4
dayl after game ends will be eUgible lor the second
draw1ng. Three more Grand Prizes win be awarded
'" the second drawing .

CASH
0...,., c::t.1 E,.,.,...,. . . II, ttR

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PRill

~

Vo\IUE

OOOS FOA
IQAME

I&gt;Atl ES

IICII[f

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170

100 I

•o!

1100

IQI.\1.

BOO

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1

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' I

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IIJ82(1

1 01

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OOOS•OA
QDOSFOA
llGNoiE ' 2'11G.\ME
TICK EU
T IC !oif"T ~
• n•07ll
, ... ~.311

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();Ids vary tte~ oo tne numt:lef 01 Game TICIII!is rou
Obllln The more )'0\J wletl . the ben8f ¥0\H Crlii'ICM of
W!MII'l9 Odds !0 obll"' Orand P1111 Draw•"'il ~ric., and quality
lof ckaW!ngllt aft 1 Ill 52 OOds 1o """' Gfand Pnrt 0.....,1'9(1) .
""'' deper.d on the number ol QUihher s
Fabo.Aoo ! Fottuot ot Ptrltl Senes f'Wlol~ os ~ pll'f'ICI"'
15!1 ~torn located'" Otuo. lnd•na Mochoga.n. Vorvonoa . West
lllf(lll'lll and Kl'!llutll.y
Scheduled ttm~~natoon elate ot lh!l P'omolioo '' Julv 18, 1QI2,
~., , fabulous fOIIV~ ol Pt'ln-ortoc..u-, eoctt whton-"
game ta.ets 1111 OtStnbuteO

••••••••••

USDA CHOICE

.

.

$ 99

Round Steak ......L:.• ••

29
Ground Beef...... !~~ 1

$
49
Ground Chuck... ~8.~
••

Fair, Gallia County Health Dep,artment, 412 Second Ave., will extend
· b,uni for admlnl.i!ration of tuber· ·
culin skin te&amp;ts, The tests~must be
read 48 hours after administered.
The foj\owing schedule for administering and reading· will apply
, during_ next week. Monday: Testa
will be given fnm 8 a.m. to noon and,
,· 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Reading will be
done ihe IIJIII!'hours till Wedneaday.•
Tueaday: Teat. will be gl~ from a
a.m. ' to noon and 1 to 8 p.m.
RM111DP, will be held ~y
d,aring the lllme.hours. WedQeaday:
t.ta will'be given fnlnJ a a.m. to
110011 and 1 tp 3:30 p.m. IJid be read
.dlrlnl the same hours till Friday.
'· 'Pet ... irOrkq in food bootlw are
:~to baye the skin test, There
· wiD benDdllrge. ·
GALUPOUS .:..,IICf lli:orea bave
been 1-.ed tw Q8l1la Academy
liP 8dlld Ill 'w4w IIIIi took the

.Me ACt. llc:alw IIIII lntlrpretallall
..... ...., be pkbd liP Ill tbe
li'I!M!flll'l dill • 1J11. to I p.m.
.....,. ~.,._ ,cll\rfD&amp; the

-··--"'·

$ .09
ToUet Tissue .\R~~L::~·.. ·
H·E~NZ . ,/
$ ·89
Vmegar
.............
~L
.

GRADE AWHOLE FRYERS • • • LB.• 49~
BUCKET CUBE STEAK .. • • • L,B. $249
FRENCH CITY WIENERS • !2 ~z. !•~· 99~

CHARMIN

..

.

•• .

.

BANANAS .• . . . • ~ • • . . • • . L~. 29~
-FLAVORITE MARGARINE .•.. ~s. 3/'1
GRADE ALARGE EGGS ••.•• !X&gt;~· 591;
BANQUET FROZEN TV DINNERSu.ozs9~
~·.:couPON

te\AXWILL HO!.JSE

. 'COFFEE ,
.3 LB.CAN $ 99

HYLAND CHUNK.

· DOG FOOD
. 25 LB. BAG . $3·~9:
· Umit One Per Cllslllllll
Goo4
ll

. ' Olflf

r.nw.

llllr 3l,ltaz .

-

~ ~-~! ~.., ~~tH
11~1
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a.m.

DIAMOND
'

HAWAII

POMEROY - Vacatlan ·Bible
School will be held at the Heath Unl·
ted Methodist Church July 26
through July 30 (rom 9 a.m. untll
11:30

•

,&lt;f

'),000

FORTWOTO oil

: POMEROY -Aug. lis the dead·
line for students wanting to transfer
to West Vlrgtnta University to sublfllt their applications, according to
,john D. Brisbane, dean of admls·
stons and records.

Is .my free checking really free?
'

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH JULY 31, 1982

WIN A TRIP

POMEROY-The Meigs Athletic
• Boosters wlll sponsor a JTlen's softball tournament, (ASA and B and
: C) July 31.and Aug, I. Entry fee Is
: $65 imd two balls. All Interested
· 'teams are ·asked to contact Gene ·
Wise, 992-6224; Wally Hatfield, 992·
· 5669: Charles Cassell. 992- 7873; and
John' Hood, 992-5168. The tourna·
ment wiJJ be held at the General
Hartinger Park.
·

··~

Mr. and Mrs. Crbmlish, 50th

POMEROY, 0.

,f

Announcements

All Summer Merchandise

Mr. ancLMrs. Eastman, 40th
. '

298 SEOOND ST.

Gallia bookmobile

Mondav thru Friday
9AM1o9 PM
saturda\19 AM to s Pill!

•

Sunday 10 am·10 pm

Thursday, July 29 - Bible Study,
1-2 p.m.; Vinton Blood Pressure
Check.
Fpday, July 30 - Staff Meeting,
8:15 a.m.; Mill Trip, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.;
Vinton Bookmobile; Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Craft Mini.COurse, 1-3 p.m.;
Social Hour, 7p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following menus :
Monday
Hamburger
steak/gravy, lima beans, tossed
, salad, fruit gelatin, bran moffin,
butter, rice pudding, milk.
Wednesday - Baked pork chop,
sweet potatoes, spinach, brown
bread, butter, ,fresh fruit in season,
milk.
Thursday - Chicken and noodle
casserole, stewed .tomatoes, green
beans, bread, butter, lemon pudding, milk. .
Friday - t&gt;imento cheese sandwich, buttered peas, coleslaw,
brown bread, butter, vanilla pudding, milk.
Choice of beverage served 'with
each meal.
Meals subject to change without
notice.
"Services rendered on a nondiscriminatory basis."

In Yellow Gold

-Anniversaries.

STORE HOURS:
Mo11.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Hp.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Wetherholt

Best man was Glen Maynard, He is employed as automotive
KIRTLAND - Kathleen Ann Mo-•
father of the groom. Groomsmen division manager for K mart in KinCartney and Jon Clark Wetherholt
were Greg Maynard, Dan Maynard, ston.
were united in marriage on May 15
A reception was held following the
at Old South Church at Kirtland. Of. '
brothers of the groom, and Kevin wedding in the church fellowship
fictating minister was Rev. Douglas
Clark, brother of the bride.
hall. Serving were Mrs. Leon (Bren- · W.Snyder,
Wedding guests were registered da) Hildreth of Laurinburg, Mrs.
The bride b the daughter of
by Michelle Frederick of North Man- Tim (Kay) Maynard of Sumter, and
Thomas and Jennifer McCartney of
chester.
Mrs. Dan (Tammy) Maynard of Sur- Wickliffe and the bridegroom is the
The couple will live in Kinston fside Beach, both sisters-in-law of son of Frank Clark Wetherholt and
following a weddin g trip to the bridegroom.
the late Betty Fulton Wetherholt,
Wilmington Beach.
Aller the reception, relatives and
grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs.
The bride is a Scotland High out-of-town guests and the bridal
Carl Fulton, Mrs. F. E. Wetherholt
School graduate of Laurinburg. Her party attended a pooiside barbecue
and the late Frank E. Wetherholt.
husband graduated from Sockastee held at the home of the bride's
Providing musical selections on
High School, Surfside Beach, and at- parents. A bridesmaids' luncheon the organ was Mn. Arthur Hommel.
tended Clemson State University. was given at The Caned Chair.
Serving as maid of honor Was Deb-

........

GALUPOUS - Activities for the
week' of July 38-30 at the Senior
Citizens Center, located at ~
Jackson Pike, are as follows :
Monday, July 211 - Vinton Site
Exerclsell, 11:30 a.m.; Chorus, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, July 'IT- Birthday -P~rty, I :SO p.m.
·
Wednesday, July 28 - Vinton
Nubition Education, 11:30 a.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.; Garden Club,

thington.

Mr. and Mrs. Maynard

•

~.;:;;;2;;5';;;;;19;;8;;2=.: ;;::::::====:;:: ~~~~~~=~=~!!!!!!!!~ii!~iB~IIipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va .
Gallia seniors
citizens' calendar

'

.

FLAVORITE

'

SUGAR
. 5LB. BAG

$14'

Until One Per Customer
Goo4 Only at Powell's
Offef Elpi1es July ll, 1982

�'
Page- B-8- The Sund a Tim es -Sentin e l

SUNDAY
POMEROY - All students,
grades 9 through 12, who will be
playing foot ball for lhe Southern
Tornadoes are to be at the foo lball fieldhoust• at 2 p.m . Sunday.
CROWN CITY - TI1e Woods
Family will be at Big Four Church, on Hannan Trace Road, Sunday at 10 a.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Harris Baptist
Church will hold homecoming
Sunday beginning with an II a.m.
service with W. E. Curiman.
Other events will include a basket
lunch and singing by the Ambassadors and the Johnson
Sisters. The public is invited to
attend.
LECTA Tabernacle will host
the Ambassador Quartet with
Rev. Wayne Harrison, who will
also preach, on Sunday at 7:30
p.m. The public is invited.
GALLIPOLJS - The Senior
Citizens Center, Jackson Pike,
will hold a gospel sing on Sunday
at 2 p.m. featuring the Grubb
Family Singers and the Soulfinders. The event will be held on the
center's lawn, · weather permitting, otherwise, inside the
center. Those attending should
take chairs. The public invited to
attend.
BRADFORD - Larry Haley
will be guest speaker at Bradford
Church of Christ Sunday at 7 p.m.
The public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - The Singer
!amUy reunion will be held Sunday In the Royal Oak Park
archery building. Lunch will be
at noon.

Po m e

Calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY- The lzaak Walton Club wUI have Its annua l picnic for membershlp, famUy. and
friends, Monday evening, with
supper beginning at 7 p.m.
Members are asked to bring a ·
covered dish, beverages, and
eating utinsels.
I

'Kyger Creek Band Boosters
will meet Mnday at 6:30 p.m. in
the band room to prepare for
band camp.
RACINE - Vacation Bible
School at Racine Church of the
Nazarene will be held July 26-30
from 6 to 8 p.m. Pastor Tom
Collier invites all area children.

TUESDAY
RUTLAND - There will be
skating Tuesday from 7: 30 to
10:30 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center. Adm1ssinn will be $1 for
children and $2 for adults. Those
taking part arc to bring their own
skates.
MIDDLEPORT - Bible School
at Middleport Church of Christ
will take place Tuesday through
Aug. 6 from 9:30 a.m. to noon.
Theme "Jesus Leads the Way to
a Brand New Day." All area
youth welcome.

HARRISONVILLE
Senior
CitiZens will meet at 7:30'p.m. at
the townhouse. Take cookies.
Beverages will be served.

~imeJ .. Ientine!

POMEROY American
Legion Auxiliary, b rew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, juniors and
. seniors, will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.

POMEROY - Ohi o Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will hold a Hawaiian
pool party Tuesday at 6:30p.m.
at the home of Jenelle Haptonstall . Refreshments will be
served. All members are urged to
attend and meet the 1982-33
pledges.
POMEROY American Legion
Auxiliary will have a joint meetIng. juniors and seniors, July 21
'Rt the Post home at 7:30p.m.
M'i!mbers are urged to attend.
POMEROY--A reunlon of old
members of TOPS OH 5709 will
be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Coonhunters building on the
Roc k Springs fa irgrounds.
Those attending are to take a
diet dish. For more Information
former members are Invited to'
call 992-7415.

SCIPIO - Scipio Township
Trustees will hold a regular
meeting July 28 at 7 p.m. at Pagesvtlle townhall.

Can cut energy bills
NEW YORK (AP) -The nation's
schools can cut energy bills up to $2
mllllon a day without Increasing
their budgets, according to an Industry report.
Elementary and secondary
schools can save15to30percellt on
annual fuel bills by managing
energy use better with a timeshared computer system, the study
by Honeywell's Energy Management Information Center reveals.
The time-sharing system allows
schools to share the services of a
central energy-control computer
and Its operators to manage energy
use. The computer, which Is linked
to a school by telephOne llnes, operates air conditioners. heaters,
lights, boUers, motors, pumps and
tans at. peak etrlclency.
Country-wide, the schools could
save from $358 mllllon to $716 mllllon a year by time-sharing a computer without draining operating
budgets to buy new equipment. the
study estlrrfutes.

Old van, old garage
SAN JOSE, Callf. (AP) - In 1976,
two college dropouts r alsed $1,500
by selllng an old van and starting
work in an old garage to design the
!It st line of personal computers.
Now their company Is a leader In
the field with sales expected to
reach $600 million In 1982.

Gallery hours are Tuesday and
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
and Saturday and Sunday !rom 1 to
5p.m.
Coming events are as follows:
July 'ZI p.m.
July 31 evening of
ginning at

Trustees meeting at 8
FAC Goes Country, an
music and dancing be6:30 p.m. at R!verby.

The Blue Grass Gentlemen and
Connie will be featured. There will
be demonstra tlons of clogging and
square· dancing a nd a n oldfashioned bean and cornbread
dlrmer Is scheduled. Tickets are
$7.50 per person and $15 per couple.
They are available at P.J .'s and·
from Jeri Skaggs, FAC director,
446-3834. Tickets should be purchased prior to July 81.

•SPEED BASTING
•MAGIC
BUTTONHOLER
•FLIP &amp; SEW
2 WAY SEWING
SURFACE
•PUSH BUTTON
FRONT DROP-IN
BOBBIN

"":."l.':"!"' '~""' 'SINGER ~.\:: '!:'7.

-.. -

--~-'25o000FF
AMANA RADARANGES
BELOW COST
SYLVANIA TABLE MODEL
COLOR TV'S
BELOWitliiCiiiiOiiiiS._T- - '25oOOOFF
KEROSUN HEATERS

----....____.. _

. THE FABRIC SHOP
ll5W. 2nd
Pomeroy,OH •.
serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

Air conditoning, power steering, and brakes, white walls, tinted
glass, AM-FM stereo, sport mirrors, body side molding and much
more. Brand new.
35
TO CHOOSE
FULL PRICE

'9287 ,

• GMAC-:rBANK FINANCING
I
.
AVAILABLE

FINAL
CLOSE-OUT
PRICES

'25.000FF
ALL UPHOLSTERED
CHAIRS
~ROCIIIII!
. ·~K~ER~S~·..... REG.LAR

· 1169.95 Each

2 FOR '12000
"

FROM AT
. COMPARABLE SA·VINGS

SOX IT TO !EM- CJde81o Wllite S. Carlioo FlU:
111di!i lllto lleHDd bue bredbli'ap tbe poutbiiHy fon

darfag die I«GDDIIIIDml Ill Chkalo S.lllrday. 'lbe plliy
bepJI wbea Wblte Sa Mike Sq1lltel bit tbe b.n back to
Bl1le Jay plteber Dave S_telb, w•o threw to GrUfln. (AP

.

By BILL VALE
Aslioclaled Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Fired
Reds ·Manager John McNamara
said Friday that the end was 'in
sight when Clnclnna t1 began a ninegame losing on June 21 ·and
dropped to 18~ games off the pace.
"That was crucial," McNamara
said of the nine-game loSing streak
that put the Reds at the bottom or
the National League West and
eventually led to his dlsrnlssal Wednesday In favor of Russ Nixon as
manager.
Reds pitcher Marte Soto pitched
10 Innings of shutout baseball June
21 but tbe Atlanta Braves won lt2-0;
the Reds lost the next eight games
In a row.
"We knew In spring training the ,
pitching would be better and the defense would be better but we weren't sure about the offense.
Unfortunately, It didn't work out on
the field," said McNamara.
MeN a mara said he had no regrets and refused to crttlclze Reds
President Dick Wagner. "It's not
knock Dick Wagner time ,"
McNamara said durtng a news
conference.
McNamara d~nled he was at loggerhe.ads with Wagner after the all
star break because Wagner called
up Infielder Tom Lawless without
consulting the coaches.

I

DEALERS WELCOME

'25000 0F•
20% OFF SALE CONTINUES THRU
THE REST OF THE MONTH
•ATo. . . .I III T..

Texas opened the scoring in the
second when Larcy Parrish led off
with a single, was sacrltlced to second and scored on a single by Mike
Richardt
Detroit scored twice In third for a
2-11ead. Chet Lemon drew a leadoff
walk from Rangers starter Doc Medlch, 7-8, raced to third on Glerm
WUson's single and scored on
Trammell's fly to lett field. Lou
Whitaker singled, sending WUson
to third, and Brookens followed
with the Tigers' second sacrifice fly
of the Inning.
Turner gave theTtgers their insu-

ON ALL
LIVING

Chaump named to
'
Pennsylvani~ post,
'

\

'
INDIANA,
Pa. (AP) ~ Former
0
,Ohio State University quarterback
coach George Chaump, who served try where I would have considered
as running back coach tor the accepting a coaching position," he
Tampa Bay BuCCaJieeV! the last said.
three seasons, Friday was named
·Before the college opens Its prehead football coach at Indiana Uni- season camp Aug. 18, Chaump will
versity or pennsylva,nla.
assemble a start of assistants, ln·• Cbaump, 46, a native of Scranton, • cl\u:ung at teast one new tull-tlme
Pa., will begin the new job Aug. 1. aide, Ctgnettl said.
·At Ohio State, he was quarterChaump coached from 1962-1967
back coach under Woody Hayes tor at JOhn Ha'tTis High School in Har11 years. During the period, the rlsbui-g, where his teams compiled ,
Buckeyes won or shared nine Big a 58-4 record and won six straightTen championships and went to six Central Perm Conference ChamRose Bowls.
pionships. When he left for Ohio
Frank Clgnettl, !UP's director of State, hlsteams had complied a :JSIntercollegiate athletics, said game winning streak.
Chaump' s acceptance ot the job
At !UP, Chaump wU succeed
otter "Is proof of IUP's commit- Owen Dougherty, who was bead
ment to buDd Its football program." coach tor three years. Dougherty
' Clw,ump said he was anracted by win become assistant "dean or stu''the very real ~bllltjes !UP his
dent lite and will help with athletic
or elevating Its record ~nd level or department proje&lt;;ts.
competition.''

'co;;~~:S ~r :~~~~J:"~~~:~~

HEADS SWC- Fred Jacoby,
commlnlooer of tbe Mid·
Amerlcau Coafel'l!llce for the
pall 11 yean, &amp;peaks d\lrlng a
news cooterenee In Dallas Friday
after he was blred aa the oew
commlsslooer lor tbe Southwest
Coafereoce. He IJ to take over biJ
new duties no later than Nov. 1.
He was bom In Logall, Ohio, aod
a graduate ol Oblo Slate. ( AP
Laserpboto}.

•. Jacoby new
·southwest
Conference
commissioner
0

0

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Fred
Jacoby, commissioner ot the MidAmerican Conference tor the past
11 years, will become commissioner of the Southwest Conference
by Nov. 1.
In Dallas to accept the post Friday, Jacoby, 54, praised the swc
for Its "strength and great potential.'' He succeeds Cllf! Speegle,
who plans to retire Feb.1 a1ternlne
years In the job.
MAC ottlc!als said a search committee would be formed lnnmedlately to look tor a new
commissioner for that conference,
which Includes 10 schoolS In ·ohio,
• Mlchlgan, I l : and Dllnols. ·
"I will be a lnting a search and
screening co
ttee, consisting or
presidents and athletic admlnlstra. tors, and we will begin the process
Immediately. I have asked for
Fred's assistance during the tr~I­
Uon . and he 'has wllllngly consented/' said Glen DriscOll qf the
' UDtverslty or Toledo, chairman of
~ MAC C9unc11 of Presldellta.
AI MAC comrnlaslotter, JacOby
1711'7 ed expanslo1l 11 the leque 'fnlin llx lllams to 10.
thjder hla ~rshlp, the eonfer-. eooe bepll l(f highly successful .
, poat-aeilaoa basketball tournament. He aiiO lleJped establish the
Callfomla &amp;a,vl wblcl) matdJeS the
~c lllld ~ eoa.t Atl!letjc
0p ' . . . (ooCbeU cllu!Ji*lnS.

ranee run with his !ltth homer of the
year, leading ott the sixth.'
Blne Jays 8, While Sox l
CHICAGO (AP) - Hosken PDwell' s tie-breaking, twD-run single
In the sixth-inning and Jesse Barfield's three-run pinch homer In the
eighth carried the Toronto Blue
Jays to an 8-1 victory overthe Chicago White Sox Saturday.
Loser Dennis Lamp, 7-5, was salllng along with a twD-hltter but ran
tntotrouble In the sixth Inning when
Toronto scored tour runs after two
were out
Dave Stleb, 10-10, was tile winner
but needed help in the sixth lrmlng
from Dale Murray.
Toronto Manager Bobby Cox and
coaches John Sullivan and Ctto
Gaston were ejected from tl)e
game by umpire Dale Ford In tbe
first Inning alter Upsha\V was
called out on a close play at first

'Mac' has no regrets, refuses
to .criticize Reds organiZation

. ~).

ANOTHER '25.00 OFF
HOTPOINT REFRIGERATORS

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CONTRACT

Jerry Turner smacked a sixthInning homer to power the Detroit
Tigers to a 3-1 victory over the
Texas Rangers.
Rookie Larry Pashnlck, 2-3, scattered nine hits In winning his only
complete game of the year.

ALREAD-Y BELOW WHOLESALE

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•!i!!i

drum had an RBI in St. Louis'
four-run fourth Inning, boosting the
Cardinals to a 5-1 victory over the
Houston Astros Saturday.
Right-hander Bob Forsch, 10-5,
scattered 10 hits over 71-3 innings
and pitched St. Louis to Its third
straight vlctocy, getting relief help
from Jim Kaat and Bruce Sutter.
Assisted by live walks, the Cards
made the most ot five hits, all off
Bob Knepper, 4-11, who lett after
four Innings.
· Forsch suiTendered Houston's
only run in the fifth. Dickie Thon
doubled after two were out ·and
made It home on Terry Puhl 's
single.
'
.
'llll!J"S 3; Rangers 1
DETROIT (AP) - Alan Trammell and Tom Brookens hit sacrifice rues In the third inning, and

relay tbrow from Toroato Blue•Jafl' AlfredG GrUfiD

·~u~~~ STITCHES ELEc:moMIC MACHINE

-

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Mike Ramsey drove In two runs, and Ttto Lan-

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WEDNESDAY
HOBSON- Hobson Church of
Christ In Christian , Union will
have a guest speaker Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Dorothy
Whittington wUl speak.

EXTRA
·sPECIAl
.PRICES

EXTRA
S-PECIAL
PRICES

Riverby calendar
GALLIPOLIS - The July exhibit
at the French Art Colony, 53l First
Avenue, Is comprised of the 52 July
4 art show prize winners.

Cardinals win
5-1 ; Tigers top
Texas nine, 3-l

SOUTHERN Local Board of
Education will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the cafeteria at the high
school.

'

!I

McNamara said he stayed with
his previous statement that
Wagner decided the Hneupchanges
that Included inserting Lawless at
second base and batting first, movIng. Ron Oestet to third, putting
Paul Householder In the outfield
and benching Johnny Bench.
Fans were upset when the team
lost George Foster, Ken Griffey,
Dave Collins and Ray Knight from
the 1!l!l team to tree agency or
trades.
·
''I'm not an auto mechanic,"
smiled McNamara. "You can
tinker with an engine but you can't
overhaul!!."
McNamara satd he remains
close friends with Wagner and his
!amUy and with the team owners.
He said he was thankftil for the opportunity to manage 3~ seasons
and had been offered a scouting
post with the team.
"I haVe about 10daystodeclde,"
he said, adding he planned to attend
games at Riverfront Stad.lum and

I · ·- . s~~~~~en

NO REGRETS -lteteotly llrell Cincinnati Reds' Manager Jobo M&lt;!Namara said his final farewell at a DoWDtown.Cincinnati hotel Friday
morning. Alter,a long losing streak, McNamara bod ligures the eod was
closing in. ( AP Laserpholo).
·

sit In the upper deck.
"Baseball's my llfe. I want to be
out there," he said.
McNamara said he had other job
offer\but decllned to discuss them.
He ha's been rumo~ to be under
consldera tlon til replace the retirIng Earl Weaver at Baltimore.
McNamara, noting the Reds decision· to gn with younger playets,
said, "I think they're going in tbe
light direction."
He said' the team could jell at any
"time.

"But this Is a young team thai has
to learn by their mistakes and you
have to do a lot of teaching,"
McNamara said . "All or the
coaches have minor league teachIng experience.''
McNamara said he left a congratulatory note tor Nixon and offered his he lp or advice .
McNamara replaced Sparky Anderson'ln 1979 and won the pennant
and finished second twlee at Cincinnati. The Reds had the best record
In baseball last season.

wants to share wealth

PULLMAN, Wash. (AP) -Paqt chme at WSU.
Sorensen, who painted hoilses tor
He also establlshed a schOlarship
extra cash between football sea- fund at his high "SChool, Northgate
sons In college, says he wants to High of Waln11t Creek, CalU. "This
"share the .wealth" now that he's · Is my way 11 saying thanks to a lot
playing prdlesslonal ball;. ' . ·
'ot people who liave helped me," So, "lt'~ jUst a common courtesy,"
rensen 1!8~ · '
said Sol'elllell, the former Washing"It's the least I can'do. It's tun to
ton State Un!vemty tree safety
be In this pOsition, too," he added.
"It's a· Jot better than painting
wJJp algDed a thn!e-yell!' cxrntract
with the &lt;lnc1Jmat1 Ben&amp;als ~arller houses like I did last summer."
Exact terms of the pact were not
this month.
Incl®ed In Sorensen's ·agrEe- disclosed, but Sorepaen's attorney,
meut with the I!engals Is a program· . Lee.Steinberg of Los Angeles, desto repay his 8Citolarslllp to WSU, crtbed the contract as "lucrative."
cloRate 111011ey to the ~ Club '• A team co-captain ~or WSU last.
aJ1(I a1umn1 association and help season, Somrsen led the Cougars'
pay for a ·knee-strenethentng rna-. dete"'lve corps and helped the

squad to Its tlnes t football season in
50 years. WSU missed earning a
berth In the Rose Bowl by losing to
the Washington Huskles In the season finale.
The 6-toot, 189-pounder finished
his senior year with 8I tackles, tour
Interceptions, five pass deflections"
and two tumble recoveries. He re-· :
celved a long llst of post-season hOnors, Including .All Pacltlc-10 ~ :
team, the Pac-10 all-academic. team and honorable mention oir :
The Associated ~ All Ame*i1 :
team.
·
A lllth-round draft choice, sO-· '
rensen was the hlghest-dtatted roo.· :
kle defensive ·l&gt;ilck at the BenPI!!' ·
rookie training camp .

•

�Page- C·2- The Sunday Times·Sentin.el

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

NFL players may stage
ByTOMSEPPY
Associated p,..... Writer
WASHINGTON (API - The Na·
tiona! Football League Players AS·
soclatlon Is exploring the possibility
of staging Its own all-star games on
cable television If the owners lock
out the players union.
"We feel tha,t. legally, the minute
the players are locked out t ~ey can
go to work where they ple a ~e beca use the owners are refusing to
pay them." said a union source.
who requested anonymity.
He said If the union gets a cable
contract, there would be a game-of·

the-week with the players repres·
entlng the four NFL dJvlslons.
The comments came Friday af·
ter two days of negotiating between
representatives of the association
and the NFL Management Council
The negotiations opened Thursday In the wake of a report that a
majority of the NFL owners sup
port locking out the players union
just before the Sept.12 start of the
regular season unless contract negotiations Improve dramatically.
The Washington Post said a
league-wide lockout Is becoming In·
creaslngly more appealing to the

ow~

,

w. va.

The Sunday Times· Sentiflei- Page-C· 3

July 25, 1982 .

.

~

all-star games on

owners, who want to deny the union
the leverage o! calllng a strlke once
the season begins.
In another development, how·
ever, the union threatened to take a
"job action," possibly a strike, dur·
lng the current training-camp pe- ·
rlod to prove to management that .
the union Is unlfted.
Mark Murphy o! the W8$hlngton
Redsklns, a member o! the union's
e&gt;Cecullve and bargalning commit·
tees, said Jack Donlan, the Man· ·
age ment Council's executive
director, has "publlcly admitted
they'rE' going to test the · union's
I'

August 10 .d eadline· for
entry in senior golf event

'"•
I

,...... madeln!hetwodaysothear· '
streng!h on Sept.' 8. Between !low· ·',,.I
D·c-•
and !hen It Ia JDcuinbent on 111 1o;
)DP. Doplan said the only .Jtem •
show that we~ s!ro9J."
. . , .: . .. agreed on~ !he two sides was that ,.
Ed Garvey, !he·unlan'sexecutlve
r .~ • t¥re WOuld · ~ ,nel!tlnp ~New·,...
dltecjor,addecl: "Wehaveloshow · ·'\ ,. . York •·next , Tuesday and ••
some iollilai'ity .In camp ID show
· • Wedneaday.
• :
: ·Afi!W.Ililitutes later,' Garvey said ...;
we're seriouS." Gprvey deClined to • '
say , what action tbe uniOII rhlgh( .
!¥1 was wrong. "We'U '1JI!I!! here;".·
take.
. . · ·~ " . ,
fl
1\e's'alji.' "We told !hem !he active!
Illl974, the Union· ~ .• ,
play.ets 'need a place to ·work'out, •.•
strudc during l1'alnl!lli eamp: The.
and they told !hem to go to Central ·
clubs countered by holding prel!ea·
Park." ·~ .
·
,
son exhibition games with rookles
Donlan described Frtday's sestree agents and veterans ivpd
Slon as ''less than acrtmonlous,"
CfOS8ed !he ~f lines. . t ;-. ,
~Garvey said, ",':"emadenopro:As Rn lndJCatlol)ofthe1J'aCk0fpfO- •
I ' ~ WJ!atsoever, '
• ,

'

JACKSON - · The 16th annual
Dinner music will be provided by John Weber, Wellston. Frame and
Southern Ohio Seniors golf tour· Helen Downard and Donna Pyle of Morgan are new members this year.
The Fairgreens Ladies Golf
nament will be held at Falrgreens Wellston.
Cowtlry Club on Tuesday, Aug. 21.
Committee persons for this year's Association wlll assist. Frame and
Play will be llrnlted to 100 male tournament are: Bill Morrow, John Gill will be in charge of the goH
goHers 50 years of age and over. Lambert, Tom Mitchell, Bob Willis, events, Morrow will handle . the
Participants will compete by age Ever~lt Morgan, Dave Frame and trophies while Gaskill will be maste r
groups and handiC{Ips for the 18-hole Dan Washam d Jackson and of ceremonies during the tour·
event.
Charles Gaskill, Lawrence Gill and nament dinner.
Martha Murphy, Jackson, ,
secretary of the Seniors goH ·
association said the $38 per person , - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - enlry fee includes green fees, goH
carts, a light breakfast, luncheon
and steak dinner, cooked outalde.
Aug. 10 is the deadline for entries.
Go If ers from a nurn be r of
Southeastern Ohio corrununities are I
expected to compete.
,
URGENTLY NEEDED OIL AND GAS LEASES
This year's tournament wlll honor
ro tutfillluture drilling progams write or call and be sure to Include
two tournament founders, Jack Stlf·
property location and acreage that Is available for lease . Also tnose
thlt have oil and gas leases that are due to expire within one vear.
flerSr. of Jackson and Otto F. Sharp
UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
of McArthur. Both died within the
CALL DENVER YOHQ-245-5508
past year.

r;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

AT.J'ENI) RIO GR,UIDE CAMP- Twelve area
yoaU...receatly look pert Ia Coacb Jolm Lawbom'a Rio
Graude College BillketiJall Camp. Gllllla Couotlano
lllkiDg part ID the camp (front row, from left): Kate
·McKemie, Laura Amlbury, Sae Griffin, Marcia

FIDley, Augle HoUy, Krlaly McCarty, ud Lea Bowen.
StendiDg, .women's camp director, Jamie VaDArsdalea, Nucy EviDB (official), Krls Cook, Theresa
Todd, Sarah EviDB ( coacb), Shelly Dodloa ud reo's
bead coach, Jolm Lawbom.

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MIXED DOUBLES - Roeemary EV.. (aerVlag, above) aDd
busband, Dr. Clyde EV8111, batded Jeu Nibert ud Mull Callterbury·ID
mixed doubles acllon Saturday moi'IIIDg ID lbe A,merleaD Caacer Society
touraamenL
•·

v

•

,...

Valvollne

I

LOCAL STUDENT RECEIVES AWARD- Krl8 Cook, left, of GIDia
SeheOI, receives tbe top free lllrow llhooter a'l!'ll'd at
Coach Joba Lawhorn's Rio Graode C.Uege BulletbaD Camp from
WofDeD'scamp dlredor, Jamie VaoAndalea. Cook made good on 9Z percent of her free *ows Ia earnlog tbe lloaor. Nearly ISO girls from
~~the state parUelpated ID tbe camp.

Royals nip Brewers; Dodgers los~, 6~3 . ~:E~~~ ~~:f~~s~ ~~~~~ . SAVE HUN·
bang, b;lng;," .....'l'hri!E! slhgles - bang, bang,
,bang- and a suicide squeeze later,
the Royals and Qu¥enberry were
. 4-3 winners, and Fingers was the
loser.
Boston was not at&gt;le to take ad·
vantage o! the Brewers' loss and
stlll trails Mllwaukee by a haH
gatne In the AL East following Its
'S-4 loss to Minnesota. Kansas City,
meanwhile, drew within two games
of West Dlvlslon-leadlng CaiHornia,
which lost S-3 to the New York
Yankees.
In other AL games, Texas '
downed . Detroit J.l, Cleveland
edged Seattle 4-3 In lllnnlngs, Bal·
tlmore got ~ Oaklan&lt;j 2·1 and Toronto c)obbered Chicago 7·1.
Twins 8, Red Sox 4
Mlnnes'ota erupted lor·six runs In
the third Inning - highlighted by
extra-base hits by Dave Engle,
Tom Brunansky and Tim Laudner
. - to defeat\ the Red Sox.
Yankees 6, Angels 3
Jerry Mumphrey a·nd Dave Win·
field drove In three ruils apiece, and
pitchers Shane Rawley and Dave
Righetti traded roles to help the
Yankees beat CaiHornla.
Rangers 3, Tigers 1
Left-hander Frank Tanana and
Dave Schmidt held Detroit to just
two hits, and Larry Parrish drove
In what turned out tobethewlrintn8-.
run wl th a sacrifice fly In the
Rangers third Inning.

Indians 4, Mariners 3
Bill 'Nahorodny lined 'a sacrifice
ny to center field In the lith Inning
to snap a 3..J tie. and llft Cleveland
over Seattle. Rodney Craig led oft
the Inning with a single. Rick Manning sacrificed, and Craig was safe
at second when pitcher Ed Vande
Berg's throw was late.
Blue Jays 7, White Sox 1
Buck Martinez and Uqyd Moseby each slugged RBI doubles In
Toronto's tlp'ee-run seventh Inning,
and the B(ue Jays took advantage
of four Chicago errors to score five
unearned runs.
Nallonal League
After a cool June, Dale Berra's
been as hot as July.
c "It feels g'ood and I have to.thallk
(Manager) Chuck Tanner for stick·
lng with me," says the Pittsburgh
Pirate shortstop. "There was a
time he could have sat me down."
Once batting an Ice-cold .183,
Berra has boosted his batting aver·
age nearly 90 points With a .361 pace
In July. That Included a triple and
1 1 F1
p
s ng e r day night to help tlle · I·
rates beat the Atlanta Braves s.o.
After the Pirates took a 1.0 lead In
the first 0 n J ason Thompson ,s sac·
uprising In the second. After Mike
riflce fly, Berra sparked a two-run
.Easier doubled oft the glove of second baseman Glenn Hubbard,
Berra tripled, scoring Easler, and
stayed on third as Omar Moreno
walked.

All Site OtiS L1mtt 12 qts

0~ ~ er~. t4\J

A~demy Hlgb

E

By JOHN NEL'!ON
AP Sports Writer
It just didn't figure. Paul Split·
torff of Kansas City and Bob
McClure of Mllwaukee were locked
in a scoreless duel through eight
lnlllngs.
Enter Dan Quisenberry o! Kan·
sas City (23 saves) and RoWe Fin·
gers of Milwaukee (21 saves) -the
two best relief pitchers In the AmerIcan League. This game, which
staried at 7:35p.m. COT Friday,
eould have lasted forever.
. Instead, Mllwaukee comes up
with three runs In the ninth on con·
secutlve homers ott Quisenberry
by Gorman Thomas, a two-run
~hot, and Ben Ogilvie.
"When we got three -runnmd
then bring Rollle In, you have to
figure we've got them," Brewers
!&gt;ianager Harvey Kuenn said.
George Brett of the Royals con·
curred. "It was a close game all the
way and Spilt and McClure were In
complete . control," Brett said.
' 'Then they get the three runs In the
lop of the Inning and everyone
thought It was over."
Wrong both times.
The Royals got two runs back In
the bottom of the ninth agalnsl
1\icCiure when Brett belted a tworun hOmer. so Kuenn figures Fin·
gers Is the man for the job.
"lfhere's no way to figure this
game," Kuenn said. "You're sail·
; 1ng along and all or a sud~n. bang,

With Moreno striding toward second distracting catcher E!1f! Pocoroba, Berra raced home to giVe
the Pirates a 3-0 lead. The Pirates,
uSing ·Moreno and Berra on !he
·bases, pulled ott the same doublesteal trick In Atlallta1
"!'lot too many cllibs can make It
go,"Tannersald. "It's a secret how
we do It I don't want to t~ll you how
we do It because, you know, someone will read it. It's a true double
steal. We got two bases."
But Berra was
coy. He said
he simply walled tor Pocoroba's
throw to pass Camp's head and he
was oft for the plate.

less

In other National League action,
It was Mqntrea18, San F'ranclsco 7 .
Jn 131nnings; Chicago 7, Cincinnati
5; San Diego 11, New York 4; St.
Louis&lt;;, Houston 2and Philadelphia
6, Los Angeles 3.
·

•

"'•

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Keith
M&lt;;&gt;reland's eighth-Inning blast set
ott an eruption In the of!lce of new
Cincinnati Reds Manager Russ
Nixon.
Moreland belted a two-out, threerun homer In !he eighth Inning Frt·
day night to power the Chicago
Cubs to a 7-5 victory over the mori·
bund Reds and raise Nixon's
temper.
When reporiers rued toward Nix·
on's o!tlce, the manager motioned
toward the · players In the
clubhouse.' .
.
''Go talk to !hem ftrst.l'm heated
up yet," Nlxpn said.
Ten minutes later, he stlll wasn't

•

SM.ITH-NELSON
MOTORS .
.
·.

'

.

.. . ·• POMEROY,
. . . OH. · ·_.
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. ,, .

YOU,WILa.; BE GLAD YOU DIDI

In the last 10 games !or the Phlllles,
who maintained a one-""'"'e
,_., lead

F78 c14
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LomiiZ v.... DIHoiiT·-

I I _ , . , ........ prlcn

"We've been getting this (talk)
all year about no runs. They get
runs tonight and what happened?
... The best pitcher In the league
(Marlo Solo) can't hold It, walked
himself out of the game."

25% off

E'IEilYDAY
LOW PIIK:E!

Electrolllc

IQnhlon

The loss Friday dropped the
Reds' record to :W.OO and ().2 since

Nixon was nam~ Wednesday to
replace John McNamara, who was
!Ired.

Solo set up thewi!IJ!Ing Cubs rally
by walking' Leon Durham and Jay ·
Johnstone with two out In the eighth
and the Reds holding a 5-3 lead.
cahn.
/ Nixon called upon reliever Jim
"!! they eKpeCI to be babied, Kern, 1-4, whose fourth pitch to
they're lull o! It," Nixon said ang- Moreland landed over the left·
rily alter his · team's seventh center field wall.
straight loss. "They get.paid good
money to do their job ... Every~
Moreland was less tallqttlve than
ody's looking !or· somebody to pat Nixon after !he come-from-behind
them on the back. I'll be damned It victory.
I'm going to pat them on !he back
"It was just a fastball that I hit ·
when !hey lose, or even talk to them out of here," Moreland said.
decently.
,
"That's all I wt11 say."
"People come to this park to see
"Moreland Is swinging the bat a
~~. to see It the way It should
lot bettel'," said CUbs Manager Lee
be· played. They're· the best fans, Ella. "He sure got all o! that one
!hi!·. most knowledgeable fans In tonight"

Several Late Mocill' Us8d 'ears Now On Sale
STOP IN OR CALL US AT •••
I

·J•
... ,

s.n

Reg 34•

..

., ~----~--~~~~--~~_.--~----~~

Ph!Wes 6, Dodsers 3
Mike Schmidt and pitcher Larry
Christenson slammed two-'run Itomers to lead Phlladelphla over Los
A'ngeles. The VIctory
· ·was the eighth

£78• 14

· ·~

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Cubs come from
behind, win, 7-5

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1912 BUICK SKYLARK 4 door, auto., air, AM-FM
1912 B\JICK SKYHAWK 2 dOOr, tp., auto., a1r,
extras
I

878• 13

___

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M.ltiiNI

qt. 10W40

p.m., men's cbampiiMIIhlp at 5 p.m. ~ Dalxed. doubles at 7 p.m. The ~ .
public Is IIMted.
.
·

• CONCWDE TOURNAMEI!IT TODAY- The lMZ AmerieaD Callcer
Society Teula TG1111111111eni wlU be CGDCiaded Ia O.Wpella IIIII evea~Ji~,
1be tbrft.41y eveat began Friday atteraoon. Oa left Is Rltl1 CloD, tAIIIJI.
oameut dlredor. Keeping IC!ore oa rlgbt at tilt Forett MDIIIal Coart.otf
Heutle Ave., Ia Bill Gray, generalmaaaaei'GfWJEH.WYPCRIIdlo,.,..
son of lbe toaraameuL The women's c~p match Is slated for S

_

BENCHMARK

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15oz.

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.

Whitacre wins third golf title
Neither ot the two f1nallsts man·
aged more than a o'le-hole lead ·a1,
ter !he fourth bole at !he Kenwood
Counlry Club course. Whitacre won
two holes In a row with pars to tie
!he maicb on !he sixth hole.
"Can you believe It?" she asked
her husband Jolm. "l just hung In
there and kept ~-"
Whitacre won the match on. the
uphill, par,-5 seeond hole. , Qoth
gnlters drove Into a clump ot trees
and had to Cblpback 01110 tiJefali-.
way. KlJn.e wis ~hort wit11 bel'
fourth sbot, 'chipped onto the greeri
and mlsaeda Hoot putt.
~tacre won It by reecblng thl!
green .Wltb 'her fourth sbot. later
sl1ikb)g the wtnnlni ·putt. trom 2%
teet away. .
·
"I1ve been playing this pme'tor · ·
dlliermlaed."
.s )'1!!ll'S, j!liCept tor the tbree,tlmes
·~ 'dl!lemiJnation finally paid wboell I wu prepalll," lbt 1J1kL
ge;wbtm tlbe bogeyed the 38th bble ''Tills l1lle wu tor my 8fi"''''Iii' ..
trl.b.t Sluo'on KlJn.e ~ Warren.
In the dlampkJIIIbJp "'QQUGGI!Jm
w&amp; carded a doubJ.e ~on !he match, Cathy Olok ot DubiiD beat
·e#'a bole
the niatc~play ' Lynn 'nlomploll ~ . ~tl, 2
~
•
' and 1, ID a replay~ the 19110 llate
:it ... tbi lblrd time Whitacre ftDala. Cook, tbe llllter ~ IOUI'Inl

CINCINNATI (Ar) - Pauline
a 55-year-old grand·
mOther from Canton, dJd!!'t come
to the 59th Ohio Women's Amateur
CJiamplonshlp Wtth thoughts of
glory.
Whitacre, a twO;drne champion
· ~ IIIIo the event, just wanted to
enjpy herself;
"I really came down here·just to
·have some tun wilh all ·!he old
frll!nds I see three or four. times a
~,"said Whitacre, WhoWOII the
cli'amplooshiP for !he third. .time
Ft(day In 38 'boles. "I haven't
wotked all that hard on my game.
. ;'!Theil this morlllg ,I real1zed how
fa)\ I bad come, and It !elt sort.of
aoCiil tor an oldster like me to be
Jllil.vJng tOr the whole i))lng and It
~de me a llt tie more
~tacre,

4 or. Sedan, V·6,

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automallc, alr. PS·PB. Lt. bl~e metallic, blue vlnyll,~terlor.
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209·Uppir River Rd.

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•
Page-C·4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

July.2s; 1P82

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

Mailman remembers cancer trek
CINCINNATI (API -Mailman
Dona ld Marrs says he might not
have completed the cancer ru n of
Canadian Terry Fox If he was
aware that Fox's relatives did n't
a pprove.
"I probably wou ld not have done
It If I knew the Fox family did not
want me to," Marrs said, one year
after making hJs trek.
Marrs. a ma ll carrier In subur·
ban Cincinna ti, was Inspired to

complete the Canadia n's journey
after Fox died during a planned
coast-to-coast run on June 28, 1981.
Marrs has an Incurable form of
ly m phoma cancer tha t Is In
rem ission.
Marrs tra veled to Carlyle, Ill., to
continue Fox's " Ma ra thon ot
Hope." Carlyle Is directly south of
the place where F ox's journey
ended.
·Marrs then wa lked a nd jogged to

the mouth of the San F rancisco
Bay, arriving there Oct. 'J:/. His ac·
compllshment helped to raise more
than $9,000 In the Cincinnati ar ea
tor cancer resea rch and probably
more than $1 million nationwide, ·
said Mark Plunkett, spokesman for
the local cancer 'society.
However, Cancer Society olfl·
ctals said the Fox family didn't
want a nyQIIe to finish Fox's trip to
the coast, even though there were
many volunteers.

SENIOR AWARDS- Coach Rllloa Wolfe, Jr.
pl'eleated •pedal sealor awanls to bla sill seDiors
Thunday eveDIDg al Soatbera'sbesebaD buquel Pill-

lUred are Coach HOioll Wolfe, Joe Bob Remaley, Jay
Reel, C. T. Chapman, AileD Pape, aDd !teat Wolfe. Abllelll was Paw Rouab.

White Letters

Jury rules Pryor father of child, hearing set Aug. II
CINCINNATI (AP ) - AnAug. ll .
hearing date has been set to deter·
mine bow much chUd support
boxer Aaron Pryor should pay for a
9-year-old boy that has been Judged
to be his son.

a

In a spilt verdict,
Hamilton
County JuvenOe Court jury decided
Friday that Pryor, the World Box·
lng Association's junior welter·
weight champion, Is the father of

70!60 Series ·

Hi-Performance

At!_twan Tonlelly Harris.
The eight-member Jury dellber·
ated lor 45 minutes betore return·
lng a 6-2 verdict. A unanimous
verdict wasr. 't required.

1.91
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and o ld ti re .

-l!ii.Y

NUMEROUS TRoPIDES -'lbe Budoryu DoJo at
Gallipolis woo t31rophles at the second
BaUle
. of Mlltoo, at Mlltoo, W.Va., July 10. 1be Bodoryu
•· Dolo was second II! tolal trophies woo. Members of
the olub, from left to right, are: FRONT ROW-

More?

Kevin HoDinphead, Alldy DICiemeDie, Se~~~el Jerry
MaMie, ConDie MaMie, Barbara Sheet&amp; BACK

annual

.. ., '

ROW-IUiooda 1lmmo118, "Rarnoaa Leffler, Bob
Burll8, Steve Tbacker, BIDy Glick. Not picturedSteve Schneider.
·

•

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•

. Local karate students earn several awards in Milton event
GALLIPOLIS - Represe ntatives of the Budoryu Dojo, a local
studio providing training In Tae
Kwan Do (Korean karate) , competed In the second annual Battle of
MOton at MOton, W.Va., on July 10,
: winning numerous awards.
· Seven students of the GalllpoUs
:Budoryu Dojo and their instructor,
·Sensei Jerry Massie, met with four
"students from the Jackson branch
ot the 8Qdoryu Dojo, led by Bob
Bums, to lace other competitors in
the townament.
· The Bodoryu Dojo karateka won
13 lrophles, Ipcludlng one first
-place, six second places, six third
:Places and numerours fourth
:places.
' The Bodoryu Dojo was second In
.• total lrophles won, finishing behind
'

the home dojo which sponsored the
tournament.
They did this "even though we
were one of the smallest dojos represented at the tournament,"
Massie said.
Winners from the Bodryu Dojo
were as follows :
Jerry Massie, first place, senior
advanced kata; fourth place, wea·
pons kata .
Barbara Sheets, third place,
under black belt weapons dlvtslon:
third place, women'sgreen belt dlv·
lslon, kata competition: second
place, womens' green belt dlvtslon,
kumlte.
Andy DIClemente, fourth ptace,
Junior weapons division.
Connie Massie, second place,
women's brown belt division, kata

Radial

•

.

competition: s econd place,
women's brown bell division,
kumlte.
·
Steve Schneider, second place,
men's white belt division, kata·
competition.
Ramona Leffler, second place,
junior girls' white belt divisiOn,
kata competition; second place.
junior _girls' white belt division,
kumlte•. ·
Rhonda Timmons, third place,
junior girls' white belt division,
kumlte.
Bob Burns, second place, middleweight dlvtslon, lull contact karate.
Jerry and Connie Massie, third
place, precision kata.
The Bodoryu Dojo wlll compete
next In the West VIrginia State
Championships to be held Sept. 11
In Charleston.

*AI

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VV'ny wait? Now's the time to
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like to help you all we can! ·
Don't delay any longer! Come In today
to speak_with one of our h&lt;!&gt;me .
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ad\/is6rs for facts!
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·•
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July ~5, 1982

Page- C-6- The Sunday Times -Sentinel

rrrack, fi~ld evenJs begin
National, Sports· Festival

in.

, -·
•'

I

RHUBARB - Meigs Coach llomer Smllb, wllb
back to camera, expresses biB dlssaiiBfacUon over a
controversial call at first base by Umpire Farrgo

duriDI Friday even1Dg'1 Amerlcau Lelloa

DIJtrlct

Toumam.ent game at Albe111 Ill wblcb Melp weal
dowa to defeat, 7-4, At left II Melp Cclecll Mike

NesaelroacL
·&lt;·

AlbeuiD wblcb Meigs wu defeated lly,a 7-4 •
·/olldenoa, Lancuter'astandout
hurler, bad pitched on Tbunday.

BACK SAFELY- Melp player Pldl 1tiD1 dive~
back to lin£ t..e u Lucuter tint Acker Ailen ADdenoa prepare~ ' to tUe lbe pickoff attempt durlllg
Friday's Amerlcaa LepJa DIJtrlet Toaraey game at

•ll:aPI"

·Lanc~ster rally tops ·Mei:g s ~ ,
By SCO'lT WOLFE
Scoreboard, led ott the llrst Inning
ATHENS - The Meigs Ameri- wilb a two run rampage.
can Legion baseball team seemed
Kent Wolfe sparked lbe rally with
to be well on Its way to another lm- a single, Gallipolis's Phil Kinghampresslve win during the American mered a triple, and Terry Wayland
Legion District Tournament bere · ripped a one run double. Cottrill
Fnday, but the ceiling caved In on · hung on for the Lancaster club to
· the )ocals In the eighth Inning as retire the side, but Meigs led 2-0.Lancaster rolled to a 7-4 win.
'
After four scoreless half-Innings
Lancaster rallied for five
In Lancaster rallied to knot the scOre
the eighth frame when It pounded at 2·all when Persons singled, Burout six of Its nine hits, while taking ton singled, and Meigs had two conadvantage of two costly Meigs er- secutlve errors, plating two runs
rors. Overall Meigs had f¥ er· .tor the eyentual winners. •
rors, Its hlghest miscue total this
Lancaster's Cottrill and JeH
season.
Wayland of Meigs settled down for
Otherwise, Meigs played Its usa pitcher's duel over the next three
ual Intense offensive .game, had a Innings before Meigs struck again
healthy p(tchlng game, .and made In the seventh frame. Tony Rlffie
some ~ fielding plays thaf led ott with a walk, Joe Bob Hemsputthelocalslntrontformostoflhe ley singled, andKentWolfellned a
game. Meigs, the visitors on the double, biB third hit of the game.

runs

READY - Terry Waylaad, studoul catcber for
lbe Meigs American Legion team wllo bu aiM!IIollll'
sblp 10 Kent State, poiJes biB bat to taku cut duriDg

lbe district toomey pme •llllllt LIDCUter Frld_liy
eveniD&amp;. Meigs 1011 the ouiiDa, 7-4. Meigs woa Salllrday'sgameovei'MurrayCity, lU.

The two run shot gave Meigs a brief
4-2 lead.
'
Meigs .split at the seams In the
botlmn of the eighth round w~n
Lancaster _un!edshed Its Ilea~ ar,
tillery . .Wayland breezed thrOugh
the entire game, aUowlilg just tljree
hits before Lancaster pulled the
string for six 8a!etles In 'the eighth,
!or a 7-4 win.
Leach jllcke4 up the wlil !or Laocaster In relief otCottrtll. Thill pair
combined for 14 stl'lkeouts alld just
three walks. Jeft-\Yllyland suffered
the Joss ~plte , pltcp!ng' well. He
fanned nine and walli:ed only three.
Meigs played Murray City Saturda;v at 11 a.m._ln the losers bracket.
Batteries: .
, Wayll!nd,(LP), and Wayland.
·cotrUI, Leach,(WP.) ·and A.
Young.
· ·

By 1.1\RRY SIDDONS
AP 8porta Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The
spotlight has shone brightly on
Greg Louganls throug)l the opening
days o~ the National Sports
Festival.
The 22-year-old diver from MJs.
slon Viejo, Calif., has been the undisputed star Of the first three days
of competition, taking one gold medal and leading \he race for another
with the help of a near-perfect
performance.
B!JI Saturday, Louganls made
room for most of theother2,600athletes entered In the fourth edition of
America's Olympics. ·
Events were held In 22 sports, Including the first of two days of track
and field, where Carl Lewis was the
featured athlete In the long Jump.
Also starting Saturday were such
sports as baseball, boxing, so!tblill,
cycling, roWing and wrestling. And
diving and flgui-e skating, which
got under way days before Friday
evening's oftlclal opening ceremonies, were on the list, too'.
Finals were slated In the
women's platform diving, and the
skating rink had the short program
tor pairs and compulsorles In the
dan,te.
Louganls and the rest of the men
divers had the day ott, waiting unlll
today to battle !or the platform
crown and the final two spots on the
U.S'. team In .next week's world
· aquatic championships In
Ecuador.
·
On Fnday, he captured the top
spot in the prellmlilarles, totaling
599.73 points to ~.IY7 !or runner-up

Bruce Kimball. of Ann Arbor, cause of an Incomplete In a history
Mich. The lead dld not come easily: Coutse. That, he fel!ls, was one of
Louganls won the men's 3-meter the best thingS that ever happened
•springboard Thur!;day nliht, then to him as an athlete.
had to return to the neiv $21 mllllon • ''I stayed home a lot and relaxed.
1ndiana University Natatorium I didn't have l,IXXI races to run like I
· Fiiday afternoon for the platform did last year," he said. "I could call
my'Own shots, choose the mee~ In
prelims.
"Today was a little rough. I'm which I wanted to compete.
"NoW, I feel more comfortable,
exhausted," he said. "It's tough goIng from the springboard to plat- more resled. Last year, I had sevform. You have to rearrange your eral sub-par meets l)ecabse of all
thoughts. In the springboard It's the events I had to run. This year,
timing. In platform, It's explosive I've only long-Jumped three times
outd'oors; compared to eight by this
strength."
Explode was just what the Uni- time last year. And last year, I
versity·of Caillonlla-lrvlne student never was jn 'a meet In which I ran
did on one dive - an Inward 1~ 1n less than two events."
At the Festival Saturday, Lewis
somersault from the pike position.
was
on the400-meterrelayteamfor
Five Of the seven judges gave him
the
South,
a quartet that also In·
·perfect scores of 10; the other two
eludes
Stanley
Floyd of Houston,
had him at 9.5.
"It's strange being thought of as Calvin Smith of Alabama and Mike
the top diver," Louganls said. Miller of Te~~~~essee.
The Festival, designed by the
"When I was younger, I was the
U.S. Olympic Committee to. give
underdog. Now I'm expected to hit
young amateurs a chance at topevery dive."
Wendy Wayland led the women's flight competition In non-Olympic
platform field, with 415.62 points af- years, was officially opened Friday
ter Friday's preliminaries. Chris night, two days after the dlvblg and.
Seufert. of Ann Arbor: was second figure skating started.
A crowd estimated at between
at 411.62 after taking the silver medal In the woinen's springboard 35,IXXI and 50,IXXI · jammed the '
American Legion Mall and MonuThursdaY night behind Megan
ment Square to listen to bandS,
Neyer.
• At til!! Track Stadium Saturday, watch the parade of athletes and
Lewis was favored In the long see two participants from Indiana·
polls, basketball player Kenny~­
jump, an event In which he has the
lowe and archer Becky LlgJ¢1,
year·~ best mark - 28 feet, 3
light the Festival Flame.
Inches. Only two other jumpers In
Later, an estimated i6,&lt;XXJ'people
, history have cleared 28 feetlegall)'Last spring, Lewis was declated attended a show at Market Square
Arena featuring comedian Bob
scholastically Ineligible to compete
Hope:
•
for the University of Houston be-

ATIILETES GREET HOPE - ComedlaD Bob
Hope IJ greeted enthulasUcally by members of tllree
ollbe teams wblcb are competlllg Ill the NaUoDai Spor-

Sixty-nine Browns report to camp
MENTOR, Ohio (API - All 69
players scheduled to report to the
Cleveland Browns' preseason
camp this weekend have arrived,
the National Football ieagoe team
said.
The-players, Including 45 rookies
and 24, veterans, w~re to undergo
physical'examlnatlons Saturday In
preparl!.IIOn for the first team prac·
lice today.

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

Has many talents

.&amp;JJ ~-c.afi

CARDINAL
BARN
BUILDINGS
.
NOR11f
DaytoaRotbHigiiSebool (No. 44,,
• a nqmlag back for . Sou_tb, geta oowbere In lint qurter acUoa at lbe
: MUaWon Tiger Stadium Friday. Tbe North won, 3W. (AP Laserplloto).

.

North rolls over
. _S outh by 32-0 count
By CHUCK MELVIN
Walsh, this one from 37 yards out,
AP Sports Writer
as the North made if22-0at the half.
MASSILLON, Ohio (AP) - MasThe teams ·traded punts to open
sU!on High School linebacker Tim the second half before the North put
Manion saved his best !or last.
together the only exterided scoring
.• Manion, playing for the last time drive at the contest.
In his home stadium, recorded the
Wooldridge ran for 19 yards from
first touchdown pf his .high school hls own 20 to start the march, and
career and set up two other scores quarterback ·Bernie Kosar of
'Wlth blocked punts as the North · Boardman fired a 29-yard pass to
stars blanked the South 32-0 In the Dana Wright of Roosevelt to set up
Ohio High School All-Star football a 28-yard Von Wyl field goaL
game Friday night.
The North took advantage of one
, The margin was the most lop- more South mistake for Its final
$ided in the 37-year history of the touchdown. Tackle Andy Carey of
Whitmer stripped the ball from
f!Bme.
. "It's the first touchdown I've South quarterback Tcidd Rollins of
scored since junior hlgh," said Zanesville at the South 3-yard line,
Manion, a 6-4, 215-pounder bound . setting up a 1-yard tll\IChdown. run
for Georgia Tech. "I couldn't be- by Steve Johnson of Yqungstown
lieve II myself."
Mooney.
The score came during the seManion was IUliJ1ed the game's
cond quarter, '!'hen he stabbed a outstatldlng defensive player, gath-.
screen pass ~ by South quar- ering 20 of 22 ~porte?' votes. Wool- ·
terback Jon-Jon Thomas · of Wa- drldge, an Ohio State recruit who
shington Court House and caiTied the ball nine times tor 55
scampered 22 yards to the end mne yards, was named on 10 of 22 ballots
to put the North up 12-0.
to pick up the offensive honors.
; Manion had Intercepted only one
pass during his entire senior
Time out, not in
seasi&gt;n.
, · "It's my last game In Tiger StaNORMAN, Okla. (AP) - Thti
dium," he said. "That makes II feel
center
of the Oklahoma basketball
extra good."
.
• Manion's blocked punt midway team, Charles Jones, Is calllid "Big
through the llrst period was co- Time" by biB teammates. That
.vered in the ·end zone by Mike Foor brought on some confusion In a
of North Rldgevll!e, -and biB second- game last winter.
eoach Bllly Tubbs asked one fl.
quarter block set up an 8-yard
his
playel'$, David Utile, tO call
touchdown run by John Wooldridge
Utile Immediately sjlouted:
time.
.of Akron Central-Rower.
'Time."
That slatted the coafu·
: An Interception by Wlllle Simpslon.
The
Soj)Jier
players passed the
son of warren Western Reserve
ball'
to
Jones
In
tbll
expectation that
· ,paved the way for the llrst pi two
he
would
take
a
shot.
field goals by AJ Von Wyl of Akron
;'

Boll ErwiD, CG&amp;cb; Shane Jobuon, Scott Davis, Chris
Broyles, Sean Deckard and Keltll Angel. Back row -

SENATORlfREPEAT- Tbe Gallipolis SeDBton
captured their aecoad strlgbt little league cbampolllblp In city recreation department's summer
program with a 1~2 seaaon reeord. Members, ~ the
198Z champiOIII are, flni row, left to right - Patrick
Parsona, Dale Lucy and Steve Greene. Middle row -

DOUBLE BO"WL
STAHlESS SlEEL SIM&lt;

Robl Young, David Loag, Jobn Mallzewakl, Mark
Bertleb, David Bloomer and Jeremy Spencer. Absent
-Sean Harris, Cbrls Craft and Ralpb Young, coach. Bobby ErwiD photo.

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The dates !or those games are:
Sept, 17, Point Ple8!l8nt; Sept 24,
Athens; Oct. l,lronton; Oct. 22, Logan; and Oct. 29, Waverly.
Checks for reserve seats should
be made out to the Blue Devils
Boosters -Club. Resen:eseatmoney
goes to the school's athletic
department.
·
Business members to ttle Blue
Devils Booster Club wlll again be
$10, and IndiVIdual members wlll
be$2.
A dlite tor the annual "Meettbe
Team Night'~ wlll be announced
)ater. Boostetswlll conduct a drawIng for the remainder of the reserve
seats for Individuals who buy club
business memberships and lndlvid·
ual memberships that night.
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" They have !lve exhibition
games to learn in, " Kush said.
"Both of them are bright kids with
strong arms. and they've been im·
presslve in practices this week. We
!eel that they're capable of doing
the job or we wouldn't have drafted
them. Now we just have to give
them a chaqce to prove it."
Landry, who was placed on waivers, had been Jones' backup quarterback since he was obtained by
the Colts !rom Detroit in 1979. Veteran David Humm started one
game last year !or Baltimore after
he joined the team as a free agent.
Rookie Ron Meehan !rom Towson State Is also trying out for quarterback, but the real contest !or the
starting spot Is expected to be between Pagel and Schlichter.
Landry's departure will put more
pressure on the rookies to succeed·
this fall, Pagel said. "Having Greg
here made me relax inore. We always had Greg to lean on. but now
that's been removed. Now we have
to take charge."

DENVER (AP) ;_ Alex English
of the Denver Nuggets Is a man of
many talents and uses all of them.
In addition to being a sharpshooter on the basketball court,
English Is &amp;lso a lpBn of letters. He
Is currently writing a book of poetry, which the Denver team Is helpIng him to publish.
"I'm not In It to make money,"
English said. "I write for pleasure.
I've always been Interested in wrttlng and it comes naturally to me. I
am not looking for recognition in
wrttlng. I just want to share some . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - - - thoughts with other people."

·Annual Gallipolis Blue .Devii .Boosters
· membership .drive will begin Monday
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
membership drive for the Blue
·Devils Booster Club begins on Mon'day, according to a club
spokesman.
· Tom Jones wlll be the chairman
of the drive and wlll also helld the
'sale of reserve seats, theclul{sfllm
sponsor donors and "Blue Devil
Clan" members.
· Film ·spoliSors contribute $110 tor
the purchase of football film for
each game. ,
Blue Devil Clan membeJ;S contribute $100 to the GARS Boosters
Club to enable. the organlzat!oil to
, further Gallla Academy, High
'.
~
-School'S athletic pt'OJUam,
·
: ReserVe seat tlcke\S .for GAHS'
' five home games are llg8!n $12.50.

The rest of the 96-man squad IS to
report next Friday.
Among the veterans who reported Friday was quarterback
Brian Sipe. who Is expected to be
seriously challenged !or the club's
starting job by third-year pro Paul
McDonald.
The Browns' camp Is being held
this summer at Lakeland Community College, after seven years
at Kent State University. A schedulIng coriruct with Kent State forced
the move.
Meanwhile, at Towson, Md ., the
departure of veteran quarterback
Greg Landry leaves the Baltimore
Colts with three rookies and an
eight-year veteran who has only
one National Football League start.
But Coach Frank Kush says he Is
confident that rookies Art Schlichter from Ohio State and Mike Pagel
of Arizona State can !Ul· the void
created by Landry's release on Friday and the trade that sent veteran
quarterback Bert Jones to Los
Angeles.

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during all evening celebration ol lbe openiD&amp; of lbe
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SPr.CIAL "~:iiiP MEN'S

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Page-C -8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.Leaders
WDICAN l&amp;Wllli:

By 'hie AMocWed ,..._

Elo!!ton

~

Balli mort'
Nf'W Yurk

49
46

D&lt;&gt;tnJI I

4ti

Toronto

44 49
WI'Mem Dlvilloft

a.,. • ...,

~I

:1!1
41
&lt;64
0

- ~ 11
-~

4."145

Ca llfomlu
KaM;tS City

tor, Milwaukee, 7l: Ham~

1

1'l: Evant, Bolton, &amp;5;

nla, 65.

,..

-

LuziMid, OUcago,
waukeE', 65.

.:W..1

2 .

-10

CIRIJvte,

Mll·

HITS: Garcta, Toromo, W ; Yount, Mll·

City, Ul.
DOUBI..D:

56
14
!\3
.41 1 H
J2 lil
.ll7 2 1 ~
li'TidaY1 GafJlell

White, Kanua Ory, 2'9;
Y~nt, MUwauker, 16: Lynn, Callfornla,
26, Evana, Dolton. 24; Rlpkftt, B.tltlmcn
:U: Cooper, Milwaukee, 2l: eow.n,'

Tl&gt;xas l Dt&gt;troll I

Sl&gt;attlp. ~

Ck!"/pland 4, SeaUie 3. II ln11ingt
Bultlmort' 2. Oakland I

K.aru.as Clly 4. Mllwaulu!P l

Seatt~. 6.
HOME RUNS: ()R:tlvlt, MUwa~. 2.1:
G.Thornu, Milwli}lilet, 23; R.t.Jackaon,
C.Ufomla., 23; Thornlm. Cleveland. 22: ...-

111 ~roll, 2

California at New Yorll
~attk&gt; at Ot&gt;veland

Cooptr, MIJwaukeeo. tl.

Oak.liand at Baltlmon.&gt;

STOLEN bASEs: R.Henderlon, O.k·
land, 89: Carda, Toron10, ZJ; Wathan,
KaJUa City, 2tl; J .Cruz, Stattle. 25 ; LeF·

Borilon a t Minnesota
Toronto at Ch!cBKO

NAnoNA.L,LEAGUE

w

St. l...ou.IJ

L

Pel.

GB

Sl

.a

~

42

.!118

.5'/tl

PIII... !Jih
Mon!T'I.'al

49 ' (3

.533

49

Nt'W York

&lt;~

-~
-~7

Chicago

:n

3~

4

lOY..
IS

() 57
.C12
WMHIIDiwWml

Atlanta

Seon
Loa

44

!..
1

56

D6tao
An&amp;'elft

,;)

ClnciMIIU

U

51

York. 98: Ec~. Bolton, 9&amp;: BPatne,

SMittle, ...

.«&lt;I
.!!63

.:rn

~

44

San Franrllco
HOJJtoa

ll

5Z

5

41

U

.Ml

H!,i

3t

60

.362

23

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

N.t'IION.Uol.Eo\Ollll:
BA.mNG UWtl ..tl) : Oilvft", Monlrul. .319: kqbo. · .319: T.......
PlttJbui'Jh. ..m: LandrNwr. l..ol Anlfe-IN,
.310: Carter, Mon~JW.I, .D.
RUNS: Lo.Smlth, St.LoWs, 19; _Murpny,
Atlanta, &amp;J; DIWIOn, Montml, 67; Sud·
""'· O!kaao. 1!8: S&lt;hmldo. Phtladelplilll.

8
U%

.463

PHtlblliJtl6, A.U.nli 0

Chlcaao 7, Clnclnnatt

~

S.n Dietfo U, New York 4
Ptllladrlphia 6, U. A.ngt&gt;lcs 3
Montreal 8, Sin FranctJoo 7, IJ lnnlnp

A.tlllnta at Pltlllburwh
Hcwton at St LoWs
C1tlcqo at Clnc!Mall
Phl.LadPiphJa at La! ~elel

San OieQo

BASEBALL
American Lupe
TIGERS- Placed

ro:c, p!!cher,

011

Mtlt

the 21-day dlublt"d llat
purch11t'd tht' ro nGumpert , pitcher,

etft'CIIVl' Ju ly 19 and

of

Dave

E'va navll!t' of the Amcr!can Asaoc l• ·
lion.

FOOTIAU.

• _ ...Na&amp;lonal F.o~ball Luave
8AL TIMORE COL TS-Rt&gt;lf'ased
CHI CAGO
110n , df'fenslvt'
Ho~s -

Gary

linema n, and Huun

ton. corntrback.
NEW

ENGLAND

PATRIOTS-

··

An·

nounced
" SU~ar

tht

reurement

of

Ray

Bear' Hamilton. nose llc klf.
NEW YORK GIANTS-Piacfd Wll 111
Carolina. llntbackfr . on thf' lnJu~

FRAN CISCO

49eu-S! gned

Montana . quarterback, to 1 aerh~• offour
one-yearcontracta.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERSWaived
Tony Sam~la , tiR:ht el'\d: and re·
IeaRd

David Clark, drfenalve end .
WASHIN GTON
. REDS KIN SWalvt'd
VInet' Roauaky. tight elld, 11nd Georxt&gt;
Lf'wla, linebacker.

HOCKEY

Nulo1al Hockey

Lea~J~e

_ ST.LOUIS BL UES-SIII:Iled Bernie

erkO. forwa rd . and Brian Sutter, forward.
COU..EGE
INDIANA ( Pa .) -Name-d
Goo ...
Chaump head foolball roach.
SOUTHWEST CONFERENCENamfd
Frfd Ja('()by comm issioner .

'

4 ft. X 8 ft. X.l/16" WAFER BOARD

MULTI • PURPoS.EBOARD

COMING TO PT. PLEASANT, WEST VIRGINIA
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Racing results

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1'III1TLI:OOWN
NORnt RANDALL. Ohio !API - Oyde
Martln Kuldfd Ceintlal Puftr to victory
Frtdly ln thf IN1ure race at Thiltledcnm.
CNstteJ Powr ran the- mlle &amp;Dd 'lO y•rds
tn 1:4610 J11Y M.ll, f,UI} and S1Z. Sfeond.
~ SoAN:y ~Itt I:UOand 12.10. whtlt' Pftl
y . Bon .... 13.at.
A crowd Ill ~"Ill .._..s Ml1U18.

'4 ~7o"
-

Flying Fred Curry

Big Bob White

COLUMBUS. Ohio lAP) -We Do~.

victory owr Chrllty

Sluggers blank
Racers, 15-0;
Senators claim
LL championship

PL"S TWO MORE MATCHES

, Red Sox
" Yankees · x

Padres · x

• While Sox
x· One game left.

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last week of r•tketeerlng. He Is followed by defense attorneys (left behind Litavoll's batk) Ralph Sperll and
l(rtght) Angelo Lonardo, who defended other men
charged In the tase. ( AP Laserphoto) .

'" Buc how can you speculate? How do you know he
wouldn't have gotten bigger and run"'them out of
town ?"
ll .was the large number of people Involved, coupled
with some Important mllilakes, that led to tlie famUy
unraveling, said prosecutor John Sopko, an attorney
for the federal Organized Crime Strike Force.
"" lt" s too bad somebody already used the title, "The
Gang That Couldn"t Shoot Stralght," 1Sopko said, ref·
erring to the comic novel. "These people made some
real blunders."
FBI age nts searched Ferrlt1o's car and found the
registration for the getaway vehicle used ln. the
Greene slaying. .G rlfttn said record&amp; showed the
bomb car a nd getaway car were registered the same
day. probably by lhe sam e person.
Using a sketch by an artist who was driving near
the sile of the Greene slaying. agents !de n tilled Fer·
rltlo. He was ja iled In Cleveland. but the famUy did
not contact him or even send a lawyer. Grlltin said.
"'So he reached uul lo us a nd offered to give us aU the
delalls of Che Danny Greene murde r ."
Before the Greene murder. FBI agents posing as
college stude nts had renled an apa rtme nt across the
street from Licavoli's house lor round·the-clock
surveillance.
While Licavoli was on vacation, agents obtained a
court order and entered the house, where they
planted an electronic ""bug·· In the wall or his family
room. in tape·recorded conversations, Calandra and
Licavoli were heard discussing the Greene kllUng.
'"They eventually found the bug, but by that time
the damage had been done." ' Griffin said. Prosecutors feel Ihe tapes were a key to the convictions, since
the jurors asked lo have them replayed during
dellberations.
Ferrltto, who had cestlfled In the defenaants' state
trials. backed out of his plea bargain and took a sixmonth contempt sente nce rather lhan testify In the
10-week federa l trial. ·· w e·re prelty sure the family
gol to Ferrllto."' said one fede ral Investigator.
Bui the prosecution team won a key battle when
U.S. District Judge William K . Thomas allowed tnem
lo re·read Ferrlllo"s lestlmony from previous Uials.
Sopko said the government would have lose the case
wlthoul the ruling.
Only Llcavoll a nd Ca landra are free on bond. The
others already are serving prison sente nces lor either
federa l or scale cha rges slemmlng from Greene"s
death.
All six will be sentenced July 30.

•

l '

Pa ul Blythe, program director for the State Labor
Commission in San Fra ncisco. said the law prohibits
children from working after 6:30 p.m.
"Under no circumstances should children be work·
ing at that hour," he said.
A spokesman for Warner Bros., Rob Friedma n,
said It was unclear who had hired lhe childre n.
My·Ca's father. Daniel Le. and Renee·s mother
were on the sec and watched their children die. "I saw
everything," said Le, a psychologist with the Los
Angeles Cou nty Department of Mental Health.
The girl "was not an actress. this was a first·l lme
thing,'' said a man at the Che n residence who ldentl·
fled himself only as a friend of the family.
Crew members had burled several mortars filled
with gunpowder and gasoline a round the 50-foot -wide
river that runs through Indian Dunks Park. a privale
motorcycle race course about 40 miles north or Los
Angeles frequently used as a setting tor war scenes.
The Bell UHl·B helicopter, s lmilax;,.to models used
irt Vietnam ana decorated to resemble a combat
chopper, was strafing Morrow and the children wllh
fake machine-gun fire. Cameras aboa rd the aircraft
. were rolling during the scene and should help provide
a record of the accident, Investigators said.
"The first blast was outrageous,' ' said ass_ls ta nt
camera operator Randall Robinson, 3:\, who was on
the chopper. " We got blown out of the sky. II wasn't
necessary for us 10 be that close to all the explosions.
'"We knew It was too strong and we Immediately
tried to get out of there. We could see everybody on
the ground sea tiering."

SITE OF FILM FATALITJES- The wreckage of a
helicopter used In the filming of t~f Warner B~os.
movie version of " Twilight Zone" lies along a &lt;reek
fled ·at Indian · Dunes Park, 40 miles north of Los

Angeles. J"he helicopter crashed Friday during a VIet.
nam war sequence, decapitating veteran actor Vic
Morrow and two young &lt;hild &lt;ostars. ( AP Laserpboto).

.,'

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Ruppert defense
will consider appeal

,
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Dr. Jerry Graham

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GALUPOUS - The Sluggers
blanked the Racers, 15-0, in a girls'
senior league softball game on
Memorial Field Friday eveni_ng.·
The victory virtually assured tpe
Sluggers of the 1982 league championship.
The Sluggers also scored a !HI victory over the PacEttes.ln Little League.play, the Senators
won their second stright title with an
8-0 victory over the Padres. Rob
Yoong and Dale DeWeese engaged ·
in a tight pitching duel. The Sens
scored seven runs in the final rung to
break the game wide open.
In girls' junior league softball, the
Sainls edged Addaville, 12·11, for
their first win of the year. The
Shanirocks downed the Stars, 18-5.·
In men's slow pitch softball, Marchi's downed the Old Brick Tavern,
36-3, ·~n.d canaday Realty edged the
Gallipolis Merchanls, 7~.

Summer league
standings...

+

•VI-

The Lowman

nla;ht at Scioto OI:M'nl.
We Do H•WY pUd l1JD.Il:llandl3.00for

OR
~ PAINY.

·' ·•7." •.

The Killer

t

driVt'll by Tmy Holton, covered the milt ...
1: •5 to Wlr1 Ute featW'fd tlblth net Fr1day
l Y.! -~

The Renegade

TAG TEAM

tKliOTO DOWNII

a

·n-

By KATHLEEN CARROLL
~!!!UlCiated PrisS Writer
CAST~C. Gallf. (AP) -Two children killed with
actor VIc Morrow. by a helicopter " blown out of the
sky" during filming of a violent battle scene may
have been working at night in violation of child labor
laws, officials said.
Morrow, a 53-year·old actor who usually played
tough guys with a soft heart, and the two youngsters,
both 7, were decapitated Friday by a spinning rotor
after the aircraft - hovering over a mock Vietnam
' struck by debris from explosions slmu·
village- was
la tlng a bombing raid .
Morrow was beSt known for his role as Sgt. Chip
Saunders, a gruff, unshaven tougti guy in the televi·
slon show "Combat." The popular series set during
World War II ran from 1962 to 1966.
He and the two children were running across a
shallow river when the helicopter plummeted 30 ~o 3:\
feet after Its call was blown off, catching th~m with
Che main rotor and crashing In sand and water at
about ·2: 311 a.m. Six others, including the pilot and film
crew .aboard IJ!e chopper, sl!ffered minor Injuries.
"Landing oli soft sand probably saved our lives,"
pilot Dorcey Wingo told a Fe&lt;leral Aviation Ad minis·
tration Investigator.
About 100 people were working on the scene for
Steven Spielberg's "Twilight Zone," a $10 million movle·verslon of Rod ·Serllng's old 1V !ll?ries: ·
Bill Gold of the Lbs Angeles CountY coroner '~ office
Identified the. chll!lren' as Renee Shlnn Chen of Pasade na and My·"Ca Dlnh Le of Cerritos.
.

RIM JOINT '
COMPOUND ,·
OR TOPPING

LUMBERJACK -MATCH

BACK TO COURT- James T.
the man
the government tlalms led organized crime activit)' in
Cleveland, walks batli to tourt during his ret!t!nt lllw.eek trial. Licavoli and five other men were tonvicted

By BRIAN TUCKER
t\ssoclated l'res8 Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - ,For years the Cleveland
mob tried to kill a brash racketeer named Danny
Greene, whose gambling, narcotics and prostitution
enterprises on Cleveland's west side were cutting Inca
organized crime profits.
Greene finally died In a car bomb blast In l!m, bu t
his death was the beglnnlng of tl)eend for a long·time
Cleveland crime family , the FBI now says. Six m en
face up to 20- years in prison after their tonvlttlons
earlier this month on federal racketeering charges
stemming from the murder.
The day before the convictions were returne&lt;l.
seven other men authorities say are tied to the faml·
ly's drug operation were named In a 74-count federal ·
II\dlctme nt.
·
"Between the convictions and these Indictments (If
they a!W result In convictions) , we have virtually
caken out the entire leadership of an organized crime
family, from top to bottom," said Joseph Griffin, special agent -In-charge of the Cleveland FBI office.
For the government. the big prize was the convlc·
lion of James "'Jatk White" Llcavou, Tl . who FBI
age nts say Is the head of Cleveland"s organized crime
family .
.
Also convicted on July 8 we~ labor leader Anthony
Liberatore. John P . Calandra and Ronald Carabbia
-each described by the FBI as a "capo reglma." or
capcaln In the family . Convicted, too, were Kenneth
Ciarcia and Pasquale " Butchle" Clsternlno.
Until then. Licavoli had never been convicted of a
major crime In a career that the FBI ,says started
during Prohibition whe n he was a member of lhe
Detroll"s Purple Gang, a group of bootleggers and
whiskey runners.
FBI officials gave the following account of the
Greene slaying.
The family wa nled Greene '"take n out."" a nd afler
several unsuccessful attempts. hired Ray Ferrltto. a
hit man from Erie. Pa . Ferrltto traveled to CheCJevc·
land area for meetings with Licavoli. Calandra. Ca ·
rabbla. Clsternlno, a nd others.
Fer.rilto and Cara bbla carried out the job sucCI'SS·
fully on Oct. 6. 1!177. bul the family. taking no chances.
also brought In Louis ""Lltlle Tony"' Aratarl and Rona ld "Vic"" Guiles as a backup te3m . They were Co
shool Greene If I hey had lhe cha nce that day.
Aratarl a nd Guiles would evencua lly testify for Ihe
proS€Cutlon In the federal case.
""I certainly think It (Greene"s slaylngl was a mls·
ta ke on their part,'" said John Sommer. an FBI agenl.

Fatal filming .may have
~· ·v~olated ·c hild labor law

.

12 ~~. ~.

5 GALLON BUCKET

• ·MAIN EVENT •

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

't'"

'23 46 sq~ :

·'

PITTSBURG H
STEELERSPia cl!d
Mark Ma lone, qu.arterback, on the phyalcal!y unable to JM!rform list. Announct"d
the ~t!rement or John Powera, liiUird .

....

bY

CASH·N-CARiY··SPICIAL

ll-4.

....

Joo

"*a

CASH·N-CARRY SPICIAL

llrve lilt

SAN

SURF. GREEN ONLY
, Cuh~N-Cany
While Supply List.

!12 IlPdaicllu) : Rogt&gt;rs,
.1!10, 2.13: D.Robtnlon,
PtHaburah. 16-4, .nfo, l9l; Lollar. San
Dk'lftl, JD-4, .nfo, 3.01; Vak'n:ZUfla, L.ol
- · IJ.l. .1110. till; l'onc~ SO.l.ools.
9-S..t&amp;3, fo.C5: Morlt~. San ~. 8-5,
.Q5, 4.m: Clrllon, ~lphla. 12-8. .!lXI,
3.:1&gt;; KN&gt;Dw. l'ti.....piU .... .810, 2.74.
STRIKEOt.n'S: Solo. OndMitl, 161; ,
Carlton, PhUiclelphla, 1£0: Ryan. Houaton, llt; ~ . Mont!'Nl, 112; ValeftZ\M!la. ~ Anfelel, 106._
Mont~al,

BEARS-SIKnf'd

John·

The Tides scored once each in the
second and third ·~ to take
2.0 lead, then scored six runs in
fifth on an RBI single bY Jose
Oquendo, an RBI sacrifice fly
Marvell Wynne, a two-run double
by Ron MacDonald, and Cubbage'~
homer.
··

CH: FIBERGLASS ROOF SHINGLES

PliCHING

GC&lt;K

.'

Dis~antling an orgf!riized c~ime_ family in Cleveland

CASH·N-CARRY...IJt.CIAL

.... ,.,.... 31.

Landry , q uo~~rl t&gt;rblll'k .

.

•

ESTLI

......... 18: Carll. San ............. 18.
STOLEN BASES: Mon!no, Plttabufllh,
~; LD-Smlth, St.Loub, H; Raion. MontR!'I~ 42; DfnUer, Pt\JJadPI~. 37; sax,

from

WID
.
.,,

Li:tt

., '

u c k n e r , OlicaJO, 1(1; l&lt;l.5mlth.

B

D£TROJT

w1nnlnil

•

'

Sl.l.wlJ. Ill.
DOUBLES: T.Kennedy, San 06ego, 26:
Knight, Houlton, 23: Oltver, Montreal, :rl;
Madlock• .Pttt~w 11 tt. zz: 'T1ec:l wuh n.
llUPI.Dl: ~. SU.ruJJ, 7; C.rner,
Hcwtm. 7: Templeton. San [Meao. 7:
Mom10. Plttsburall. 6: Thon, 1-biaton. 6.
HOME RUNS: Klnlman. Ntw York. 25;
Murphy, AtliMa, :H; caner. Montret.l,
I); Homer, Atlanta, 18: Gurrrero, lA

Transactions

tract

.

Montreal, Ul; J .Ray, PlltaWflh. lli;

Montrt'a l at San FranrtAoo

wu.

'

tlftl, 65; KiJ!pl.ln, New York. m; Guef".
r«o, LDI ~. 62; CIJW, MontrNI,
61: T. Kennedy, San ~ fil: Clark, San
Franct.eo 11.•
HM"S: Knlaht, Houston, 1.lJ; Ollwr,

s.daJ'aG&amp;nw

1

The CharUes scored their two
runs In the first Inning on a home
run by center fielder Rl~ky Baker.
Alno PetraW lashed a two-run
single for Syracuse to break a 2·2 tie
In the fifth Inning, then added a
three-run homer in the seventh tor
Ills second round-tripper In as
many days.
Baker, 2·2, pitched his first com-

ational

·

plete game for the Chiefs, who ha~
now won seven of their last nlrie
garries.
Mike Cubbage's two-run IDner
In the fifth inn!Dg capped a slx·nin
burst by Tidewater as tile Tides
Rocheste
easUy downed
r.

...RBI: Murphy, Atlanta , 67; OUver, Mon-

St.LAJII 6, Houston 2

NfW Yort 11

whiCh pounde&lt;l out 13 hils. The
CUppers jumped ori Charlles star·
ter Larry Rhynko fo~; three firstInning runs and were never headed.
Centei""· fielder Mike Patterson
addedasolosbotin the siXth Inning.

two games back in third.
McMurtzy, 12-6, wenttheflrst813inningsand·wasU1tedafterglvi!Jg
up hiS third hit, a double by EUjah
Bonaparte. Moo~ then ca"'e on to
get '1JS eighth save of the season on
a ground-out and
din
strikeout.
game-en g
Richmond $COred an unearned
run in the sixth Inning when Craig
Landis reached base on one of tour
Toledo errors and eventually
kored on a sacrifice fly by catcher
Matt Sinatro. The Braves got the
run in the top of the sev·
enth on Gerald Perry's 13th home
run.
Pe(e Filson went the distance for
Toledo, scatterlngsixhltsandstriking out six, but"'as saddled with Ills
sixth loss In 12 deCISions.
fielder Don Mattingly col·
. lected a grand slam for Columbus,

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
DATE- GYMNASIUM
Week ol July 25,1982
POOL
July 25 2-4 p.m./Open Recreation
2-4 p.m./Open Swim
9·10 p.m./Open Crescendo
July 26 Closed
1·4: 30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
6·8 p.m./Open Recreation
6·8 p.m./Open Swim
July 27 Closed
1 ·~ : 30/Camp Crescendo
6·8 p. m.!Open Recreation
6-1 p.m./Open Swim
9·10:30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
July 28 Closed
1·4:30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
6·8 p.m./Open Recreation
6·8 p.m./Open Swim
·
·
July 29 Closed
1 · ~ : 30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
6·8 p.t)l.!Open Recreation
6-8 p.m./Open Swim
9·10:30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
8:
30·
10
p.m./Camp
crescendo
July 30 Closed
2·~ p.m./Open Swim
17·9 p.m./Open Recreaton .
7-9 p.m./Open Swim
July 31 2-4 p.m.lqpeo Recreation
2-4 p.m./Open Swim
Aug. 1 ~·~p . m./Open Recreation
2 · ~ p.m./Open Swim
9:1() p,m./Camp·crescendo

.... Ollcqo. 21.
.
Pri'CKINC 112 Of!daioru): Vukovkh..
MUwa~. 10-4, .714, 3.12; Burnt. Chicago, 10-fo, .71fo, 3.51; Caudill, Seattle, }{).
fo, :not, 2.13; Guklr}', New YOOC. s-4. .81J,
3.~; Barter, C1e'Yfland, 10-5, J£7. 3.n:
Zal)n, CalltomJa, 1M. .667. 1 33: Cll'ar,
BotkNt; A-4, .81j7, 100; J.McLaugtllin, Toronto, 1-4, Jl{f, 3.18.
Sl'RJKEOtTI'S: F.Bannllter, Sean)e,
121; Barker, Clf'vt'Lind. 1~ Gukby, New

Mllwauki.'E' 11 Kansu CUy

--

With the v~tory, Richmond
malntalned Its 1)2-game edge"in the
International ~ague over Coluni·
bus. Rochester dropped to fourth,
2'f.o ganies.out, while Tidewater Is

ena.

Mli\I"II!SOta 8. Boston t
Sunda)"a G&amp;n'IN

Philadelphia

8-2.

'

T R I P L £ S : llrrndoo, Detrutt, 9;
W.WUaon, Kana11 Clry, 9; YOWl!, Mll·
waiiJcfto, B; Grtmn, Toronto. 6: UPihaw.
Toronto, 6: Bi'rtl. Kanua 01y, 6; Cow-

Nt&gt;W York 6. Ca llloml.a J
Toroolo 7. lllleago l

T~u

67;

wal.lkee, IJB; Hamh, Clt'veland. m ·
Cooptor, Mllwaukre. 112: McRae-. Kanau '

.511
.417

:rr

Callfor··

10 ~

(1J

41

Oevriand.

Downin.a,

RBI: McRae, Kai!IU C1ty, !3: Cooptr,
Milwaukee, 71: Thomtcm. ~~~~. 70:

.n l 8

. .

C'hlcaRQ

~

7~

."' .,. ,.,
"

..136; HrbH. MjMriOUI, .3M; YOW!t, MU·
IYIUiff, .lll; HaiTih, C'levrlanct .DJ.
RUNS: RHt'ndt&gt;norl , OUJand, 11: Moll- •

~

~

.

BA.'mNC 1190 I t bllta': W.Wiaon,
Kansu City, J.H ; Ganltlt'r, Mllwalikfe,

.WERICt\N LEAGUE
~mDMUon
·
W L . I'd. OB
Mllwaukl'l'
~
311
-~

St-a nk&gt;
Oaklud

By The Allocla&amp;ed Pres&amp;
'
It was a night for pitchers In the
International Leai\le.
·
Craig McMurtry picked up Ills
12th vtctory of the season Friday
night- tops In the league·- as he
combined with reUtwer Donnie
Moore to three-hit Tdledo 2-1 and
keep Richmond atop t)le standings.
Columbus' Jim Lewis picked up
Ills lOth view .against five ·losses
as the Clippers pounded CJuirleston
9-2, Greg Biercevlcz tossed a fourhitter and struck out eight as Tidewater overwhelmed Rochester 9-1,
and Jim Baker had a five-hitter as
Syracuse cru~ past PawtUcket

..
I

Pitc~ers shine in lL ·play; Clippers

Scoreboard ...
Majors

July 25,_1982

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

White e~terlor with ·red interior. Big tires on sport · wh~ls
"Gheyj!nne p~g., atnond., full power. Pr·lced below wholesale. . ., ~· •
'

t

.

.

1979 DoDGE PICKUP .

This .custom 100 has a_uto. ·-trans,, R,&lt;~Wer steering ~nd extra sharp
throughout. Special accent pal'1'· Slant six engine. '
· ·

, 191lCHEV. IMPALA 4 DR• .
·Medium blue finish with (lark blue custocv Interior,
~heel covers and only 18,000 miles.
.

· WE
APPRECIAtE ,
·YOUR-.--

~,,-.~,......._,~

IUSINISS

v-il, cruise,

1911 CHEV. MONTI CARLO
Light beige wltf't OOid cl9th lpterlor. Cruise,...., defroster. RI!IIYt
11115. &gt;
• ·
•'

wheels and 18,275

"Home of the Shar,.st
-·-~

••.

•a..Jat

a.

·ao,

Cars In the V•lhty'

Car Co.

1&amp;40 'anm All., Gallipolis
-

u_,

By J.\CK A. SEAMONDS
fearing emotional testimony might harm his client
Associated l'res8 Writer
more than help him .
FINDLAY. Ohio (AP) -The six·week retrial of
" I felt a mbral responsibUity nollo put a menially
James U. Ruppert on charges of murdering 11 or his
Ill person on the stand, " Holbrock said.
The retrl~l focused on Ruppert ".s m ent al condillon
relatives was barely over when defense attorneys
saW they would ask their client to consider an appeal.
before and at the time of the shootings. The defense
admitted that the former draftsman and skllle&lt;l
Ruppert, 47, of Hamilton, was convicted of two
charges of aggravated murder Friday by a Hancock
marksman killed the victims In the natlon"s largest
Cowity Common Pleas Court jury In cpe shoollng
family mass murder.
deaths .of his mother, Charity, and his brother.
However, they m aintained lh al Rupperl was suiLeonard.
fering from a paranoid psychosis a l Ihe limP of Che
Jlut he was found innocent by, reason of Insanity on
incident. Repleaded Innocent by reaso n or insanity to
nine other aggravated murder ·charges In the snootall 11 charges.
His first conviction, in August 1975. was overturned
ing deaths of his sls)er-ln-law, Alma, and eight nieces
by the U.S. Supreme Court on appeal because of judi·
and nephews.
· He was sentenced to life in prison by presiding
cial error. The trial was moved lo Findlay from Ha·
m'llton on a change of venue because of publicity.
Ashland County Judge A. Ross Siverling, sitting by
asslgnrilent. A hearing on )Yhere and how he will be
The prosecution hammered at the Insanity plea,
treated Is to be conducted within seven days.
bringing in witnesses who had met Ruppert In a bar, a
The shootings took place at Charity Ruppert's twostock brokerage office and a rescaurant. All said he
story frame home in Hamllfun on Easter ~unday,
was shy, ple~sant. highly Intelligent man who ap- .
·March
1975.
peared sane to them.
Lead,defense.llttorney Hugh Holb~k of Hamllton·
Ruppert's mother was shot in the chest' with a .357.said a decision tQ appeal was up to Ruppert, but that
caliber Magnum. The 4·year-old child had been shot
he would favqr lt. Holbroek ,said "J\Iiliclal error by repeatedly in the head. Ruppert would later tell psySiver.llngwoul~ be among the foundations for appeal.
chlatrls,t s the youngest child took the longest tln)e to
_ Holllrock maintained that ta!M!S of .l!ltervtews wtth
die,
reason of
Ruppert's brother·, Leonard, had repeatedly been
·Ruppert would have led to Ills aequlttal
f!1
00 able otber . ~ntty on all charges, had Siverling allowed them to ~hot in the-, head. The defendant had emptied one,
dcal~e~. 111e Jlllllder charge~
be introduced as evidence,
\ · ,
rune-shot .2~aUber revolver Into the victims, retile -aq 111 11 ri 111!1 rdal!v~_; (Al'
. , lie said .h e eonsk!e~ putt,tng Ruppert on~¥t- ~ loaded ai leaSt twice and continued flrlhg. Of the 44
'
stand in hiS~ defense"!lllut decided agalnsllt, ' b\JUets fired. 40 had struck the victims,

nn

4 1111111 IIJ 1 -

IIIIP•••W
-*'·
lfll
ei tr1

... I .... h).

bY

illlull)'

ness

�••

'

'

'

..

'

•
Ttte surida Times-Senti

July 25, 1982

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

Letter adds to Watt's problems
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AssOciated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Interior
Secretary Janles Watt, embroUed
In domestic controversies slncetak·
lng office, on Saturday found hlm·
self in foreign pollcy.fiap over a
Jetter he sent to the Israeli
amhassador.
Watt told Ambassador Moshe&lt;Ar·
ens that U.S. support tor Israel
could be jeopardized If Jewish IIIler·
als oppose the Reagan admlntstra·
lion's energy Initiatives.
The letter provoked outcries
from American Jewish leaders and
led one senator to call for Watt to
resign tor an act ol. "bare-knuckled
bigotry." At the White House, o!fl·
clals called Watt's statements " un·
fortunate" and said they did not

a

renect President Reagan's views
or American foreign poUcy.
Watt sald the letter was not meani as a threat, as some American
Jewish groups charged, and that he
told White House officials he could
delenll his position "ably ,with. or 1
without their help.''
"U we do not reduce America's
dependency upori foreign crude
energy, there Is great risk that In
future years America
be prevented from being the strong protector and friend of Israel that we
are and want to be," Watt said In
the o11e-page letter.
·
"It the liberals of the Jewish com·
munlty join with the other liberals
of~ nation to oppo~ theSe efforts
(at energy Independence I, they wlU
weaken our abUity to be a good

will

Credit card scam

swim acn~~~ Lake Erie. Maeuer, ll')'iac for tile secoad
Ume 10 swim aeroa the lllke, neared the tblrty mlle
JDBrk but bad 10 tlop due 10 ewuauon. (AP Later-

VALIANT EFFORT- Mary Dillon, tbe.glrUrlend
of John Muenzer, watches over the Toledo swimmer as
he Is brought In by boat after unsuccessfully trying to

photo I.

Second swimming attempt fails
By M.R. KROPKO
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - "It's goIng to take one heck of a swimmer
to get across that lake, " said Jotm
Muenzer, the University of Toledo
swimmer who failed In his second
try to traverse Lake Erie at Its wid·
est point.
Muenzer, 20, Is among a growing
number of athletes consumed with
the challenge ot being the first to
succeed In the 53.8-mUe swim. Urst
tried two years ago by Doug Con·
rad, then a Case Western Reserve
University athlete.
Those making serious attempts
at the crossing, like Muenzer, not
only train, but put together a support team to go along In a boal.
Chuck Hltchklss, 32, a resident or
Olmsted Falls, Ohio, Is currently
the only swimmer who has an·
nounced plans for a crossing at·

tempt yet this summer, although
there may be others.
In 1981, Muenzer's try was cut
short after 16 hours because of
storms and 8-foot waves.
This Ume, he left Rondo Beach In
Erieau, Ont., on Thursday and began swimming toward Cleveland.
Nearly 35 mUes and about 26 hours
later, fatigue set In and he called It
quits. When his support boat, the
North Coast, arrived Friday even·
lng In Cleveland. Muenzer was on a
stretcher, wrapped Ina blanket and
asleep.
Saturday morning, he was he
was still tired and aching.
"I fell short," he said. "I can't
believe It I thought we had II. I'm a
little bit upset. We had so many people helping. Physically, I'm sore,
and I'm depressed.
"The lake was beautiful, to tell
you the truth. You couldn't ask for

better conditions. I thought we
were going to make It, but then I
knew I was In trouble. 1t happened
so fast. When your body quits - It

qutts.'

1

Muenzer swam In a water
temperature of 72 degrees and oneto-two-foot waves throughout the
effort.
Asked what motivated hlm to try,
he said, "Basically because I think
J. can do lt." He said he will take
aboUt a year tothlnkaboutwbether
to try for a third time.
Ray Muenzer, of Maumee, Ohlo,
the swimmer's father, said the
swim has weighed heavUy on his
only child's mind for two years.
"Now he has to decide whether to
do It again," the elder Muenzer
'satd. "It has made our famlly, tbe
three of us, very close, and money
can't buy that."

•

Compromise · saves tax Increase
By JIM LUTHER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - It was
past 4: 30 a,m .. the Senate had been
In session 19 Y, hours, and Sen. Bob
bole was In danger or losing the
tax-Increase bill In which he had
Invested so much. ·
As the clock ran out Friday mornIng on the final roll call, Sen. Jesse
Helms, R·N.C. the New Right
leader who had made no secret of
hls distaste for raising taxes,
sighed, signaled the clerk and
changed his vote to "aye. "
Helms' protege, Sen. John East,
RN.C ., who was encircled by fel·
loW Republicans In the front of the
Senate chamber, stared at the Door
tor several seconds before raising a
hand, s_wltchlng his earlier "no" '
vote and sealing a 5047 victory on ·
the btu.
Eighteen hours earlier, Dole, a
Kansas Republican, apparently
had picked up the North Carolina

votes by engineering a compromise
on an Increase In cigarette taxes.
He had wanted a permanent dou·
bllng of the tax to 16 cents a pack:
Helms, East a nd other senators
wanted no Increase. The final corn:
promise provided for a 16-cent tax
for the next three years and a return to 8 cents thereafter.
Most of Dole's battles turned out
equally wen as he guided the bill
through four days of debate, 67
amendments and a lot of hurt feel·
lngs. He lost only one major test on
the bill, which would produce $98.5
billion In revenues over three years
and comes on the heels of last year's record tax cut - $749 'bllllon
through 1986. But In the end Dole
got some revenge on his single loss.
Tlie bill that his Finance Commit·
tee wrote Impose d Income·
reporting r e quirements on
businesses that employ Upped
workers. The aim was to coilect

'"E.T.' becomes
'

By SCOTI' IPlAF'I'
Press Writer
: NEW YORK (AP) - Each hot,
Sunny day,l2-year-olds Felipe Zea,
Tamer AyasU and Jeffrey Russo
oustle passersby on a Manhattan
sidewalk to support their summer
a&amp;tlctlon.
· : Their game Is cold_lemonade for
cash. Their habit Is a sUmy crea·
iUre with bulging eyes, webbed feet
and an Inhuman desire to phone
llome.
: His name, as you probably kn9w,
Unless you've beencutofffromclv·
·QJzatlon a while. Is "E.T. - The
Extra-Terrestrial." And with his
everslzlb. glowing heart, he's been
C!apturtOg the fancy or movtegoers
since he touched down In earthhound theaters six weeks aai&gt;.
. : M. soon
FeiiJl€, Tamer and
Jeffrey · have filled their pockets .
with the day's lemonade profits,
ihey head up the block to spend It on
!lckets to E,T.; they've seen It a
.col)'lblned total !119 times.
7 E.T.'s own siiJTIII'IerUme bust·
ness Is brlnginglna~t$3mllllona
A~ated

as

some taxes on the 85 percent of Ups
that the Internal Revepue Service
estimates Is never reported as
Income.
The restaurant and hofel lobby
portrayed the provtslpn a5 an at·
tack on workers who earn the min·
!mum wage.. Democrats took up
the fight and the provision was
stripped from the bUI, 'ro-25.
That left Dole more than $2 bll·
lion short of ralslng the revenue
that the Senate had mandated
tl)rough Its budget ·pi'llcess. He
found a $2.8 bUllon answer: take
away half the deduction that bus~
ness people are allowed for ex·
penses of feeding and en~rtalnlng
cllents.
· ··
..
There's a' lot of abuse In the deduction and ~ · big beneficiaries
are the well·to-dci, Dole said, lines
often used by Uberal Democrats In
attacklng _the provision. which they
have labeled the "three-martini

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) A man jaUed In Jacksonville on
grand theft charges used a credit·
card scam to steal more than
$500,lXXIfrom retaU stores In at least
a dozen' states, pollee said.
Clarence Eugene Watson, 36, of
· Lafayette, Ind .. was held In the Du·
val CoUnty Jail In Ueu of $100,lXXI
bond In connection with fraud .at
five area stores, forgery detective
S.H. Richardson said Friday.
Richardson said he had linked a
credit-card scheme u~ here by
Watson to llstores In Florida, Ohio,
illinois, Indiana, Texas, Kentucky,
TeMessee, Pennsylvania, Geor·
gla, Washington, Oregon and
Cilll1ornla.
"He's been doing this since 1967,"
Richardson said, adding ·that he
had no Idea of the exact ,total In·
valved or how many more stores
might have been victimized.
Watson had more than 50 credit
cards under 17 allases when he was
arrested by FBI agents July 8 at the
Dallas-Fort Worth airport, pollee
said. He was extradited to Florida
last Friday.
Using an alias, Watson would obtain Instant credit with a card appll·
calion and charge merchandise to
the maximum allowed, then would
return the merchandise tor cash.
Richardson said.
Michael Obringer, assistant state
attorney, said Watson was con·

n~ts.

friend Or Israel," Watt said. "Your :
supporters In America need to•
know these facts."
American Jewish leaders said.
Saturday that they round "a veUed;
threat" In Watt' s letter and found It
orrenslve that he would appeal for:
Jewish support through a foreign~
ambassador. · ,
.
In a statement Issued In New
York, the American Jewish Com· :
mllttee said, "SecretarY. Watt ·
should go back to $Choollor a re- .
fresbercourseon the American pol :
Itical system for he seems to:
q~tlon the right of Americans to:
hold opinions that dtrrer frOm his." ·
Sen. Patrick Maynlhan, D·N.Y .,
said Watt should either resign or. be .
Ured "lor this act bare-knuckled
bll!l)try." . '·

vlcted of mall Ira ud In lOWflln 1976
and o,f vehicle theft In California In
1971.
Richardson· obtained a warrant
for his arrest after they received
Information he was en route to
Texas.

'J

.. .

.•

J

Announcements

SWEEPER

and

sewing

machine repair , part!, and

supplies.

delivery,

Pick up and

Davis

Vacuum

.Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·0294 ..
BALLOONS FOR ALL OC·
CASIONS Say Happy Blr·
thday. I Love You. It's' a
Boy or Girls, Get Well ..
Anything you wish In a dif·

Call446·4313 .

dr.

Golf Lessons . John
Teaford. Chester, Ohio.
The lzaak Walton Club will
have its annual picnic for

membership, family, and
fri ends. Monday evening,

July 26. Supper will be at 7
p.'m . Bring a covered plate

THIS WEEK IS A
COST ·cuTTER SPECIAL

of food, drinks, and eati~g
ulinsels. Come early and
enjoy the good company.

W.e are holding a household
showor for Dick and Bar·
bara Lambert at Salem
c~riter .
F:l rehouse,
Tuesday, July 27 at 7 p.m.
Anyone that wants 10 come
i~ ' .. welcome.

Given

by

Sl.

•

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

••

•

~ Position Availab_le

~

ULTRASOUND
' TECHNOLOGIST

full time openin1 for
fegistered oi · trained
J.tedical Sonographer.

·FRESH3LB.
.
'

CHUIPAK

:GROUND BEEF

,.IIIJ (OIItfltiMIIrlle with

fxperie!IQ.

•
''
J:onlltt

71:J-Mnon
182-New Haven

1195-Lelart
937- Buffalo

949- Racine

742--Rutland
667- Coolville

Up 1o 15 words . One day

inserTion .. .. .... ...... SJ.OU

lJ p to 15 worCls . Thr ee day

insertion .. .... .... . ..$.4 .00
insertion .

.. ....... .$7.00

a

Auction

Rick Pearson, Ex ·
perienced AUCTIONEER .

Plus you will nave a secure

Estates, antiques, farm,
household. Licensed Ohio·

part time job with the Ar my National Guard after

schooling . Benefits include
a Sl ,500 .00 enlistment
bonus, S35,000 life In ·
surance and free tuition to

any college or trade school
in West Virg inia . In ·
terested persons may ca ll

(304) 675·3950 or in Wesl

This is a large sale of fur ·
niture and
household

VIrginia call tol l free 1·800-

items. New and Old. All

6A2·3619.

clean and workable. Helen
G. Moore, Executrix, Don
Hart. Jr . Auct., Charles
'Bu d' Spires, SaleMgr.

Posit ion
Available
Language Develpomenf
Specialist. Qualifications :

Department of Education

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community

Speech and Hearing Cer tification, prefera bly with
M .S. P .R. validation , BA or
BS from an . accredited
university or college in
Speech
and
Hearing .
Responsibilitie s:
In ·
dividual and small group
therapy,
assist
other
professional in developing
$tudent or adult program
plans, provide inservice
training
to
other
profes s ional s, provides
consultation with parents
and other staff , maintains ·
appropriate records, per·
form s related duties as
assigned. Salary minimum

Reynolds Auctioneer . 275·
3069.
~ ~~'!!.•E. T~Buy __

white, 1 brown and white .

niture and Ant iques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,

WANTED TO BUY Old fur ·
446·3159 or 256·1967 in the

TWO mattresses &amp; .box evenings.
springs, full size, 304·675·
5251.
Buying Gold,
ONE male kitten, black &amp;
white. One female, black
with white paws. 1 female

Silver .

Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for

clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson

LOST 7 yr. old Bea~le dog.
Tan, black &amp; while. Collar
with identification. Reward
offered. Lost in Raccoon
Road area. Call 614-949·

furniture, gold, $ilver
dollars, wood ice bo'xes,
stone jars, aritigues. etc.,

L0$1 · floating key ring
304-675-2324.
Lost · Horse, brown, Ap·
paloosa pony 1. week ago.
Vicinity Hickory Chapel
and J~richo Road. 304·675·
6276 or 615-6999,
Yard 5att '

Garage Sale Tue. &amp; Wed.
Torch &amp; gauages,, leather
lackel$, tape players, Fair·
fleld·Centenary
Road,
Fairfield Acres.

446·0069

Technology,' Effective 9·1·

$1 ,'000 . POSSIBLE . And
more, between now and

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all private less ons,
M en, wom en, &amp; childre n.
Instruct ion thru black belt.
A lso available Karate
uniforms puching and
ki cking bags, and protec tive equipm ent . Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
As soc iate s
Karate
Studio , 143
Burlington Rd .• Jackson,

December ! Average SS .OO
an hour demonstrating toys
part time. Evening or day.
House of Lloyd Party plan
hiring now. Free kit, no in·
vestment. Free tra ining,
hostess gifts, supp lies. Cal l

met
equipment.
In strumentman · must have
exp·e rience with electronic
Distance
meters and

Wanted -Baby si tter . Af
ternoons .
4 h ou r s .
Harr isonvi lle. 614·992 ·5264 .

Distance 1)'1eters. Must be 614-992·7046 collect.
able to set Opt ical Plum · ______ _ _

Theolodite .

Mu st

have

~

~-

~.

Immedia te opening for in·
dividual with accur ate
typing and filing skill s,
good
telephone
co m munication, and able to
work with Publi c. In·
dividual needs good work
attitude. Send resume t o

knowledge of Trav er se and
Vertical c irc uits . Se nd
resume to : P .0 . Box 1472 ,

Portsmouth, Oh 45662 .
Attention
R N' S· Pomeroy
H.C.C. now has opening tor

full and part lime RN for 3 P .O. Box 358 Athens, Ohio
to 11 and 11 to 7 shifts . 45701 '
Upgraded salary and shift
differential. Contact Nancy
VanMeter director of Nur -

DEMONSTRATE toys &amp;
gif1s,

sing. 614·992·6606.

home

party

plan .

August to December. No
collecting, delivering or
cash investment. Free kit,

Immedi ate
opportunitie s
for Avon representatives in

these neighbors-.. Middlep·

11______!!t~!i~!_ V'Jan!ed

Co. Also Addison, Chesh ire,

Private room. board and

Springfiels, Racoon, Hun·
tington and Morgan Twp.

in Gallla Co. Call collect
614-698 ·7! 11 '

Dependable child care in
my home . Ref er en ces

AVON . Three people to sel l
AVON . Caii4A6·3358 .

available . 3204·675·2527 .
- ·----- ------·

Wh ite's Sc hool of Taekwon
Do Korean Karate 426 Main
St .. Pt
Pleasant. New
students acc ept at any
c l ass -M en , women or
children. Hours Tu e. &amp;

Thurs. 6 to 9PM and Sat . 11

SANOY AND BEA VER In

18

-

-

-

Would like to do painting,
interior, exterior &amp; roofing .

Call anyt1me 614·245· 1763.

~

Mowing no yard to
big or small. Reliabl e and
L&lt;~wn

dependabl e. For est imate
ca l ll«6 · 31 5 ~ al ter 6PM 256·
1967.

Gallipolis-Rodney area for
2 girls ages 4 and 3 mos.
Call614·245·5565.

Tables, round or square.

Wood ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Wi II buy
complete household. Gold,
silver, old money, pocket
watche'!i, chains, r ings, and
etc . Indian Artifacts of all

types. Also buying baseball
cards. OSby Martin 992·
6370.

Administrator

Lovely 3 Bedroom hom e, 1
min . from Gallipolis. Ful l
basemen t. Possible land
contract. Evenings 1·216·,

4173.

Odd jobs or yards. Ca ll 4.46 -

Busines!i
_ _s&gt;_peo!t~n~ty __

21

only . Call614 ·256·6856 .
LOW HEAT BILLS 3 bdr.
birck, lower Second Ave .;

Gallipolis .

_ -~o!!_e_y!? !-?~_!!_ _

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fix ed
rate. wv a. &amp; 'Ohio. L eader

Fantastic

sert optional) . Call 614·388·'

--

4 bdr . colonial , 2 firep laces,

all the ex tra s. Shown by ap·

pointment . Call446·7802.
- ----·-------.
3 bd. room ranch, c lose to

Meigs

'.

Across

from

Lowest
Prices
Ever
On.

New14' Wide

MOBILE
HOMES
From
$9,995.00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
With 2 Locations

Rt. 93 North

Jackson, Ohio

286·3752
or

oppor tun it y
r-mp loycr

PQ u r1 1

Corner 2nd &amp; Viand
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

P.O. Box 1088, Gallipoli$,
Oh 45631.

675·4424

AnENTION.RN•s

• An "'V•I oppOr!~ntly ,einpl&lt;l,ot

THE HUNTINGTON
HOSPITAL, INC.

1· S••ve~rat·· families yard
Valley
ments. Evergreen
Fri .· Sal. 9 a.m. til·
.J uly ·23, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
July 24, B a ..m. 1111 •, 2935
Meadowbrook Drive, Pl.
Pleasant .

PLANT MANAGER
•
Seeking~ Pl~nl Manager for a small com pony. c~n·
dld~le should have a colfege degree wllll some

P .0. lox 310

Gallipolis, Dhlo,454~1

,.,

Mow~r

&amp;Snowdozer ............ 14605

1-8179KT Pro 'Model Hyd. Lift 60" Mower. 19 h.p ................. 5915.
1-8199KT Pro Model Hyd. Lift ~0" Mower 19 h.p.... ~ ......., ..... 6125

. Is .rtow interviewing RN's for a
. limited number of supervisory
positions and unit positions. We
. can offer straight.. s!lifts, ~ high~y
competitive sala.ry, spec1al un1t·
differential
and
flexibili1'(
schec;lullng.

. engineering e•perlenco preterrlld. outlet Include
1111 development, Implementation of penannet
policies and procedures oR btllalf of a bMrd, over·
-11111 ancl' managing ·• busl-s olllce and an
l)pet'IIIOIII dtp.Jrlmfttl. Seluy Mgollalllt. .
Interested candidates PIHit f-ard retume and
sat.ry history to:
Plant Manager

1-8123 12 h,p. Hydro. Lift 50"

.CONTACT JUDITH ASHE
. . . . . , .....nel

'

I A.l. 114:31 P.M.
-~1 .

4599

WALK .BEHIND TRACTORS
2-5645 12 h.p. Hand Start with 40" Mower ......................... 2915
'

t

•

2199

'

2-5240 8 h,p. Hand Start with 30" Mower ........ ,..............\... 2260

1799

2:...5200 8 h.p. ,Hand Start with 30" Mower ....................... :... 1990

1499

~ GRAVB.Y TRACTOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MANNING ROUSH--owte .

204 (X)NDOil ST.

PH. 992·2975
1..

full

NOTICE

'

res .

with

ground. Blended rate of 14
percent. Call614·992 ·5348 or
992·2064,

Salary commensurate with
E1perience.
Conlacl:
Director of Personnel
Pleasant Valley
Hospital
Pl. Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340

behefits. Send resume to

H.S.

basement ,
l 1/ 2
bath ."'
Family room. fully car -:
·peted, garage , over 1 acre ..

Full lime opening for
registered or trained
Medical Sonographer.

An

112% mor·

8878 evenings or weekends . .
.. - -·-· - - -

ULTRASOUND
TECHNOLOGIST

proximat ely
100 bed
SNF/ICF nursing facility .
Excel lent salary and

9

tgage, low down paymen1,
3 to 4 bedrooms, modern·
house, over 5 scenic acres,
pond, nicely landscaped,
cen tral
air ,
n e wly
refinished hardwood fl oors,
fireplace (WOodburner in·

rosition Available

for

lot:

oppo r tunity!

Assume FHA

Mortgage, 77 E State St ,
Athens, Oh . 614·592·3051.

in

Extra

f ir eplace. modern kitchen,.

OLD wicker furniture, old Dependable babysitter for
quilts &amp; Iinens, call 614·245· infant 8 to s, Moo lhru Fri.
' 94CB.
In my home. Call 446·3132.
3 Family Yard Sale July 26
&amp; 27. 7/10 mite from 141 out
NeighborhOOd Rd.
Porch sale-Moo.. Tues.,
Wed., July 26·28. Bob
Jef·
1

--=

basement. Call 446·

Interior &amp; ex ter 1or pain ting. Reasonabl e rates .
Call for free estim ate, 446-

OLD FURNITURE, beds,
chen cubbards of all types.

Jl -- =- H _o_'!'_e_s fo!:_ S~_le

Energy efficent, 2 yrs. old
Wanted- to Do-

.

needed

Real Estate

on 6 acres, r:Nin water
system , severa l fruit tree.
Shown by appointment_

Complete
households .
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or992·7760 . ' other than leaching. Salary
- - - - -- -- ---- for full -time position on
faculty scale. Apply lo
Coordinat6!' of Personnel,
Gold, silver, sterling. 'Rio
Grande College, Rio,
jewelry , rings, old coins &amp;
Grande, O.hlo 4567~ . Ap·
currency . Ed Burkett Bar· plications
received untit
ber Shop, Middleport. 992· position filled
.
3476.
Babysitter

7571.

18

are Bachelor's Degree, or
equivalerit demonstrated
by license, certificate, or
education ; plus 3. years of
practicill experience in
diesel-auto or relftfed area,

iron, brass, or wood. Kit-

Cakes for all occassions .
Weddings a spec ialty , 7
yrs. ex perience. Call 67S·

3 bedroom home tor sa le or
rent with option to buy .

2~

-- WantedtoCo
.. -- -·--

446·3862

sold. Ca ll 614 367 0480 or
446·3426 alter 6PM .

surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance Looking for women in·
coverage in Gallia County terested in· earning $20 to
for almost a century . $60 or more in one evening
Farm, home and personal having toy parti es . Work
property coverag es are own hours. Call Friendly
available to meet in - Home Parties Manager,
dividual needs
Contact 614 ·992·3561. Also booking
Kail Burl eso n, agent . t oy parties. If long d istance, ca ll coll ec t .
Phone 446·2921.

taken for part-tim e cook·
waitress. Apply at Senior
Community Center, 812
Vi and St . Pt . Ple~sant .

carol Neal

734·3734.

6641.

-~---·---

Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all types of businesses .

to 2. Full line of Century
Martial Ar ts suppli es also

Insurance

13

Wanted ·· drummer
for
serious rock band , Blltzkreig. For audition, ca l l

____S!.r~j!_e.!.~ _ ·C&amp;L Bookkeeping

Oh. Call614 286 30/d.

Ca ll 446·4480 .

laundry . Elderly only . 992·
6022 or m ·6748.

Professional

23

---~-

Tra sh col lection &amp; haul ing.

crt, Pomeroy, and the
Township areas in Meigs

82 . Mii1imum reQuirements

BEDS·IRON, BRASS, Old

-

Free training . 614·992·7046.

Hand School, P.O. Box 1A, WAITRESS, maids, ba r·
Cheshire , Oh 45620. tenders &amp; cle rks wanted .
Write qualifications &amp;
(614)367·0102.
Phone number to : Job
Placement, P.O. Box 102,
GRANDE Hen derson, WV 25106 .
RIO
COLLEGE / COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
Cor · Applications are now bei ng

dinator/ lnstructor DieselAutomotive
program
leading
to
Associat e
Degree
in
Diesel

lS

- -·- - --··- -Survey Crewma n Needed ·
minimum 3 years ex·
R ad p e rien ce .
m an/C hain m an
should
have knowl edge and ex peri ence with Electron ic

year . Contact Mr. David C.
Ratliff, Principal, gyiding

We pay cash for late model

LOST Tycoon Lake area
around lsi of April. Male
full blooded Norweigen Elk
Hound black &amp;.sliver grey,
lyr old . No collar .. Reward.
Call614·245·5047 .

~-

SlO,SOO (191 day position) . Keith, ~92 · 3408 . Must have
Available 1982-83 school drums.

calico cat. Phone 304·675· sale. Spring Valley Trading
Co .• Spring Valley Plaza,
3909.
446·8025 or 446·8026.

.- -IciSiaiidFciund -

HelpWanled- -

You can earn over SS50.00
per month while learning a
valuable skill like com·
puter repairer , sheet metal
worker, or refrigeration.

sa1-e ~ - ­

9

:l()A-615-7 «I.

--

Schools In struction

11

Larrys Groc. Syracuse. ,

:
· HolpiiJI '
" Pt. Pltalf!l, WV 25550
(3041 67S-4340

•

8--~Pubilc

A puppies. 3 months. Will be
small dogs. 3 black and

ters

: Dlnctor of Pe~t~~~~•lf
•·
f'lta~nt V.fltJ

•

379- Walnut

Pomeroy

Up to IS Words .. 5ix day

Light housekeeping
needed. Call61079·2622.

HIGH
SCHOOL
GRADUATES/ SENIORS .

Female AKC Registered
Irish Setter . 614-742·2880. S
years old.
30~ -

11

clothes, misc .

merchandise every week.
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome .
Richard

2 gray. 1 tiger kittens,
173·5798.

services

2309
Pleasant, 9-3 Saturday ,
boys 8 to 14 clothes, adult

Center. Truckloads of new

7
'

985-Chesler
34l-Portland
247- Letarl Falls

87 ·Upholstery

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

=MIj~~~~··=
==
. Vernon, Pt.

Hoefl ic h. 992·5292.

"yellow" 3 keys and lock.

.

INSPECTED

mixed breed. Wormed and
Veterinarian inspected.

Lost between Racine and
Syracuse. Neutered male
shepard ml• . Ans\Vers to
nam• of Je$se. Old family
pet. Reward. 9~9- 2862 .

••

U.S. GOV'T.

Cute, cuddly puppy needs a
good home. Just loves
people. Tan and while

:
PERMANENT
• HAIR REMOVI'IL
Pt ofessional Electrolysis
Center. A.N).A. approved,
Doctor referals, by ap·
pOlntment only . 30~·675·,
62a4.
ceARLIE Lilly &amp; the Poor
Side Band . Sunday, July
25Jh 5 to 10 :00 p.m. at Club

7. :: :·

Puppies part Shepard, 5
wks old &amp; mother. Call614·
379·2703 .
'

2336.

•

992- Middteport

367- Cheshire
318-Vinton
24s-R io Grande
256-Guyan Dist.

Mason co., wv
Are~ COdo 304
61S-PI. Pleasant
45&amp;--Leon
576-Apple Grove

(Average 4 WCJrds per l ine)

WED. EVE .-5:00 P.M. July
28 at 205 Wilson Ave ..
Ravenswood, W. Va .. 6
blocks from the stoplight .

to

Salem Center Flrebells:

•

446-Gallipolis

81 -Home Improvements
82 Plumbing &amp; Heating
83 · E)(cavat ing
8.4· E iecrical&amp; Refriger ation
85-Genera l Hau ling
86· M. H. Repair

65-Seed &amp; Fertil izer

9ive

bricks

Male Border Collie to give
away. Caii61A·379·216ll .

hOI tank blu i ~g . Riverside
Gun Shop, Rt. 7, Athalia,
614-886·5194.

BEEF

d;~- ~x6.

away. Call446·3392.

~

Meigs County

Area Code 614

643- Arabia Dist.

61 -Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to buy
6J. Livestock
64Hay&amp;Grain

WV . Buying antiques. 304·
773·5785.773-9185 .

Broken

10% over cost . gun repair &amp;

·. LATE BREAKI.NG PRICE
KROGER'S GROUND .

4
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
column. There will be no

Agency

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

Gallia County
Area Code 6141

48· Equipment for Rent
49· For Lease

!FEMAl In conjunction 2 steel freewith the Ohio Department Call 446 · 7~13 . /
PboN"'f/unil Resources
July 25

ser.lees

--··· .... .

41 -Housesfor Ren t.
42-Moblle Homes for Rent
43-Farmsfor Rent
'
4~ · Apartment for Renl
45-Furnished Rooms
46·Space for rent
4/·Wanted to Rent

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
The National Flood In·
surance Program (NFIP)
Will be diSCUSSed at a
public meotlng to be held In
the Municipal Court Room
at Gallipolis on August s. charge to the advertiser.
1982 at 7 : 30 P . M .
The general public is To give Furniture. Call446·
!lwlted. This is spunsored 0508.
by the Federal Emergency

GUNS will order any gun al

CORRECTION
.
.

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.
'""'"
. .........
. ....... -r •• ... .

18-Wanted To do

Management

75· Boats&amp; Molars
76 -Auto Pads 8. Accessories
77 -Au to Repair
78 -Campjng Equipment

,_.

36-Real Estate Wanted

17-Miscellaneous.

CQ .

WE I~SEIVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

34· Business Building s
35· Lots &amp; Acreage

16-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

tr.Fent wav. Deliver to
HOspital, homes for almost
any occassion. Balloons ·&amp;-

COI'YIIGIIT 1912 · lltE 1110&amp;0 CO.-ITEIIS ARD PRICES
COOD SUIIDAY, JULY 25, IMZ lltiiDOOH SATURDAY, JULY
31. 1M2, IN GAUIPOUS AIID I'OIIEIIOY

33·Farins for Sale

following telf!phone exchanges. · •

n vans-&amp; 4 WD

74·Motorcycles

58· Fruits &amp; Vegetables
S9·For Sale or Trade

J2·Mobile Homes for Sale

13-lnsurance
l.t· Business Training
15· Schools Instruction

me.,

ldvflfttted PIICI Wl1htn X) dlys.

31 -Homestor Sale ·

11 -Help wanted
12·Situation Wanted

. =- .!'~ti!l~~li~==:.

71 Autos for Sale
72-Trucks for Sale

S7·Musc'lallnstruments

&amp;er"lees

IRONTON - Another firm has. been added to the growing list or
creditors who are suing the bankrupt Hatfield and Mc&amp;ly Inc.
I.T. T. Dlverslfled Credit Corp. tued a $751,296 suit tn Lawrence
County Common Pleas Court last week for money Hatfield and
McCoy allegedly owes the credit firm.
·
Also named as defendants In the suit are Hatfield and McCoy's
President, J . Michael Hale, and the firm's se&lt;;retary, ·Richard G.
·
Martz and hls wtle Betty.
Other creditors who have flied suit against Hatfle!d and McCoy
Include the First Huntington National Bank; the HuntlngtonPubllsh·
lng Co., which publlshes The Herald·Dispatch; the Times Co.
which publishes the Marietta Times; and the Ohio valley Publishing
Co., which publishes the Gautpolls Dally Tribune, The (PomeroYI
Daily Sentinel, and the Point Pleasant Register.
Including this latest suit, Hatfield and McCoy's creditors are ask·
lng for a total of more than $1,100,lXXI that \)le firm allegedly owes.
The I.T.T. suit alleges that Hatfield and McCoy and Its operators
have defaulted on Its obligations and that the defendants named are
liable for the firm's debts .
, The firm, which ran a chain of nine appliance and furniture stores
In Ohio, West VIrginia and Kentucky, was declared·bankrupt July 7
In U.S. Bankruptcy Court by Judge Edwin Flowers. '

""Mdo,.,

Aea• &amp;state

---:.:::::::==
-.. " .
...... .... ...
......
..........

Hatfield 'and McCoy
sued once agairi

Classified pages cover the

51 ·Household Goods
~2 · CB • .TV &amp; ~adio Equipment
53-Antiques
Soi·Misc . Merchandise
SS·Buildlng Supplies
56· Pels for Sale .

23-Professional Services

5-Happy Ads
6-Lost and Found
7· Yard Sale (paid in advance)
8· Publ ic Sale
&amp; Auction
9·Wanted to Buy

There may be aliases that we don't
know about," Richardson said.
Detective Roy Haskins said Wat·
son once lived In Jacksonville but
had been traveling around the
country.

Ucn Of lhlle IC!Vet1IMCI lttn'\1 IS feQUifld to be
rudlly llfHabie lor ule ,, Net'! Kroger 510ft. ttcept ils
........ notedtnNacl .
out of ¥1~Md
tltm . we wtU otftt yOu your choM:e Df 1 com~rlble 11em,
wtWf'llvll..ble. retlett•no the Slmt Nvmos or 1 '••ncheck
whch Mil tnl1llt 'fOU IO pu•chiM 1"- ~~Md 1ltm 11 1tte

~

21-Business Opportunil~
22·Money to Loan

3-Announcements
4· Giveaway

"It took ·four weeks to get his ID.

ADVERTISED ITEM POLiCY

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

fleaeelal

i·Card of Thanks !paid in advance)
2·Card of Thanks (paid in advance)

$5()0,000

summer addiction

or

.. . . .............
.. . .. .-....". .

~'""

or

luitch."

'
day - not Including sales of but· or shiny phrases, comparing the
tons, T·shlrts and other assorted tllm to such classics as "Peter
E.T. paraphernalia.
Pan" and ''The Wizard otOz," and
Why Is E.T. so popular?
delving Into the chlldhood ol. direc:
Says Jeffrey: "Adults didn't un· tor Steven Spielberg for clues' to the
derstand E .T. the way Eutott did. source of · all this summertime
To Eutott, E .T. meant friendship magic.
and love. Love was the theme oft he
And · money has been the
movie."
outcome.
E.T. Is the story or a lovable
E .T. has taken In ~ore than $1ll
otherworldly botanist aceldentally
mllllon, and now cruises along at.
left behind by .his fellow aliens dur·
mQne than $3 million a day as the
log a nature walk on earth. Chronl·
movie climbs Hollywood's list or
cally homesick and pursued by all·tlme money·makers. shattering
adults who see his value In cold,
records as It goes.
Also cashllig In on E .T.'s success
sctenltrlc terms, E .T . .follows a
candy trail to the closet or E!Uott
IB Hershey FoocJs: Corp., ~
Taylor, who offers hlrn refuge and
Reese's Pieces lured·E.T. trom,the
friendship.
forest to Eniotr s bed! 0001. Sales 11
1
There, In young Eutott's suburthe candy In June were up 70 111!1'
ban California home, E .T. goes cent over May.
·
trlck-or·treatlng1 gets soused on
The E.T.. stutted doD wll.l hit the
beer, learns to speak 'Jy watching shelves any day, ud retalli!l'll aJ. ·
Sesame Street. and devises a plali readY~ have- pliiiid $16 illlllloll
to ''phone home" and be rescued· 1worth onlers with~ IJrter.
national, tJii! toymaJrer Ucellled to
after seeing a telephone commer·
create ll T·llhlrtllllld lluttons·are
ctal and a Buck Rogers comic strip.
on sale bi theater W!b!N; E.T. bed,
Since the movte1s release, criticS
shee(s won't be far behind.
have been dusting ot1 their supply

446-2342PHONE ·992-21.56
'675-1333

POMIROY, OH.

�Page-D-4- The Sunda
31
J

Homes for Sale
bdrm

home

(lty

newly

m1nt

redecoraf E'd,
d1t10n

con

SChOOlS

See

Moddleporl Oh 116 000 No
resonabl e offer refu sed
About 1 t1 c re lot HI BrCid
bury Oh 10 tr ililf'r hook up

water , ga s e lcc tn c. scpt1 c
Call

614 992 2602

Mauncc Dur st
Pomeroy , Oh• o

4 E

St

J or

&lt;1 bd room home
1111
baths K1t chen fully eq u1p
ped
Lar ge l•vmg room

wdh f1r e pla ce
tenor

hard

basement

Most 1n

wood

Fu ll

F 1n1shed room

Rd

PJus

large

bedrooms ,

out s1de pond and 31;,
acres, garage Phone 304
576 2587

KOME for sale, Mt Vernor.
Ave Under S40 000 Call
3Q4 675 2973

h
ACRE w1th mob 1le
home, loca ted 3 miles off
Route 2 on Mollstone Rd
Land con tra ct Phone 304
576 2219
1

34

Mob1le Homes
tor S"'
a"le,___ __

MOBILE
T-RISTATE
HOMES
USEO MOBILE
HOMES, CARS, TRUCKS
GALLIPOLIS
CHECK
OUR PR IC ES CALL 446
7~72

Cl-EAN USE O MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
(}UALITY
MOBILE
f{OME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST GALLI POLlS, RT
35 PHON E 446 3868

1980 Wtndsor 14x70 new
c(lnd Deluxe ki tchen, large
h.v1ng room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm Htdden utll room
379 2310
197112x60 Korkwood almost
one acres lot w1th com
merc oa l garage Ca ll 614
2~ 6640
r{ew Moon 1980 model,
12x65 wolh 12' expando, set
up tn local park With sktr
tong 1!. steps Ready to
noove onto S6 500 Call 446
3547

.---------10x55 Great Lake 62 model,
a1r cond , washer &amp; dryer,
tully furnoshed Call 446
3783
0tf,;e ~r~:le;s -;~ 79~d
o'he 80, 50x10, cen tr al atr,
U.500 ea One 74, 10x45 woth
3· a•r condttioners, S1,650
One 27 Camper $2 ,500 Call
6)4 643 29 16
~----

-

--

- - -

1~80 Nashua 14x70 expando
otnmg &amp; llvmg room , 3
trorm , 1 1/2 bath. centra l
a)r Would ltke to sell on
land contract Call446 8335

Houses for Rent
--------Homes for Rent, Le ase or
Land contrac;t tn town or
c ountry
Cal l
Strou t
Realty, 446 OOOB
41

~io 6-,:_~voEw

oE L uxE
cent a1r, firep lace, garden
tUb, underptnnmg w 1th or
w1thout applla Call 446
6211 or614 388 9916
House tr ailer lor sa le For
more lnfor mat•on wrtte
J&lt;&gt;hn Greene. 1901 Bellvoew
Road, Cambrtdge, OH , or
cBII614 439 1942
12x60 Buddy mobile home
1fl excellent cond Washer ,
dryer. stove, new refng,
r\ice turn• ture Patte, built
on utll•tY room Call 614
9J2 26B4 after 5 p m
QSED MOBILE
2711

HOME

1)x52 2 bedroom PMC
house trail er Best offer
304 675 5658

.-------

l- - - -

:5

-----

--~

Fa.=-msiO~s~le

:___::

6

is ;cres co--;;,~le tely fenced,

lobacco allot 1!. 1980 W1n
~sor trailer furnished, all
electnc. cent a1r, new sep
~c tank &amp; new heat pump
011 775, Patnot, $26,900
Call446-0844

i4

Business Buoldings

Portable

Offoce

Buoldong

~2x.W 11. $4,000 Built by
~turdo House, Exc cond 3

grtlce spaces, gas heat, a or
condllooned, commode 1!.
sink Located 2nd &amp; Brown
$1. on Mason, W .V Contact
lrl &amp; R Block, Pomeroy 614m-3795 9" Call eve(ling 304
l13-5S35 afler 6.
~5

Lots &amp; Acreage

0.33 of an acre on Loncoln
Pike E lectrlc hook UPIdeal for trailer, $5,800
ta/14467934 after 5.30 PM

adults
pets 304
675 2812
co ttage,nouftl1fteS
furntshed,
or675 l580
-- --45
Fu!:_n~hed Ro~!!l ~ _

Rooms wtth cooktng, cable,
a or, S4D a week 304 773
565 1

home, llv.ng
room, dtn1ng room &amp;
family room, c1ty schools
Call 446 1323
3 bd room house 1117 baths
Family room and ftre
place.
stove,
and
refrtgerator furn
Car
petong $300 mo dep req
No pels onsode 614 992 2362
after4pm
Unfurntshed 2 bd room
house on 1 acre, With wood
burner One child only
S150 deposot, $160 mo
rent 614 742 2753
You' ll love thtS 14 acre
farm 10 the country w1th a
pond and small barn Thts 2
bedroom brtck home IS
only 2 miles from down ·
town Pt Pleasant Woll
s1gn a year lease at $450
per month 304 675 6276
HOUSE for rent, 304 675
30 17
42

Mobo/e Homes
for Rent

Mobtle Home, Eureka, 1
Bdr • furn , roverfronl lot,
r ef 1!. deposot Adults, $100
mo 1 643 2644
12x65, 3 bdr, mob1le home
Cl ean, atr cond , furntshed,
good locatoon, ref req Sec
dep req Call446 8558
FURNISH EO mobole home
1n ctty Central a~r One or
two adu lis only Call 446
0338

2

bdrm
unfurnished
mobile home 1n CheShire
Ref &amp; dep requored Call
446 4229

Beaulo/ul 2 bdr mobile
home on the 0 J Whole Rd
Wtth garden and out
bulldongs S150 mo Call446

2 bedroom tra1ler Real
ntce, adults only Brown's
Trader Park, Mtnersvtlle
6149923324
Three bedroom trailer ktt
chen furntshed, 2 car
garage. $250 month plu s
deposot, 304 576 2682 alter 6
pm
2 bedroom mob1le home tn
New Haven Adults Only
No Pets 304 675 1452 after
3

44

Apartment
tor Rent

Furn•sh 2 rooms and bath ,
c lean, no pets, adults only
Dep requored Call 446
1519
4 room unfurntshed apt all
ca rpeted, ut111t1es pa1d,
adu lts only no pets Call
446 3437
Etf1encv apartments 1st
floor &amp; 2nd floor Call 446
0957,
729
2nd
Ave ,
Ga ll•pol1s
Furno shed apt, 1 bdr ,
adults, S200, uloltoes pd , 607
2nd Ave, Gallipolis Call
446 4416 alter 7PM
1st floor furntshed apart
ment, adults preferred ref
1!. dep r equored Call 631
4th Ave , Gallopolos
Upsta1rs apartment SISO
month 1!. ullloloes. 2 blks
from college 245-9172 Dep
req Available Aug 1st

•

3 room furnoshed apt
Deposit 1!. references
required No pets, adults
only Inquire 602 4th Ave.,
Gallopolosalter 4PM
3 room furnished apt S250
month Includes ulllllles.
lnqu~re at Meigs Inn In
Pomeroy _

and
ri~ii~iii~il:=i~~~~~~?1 ranges
Furn ture
1

MtFERandlse

S_1=-_HousehoidGoods _
GOOD
USE 0
A p
P Ll AN C E S
washers,
dryers,
retngerators,
ranges
Skaggs
Ap
pllances, Upper River Rd ,
besode Stone Crest Motel
446 739B

BEMCO mattresses or box
springs, lull or twon, S58 6
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Poece Naugahyde heavy
Park, Route 33, North of
wood loving room suote
Pomeroy Large lots Call $595 Pollow arm sola &amp;
992 7479
chaor $295 Roll top desk,
dark 1!. ltght, S189 Bunk
Small
trailer
spaces
beds, complete, 1nclude
Mason 304 773 5651
mattress, $199 Complete
water bed shop wolh 10
TWO large traoler spots tor bedroom su1tes on d1splay ,
rent, fully equopped, $40 a starling price 5229 Up to
$7500 Big daddy cocta ol &amp;
month, 304 773 5319
end tabl es $5() Wall A Way
recloners $169 and up La
49- - -F-orLe...--- -Z Boy recltners 1n stock
USED FURNITURE 5 pc
For lease 2 bdr , cedar ran 1!. 7 pc
donette sets,
ch
beaulotul
stone bedroomsulte Hollywood
fireplace , wrap around style, bunk beds, Flaor Fur
deck, lovely 6 acre settmg, ntture &amp; Des1gn Gallipolis
near Green Sc hool Call Ferry, WV
Open 9 6
Woseman Agency, 446 3643
Phone 304 675 1371

WATER HEATER SA LE
!WI1111:

WHOLESALE PR ICES
Gc1l W;tlo:r

SII 'I%
Sl Ill 00
.S 13'1%

Hr:aiEI :;

TV'sbookcase,
3 moles
out Bulavdle Rd Open9am
to7pm , Mon thruFrt , 9am
to 5pm, Sat
4460322

Gen Elect 2 spd, avacodo
wa s her,
extra
ntce
Whtrlpoo apartment stze
washer $90 eacll Call 614
245 1207

llfliNG YDIIH I RIJCK

', &amp;
I·

::·:.1

INoollo:llvo:o

-------

Over 1,000 ceramte molds,
kilns and suppl oes 614 742
2925 or 742 2085

18,000 BTU Amana Aor
cond used 1 month 5400
949 2857
30 tn elec Sunray Range
$85
Wh 1r /pool
Auto
Washer S75 614 742 2352
l4

Misc. Merchandoce

Plasloc Septoc Tanks Slate
and county approved 1,000
gal !tank, price $340 Other
s1zes m stock, haul tn your
pockup !ruck Call 614 206
5930, Jackson, Oh RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

AKC REg Cocker Spaniel
pups Call446 1262
Groomtng serv.ces for
pels
Woll cl op English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer's Reasonable
For appt 614 992 7342

SS -- _BUII&lt;!''!l!}~J&gt;I!!s

AKC Dachsund puppies
Black and tan, males $75
991 7891

-

Pels for Sale
-----------

56

Sea rs lawn tractor 10 H P,
36 10 mower, useded 1
season Call614 245 5294

Real Eatete - General

SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY, 2-4
354 Thord Ave.
Gal It polis, Ohio
Looking for a nice older home close to
downtown? Come tn and look around.
Lovely 2 story Colonial, formal dining,
1'12 baths, 2 large bedrooms, patoo &amp;
storage butlding tn back . Owner will sell
on LAND CONTRACT or INTEREST
FREE LOAN.

Baird &amp;Fuller Realty
Ph. 446-7013

MEXICAN
Haor/ess.
female, spayed, ped•greed,
2 lb, very !my, wonderful
home companton, $150 call
304 576 2491
S7

MUSICal
Instruments

-- - - - - - - - Wurl•tzer organ, Super
Spro te $800 Call446 8224

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow
puppoes,
CFA
Htmalayan, Pers1an and
Siamese kottens Call 446
3844 after 4 p m

INVENTORY OF REAL ESTATE FOR SALE:
VINTON.
3 Bedrm ., Keystone Rd , owner
$5,000 00 down
$32,500.00
2 Bedrm, Jackson P1ke, owner anx1ous to sell
$37,500.00
Old bank bulldong, Jackson Poke, Rt 160, buy
now!
• 53,000 00
Commerc1al Bldg, 2 apartments, Jackson Pike,
Bargaon
$32,000.00
2 Acres of land, Keystone Rd , good onvestmenl,
Only
$3,000.00
2 Bedrm , modern home, With 11 acres, ready to
move onto
$43,500.00
151 Acre Farm, lg equopment buoldlng, good
locatoon
$106,000.00
MOBILE HOMES, WITH LOTS:
S11 200.00
12'x50' Kirkwood,'" acre, McCully Rd
10'x50' Moon, 55' Wide, to Oh1o R 1ver, Only $7:.500.00
10'x50' 1965 Model, 24'x40' shed, 6 7 acres $10,500 00
12'x65' 1974 Hollypark, '~acre, Floyd Clark
Rd
$35,000.00
10'x57' 1963 Fleetwood. near Ty coo n Lake,
Buy Now I
$12,500.00
HANDYMAN'S- WOMEN'S SPECIALS!
2 Bedrm. cottage, 4th 1!. Vone, 40'x100' lot,
Special
$10,000.00
1,624 sq fl Modern Ranch, needs some wQI:k completion
__
$4.4,000.00
stately old home, 2nd Ave , needs some T .L. C.
$60,000.00
' APARTMENTS FOR RENT:
3 2 Bedrm. A pis., adjacent to gold course,
AdUlts only, no pets, From
MISCELLANEOUS:
3 Bedrm . brick, residential or commercial,
_
Clly
$110,000.00
3 Bedrm . Ranc~. 6acriiS, m/1, along Bear Run
4 Bedrm., tennis court, secluded, 38

·S6:I,9tiO.IIO. ·oil

Wood Realty, tnc.
32 Locust 51, Gallipolis
I
446-1064

Ptck your own bean and
each,
tomatoes, S3 bu
bring contatners Raynor
Peach Orchard, 446 4807,
Lower ilover Rd Closed
Sundays and Wednesday
eventngs

-:&amp;...--------Corn Stiver Queen, white
For treezong s1 oo dot , for
fre&lt;!tlng and cannong Call
614-245 1157
Fresh vegetables Open 3 00
to 6 00 daoly 2 miles west
ot Gallopoloson Rl W Call
446 1080

CANNING tomatoes, $600
BU 304 675 2929 alter 5
HALF Runner beans Blue
Lake beans, tomatoes
Harry RhOdes, 304 6751981

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

Sonta's ProfessiOnal Dog
Groomong Call614 388 8547
and ask for Santa

OFFICE 446-7Q13

AKC Reg Poodle Puppoes
446 0857

lnternattonal cub cadet 12
h p wtth Hydrostatic dnvc
and loghts New battery
and starter Has -48 tn
mower w1th extra blades
Contact Marvin Keebaugh
at 985 3913 or 667 6245
$1500

2 Reg
male Labador
Retrtevers, professt onal
trained to hunt Call 614
368 6623 or 614 38B 9991

INTEREST FREE LOAN - Owner will finance
Wllh down payment at NO onterest or sell on Land
Contract Good l'h story home located at 2129
Chestnut 51, Gallopolos Call for detaols
'1028

TRAL REALTY

INTEREST FREE LOAN - OWner Woll carry Wllh
no interest with down payment or Land Contract at
12% mterest Two story Colonial 1n town, beauttful
entry, formal donong, brock paloo
I 1149

NfW LISTING - Located m Syracuse Th1s home
has an extra litrge lot and 5 poss•b le bedrooms The
d1n1nq room and kttchen are spac tous, kttchen tS
fUllY eQUipped tncludtnQ diShwasher
Askmg
$32,000

LOT IN RODNEY - Setup for 2 mobole home pads,
pattos, water &amp; sept1c tank , both spaces rented,
good onvestment property
1 1085

l TRAILERS - Can be use d as addons, small
bus tncss, or constructton off .ce 2 trail ers &lt;ask1ng
S4500 1!. $55001 are lOx 50 woth 3 rooms each Furnace
8. centrrt l a1r One has 'h bath &amp; hot water heater
Tl1e thtrd tS 10x35 (asktng $3500) W1th 2 rooms, fur
nac c. centra l a1r, 1/ 2 bath &amp; hot water heater

OUTSTANDING BUY Frame home wolh
alummum s1d1ng, 2 bedrooms, bath, located tn
town Only SB,SIJO
10085
93 ACRES - Vacant land, good Investment proper
ty Some tomber, all mineral roghts. located In Ad doson Twp
1 1032

on approx 2 acres, Basham &amp; Eagle
R1d0e Needs handyman Asktng 525 ,000

HOMF

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Nella Smit~, ~. 388-8649
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162
John Fuller, Realtor, 245-9473

NF w LISTING - Close to Route 7 out ot Mod
cllcpor t 3 bedroom newer home on 2 acres Rental
tr ,1 t1 cr also Asktng $35,000
3 FlAl AOH S - In Ractnc . Ohto Owner will help
ftniln cc Asktnq 16,500
3 f\F OROOM BRICK ..tOMF

LtVtng room has
woodburmnq fireplace , 1'! 1 bttth, httrdwood floors,
we ll constructed ~nd 1nsul a tcd ASklnq$35,000
_.,, N I tl.l \

Real Estate - GAneral

Bn ck homr.lor rent tn Letart, Oi l tO

co

Rul Elltllte -

$275 00 a month
month, furn1sh
Brok~r

Aucttonccr

Generol
BMR 411 - Older home located on Thurman Con
tatns 1 rooms and bath, 2 ftreplaces, professiOnally
installed wood burner, forced a.r fuel furnac~ Out
s1de features a garage and a screened, summer k1t
chen wolh buollon groll Call lor appoontment

CANADAY
REALTY

BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION! - Two story
home presently beong use" oii'i_tl doplex, could be
easo/y converted to son\l.tl}vv ,, Chooce locat1on '
near Washmgton Scho()l t...all for deta• ls 1
BMR 389 - ThiS lone home has 4 bedrooms and os
located c lose to town You will have a large lot wtth
a country atmosphere and have all the c1ty con
venlences Call now'

446-3636 ANY HOUR
Ron Canaday, Rea~or, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Rea~or 446-3636

25 LOCUST ST., GAWPOLIS, OHIO

BMR 398- GET READY FOR SUMMER! Owner
transferred and must sell th1s 3 BR ranch Close to
town oncludes deluxe 18x36 onground pool Call for
an appotntmenttoday•

SOUNDS OF THE FOREST
Listen to the birds ... watch the squtrrels playing
thos home os surrounded by trees Over 3 acres
with oust enough trees cut to a low space for the
home and garden. The qarden os planted and
growing beautofully There are fruit trees and a
grape arbor 3 bedroom home, baths, baement with
recreat1on room, f.replace, woodburner, w1nter's
of wood Included. Located on Rt. 688 between
and ~~~11(111.

BMR 410 - A frame situated on a beauhful wooded
set1mg, you wtll love the atmosphere Owner finan
cmg for qualtfted buyers Low 30's
BMR 413FJ - Mono farm located oust off the Ap
pa1ach1an htghway near Jackson. 31h acres m/ 1
w1th an older two BR hOme, several outbuoldmgs
1ust nght f.or let~ure time or full time llv1n,.9
· BMR 414- 12x60 mobole home sotualed on a 1 acre
lot Includes furnature, hDS reDr paflo w/cover,
covered front deck, 12x24 garage wolh storage

+

, BMR 41S Extra nice bo -level , oncludes 3
bedrooms, lg famoly room wolh broc~ fireplace,
• 18x21 liv1ng room, eat In kitchen, lg . utility room,
' and garage Sotuated on large lot. CIIY school
. district Cal /lor details! _
tHIS HOME DEMANDS A SECOND LOOK - The
decorating Is fabulous, walls are mirrored,
wallpapered, nearly all have chaor raol, excellent
taste Cozy den off kllchen has beamed ceollng,
rustle brick hearth with Franklin stove, mantel for
clocks and things. Gorgeous drapes on llvong room
stay with home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining
with access to covered deck, central air cond , at
tached garage, large level lawn, back yard fenced.
vi - lble from Rl. 35, near HOlzer Hosp, $6~,900. JUST
LISTED!
'
TERRACED, WOODED BACK YARD IN A SUBDIVISIOf\1? This home Is full of pleasant surprises,
large 26' 4"x13'7" living room with picture windoW,
tamlly room with stone fireplace, floor length win·
d...,s, kitchen has knotty pine cabinets, range,
snack bar, assumable mortgage Just minutes from
city $.47,100.
$19,000 BUYS A NEARLY new 3 BR ranch home.
Fully carpeted, ltookc;;.ftl ft 10d ~urner, carport.
Only 4 miles from city - :;~"...,
LAND
- 2 ,year old cedar ranch,
beautllul country surroundin!ll, :l bedr'ooma, family
room with wQ!Id burnlno .,.. .. , larQe kitchen has ,
snack bar,
Carp;iftlD -apes and curtains.
Move I~ concllllon. IILJ7~1TH SUllO DOWN
PAYMENT, BALANCE AT 12~ . Kyger~ Creek
Schools.

renee-

•

: BMR 416- want a nice 3 fiP.. wncn style home wllh
a top of the ground P\l,ttl\ltt-l!ong a tloss)ble 8.50%
" mortgage assumptlor , .r so, call now
BMR 418- New Listing- Brick 1!. frame situated
on acres Includes 3.f'.A\Itl'mlhs, lg. family room
with fireplace and · K~!l.'tRII'Ifer, lg . /lvong room,
• dining room and deluxe kitchen Call lor details

s

FORltiiiAI'D TO WINTER -Willi
"ti.roeblioce to warm you, but tor the warm
days
evenings you'll like cooking
the covered patio or Suml)lor game
lawn. There's nearly an acre to
brick ranotj, l'h baths. work soover
basement, attached garage. Recently
terior. Kyger Creek Schools. $.49,000.

•~

BMR 419- New Listing - Lovely 4 bed•oom home
! In Gallipolis. 2 lull baths, den, formal d1nlng rm.
1 Call lor complete details.
1

full
In-

'

FITS Y0 UR BUDGET!- $39,500. Three bedrooms,
1
l'h bath ranch Family room With loreplace AI'
ta1:hed garage, city schools, lew miles from city
Good location. price oust reduced .. ...,,.r
qulc~ sele.

needs

'

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Br)ck and block
building on «&lt;'X1.50' lot on Eastern Ave In Galllpcllls.
Pret141nt1y l,n use as carry-out, Excellent location.
Call for showing. $48,000.
FULLY FURNISI:IEOI~ Buddy Mobile Home,
1
14'x70'. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, equipped kitchen
with 'flulll-ln jlesk, formal dining are with buill-In
buffet, concrete sidewalks, "'rklng aru, central
air cond., washer and dryer, large ~111..-!KaPtd
lol Be1ulllul home, move In cond- $29,500.

Unocrwnblolholo

one -to nch _ ..to torm

E-

N

r

.I I

[)

L1vestock

63

T

446 1675
Long tractor, Vermeer
balers, 1!. Hay equopment,
bale movers, rotary toilers
$1039 00, wagons, disc, post
doggers 1!. drivers, seeders,
rotary cutters, blades.
gates, cultivators &amp; front
end loaders
And see us to get your parts
&amp; complete servtce
USED EQUIP
IH Hydro 70, Ford 7000,
Ford Jubolee, 165 MF,
Massey Harris Pony, 70
Ohver, 185 A C
04006
Ouetz, plows, d1sc, JO
manure spreader, Ford 501
mower, 19 ft camptng
tra11er
We buy used equtpment

I KI J

....

IOROWBY±

CAL-l. 't'OUI'It "llltOt&lt;I!R,
AND YOU U~UALLY
ee--r --rH/5.

I KI J

) ()
't'eslerdly.

KJ

·
a-~
I "'........

-

Equtpment

350 John Deere dozer Gas,
rebuolt engine 54 000 614
742 1228

I

I CEKEHj

~arm

For sa le horse tratl er for 2
horses Call614 38B 8738

But I'm /UII trying to
make a few bucks

lour or&lt;llnaty-

~ -- t:.·!~ ~'I!'!J!'!!Inl ­
'SUMMER SHOWOOWN'
JIVIDENS FARM EQUIP

M

tour Jumtllel,

61

arronge 111o c:lootoct letlera oo

form the aurpr!M anawer u
gooted by lhe 11&gt;ovo canoon

•uo

Appaloosa and 44 tnch
pony Good ndt ng, S.400 for
both Call614 245 9463

63

Livestock

L1vestock

63

HOLSTE I N
spronger
heoters, 304 B82 2575

Rcgtstered and grade hor
ses, excellent 4 H pro1ect
English and western sad
dies
everythtn9
tmagtnable tn horse eQuip
ment and supplies, also
rtdtng lessons and trail
ndes and horse tr'atmng
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow
614 698 3290

Hay $1 25 bale on fo eld 304
675 2254 or 304 675 1302

Jumbo Bob Whtte Quail,
egqs also available La Bon
te's Quail Farm 614 985
4345

HAY , top quality, 2nd cu t
tong, July 10th S2 00 bale
304 675 4114 or 614 379 2697

REg
Quarter hor se
QUtldmg w1th sa ddl e &amp;
brodle, $900 Call 614 379
2745

37 head Hol stein da1ry
cow s a ll to sta rt frPshen 1n
August
Reasonably
proced 304 576 2510 or 576
Reg tst ered Nub1an goats, 2263
rabbtts,
ducks ,
and
4 qoats 304 458 1807
guoneas Call614 388 9756

64

_ _

!"~

&amp; Grain

Hay $1 50 bale
6641 or 446 B381

71

Call 446

Autos for Sale

--

- - -

1977 Olds Cutlass 441 Good
cond1f10n Call eve n1ngs
446 77B1

Real Eatate - General

INEPT FLOUT HANDLE BEFORE
How that Morae code message c•m•
thfough - ON THE DOT

Rul Eltllte - General

The CENTURY 21 VIP" Referral ""rvtce means the In depth expenence you d
expect from a m ember of the Number 1 real estate salesorgamzation
,.,....,i.··;;;.·~ m Amenca It puts you 1n touch w1th the nearest
\J'IIIUI~21 CENTURY 21" office to give you an overvoew of the
=--~
area you re movmg to while seUmg the home you re
lEIS.._ _ j I I
tiJ leavmg Catl now: before you mak'" a move

SOUTHERN HIUS, INC, 23

GALLIPOLIS,OH

~~~

RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
'o PTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH.

F

General

a

Be&lt;! line pock up camper 8
fl Sleeps 4 Gas and Elec
refrlg Stove and oven.
Pressure water svstem.
furnace ond gas loght Com
mode 614 992 7133

ICIWIIILED WORD GAME
by ..m Amokf ond Bob Lot

NEW LISTING - HAPPINESS FOR
SALE _ There's a lot of happy living In
thiS tmm ac ulate 3 bedroom ranch
FamilY room. fireplace
2 baths,
natural gas, central atr Basement,
covered patiO New garage Near Sliver
Brodge Plaza
I 126

Norweogen Elk Hound
pups 10 weeks old Cal1614
256 1117

Smil ll apartment 1n Rac•nc, $150

_ r:_or Sa!e or

OM~S FOR

LIH
INSURANCF
428 Second Ave
cal1446 0552 Anyhme

CONTRA~

m -5692.

-- -~1/'!f!'l•b!~
Home grown sweet corn ,
Charles McKeon Farm,
Fairfield-Centenary Rd.
Call446 9442

59

STROUT. REALTV Inc.

Real Elltllte - General

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

,Frufi - -

The sunday T1

Potnt Pleasant, W . Va .

Real Elltllto - Genorat

POODLE GROOMING
Ca ll Judy Taylor at614 367
7220

AKC COLLIE PUPPIES
Lassoe type Call 614 256
1267

Real Eltlte .._ General

WOOD REALTY, INC.
-446-1066

58

-· - ~------.

AKC Reg English Spronger
Spaniels. 11ver and whtte ,
all shots, $95 Call446 8234

CAST I RON bathtub, $10 00
Seth Thomas mantle clock,
1857
Old
fashooned
dresser, p1eces of marble
304 675 2635

Rool Eototo -

'I'll

OHIO RIVER LOTS FOR SALE Located 3 miles below Eureka
Dam, ideal for camping,
building or mobile homes. Call
RANNY BLACKBURN at STROUT
REALTY 446.0008.

lor sale, 304 oiS8

For sa le Wurllfzer ptano,
S500 Homelote cha on saw
new slol l on box,$150 882
3173

1975 r:ase .C50, dozer
tractor, 1.800 hrs , very
good cond, S14,900 Call
446 4537

OPEN HOUSE

1---__.:_-----------------Real Eatate - Generol

Left handed compound bow
bear like new. only shot on
ce, $50 Call 446 3094 or 614
3B8 8857

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all bre&lt;!ds AKC
Reg Dobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Servlt e
Cal l446-7795

/Mtal
sheets for all
butldtn9 purposes
Flat
porce11an enamel coated
4x8 thru 4 x 12 Proces, S7 00
to $9 60 614 667 3085

Womens cloth1ng, large
assortment
and
_.(c
qualoly, soze 7 12 Call 614
367 7209
Good used 13 a d 14 onch
I ores Call446 9516

TEXACO HYDRAULIC
01 L N0.32 10 weight 55
gal drums Each $80 00
614-667 3085

Butld1ng matenals block ,
bnck, sewer p1pes, wm·
dews, lontels, etc Claude
Wtnters, R10 Grande, 0
Ca ll614 245 5121

Heavy equ1pment I Cater
p1llar 0 4 dozer , hydroltc
blade and cab, exc cond
$7,500 Ca/1614 643 2916

P~!sJ~~ ~a_le --

56

WOOD
1833

ADDITIONAL OISCOUN
T!
L IMITED
TIME
ONLY' THE BIG, NEW
AMAZ IN G 1982 FAMILY
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN
CLUDE DECK, FENCE ,
FILTER &amp;. WARRANTY
ARE NOW ,AVAILABLE
FOR ONLY S999
IN
STALLATION 1!. FINAN
CING AVAILABLE FIR
ST COME. FIRST SERVE
CALL 1 BOO 624 8511 (Ohoo) ,
I BOO 642 3053 (WVI

Ohoo-

S4

CALl. Robert Harper,
d1stnbutor of M ead ow
Fresh Products, 30A-675
1293

Forewood tor sale Call 446
1437 or 6U 256 6574

rota toller, $200
Wurlltzer accord1an, $100
Call 446 7649

VI

i'ldl

RAT LI FF 'S POOL CEN
TE R PoolS sale, supploes 1!.
•nsta~oatton 403 2nd Ave ,
Gallopolos, Oh Call 446
6579
In ground Ablove
ground

July 25, 1982

5 HP
dryer
whtte mtnt
shape, $90 Whorlpool coppertone auto washer. real
noce, SllO Call446 8181

POMEROY LANDMARK
Ill l

M1sc Merc~an~•c_e .

S4

GE

1111!1:1 fiii!IIJY SiiVI!ll

3 bd. room apt , Middleport
$150 mo. and Security dep.

Pomeroy -two bedroom
apartment,
newly
remodeled. Carpeting, nice
yard. $165 mo. Deposit req_
992-2288, alter 6 p,m

Soltd oak furn 1ture, curved
glass chtnas, clawfoot
round tables, cha 1rs, dry
sonks etc Call 446 3759

I h;:y Loi~ll

31 t:;il W,;lo:r Hr:,;l ;:r' tG;,st
•li [; ;ol Wiilo:rlli:dli:r:: If lo:o:lll

Household Goods
---------SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE 1!.
PAWN SHOP 67 Ol ove Sf,
Ga lliPOliS 9xl2 rlnoleum
S22 , 3 p 1ece hv 1ng room
1
couch love seat
chair S199, 2 poece lovong
room suttes from S140 up,
love seals trom $70 up,
maple do net sets from S99
to S199. wall huggers $100 ,
recloners
$80,
maple
rockers $.49, bedroom
suotes S150, varoety of table
lamps, marble top stands
$30 and up. twon and lull
box spnngs &amp; mattress
(new) SJOO. several utololy
cab inets, k•tchen cabtnets
wood 1!. metal, baby beds,
chests of drawers S2S to
$60, 3 way rec/oners $100,
gas &amp; electroc ranges,
refngerators, wash stands,
bunk beds complete w1th
bunk1es S170, several
dressers, hall tr ees, beds,
brass head board beds $35,
bookcases,
s mok ers,
Hoover spm dry washer,
wronger type washers, hut
ch, coal 1!. wood heaters.
televrstons, fans, new tools
of all konds, variety of
stlverstone cookware Call
446 3159

51

4_
6 _ ~aceforRent

~1[

.in

acres, 6 rm house and
barn, tobacco base on St
Rt 218, 7 112 moles t ram
coty Call 614 245 9222 after

turn oshed

House
120 3rd
Ave,
Galllpolos 1 bdr, gas heat,
dep req The W•seman
Agency , 446 3643

~1

New Moon. 2 bedroom
{4,300 304 882 2236

r oom

The elderly os my conce rn
I have one vacancy tn my
pnv ate home Very good
expert ence S470 Per mo
667 6329 or 667 3402

5:16

MOBILE HOME S MOVl=D
l:lcensed &amp; 1nsured Call
:jp4 576 2711

THREE

3 bdr house good locat•on,
2 bdr apt, HUD excepted
A One Real Esta tes, Carol
Yeager Realtor Call 304
675 5104 or 675 5386

3727
, q79 L•berty Ltberator
S11.500
Contact John
Mvers, Ohoo Valley Bank
Call 446 2631

Furn• shed apt 4 rooms
and bath, depostf adults
only no pet s off1 ce space
BOO sq fl 608 22nd Sl Po ont
Pleasa nt 304 675 2601
2 bedroom ap t 1n Mason
Adults only No pet s 304
675 1451 after 3

4 bedroom

FOUR bedroom , excellent
neighborhood, huge family
room , bar 1!. wet sonk, 304
675 3779 between 5 9 p m

APARTMENTS, m obole
homes ,
hou ses,
Pt
Pleasant and Ga lli polis
614 446 8221 or 614 245 9484

TWIN R1vers Tower now
r ent.ng to qual•fted ap
plteanfs , age 50 and older
Phone 304 675 6679 HUD
asststed prot ec t

2

IIVIOQ room , C41fhedral
cedmg, wood beams, stone
firepl ace, stone &amp; cedar on

Apartments 304 675 554B

28 ACRES, tobacco allot
ment, mtneral rtghts, no
buoldongs, $10,500 304 675
6851

RtAtals

on Hannan Trace

r-------------...;.._.;.._;..,

Three room furn• shed
apartment, adu l ts no pet s
Pomt Pl easan t Phone 30.4
675 24S3

ouock sale 614 9913530

ONE m•le out of Glenwood

•

- by Larry Wr/aht'l 51
Hou~et•o!d Goo_ds
LAYNE'S FU RN ITU R E
Sofa, chair, rocker, ~ot
loman, 3 tables, (e xtra
heavv by Frontier), $685
Seta, chair and loveseat,
$275. Sofas and chalr5
priced tram S285 to S795
Tables, SJ8 and up to Sl09
Hode a beds,$340 , queen
soze, $380 Recliners, S175
to S295 , Lamps from $18 to
S65 5 pc dinettes from S79 ;
to $385 1 pc , $189 and up
Wood table wolh 4 chaors,
5219 up to $495 Desk $110
Hutches, S300 and S37S
maple or p1ne fln•sh
Bedroom surtes
Bassett
Cherry, S795
Bunk bed
complete w1th mattresses,
$250 and up to S395 Cap
Ia on's beds, S275 complete
Baby beds, S99 Mattresses
or box spnngs, fu ll or twtn
$58, torm, $68 and $78
Queen sets. S195 4 dr
chests, $42 5 dr chests,
S54 Bed frames, $20 and
$25 , 10 gun Gun cabinets,
$35() , donette chairs $20
and 525 Gas or electnc
ranges ,
$325
Baby
matresses, $25 1!. $35, bed
frames 520 , 125 , 1!. $30 used

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

Apartment
for Rent

TWO acre lots 150 ft road
frontage,
ctty
water,
behond 84 Lumber, call304
675 6873, 675 36 18

ove r garage Must see to
apprec1atc Reduced tor
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
dttt on 3 bedrooms, family
room w1th It replace, ce n
tral a•r basement, phone
304 675 1542

44

1 acre lot c lose to Holzer on
Kemper Hollow Rd, $2,695
Ca ll6 14 592 4359

3 bd room f) Ouse for sale or
renl 614 992 6309
8 room housl:', double lot
doubl e garage, 680 5 2nd .

~c!:_eage

spaces at OhtO Valley
Memonal Gardens L01 No
25 Sec loon B Call 614 256
1933

Melvm Hall e y or ca ll 446
3B97

tank

Lots &amp;

35

July25, 1982

Its Ohoo-Poont Pleasant, W.Va.

Tomes Sentonel

NEW LISTING - BMR 420F - This fine home Is
only three years old. It features 1400 sq. ll.of living
space, with 3 large bedrooms, l'h bath,s, large living
room and a lo~ely kitchen with dlnong area, full
' ~&gt;asement. Priced al only $60.000. On yes, I am sure
• you will alsoenloythe24acr!JSofland It sits on
BMR 402F' - Check on this one - 37 acres wllh
1401 lb. tobacco base, 30x30 barn. NOW available
on tand contract at 10'11&gt; Interest. Call tor details.
BMR 421 -New Listing- Possible Loan Assump-

tion at l'h~ mterest Nice 3 BR ranch on 111 1/ol
lot. priced at$35,000. Better call

'

01) 111/sone Niday I

-

BMR 422 - New ~IStillll- Nice ranch tocaltd on
Roulh l.ane Is priced to sell at S38.000- Large LR, 2
BR, kiiCIMn IncludeS' range, ~n-level ovftft, c!llhw.Mr,811dtllspaaei.Cell~.-e'

PRICE REDUCED S27,000
MAKE US AN OFFER
1 thtnk you would say that thiS sorr:~wl
lng brtck tn level IS one of the nicest
counTry homes you ' ve ever seen TA •s
beauty ts s1tuated on 41h acres of land
about 3112 miles from Rodney Why not
IPt vnu,. f;lmdv Pntnv .. BR5 3 bath s
larqe 1tv1nq and dtntnQ room . com
pleTe Ktlcnen, ram•IY room wtth stone
ftreplace and 2 car garage Be the
f1rst to see thts one

SLOOO DOWN r'A v Mr N ' on th•s Ohto 1
Rtver Vt cw property Approx 8 ilcrrs
wood ed lAnd on Rout e 7 and 5 m1 south
of town Owner will f1nanc e bf'lancc at
10o.-o
I
OWNER WILL FINANCE Great
famoly home wolh 3 Brs. 2 baths, 15x27
LR wllh gas ftreplace, large modern
kttchen w1th range, self cleanmg oven,
ow and d•spl, laundry w1th washer
and dryer, part basement and over 6
acres of land at the edge of town
GF NTl f MAN'S FARM - 33 ac res m /1

on Stat e Route 160 near North Gf! lltn
H•oh Schoo l Mostly clean rolltno
qrassland, stock pond, 3 BR rc"lnch type
home wtth full basement, qood bMn
Out of town owners says SELL
WALNUT TOWNSH!r' - Beet, hily &amp;
gratn farm 80 acres, m /1, approx 35 A
qood c ropland , 10 A wood s, balance
pasture, Qood fences, 9 rm / bath ,homc
was butlt tn 1872 &amp; has been partiAlly
r emodeled, 50x50 cattle barn wtth co n
cret t&gt; floor
larqe silo w•th auto
un loader, sevcril l sheds, lrtr&lt;l&lt;' pone!
sprtnos, stttnd tnQ crops oo to nrw
owner
BEFF CATTlf COUNTRY 131
Acres m , mostly c lean htll pasture qood
f ences l't, story home, IMQC bc:~rn , lob
b~se , fron ts won 3 ronds nenr Mudsock
Pn cc reduc ed to$64,000
LOCA r tQN PLUS OUALi l Y ' houlcl
dcsc nbe thiS lovel y 3 BR brtck rcmcll
SiJCCii'll featur es ore a lorqe LR and
d1n1no rm . cQu tpp ed kttchc n, P 11 b.=tlhs,
laundry qu;~l,ty carpel ce nt n•r and
an ovcrr,tzed 2 cnr Qilrnge Locc'lt&lt;'d on
U 5 35 We st rtnd SllOWn bY ap
p&lt;1(ntment.

ASSUME 81!2% LOAN - Lovely ranch
at the edge of town os proced to sell al
$49,900 Features are 3 BR. 11/2 baths,
large LR wolh WB fireplace, modern
k1tchen &amp; d ln1ng area , laundry rm,
garage 1!. gas heat Call for ap
po1ntment
L~RIAT DRIVE - OWNER FINAN(
INC AVAILABLE - Lovely 3 BR 1,
story 15)(2 1 LR for 'l'lal rhn .nq lull
basC'rncnl w•th 1.4x27 tcvnlly rm fln• sh
r d ,n knotty p1 nr 2 hrf'placrs. 47 It
rprtr ~crrr n rct 1n por r h qariHH"' ~ n d
100x300 lot can bf' bouqht w•lll or
w• thout lu r nilurr Ask•nQ $59 500 w•th
2-4% down and 12% on tne balance
PRICE REDUCED TO $69,500 ' BUY
BELOW REPLACEMENT COST Over
2100 SQ t1 Of IIVtnQ area ThiS il l I brtck
ranc her offers 3 BR's I master 1S 16x22)
3 brtths 15x2 4 LR wtth firepla ce, 13x2S
lamtly rm , formal dtntnQ rm, galley
kttchen tn cludt-s double ovens corntng
type counter top range , OW &amp; d1sp , QaS
heat c('nt a1 r. att1c fan &amp; much more
Loci'ltcd 1n town on Spruce St Ex
wns• on Ca ll Ranny Blackburn for a
pcr sonnl show tnQ
R IO GRANDf
co mm c r c • t~ l

OVAtlrtbi C
bus•nC'SS

CornN lot , ]Onecl
ld0'1C1 56
all
Ufti1I1CS
RcMIY tor your nf'W

IHF

SfTitNG

IS

GRF f N TOWNSHi r - Cf N rRt'll LY

lOCATED - n2 ncrc farJn hrts tron
taqc on Sta te Route 588 FCHrftcld (('n
tenr.ry Road &amp; vr~nco Patrfteld Rd Ex
cc ll cnt for fr1rm1nq or development
Older 5 rm &amp; bnth farm !tome, bun &amp;
Sdo tnc lud cd Owner!&gt; wtfl cons1dcr
sc lltnq smaller tr ilc ls of short term
f1nr~n c•nq Call for morP tnlormrtlton

GlJYAN fOWN~ Hir' - 108 nncs m / 1
locrtlcd south of Mcrcc rvllt r Approx 20
A tdlrt blc billc1nc c woods lob hasf'
owners wil l 11(:- lp f, n,, nc c

S18,000 - NF ICHRORHOOn f.?C'AO
4 Be dr oom sect•onC'II home m ust sell
th1 s month to sc ltlf' es t ~ t (' Crlll for Ap
potntmen1

AFFORDABLE FARM- 9W!" LOAN
-"SSUMPTIO"' - Noce remodeled 6 rm
rs; bath home, WB loreplace, stove,
refrlg .,"" cellar house, 3 sheds, SO acres
m/1, approx 15 A cleared, 1!. balance
wooded Located near Eureka on the
cliY school dosl $38,900
HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a hun
tlng lodge, vacation home. etc Rustle
log home Is b\Jill from hand hewn
beams and has a sleepong loft, modern
bath, large stone foreplace and approx
21 acres of woods in the Wayne Natoonal
Forest Extra tand avaolable Easy Ter
ms.

HUNTINGTOWN TOWNSHIP - 176
acres m/1 vacant land, fronts on Rae
coon Creek &amp; the Tom Glen Rd Approx
31 t oliable 1!. the balance woode~ Under
$400 per acre
HUNTERS PARADISE - 4B acre• m/ 1
on Raccoon Creek near Ewtngton, ap
prox 10 A tollable, balance woods. 1'12
story log cottage, cellar hou se, 12x15
metal buoldong, extra mce 14x70 2 BR, 2
bath mobile home All th•s for the
askong proce of $39,400

RIO GRANDE AREA Roo Cen
terpolnl Rd. (Cherry Rodge), approx 75
acres woodland, fronts on 2 rds , county
water evaialble Owner may help flnan
ce Pnced to sella! $400 per acre

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE - on
the wilderness of the Wayne Nat•onal
Forest. 5 to 9 acre trac ts of woodland
CENTENARY - LOT FOR SALE - ' now avaolable, ad101nong thousands of
Super location, 93 fl frontage on Route acres of government land Public hun
Ul, county water avaolable Asking tmg, fishtng and cam ptng permtt1ed
Prices start at $3500 with fonancong
$7,000.
available
LctVEL y BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN CHER , plus 78 ACRE S " of land on STYLE ... ELEGANCE ... A WAY OF
Cheshore Townshtp offers lots ot good LIFE - First lime on the market tor
hvtnQ tor your growtng familY Home IS this like new contemporary, 3 or. 4
tUSI iike new woth 1438 sq fl ot lovong BR's, 2 baths, large opel\ LR wtlh
area plus an attached garage 2 fireplace 11. beamed ceilings, kitchen
spaCIOUS BR's, 2 baths, 8x21 LR, 10x2A Includes range, OW 1!. refrlg ., full
kolchen woth retng , d1sp , OW, double basement, wrap around deck, cedar
o~eri &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays tn sldl
12x24 above ground pool,
laundry. Land os mostly rollong pasture
~~;'.;"~~h~b~~a:~r~n
&amp; 10 ac:res neDr Eureka .
tand with approx 25 acres wooded Call
tor eppolntment.

......

NEW LISTING- EYE APPEAL- Sol
on the nver bank and en1oy the v1ew
from the back lawn of thos enchanting
log cabon on Moddleport Only 3 yrs old
3 bedrooms woth I of! No ce landsc
S25,000 Possibollty at owner o

SUF'I RB

Bciluftlu l 1 8 acrf' woodP cl lot on tlw 0 J
Wh• tc Rd 311 II fr on taqc, l2x65 2 BR
mobtlc tlomc w1th f'x piln{IO Pnced to
sr ll at $12 ,900

Rf CFHA r i ONtAND
251'lc r rsm l
mn~tly woods fronts on Ltfll c R,lrcoon
Cr ee k &amp; Statr Rout e 325 ncar Tycoon
Lake 515,000

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% down - Campsotes on 1he Wayne
_Naloonal Forest 5 to 8 acre tracts
wooded land, good hunlong Proces start
al$3,500

MEIGS
NTY - Move to the coun
try
Neal and clean small older
remodeled 2 bedroom home N oce bog
screened tn back porch for en1oyable
even1ngs Cellar house wtth storage
room above 2 car garage and 1 118 acre
of lawn
~ 161

on
sat oslyong well
3 bedroom home
FA oil furnace, cou nty water. drilled
well, and dug well State hoghway 1 ac
land, well groomed Close grade school,
super tor country store $18,000

GAS "AliDN &amp; GARAGf
131 II
front on State Routf' 554, co rnpr lot,
ovrr 3100 sq It , 5 bay s pres.cntly used
lor cluto trc:tctor &amp; IMm cqu pmrnt
rcpn•r S pi1rllr1 1f1nrtnC1n&lt;1 f'IVitilc'lh i P

t\UII OIN( nR MOI"lf HOMf q I f
Approx 5 , ilCrC's locn lc&lt;l on ~~~
Grak1am Schooi - Rd , co water, over
300ft rd frontage Green Grade School
&amp; Gallo a Academy Hogh School S10,900

$200 PER ACRE
Gr&lt;'f.'nltl"lcl lown
Sll iP 8.4 C'IUC'S M l i!pprnx 10 A hOT
tom, 35 A woodf.'d 35 A slnpprd sm r~ll
crrrk, excrllrnt hunt1nq
TOTAl
PRICE $16 BOO

POSSIBILITIES abound on thos solid
older 2 story home 7 rooms and bath
Large garage plus carport, cou ld be
used for bus,ness Ntce block storage
bulld tng Cellar house and sttuated on 4
flat lots Woll sell woth 2 lots of 4
~ 1l8

Pt'CTURE PRETTY and first lime on
the market 3 bedroom ranch with kol
chen, ltvmg room , large fam,ty room,
ma 1n bath, utd1ty room, large covered
patiO and front porch Thts home stts
nestled on 1 acre of love ly landscaped
lawn

,,

ol
of Rio
Two story house and
basement Now be1ng used as three
apartment rental Can be restored to a
famtly dWelling
Has c1ty wates,
natural gas Shown by appOintment
I
9
6
s

M us

FARM LISTING- Modern home, full
basement, all modern convem ences
Rural water, barn Corn crtb Roll1n(;l
ground, approx 30 acres grass. 10
woods, 2 tarm ponds One of the better
ones . Call tor moredetaols
N12l

HASTE! (No lime to Waste) -

Come

:~:e ~~~.;:~~~~hwi\[oucEti-~~a';~ ~~~
1 ca r garage M
and all of H11s tn
tor YOU'

$2 000
~! ..

3

free sodong
real value

,....

1982

30 ACR I S VACANT LAND
Sec B
SUPER STARTER - Thos nea t and Raccoon ~wp t5 rt cr rs woods 15 acres
c lean 2 bedroom home would be perfect pas tur e F.anc tnq avn tl ab lc Lt St•nq
for f 1rst ttme buyers or rettrees Has pn u:• 1S $15 500 S7 ,750 down Owner wtll
rMrY ttl&lt;' rl', 11111 o APR
1ust been remodeled and •s con
ven1ent ly located to schools, shopp1ng
0954
etc Pnced 1n the S20s
RETREAT
and
what
a
SUMMER
N 998
barga•n ' Located on Raccoon Creek
NEW LISTING COMMERCIAL very clean an~ ell maontaoned 1970
12x50 Globe master M H Includes some
BUILDING 3 story commercoa l furntture, county water, sept 1c tank and
bulldmg Part•ally remod eled Over
1112
53acre
6 000 SQ ft on f1rst f loor Good reta•l
134
s~les tocat •on '
#
TOP THIS PRICE - $19,900 15 all ot
takes to purchase th• s 2 bedroom home
Alumtnum Sldtng Storage buld1ng Ap
GOOD FARM Mercervil le area ,
prox an acre N1ce garden area A neat
modern 2 or 3 bedroom house , 2 barns,
clean home
N 105
approx 1800 lbs tobacco base 25
ttllable acres, some of the best Fences ACREAGE - 3 acres total A lovely
are good, 56 acres pasture 10 acres butld1ng spot S•ts high and overlooks
woods Let us show you thos farm !140
the nver with a beaut1ful vtew
1 149
WANT TO BUILD? Well th ere os plenty
of room on thiS 21f2 flat acres Rural
water Electr1c Road frontage No
restnctions
1986
HER" IT 1St and waotong tor you to
buold the home of your chooce 2 13
Rural water
Ctty
SUPER DEAL - Lookong lor terrofoc wooded acres
schools
f/nancong terms? Then gove us a call
1109
today for more 1nformatton on thiS 3
bedroom ranch Doshwasher, dosposal
ACREAGE - 2 acres more or less
Aluminum s1ding Basement 1 acre N1ce place for your new hous eor mob1le
e County water available
$35,000.
·
I 961
N159 hom '

NEW LISTING - OWNER HAS LEF T
STAIJ'E and needs t o sell thos lot loc ated
close to town 42 acre Water available
Restricted to help protect your proper
1984
tv values

�'.

llipolis, Ohio-Point

Page-0-6- The sunday Times- S e ntin e l

71 - -A uToSiOr Sale

81 Chevette. 9 mos. old ,
1Q,OOO mil es, It , blue.
delvxe int., S4,BSO

1980 DODGE D1p1om a1
sta t io n wa gon, J04 675-5867 .

f i rm

Caii446·705J.

12 - - Tru Ck~ID!_~.!!.- -

~---

75 Ca m ar a LT, 350 e ng ine,

197s F BOO Fo rd J ton 5 sp
and 2 sp. axel 20 ft f lat
bed Motor new w ttn less
th an 5000 mdes Good cond

AM· FM 8-track ta pe. 60,DOO
niiles, ye llow wi th ba lck
tr,i m , gr ay cloth inter tor

Call 61 4·367·7727

5692

htrlo tntuble 11.-.Jing

Rabbit Deluxe
A .C , am ·lm 8 track Lots
1979

VW

73 --

of ext ras 614-742 2228

197) Cne vy Nova, V-8, ps,

197 5 v w Dasher Sta t1on
Wa gon 4 Dr , 4 sp , good

good cond
3496.

pb,

auto..

low

m i leage,

$750 . 304-895·

75

1971 Pl ymouth Vo lare Sta
Auto., 6

Wa gon. 4 door

condition, 304·675·
le r . Call 446·2235 after 5 ·00. cellent
7132, alters p.m .

---- -- ----1978 YAMAHA 500 , good

1980 'Sears 12' fiberglass
fishing boa t, 7 1/ 2 Hi&gt;

1980 Hond a CM400E . Li ke
new . Must sell. 614'742· condition, low mileage,
$950.00, 304·675· 3534.
2025 .

1975 CH E VY Monza. 4 cy l .
good condition, $900 DO Ca ll
3G4·J9p999, ask lo r Tracy.
197~

Ol.OS Cutlass. ex·
celtent, 350 eng ine a nd
t trt!!,

~ -----

Torona do , 2-

deor. H . T, All ex tra s inc.

bod y

repelroble.
22-16.

b6ilt in A.M F .M. 8 track
sti reo Good cond $395 .
614·667·3085.

jackets. $900 . Call446·4782.

WISEMAN

oy

r ough

Ca ll

but

30&lt; 882

vice,

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

~ v~~s~_4 ~~~=-=-

1klr W t ~ m.tn , Broke r , 44' l '"

dro ve. AC. PS, PB , AM FM

f we

'' J

lim ( oc hun. AU K!olle, 44• · 7111 F ve

H.•u n ton, An oc . Ut

( l ~ d •Witl k tr ,

1980 LUV 4)( 4 Wl fh topper ,

PHONE 446-3643

$4,995 DO. 304 576 -2403.

~HI.I F ve

II U OC l 4) )lf6

m
IEAI.TOI

=~ ~~~~Cyc les--­

Kawasa k • 1000 LTD . 1981,
fan ng , cr ash bar, low
miles Cal l 446·9278, like
new, qu1ck sale, $2,800

stock .

608 E. MAIN

,---------------

POMEROY, OHIO

gOvernment sales in your

PH.992-2259

)! E PS. cars. truc kS under
siOO available at local

a (j!a . Ca ll (refundable ) 1·
7~ · 569 - 0W ext. 1855 for·
dlfectory on how to pur·
cliase. 24 hours
1975 MONZA 1971 Dodge
Charge r Super B w rth 383
magnum , 304-675-5812
Real Estate - General

O'BRIEN-CROW
REALTY
WE WANT TO LIST
YOUR HOME

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Neat two story
frame home w1 th thr ee · four bedrooms, dining
room wi th f irepl ace and bar . New carpeting

througnout. S31 ,900.

·

foii!W LISTING - FANTASTIC HOME - wi th four·
five bedroom s, 2112 baths, large living room with
beautiful ftreplace, den . big uttltty room and f\No
porches. Home Is in exce llent condition with every
r oom carpeted and lots of closets S65.000.

LOW INTEREST ASSUMPTION
SELLER FINANCING
The terms are excellent on thlsrnost at·
tractive brick home on Oak Drive but
that's not all . This is an energy efficient
3 or~ bedroom home with those special
touches that the owners addet;l that
makes this an outstanding place to live.
The yard Is large and private with ex·
ceptlonaf landscaping, large In-ground
pool and a lovely view. The home has 2
fireplaces, woodburner, llnlshed
basement. fully equiped kitchen,
din ing, 2 baths, hardwood floors &amp; wall
to wall carpeting. Nat. gas. central air
&amp; much more. Immediate pOssession.

Let us show you one of Spring Valley's
finest .

LAND CONTRACT - OWne r will l inan ce th is four

Jlown tor 15 years at 12% Interest witn montnly
payme nts of $282 .05 Sale price $28,500.

shed, and a fou r bedroom home t hat has recently
been remod eled throughout. Stop in and ask about

this one. $39 ,900.

437% 2nd

LOTS One acre to 77 acres As m any acr es as you
would l1ke. Water and elec tr ic ava i la bl e. Startin g at

Gallipolis
Steven Holmes, Assoc.
388-9762 Evenings

Real Estate - General

OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE
MAKE US AN OFFER
Must have sold before they leave the

$1.500

area. Spacious.( bedroom ranch in c rtv

REALTORS :
Henry E . Clela nd. Jr .. GRI .... , ....... , . 992-6191
Jean Trussell ...... , .... , ...... , . . ..... 949-2660

s c hool dist. (Washington Elem . L In ·
eludes 1'/• baths, huge family room
w/ firepla ce. equipped kitchen , full
basement, nat. gas heat, garage and
over 112 ac . yard . Priced to sell .

Dottte S. Turner . . . . ........ . • . ••..... 992·5692
-~lice

.... . .... ... ..... , . ... . .. .. . , .. . 992·2259

family
ASSUME VA LOAN
APPROX . 54,000 DOWN
You need not be a veteran to assume

this VA mortgage. This Is a well built
attractive 3 bedroom rancl&gt;.ln LaSalle
Circle. Has large kitchen and bath.

3

spacious bedrooms, garage, fullyin·
sulated and 'h ac yard . Priced at

$48,900.
88 CHILLICOTHE RD.
VA ACQUIRED PROERTY
Anyone can buy I S14DO down payment
and 30 year mortgage that will keeo
your payment low. 3 bedroom nome

large yard. J ust$27 ,000.
STORAGE BUILDING
Plenty of parking,
water and electric .
Ideal tor a garage or
whatever
Asking

has bath, kitcnen, l iving room and
basement New paint inside, new H/ W

$23.000.

heater, wiring. $22.&lt;100.

2 HOUSES - Rent will
nelp you pay. A fam11y

HERE ' S A CREAM PUFF
Authentic old brick 3 bedroom ranch
with a farge lleautitul family room. 2
full ceramic baths, wife i\Pproved bvlt

MASSIVE EXECUiiVE HONE HOME
LOVE A BARGAIN?
5 bedrooms, 3 batns, 4,624 sq . ft. of living space.

$37,500.

Sure you dol And here is a 'bargain ! Main entry,
·.. nuge formal living room , formal dining room

I NV EST - 1n these side·

&lt;W/targe gleaming candelier. Completely equipped
'li1tchen with island Jen-Air grill, bar . Wall-to-wall
massive stone fireplace In the family room. Rec.
room, master bath features a garden tub. 3 car
!j1rage. This hOme features much more. Like to buy
.llolfor your money? Then th is home is for you!

Reel Eatate - General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
CeMre S. Hobstetter h.
llroll!r

PHONE 7!2 2003
NEW LISTING - St
Rt 143 . Approx 1.88
a cre s . 3 b e dr oom
Barrtngton home w1th 2
baths. Island rang e and
double ovens tn kttchen .
Family room with woodburner
3 st o rag e

SEE FOR YOURSELF!

J~~&amp;t ta~e one little peep at our new listing and you

Will agree this home has been immactJiately kept.

Cbmfortable 3 or 4 bedroom ranch . Features: a
11\llng room , family room, modern kitchen, full
O.Sement, 2 car gar age. Close to town ·An af ·
fordable home pr iced in th e 40' s.

build ings . ~e l ls for
$36.900.00.
NEW LISTING - Brick
St. in Pomeroy 2 story
home wtth 2 bedrooms.
Gas forced air furnace.
Extra nice stze lot.
Needs some minor
rep a ir but a r eal

barga 1n a t ONLY
$12 ,000.00.
FARM - 4B acres with
lovely 4 bedroom home,
2 baths, family room
with fireplace . Central
stereo and vacuum All
minerals Included. Call
today, we have a
REDUCED PRICE.
MIDDLEPORT - This
home reflects the love
and care it has had. 3
bedrooms, dining room,
sitting room , utility .
Everything is In tip-top
shape. Close to stores .
and shopping. Owner
willing to _negotiate In
price of

ns;ooo.oo.

Cheryl L•mfey,
· Sales Assoc.
Phone 7n·311t
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
742-3092

Sua~e Two,
MacGrecot, Ottnlop, &amp;
-nln&amp;Eflllipmtnt
*GOlF LESSONS

We

c•nr

-AU AGES

6 ACRES MORE OR LESS
-Good home s ite and well. BOO lb. tobacco base . Some
timber. Owner will sell on land contract - 1o% inl.
rate . Low down payment.

,

·

In kitchen and dining area . Two car

garage and a klng's view of the city and
Oh io River Valley . This home is very
nice ly·decorated and has had the best of
care. The owner is moving out of state

and desires a quick sale. Located in
town, grade school children can walk to
school.

room

&amp;

tirelace.

Large

basement area, shady lawn, very good
neighborhood, city schools &amp; water.
New hospital on Martin Drive.

OWNERS WILL HELP FINANCE
Well kept 4 bedroom' home on Rt. 1!1().
Ownrs have bought another home and
must •ell . Includes nice kitchen, dining
room, sewing room and bath . Detached
.garage, farge building and 'I• ac. land.
EVERYTHING YOU'LL NEED
A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD

YotJ mtJst see all the extr~s this fine 3

bedroom home offers. Located in city
school

district,

this

ranch

has

a

beautiful kitchen with quality cabinets,
range &amp; oven. dishwasher !compactor,
fireplace in living room, l'h bath, full
basement, - family room , oar age and
18x36 in-ground pool, huge cover~d

deck an&lt;l'/• ac . Onl_y$53,900 .
S3,250DOWN
12% INTEREST
You can't beat terms like this. Sellers
must sell this 2 story remodeled and
modernized home In Patriot, Has 3
bedrooms, family room , equipped kitchen, formal dining, basement, central
air and large flat yard. A batgain ' at
$32,500.

NEW ON MARKET
LOG HOME &amp; 10.8 ACRES
Th is i~ an attractive 1'12 story 8 yr . old
log home with 3 bedrooms. fireplace ,
equipped ltitchen , · 1'12 bath, full
basement &amp; woOdburnlng furnace LAND CONTRACT - Just listed this
Wooded 1~ acre lot. Only $39,900 and cozy remodeled 2 or 3 bedroom home in
owner will finance with $6 ,000 down the country . Has new batn, wood·
btJrner, eat· in kitchen, instJiatlon,
payment.
cellar house. chicken nouse and 1.5
acres. Only $22,000 . Low down
MOBILE HOME.&amp; 15ACRES
Very pretty location, west of Thurman payment.
on Rt 35. Has pond and land loys perfect . Home has 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
etc. Priced to sell al$28,900 .
NEW LISTING- 9'4% ASSUMPTION
- Redecorated 3 bedroom brick ranch
RURAL SETTING-CLOSE TO TOWN
on t. 35 In Rodney area. This floe home
Nice well maintained and redecorated 2 offers ~ulpped kitchen, woodburner.
bedroom home 2 niifes from town. Has new bath, Insulation, air cond ., garage
an equlped kitchen, full tiasement, w/workshop ond ·storage bldg. A very
f,a mily room, woodburner, elect. heat
(low bills), large attached carport, good buy at S49, 900.
detached garage, some f~rnlture In· RIO CENTRE ESTATES - Beautiful
eluded . 1.2 acres w/lru lt &amp; shade trees wooded building lots·trom 2 to 5 acres
plus garden area. $39,500.
each. Ideal location near college In
. good ·resldentlal 3rea. S6.801J tb $11,0011.
OWNERS ANXIOUS TO SELL
Land la_y s very good. Lots of J!rlvacy.
DROPPED F'RICfi'J0$32,000
Attractive 4 bedroom home In town. 42'h. LINCOLN ST.~ 2 bedroqm home
Has full basement, family oom, equip·
ln , town.Owners have transferred and
ped kitchen, dining room, nice tarpet,
a~e
anxious to self Gas furnace. city
nat. gas heat and located In a family
water and . sewer. Screened In porch.
neighborhood. Low Interest loan
Priced In 20s.
assumption, low down payment.
NEW ON MARKET- 2 yr. Old malnt.
free 3 bedroom home situated on 1 acre 10'10 OWNER FINANCING· - Sellers
near H.M.C, Has equpped kitchen, musloelf now. Over 1700 sq. ft. of 11-.:lng
dining area, full basement, 1'12 car space In this aftrllctlve 3 bedroom brlc~ ,
garage and attractlv, landscaped yard.
frame home near Rt. 518. Dwnes have
Priced In low 50s.
moved 10 F'a. and willing to .l isten to
listen to any reasonable offer. The
'
OAK DRIVE
hOme has large tamll\ room &amp;
BELOW MARKET INTEREST
fireplace. equipped kitchen. 2 baths, 2
Owners moved, must· sell now. One of car garage &amp; nearly '"' acre yard.
the are's fln~t neighborhoods. Con· priced to sell at 559,~. ,
venlent to most . everything •and excell~nt tor children. 4 bedroom bllevel
' ·
•
Includes 2'h bath;' family room, •
fireplace, dining room. equipped kit· , NO tNTERo:ST
chen, deck, 2 cor garage and corner lot, YEAII~ - Can
ths to for
$69,900. Immediate possession.
anx!ou
cew1
REDUCED TOSS2,HG
Family sized 3 bedroom home near
Rodney. This unUIIHIIY styled hOme of·
fel'l family room, woodbumer, 2 baths,
eat· ln kitchen, utll. room, 16' meater
bedroom w/bam, elect. hHt, . ' C¥
~ncl 'h 1c, yard. Mike uaan tf'

a.

r::•

( Pomerov Scr"o
1ron &amp; Metal)
Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodi es,

scrap iron and metals.
1 Mile West of
Fairgrounds on Old

Rt. 33.
Mon .·Fri . 8:30 to4 : 00
P~ . 992-6564
7191mo.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Co.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete
guHer worll,
complete remodeling, root·
ing of all tr"'· Worked in
home area 20 years.
Ftee estimates
ea11 a•l· ll22

-

SS Hole-In-One U
JOHN TEAFORD
Chcstor, OH .
! 14 1 mo

l ilrCJ c or Sm il ll Job'&gt;

PH 99 2-2418
6 21 1 mo Pd

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL

1I

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail of all ages
available up to 8 Weeks

•

In any quanttty

Eggs Also Available
Clell La Bonre
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom , OH .
45343
614-985-434S
6/ 2411 mo.

with buiiHn island, patio, extra room for office and

extra lot. Tnls nome' nas the c harm of the old and
. the convenience of the new . A pleasure to show. Call
for d~tails .
N527
" GONE WITH THE WIND''
WITH THE CHARM OF THE OLD SOUTH
Gracious colonial home with 17 acres pf rolling land.
5 bedrooms. large family room, modernized sunny
kitchen. 2 porches Has aluminum siding and owner
has added extra insvlation . 2 barns, chlckenhouse,

•UH4

, New Homes - ex - .
tensive remodeling

# 389

•Electric work

•Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing work
14 Years Expenence

oewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Sl"ilh
All makes and model s
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
service available.

7-8-1 mo Pd .

tK

DABBLE
SHOP

16 Y E AR S EXP .
• Re s ident1a I
•Com mercoal
•I ndus tria 1
Racine, Oh1o
24 7-3534
Fre e E st i mate s

F A furn ace, 30'x'40' barn . s nlngfed roof. lots ol

ROOFING

''

yo unq peach and ,1pp!c trees. All thi s reduced to
~452

H.

&amp;rJGAlll f' OLh - WILL TRA DE FOR FARM
6 ro om s, 2 stl:lry home. Natural gas F A ftJrna ce. All

•
•
•
•

the city conven tence. 1 car garage or stora ge bldg
If you have a farm and w ant tn town. com e tn and

IIS24

L WRITESEL

Gutters
Downspouts
New or R'cp;ur
Paintmg

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or949·2263

71!00M$, HOMf, 01! INVESTMENT
OR .d r oom apar t ment. and 3 room ap artment , on
rtpprox imately 4112 tt cr es of land in Pomeroy , Ohio
All c1 ty conveniences Priced to sell now . $15,900 .
.
!528

Pau

By O.wald Jaeoby
aad Afao Botta&amp;

4 20 ttc

6·21 ·1 mo.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

81

•backhoe

STU CC O PL AS TERIN G

3(12 M ech antc St .
Pomeroy, OH

• A water, sewer

' • SEA T COVERS
• VI NYL TOPS
•CO NVE RTI BLE TO PS
• CAR P ETS

1182

•limestone

PA INTIN G
mt er1 or and
ex t e r1 o r , p l u m b1ng ,
r ooftng , some re mOdeli ng
20 yrs " P Ca ll 614 388

• A Comp lete L1 neof
Automobile U pholstery
7 l 1 mo pd

3-29 -tfc

WE

MILL
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

POOL

TOGETHER
• Stainless Ste el
• 1 Fiberglass ,
• Vinyl Liner s

PERSONALIZED

Call 992-6259

POOLS
1-304-773-5634

276 Sycamore St.

c L . t&lt; tiC hen
Mr.son, W . Vi'

Middleport, Ohio

670 1 mo
6 77 I mo

COMPLET E
RADIATOR
SERVICf

From the Sm.1llc st
H(!.ltC'r Core to the
Larqcst Rild•tlfor.
R.1dtiltor SpeCiali st

NATHAN I~ IGG S
35 Y rs ; E xpene~ce
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy,

Oh.

Ph . 992· 2174
2 26 lfc

1 14 ti c

GARAGE
Corner Main &amp; S. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT
Ill Minor &amp; Majot
Auto &amp; Truck Repair
•Free Estimates
•Reasonable Rates
Open 8 a.m.·6 p.m.
Mon. thru Sal.
PH . 992-7762
Jack Coleman 6 2,1
&amp; Tim Roush 1 m o

PROUDLY PRESENTS
lut·~ - L,•d• t·~ ~•qhtl2 · :t o

Wed \

And low 1nterest rate on balance with owner, 2
bedroom cot ta ge W1fh1n 5 m inutes of Si lver Bridge
1
Shoppin q Pl azrt
#2'0
1

KIRBY
SWEEPER
PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

I' ICTURE ROOM SETTING
UntQUe th n •e or four bedroom bn c k home m mint
conditi on . .Large liv in9 room ·and family room, both
baths'~ Frbnt porch and b~ck patio. Kitchen is equip·
ped w1th built· in stove, r efrigerator, freezer, diSh·
'y\lasher and fpod center. Master "bedroom t)'ls a
pr.iyate dressi"g room with sliding d.oor:s leading to

patio and pool. Beaut ifully dec orated. Cal l today 'for
more de ta ils.
#S21

PHONE
( 304) 273-4098

RUT BUY ANYWHERE
1800 SO . FT. CHARMING TR I·LE' VFL

ELEC.TRONIC

r C!Uipmcrl,,

Terry Brown
Tcchnici;m

..f

AssoC~&lt;liC · de~rcc •nd
1st c'l.lSs FCC hcensc.
f'honc 98S·3364 /l.vc.
,.
or91S· 3833

I

114'7
,

Ideal for boating, fishing and picnickin'g a1 y~r

backdoor. E;nioy this spacious cheerful hOUse With 3
' bedrooms,

baths, larQe jiv l n~ f"OQm , eat :n !\it·

~he~. 2 fireplaces. full basement, 2..porche•. cnain

l1nk fence, plus much mor-e. Cc"ll todl'IY to mi'lke an
~ ppo i ntment to see this tovely year aroUnd hon,c .
.,. "11 05

BRICK "OME

AN D 2A C ~&lt; r,.- S47,000

.

, 3 bedrooms, llf2 bath home wtth lots of extr .'l nice

features. built-in cabinets. sclf-cleanlno raoge,
dishwasher, garbage disposal • ttnd large diruog

room. Kyger Creek School&lt;

'
~CIIDWN C t1 Y
'
Nice 4room Ire
1e with" balh.,E'at-ln kit&lt; l)t!rt'
With metal cab Us anll double sink. Fu"l oil
lw!all!'ll stove. L6caflld on nlcP city_ lot near church.

.. NIIW4llltiNU&amp;.T

'I

•· KtN'S
• APPLIANCE
,., ~~
: AI I es
~~:_~ers

• .Dish·
• , Ran,.• aRtfri,.rat·
.,.,
on
.
,
• 'Dryers e Freezers
PAIITS 1nd SERVICE

~ -5- tlc

IISlll

COUNTRY LIVING /1. 1 f f ~ 8£ ST.
14jiCRES MORE OR LF SS. •
(Free Not. c. as)
Step Into oJlll q,t the cleanest farms In an 1dea1
location. Three flOod Sized bedrooms, lar&lt;!&lt;' Jiving
room, sunny eat-in kitchen and batn Tobaccn ballf.
gas Ieaiie and free gas, all 9&lt;1 with it. Large bath,
cellar house and chicken house . Call todlly tor marw
more extras.
·
11413

eltdrica WOrl

lf•oe Eslimatesl

Ill

V. C. YOUNG
992-6215 or992-7314

For Appt. 1&lt;2· 2011

I"'HONT 99 1 99 13

Fr enc h Cit y Pa1nt 1nq
r esidenttal &amp;. commer c1al,
tntertor , ex ter1 or , paper
ha ng 1n g,
&amp;
t ex tur ed

9·30-tfc

Vinyl

&amp; Aluminum

CONSTRUCTION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Built Garages"

for

estimates,

free

siding

949-2801

trail e r. Call 446·0'136 aflter
S·OOPM

or

949-2860.
No Sunday Calls
3-11 -tfc

ESTIMATES

&amp; Acces•ories

PH. 992-6011

1976 Ford truck engine 302.
good cond, $125. Call 614

BUILDINGS
SilOS start from 30x24"

· Utility Buildings
Si1es from 4 to 4 ••d all

~ood buildings 2!&lt;36.

Insulated Dog Houses
PIS BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Re~lne,

on.

Ph. 614-1&lt;43·2591
6.15-tfc'

INSULATION

FOUR winter tread

tir~ s .

B25x20 with tubes . $200.00
PhoneJ04-675-1892 .

ALUMr~~ll :I DING
:~~!~~ 1b0o~rs

.

77

•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
•New roofing
Free Estimates
J
K
ames eesee
Ph. 992·2772

-

.

.

-

j. -·

Ma sonar y

work .

Logu{'

R614
I 3881,

CHR 1S T I A N' S CO N
Co n&lt;tr .
S T RU CTION
rooftng , sidtng, spou ttn g,
fenc 1ng, pa1nt1ng, r e p a ~r s &amp;
c leantng
446 2000, co li
befor e 8 and after 5: 30

CON CRE TE CON

Ge ne's Stea m Carp e t
Clea n Sco tch Gaurd Free
est tm ates sprtng specta l s

SPECIAL
enamel

Complete

paint

jobs from

SJOO . Sunrools installed
'from $225 Auto Trim Cen·
ter. 446·1968.
79

7-! -1 mo.

- ..
Motor Home
. __ ~ ca!'!P.e.!'s __

RINGLE 5'SSE RV ICE ex
pen enced ma son , roofer .
ca rp enter , el ec tr1 C1an.
ge ne r al r ep a 1r s and
r emodeling Phone 304 675

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE
Or_ 0 nyltllnt

tiM. you . I
want to do, becaose I ·
live wlm • cerpttlter.
lfls na-ls AI Tromm.

742·2321
Rullltlld, OIL

7·15-1 mo. pd.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance
• R90flng of Ill lypts
aSidlltl •
•
•lltmodtflng
a Frft estimates
all Yl'l. ••flll'llnce

lOIIHOSKIJIS

Pll. 94f,2160 or 149-2222
HO·tfc

BOGGS
sALES &amp; SERVICE

refrig

gas

or

-

ADVANCED

CLEAN;J!~ 9S1~RVtCE

,

No Answer 446·2062

Modern steam cleaning
tor carpet &amp; upholstery
(lnsuranc e work) .
• ScGtcguard·JM
• walls, floors,

w1ndows
• water &amp; smoke
damage
Industrial
Commercial

...:

Residential

Dependable, 8 years experience. We do caret

...,

tic

SOLUTION

Uphol stery

Ave , Gtlll•pOII S

jl____S_U_
ND
_ A_Y_P_u_zz_L_ER----lr
ACROSS
1 Kind ol foot
race
6 More

mature
11 Continuous
operation
~~Depo rt

19 Join
20 Mends

21 Mexican
dish
23 Encourage
2A P,art of a
1001

den!
G1 Conjuncllon
62 Harvests
6" College deg
65 Elllsts

66 Baseball
glove
67 Mountain
nymph
69 Sweater stZe

71 Ventilate
73 Lamp
741 Winter
vehicle
76 Cldlster of a

counlry
124 Small rugs
t25 Peel
128 rnocese
t 27 In the phone
book

129 Lances
131 Profit
132 Appellation
of Athena
133 Dawn
goddess

134 Roman

bronze

26 Icelandi c

type

t36 Goddess of

saga

79 Boring

discord
t37 Foray
138 Squander
139 Symbol lor

solar over
lunar
year
30 Distance
measure
•cour se
32 Born
33 Indonesian
34 Fireplace

device
8 1 Clo1t'l

measure
82 Wager

84 Freshet

tin
1•0 Brhlah baby

85 N8gatl on

buooy

87 lampreys

14 ~ No genUeman. he

90 Character-

IstiC
92 Indefinite
number
93 Italian

seaport
95 Crown

1•2 1nvalld

1&lt;3 Cuddle
144 Join
t•6 Avoid

t•s Lively dance

2088 or 675 4560

98 The two

1St Signs

Wa1 er well s Co mmer ci,l l

40 Decimal

of ua
99 Conjunction

and
t• cand
TesSer
t holes
Pum Domes
ps Sa les
v1ce

ADVANC E D
Sea ml ess
Gutter ·Doors
Off c rtn q
c ont inuous
gutter•n o.
se amless Std tng , r ooftn g,
ga r age
d oo r s,
fr ee

PAINTING 1nten or 8. ex
t erior . free es t1mrttes. JO.t
675 1128
STARK S Tr ee Trt mmtng
and Lawn Ser v 1ce Shrubs
trimmed Phone 304 576·

2010

part

101 Entrances

42 Stop

103 By wsy ol

•3 A Reiner
45 Game
46 Article

lOA Snow
runners
105 Vehicles
108 A Gershwin

3 Cheertul
song

110 Scoffed
112 Rind

6 Russian

49

Me~tlean

coins
5t Silkworm
52 NFL score.
53 Coin tor a
60 Acrosa
54 Polson

55 Feolo lndllJ·
nant
57 Anllered

113 Brown on
the beach
114 Above
115 Word from a

doll
11 7 Spirited

horse
118 Anthropolo·

CARTER' S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pme

Phone 446· JBBB or 446 4477

Gallipolis Olvers•f•ed Con·
st . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backnoe work
SpeCial
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. «6-AAAO
SidenstFicker

Elettrical

____ ~ Re!_r!J!_J'~Ii_o~ .
Clendenen

Refrigeration,

Air Conditioning, &amp;
Healing Service. Calf 614•
256·1446.

-

t · - - ---- ---- ...

1 Stay

2 Conect
4 Pub order
:S Old pron oun

coin
7 Arrow
polson
8 Frull seed
9 And. Lat
10 Sharp reply
t1 Makes

ready
t2 Scale note

0

Madrid
17 Abbr on a
ship
2 1 Havtng
made a will
22 AttaChes 10
23 Assistant
25 Away
27 Unproducllve
28 Share
30 Super spy
31 Auction
word
33 Worship
35 Citrus fruit
36 Wan
37 One
defeated
39 Slmtan
41 Young
salmon
42 Sharpen
44 Treats lor
112 Down
47 Enemies
48 Short cape
49 Part al a
flower
50 Brand

88 Dwelled
89 Declared

90 Nota of
scale

91 Neighbor ot
66 Down

9&lt; Rugged
mountain
crest
96 Sun god

98 Need
99

F~ures

of

speech
tOO Speech
Prophets

~02

tO•· Red. and
Yellow
105 Solicitude
106 Soup dlshee
107 Scatters
109 Collect
111 Esteems
112 Fldo and
Rover
113 Mountain
• lake
116 In music.

high
118 Planet

119 Remunerated
122 Longs lor
12• Young lady .._

60 Eal

~25 Bucket

~

61Fam

126 Slumbers

,J
~

54 Conmc t

member
63 Undergarment

66 New Eng
state

67 .. _ a clear
day . .'
68 Landed
70 Shlrker
71 Sum up

72 Anger

73 South
American
plains

75 Minor Item
77 Mapabbr

gJa1 Marga-

13 Unlock

ret -

58 Chemical

119 Separate

t4 Militarystudent

76 Evergreen
shrub .

15 Downy

60 Song. In
Berlin

ducks

83 Large cuks
86 Diving birds

55 Paris streels
56 Meager
59 Wearying

animal

120 Amtrak
121 Capri's

Plumbmg
&amp; H ! ating

DOWN

number
41 Heap

47 Renown
48 Form

16 Mrs., In

123 Bitler vetch

Q7 Hindu
queen

.-s---.-

.. - - - - -···---

Gener fll Hauling

buildings
691 Miller Drive
446·2642
Free Estimates

35 Mine vein
36 Entrance
38 Dealer

66 Cortez motor home, exc.
cond .. $4.500. Call 614-388·
u.s. ·at. 50 East
SEWING Machine repairs,
8747 .
Guysville, Ohio
service. Authorized Singer
Aut~O!'ilecl John Dttrt,
· Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Ntw HolloOMI, Bysh Hott '
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
·. Farm EqufpmiHII
, ,
F'omeroy: 992·22B4,
OHler
-- -----~---~---.-- . - _. - - - ____,t,. - -Farm Equipment " 11,
Home
- Gineril 'Haoiiiiiri' ..
.......... -·-··· ..... .
Parts &amp;Service _
~-lmpr~.!~ts_ - JONES &lt;BOYS. WATER.
1·3' ttc i' F &amp; K Tree Trimming.' SERVICE : Caii6T~- J67-7471 ,
,
_
, stumpremov_al. 675-1331.
or 614·367-0591.

J.,-;...;_-----....:.1
' I

Mobilthomeawnlngs
Aluminum Utility

t•9 Those who
rent
150 Memoranda

17ft Travel Mate camper,

electric,

diamonds

31 Dinner

84

.

siding
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms

29 ExC&lt;ISII ot

B'a ckhoe Service . Call 675·
5580 .

I elect., ex cond., $2,0011: Call
614-367·7202.

Bill'S

sausfled. Because of the
lucky minor suit distribution
his !Ide coold make flve

RON 'S Tc- leV1S10n Serv1 ce
Spec 1alizmg 1n Zentth and
M ' torol a, Qu aza r . and

82

T
_

IMPROVEMENTS

lent non-double. Ea1t wasn't

27 Romance
lang

Lawrence

selfvolt
contained,
•:====='t===:;t=========::====~t======~==~~completely
air cond.: 12
or 110

!I'~
"'r
1__

Nu·Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl

&lt;ie ne Sm1th. 992-630'1

83 _ . - ~ ~iita vaf•~g- ·

_ . Aut~ R_!f!Oir

~~=~~~~~~~~~~c~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;i

~~~~~~~~~~~L__:::::::::=-----------------------------~

or61436 7 71 60

Auto Parts

76

Call 446·8515 or 446-0445 '
atter 4 : JOp.m .
tic

Ca ll 614 3617784

Cli nfon outtboard eng me 5

FREE

l l 2Third Ave.
61 4-446-2716

I Box 124, PI Pleasant. 304

est•ma te&lt;, 614 698 6205
1/2 HP , 1979,$215. Cal1614
367 741 2 0r614 ·367· 7242

illdn't South, afraid of a
heart ruff 11 West sot on

6754 154

304 895 3802

Boats and
Motors for Sate

18' fiberglass boat with 85
H P Johnson motor and

Custom
kitchens and
bathrooms.
Remodeling,
add-ons,
new
homes.
plumbing, elechic, siding.

"Beautiful, Custom
Calf

·c. R. MASH

7.S

condtfioning . All Type5
Insulation Electrical
Wiring.

MOWREY S Upnols lery Rt

1 I I mo

7 1 1 mo

EL ECTRIC

1163 Sec

house calls Pnone 516 2398

1 he L ow e!&gt; I

~ -~==i'~'~'~·1~46~40~6~6==~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;:=

4o16 7833 or 4d6 183 3

LON E WOLF 10 1

Monomum l"rtcc\ -

ti c

lRI STATE
UPH OLS IERY SHOP

or 446 2454 .

VII I' qloldl y .1nnounce rn,u r,lc ll
n•qllt ol lh l.' Bolnd we otle 11
dn n !- .1nd dr'own Some dnn._ s
r e d uc ed dur.nq b.Hld
Ou r H n
Mon l=ro 1 00 2 JO,
.,,,, &amp; Son 4 2 JO Ca rry Out
lieN o1nd Wtne Aw ;~11.1bl c .11

Bea r Front End
Sc r v tce
. Dependttbl e,
qua r
anleed Work 9 yrs E)(
pert ence
SR 124, Rutl and. Oh

-f'lumbinf and

f\ ANO !I
Wed &amp; Ttlu r\

~~;~~~-~7~1~6=1=m~o
~~~=========~;~;;;;;;B;2~0:t:fc~ 8FT
379 26JJ alte r SPM.
;
libreglass tru.c k top
"CUT OUT
ALL
STEEL
J&amp;L
BLOWN
pe r, 304-67S-4D04.
FOR FUTURE USE "

39A CRESMOI! r ( '' LF. '~
Tillabl e pasture/and, some timber . plenty of sprtng
water, 1/2 mile frontage on Prospect Church Road .

1112

~creleW«&lt;

SIDING

BARN
Locotcd ot Brown · s
T,uidermy, Co. Rd. 25
nc,n Chester .
T.V. •nd R•dio Rcp.11r
Atso other E lcctronic

i 379

BF AUTIFUL WA H RFRONT \
• All BRICk HOME -CI TY SCHOOL ~

-fioofiorlll14rulter worl

HI ~ M O Nf H '~

M/IRS HALl f E NN/INT9 1
Fn &amp; So1t

SPIN WHEEL
BALANCE

·~ddoosaodromodtinr

SERVICE

k YGE R CREEK SCHOOL OtSTRI&lt;\

Phone for full details.

I

~=======~=~~==~-==============:~~==================~~=========~
-

M hdf' rn. 3 BR r anch home approx . ·ill2 yrsold .' Ther·
mopttn e windows , storm doors, FA furnace . with
central air . ki tchen has btli lf.in cabinets, stainless
·Steel dbl. sink ttnd dining area. F.ull basr'.' ment with
pat io doors. Rural water syster;n , gari'lqe Call now

. 11425

F rt &amp; Soli li Vr RAN O S
&amp; Or ovm t'&lt;I Ch ntqhlt

IDnn~

446·3080

RU55ANDMAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Heating &amp; Air

87

l hur!&gt; - Poollourn a 2 .30

&amp; ELECTRONIC

SERVICE

7 22 1 mo. pd

more . Reduced to$58 ,900 . Cal l for information . 11465

for only 522.500.

CARPENTER

Pomeroy, Ohio

Larqr l ivinq room with fireplace, dining r oom with
slidmg doors lo concrete patio, modern e{lt·ii'l kit·
chen, large recreation room on first level. Utility
room , 3 bedrooms w ith pl enty of c loset space, ·2v2
baths, air conditioned with storm doors and windows 2 car fini shed garage , level lot 100'x300'. Lots

dcrpinnin9. lot s · of built· in cabinets; range,
refrig erator . citnette set. Atr condtttoner and other
furniture, ruri'l l w ilter, nice land for garden. All th1S

DUGAN'S
ALIGNMENT

YOUNG'S

-• 4C•rlry Or,l !t
Ntqhl l 2 30

•&gt;1 Jrci Av1 ·

J IM S Wnter S NVICP Cal l
Jrm Lan.cr , J04 675 739/

7891
St. Rt. 7- Between Middleport &amp; Cheshire, Oh .

35 Court St.
Gallipolis r Ohto
call44,-3896

Wil l haul d1r t of any k 1nd or
Any rlr1veway maten al
Ca ll Leroy Caldwell, 446
4851 lor cs t1mate

STRU CTION Spec 1a i1ZIOQ
tn co ncr ete drt veways,
Sldt&gt;wal ks. fl oors, pallos,
et c 11 yr ex p Ca ll 614 367

CANDLELIGHT INN

.,.r

r11 .1t , . ,
•u·• 1 ~~~~ · t.l i ' I H•P
1 1

710 1

Ca ll446·2107.

1--------------l BING S

't

St · •
UrRI Ule
nppmg
and refinishing

Now H &lt;~u l 1ng li mestone fill
dtrt top soil qr ave l Free
est 1mates
Call 61 4 367

CAP TAIN STEEM ER Car

REPAIR ,
call Bill W1rd
Ward's Ktybolrd
44Hn2
Vi01
Moster C. 5 9-tfc

F

11, " .

P·• ••

~oo· ,

We ' ll do 11. Call •46 3159 or
614 256 1967 al te r 6

pet Clea ning fea tured by
Haff el t Brosthers Custom
Carpets Free cs ft ma tcs

~~ TUllNG

COLEMAN'S

245-9113

m . 111. 1 ' •• n

som efh tng hauled
away or someth1ng m oved?

30R ooyea
l 1nr sg ex&amp;
spec tali ZinQ 1n

ce• lmgs

f'l

Need

Cal l 614 388
9622 or 614 JBB 9851

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residentia I
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
3-7 -tfc

,, 1, •, a

•u ·• m

1

~NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

9652
Spoutm g
pen enct,

Free Estimates

AE RIALBUCt&lt;ET
TRUCK SERVICE
47ft . work1ng He1ght
PASQUALE

SS

&amp; gas line•
•dump truck

licensed &amp;Bonded
PH. 992-7201

( A1 1 ,_
1- , 1 • . 11· 1 1-''
" ''

bl

t ex tured ce iling s com
m er ctal and res1denf1 al.
f reeest1m ates Call614 256

• excavating

*uplir:·systems

PH , 992-6506

11.1r , n l ll ' l'd
]t cl 1)1 V I

l ' llq4C:t 'lf la

Poor South was duped
line defenae and an t:1ce -

Home
Improvements

vvnrt (
I')')

nnesse in trumps rather
than playin&amp; for tbe drop.

East defeated a &amp;ame that
could bave been made, but
still felt Hke al-r
Althougb be wu tempted
to bid three diamonds at his
l1rst turn. hll poor eult and
the adverse vulnerability
eilenced him. At bll ne1t
turn he wu tempted to dou-

CHAIN LINK FENCE

,r 1 ll " •·fl l l t&gt;C 1r tr t.t ll

found the belt defense He
SWltched to his single ton
nlne-ol-hearta. He knew , of
partner
coune, tbat hll le.
could never aet on ead

trumpscashed
and loolthetwoace
trump
of
play,
tricks to East's kina-queen
If East bad doubiOd the
final contrac t declarer
undoubtedly would double

Opening lead +Q

Pac-Man Party Packs
and Cake Available

t

I II

Rive him a ruff, but declarer

Pus

DENNY

! l l ( l kl( (l'
1 ll •r tn r H1·.1 111H1

to;

Pau

CHECK OUT OUR
BIBLE SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

BUY THI S HOME
r ROM OWNr R WITH 1S2,500 DOWN

3BEDROOMS - JA'C RF.SM.OR L,
,
(vlobile hom e l4 ' x7~' 1976 Freedom. 1'1' batns. un-

Eul

Ew 1ngt
ont 1ngCa, ll
Con
tr ac
;=========:;t=========:::;t=;,;;;~~~;:=~t:======s;;~;::;i
NOW OPEN
PIAN
9939

3 BR, lull ba sem ent, wh1te alum 1num Sldinq, fu el oil

r

N.....

PH. 992-2063

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp;Service

7-15-1 1110

A lOT

le t' s t a lk trade . ·

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-,269 or 985-082

Greg Roush
Ph.992-7583
or 992-2282

N503

onl y $14.900

APPLIANCE SERVICE

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

nr 4 b ~d roo ms t o br~ cc o ba se. e1ectr1c r anq e, built·
in woodburner, ftJel oil FA ftJrnace, lots of frtJit
trees, grape arbor, strawberry patch, 3 acres
tillable. AsstJmable loan. Phone for mor~ details.
SAVE

ANO

+At0874

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer. South

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

S&amp;WTV

••

arcum
~:::::::::::::::::::-r::::::::::::::::::::lr.::::::::::::::::::::JI.===================~N\
ER
built up root

#S29

Cl f?I VF A lll 'l l f ,

+KQ71

!QIIIII

with dQOr opener, attic, 2 flrep :aces, central atr,

large basement. and over 1 acre of beautifully ian·
dscaped grounds. Close to the city. For more details
call today..
on
232'ACRES
MORE.ORT ESS
8 room brick home- approximately 157 acres tim·
ber, 32 acres tillable, 43 acres pastureland .. Has a
gas well . Rural water system and a well. All
mineral rights goes. Barn and storage -buildings.
Owner will help carry some f inancing on ~ a'ld contract.
.•
H35
BACK WHEN THINGS WERE BUlL T RIGHT

EAST

• ,!

Pomeroy, OH.

- Sewer

clubs
Aftera low
Westclub,
dilcouraged with
East

+KQ

WEST

REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

Service

Dozers
Racl&lt; hoes
Dump Truck s
lo·Boy
Trencher
Wiltcr

+10 !2

••

... .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

I 'I'I ' ·O U I\ 1 I

+AH
SOUTH
+AJIS4
.KQII

1-IHI

+IOtU
.A Jill II

51. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

7 16 2 mo pd .

Services offered

ble lour spadea, but paoaed
acaln. Eut eunnlled from
bls opponents' otronc bid·
din&amp; that hll par!Jitr wu
likely to bave a spade void
and very few bl&amp;h cards, II
an~ 11 all. Wh~ ehould he
alert declarer to the bad
tromp break? Frequently
this type OflpootaneoUI doU·
ble helps the declarer make
a contraet that otherwise
ml1ht fail.
East won the opening dla·
mond lead with hls ace and
quickly cashed the ace of

NORTH

GARAGE ..

O'Brien Elecfric·

- Gils Lm es
- ~c pttc Syst ems

*FIELD TRIPS

BusincsscqtJ ipmcnt, building, and D·21icenses.
6 room ll o m E,\- Central a tr , modern ki tc hen. l 'h
bat hs, a ll cit y conven1ence. Ntce hom e.
Rental- 3 r ooms A ll f or on e pric e. An exce llent in
ventment Ge t started now in bu stness and a near by

good construction and excellent ~ are
like this always makes a more
desirable home. 3 bedrooms, 1•12 baths/
nice kitchen· dinmg combination ,

bedroom ranch home
with modern bath, nat.
gas furnace, carpeting,
garage, carport and

ousing
Headquarters

large cheerful living
room . dining room.
shed, patio pluo cherry,
apple, and plum· trees.
Priced to sell .
1539
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
BEAT INFLATION 81f•% ASSUMPTION .
Charm and quality will be yours In this all brock 3
bedroom home. Laroe llvlna room and formal
dining rm. with larg~ plctu~ wlnd0\11$ overlooking
the Oh io River. 3 baths. family room, 2 car gara~e

s_chool system. Call for more detal_fs.
~ USINESS - HOMF RE N l AL

nice al we have seen for S62,000. very

try on good hard road.

Both tor $21 ,ooo.

it PRO SHOP

3

bedroom modern home
with bath, basem ent
and garege in th e coun·

by·s1de houses and have
a business loc ation.

KLUB

storage building. Close to Gallipolis, in the city

TRANSFERRED
This attractive· split level Is about as

:viRGIL B. SR . IEAI.TOI '
,:21_6 E. ~nCI ~J .
Phone
1-( 614 )-992· 3325

cold divide. All utilities.
Large home and a
smaller one. Baths and
city water The pric e 1S
negotiable
Asking

153 CARMAN DRIVE
PRICED TO SELL
Very nice 4 bedroom bl-level In Tara
Estates. Owners bought a new home
and must self . Includes a fully equipped
kitchen, family room , dining room , 2112
baths and 2 car garage. This Is a roomy
home with a good floor plan and a great
view overlooking poe1 . En joy use of
clubhouse and pool . $75,000.

Roger Hysell

EUGENE LONG

SCRAP

KOUNTRY

6A n ' l S,7ROOMH0Mf - BARN

N1 ce 2

The Sunday Times· Sentinei- Page--0 · 7 .. -

South duped by defense

Wett

coun1rv eat· in kitchen,

hom e

.EAFORD(B

FLOOR

DREAM NO MORE
PO SSt BLE ASSUMPTION
LOAN-526,900
The American dream of
owning your own nome
Is possible today with
the financing on tnls
well kept home . 3
bedrooms, 2 baths ,

bedrooms. living room, den , dining coom , kitchen

bedroom home in Pomeroy with a coa l and wood
furnace and approx. ::v.. acre of ground with $5,000

wattr, sewer, pon-

Llcenstd &amp; Bonded
Phone 949· 2293
or949·2417
3-3-tfn

Perfect for a family restatJran t, antiqtJe shop, doc ·
tor or lawyer offices. Ni ne rooms of elegance, 3 or.(

OWNER WILL FINANCE - Th is 21 acre farm tnat
Is all fenced, spring water. big barn, implement

446-3021

LARGER RIVERVIEW BRICK
ENERGY EFFICIENT RANCH
One of the nicest you'll see on Lower
Rt. 1 wlfh a terrific view. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, famly room, fireplace, equipped
kitchen, formal dining, basement, 2 cor
garage, extra Insulation (6" in walls),
triple windows, highest elect. bill $65,
and owner will finance at 12% . $79,900.

8% · LOAN ASSUMP·
TION
MOD!RN2STORY
Features
3
n i ce
bedrooms, with large
closets, l'h baths. living
room, dining room,
fam ily room , modern
kltcnen with all built-In
cab inets, range, gar·
·bage d isposal. and dish·
washer. This home is
located 1•12 miles from
Holzer Hospital on Jay
Drive.
N541

TO BUY
Superior Siding

ds,
foundations /
rtcllmatlon.

Hii&lt;RTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virgin ia Over
2C( less expensive ca r s in

ONE

EXCAV~TING
CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; NCkhoe ser·

8-tr ack Ca ll 446· 1024 a ft e r

14 =

WANTED

AND

Real Esta te - General

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

2 ACRES -

C&amp;M

motor, trailer, oars, life

Real Eltat~t - Generll

79 Jeep Wagoneer 4 whee l

c ~l. .

good co nd , $1.695.
Will accept tr ade 614-667 ·
3il.BS.

r

w. va .

BRIDGE

Business ~ services

Boats and
Molors for Safe

5:30P M

cQnd 614 661 3085

1V2 Olds

shi eld, low mileage, good
co ndi tion , $850 or best of· 1980 HONDA CRBOR , ex·

Be seen at 400 Lasley St

Pome

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipolis , Ohio- Point Pleasant,

--- ~!orcyci~~--­
79 Yamaha GT 80 . 614·949· CMm Honda S900. 304-675·
2749.
6252 or675·1293.

1974 c nevv p1ck up, 6 cy l ,
a uto, tr ansmtssion S800

leacutepotrorhim."

'

July 25, 1982

~-

~ .~S;;;;::.;~they~~·re~~t;;g'~~ s~_
,ooo
_ 61~667 JOBS

1974 Fleetwood Cadtllac.
Need s a few repa trs $500

m

'

- . -·- ... 7~ - ·- _ MO!!!'~Y.£ 1~--- _
·--- ..

74
1975 Honda 500, luggage
rac k. adjustable back rest.
helmet bag, 2 helmets, win·

1974 Gre mlin good sna pe.
Ca ll614 388 8791 after 5PM. '

Pl~asant, W.Va .

128 College

offk;lals
130 Time periOd

131 Strong
winds
132 Pinafore
135 Pin! ail duck
137 Discourteous
138 Transaction

t40 Part or EAP
1•2 Pecan
143 Aotallng
piece
14• Metr ic:

....

�•
is,

Ohio~ Point

1982

Pl easant, W . Va .

First of 1,800 Haitian detainees freed
amid ~beers as they join U.S. relatives
By RANDALL HACKLEY
Associated Press Writer
MIAM I (API - Seventeen Haitians, some at Uberty for the firs t
time In morethanayear, broke In to
cheers, kissed relatives or sang a
Creole hymn of thanks as they became the first ofl,!m refugees to be .
freed by a judge's order.
"I feel so tall. I can see so far
now," said Raoul Felix, 42, blinking
at the unfamiliar horizon as he
walked Friday out the gates of the
Krome Avenue Detention Center
Ills vision uncluttered by concert In~
wire or barricades.

'limes- JtlltiM
Ohio-Point Plea sant,

.

U.S., Soviets talk
about Afghanistan

She won a tournament in Mexico
last year and was the only woman
selected to accompany a men's
team to the United States two years
ago.
Miss Hu does not speak English.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Rush Taylor said
early today that he had not received any word on Miss Hu. The
Immigration and Naturalization
Service office In San Francisco was
closed.
In Peking, a spokesman for the
fo reig n mini s tr y de clin e d
comment.

dence the Soviets have changed
their position on Afghanistan." In
fact, he said, the number of Soviet
troops has Increased In recent
mon ths from about 85,000 to some
100,000.
Afghanistan Is currently run by a
government Installed by the Soviet
Union and headed by Babrak Karma!. The United States and most
other countries have not recognized
the Karma! government.

HAPPY TO BE OUT - Forty·tw&amp;-yeaNJid EUeone Fraaeou clasps

biB bands together alter he was released from the U.S. lmmlgratlons and
NaiUI'!'Uzatlon Services detention camp at Krome Ave., Miami, Fla.,
today in the lint of the court ordered releases. 'l'be Haitian refugee bad
been In the camp since August of 1981. ( AP Laserphoto ).

President looks for
new economic chief
replacements for Weidenbaum,
By OWEN UU.MANN
who
will remain in his post until the
i\ssoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - In the end of August. They would not dismidst of mounting apprehension close who the prospective candiabout the course of the economy, dates are.
White House ol!lclals are trying to
Shortly after Reagan accidenrecruit a new chief administration tally divulged prematurely In St.
economist to replace Murray L. Louts on Thursday night that Weldenbaum was resigning, rumors
Weidenbaum.
President Reagan's aides, In surfaced that the president would
their search for Weldenbaum'ssuc- replace him with Wall Street financessor, must find someone who cial consultant Alan Greenspan,
would be compatible with the presi- who previously held the job under
dent's firm economic beliefs and fo rmer President Gerald R. Ford.
However, several administration
who would be willing to take the
risk of joining an administration offi cials expressed'skeptlclsm that
when a string of other advisers are Greenspan would set a precectent
by becoming the first chairman to
teaxtng.
"I think just about any economist return to his former job. Greenspan
would love to have the opportunity held the position during the 1974-75
to come here and advise the presi- recession, which has been likened
dent of the United States. It's a real to the current downturn.
Anofher name mentioned Is that
feather in his ca p," one administration official said Friday. "However, of Martin S. Feldstein, a Harvard
there could be a problem If people University professor and president
of the Nalional Bureau of Ecoperceive this as a sinking ship. "
Weldenbaum. who resigned tore- nomic Research, the seml-oftlclal
turn to academic life. Is the seventh arbiter of when recessions begin
Reagan economic adviser to leave · and end.
since the start of this year, at least
Some admin istration officials
partly because of plspleasure with conceded that It will be difficult to
the course of presidential policy. fi nd an economla luminary for a
Associates said Weldenbaum had post that has been downgraded In
grown disenchanted with the job be- Importance under Reagan. A key
cause of Ills diminished Influence reason for the job's diminished inwith the president.
fluence Is because \he president has
White Hou5e a ides said they were such firm, consistent economic
considering four or fi ve names as views of his own, the officials said. ·

PRESENTED ORIGINAL PAJNTJNG -

.JaCk

Fruth, p~ldetd of Fruth Pharmacy &amp;tores, ,_riP*.
Is ahown acoepiill&amp; aa orlaJnal pallltilla by aa American Greetlnp anlat presealed 1o him by ~
Greetlnp In appreciation of Fruth Pbarmaey, wblcb
Is a m~or retailer ol American Gredinp product&amp;

'

Maldnalhe presema&amp;ion are American Gredinp of·
fidals, left lo rlglli, Jim CUIIDinpam of Hun&amp;Jn&amp;tott,
W.Va., Joltn Scheel, dllltrld sales IRIIIIA&amp;er from
Fraald1n Park, Pa., and GeorKe Fulcher, mldAilantk: rqlonal manager lrom Alexandria, Va.

Mining association elects board
COLUMBUS - George Nlcolozakes was reelected chairman of
the board of directors of the Ohio
Mining and Reclamation Association at its recent annual m!ietlng in
Columbus.
Nlcoiozakes Is president of Marietta Coal Co., St. Clairsville.
Other officers reelected include
Stephen G. Young, vice president
for governmental affairs, Consliidatlon Coal Co .. who was elected
vice chairman of the board; Phil
Bowman, vice president, Waterloo
Coal Co., elected secretary; and RIchard James Jr., J ames Brothers
Coal Co., Magnolia, W'lo was

Hometown service from coast to
coast is just one part of cor
insurance the State Farm way.
Call me
details.

elected treasun!r.
Neal S. TQStenson Is president of
the !IS-member coal Of~!rators
assOciation.
.
Newly elected members of the
board of directors Include George
Morrison, Crown City Mining Co.,
Crown City; James Brown, Star
Mining Co., Junction City; and
Warren Kolm, Keffler and Rose
Enterprises Inc., Canfield.
Board members reelected include Thomas BelvWe, Belvute
Mining Co., Wh~lersburg; Gerald
Blackmore, Central Ohlo Coal Co.,
Cumberland; Thomas E. Cahtll,
Peabody Coat Co., Coschocton;

.

.

GAWPOUS - ApprO.val !rom the Ohio Board of ~boo) imd College.
Registration nas been receiyed by
Gallipolis Business College to award
the associate degree in business in
micro-complileradministration.
Additional a.ssoolate deg~ i'n
business offered by. the schOOl ~re

CAROLL SNOWtiEN
417 Second Ave .

Oh.
Phone 446-4290
Home 446· 4511

Galli polis,

business admlnislratfon , ·. ac·
counting, and executive secretarial.
Directing and Instructing the computer program is Don Miller formeriy of the Pittsburgh, Pa. area.
Miller, a graduate of Bethany
College, Bethany, W. Va., received
~ bachelor of science degree in

Business briefs:
Gradqates from trust school
ASHLAND - Delsle J . Burgess, trust administrator for Ohio
Valley Bank, was one of 50 students who graduated Friday from the
11th annual session of the Ohlo Trust School
·.
Course of instruction coiislsted of one resident sumnier session
from Sunday' through Friday. Faculty members, all.of whom are
officers In the trust departments of Ohio banks, were chosen tor both
knowledge and experience. ·
W. Emory Tr!llnham, dep,artment chairman and assistant' professor in business a4minlstratlon ·at Ashland College, conducted a lecture on ' 'What's New Iii Ma,nagement."
Curriculum ti1cluded estate planning fundamentalS, personal
trusts administratiOn and agencies, decedents estates admlnlstratio~, Investments and securities, real property, taicatlon, trust operations, employee l;reneflts, corporate trusts and new business and
public relations.
~

)'"'

Jones new. Joo{l-service
instructor
'
'
RIO GRANDE ....: Evan Alan Jones, Oak Hut, hall,been employed
as the new junior fo:od service lsntructor at Buckeye Huls Career
· '
·•
Center.
Jones hall had extensive elpertence in restaurant management
· with Bob Eyii!IS Farms. UnW recently, he managed two reslaurants
in CirclevUie. Origlrullly from GfiUipolla; Jones is a 1969 Oak HUI ·
High School graduate. .
1
Jones Is coming to the tri-courity vocatiOnal school as it Initiates a
course 1n restaurant management. :&gt;tildents enrolled 1n this course
and in other food service classes wm have the chance to operate and
manage Buckeye Hllls' own restaurant, the Buckeye HlUs Corral.

· · · ' ,.
Kidd,' Ellen~~- on RGC boord
,

Air conditioning, V-6 252 engine with autom'atic overdrive, AM·FM
stereo, .body side molding, tinted glass and much, much more.
Brand new.
· FULL PRICE

I

J

Chris Changells, Industrial Mining
Co.; Lee Conway, Benoc, Inc., Morristown; Robert Kota, Y &amp; 0 Coal
Co., St. ClairsvUie; PhD Eberhart,
Eberhart Coal, Inc., East Sparta;
Thomas Mackall, East Fairfield
Coal Co., North Lima; Wllltam Nicholson, Ohio Edison Co., Toronto;
John Oreskovich, Keller Mines, Alliance; and Michael Puskar1ch,
Cravat Coal Co., Cadiz.
Associate member representatives to the board of directors will
be William Slease of Dravo Marks,
Brunswick, and Robert Frederick·
son of Cecil I. Walker Machinery
Co. , Charleston, W.Va.

-GBC . e_xpanfl_s -computer coq~~-8 .

1982 BUICK LESABRE SEDAN

'986~

•'

eWAR.ORO.BES .
eCHINACABINETS

e BASE•CABiNETS .
e UTILITY CABINETS .

HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION

• .

35 MORE TO OIOOSE FROM AT COMPARABLE SAVINGS
. ·. GMAC-IANK fiNANCING
.

.,

July 25, 1982

Ohio businesses . appear to thrive

Chinese tennis star in hiding;
reportedly wants .to defect .
tournament but did not show' up tor
By STEVE WIISTEIN
a match with West Germany on
i\ssoclated Press Writer
SANTA CLARA, CaiU. (API -A Wednesday. When asked at the
19-year-old tenniS star from China time why she did not play, the Chihas gone Into hiding and wants to nese coach did not reply but merely
seek political asylum In the United shrugged his shoulders.
"We've had no formal InformaStates, according to sources close
to the In ternatio na l Te nni s tion that she w~ nted to defect," ITF
Secretary David Gray said Friday
Federation.
Hu Na, China's top woman . night. "In !act we haven't heard
player, led her team to a victory from the gtrl at all."
But an Informed source working
Monday over Japan In the first
round of the Federation Cup tennis closely with the ITF said the gen-

·

In the midst of economic gloom,

are to be released under orders of Ing the past 10 years. Many sailed
U.S. District Judge Eugene P. Spel- 700 miles In tickety boats, and 53
lman of Miami. He ruled the deten- refugees drowned on the trips dur·
ing the past year.
tion policy was illegal.
Fifteen Haitians happily piled out
Gerry Wynne of the U.S. Catholic
Conference of Was hington , an · of a school bus Friday outside
agency sponsoring many of the Krome, touching soil as tree men
Haitian refugees, said sponsors for the first time in up to 15 months.
would return to the gates of ~me They sa ng the Creole hymn "Merci
Pour Dleu" (Thanks to God), and
on Monday .
posed lor photogra phs before reThe Reaga~ administration -beboardlng
the bus to Miami, where
gan deta ining Haitians who lacked
live with relatives.
most
will
proper Immigration docum~ts In
Two
others
were released earlier
the spring of 1981, hoping to stem
In
the
day.
the tide of some 50,000 refugees
Beaming, his arms raised In trifrom the Impoverished nation durumph, Etienne Francois, a 42-yearold fisherman detained since last
August. was the first Haitian to.be released from the 15 ~-acre camp.
U.S. o!llclals have argued that
Haitians were fleeing .their hOmeland In search of jobs..:. not because
they feared political persecutlon·as
many claimed. Almost ali arrived
era I manager's office of the Marri- without proper documents.
Last October, the Coast Guard
ott Hotel, serving as tournament
began turning llack refugee boats
headquarters, received an anobetween Haiti and Florida.
nymous telephone call from someAttorney Ira Kurzban and other
one who claimed to be harboring
advocates for the Haitians sued ·
the player.
"The caller said the girl Is safe over the detention policy, contendIng the Immigration service was
and wants to seek political asylum," said the source, who asked dl sc rtmtri a ttng agai nst the
not to be Identified.
Haitians.
On June 18, Spellman ruled that
Dan Oaks, front desk manager at
the hotel, said Friday night he could while there was no dlscrimina tlon,
not confirm whether such a call
the detention policy was illegal bewas received.
cause Interested parties were not
given sutflcient notice before It was
Miss Hu, a 5-foot-8 plllyer from
enacted,
as required by the federal
China's Sichuan province, Is consiadministrative
code.
dered to have world class potential.

The newly freed men "acted as If
they'd won the New York state lottery," sa id U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service spokeswoman Beverly McFarland as refugees h u gged and k isse d
flower-waving relatives outside the
camp.
She said almost 400 other Haitians at Krome would be released
"In trickles," but that no more
would likely be freed this weekend.
In all, about 1,tm Haitians Incarcerated In federal compounds In
Florida, West Virginia , Texas, New
York, Kentucky and Puerto Rico

Section ~

;

• I

mathematics and did graduate work
at Cleveland University. Plans ' are
to complete his studies in economics
a!Ohio University.
When asked what an entry level
student can expert, Miller said,
"Students will bave a basic understanding and appreciation for
computers.
"Advanced students will be able to
program for the total business en.
vironment." Miller continued, "I
fully enjoy teaching and helping
people accomplish what they want to
achieve."
Miller will be teaching at the
Gallipolis Business College with
classes at Wellston and Portsmouth.
The new computer program offers
entry as well as advanced courses
inclu~in g basic . programming,
prograrnming applications for accounlants and managers, and
OOBOL. Advanced program application will be achieved by those
completing the tw~year program.
Hands-on training is stressed in
computer classes taught at the
college which makes class size
' limited . ' Fall class schedule,
however, will accommodate both entry and advanced level students. Additional classes will be added on a
need basis.
Applications for fall quarter starting Sept. Tl, are now being accepted. Anyone wanting financial
aid assislance must apply by Aug.
20, becawe of grant deadline.
For more information on enrolling
at the school, call Gallipolis at 4464367, and Wellston, 384-2164.

By .JOE B. McKNIGifl'
A!llOciated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - While
most of Ohio' s economic news has
been bad - wlth12 .3percentunemployment and prolonged high interest rates - many of the s tate's
businesses are doing just fine. And
some are thriving, due In part to the
economy.
"Our business tends to benefit by
an economic downtown," said John
A. Hernandts, manager of corporate public relations for Amer ican
Greetings Inc. of Cleveland. "We
have consistently done well in
recessions.''
Hernandls said the greeting card
firm has found that "even when finances are short and Individuals
are pinched for money, they still.
!eel the need to exchange sentiment
with one another on special days ...
occasions when they try to do as
much as they can afford to.
"In a recession people tend to
spend less on a gift but spend more
on a card and in some cases the
card becomes the gift," he said.
American Greetings had a 22 percent Increase In revenue for the
three months ending May 31 over
the same period a year ago, and a
17 percent Improvement in net Income for the same periods.
Its report to stockholders called
the fiscal year ending last Feb. 28
"one of the most exceptional years
in the 78-year history" of the
company.
Hernandls said American Greetings Is adding personnel, facilities,
product capacity, warehouse and
production space.
A sampling shows many Ohio businesses making It In these hard
times -showing bigger profits, expanding facilit ies and add ing
employees.
Cooper Tire &amp; Rubber Co. at
Findlay saw sales revenue In 1981
increase by $50 million from 198!,
and Its net income increased $4.5
million In the same period. Because
of the recession, a spokesman said,
people drive cars longer and need
more replacement tires, which ·are
Cooper' s forte.
WendY' s'-intf!rnattonal, headquariered in Columbus, reported
revenue from Its company-owned
hamburger outlets was up 41 percent in the quarter ending March
31. At least two other Ohio-based
restaurant chains reporied healthy
financial growth in the past year.
Lincoln Electric Co .. an 87-yearold East Cleveland rnanufacturlng
company that Is owned mostly by
employees, retirees and heirs, Is
close-mouthed about Its financi al
report card.
But Forbes magazine reporied In
June that the firm, which makes
arc-welding equipment and Induction motors, hasn't layed off a
worker since 1951, and guarantees
anyone with two years or more seniority at least l:J hours work per
week. Last year, Forbes reports,
Lincoln's 2,624 employes averaged
making $44,000.
There are others examples, Including Diebold, Inc., Canton,
which reporied 1981 net sales, -profIts and earnings at record levels,
and completed a $3.5 million expansion of Its plant at Newark.
United Color Press of Dayton
opened a $4.5 million printing facll·
tty near Middletown, which added
65 jobs and includes plans for 400
employes.
Honda Is building a $axl million
automobile' assembly plant In Union County. It will employ about
2,000 workers and has attracted at
least one ancill;u-y business to the
state. Stanley Electric Co., Ltd., of

Japan, built a warebouse at London
to distribute automotive electrical
systems to Honda and other
automakers.
The Ohio economy also has suffered from the Impact on such
heavy Industries as steel and domestic automobile manufacturing,
both losers In the present state of
affairs. But even those Industries
show. some encouraging signs.
In Youngstown, where steel gave
up Its throne five years ago, Hunt
Steel Corp.. a new business, is Improving an old mlll once owned by
Youngstown Sheet and Tube. Hunt
Is Installing new equipment and expects to create 500 jot.; by year's
end.
Efforts to diversify business In
the Mahoning Valley are beginning
to fly . Commuter Aircraft Corp., Is
putting $66 million into a new shortrange passenger airplane factory
that hopes to employ 1,600peopleat
the Youngstown Munlclpal Airport.
Amerljet Aircraft Corp., and AmerIcan Airship Ltd., the latter a spinoff of a British dirigible firm, want
to locate facilities at the same ·
airport.
In southern and western Ohio,
General Motors has recently called
back workers for a second shift at
an assembly plant In Norwood , a
Cincinnati suburb. to build sports
cars, and at Dayton, where It
opened assembly lines to make diesel engines and compact pickup
trucks.
GM says It now has about 24,000
people at work In the Dayton area

and since March 1, GM has called
back about 4,00tl ln Dayton and Norwood combined.
Ford Motor Co., Is buying $6 million worth of new equipment, Including welding robots, for Its
Ma umee stamping plant near
Toledo, and will start production at
Lima this fail of a new !our-cylinder
gasoline engine for front -wheeldrive cars.
' Cooper Tire, almost wholly In the
replacement tire business, can
build 34,000 tires per day at a re- ·
cently expanded fac ility In Findlay
and a second plant at Texarkana,
Ark. It reported 1981 sales revenue
of $394 million, up $70 million !rom
19&amp;1. Its net Income last year was
$17.3 mtlllon, up from $12.8 million
the previous year .
"I guess It Is all because we are
lucky," explained Ivan W. Gorr, executive vice president and treasurer for Cooper Tire. "We are lucky
to have a pretty good management
team, a good work Ioree, (and ) a
good sales force out there selling.
"The public Is holding on to its
cars longer and that played a part. .
We anticipated the market and are
ready to serve it. There's nothing
unique about what we are doing except about a lot of things put together that make good business
sense," Gorr said.
George Melling, treasurer of
Bane One Corporation, which owns
23 banks In Ohto and Is bidding to be
the largest bank holding company
In the state, lists several reasons for
his bank 's success.

Dr. FREDERICK WILLIAMS

MICHAEL SlMMONS

Dr. Williams named
C'h ristian school head
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Frederick W. Williams has been appointed
administrator of the Ohio Valley Christian School.
Williams Is a 1974 gr~du a te of Piedmont Bible College, WinstonSalem, N. C. He r eceived his master's degree In church hL•tory !rom
Bob Jones University In Greenvllle, S.C., and earned a doctorate In
theology In 1981 from the sa me Institution.
While at J;&gt;ledmont , Williams worked as youth director in a local
church. In addition to graduate studies, he pastored a churcMor two
years. In 1979-81 he taught a cou rse In History and the Bible at Ohio
Valley Christian School, and' tor the past year has been teaching at
Tennessee Temple University In Chattanooga. He and his wife,
Ruth, have two children.
In another personnel move at the school, Michael K, Simmons has
been named athletic director. A 1971 Point Pleasant High School
graduate, he received his bachelor's degree In education In 1975
from Glenville (W.Va.) State College.
He did graduate work at Pensacola Chrf,stlan College and received
his master' s educational administration In 198!.
Alter teaching at Ga llia Academy High School for three years,
Simmons began teaching at the Christian school. He became adminIstrator one year later , and for the past three years has doubled as a
coach.
~ athletic director, he will be admin istering the physical education 'depa(1ment and the sports program as well as teaching. Simmons has Jiad ·experience In coaching soccer, football , baseball,
.
basketball, softball and volleyball.
He and his wife, Debbie, have four children.

Releases
MU funds

' w-. va. -

HUNTINGTON,

The

RIO GRANDE __,: John'Daylson Kldd, Jackaon, and Wendell W.
Marshall University Foundation has
Ellenwood, Columbus, bave ·recently been elected to the board of
allocated nearly a half·miiUon
trustees at Rio Grande College.
· ,
.
dollars in private fund:r for a wide
A CinclnnaU natiYe, Kldd Is' presently executlvll vice president of
range of Marshall programs for the .
the Oak Hlll Savings Ban)~ an4 v11:e p~ident ot Davia Refractories.
1982-83 tertn, said Founl!ation
He obtlllned his bachelor's degree in acmunthqf from Miami
Executive Director Bernard Qileen.
University. ·
.
·
·.
,
·
The 5493,176 total includes $e0,900.
· Kldd has ~ ~ lllliiiiJlei'Ous civic 'organlzatlonl, Including 1: from the "Universi»"'s. Greatest
Needs" 11ccount for faculty_develop- •
the American InsUtute of Q!rtlt!ed Public. Atcouritanta; the Ohio
Bankers As9oclatl0n, 'the l'lau Admtntstratltwl ialutute Uld the
ment programs, Queen said. 'l'his
bOard ot trustees at 011r. Hill llotlprilll&gt;
•
will pennit faculty members to at·
1 '
;Kidd and Ids wife, Jlllie, baw tlln!!! clllldre!!., LaWI'fiiCe, u•. •et
-tend professional coilf~ and
and Dc:AI"'•• ""'-•
Ide- 2M
· -.. ...
m~tlngs, as well . 88 lmdertaking
- · .H""3
•t
Mlllourt Ave.( J"'*-t. .
.
• othel' projects to improve the skills,·. ~IVOOCI. m,tna!ly trom Coaltoll. Is DOW the dlrecfor bf Ohio
Ualklll. .tOIIIDI!tatte~.HeJIIi. •IIIVwu ileUllllolt&amp;te:
headded.
and Amerlc!u ~ ta WasiJIDatoD, D.C.
, . ,
Another ....1124 is e&amp;f1118rlled•for
. Ellellwoocl .. lnvolvedintheOblo!locleiJitDPn!lrettQIInlt Ell the
an array .rl continuing support
UJll8' ArUaacton _Rotary Club, the Upper ~ ~
~ Pf:IIIJ'IIIII under ~ ·'.'Greatest
· ~ and the Oblo State Alu!nnl Board o1 WutiJDatoa.
Need~" category, including College
Ellenwood Uld 1111 will!, the fiH mer Mary Janet Hayes, baft'two
Bolrl partlcipatlOJ!, a summer musi~
._lid two
EIJaiwwcl 8nilwd llld ar.trY
camp, nationll forensit:~~ COITI-

res

.,.e;....

..

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
111\ICHANIC

.,....,......_llllldl'a
w. · o1 ·~~~=~~:Heller::r~
• .
· a(ri,:Fart:j
.
.r.::- the
project,
theYNational
Oraland
H!ator'
of Ap- _
•
'
•
~Honoc:Day. .
'1·~~~!'~8~~"11~,!(1~0~rl.~'-:!"~"·;·e~T·~~~
petition,

\

,

..

MNSCAB:- ..... Rw*»~Agency,GaJ.

Jlpall. ~-a Ulll I'GI'II EXP fo1lop ulea
reconlt (lOIJijlled by . . - 'rom Y 01111&amp;'· In lhe car.
'l'he.,.. •• woa·la ..... ta~lll*""ha betw ee-. aew

qeaclea

Life lnvealo!'w
u a three-l&amp;ate rellon.lnclud1111 ObJo, IM!en~ and Mleblgaa. Stanclln&amp; ~ lhe car
8HI!Ieat8 Mike Crfte8, left, and Rex Rumley.

'

�July1$, i982

Pom"roy-Middlefio_rt-Gallipolis, Ohio-;-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Cattl~,,JJusiness·
By DON KENDALL
AP FIIJ'T!'I Wrl~r
WASHINGTON (AI?)- For the
first time since 19'18, the Inventory
of feedlot cattle- those which produce the choicest beef - Is showing
sustained growth over year-earUer
levels.
' According to the latest Agriculture Department ligures, the

improving, figures

number of cattle being fed lor the
The cattle business, lifter ~era!
slaughter mw:ket In 13 major beef years of depressed prices and
states on July 1 was up fr'om year- shrinking 'profits, has benefited
ago levels for the second straight from herd reductions and cheaper
quarter.
feed since last year's n!cord grain
• Farmers and feedlot operators , harvest.
had 8.98 , million head being preMoreover, producers this year
pared for slaughter as ~July 1, a 4 have kept marketings, &lt;;InTent by
percent Increase over le-Vels tn 1981 shipping cattle to staufl!lter plants
and 1~, officials said.Monday.
before they get too heavy. That was
'

Agriculture arid our community

'

i

~~ow

\

•

Ponds valuable asset.,
should he protected
By MARY ANNROZUM
Soil CoRIIervatlonlst
Soil CoR!I. Service
GALLIPOLIS - Owning a pond
can be a valuable asset - or
.· liability. Building a new pond these
:days costs several thousand dollars.
'; It makes sense to protect your in· vestment, and yourself.
A new pamphlet called "Dam
; Safety - Who is Responsible" is
: available from the Gallia Soil and
, Water District. It ~xplains several
safety ·rea lures of darns and tips to
~ keep them in top condition.
. As rural it areas
becometo avoid
more
developed,
is important
; building below a dam that may fail.
. If building occurs around a pond, be
; sure septic systems are not entering
".the watershed.
An important tip to reniernber is
to keep trees and bushes removed
from the darn. Water will travel
.!long roots as if they were pipes,
')iarticularly as they die and rot out
·Burrowing animals are also at~racted to the roots and further
:weaken the dlrn .
•. Cattails should be removed from
ille dam area as soon as possible, or
'willow trees will move in next. Some
.Cattails at the opposite end can be
~ept for duck breeding areas, but
't)ley can get out hand qui~;.kly . · · ·
: Keep the pipe and emergency
;Spillways free of trash so they don't
plug up and cause water to back up

Homemaker's column

_Chair caning
tlass offered
By BETI'IE CLARK
Gallla County
Extension Agent,
Home Economics
· : GALUPOUS - Some of you have
·been tellin~ me that you do not
:receive the monthly "Homemaker's
:Newsletter" and that you have not
·beard about our plans for having a
class in chair caning.
·: We had been getting many
requests for classes in chair caning
so Denise Shockley and Deanna
:Tribe (Vinton County's Extension
;Agent, Home Economics) 'have
·agreed to teach a dass. They think
you will need two days to finish a
ehair. The days will be Aug. 12 and
13, at the !'CA Building on the Upper
.River Road, near the airport.
There will be a $10 registration
;fcc, plus cost of supplies. J;&gt;enise will
·need to sec your chair in order to
know what supplies to order for you.
She will be in our office on July 29, so
you can bring your chair to 1502
Eastern Avenue, and Denise will order the supplies you need.
If you don't have a chair or stool to
:work on, Denise will order a kit con·taining a stool and the needed
materials for around $10. You will
.ieed to let her know if you want her
(o order a kit fur you.
If you want to get the newsletter
.all you need to do is send us your
·name and address and tell us that
:you would like to have your name
'added to the mailing list and we wiU
:iend you our newsletter each month.
: The newsletter carries new and
~elpful information on foods,
clothing, family living, money
:management, housing, home fur'llishing and equipment, infonnation
:qn I what's happening in extension
~nd usually a favorit~ recipe.

.~educe price
:~upports for
~ured tobacco
•
; WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
•. AgriCulture Department , has re- ,
41Jced price supports for this year's
crop of flue-eured tobacco ·IJY' six
• Cents a pciund as a result ¢ new ·
!l!&amp;l&amp;lation $1gned by President
'Reagan. ,
'
: The averlj'e Joan rate was ·
frlmmed to $1.699 per pQUDd from
OJIII!'vel ~ JL1!l9 which bad been
liuaouDced earlier tor tile 1982 crop
01 flue.cui'l!d. That 11 a cut of 314
. ~t. ·'
..

and go over the top. Keep a good
stand of grass in the emergency
spillway and also on the dam to
prevent washing and erosion.
Beaierttoanysceping,cracksor
movement in the dam. Catch
problems early so they can be fixed
before real difficulties occur.
To obtain the pamphlet, or for
more information, call the Gallia
&amp;lil and Water Water Conservation
District office at 446-8687 or stop in
at 529 Jackson Pike in the Spring
Valley Plaza.

RECENTLY AN article appeared
in "Peeps" which stated that Capt.
Billy Bryant owned the showboat
Majestic. This was wrong. Capt,
Bryant never did own the Majestic.

By BRYSON R. CARTER
durin~ the pa~1 three years. Or, the
corporation or if an annexatirm rrf development within a residential
ExleR!Iion Agent
owner cun present evid~nce of lin an- petition has been filed, the applicant , district Bu~ 1'Ural zoning law has
Agriculture and CNRD .
ticipated ~ross ,income of $2,500 in must also file with the city , or usually treated agriculture land as·
· Gallla County
the year of application.
••uncOmmitted'.' or ••open" land.
village.
•
GALLIPOLIS - New legislation
If the land remaiR!I in af!ricultural
The municipal corporation has 30
This new legislation allows
allows farmers to preserve their use lor five years, the owner days trr approve, nrO!iify ilr reje-ct agriculture districts to be easily
land by establishing ari agricultural receives a defennent on new utility the application. If modified or rejec- created by a volunk&gt;er application
district. AmeQded Suti!titute Senate service assessment collections, te-d, the application must show sub- by the ·. OW)ler. · In pri~r Ohio
Bill No. 78 is the •first major protection in nuisance lawsuits, stantial adverse effect on the legislative proprJSals various local
legislation in Ohio to deal with the restrictions 1111. use of eminent . prrovision rif municipal services; ef- and state review panel~ were
problems of protecting•farmland .
&lt;!omain powers nf the ~overnment ficient use of land; orderly ~rowth required for creation of an
Rural zoning law has usually and certain exemptions to the air and development ; or public health, agricui\Urr! dis.trict. Also minirnwn
·treated agricultural land as "open" pollution law.
sizes of . up to 500 acres were
safety or welfare.
land, with no protection from other
In addition, the law allows roadMM 402, " 1982 Land Use proposed. None of these more difkinds of development. :•
side markets, even if the area is Legislation," has details on the npw ficult pruVisiol\'l are a part of the
The new law states that an zoned, provided at hiast 50 percent of bill. Copies are available thrnugh new agriculture districts law. On the
agricultural district can be formed sales are produced by the market the county Extension offices.
other hand becaWIC no public policy
by voluntary action of the owner if operator. In the past, zoning laws
Here is an excerpt of Bulletin 402 is actively . required to fonn the
the
following ·.minimum , have prohibited fan11er operated which may help clarify this new districts the tffect of district forqualifications are met , .
·
wadside markets near rilany legislation:
mation may be uneven.
- The land ll'lust be dev oted ex- metropolitan areas.
Various prnprmals have been
The a~ricultural district is
elusively to agriculture ur a federal
There is no charge for forming an made to establish ''agricultural prnvide(j deferments on m;w utility
government land retirement or con- a~ri cultural district. The county districts" becaw;e veyy little prot~c­ services assessment collections,
servation program during the year auditrrr provides application fonns. tion is ·provided to agriculture by protection in the event nf nuisance
of application.
He will detenrrine if the land meets rural zoning law. Other rural zoning lawsuits, and restrictions on use of
- The land must be at least 30 the miniwum requirements and will districts, ''Uch as a residential . t'lllincnt dm11ain powers of governacres in size or have an average . nrrtify the applicant at thaUirnc.
district, usually have strong prolec- JIIent.
gross income of at ,Jcast $2,500
If the land is within a municipal tinrr measures to prevent other kinds ,

Homer Ward bowled first
300 game on Ohio River

TilE MAJESTIC was the last

showboat to tour the inland waterways long after all the other
showboats had ceased to operate.
The last several years ot the
Majestic's tours were sponsored by
the Dramatic Classes of Kent State
and Hiram University, bOth Ohio
schools. I believe Hiram sponsored
tlw! tours for about eleven years.

I'ly JAMEs SANDS

.

edge of the upstream public use

YOU HAD 'tHAT. full page of pictures and text by Mary AJ\11 Edwards in the July 11 Sunday Colwnbus Dispatch about the daughter of a
Gallia Countian - she is Arela
Karlene Fraley Bunke. She and her
husband so worked over their Forest
Park yard that It won first place in
the total landscape category of a landscape design Contest for their far
North Side Colwnbus subdivision,
sponsored by Forest Park Garden
Club and Forest Park Civic
Association.
ARELA KARLENE Fraley Bunke
is the wife of.DeMis Bunke and the
daughter of BUI Fraley and Reva
Murray Fraley. Bill Fraley is one of
the first men to come ashore in
France on D-Day June 6, 1944,
eleven months before World War D
ended In Europe.

area.

YOUR GRANDPARENTS, if they
are 70 or 80 yea;os of age, looked out
over tlie Gallipolis parkfront to see a
different aspect. Instead of the rare
diesel towboat which you see if you
watch long enough over upstream
public usc area in 1982, your an·
cestor saw steamboats parked
there .

MID-OCTOBER 1965 Helen M.
Welker carne into possession of this
ancient photograph. Helen says that
the occasinn wair homecoming, and
all those attending gathered at
Gallipolis, where Helen's father was
assistart wharfmaster - Jake
Brown. Howard Donnally, probably
a relative of Peeps' cousin, A. Don
Pope, in Orlando, Fla., was the head
wharfmaster.

HELEN M, WELKER, M9 Fourth
Ave. , Gallipolis, came up with a
photo~raph which someone made
July 12, 1915. It shows a veritable
forest of smokestacks in the Ohio
River where it tnday touches the

BERNICE SAUNDERS Brown,
93, who is Helen Welker's mother,
lives with her father at 549 Fourth
Ave .. Gallipolis. Bernice will be 94
years old on Feb. 23, 1983.

r----------------------------~---------------Y--

]ames E. Altho/, Ph. D

various tln\es in conjunction with
SpeciiiJ Corretrpoadeat
Mrs. Neagle. The Werhle-Neagle
ANNOUNCES HIS PRACTICE AS A
GALUPOI.JS - The building at shop was also located at 312 Second
THE
COLUMBUS
WRITER
PSYCHOLOGIST
356 Second Avenue (the upper part prior to 1915.
singles out a "family ghost" which
of
"Thomas
We are not certain how long the
WITII
she says is associated with an old
Clothiers) dates
millinery remained here but in the
tombstone in a curving bed that borto abdut 1895,
TIIE PRIVATE CliNIC FOR
1930s, Kroger's used 356 Second. The
ders one side of the back yard.
altbough parts of
Kroger's store began in 1927 in
COUNSEliNG AND PSYCHOTHERAPY
11
Nearby,u she continU'es, 11 iS an
the building may
Gallipolis in the 400 block of Second
TilE
MAJESTIC
is
still
around
go back to 1851. In
OF
elaborately decorated, but worn
Avenue. Kroger's of course was
1895 a fire at the
founded in the 19th century by B. H. and has a pennanent home in Cin- brick with notatiol\'l 'World's Fair'
comer of Second
Kroger of Cincinnati. In 1883 Kroger cinnati. It no longer tours but one and '1893.' Bunke found it in an old
and State spread
opened his first branch store and by can still see a show on It for a small clay pipe plant in Uhrichsville,
SANDS
down Secoild and
1929 when Mr. Kroger retired he had fee. The sternwheeler Attaboy is ·Ohio."
damaged in various degrees all the over 6,000 storllll. Kroger's left 356 in also in Cincinnati but the owners of
the Majestic sold the Attaboy.It burbuildings to where the Central Trust 1939 to move to 17 Court Street. .
DENNIS BUNKE is a ci vii
INDIVIDUAl , GROUP, MARRIAGE &amp; FAMILY TIIERAPY
Bank is. The only building to survive
IT IS INTERESTING to read the ned a few years ago but has been en~ineer with the Ohio Department
PSYCHOTHERAPEUTIC TREATMENT
in its entirety wa~ the B~anriyberry Kroger's ads for the 1930s: roast rebuilt.
of Transportation. He and Arela
TESTING AND EVALUATIONS
building at 351 Second. The Kerr beef sold for 17 cents a pound;
Karlene are the parents of Kyle, 3,
buildirig on the comer and·the two bologna was 12 cents a pound;
TIIERE IS another showboat and Stephanie, 5. Bill Fraley told
next to it had to be demolished. The bacon, 15 cents, and oysters, 20 cents located on the Mississippi River. Editor Holle Wilson that the
By Appoinrmenr Only ·
117 SecmKl Ave.
Ohio, Valley Bank building and the a pint. &amp;&gt;me of the brand names are This boat - the Golden Rod - is daughter is Karlene, but the DispatPhone i6l4l 4464998 · ·
Gallipolis, Ohio 456.1l
{ed brick known as the Nevius- still around: Eatmore Oleo, stationary and is a floating ch called her Arela all the way.
Roedell builcjing were built shortly Spotlight Coffee, Clock bread, and
restaurant. Both of these boats a!&gt;' Marie Foster, who knows the family
after this as well as the partial Latonia Club ginger ale.
rebuilding of the 356 Second
From 1840 to 1981 Moore's Auto years
pearedstaging
here initsGallipolis
shows at for
the many
park- r-;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t
building, which was known as the was located at 356 Second. In 1940 front landing.
Fenner building .
Moore's was an 18 store chain owned
In 1895 the Cherrington sisters ran by William S. Moore. Before
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va., was
State BaDII No. 983
a book store at 356 Second. The den- Moore's moved in the building's
the
wintering
area
for
several
of
CONSOLIDATED
REPORT
OF
CONDmON
OF
tists, Dr. Safford and Dr. Minium, owner R. · M. Swil2er did a lot of
had their offices on the second floor. remodeling. Sent from Marysville, these boats. There were the
About the tum of the century 356 Ohio, to manage the Gallipolis Majestic, Billy 'Bryant's boat, the
'Second becarnea,saloon,
Moore's Auto was Dan Brown. Er- Colton Blossom, and I believe· the
' IN 'THE FIRST decade of the nest Conkle was the assistant. At Water Queen. Capt. Billy Bryant fir1900s, the address was known as Moore's one could buy auto ac- &gt;1 operated a small showboat. He
Lake's billiard and bowling. The cessories, Pennsylvania Oil,
;building housed four ten pin alleys Goodrich tires, Glidden paints, seat Climate study
·and three duck pin alleys. The first covers and ~ven sporting goods.
.bowling alley in Gallipolis' history
IN THE 198GS Moore's moved into
Federal Reserve Qlstricl No. I
ROCHESTER, N.Y . (AP) - A
;was contained in the basement of the new Elks building, and 356 naturally occurring radllolsotope
~ GaWpoiiB ID the State of Oblo and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of
·what is today the Gallia Hotel. Second stood idle off and on for some may reveal ancient shltts In ell·
busineu OD June 38, 1982.
'During the Civil War when this alley years. In 1965 and 1966 Thomas mate, University of Roche!lter re.
;was begun the Gallia Hotel was Clothiers took over the building and
searcher~ say.
·named the Garnett House.
began the process of consolidating
Using ultra-sensitive techniques
ASSETS
·. In 1908 Gallipolis had a bowling 356 Second into the 354 Second adIn rare-element detection, deveCash and due from depository institutions .. .... ...... . .. . .. . ... . , 3,583,000.00
.team that competed against other dress. Thomas Clothiers was founloped at the university's Nuclear
u.s. Treasury securities
6,970,000.00
.towns at the Lake Alley. On the team
ded
in
1933
by
T.
A.
Thomas
and
Structure
Research
Laboratory,
Obligations
of
other
U.S.
Government
:were Frank Bell, Rube Barker, Fred
agencies and corporations
5,350,000.00
·Ashworth, New Bo5ton, Jr., and Clarence Brumfield and until BI'UI'Jl- the researchers discovered an as~
field's
death
in
1946
was
known
as
elation
between
high
level,
of
Obligations
of
States
and
political
subdivisions
·Heniy Cherrington. In one match
in the United States
6,907,000.00
against Ironton that year Gallipolis Brwnfield-Thomas Clothing. The beryllium-10 and the "mint-leerolled to a 300 pin victory. The top finn began in 1933 at 360 Second. It age" of the 17th century.
The illotope wa, measured In sed·
scorer was Rube Barker, who rolled moved.in 1940 to its present location.
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
James Saodll' address Is Box 9%, tment, deposited In the late 1600s,
a 546 series.
under agreements to resell
3,200,000.00
Clarksburg,
Ohio
Ull5.
THE FOLLOWING YEAR
from a take near Syracuse, N.Y.
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income)
17,746,000.00
Gallipolis native Homer Ward .fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiil
Less: allowance for possible loan losses . , . .. . . ... ... . 218,000.00
bowled the first perfect 300 game on
Loans, Net
17,528,000.00
the Ohio River so far as' anybody
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
could tell. The previous high was '!17
other assets representing bank premises . . . . . , .. .•• ... . ... . , . . . . 902,000.00
held by a Cincinnati man. The crowd
Real
estate owned other than bank premises ..... • , ... . . . . .... . . ..... 6,000.00
'that'evening whopped it up as Ward
All
other
assets .. . ..
965,000.00
,used what the Gallipolis Bulletin
TOTAL
ASSETS
15,111,000.00
·referred to as "a peculiar curve
LIABILITIFS
'-ball."
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
. In i909 toe N. P. Fenner building
and'corporations . . . .... . .. . .. .. ... .. . ... ... . .... . . .. ... . . . . . 5,773,000.00
•was taken over by Illake's Haf.
Time
and savings deposits of individuals,
dware which stayed here about
BANKRUPTCY
/CHAPTER
13
partnerships,
and corporatioR!I ...... , . . . . . . .... , . . . . . . . . . . . . 33,179,000.00
;three years before ~oving · to 310
Deposits
of
United
States Government . . . . .. .. . .. , ... .. ... . . . .. ... , 46,000.00
Second. In 1912 the C. W. King
C,ll
for
Information
Deposits
of
States
and
political subdivisions
Clothing store was at 356 Second.
In
the
United
States
698,000.00
Here one could buy Michael Stem
1-221-5379
Certified and officers' checks ...... . ......
182,000.00
clothing, , Uon shirts, Howard's
Total Deposits
39,880,000.00
Reliable hats, and Widow Jones
Pamela N. Maggied
Lee C. Mittman
a. Total demand deposits . . . , ...... ... . . .. , ..
6,501,000.00
clothing for children.
Attorneys-~t-Law
b.
Totai'timeandsavlngsdeposits
.
.....
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
_.
33,379,000.00
IN · 1915 MISS Emma Werhle
88 E . Broad St.
Federal funds purchased and securities
moved her millinery shop to 356
Columbus,
OH.
3215
sold under agreements to repurchase . ....... . . . ... .. ... . .. . . . . . 374,000.00
Second. Miss Emma ran the store at
All other liabilities ..
910,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures) ...
11,164,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock
a. No. shares authorized l,IMJO
b. No. shares outstanding 1,1Ml0
(Par Value)
900,000.00
SurpiUB
2,850,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves
497,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
4,247,000.00
--·••••••CLPTHISCOUPON ------TOTAL UABIUTIES AND
MONDlY • 11111Do\Y • WIDfiiiDlY
~
EQUITY CAPITAL . ... .. ... .. .. .. . .. .... . ... . . .. . ... . ..... 15,111,000.00

Whitney, Altho/ &amp; Whitney

II'l;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij

Introduces Sherwin-Williams

The Commercial

Ke111-Tone® Paint!
'

TilE MAJFSTIC was built by
Capt. Tom Reynolds in Pen1\'iylvania In 1923. He also built a
stemwheel towboat, the Attaboy, to
tow the Majestic. Capt. T1111 also
helped his brother build a towboat.

Your grandparents looked out
over a parkfront\ thus ...

t

~·

'

,

later built a larger boat which he · well, said that Arela is the first
called Bryant's New Showboat. The name, and she went by her middle
name in school.
preceding by Frallk Hill.

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GAUJPOU,S - OI', Sam Peeps
" J.llllde a.n error a few •weeks back
' wherl ljt asserted that Capt. Billy
Bryant once' Owned the showboat
Majestlc.·Frank Hili, the unOfficial
hilltorian ot the Old French City,
straightened us out with this
statement :

New law ·will allow Ohio farmers tQ 'prese~e their l~nd
PlPFS clogged with trash can cause damage to dam.

'

Capt. B~lly Beyant never owned showboat Majestic

a problem early In 1981 whe!l averweight cattll! added to the beet glut
and helped )1old down priCeS.
Thus, total beet output may· be
' to' the .1981 level, with
about eqUill
pork production down significantly
trom last year, acconlln&amp; to USDA
projections. Total red mea\ and
poultry output,may be down 3 to 6
petcent. '

'

'

I

0

•

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REEPS, a GdlliP?lis Dwry:

.

0

The sunday Times· Sentinel-Page E-J-

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

·,July 25, 1982

and Savings Bank

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MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of
$100,000 or more
~ verage for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
ending with report date
Total deposits
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Can be appllid to rough or ·
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amooth uteriora. Realats peelIng, bliatering aild mil.,.. Uae
on wood, meter or ~ry. ,Long
luting. Gal. Each. 69·8101·10

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10,063,000.00

I, the undensigned officer do hereby declare that this Report of Condition
(including the supporting schedules) is true to the best of my knowledge and
beUef.
Wayne L. Niday
· Executive Vice President &amp; Cashier
We, the undenslgned directors, attest the correctnesll of this Report of Condition (Including the supporting schedules) and declar!ld that it has been
examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared in ·
conformance 'lrith the in8tructlons and Ia lr!le and comet

~

,,,.
;.,:

''·
.."' '
•

OWners

. tllddll,.... 01111

".·
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..
•
•

D. Paul Davies .
Donald L. Crance- Directonr
Alva G. ShOemaker
StllteofOhlo,Coullty~Gallla,u:

..
SW111'11 to and IIDc:rlbed before me thla 2iltb
~July, 1982, and I hereby
, certify thatl am'not an officer or directOr of tJia bank.
·
MyCGIIllllilliooapireaAupat 1, 1•• OlrlltinaDay, Notary Public.

.-y

l

'

.

�Page-E-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Observe~s say Peronisni is. on rise.
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(AP) - Peronism, with Its strange
cast of characters and Its record of
mismanagement that rwtce almost
bankrupted Argentina, may well be
headed back to power again.
Alter their Falklands debacle,
the nation's military leaders promIsed civilian rule by 1984. The amorphous movement Inspired by the
equally Ill-defined political philosophy of Juan D. Peron is widely
seen as the front-111nner.
"We Argentines are cultured
enough to hold honest elections,"

July 2S, 1982 ·

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

says a well·to-do lawyer and polltl·
cal analyst. Then he added ruefully: "But we are uncullured
enough to vote Peronlst."
Army officers deposed and arrested Juan Peron's widow and
successor as president, Isa bel
Peron, In March 1976. Argentina
had plunged Into chaos. Inflation
spiraled to a projected annual rate
of 45,1XXJ percent. Political factions
exchanged gunfire In the streets.
In 1955, _officers chased Peron
himself Into the small gunboat In
which he fled to Paraguay. In nlne

years as president, he had led the
nation trom wealth to heavy debt.
·Thougl) Peron died In 1974,. and
his movement Is spilt under agtng
leaders of limited stature and untried pretenders, political analysts
say conditions favor a third round
of Peronlsm.
Isabel, In exile, has scant control
over party tacllons. But her last
name Is magtc, and she Is president
of the Justlclallsta (Peronlst)
Party.
.. ,sabel wUJ name someone. and
they'll hold together until voting
day," said the lawyer, who asked

in Argentina

anonymity. "Then we'll see It aU
again. ?eronlsts can win elections
but they can't govern."
The logical question Is, "Why?"
But tn !3uenos Aires, few .peoe!e
have "to ask it.
.
•
Peron symbolizes dignity lor the
working class, Argentine leadership In Latin America and the sort
of confident self-reliance that Ar·
gentlnes regard as a treasured
attribute.
His populist philosophy, based on
emotional appeal, Is uslul to almost
any ldologue. The rtght, left and

\

•
;

.

)

'

center- and otf8boots In-between they smuggled her perlectly preserved remains to an unm!lrked
- all claim his mantle.
,
·
l:ll.slllusloned bY •lmbalances Iii grave abroad. ·
the military's dpen economy and
spurned In-the FalklAnds war by ·· In quiet exne, Peron outwalted
the West, AtJen~ now 100\1 In· the mllltary who ~ him. Afward, and toward Latin nel$hbors. ter six generals and two clvlllans
Peronlsm, as a result, holds wide had tried illetr. hAnd, Peronlsm
. ...- .
but not Peron - was allowed to rub
appeal.
Peron rose to power In 1945, an In 1973.
An unknown dentist, Hector
army colonel with strong labor
backing. His wlf~; Evlta, bullt !lie- Campora, swept to the presidency
gendwlthhersupportlor"theshtrt- on a simple slogan: "Camporr to
less ones." She died In 1952, Government, Peron to Power.' He
considered a virtual saint, and then stepped aside and, to public
when. officers later deP9sed Peron jubilation, Peron came back again.

.'

Pomeroy~Middleport

'July 25, 1982

underground ~caverns

The ·latest,· ip se~uring records
BOYERS, Pa. (AP)- Secreted ' "
deep under a wooded western Pennsytvanta hillside are m1lllon.' or
doculll!!llts and mUes of computer
taPe iletaUIJ!g the vital recOrd., of
citizens and i::orporatlons alike.
,The data
stored fOr satekeeplng tn a cavernous 'limestone mine
aboUt 5li mues north ot Pittsburgh. .
The labyrinth of roadways and
vaults carved from rock was aban·
,doned II! 1952 by a steel company
and taken over by National Underground Storage, Inc. (NUS).
Today, more than 900 clients from the First National Bank of
Slippery Rock, Pa., to several fed-

are

.

'
The Sunday Times-sentinei-Page-E-7

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

erfll agencies that prefer anonym- mllJ!ondocumentslnthlsooeroom, changes the nature of the security
here," Black says.
lty - have turned the old mtne Into and we can· find any one of them
Security, of course, Is the prime
gtglntic undergiou~a filing j within live mtnules," h!! says.
rea~on
that records are shipped
cabinet. ' ·
.
' Much.of what's deposited In the
here from all 50 Rlates.
"l llldn't know ,d;lere was this mine 220 feet down Is mundane · Back tn the Cold war days of the
much paper In t!tewholeworld \!DIU cancell!d cheeks, tax paper~. per·
1950s,
the tear· of nuclear fallout
I got here," says NUS'president AF-- sonnet ' ' flies. birth and death
prompted clients to go under·
thur Black.
records, duplicate computer tapes
StaJidlng 1J1 the aisle of a- 1.~ and the like. .But t_here are also ground with their vital papers and
sq~f.toot room, Black L, dwarfed
plans for nucl_ear power plants, . tapes. 'In tact, NUS' first advertlslng brOchure featured a mushroOm
by row upon-roW of gray metal
grades lor Ohio State Un~verslty
cl()ud from an atomic blast on the
shelves, lllled from floor to ceiling
stud~nts and ~eotapes of at! of
with neatly stacked c;u-dboard
Mike , Douglas telev-l,lon talk cover.
"Today, companies are protectboxes.
shOW~. ,
"There are 50,1XXJ boxes In here.
NUS will not, however, store ,Irig their records against such
And each -box holds 3,())) docuItems of intrinsic value like art
as !Ire,dissident
flood, earthquakes,
hurricanes,
employee!;,
ments, s~ ,by-ll _lncl)es. 'Ihat'~ 150
works or gold bullion . "That thlngs

a

terro.-'·•'ts and that sort of thing, "
Black says.
"Al&lt;;O, If a company klseslts.compuler and doesn't have a backUp, It
can be fatal."
,
With Its ljinlted accessibility, the
mine Is an "Impregnable !ort.ress,"
according t_o the company's
advertising.
Its rural location Lq so unobtruslve that It's difficult to lind even
with a map. Inside, the rough-hewn walls are
spray-painted sliver to reflect light
and sea l the llmest.one. It makes
look like the set of a

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

Neighborhood seeks
to forget its history
CLEVELAND (AP) - Between
a bustling downtown on the west
and a renowned cultural-medlcal
complex on the east lies Clevell~nd's scar, the Hough ghetto,
where residents have spent 16 yeai-s trying to forget a nightmare.
. Comments trom some who lived
there then and now suggest Its future Is as murky as Its past was
violent.
:In the summer of 1966, as urban
unrest spread to most of the natlim's Inner-City slums, Cleveland
p6llce squads hoped each night for
fierce, cooling rainstorms.
'That summer's tensions grew
more volatile, until a minor lncl·
dent In a bar at East 79th Street and
HOugh Avenue turned Into a week
of burning, looting and violent
.cOnti-ontat.lon.
The Hough riot brought open
warfare to what already WI;!S 10
square miles of blight and decay.
-A 26-year-old mother was shot In
tlfe head and killed when She leaned
out a window to call her children.
An unarmed, 36-year-old man.was
shot ,and killed as he stood on a
Hough Avenue sireet corner. A 29year-old Hough resident was shot
and killed as he drove home.
"What 1 remember about the r1·
ots Is, there was a bomb got thrown
In front ol our car while I was out
trying to get some of the young people off the streets," says Fannie M.•
Lewis, a wellare -depenctrnt
mother of five In 1966 and 11city
council member today:" "It really
flared up. I was really frightened
by tllat.
--"But what I remember most was
the unrest arid the martial law that
was Imposed on us. The people who
got killed really dldn 't understand
what was going on. I feel there was
a price paid by the people who live
there because of what went down."
Today, Mrs. Lewis, 56, sees herself as a survivor and an example of
what pride and determination can
accomplish. She was elected to
Cleveland City Council in 1979 and
Is now In her second term.
"I've overcome a Jot of rough
edges," she said during an Interview tn her City Hall office. "I came
here tram the South In 1951, and I
cried tor two years. I really thought
blacks had It made In the North, but
blacks had it much worse In the
North than In the South."
Hough, once the neighborhood of
Cleveland's elite, became a ghet.to
tor poor blacks In the 1950s. Mrs.
Lewis recalls raising her family In
a house shared by six other families. The poverty, population density and a feeling of hopelessness all
helped spark the rioting, she said.
Decay, crime and drug abuse
soon set In, and most of Uie black
residents gave up on Hough, movIng to Cleveland's Glenville, Mount
Pleasant and Lee- Harvard neighborhoods, and to eastern suburbs.
U.S. Census Bureau statistics reveal the Hough population declined
In the 1960s from TI,IXXJ to 45,1XXJ,
and by 1\lll the population of Hough
was 27 ,lXXI.
"It's always been a struggle,"
Mrs. Lewis said. "We've always
had to fight.. We've always' had to

hang In J_here."
Mrs. Lewts said that tn her 96
percent-black ward, 45 percent of
the men berween the ages of 18 and
35 are unemployed and drug abuSe
"Is wide open."
Budget cuts In social program
have taken a toll.
Although Hough today might
seem at first glance ripe lor a new
wave of urban unrest, a new Hough
riot will not happen, Mrs. ~ ·
said. Despite Its problems, Hough's
neighborhoods are no worse ott
than other neighborhoods In the
city, she said.
Cleveland Pollee Department
statistics lor the first four months of
1982 show that 13.9 percent of the
city's major crimes In that period
occurred In the Hough district.
Four of the other five pollee districts In Cleveland had a larger
share of reported crimes.
"It's become less dangerous In
the (Hough) district as the yean_.
have gone by," satd Detective Robert Bolton. "Probably the main
reason Is the lack of population
density."
A lingering reputation of violence.
In her Ward 7 Is nothing more than
"the Hough myth," Mrs. Lewis
said.
Where Hough streets were once
lined with dilapidated buildings and
homes, vacant lots now a,.re commonplace. Many burQed"or abandoned buildings were torn down,
and nothing replaced them.
In 196'1, some . Hough residents
who nicknamed themselves "The
Machine" formed the Hough Area
Development Corp. In an effort to
bring new economic Ufe Into the
community.
In Its 15 yean, the COrtlOra,tl~n, , t
was financed primarily Ill' feder8!
agencies, most recently the Com·
munlty Services Administration.
Byrdle C. Lee, the corporation's
assistant to the president-lor public
relations, said Its contributions to
Hough have been many and varied.
"We have rehabilitated an average ollO housing units per year; we
have put up market-rate new
houses, the first In eastern Hough In
40 ye8f$,.!1-'"she said. "We have contributed over lXl new housing units,
over 200 rehabllltated units; we
have created o\.er 200 permanent
jooo and we have built five new
businesses.
"11 you a.Sk where Hou3h would
be If we go out of business, the
answer Is Hough would be In a veiW
serious state."
Under the Reagan administration, the Community Services Administration has been phased out,
and with It more than !Kl percent of
the Hough ·corporation's annual
budget. The last of the federal funds
will come In October.
"Piwte don't reallze that we had
a staff of 23 people, a well-honed
team," Ms. Lee said. "Now we
have a statf'ol 11.
··
"We have been trying to follow
the suggestions of the federal government. We have made appllca·
tlon to some of the foundations, and
we are seeking contacts In -the corporate community. As of -the present moment, there Is no defb\!t:!ve
answer as to where we stand."

•'.

DR. GEORGE W. DAVIS

----OPTOMETRIST---examination and to correct if
needed.
.
Unfortunately, you probably
won't hear about these problems
from children. If they see chalk·
boards or book pages as blurs,
they'll assume everyone does.
Since 80% of learning is through
vision, give your child a head
start with an eye examination
BEFORE entering school. That
will give you an "A" for effort
· whether your child's vision needs
help or not.

.,._

USf 0111 COIM.IT lAY-AWAY
A 1ft.,..... "'''lll 1 II. Sltlict

.

Cllertt 0,. Y• hr·AwiJ Ace-

*******

...-

_

In I he 1nleres l of better vi~ion

/

from I he ollin: of

PRICES IN EfFECT THRU TUESDAY, JULY 2nH WHILE QUANTITIES·LAST

Geerge W. Davis, O.D.

PINK T~GGED
SPRING
AND
SUMMER
CLOTHING

1.74-

UPTO

1
33 /3.%

\

OFF
HECK'S REG;PRICE.

1.44

3..59

'

Harti Reftectina 2 In 1

Black Flag Ayport

Because you'd like a friend who can give you
_quod advice, probably save you money, and really
help your family,-talk to the Ohio Valley Bank.
Our Trust Division can do all this and more.
Once you know all the things our Trust Division does
for people, you're going to be pleasantly surprised. But
basically, it can help you and your family three ways.

EACH

R11. UI Eodl

,Reg. 1.99

.

Doc !II cat Cottar

I. Manag~ your mon~y.

lilts ll11s and 11cb Ill' 5 nonths. Relleus on
ro111tng hudli9ln \jp to 450 ''"tor p111 utery

Traps and rids tly fnll ,lite honte.
"lots olarriYIIs bit no dtparllres."
HAIIOWARE OEI'T.

HARDWARE DEPT.

Starting right now, we can help you take better care of
your money. Preserve it, protect it, minimize taxes . See
that it brings you a good return. Explore investment
opportunities not available to you as an individual.

2. s~ul~ your ~stat~.

25.99 4.99

I J~e~;34."

3FOR

Reg. 7.99

Coleman 48 Qt.

Poly·Ute Cooler
Hinged lnsutatd tid with _
Iaten, two-way handle, tray
· and drain. Made of lade and
corro.slon
resl~tant
poty~thylene and lnslllated
with poured pbtyui-ethane.

89~

- Arm and Hammer

Academy Nylon
Sport Bag
Heavy duty nylon oxford.
Nylon web handles with snap
together carry handle. Heavy
duty -delrin zipper and webbed
side handle~ .

_____..__

16 oz. ·Baking

Soda

•
fOOO D£1'( .

SPOilS D£PT.

Nobody wants to die but we all will someday. And
estate taxes can really hurt your family, unless you're
properly prepared . We'll work with your lawyer to see
that you are prepared - to minill)ize what the govern ment takes ·and maximize what your family gels. Ani:l
we'll handle all the details :--

Now Thru August~ 2_
5, . ' 9~-~
SAVE $,2000 On All Hom'es
Ordered From This Model

•

89~
16 Oz. Hungry Jack
Instant Mashed

·3. Guid~ your family.

Potatoes

Delicious Hungry Jack Instant mashed _potatoel are
good as homoma~ . A. great
accompaniment for , ,any ·
meal.
-

When an estate is settled, the proceeds from the
insurance, property and investments often total more
than was expected. Enough so that with proper management your family's future is secure. If they need help,
we're here to provide it.

RIO&amp;-D£1'T•

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Is all this free? Of' course not. But it's surprisingly
inexpensi~e and usually more than pays for itself with
the savings it provides. And the ·peace of mind it provides is a bargain at any price .

.-· J~SJ ARRIVED 1983·,-

··2.29

'

Reg.3.99

50 lb~ Kiddies Fun
Play Sand

·?

2e44'.

24xs2 COMMODORE
. SECTIONAL' HOME 1.
' . .

,2.44·

Reg.2.99 .

.'Reg.2.99

601b: Quictrete
Mortarlix

.

• twr c.,.;.ce olps oi! electric
· •..., &amp;Iorint sljlrm wllldDWs •·.

60 lb. Quicktete .
. Sand
Mix Topping
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.O.I'IIen tu....l fuiiiiiii!S

•

C. Leon Saunders, our Trust Officer, will be pleased to
give you all the details. So talk to Leo11, a banker with
33_years of experience. You '11 be glad you did.

• l

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.Ohi9Valley Bank

I

KINGSBURY HOMES

G~ll•pol•s Oh•o

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458 Second Ave., Gallipolis
Phone 40&amp;-2'.t.lti

AU

.SPORTS DEPT.

I

marooned-tn·!""'ce
..,.... science-fiction
mov~.
. A musty draft blows constantly
at the portal. It Is created by two
huge fans that circulate nl,lnl
cubic feet of air per minute In the
80-acre mine, of which 15 acres are
developed.
'Ihe 56-degree temperature Is
constant In the tunnels, but at more
comfortable level~ In the rooms
where work L~ being done. The
mine's natural humidity of !l5 pered
bo t
nt
cent Is lower to 8 u 35 perce
h
In t e storage area.~-

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Salutes and rewards participants in the 32nd Annual Gallia County Jwpor Fair
•
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as a broad based and new approach to incentive awards,
and bJ. addition
to regUlar
.
.
premiums and ribbons, Central trust will pr~sent ~o Winners in nearly 100 desfglaated
categories of non-livestock projects and smaJJ animals:
,
·.
'1st Place •..• ~ • • $15.00
2nd Place • . • • • . $10.00
_
3rd Pla~e . ... . . . . $S.oo . . · ·
.
.
in recognition of the GaiUa
County yo~th who'put. forth bard wor~ ud loog. hours of
.
effort in the planing .and development'of'their
exhibits.
.
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A schedule of area programming,
_activit~ and epeTJ.ts
July 25 thru 31 .

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'Includes complete

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listings

· TV Mailbag
Page 2

Soap World
Page 5
.

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ESPN Listings
Page 9
Area Events
Page 15

· Armand Hammer Collection•.•Page 8

· .; &amp;,:Ving GalliJJ, Meigs and Mason
I

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Counties

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