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                  <text>Middleport resident dies in auto crash

Meigs County happenings
Squad kept busy
Eight calls Including two for car
fires were answered by units of the

Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service Thursday.
At 1.2: 40 a.m. the Middleport unit
went to the City Limits Bar at 748
North Second Ave. and transported
Robert Van Meter of West Colum·
bla to the Veterans Memorial Hos·
pi tal. Also taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital were WUJlam
Blyth from h1s Chester Road resl·
dence by the Pomeroy unit at 4: 24
a.m.; and Hllah Jones from her l!ll
South Third Ave., Middleport, res!·
dence by the Middleport unit.
At 5: 21 p.m. Clara MUJer was
transported from the Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
unit; at 5: 31 an unidentified man
was taken from the Syracuse fire
station by the Syracuse unit to the
Pleasant Valley Hospital; and at
9: 36 the Tuppers Plains unit ans·
wered a call In thevUJagetoanauto
accident where noone required
ireabnent.
The Racine Fire Department
answered both of the calls for auto
fires, owners not Identified, one at
4:29p.m. on the Gun Club Road and
the second at 8: 45 p.m. on Adams
Road . .

Meels Monday
The Portland PTO wUl meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at the school.
Plans wUl be made for the annual
fall carnival.

A Middleport resident was ldlled
and three others were Injured Wed·
nesday In· a tw~ar accident near
Stroud, Okla.
According !D word received here
Carolyn Triplett, 38, was dead on
an1val at Stroud Hospital. Also In·
jured In the crash were Mrs. 1'11·
plett's husband, Ernest, 51 and son,

Check incident
The automobile of a Route 1,
Reedville, man has been
vandalized.
Meigs Sheriff James J. Prof!itt
.said Lloyd Cllne reported that
about 8 p.m. Wednesday he heard a
shot and upon Investigation found
that h1s 1917 Cadillac had been
struck. The sheriff's depariment 1s
Investigating the complaint.
Thursday evening, about 8: 30
p.m., a car was heavily damaged
by fire In the Racine area. TheRa·
cine Fire Department was called
but the owner Larry O'Brien had
tore
the department's
managed
to extinguisharrival.
the fire be-

Buddy, 15, both of Middleport, and
Kenneth Little of Cllesh!re and a
New Hampshire man.
The accident occurred shortly af·
ter 4 p.m. on the Turner Turnpike
(Interstate 44) near Stroud, which
Is mid·way between Tulsa and Ok·
lahaina City. It was reported tha

the driver of the New Hampshire
car CI'06sed the median and hll the

Triplett car head-on.
The Injured were taken to St.
Francis Hospital In Tulsa.
Triplett IS reported tc be In stable
condition with a broken h!p, fractures of the arms and ribs and ex·
tens!ve Internal Injuries. The son

1

has a broken jaw. Extent of Uttle's

Injuries were not known.
•
It was reported tha the Trtplett.s;
were returning from Texas. The,.
Triplett famlly tonnerly lived
Racine.
Arrangements for Mrs. Triplet\_
w111 be announced by Ewing Fun~
••
era! Home.

lni

Kansas·State .... 23 Penn·State ..... 39 ·
Baylor · ............ 14 Kentucky .. .. ... .. 9 Maryland .... ~ .. 31 ·Wisconsin . .. .. .... 9
•
West . Virginia .. 41 Mississippi ...... 28 Cincinnati .. .. .. 38 NebraSka .: ...... 42
Oklahoma ....... 21 Southern Miss 19 LouisvUle . ....... 16 I auJtJ • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • 7

•

Fl'tl4) clothing day

Veterans Memorial
Admitted: Robert Van Meter,
West Columbia; Hllah Jones, Mid·
dleport; Kenneth ~:~~·~:leport; HoUle Starcher,
Discharged: None

Free clothing day will be held by
the Gallla·Me!gs Community Ac·
tlon for low Income people on Sept.
22, 9 a.m. untU 12 noon. The agency
coUectlon bank Is located In the old
h!gh school buUdtng In Cheshire. ·

•
tllttS

r;:=======~============:::J

1

Vol. 1'6 No. ~0

To end marriage
Deborah H. Fink, Middleport,
and Danny B. Fink, Cheshire, !Ued
for dissolution of man1age In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.

S~ial

Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Copvrighted 1982

Stanford .. ..... .. 35 Georgia .......... 17
Purdue ........... 14 Brig.-Young .. ... 14

tntint
9 Sections, 58 Page s 35 Cents

Sunday, September 12, 1982

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Additional information
soug~t on '648' · pullout

•·•

session set

The Eastern AthleUc Boosters
will meet In special session at 7:30
Monday at the h!gh school.

Meigs, 1ackson commissio_ners want meeting
with state group befo~e making final deciSion

JYI'A to meet
The Pomeroy PI'A wUl meet at
7: 30 p.m. Monday at the school.
Teachers wUl be Introduced.

Toledo ........... 31 Indiana ............ 30
Ball State .. .. . .. 14 Nortliwestern .... 0

in.

GAUJPOLIS - The Meigs and
Jackson county commissioners
saki Friday they are not yet prepared to decide whether to approve
Gallla County's request to ivith·
draw from the three-&lt;:ounty mental
health '1148' board dlstrtct.
In order to get more Information,
they decided to seek a meeting with
the director of the Ohki Depart·
ment of Mental Health. The Gal1la
County commiSsioners wUJ also be
asked to attend the meeting, they

VWoffars
.VW Pickup Oleael, EPA estimated @ mpg, 49 mpg highway
estimate.• The best mileage pic~up in America.
VW Jette Oleael, EPA estimated IG&gt; mpg, 59 mpg highway
estimate.• The best mileage luxury spoil'sedan in America.
VW Rabbit Dleael, EPA estimated @ mpg, 58 mpg highway
estimate • The best mileage of ~ car sold in America.
German engineering. It means nothing but the best.
• Use "estimated mpg" for comparison. Mileage varies with
speed, trip length, weather. Actual highway mileage will probably
be less.

HIGH SGIOOL SENIORS
You'll like the individualized attention you receive when
you gel your Jenior portrait made at THE PHOTO PLACE.
Each preview set includes I 0·12 different poses before
traditional oil backdrop.r and in attractive 011/door selling.r.
You'll al.ro like our reasonable priceJ.

For Appointment or More Information Call
Alter 5 p.m. on Weekends
Bob &amp;Charlene Hoeflich

GOI·NG·BACK TO
SCHOOL? TAKE·A
'

FRIEND. THE
DAILY SENTINEL
$33.15
9 MONTHS

.•

said.
The meeting wUJ be 8.J10!!1ged for
"the earl!est possible date," they

saki.
The six commiSsioners met for
about one and a half hours Friday
morning 1n Galllpolls, mostly In secret session.
In• a statement read after the
meeting, the commiSsioners said'
they are concerned about "the ef·
feet Qaiua• ~ty's ~\hdrallral

0
N
L

THE PHOTO PLACE
109 High St

y

wUl have on mental health sel:VI-

ces" In the three counties.
Meigs commissioner Richard
Jones said Jackson and ~ are
worried Gallla County's pullout
may have an "adverse .effect" on
funding and quality of services.
The GaUJa commissioners decided Aug. 'lT tD request withdraw
from the 648 board district They
chaJ:"g81 the..648 board Is ''wasting
numerous tax .dollars" al)d dupll·
catlngettortsoftheGallla-Jackson·
Melgs Mental Health Center.
The Jackson and Meigs commlss!ons niust approve the withdrawal
for !t to become effective
d!ately. It they do not, Gallla must
walt one year before It can dissolve
Its ·association with the board.
Gallla County also needs approval from the department of mental
health, which It has not yet recelved. According to Jack Bellay,
spokesman for,the department, no

cleciS!on IS Ukely to be reached untll
Jackson ~ Meigs have reached
an agreement.
· Maxine Plummer, executive d!·
rec!Dr of the 1148 board.
with the
Meigs ilnd Jackson commiSsioners
last week tD argue agalilst approv·
1ng Gallla's ~uest.
·
She said losing Gallla County wUl
hurt the 1148 board's abUJty to win
tuture federal grants.
Plumrnel" also sald Gallla has not .
followed all the necessary procedures to break away from the

lmme-

met

board .

· 1he department of mental health
ts' seeklngtoconsolldate648boardS.
she saki, and!snot likely to approve
GaUJa's request to spl!t an existing
board.

The Gallla commissiOners wUl
travel to Jackson County on Mon· '
day and Meigs County on Tuesday
to present their case to the
commiSSioners.

Pomeroy

NEARING COMPLETION -Ohio Power Co. 'sS80
mUJlon hydroelectric plant at the Racine Locks and
Dam will be ready lor use In the American Eledrlc

Power system lollowbtg a testing period of Its two
generating units during the ne"t few months. The
project has been In the works for more than 10 years.

Cassell-~ays

power plant
will soon be in full operation .
I

THE SALE YOUVE BEEN WAITING
•

•
•
All Prices Are PJus Any Taxes
And Title Fees

S7QOOO

EVERY 1982 MODEL
CAR OR TRUCK
DISCOUNTED

ssoooo TO GO

All 8 Olds. Cutlass Cieras
S700°0 G.M. Discount

,
world, If not the largest !n power
'l'lrnes&amp;ntlilei'Siall
production.
RACINE - The $90 mUllan hy·
The units consist of a turbine and
droelectrlc power plant at the Ra· a generator Inside a housing unit,
cine Locks and Darn.wUJ soon be In ' underwater beneath the power
full operation, according to con· • house. The plant will be operated
struct!on manager Charles Cassell.
remotely by microwave signal
One of. the two plant units Is now
from Thrner station, near Charles·
!n a testing pattern and the second
ton, W.Va.,andcompleteoperatlon
will go through testing about the
from start up to shut down wUI be
middle of October. During the
handled by the computer system.
month·long testing pertods, both
There wUJ be only five employees
units wUl be checked through aU
types of operational situations.
The plant, constructed by Ol)!o
Power Co., !s designed to generate
235 miUJon kilowatts of electrlcty
annually by water power from the
Ohio Rlver. The electrtclty wUI go
request .to dl!islove ltll aS80cla&amp;n wWt the threeDISCUSS GALLIA REQUEST - 'The Meigs and
Into the transmission network of
county
1148
board.
They
decided
to
reque!lt
a
meeting
.JIM!boa county CQIIUllls8loners met at the HoHday
Area deaths ........ ... ........... A·5
the American Electric Power
with
the
director
of
the
Ohio
Department
of
Mental
11m In GaiBpollri Friday to discuss Gallla County's
Along the river .......... ..... 8-1·8
system.
Health to g~ more lnfonnatloo.
Business .... .... ... ! .. ... .... ..... &amp;-I
Cassell said the Racine plant Is
Classified
ads ....... .......... D+ 7
unique In that It's the second of Its
Editorial
............
... .. ......... A·~
type to be constructed In the United
Farm ............ ....... ........ .. . E·~
States. The first Is In Washington
Locai .................. ........... A+6
· state and Is of French design. [)e.
Stat~&gt;- National ................. D·l·~
sign on the Racine plant Is Swiss
Sports .... .. .... .... ..... ...... ... C·l~
and Austrian.
Tak&amp;-One ... .. ....... .. .... ... Insert
Cassell said the Racine plant will
be the largest In physical siZe In the
cdmmlttee determine If some of the
GAi.LIPOLIS - Three Ohio leg· ties, set up the GDC Review
GDC buildings planned for demoll·
Committee with members from h1s
lslators have 'asked for the forma·
tlon should be saved.
t10n c1 a special Senate-House office, the Ohio Department of AdSeveral GDC employees have
committee to Investigate aUega· miniStrative Services and staff
tD Ball and Collins that
complained
members of Collins. It was also aptlons of favortlsm at the Gallipolis
the
GDC
Review
Committee can·
pointed to examine employee
Developmental Center.
not
be
Impartial
because
It consists
allegations .
.Rep. Claire "Buzz" Ball (R
Magnone
had
"no
problems"
of
administration
Insiders.
Athens), Sen. Oakley · CoUJns (R
with the formation of a legislative
lrolltoll), and Rep. HaJTy C. Malott
They have charged that some
(O..ML Oratn, made the request· commlttee when told of the request
members
of thecommltteewere In·
last week In ~tters sent to Senate FridaY. Ball said, adding that the
volved
In
a
previous p}"Obe at GDC
review
committee
wUl
continue
its
PreJ;Ideli't Paul Glllmor and House
which
cleared
the administration of
lnv~ation. It meets for the first
Speaker Vern Riffe ..
any
Illegal
actions.
time In Gallipolis Thursday.
Some employees have charged
AlthOugh they may refuse, Ball
Bllll said.they made !heTequest
ODMR Is also using "stall tac·
the
becaUJe GDC employees "sam1 to said: he Is optlmlstlc that GlUrnor
Ucs"
to d(:lay the review commitbe4lssatlstled with the admln1stra· and ~e wUJ approve the forma·
tee's
probe and push !t past the ·
tlve committee" Set up to.tnvestl· tion of a legislative committee.
November
election.
He envisions 'six Jlllllllbers on the
gate the corn~\5..: , , , , ,
MagnOne
had said he hoped the
"Workers lil!gbt bave more CO!r ~ttee. three from the House
review
committee's
Investigation
ildencetnalegtslativecolllllllttee," · and three from the Senate.
would
be
complete
by
Sept.
23, as to
. The committee Would Interview
lWlll!lded.
.
not
Interfere
with
appeals
tUed In
Rud;Y ,Magnone, director of the. emplo)rees !l"d gather Information
relation
to
the'
most
recent
job
abol·
.
phio Departnient of Mental R.etar- In Gallipolis; )le said.
at
GDC.
isbments
The IEgtS!awrs also requested the
~tloo and DevelopmentalptsabUl·
By BOB HOEFLICH--.

Inside
today•••

S7QOOO

ssoooo

Special committee sought
to probe GDC allegations

Citations From Top to BoHom Must Go

OIEVROLET CHEVETTE, ••••••••••.$6QOOO
.
CHEVROLET
CITATION ........... . $50000
CHEVROLET CAVAUER ... •....... $9()()00
CHEVROLET CELEBRITY............ $70000

#174

#380

$7,827.27
G.M. Discount
500.00
Roscoe's Discount 600.00

$10,102.67
G.M. Discount 500.00
Roscoe's
1,000.00
Discount

.

Demo Spec•a'~

7.CITAllONS TO CHOOSE
FROM AT UNBEUEVABLE

PRICES!!!!

GMQUAUTY
SERV"IICE/PARTS

·. :. Gallia
shOtVs.
incteased
enrollment·
.
.
.
..
..
.
.

. - · ~~

;.

~

'

·, ; .. . GAlJ..IPOL]S :- Elll'(lllmeil~ In
.~ botll

'

.

3,16l~tlean'llled this-year, an

cl Gallla Cooney's aCbonl dis-

.lncre&amp;~eot45tromlut)'Mt'stotal

:•.iowinJ a lllgllt decline In the ~

Dlstrld Ills 2,111 earallld, a-lals 11
lrl from lut )'t!lll"l "2,1M.

· llltlpri!im'm'l'dlast'MI!k.iln·
Nll ..ve DOled fl!l:tuatkm In the

lDct mb&amp;Walloa-IIOII!dat

Jliell appeer~ to be stabQtztng, toi- . 11 3.~.. 111t! &lt;'"llpD!fl City Sehool

. ·,..r.

YOUR
PRICE

·

'

theGallla-Jilcb;Jii.VJalllnJolntVo-

aJIIII!af~tlm. Oneofthelarg- callkll!ll Scbool Dlltrlct'a fadltlm
Ill lncre8lim In the entire ~ at Rio Grande and .ueuv!lle.'the
• ~ l.Qca1 Sc:bool systetn Is at ' Guidbw H8ad Sdlool fl:r ~.
--~ --~-~----'"

~------

...

at the Racine site, and they wlll be
Involved primarily in routine ma.inl
tenance, with some operational
functions.
The hydroelectric units, Cassell
sa id, are more costly to construct
than coal burning ones, but arl&gt; less
expensive to operate after con·
strucUon. The plant will have no ef.
feet on the environment and
operates without consumption of
any natural resources, thereby
marking u.p another plus for this
type of facUlty .
A publ!c park Is being construe·
tlon bY Oh!o Power downriver from
the fu\clne plant and 11 should be
open by next sprtng, earlier, per·
haps , depend ing on weather
conditions.
Construction of the first power
plant in Meigs County has been a
long, drawn-out affair . Appllcata·
tlon for a license to construct the
facility was flrstflled In 1969andthe
ortgtnal cost estimate was $54
mlll!on.
·c assel! said Ohio Power is doing
a feasibility study for a stm!lar unit
at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam In
Eureka.

'a:=~Tn:-:~~· wblcb
. . . . I clSicblldrm from
Jut ;ear'~'* cl·4&amp;1 "'~Ck'nla·
AD told, the~ riool~ have

mentallydi-NP' llldeD1I_..tlle~
Oblo Vllley~'lcbaal,aater
tile areta'l Jarlest Jlfvate lllfloola
Prs'rle•theJumpln~tlonat

lot

Hanniln Trace· EIPITI@ntary
whiCh was last year's top ~honl·
with 4fif S100ents - an !DCI'I!IIII! In
the county schoolS ·have been refleeted at Mlav1lle Elemeritary,
Whlcll has 172 &amp;tud'entB thll ·ye&amp;r,
~to 2591ast year.
• Co~ with tlds Is a ~line
from "lOt In 1981. to 162 DOW at
OiellhJre.Kygei; Elemel)taty. Me.
Iaiiie ~· pet__. ilheclix
, k the dlltrlct, said the llprai are "
decelvlni bl!caUJe 11 the qrd fl.

· .(ContlnuedonpageAS)

·

IIABUUANA RAUL- Aa.- eo.e, 'ej f'" . • way alolld GfmartJuaaadl8coverecl growlq In alleld .,
tide llle IWIIIDI board of a plcbp truck '!'•n"n1 a. In rlmll Ohio. See !dory and addiiiOIIal phMo on E4
and 1 klday. ( AP Laaerphoto ).

J

�Commentary and

persp~cti~e

Page--A·2
!

September 12. 198i
•

..

Stuck?________________________~w-·i_ll_wm__F_.B_~__kl~ey_J_~
~~
Q:tv

A Division of
rT""L-1~-r• ~d·F=I

825 Third Ave., Ga llipolis, Ohio
1614144S.2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614)992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publ1slwr-Controllcr

AMt:MBER nf Tht• Asstwiwh'tl Pn·~s. lnlund lluil} J •n·s~ i\ssudatinnumltht· Amt&gt;rkan
Puhlishtn Aslilwlatinn.

Nt'"'ll ~pt'r

!.ETTERS OF OPINION llrt' &gt;At· lmmnl . Tht·) l&lt;ilmuld·b.;- I t'll.~ lhunJOO o.~· ord~ lun.~t . AU
ll'l lt•r.o 1m · ¥Uh}t-rl tn t'd il in ~~: and must bt· sil¢11t'd " ilh nHmf, ;ultln·n Mnd h•lt•phtmt•
num~r . Ntt un."ii,Knt'dlt'tlt-111 willl&gt;t' puhlls ht•d. l ..t•llt•rs shnuld l:w In "'"" lla!ih:, addrt'?lliin~t
b!sut'!f, nut pt'I'!UII\aliUt&gt;s .

Rewriting history
Even a very short trip to the Far East serves to remind the globetrotter that what seems Important depends largely on where you sit.
Over here, even the agony of Beirut has had to share the headlines
·recently with the Oap over Japan's alleged attempt to "rewrite history" by
revising Its school textbooks on the subject of Its behavior before World
War n. From Tokyo to Seoul, Peking, Taipei, Manna and all the way
around Southeast Asia to Bangkok and Jakarta, this controversy has got
everybody's knickers In a knot.
I have been at some pains to try to find out what really happened - no
easy task, since the revised textbooks are not publicly available yet and It
is therefore necessary to rely on hearsay. But I have concluded that the
Ministry of Education Is probably more sinned against than sinning In this
matter.
·
Japan's national teachers' union Is one of the most dependably and
'strenuously leftist organizations In this fundamentally conservative soictety, and ever since the war Its members have enjoyed sticking It to the
.conservatives In their history classes, teaching their students that the
pre-war rtght-wlng mllltar!sts were a perfectly awful bunch whO led their
-nation to measureless disaster. This Is true enough as far as It goes, built Is
:athoroughly undependable guide to sound voting behavior today- which,
:tlowever, Is precisely how the teachers have sought to use It, pushing
·socialism and even communism for all they we~ worth.
Over the years, therefore, various perfectly reasonablE: Japanese
have suggested that Japan ought to ease up a bit on the self-nageUatlon,
particularly In tront of students. It's a little as If American teachers were
seeking to Inculcate a chronic sense of shame In our youth over this
·country's alleged misdeeds In VIetnam.
Anyway, the Ministry of Education got the message, ~nd gave the
go-ahead for various textbook revisions. A reference to Japan s Invasion of
China In the 1930s was changed to an assertion that Japan "advanced Into"
China. Details of the Japanese atrocities at Nanking In 1937 were dropped.
A description of how Koreans were forced to work for the Japanese war
effort was subsumed under an account of measures for natlonal.moblllza·
-lion. Etc.
Well! You •vould think Gen. Tojo himself had reappeared and proclaimed the revival of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. Japanese leftists went Into spasms and were promptly followed by the .
· governments of Communist China and staunchly anti-community South
Korea. The former summarlly canceled the Impending visit to Peking of
\ Japan 's minister of education, Heljl Ogawa, snarling that the moment was
no longer "opportune." The Koreans, who by and large dislike the Japa·
nese anyway, followed Peking's lead In filing a formal note of protest with
Tokyo, then refused even to receive a Japanese delegation dispatched to
"explain" everything.
·
In Taipei the nationalist government, usually pretty sophisticated
about these thtngs but unwilling to seem less alert than Peking to defend ''
basic Chinese Interests, rumbled lrlto an equivalent uproar. Even !Jn Okinawa, which longed for and not long ago achieved reunion with Japan, plans
were laid for a mass petition with lOO,oo:J signatures demanding reinstatement of references to the massacre of Oklnawans by the Japanese rnllltarists. All over East Asia, newspapers and governments got Into the fact.
Here In Japan, defenders of the government had no trouble (and
perhaps a bit of fun) demonstrating that all nations tend to rouge over the
more obvious blemishes on their national conduct. One columnist quoted
the highly antiseptic accounts In various American encyclopedias of the
overthrow of Queen Llluokalanl !n Hawaii. He could also have pointed out
that FDR wasn't quite so thumbsucklngly Innocent of provoking, and even
anticipating, tile Japanese attack on Pearl HarbOr as most American
textbooks would stUl have you believe.
.
This whole episode serves to remind everybody how thoroughly, even
today, all of her neighbors In East Asia fear and distrust Japan. When she
resists American demands that she Increase her expenditures on armaments, we ought to remember that it Isn't purely stinginess; It is partly a
leglslmate reluctance to alarm the rest of the region.
As for the textbooks, In Napoleon's words, history Is uno falble convenue- a lie agreed upon. Japan's realfaull was her reluctance to stick to
the victors' version of the complex facts.

:The saving rate

column?" I found my sell saying,
world out there what happens when "Gene, when you have been at the
profession for long enough, you
a columnist gets stuck ...
You see, poring over a table of can, If In a bind, close your eyes~
figures, I wrote yesterday a careful point to the front page of The New ,
piece announcing certain conclu- York Times, anti whatever stoi-y
sions about the nature of economic you are tlngertng when you open
distribution that I thought astonish- your eyes - you can wrlte a coIng. Indeed they proved to be. Later lumn on that story." 11 Yes" that day, at a social function, I ac- Shall! Struck - "I think I
costed a very bright gentleman, remember that column."
VIctor Borge documented the art
head of a big banking house In New
York, and announced my findings of Improvisation as practiCed by a
to him. Startled Is not quite the musldal. During his great one-nnan
word to describe his reaction. ~e show In New York, he neared the
said I was quite simply wrong. Not end, turned to the audience and
possible. I said, citing the source of · as_ked tor volunteers to pronounce
any one of the first seven letters of
my figures.
Hall an hour ago, when my re- the a!~ bet. He would point to one
searcher got to tile office, I tele- alld tl!en to anilther, unltl he had a
phoned and told her that, just to be series: A G E 'F B D C. These, of
sure, she might check. Ten minutes course, correspond to musical
later she rang to say that the gentle- notes. He would sit down and taP,
man who had put the chart together
Intended that It should be read weU, upside down Is the best way to
put It The dllflculty tl!en - and It
happens to columnists every now
and then, though I don't remember
In 20 years Its coming quite so close
- Is how to write Interestingly on
no notice whatever, running (In this
case) between engagements In Chicago, live appearances, one more .
or less on top of another, which cannot be put off. The question is
whether, In the Interstices, I can
meet my professional obligations to
this newspaper?
.
Once, two or three years ago, I
was doing a program with the amlatile Mr. Gene Shall! of NBC. Everything went swimmingly. Too
swimmingly" Because he played
me like a cobra, undulating hypnotIcally thls way, that way, as·I gradually lost any sense of caution. He
said then: "HoW do yo\! know what
to wrlte about, when you wrlte a
It is conceivably of Interest to the

the notes out In consecutive order. ronto to accuse the United States of
Then he would vest a Utile rbythm economic malpractices, such as deInto the sequences, and suddenly a . flclt spending and Inflation. You
tune emerged. Th1s tune he played could play with that, but you would
out In the style, respectively, of need to dig up the corresponding
Bach, Mozart, Schumann. Chopin, figures of.our critics. It would be
Brahms, Llzst, Gershwin. Asmash tun It one of those were a represenexhibition of Improvisatory tative of Mexico. Or Brazil. Or Ar·
gelltlna. Or Great Britain. But you
powers.
But a scribbler cannot easily du- see the problem.
"Israel Demands Security Zoneplicate a m~~Siclan's powers - .
though I suppose a poet, or the In Lebanon As Tensions Grow." Oh
versifier, could do so. Wrttea piece,
no! Not another column on Israel
without the opportunity to reand Lebanon. You cannot do that lb
search, on this morning's stories on
the Am.ertcan speaking world. Not
the front page of the Chicago Tribafter a dozen columns on the subject during the past dozen weeks.
une: "Embassy Raiders ReleaSe
Four More." Well, you could go on a
And, finally, "Health Hazard
·bit about lntema tonal terrorism, Waste Heads for Chicago." No, that
but we've done that. "Cut U.S.
won't play even In Peoria, which Is
Deflclts-IMF Nations Ask." Not
near enough to Chicago and proba·
, bad, actually. Representatives of bly shares Chicago's concerns.
the nations of the world meet In To-

WASHINGTON - Tony Coehho's well-ordered life crumbled In
ruins when he was 21. In.one terrlble wt, his planned career In the
plies 0011 was abruptly cut ott. He
exper ced real or iJercelved rejectlor\ by h1s family and frtends .
He was even ruled unfit to hold that
uniquely American mark of adulthood, his driver's license.
What dealt this shattering blow to
his self-este'em - ~d drive him to
the point of contemplating suicide
- was nothing he had any control
over. He was told he had epilepsy.
Eighteen years later, Coelho has
a confident message of bo!lfi' for the
2.1 million Americans who suffer
from this widely misunderstood
disorder: "Eighty percent of all
epUeptlcs can be normal people If
they let themselves do it."
As a hard-driving congressmen
with unblinking brown eyes from ·
California's lush Son Joaquin Val·
ley and the respected chairman of
the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee, Coelho is
living probf that epilepsy need not
crush the victim's dreams of a successful, rewarding llle.
But Coelho had no such assu-

ranee during that . awful week In
Aprtl1964, when his llle seemed to
be over before It had fairly begun.
He was a lew weeks shy of his 22nd
birthday when he learned that he
was an epUeptlc. A graduate of Loyola University In Los Angeles,
where he had been a "Big Man on
Campus," he had decided to become a prtest.
But he was told to leave the seminary. The Catholic Church does not
permit epileptics to become priests. As Coelho puts It, "I decide!~ to
give up nnaterlal things for lhe
Lord's work - aild they said no."
He was pained alsO by h1s parents' response to the news of his
diagnosis,. as he recounled later:
"Their re~ctlon hurt me - they
said no son of theirs was an epileptic, that I had to get away from
those crazy trtends ·of rillne and

come home."
Coelho felt rejected by h1s frtends
as well. "II was an absolute, total
bomb," he recalled recently to my
associate Tony Capacclo. "I was
challenged, and I folded. I didn't
have the Inner strength to realize
that I only perceived people were

- --Local Briefs::--

education's decision earlier this
Summer to transfer the kindergarten !rom Cheshlre-Kyger back
to Addavllle.
"We've got an Increase at Hannan Trace, but the rest are bold·

Returns indictment in Mason killing
POINf PLEASANT -An eight-month sN!rtfr•s Investigation Into

ihe l9lll shooting death of a Point Pleasant teenager has resulted In a
graixljury Indictment against a man currently held In a Tampa,

Jng," she saJd.
In the h1gh schools, Kyger Creek
leads with 333 students, a loss of
three from last year. North Gallla

Fla.jaU 011 a manslaughter charge.
Ronald Ray Myers. 19, formerly of Rt 2, Point Pleasant. was

formally cbarged with m)ll'der In connection with the June 18, l9lll
shooting death of James Terry McCausland In an Indictment returned by the Mason County gr&amp;I¥IJury.
McCausland, 18 at the time of his death, was found In a wooded
area near Point Pleasant. He had apparently been shot in the chest
In August, Mason Shertff &amp;bert Fruth reported his departmellt
had a suspect In the McCausland case. Fi'uth saJd Deputy Tommy
Roush and Chlet Deputy George Plants had been In contact with
autborttles In Los Angeles and Tampa, and that enough evidence
had been gathered to justlty presenting the case to the grand Jury.
Roush said Frtday the shertff's department began looking Into the
case In January 1981 and that a tull-scale Investigation has been
underway since early this year.

CAPT. JERRY MADKINS

Madkins
Emancipation
Day speaker

EMT classes begin soon
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County Emergency Medical Service will
hold an emergency medical technician (EMf) class beginning Sept.
:ID.
Classes will be held twice a week from 6: ~10: ll p.m. In the
courthouse annex. Those Interested In enrolling may contact Linda
Nibert at 44&amp;-3422 for further Information.

GAU.IPOLIS - Capt. Jerry B.
Madkins, u.s. Ariny, wlllbetheguesl speaker at the 119th Emanclpa·
lion Proclamation Day Sunday
afternoon at the Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds.
Madkins Is an Instructor of milItary science at Marshall University and associate pastor of the
Sixteenth Baptist Church In Huntington, W.Va.
The celebration, which began
S&amp;!urday, will feature the crowning
of the emancipation queen, a gospel
sing, church services atlO: 00 a.m.
today with the Rev. Grover Turner
of Paint Creek Baptist Church, arts
and crafts displays, and a bean
dinner on both days of the event.

GALLIPOLIS - The Fourth District Court of Appeals will hear
appeals cases at the Gallla County courthouse Tuesday. Five cases
will be heard, according to Judge Lawrence Grey.
Grey and Judges Homer "Pete" Abele and Earl Stephenson will
review all cases trom lower courts, review Information and Issues
written opinions approving or disapproving the lower court's
decision.

Adult education offered

turning against me ... "
Most realli.e It too late."
At this critical juncture, friends
Today, the unabashedly partisan
at the seminary gave hlm hope politician still believes this.
with a capital "H." They Intro- ''Friendship stltl has a hlg~ priorduCed him to Bob Hope. The young, Ity than partiSanship for ·me," he
distresSed seminarian and the el- said. Even In the heat Of battle With
derly, Irrepressible comedian had Republican adversaries; he said, "I
long conversatlolns that gradually Insist, Insist on It that we remain
helped fan tlie sparks within Coelho
back to life. It was Hope who sugof
gested Coelho seek a career In poll!·
tes In "Mr: Blue" reads: "Great
lcs, and ·mentioned Congressman
ea. It is the courageous man who
B.F. Sisk as a possible employer.
ares contradiction and acrimony ·
Coelho eventually silent 17 years In of wgument If one loves anything,
Sisk's Washington office, before one will speak out...
strlklng out on h1s own.
Coelho has
put that principle Into
I
Another unlikely aid to yoong practice, too. Determined tq help
Coelho's recovery was a sllm,llttle- other epUeptlcs by his own exam·
known called "Mr. Blue," by Myles pie, Coelho has never tried to play
Connolly. It told the story (/f a mllll- · down 1\ls affll~tlon; using It Instead
Ollalre whO lost everything and as evidence that he has the ability
like Coelho - was forced to to overcome setbacks .that wou)d
re-examine his life and h1s values. defeat a lesser man.
The tortured young man read and
reread the little volume, scribbling
"Because I've been challenged In
hiS own approv.lng comments In the a basic way, I'm a better pel'IIOn,"
margin next to passages that
he said. "Everything I ciO generally
struck hlm as significant.
comes back to epilepsy. It'foreed
''Friendship was one of llle's fine me to find out who I was. I don't
things to him," the book said of Mr. worry about myself.'I'm very satisBlue. Wrote Coelho In the margin: fied with who Tony Coelho Is. ,I
"II shOuld be with more people.
know hlm weU."

&amp;

:~~:r

'

'

Coe~'s ~

Helicopter crash
kills 44 people

GAlLIPOLIS - Adult education classes are being offered on
Monday and Wednesday evenings at Gallla Academy High &amp;[hoot
and Monday and Wednesday mornings at the &lt;:;allla County senior
Citizens Center.
Studies Include reading, mall!, English, social studies and science
for those who were unable to complete their high school education.
Studies Include tile five areas tested on the General Education Development (GED) test.
For more Information, call Roger Brumfield at446-3250 or, after
3: 30 p.m., 446-4033. Daytime class Information may be obtained by
calling the senior center at44G-700l, Pearl Remy at 44G-750l, or Linda
Stanley at 44&amp;-3640.

MANNHEIM, West Germany
:AP I - A U.S. rnllltary heUcopter
crashed onto a busy West German
highway during an International
air show Saturday, k1Ulngall44 peopi&lt;' aboard, Including five Amerl·
r ao r rPw members, oollce said.

Witnesses reported seeing one ot
chopper's rotor blades Oy off.
Thrrr were also reports the craft
&lt;·xploded on Impact.
It was n~t IITunedlately clear
whether any vehicles on the autobalm were hit and there was nooffl·
ctal report on the cause of the
crash.
lht·

Issues program reminder

~.l

GALLIPoLIS - A reminder has been Issued by the Gallipolis
Recreation Department that a golden danceaeroblcs class begins
Tuesday at Grace United Metlpllst Church.
Fall programs sponsored by the department begin Monday, with
openings available In several classes.
! r

follows with 263 on the student list,
down 12; Southwestern has 'Zi7,
down eight; and Hannan Trace baS
JP3, down four.
. Figures for the other county elemen~ schools, with last year's
figures In parantheses, show
Bldwell-Porier with 357 (389); Cadmus, 165 (176); Centervllie, lJl
(147); and VInton, 243 (228).
Enrollment In the city district is
holding Its own. Washlngton Elementary, which had the highest sin·
g1e enrollment In 1981 with 792
students, stltl leads this fall with
757.
Rio Grande Elementary has 'Zi2
students, down three !rom last
year; Clay Elementary 163, down
six; and Green Elementary. 337.
down eight.
Gallla Academy High School's
population is up by 10 this year to
1,32D - the school with the largest
single enrollment In the county.
Ot these, 100 students - 60 jun·
tors and 40 seniors -attend Buckeye HUls Career Center, the
JVSD's first vocational center.
There are currently 7!11 students enrolled at Buckeye Htlis and Buck·
eye Valley Career Center near
McArthur, according to Mary Jane
Stanchlna, Buckeye Htlis guidance
counselor.
Attending Buckeye Htlis !rom the
county schools are 46 students from
Hannan Trace (18 juniors, 19 senlors),20tromKygerCreek (lljunlors, nine seniors), 51 !rom North
Gallla (25 juniors, 26 seniors). and
58 from Southwestern (35 juniors,

·.
I

Gallia enrollment. ••_______

Appeals heating set

A tale of hope~_ ------------------.__,;;..la;;;.;.c_k-~-nd_e_rso_n

The Sunday Times -sentinei-Page- A:3

Pomeroy M~ddleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

September 12; 19'82

23 seniors) . Gallla County's total
enrollment In the NSD Is 266.
roughly 37 percent of the trl&lt;aunty
district's makeup.
"().u- figures are fluctuating, because Friday was the cutoff date
for chang'es," Stanchlna explained.
"These figures are not final, and It's
possible we will get more students
In our programs."
The Guiding Hand School, which
educates and trains mentally retarded children and adults In Its
Cheshire facUlty, has 40 chlldren
enrolled this year, 16 of them from
the city schools and 24 from the
county.
Superintendent Loren Phelps
said this Is an Increase of five from

·~
;.:&lt;Co:::n:.::tin.:::ued=fro::;m;.::P~ag~e::;Al:.;,.)_ _
·•

last year. However, Its adult enrol·
lment baS dropped !rom 60 to 26 this
year - partly because lhe sc~ocll
was unable to reach a contractu!f1
agreement with GalllpollsDevelo~
mental Center for tralnlng some ~
Its adults.
:
· in the meantime, tile Ohlo Valle')'
Christian School, which operate6
out of the First Baptist Church ~
Gallipolis, has 1.84 students e~~
rolled, up eight from last year. '.
The total in 1!8&gt; was 150, Indica~;
lng a steady growth, according ~
Dr. Fred Wllllarns, the school')!
new admlnl~trator. OVC has ex;
panded In Its six-year history li:!
cover K-12, gradua ling Its first ~
nlor class last year.
·

_;Weather:----~

• WEATHER FORECAST -The National Weather Service pre- ·
diets showers for Sunday across many parts of tile nation. Showers
are expected In Montana, Idaho, North Dakota, Wyoming, and eastem washington and Oregon. Showers are also predicted for western .
New Mexico and northern Texas stretching to tile MissisSippi and · .
Ohio river valley states. (AP Laserphoto) .

State forecast

Extend benefits

Partly cloudy and humid . High In the mid-Ills .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jobless
workers In 36 states can apply for
up to lOweeks of additional benefits
be!4nnlng Sunday, thanks to lmplementation of a $2.2 billion supplemrntal unemployment program.
Extended Ohio Forecast -Monday through Wednesday: Chance of
The program, announced Friday
showers
or thunderstorms each day. Highs In tile low to mid~
h\LaborSecretaryRaymondDonMonday
and
upper 70s to low Ills TUesday and Wednesday. Lows In
o~an. is designed·to respond to the
the
low
to
mid
-In; Monday and TUesday mornings and upper 50s
long-term joblessness suffered by
Wednesday.
many Americans In the current
....!'~
-('(~·es:;_
. s~io~n!:.·--------------------------------­

Extended forecast

.'

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Rudand businessman·Grate _--By BOB HOEFLICH
RUTLAND -Thursday evening
- lf you'll pardon the pun - was a
Grate night In Rutland.
Members ot the Grate tamlly ,
employes of the Grate business operatJons In Rutland and The Plains
aod their spouses gathered at the
Rutland Elementary Scjlool to honor Arnold Grate, president and
founder of the businesses, who Is
l'l'tlring .

HONORED - Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Grate, Rutland, were honored
with a dinner and party at the Rutland Elementary School Thursday
night marking the retirement of Mr. Grate !rom the Grate lumlture
and bottled gas """'"esses at Rutland and The Plains. With them are
their three SODS, from the left, the Rev. Gene Grate, a paalor In Lodl,
Mo.; David Grate, who wiD now serve as manager of the Rutland
Furniture Store, and the Rev. Herb Grate, who wiD serve as manager
over the television and appliance departments.

High tributes were paid to the honored guest and there was a bit of
"roasting" as tamlly members and
employes spoke tollowtng a dinner.
The evening also featured a "surprise" guest, the Rev. Gene Grate,
who was nown In trom Lodi, Mo ..
for the retirement observance.
Paying tribute to Grate were his
sons, the Rev. Gene Grate, David
Grate and the Rev. Herb Grate; his
brothers, Wendell and George
Grate; his sister-In-law, Donna
Grate who read an essay written by
her daughter, Jenny, when she was
a junior at Meigs High School.
The essay described Jenny's uncle, Arnold Grate's llfe, particularly regarding his h.orsemanship
and love of his home. All of the
speakers stressed the Impact and
beneficial Influence Grate had had
on their lives.
Responding to the tributes, Grate
spoke briefly of his early lite and his
entrance Into the business world.
Success for Grate did not happen
overnight. It goes back over 50 years when Grate sensed his ablllty to
meet people and to sell. He recounted his ability as top salesman
In his school many years ago when
Cloverleaf Salve was sold each
year to earn pictures for the school
walls.
Born on a farm In the Fairplay
Community, Grate Is one of eight
children. His brothers and sisters

are Wendell and George, as&amp;»clated with the businesses; Robert
and Paul of Marlon; Ova l-yons of
Midland, Mich., (she Is a minister); Eva Hersman, Castilla; Herman, who resides In Rutland and Is
also In the furniture business at
nearby Masol!, W. Va. Grate
learned early .:r.. and the hard way
- that farming was not his cup of
tea.
While quite young, he traveled
from door-to-door seUing small
household Items to friends and
neighbors and whUe still a teenager, he talked the owner of the
Vinton Feed Mlll Into purchasing
an old truck and hiring him as a
salesman to travel by-ways selling
feed.
Successful he was for two years,
but when he asked for a small pay
Increase, the arrangement hit the
dirt. It was back to door-to-door selling on his own and slowly but
surely he progressed economically.
He and his wife, MOdred, were
married In 1937 and on a visit to
some or her relatives In Jackson,
they picked up some used !Urnlture
which he peddled easUy. So they
and soon Grate was making regubegan
securing
more used
Items
trips
to Columbus
to secure
more used stock. An old feed room
In a house where he and Mrs. Grate
resided In Danville was cleaned up
and used for a storage area.
In 1848, Mr. and Mrs. Grate purchased the Steiner property In Rutland, and the follOWing year they
opened their store. At first they
planned to sell only used furniture.
However, they reflected on the
plan and Invested In several thousand dollars worth of new merchandise and the business took off.
Liking lots of people contact,
Grate did not sit down tn the new
store. No, sir! He took the the road
1~ r

Alcohol-related accidents
BJ«n''IERS- Amold Grate, center, was hooored upoo his retire
ment as president of the Grate business operadons In Rutland and The
Plains, with a dlnDer and party at the RujJand Elementary School
Thursday nlgbl. Wltb him are two ot his bnKhen1 who wiD continue their
work wtth the buslnes!leS. They are, left, Wendell Grate, who wiD he
ntanager of the carpet shop 118 well as a salesman for Rutland Fumlture, and on the right, George Grate, whowiUhemanagerofthebottled
gas operation In Rutland. Geoi'Je had been 88110Ciated wKh the Betsy
Ro88 Baking Co. for many years but Joined the Grate business operations In Rutland In ~h of this year.

illLUMBUS- The Ohio Department of Highway Safety's weekly
"box score" reports show a decrease In the number of alcoholrelated traffic accidents this past
week.
·
Of the 20 traffic fatalities only
three (15 percent) were found to be
alcohol-related. But so far this
year, alcohol was found to be a factor In 39 percent of all fatal traffic
accidents.

Arrests for DWI are Increasing,
the -department said. This past
week, the Ohio Highway Patrol
made 1,188 DWI an-ests. So tar this
year, more than 34,(0) people have
been arrested tor drunk driving.
The department's seatbelt data
show that In nine of the fatalltles,
the victim had a sea !belt avaUable.
None had a seatbelt In use at the
time of Incident, and nine had one
but didn't use them.

Sepf\!mbe,r 12: 1982

September 12, 1982 ·

s, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va.

Pom

seUing - moving those retrtgerators and ranges In Meigs, VInton,
Jackson and Gallla Counties as
electrical power was extended Into
the areas.
In 1950, the Grates went Into the
bottled gas business which went
hand-In-hand with selling the
ranges. Then a bottled gas business
as well as a furniture store was
opened at The Plains.
Besides being successful tn business, both Mr. and Mn. Grate have
been. quite active members of the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
and the Influence of the Chrlstlan
home In which they wer.e reared
was mentioned more than once
when their three spoke Thursday
evening.
Grate expressed his appreciation
to employes and to his family
members for their Interest and
work In the businesses. "This nlgllt ·
will be a great memory In my lite,"
he closed. .
Grate was then presented gifts of
a tool set, an engraved plaque notIng his 35 years of seivlce, a gold
pocketwatch and chain. Mrs. Grate
was presented a bouquet of roses.

'

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TEMPORARILY CLOSING SEPT. 25

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
SALE CONTINUES
AT

~
58 Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
9:30 to 5 Except Thuns. &amp; Sun. - No Phone

GOOD SELECTION NOWI
REOPENING OCT. 25 FOR ANAL ANAL

THE SELECTACARE
LINE
*ALL ELECTRIC

Area death s

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·the Sund.ly

Times - Sentine l-Page- A - ~

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Hunter safety course starts -n ext month ~J

By BOB
Trinity Church . In Porllel'oY. bp tanzo at~- .
of us who never get around to
·
Janet
Ewtaa
Gatlde;
loiu~
of
bad
·a
tough
summer,w!th
beaJ\h
cards feel so bad.
•
'tlst Owrch, ~th the Rev. GI'CMI'
. ~.
.
Pomeroy,
now'
of
PoliUac,
Mich.;
prpblemsrealty)IUttliig,hlmbnthe
Andagalnthla.,JohiiMohler
:·'
ottlcll!ttna. Burial will be In
GALLIPoLIS - Jlril BW Robin- Turner
~autfereduevereitroke~Ls
shelf.However,heladoingwelland ~RoUtel,~mll!tllethe
I know we're so "liberated" ta; :
Pine
Street
.' Cemetery. Friends
. son, 12, 727 'lljlrd Ave., Galllpolls,
a
patient
at
St.
Joeepb
lbpltal.
may
even
be
a~
t.O
be
tlack
In
the
first
··
with
Ills
Cllrlstma'4
eards.
day,
but couldn't we live without •
died at 6:4!1 p.m. F.l1day In PJeasant may call at thefWieral home from
Mrs.
Gatkle
1t'PUid
Ute
hearing
pulptt
this
mon~
tbat.'•
'
!
antaatl
_
c!.
l
They
'Ill
tile
iNill
~
week.
the
closeup
of the "belly button" on :
24 and 7-9 P-trl· 'today and !rom ll'
VaiJ!!y Hospital.
.
lromherMelpCounty~The
'
NQwthat'savoldlnctheruih,tosay
that
body
spray
commercial. Do ·
Monday. · ·
B0rp, ·dct. 12; lid, In G~!X&gt;Ils, a:m.-noon
addrelll.s
St.
Joeeph
Ho&amp;plial,
!Ol
Mn.
Bertl!a
Parker,
our
fillthtul
the
leaPt
but,
.Jolm,.)'llumakil111ose
keep
smiling.
'
~ servtces will be held In
son_of•tlie late WWJam "Dude" and ·
the funeral home by Ancient York Woodwlll'\l Ave., Pontiac, Mich., Laurel Clitf co~t. main- r•;;;;;;;;;;;~·~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ji
Iva Rollinson. he was a 1927 gradutatns excellent health. She's beerflo
::
Lodge No. 33 Prince Hall, F&amp;AM, · 4le3. Mn. Gatldelsallllterof.Mn.
at,e • ct the Chicago Engineering
Helea
Norris,
and
Mrs.
M8ey
Buck.
the
doctor
lD
tiJne8,
In
the
last'lO
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at 7: ll tonight. A flag presentatlon
Sclioolllhd Wol'ke!l tot ro years 1n
•
G&amp;Jilpoll.s as a barber with hiS !a- wiD be made by VFW Post No. 4464.
•
ther. He ~~ 'Gahlpolls Electric
In 1933 ~- operated the business until his death.
diet l.s playing a big role lD aspects
1\
A World War nAnny veteran, he
of ow: health.
'
I also thoullht you'd Uke to know
attended Paint Creek Baptist
that Mr. and Mrs. DlckKarr, Mn.
Cbtlreh and was a member of the
JOhn CostaDZD will be bolit for an
Polly Eichinger, Mrs. Iva Pearl PoElectriCaJA~~ SeivlceOperwell and Mis. Bertha Parker were Ohio Hunter Safety Course at his
·ators, Anc~t ·York Lodge No. 33
home on County Road 35 this
In Athens to surprise Mrs. Nellie
Prince Hall, F&amp;AM, VFW Post No.
month.
Tracy on her 92nd birthday.
4464 and American Legion LaClasses wiD be held on Sept. 15, 17
Mrs. Tracy Is a patlent at the
fayette Post No. 'l'l.
Offfqt !fcauts'by Appointment Only
Kimes Nursing Home. The Laurel and 18 with classes on the 15th and
SuMvtqg are two soos, Stanley,
Clitf Health Club Sellt two large 17th to begin at 6:ll p.m. and the
serving with the U.S. Army In West
.birthday cakes, large enough to one on the 18th to begin at 9 a.m . .
· Germany,andWayneofGalllpolls;
Class size must be limited and all
treat all the patients at the home, on
two daught,er$,·Mn. Joyce Davlsot
Interested persons must register
the occasion.
Gallipolis, ari1l ¥nJ. Loretta Brooks
before sept. 14 by contacting Cosof ~to, . Clillf.; four grand- cbpdren; aJ¥1' ~sister, Mfs. G~ ..
~to
Meigs countyMrs. Anna
Is at)j!ast
uying
Wolford of·Sjiringfleld.
'
for the time being. Anna - a rest· .JIM BILL lWBINSON
~services will be bel!! a! 1
dent of Apple Grove for the past 50
STORE HOURS:
}'t!lll'S - has been busy cleartng out
.
''memories" In preparation for her
S. Triplett
ceded him In death.
move to Bowling Green where she ·
Funeral seivlces will be held at 1 Is taking an apartment near one of
. MiobaJPoRT--Graveslde serp.m. Monday In tl)e WUIJs Funeral her daughters, Norma Morrlsl
' Mn. ',qirocyn S. Triplett, Home,
·Vices,!U'
with the.Rey. James Lusher Anna made the move yesterday.
:38. ~ Sl, ~killed omctatlng. Burial will be In Ridge;WednesdaY ·tn 111 auto accident at
lawn Cemetery, Mercerville.
:d you have any books !rom the
i s~.Okla.,•Wmbebeldatna.m.
Friends may call ~t the funeral PomerOy and MJdclleport Ubrarles
'Mood&amp;y at .G!lmore Cemetery.
home from 7-9 p.m. today.
lying about noW's your chance to
Mn. Triplett was born Oct 2.
The grandsons will serve as get off scott free. The Ubrarles are
.1944 -at Mlddleport and she-Is the
·pallbearers.
observing penalty free month and
:w!fe'of,Ernest Trtplett \fbO Is COD·
you can return your overdue books
; lined to the ,Stroud hospital as a retor
the entire month without paying
:Stilt r4 lnl~ received In the same Bernice Brucker
one cent of penalty.
1acCident. Other Slii'VIvors are two
GALLIPOLis' - Funeral seivl- ·
SOflS• ·Gene'.'GeraJd Thompson and
Rev. !'IW Perrin, pastor o! the
ces
for Bernice Brucker, who died
!James Ray .Boyer; aslster, Mary
Lou Hawkins, Middlepor t; a Thursday In Greenfleld, Ohio, will
. bl'othe'r, James Allen Smith, be held at 10:30a.m. Monday In the
Tobias Funeral Home, Dayton.
cOlumbus.
i Mn. Trlpiett.was a member of · Friends may call at the funeral Virgie S. Rife
home from 2-6 p.m. today.
~ Mlddleport Amerlcan Legion
Post Auxlllal'y.
GALLIPOLIS - VIrgie Sollhin
· Otriclatlng at seivlces wUl be the Fred W. Hulshorst
Rife, 82,- Rt. 1, GaWpolls, died at 9
Rev. Mark Flynn. The Ewing Funp.m. Friday at her residence.
elf~) Home Is In ~harge of services.
~LIS - Fred W. HulBorn Aug. 'ZT, 1900, In VInton
There wiD be no visitation.
shorst, 77, 35 Burkhart Lane, Galli- County, daughter of the late Levi
- ~I
polis, died Friday mol'lllnl. at and Eva Keeler Slilvely, she at-·
Holzer Medical Center.
tended BuiavUJe Christian Church
Cl,unot Bevan
Born Nov. 20,10041n Centenary to and was a member at the Bu!avtlle
,
the late William and MlnnleJ the- Grange.
GALLIPOLIS - Camot Bevan, berg Hulshorst, he worked most of
~ ll18l'lied Raymond Rife on
88, Rt.&lt;,l,,. C!'Pwn Qcy, died at _3: 15 , . hJs lite as an automotive body re- March ll, 1918. and he also prea~Ji!~jnJ]IQ.Jzw~lcai,J,; palrmall and 1\lterided Rodney 1./nlceded her-ln dea'th In 1981.
~·
··
ted Methodist Church.
Suivlvlng are four sons, Herbert
BOm JUne tl!, 189!1. In ·.Gii}&lt;an He manied Hester Cobb, who of Florida, Francis ofRt.l, Gallipo'1\Yp., GaJlla County, son of the late suivlves, on June 23, 1929, In
lis, Merchof Cheshire and Rllgerof
Ch;arles and- Emma Sheets Bevan, RodneyColumbwi; four ~ughters, Mn.
he ·Was a -"~!tired farmer and atAlso suivlvlng Is a daughter,
John (Mary) SteinbeCk ·or Gallipo~ Slloam'&amp;ptlst Chin-!:h.
Mnj. Donald (Patricia) VanPutten
lis, Mrs. Roland (Faye) Spencer of
He and h!S WU:e, Dlcle, who sur- ot Rancho Palos Burdes, Callt.; -Columbus, Mrs. Leroy (EIIeell) El·
viVI!!l, . ~ ~May 15, 1917,
and two grandchildren.
Uot\ of Newcomerstown, and Sarah
In Glin'ip011s.' ·
.
. He was also preceded In death by Summers or Rt. 1, GaWpolls; 29
Also surviving are two sons, Ivan two brothers and one sister.
grandchildren and 20 greatofBn«alo,,N.Y.1 and Dwight ofRt
Funeral seivlces will beheldatl grandchlldri!n.
l, CrownC!jy; two daughters, Mrs. p.m. Monday In the McC9yFuneral services will be held all
Mlchael tVfvian) Kalk of BouJ4er, Wetherholt·Moore Funeral Home, p.m. Monday In Mtller's Home for
Colo., and Mrs. Robert (Georgia) Gallipolis. Burial will be In Cente- Funerals, with the Rev. Alfred HolBrown of Tiuy; 12 grandchildren nary Cemetery. Frtends may call ley officiating. Burial will be In Rife
and 12 great-gnlndchlldren.
at the funeral home from 3-5 and 7-9. Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Abrotherandslxslstersalsopre- p.m. today.
funeral home from 2-9 p.m. today.

J•mBdlftob~

p.m. Mmfay In Paint Creek Bap-

Boll'dJca

.

the::.

were

Wl::;~-=::r~~ :~~~==~ :

~.!:. ~~ton~:O~aughter, :r:.t'':S:O~:!

.JOHk~·- WADE,

.
M.D., INC.
VETER~l'fS M:EMORIAL HOSPITAL

,EAR) NOSE &amp;THROAT
:GENERAL AUERGIST

Wbee~r

carOlyn
~

ATTENTION!" HOME OXYGEN PATIENTS

.

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co:,

Nu :rubst•riptiHN by mail pcnniUc.'C.I in

tuwnli whfn• hornt: carrit:r

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Qhio-Point Pleasant;w .

i

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CALL {614) 992-2104
or
675.1244
rr===================:h~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thurs. 9 am til· 9:30 pm
·Fri.·Sal 9 am bl 10 pm

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CLOSED SUNDAYS

IAre~ deaths

*SEMI ELECTRIC
*MANUAL HIGH-LOW
*FIXED HEIGHT MANUAL

THE All NEW
AMERICAN STANDARD
.WHEELCHAIR

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~r..r~t ·:."

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MINI 02 FEATURES:

Please ask yourself, does my current o~gen machine service include
the following:

*52 POUNDS
*ECONOMICAL, PENNIES
A DAY TO OPERATE
*EASY TO MOVE OR
TRANSPORT

•REGULAR MONTHLV EQUIPMENT CHECKS
•24 HR. DEPENDABLE SERVICE-7 DAYS A
WEEK
•FREE DELIVERY/PICKUP
•DIRECT BILLING FOR PATIENTS
•NEW CANNULAS/HUMIDIFIERS MONTHLV
•SAME DAY DELIVERY
•ALL NEW, QUIET, LIGHTWEIGHT, POSTABLE
MACHINES
1.

EDICAL

EQUI~p_,ENT

2605 JACKSON AYl
PT. PLEASANT, WV 25550

Please Call For
A No ·Obligation
·Demonstration.
TodaY~·

*We offer aJI of the above services
•Check and comp4re our prices and service
*Also fPeciaJizing in wheelchairs/
bedi
*AU e~ .mmt be by
orrlers

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�September .12, 1982 ·
"

Charges draw
•
pnson
term

the riv.er

POMEROY - Upon entertng a
guilty plea to three counts of trafficking In marijuana , Earl Phelps,
30, Pomeroy, Friday was sentenced to a term or not less than six
months nor more than five years on
each count In Meigs County Com·
mon P leas Court.
Phelps will be transported to Columbus next week to begin serving
his sentence.
Two of the charges resulted from
the sale of ma rijuana to a n undercover agent on two occasions In
P omeroy, In March of this year.
A third cha rge can1"as a result of
marijuana discovered at a garage
operated by Phelps on Mechanic St.
Prosecutor Fred W. Crow, Ill obta ined a search warrant and followIng a search of the garage by sheriff
deputies. and Pa ul Gerard, investigator for the prosecutor, four large
plas tic garbage bags full of mari·
juanwwere found .
Crow represented the State of
Ohio a t Friday's healing and
Phelps was represented by Charles
H. Knigh t.
People called as witnesses or Ju·
rors In the trial originally scheduled
for Monday need not report. Jurors
will receive notice by postcard
when next required to serve.

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The follOWing
couples filed for marriage licenses
this past week in Gallla County Probate Court.
VIrgil W. Bentley, 25, Rt. 2, McAr·
thur, medical lab technician, and
TammY M. Davis, 22, Rt. 2, Patriot,
nurse.
Edward S. Saunders, 57, Rt. 1,
Northup, self-employed, and
Glenna F . Saunders, 44, Rt: 1, Nor·
thup, housewife.
Gary L. Eisnaugle, 24, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, janitor, and Wanda Saund·
ers, 38, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, housewife.
Richard D. Darst, 46, Rt. 1. Cheshire, dozer. operator, and Wanda
Pancake, 33, Rt. 1. Cheshire, state
employee.
Randall N. Baldridge, 24, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, operator, and Rebecca G.
Gregory ,18, Rt. 2, Patriot, at home.
Billy W. Simmons, 22, Rt. 4, Galli·
polls, Iron worker, and Debra L.
Myers, 16, Bucyrus, student.

mber 12. 1982

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Meigs store
disqualified
CHICAGO - Vance's Sohlo,
Route 4, Porneroy, has been dls'quallfled from the Meigs County
Food Stamp Program for a period
of one year, which began Aug. 20,
the U.S. DepaJ;(ment of Agriculture
reported Saturday.
The disqualification Is based on
evidence showing that the firm accepted food stamps in exchange for
ineligible Items, including a carton
and 20 packages of clgareUtes,
household cleaning products,
Ia undry products, personal grooming Items, paper products, bar
soap, and trash bags.
Larry Vance, owner of the firm,
may apply for relnsta tement of the
firm In the Meigs County Food
Stamp Program at the end of the
dlsquallflcatlon period. The firm
may not accept food stamps before
It Is reinstated.
A USDA official expallned· that
food stamps can be used legally
only to buy food for human con·
sumption, Including seeds and
plants to be used in gardens to grow
food for the personal consumption
of families certified to receive and
use food stamps.
Monroe Woods, Midwest fte.
glonal Admiiilstratlon of the US: ·
DA's Food and Nutrition Service,
which administers the program, '
explained that before being au tho- ·
· rlzed to accept food stamps, firms ·
must agree that they will abide by
the regulations governing the Food
Stamp Program.

Section@

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dumbfounded as he tries to phone
Mrs. Joanne F. Strode (top left) at
her well publicized telephOne
number.
The eye hardly has to be so keen
to collect the message put forth at
thiS apartment house (top right) at
First Avenue in Gallipolis; but wit
and a grammer book are necessary
elements for greater ·comprehen·
He"'"'s lon of the faux pas at Betty's Car·

Pal'

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Vital signs==

The ylsual voice often f01wards
more strenglh, than the loudest of
human utterances. A minor faux
or two Is posted vulnerably
about the Ins and outs of the coun.
ties tot
consumption ~will
likely
a chuckle .
.t~ose
whO cite
ot:uncon-

:a:
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ryout and Grocery on Ohio 7 ·tn
Meigs County (bottom left) . U today's hard times st!U don't make
you eligible for the government's
food stamp . program, you can al·
ways trade In your stockpile offish
for perhaps a fifth of your favorite
beverage. '1
~·
And If the stone Is more Important to you truin Immortalizing your

name, then the owner of this Pomeroy monument sale lot appears to
have quite a sale Item for you (bot·
tom right) . Like all businessmen,
he has to devise competitive bar·
gains for his customers, but an un·
assuming paSserby may find one of
these demonstration sale Items to
be an unusual change from the gar·
age and yard sales that proliferate
in the summer month&amp;. ••

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Jurors won't report
POMEROY ..A trial scheduled
for Monday In the Meigs CountY
Common Pleas Court has been can·
celled. Jurors do not have to appear·
for Jury duty, Sheriff James Prof.
fill announced Saturday.
The sheriff's department Is at·
tempting to learn the Identify of the
owner of a large black dog which bit ·
elght·year·old Alon11a · Cleland,
Route 1, Langsville, Friday
evening.
The incident took placeon County
Road 10 near the old Betz property.
The child was treated In the emer~ room at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Story and photos by ]ulie Brienza .
Times-Sentinel Staff Writer

J

�Pomeroy-Middlepo~t-Gallipolis,

September 12, 1982
B-2- The sunday Times-Sentinel

At Wit's end

@~~~

Sunday/People
Lawsuit filed seeks $1 million from Ono
NEW YORK (API - A woman is seeking more than $1 million !rom
Yoko Ono. widow of slain Bea tie John Lennon, saying her daughter
broke her arm on the Lennon estate on Long Island and was Ignored
when she asked for medical attention.
Margan•! Hair filed a lawsuit Friday contending her daughter, Caitlin , 7. was "assaulted " by the granddaughter of the governess of Ms.
Ono's 6-yea r-old son, Sean Lennon. Thelncldentoccurred whlleCaltlln
. was staying al the estate In Cold Spring Harbor on May 29.
_ Ms . One's lawyer, David Warmflash, said Friday he had no lrnm~
: diale comment on the suit.
Mrs. Halr' s lawyers said the governess Ignored the glrl'srequestfor
fl)ed lcal attention, and the broken a rm was not diagnosed until after
Caitlin returned home 1o Manhattan. The governess was not identified
lri court papers.
:The suit seeks $1 mtllion for "Pennanent Injury" and $50,(0) for
medical expenses, and accuses Ms. Ono of leaving the girl in the care of
· "Incompetent, Irresponsible, careless and negligent bodyguanls, governesses. agents, servants and employees."

-.

Sticking it to .the grandparents ·with the nev.r children's toys
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By ERMA BOMBECK
potty sea~. blankets, assorted
AnynewbabyworthltsSIIltthese clothes and toys. The toys tell a
days has two fully-equipped nurser- story.
Soon after the birth p! a baby, a
ies: one wltli Mom and Dad and one
at Grandma and Grandpa's.
' mother must make~ decision. She
Each one has a bed, a playpen, a knows that thrQughoutachll!l'sllf~

feel f•bal- nay altllt

".ARCADIA
Saddle Leather
Wine Leather

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ttine .he will 1receive many tOys,
some more devastating to the human body than o~rs. She must
weigh the oPtions- Who wlli ~
these toys! The·new parents whose
job It Is to dlaclpUne flnnly and gl\'e

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The

:JIHI Second ,\ve.

;

Lafayette Mall 1

~cli.t~ Shoe Cafe

Gallipo.lls, 0. '
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Open Daily 10-9;
Sunday 1·6

their full attention to this child? Or
those two, sweet, vulnerable people
In their twtllght years who are so
awed by this precious life that they
blindly accept whatever you give
them?
The decision is usually quick and
decisive. Stick It to the
grandparents.
From aU appearances, the toys
are divided evenly between the two
houses. It is only after you watch a
mother designate a toy's future
that a pattern begins to develop.
Any game that has 187 pieces,
cannot be seen by the human eye,
and screws up the vacuum sweeper
goes to Grandma and Grandpa's

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We Honor

Dr.

Jla&amp;.
sanl Memortai Library are CoodudiD&amp; a book sale
lhrclugb today. Boolra Oil ~ I!UbJects wiD be ...
sale !rom 1 to 5 p.m. today at a ranp of prlcell. Al8o

Helen help

ticket for Reagan's limo

OGDEN, Utah (AP) -Anofflcerapparentlythoughta parking ticket
for PreSident Reagan's llmouslne would be an amusing souvenir of his
visit to Utah, but the pollce chief isn't slntllng.
A Secret Service agent found the ticket Friday on the car, which was
. legally parked in a private lot next to the Hilton Hotel, Reagan's over,
: night stop during his two-day visit to Utah.
"One of my officers felt It was tunny to put that parking ticket on the
president's limousine and attach my name to It," Pollee Chief Joe
Ritchie said by telephone from his home. ''The only thing is I don't think
It was tunny."
Ritchie said he didn't !mow who committed the prank, but planned to
investigate and punish whoever was Involved. "We'll take whatever
djsclpllnary acton we think Is proper at that tlnne, " he said. "I don't
"!tOW right OOW What that wlli be."

Grandparents' ~dvice marks their day

..
(702)

(700)
(701)

$1

1.1

Our Reg.1.3;
K marts Spray Enamel Paint

Save On 3 12·oz. · Sweet'n Low•'

Our Reg. 1.47
6·pr. Pkg. Nylon Knee·hl's

Ideal for interior and extrerior
surfaces. White and colors.

Looks like sugar and tastes like
suaar! Contains 100 packets.

Stretc h nylon with nude · heel.
Basic colors; fit sizes 8V2-ll

1

"NeT wt

(703)

Our Reg . 19.97·21.97

16.97-18.97
Large assortment
of infant and
toddler's snow suits.

5.47~~j

Shop

Sharpening Euentlals

and
Savel

Pretty styles In solid colors.
Misses·.

Choice of Smlth's~ .nr..r......,n.
kttorOO

QUAKER
STATE

~~:':.t:r:::~ ~~~ ::nkl~

oui- daughter

chen until the rest

137 N. lnd AVE.

·rH_~-

"'f ~ tPtP"'f

992·9917

MIDDLEPORT
DINNER SERVED

LUNCH SERVED

11:30 - 2:00

5:00 - 9:00

DAILY SPECIALS

NEW MENU ITEMS

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY IN THE LOUNGE

Back By Popular Demand
Recording Artist DAVE DUNKLE
*Hotel Rooms By Day
*Special Roles Weekly ond Monthly
*Party and Meeting Rooms Available

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

needs
painting
you-lmow·
off or
Anything
that goes
has atowheel
who.Anything you have to add water
to is definitely a grandparents' toy,
as is anything that takes the top of
your head off like whirring tops,
computer bleeps, drums, horns and
sirens.
Size Is a big f~ctor In determining
at whose house a toy wlli come to
rest Grandparents automatically
get any toy that dominates a living
room (trampoline, tent, horse, in·

ACROSS

at you pack up

Testing
Evaluation
Selection
Fitting
MEDICARE AND
Follow-Up
UMW APPROVED
Annual Checks
Professional Audiologist
Ucensed hearing aid fitter and dealer

HEARING
AIDS

RITE VISIT
PHONE, w or
SPEECH and HEARING

Mo~d:~'~:~~~day
Saturday9AMto5PM
w!~~.~~"~Ntr~~: ;)fl

412 Vinton Pike
\'\
Galli" poll"s, QH. 45631
446 5500
,...:sa:ry~-~-~H~.~------L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-lJ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~
your leftoVers and take them to
your cars?
... Or hope she reads this column,
which may make the ploy unneces-

,...
-.)

446-9510

SEMIANNUAL TRADE-IN SALE

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(705)

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Umn2

Sote
Price

16·oz: Celebrity· lacon
Delicious sliced bacon. Product of Hungary. Save now.

(707)

Each
46-oz. · Vlallc®Pickles
Mouth watering Polish or
~asher dill pickles. Savel

·EXTRA
COLOR

.

.

35mm &amp; New
. "disc"

17' Each ·

10 F:Or : 1.$3
Kllltomat 4" Prlnta
23'each

our Reg. 5.97

10 !llor 2.07

4.97

Get extra ·prints of
favorite color
\

W•TH ':OUPO N

............. lOots
~cottOn/nylon tube IOC)!s
work. 18" lirti1th. fit 1().13.
-

........ ll ... .

:SOOP"

st-ots at these , tow

prices. · . 8orc;:leri8$S.
textUred prints from.

any . Focal•

ac~

Interior Flat Wall Paint
Willie vlny[ latex paint goes
on ea~ly and dries quickly.

sa~

Reboleli'ntted tot.lr.'eSllpl.iatkwl

Quaker SJatet~&gt; JOW40 011 .
All-weather oil meets SAE.
new car specifications. ·

Prints
.·: Prints
Slides

'•

From Your

P.RINTS·

110. 126 &amp; Reg.

4.97~~~~:

K mart~
Sole Price
Less Mfi'.
Rebate
Your Nel
Cost After
Mfr. Rebate

Qr Kod-

negative.

QfP~Your'

as~
l;&gt;ept.

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'•I·&lt;~.:.••

Each

3 DoysOnlyl
. VIsit Your
.
K m&lt;:Jrt- camera

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O~r Reg. 1.32

WITH COUPON

ZlfllecSt.,.ll ....
'25quertslze.

•

IT'S TIME FOR OUR SEMI- ANNUAL TRADE-IN
SALE. DON'T WORRY ABOU T WHAT TO ~0
WITH YOUR OLD FURNITURE. BRING IT TO
EMPIRE AND YOU WILL GET:

$200~~RE

DEAR HELEN: .
We have two boys and two girls.
Our house is ~story, so each
has a separate room.
.However, most mornings I find
them all in our older son's water
bed. Their ages range from 5 to 9.
My mother thinks this Is disgraceful." I'm glad they get along
so well .. . and a blt relieved that ·
they don't all pile Into our room as
they used to before the water bed
came along.
Is this a "deprived" habit as
Mother implies? - MOM
DEAR MOM:
No!
.
What's disgraceful here is your
mother's Implication that bed
~ "bad." - For shaqte,
Grandma! - H. · · .

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·: Middleport.,Ohio ,
.'

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I've found a man who treats me
special. He says I'm everything to
him, and I'm •tired of being "nothing" to my famtly. So I'm planning to leave. Do you blame me?M.A.M.
DEARM.:
l don't blame you tor leaving a
fatled marriage, but don't blame
your daughter entirely. If, over the
years, you cared ·tess about your
husband's cheating than · she did,
maybe love was ltylng before riva!ry gave It the final shove.
As for the new man: Are you In
love or only Intrigued because he
"treats you special" - and right
now your battered ego needs that?
-H.

Snow suits

8.96-9.96
Sweaters For Chilly Days

-. BAKER
.FURNITURE

D~~o~~E~~en

DEARUPSET:

"Every time I think of teUing my ·
da ughter to take aU these toys off .
my hands, I feel sorry for her. She's
stuck with the kid! "

''competition.''

Our Reg.

SAVE ON
EVERYING

Bt'IIELENBOITEL

It's always
been that way.
is
JEialous
and possessive
of myShe
husband (her father). Even when marlied, she spent most of her time
Wtth her girlfriends or with him.
She doesn't like men her own age
(24) and won't date, though she's
· attractive.
::;;tnce she's been home, my husband sleeps Dl) the ciruch - no s· •
for me. I work.nlghts. So does she,
but pays nothing toward room and
bof,rc;l. - and baby-sitting, shich
"DaddY" .does all the time. He has cheated on me many
times, and she was more jealous
than I. She hates me as I'm her

(704)

ends.

Wife's tired of family
but she's divorced and back home
again with Daddy who prefers her
to. me, and showers aU his affection
on ~r and her little girl.

lfmiiJ

loa: sale are white denim book bags In two styles. The
book bags wDl continue to be sold after the book sale

Home."

THE LaSALLE

~s

marded, things mJght be better,

IH6·oz. Net
Depending On
Pigment

PHlLADELPHlA (AP) - Thousands of grandparents, asked to
· niark National Grandparents Day by giving some tiJ)6 to young people,
: h;ld some old-fashioned advice: Listen to your parents! ·
' ·Avoiding a flashy lifestyle also was a popular wamlng !rom people
&amp;awing on decades of experience. The Ideas came from more than
23.roJ grandparents living In 262 nursing homes In 10 states.
The grandparents sharing their hard-earned wisdom live In homes
owned by the Phlladelphla-based ARA Services Inc .• which timed the
. survey to coincide with National Grandparents Day. Congress has
: d~lgnated Sunday as grandparents' special day.
- "Do not be blinded by what might seem to be a glamorous life,"
· offered Charles Davis, 64, of Noblesvtlle, Ind. "You wlli
Jearn to appreciate all things as they open up to you."
Nellie Dawson, 86, alsoofNoblesvtlle, said her advice to today's youth
Is to listen to parents and obey them because "they've already been
around once."
"
. The survey was conducted at ARA nursing homes In California,
· Colorado. Florida,llllnols. Indiana, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas, West
: Vlrgtnla and Wyoming.

SEPTEMBER SALE
DAYS CONTINUE

.

three feet tall, had two bug eyes, :
and kept mumbling, " Phone

r----------------------

dou that has a wardrobe
trunk filled with on~tnch bras and
bikinis that get lodged under your
flngernatl when you try to pick
them up, is len at Grandma and
Grandpa's.

NORWALK, Conn. (AP) -Jack Paar, former host of the ''Tonight"
show, is recovering from surgery at Norwalk Hospital.
A hospital spokesman said Paar's famJly had asked that the nature of
tl)e surgery, performed Friday, nol be disclosed.
· Paar. 64, of Greenwich, was admitted to the hospital Thursday afternoon, the spokesman said.

. Justice Stewart released from hospital

door gym, full·slze fuel rocket~ .
Why do grandparents put up with
it? I visited a friend of mine recently who -had just become a new
grandmother. She was perched on
the edge of the sink, held c~ptlve by
a battery-driven robot that stood

ho~~

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The Saving Place ..

Paar recovering from surgery

:suGAR HILL, N.H. (AP~ -Retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Potter Stewart was back home today after being dlseharged !rom a
h()Spltal where he was treated for Injuries suffered In a fall.
Stewart, fn, fell at his home Aug. 23 while cllmblng stairs to tend his
sick wife. He suffered broken ribs and a chipped coltar bone.
·He was released from a hospital In Uttleton on Friday.
Stewart served 23yearson theSupremeCourtandreslgned last year.

The Sundily Times-Sentinei- Page-B-3

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

12, 1982 '

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DEAR HELEN:
We frequently have potluck
dinners at 01111country schoolhouse.
You learn a lot about people by the
wP,y they act at C0f1!111UD1ty eat~thers- There Is always the ilut100 who si\OVels doW every:thlng 1n
sJiht and great lllurplllg IOUIIds;
.aod Miss Picky wbo only.ts Wbat
s¥ brings, for tear &lt;if focid polaonlng. Then ~ have the one-upper
wlw alway! enters with the "hit of
tli! evening'' and expects raves ·
fr\?m ~-and beruv.;ulte,
briqlng a bag of potato cbll,w b'
her famlly·of.lour's - b b.lloo.
l3ut my prtze II Mrs. s.mpllr. .

. Sl!e fUll her empty Cl . . .
wttll "'dllll 8lld clabl" trom au t11e

nOt-vmdlw food lleml, IH-

Ini bome eiiDiilb vlttJel10 ........
sd\an amay. The l'l!llt fl,us W.S lJir
fall!liY a couple ot dayl·on OlD' Mf.
town- wllldlweilould law !lied
Sbe'l Dot "poor .,....
~....... ftdof
. - UPIJI!&lt;l' ..

~

.

\

ON ANEW LIVING ROOM SUITE

s·1000R
MORE
OR
$100 MORE

ON YOUR CHOICE OF ANEW
DINETTE (wood or metal)

$300~~RE

FOR ANEW DINING ROOM
SUITE (Hutch, Table, 6 Chairs)

$50 OR
MORE
$50 OR
MORE
OR
•280 MORE

ON ANY NEW RECLINER

'

ON COFFEE AND END TABLE
FOR ACHAIR OR SWIVEL ROCKER
0 N ANEW BEDROOM SUITE
(Bed, Dresser, Mirror, Chest)

SHOP TH.E AREA'S LARGEST
FURNITURE STORE

OPE-NMON.&amp;·FRI.
I P.M.
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�September 12, 1982

About books
t he " It-all ·ha ppe ned ·too.fas t "
blues.
And yet, even as one part of our
mind Is saying "I've heard all this
before," we keep turning pages.
Miss Robinson must be doing something right. but what? L!ndel
J ames may be fa mlllar , but she Is
not boring. It will be difficult for
even tile most jaded of readers to
keep from sympathlz!ng with Lin·
del as her singing career a nd ller
personal life crash against the hard
realities of scheming managers,
grueling travel and the ubiquitous
presence of drugs. Miss RobinSOn
docs a com mendable job of dra m atlzatlng the gradua l, but inevlta·
ble, process by which a serious
m usician Is swept into the Ide ntity·
distorting maelstrom of the roc k
world.
Bu1 even though the book's 11&lt;'rolne Is portrayed with e nough
flesh a nd blood to hold our Interest,
"Walk on Glass," finally relies for
its a ppeal on our c uriosity a bout the
business of rock music. Writing
with a great deal of ve rtslm!Utude,
Miss Robinson peeks a t dally lite on
every level of rock society - from
record company executives who
" take meetings" over lunch at the
Four Seasons to strung·out grou·
pies who "do" cocaine In the res·
trooms of sleazy bars.
It is largely through her support·
lng cast that Miss Robinson gains
entry to these various segments of
the rock Industry. Props ra the r
tha n people, most of the novel's
characters (except Lindel) exist
only to give us the opportunity to
look behind some differe nt klnds of
closed doors. Among those spied
upon: Jeff Stein, m anager on the
make; Tim Harrison, a cynical " A
and R" ma n In touch with every
new trend, be it musical, chemical
or sexual; Marcia We!s~man, secretary with an eye to~ard better
things, In business a nd In bed; and
Brian Davis, the Mick J agger· Uke
British singer with whom Linde!
fa lls In love.

Eldl
ot 101
- .......,..·lor
-ulo
il
required
bo rotdily
in MCh Kroger Store, llltqtpt •
opeci!icllly no18d in 1hil od. ~ we do
run ou1 ot on
Item, we will
off• you your choico of 1 - l b l l
Item, o v -. rallactlng 1ho

uvinglor 1 rlindlocll which will
ontillo you 10 purc'-lho adwoltem .. 1ho ...... price wi1tWI J)

-

TOTAL SATISFACTION
· GUARANTEE •

Tuesday,
Portland
(post
office) Sept.
2: 11).4 :14
40; -Letart
Falls
(Effie's Restaurant) 3:15-3 :50;
Racine (bank ) 4:35--6:35, short film

_,""yOUr

COPYRIGHT 1912 - THE KROGU CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY , SEPT. 12 . THROUGH SATURDAY, SEPT .
11, 1912 . IN GALLI J&gt;OLIS AND J&gt;OM E ROY .

Budget
Pleaser

S_EW BEEF

l

EXTRA LEAN

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868 Camden Ave.
Huntinlfon, WV 25701

Apple butter
demonstration a
Buckeye Furnace

II

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fljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

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Apple butter making demonstra·
tions will take place at Buckeye
Furnace on Sunday, Sept. 19. The
event Is being hosted by members
of Jackson County VIctory Grange.
Three copper ke~tles suspended
over wood fires will each be filled
\Yil 10 busbels of local apples, Ill
pounds of sugar and a touch of oU of
cinnamon. While being stirred, tlie
mistures will be boUed down to a
consistency to be sampled by p.-...
parers and spectators.
A Umlted supply will be available
for sale that attemoon, omclals
said. Most of the product - about
400 quarts - will be canned and
sold at the Jackson County Apple
Festival, which will begin Wednesday. Sept. 22.
Located southeast of Wellston In
Jackson County on Townsll!p Road
167 off of County Road 58, which
runs south froin a junction with
S.R. 124 about four miles east of
Roads, Buckeye Furnace Is operated by the Ohi Historical Society.
It Includes restorations of the migt·
nal furnace and casting sheds used
In making pig Iron and a reconstructed company store which Is
now a museum. The area also In·
eludes nature !ralls and a picnic

~I
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FROM
~

$}588

TO

$2888 SQ. YD.

INCLUDES THICK FOAM PAD AND INSTAllATION
FURNITURE
GALLERIES

CGmer Second and Grape
Gallipolis
44t:OU2

.

-

WINTER 5
,COMING

Help You

•

.
'ft Ofttr :AComplete

PREPARE.
YOUR MOBILE HOMEl
.
.

. At the Corner of SecOnd 1nd VIand st;..h

POINT PLEASANT, WEST VIA91NIA 25550

U~e .Of

l'alti &amp; Seiiiiee.

totO Mor1on
'jA(;~SClifll; g1~!9_•15640

LB. $}99

If you've been wanting a good encyclopedia,
but figured you'd have to lay out hu11dreds of
dollars for it, we've got a ·surprise for you.
The Funk &amp; Wagnalls New Encyclopedia.
This week, we're offering Volume 1 for the
incredibly low price of 9&lt;:~ Which is our way of
introducing you to an encyclopec!ia that c~vers
193,000 subj.ects (more than some
encyclopedias costing hundreds of dollars). And
features over 10,000 maps, ,photos and
illustratidns, many of them in full color.
When you and your family have examined
Volume 1 at your lesisure (without s~me highpressure salesman trying ·Jo sell you the whole
set), we think you'JI want Volumes 2 through 27.
You can complete your set as you shop each
week for $3.49 a volume.
In no time at afl, you'll have what you've
always wanted: a home 'reference librqry that
contains a wealth- of information. . ·.,
But hasn't c.ost a fortune.
I

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area.
Admission Is $2 for adults and $1
for chUdren aged six through 12.
ChUdren five years old or younger,
accompanied by a parent, will be
admitted at no charge.

GROUND CHUCK
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Pleaser
Special

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fREE DICTIONARY
Get Funk &amp; Wagrtalls

2-volume Standard Desk ··
Dictionary free when you
· pim;hase Vols. 2 ana 3 ··
. of the.Encyclopedia.

past~.

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS

$ 69
HB.
BAG

59~

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120Z.

FRANKIES

PKG.

¢

HEAD
LETTUCE

Head

THOMPSON SEEDLESS

SUPERIOR

POLISH SAUSAGE

RED or GOLDEN

DELICIOUS
APPLIES

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CAKE MIX

10

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CTN.

89~

MT. DEW

LAND-O-LAKES

4 STICK

MARGARINE

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Sp~clal

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POUND

2~R· gg

4 Roll Pak

Budget1
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Pfeaser
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CREAMmES

BROUGHTON

. SUNNY MORN

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·Ice Cream

7.25oLBOX .
GAL

$}69

zooz.79t

LOAF

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CREAM PIESl40L
LEMON,

COCONUT

8

GRADE A
EXTRA LARGE

EGGS
..
I)OZ.

WHEAT BREAD

Can

·. Budget
Pfeaser.
Special

HALF

¢

SNACK DIPS

QUALITY

FLOWERS BUTTER MAID

MORTON FROZEN

HAWTHORNE MELODY

JUMBO
ROU

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6.5 Oz.

In Water
or Oil

8-16 OL
Btls.

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Chicken Of
The Sea Tuna

Cottonelle ·
Bathroom Tissue

Bag

PEPSI-COLA
DIET PEPSI

Vctrieties

18 OL Box
160Z.

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NEW CROP
U.S. NO.1
WASHINGTON

· Big cache
CQPNAC, France (AP) - This
town In the southwest of France
currently holds the equivalent of 1
bllllon, 50 million bottles of French
cognac aging In oak C&lt;\Sks. ·-·
Many of ·these casks have been
aging for over 400 years, when cog·
nac production was discovered ac·
cldentally by alchemists trying to
tum non·preclous metals Into gold.
-The · town's cache represents
eilough cognac to supply every
country In the·world for seven years except Albania, which Imports ·
110 cognac at all, according to the .
Bureau du Cognac.
Worldwide exports of cognac ex·
Ceec1ecJ 150 million bottles- l,n the

LB. $}49

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AND OPERATED. \

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15 DIFFERENT QUALITIES IN 342 COLORS

$ 59

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"YOUR HOMETOW,N
SUPERMARKt)'S"

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•REDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY-SAYING
COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V AND
RECEin DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU PUR·
CHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER
ITEM. NO EXPIREO COUPONS ACCEPTED. DOUBLE
REDEMPTION OffER DOES NOT APPLY TO "FREE
MERCHANDISE" COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER 49'
IN FACE VAWE. NO CASH REFUNDS WHEN DOUBLE
COUPONS VALUE EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM.
CIGARffiES' AND CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE
EXLUCED BY LAW. TO INSURE PRODUCT TO All.
OUR CUSTOMERS, WE ARE LIMITING OUR "DOUBLE
COUPON" OffER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COffEE
AND ONE CAN OF .GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
FAMIJl. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER 16.
.

THURSDAY ONLY
SEPTEMBER 16

ANDMARKV

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Funk &amp;Wag nails New Encyclopedia ...
Vol.l. only

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Let

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Introducing A
Special Money
Saving Offer
From Kroger.

Swimming Pool Anli·Freeze, Healers,
Winterizing Kils.• ' Solar Covers,
Domes.

-

. .

.. ""'..-.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUMITITIES. NOI&gt;II
SOLD TO DEALERS.

SPECIAL PRICES
Swimming Pool Covers

Gallia bookmobile
GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library will
be at the following places the week
of Sept. 13 to 17.
Monday - Ewington, 1:15-1: 45
p.m .; Geige r 's, 2·2: JO p.m .; Adney
Rd., 2: 45-3: 15 p.m.; VInton P .O.,
3: :ll-4: JO p.m.; Bidwell, ~ p.m. ;
Harrisburg, 6: 15-6: JO p.m .
Tuesday - Eno, 2: J0.3 p.m.;
Rece, 3:05-3: 20 p.m .; Africa Rd.,
3: J0.3: 45; Kyge r I , 3:504: 20 p.m .;
Kyger II. 4: 25-4:40 p.m.; Roush
Lane I , II, 4: 45·5: 15 p.m.; Cheshire
I, 6-6:30 p.m .; Clleslllre II, 6: 35-7
p.m .
Wednesday - Banes, 2: 15-2: JO
p.m .; Smith, 2: 45-3: 15 p.m.; My·
ers, 3:J0.3:45 p.m .; Mercerville, 44: JO p.m.; Burd, 4: 4().5 p.m.;
Crown City P.O., 5: 15-6 p.m .; Eu·
reka, 6: 1~: 45 p.m.
Thursday - Watts, 2: J0-2: 45
p.m .; Brick School Rd., 2: 55·3: 10
p.m.; Addav!lle Elementary, 3: 153: 45 p.m .; St. Rd. 7 (Roadside
Rest) , 3: 55-4: 10 p.m .; Georges
Creek Rd. I , II, 4:15-5 p.m .; Bula·
ville Tr. Ct., 5: 3().6 p.m.; Plantz
Subdv .. 6: 15-6:45 p.m.
Friday - Kerr. 3-3: 40 p.m.;
Buck Ridge; 4·5: 05 p.m.; J a y Dr. I,
II, 5: 15-5:45 p.m.; Bob McCormick
Rd., 6-6: 15 p.m .

"

Ewrydoi iQ you buy 11 Klogor il lOIII ol1ioflc:1iOn 1.... ol ~- "you
Kroger will replace your item with the
umt bfand Of 1 cc:JnlPifable brand 0t
refund v&lt;hJ' purchlle price.

.

shown 15 minutes after bookmobile
arrives ; Syracuse (pool) 6:50--8:50,
short film shown 15 minutes after
bookmobile arrives.
Wednesda y, Sept. 15 - Tuppers
Pl a ins
( Arbaugh)
7:25-8:05 ;
Riggscrest Addition 8:20-9, short
film shown 15 minutes after bookmobile arrives.

pepper~

Ideas, ·solutions and recipes for an abundance of green

-iood

Meigs bookmobile
Bookmobile schedule for the week
ofSept.l3-17 :
Monday, Sept. 13 - Carpenter
(Laura's Store) 3:1()-3:40; Dexter
(church) 4:11).4 :40; Danville (chur·
ch) 5:20-5:45; Rutland (First
National Bank) 6:»8, Short film
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile
arrives.

Sunday Times·Se ntinei- F'age- B·S ;

What's cookin'?

Novel depicts rock (n' roll world
By Bill Ott
novel. Readers a nd voyeurs alike
A.merlcan Ubrary A.ssn.
respond best when there's a story to
Roc k music writer Lisa Robin- be found behind the curtains. Does
son's fi rs t novel, "Walk on Glass"
" Walk on Glass" tread the delicate'
(NPwma rke t P ress, $14 .95, 387
llne between fiction and titillating
expose? Yes and no.
pages 1. gives free reign to the
voyeur that lurks In a ll of us.
Miss Robinson's story Is as old as
Miss Robinson's byline appears
show business Itself. F rom "A Star
In the most Influe ntia l of popu larIs Born " to the current Broadway
music journals, a nd her TV a nd r ahlt, " Drea m girls," we have been
engulfed by female s ingers whose
dlo Interviews have attracted wide
a udiences. She has the reputa tion
drea m s of m a king It big com e true,
of being a writer whom rock stars
only to be shattered (usually terntrust. All of these credentials would
porarily) by the effects of an obsessrem to ma ke her a natu ral choice
slve a nd self-destructi ve love
to write a "behlnd-th&lt;'-scenes"
affa ir . Linde! Ja mes, Miss Robinson's rock-singer heroine, must
novel.
Bul it ta kes m ore tha n Inside Intake her place behind Judy Garformatio n to produce a bellevablt
land and all the others as she s ings
Most requested books In 150
U.S. cities, compUed by the
A.m erlcan Ubrary Association
Fiction
I. TilE PRODIGA.L DAUGHTER, by Jeffrey Archer (Simon a nd
Schuste r , $15.95)
2. EDEN BURNING , by Belva Plain (Delacorte, $15.951
3. THY BROI'HER'S WIFE, by And rew Greeley (Warner, $14.95)
4. CELEBRITH, by Thomas Thompson (Doubleday, $17.95)
~. MAN FROM ST. PETERSBURG, by Ke n F ollett (Morrow, $14)
6. CINNAMON SKIN, by John D. MacDona ld (Harper and Row,
$13.95)
7. TilE PA.RSIFA.L MOSA.lC, by Robert Ludlum (Random House
$15.95)
8. PUBLIC SMILES, PRIVA.TE TEA.RS: TilE lAST NOVEL, by
Helen Van Sly ke and James Elward (Ha rper and Row, $12.~)
9. NORTH AND SOUTH, by John J akes (Harcourt, Brace. Jova novich $14 .~)
10. 11IE CA.SE OF LUCY BENDING, by Lawe nce Sanders (Putna m ,
$14.95 )
Nonfiction
1. WHEN BA.D TlUNGS HAPPEN TO GOOD PEOPLE, by Harold S.
Kushne r (Schochen, $10.95)
2. A FEW MINUTES WITH J\NDY ROONEY, by Andrew A. Rooney
(Atheneum, )12.95)
3. LIVING !\LONE A.ND UKING IT, by Lynn Shahan (Strafford
$10.95)
4. TilE LORD GOD MA.DE TIIEM i\LL, by J ames Herriot (St.
Martin's, $13.95)
5. EPPlE: THE STORY OF A.NN LA.NDERS, by Margo Howard
(Putnam, $13.95)
8. TilE UMPIRE STRIKES BA.CK, by Ron Luciano and Dave F isher
(Bantam, $12.95)
7. Ji\NE FONDA.'S WORKOUT BOOK, by Ja ne Fonda (Simon and
Schuster, $17.50)
8. TilE PROPHECIES OF NOSTRA.DA.MUS, by Erika Cheetham
(Putnam, $5.95)
9. EDIE: AN A.MERlCA.N BJOGRA.PHY, by Jean Stein, edited w ith
George Plimpton (Knopf, $16.95) ·
10. -HOLY BLOOD, HOLY GRA.JL, by Michael Baigent, Richard
Leigh and Henry Lincoln (Delacorte, $15.951

Th e

f' omeroy Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasa nt, W.Va .

6 ·9~

oz.

Pie

uoz.69¢
CAN

GENERIC FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE
Budget
Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

SUPERMAN

BELLVIEW

Peanut
Butter

Grape
Jelly

$129

lBOi
JAR
.

I

zu. gg~
JAR

Budget
Pleaser
Special
LIBBY

Tomato
Juice
460Z.
CAN

79~
~

-;
. I

•

'

.,

•
~

•

�•

Times·Sentinet-Page- 8·7

MIDDLEPORT - Susan Jean
Fuller, daughter of Mrs. Dorothy
Fuller, St. Joseph, Mich., and the
late Robert Fuller, and John Thomas Rue, son of Mr, and Mrs. Thomas R. Rue, Middleport, were
married on Aug. 14 at Lakeshore
Church of Christ In St. Joseph.
Phlllp Beavers performed the
ceremony.
The bride wore a polyester knit
gown trimmed with crystal pleat·
lng and venlse lace and designed
with a chapel train. A lace cap held
her cathedral vet! and she carried
red and white roses.
Mrs. Michael Damscrhroder
was her sister's matron of honor,
and Mrs. Daniel Ranke, sister of
the bride, was bridesmaid. Thema·
tron of honor wore a burgundy
gown, and the bridesmaid was In a
pink gown.
Nathan Ranke was the ring·
bearer and Michael Damschroder
served as best man · with Daniel
Ranke as usher. The groom and his
attendants wore gray tuxedoes.
A reception was held at St. Joseph Elk5 Club. Sue Rue, sister of
the groom, Angleton, Texas,
served the cake at the reception. On
the Friday evening preceding the
wedding, Mr. and Mrs. Rue enter=
talned with a rehearsal dinner at
Tosl's Restaurant In St. Joseph,
Mich.
Following a wedding trip to Can·
cun, Mexico, the couple resides
Houston, Texas.
The bride Is a graduate of St. Joseph High School and Lake Michl·

Mrs. Rue
A graduate of Hilliard High
School, the bride-elect attended
Bob Jones Christian University In
Greenvme, S.C. for two years. She
19 presently a junior In the school of
business administration at Cedar·
vllie Christian College.
Her fiance was graduated from
Riverview Christian High School,
Washington, and also attended Bob
Jones University for two years. He
Is a senior In the school of music at
Cedarville Christian College.
The wedding will be Sept. 18 at
Hillcrest Baptist Church In

Norton, Glay

Engagements, weddings, anniversaries

~~~~~..,..The~r
"SellrelllldSympatey: Da-

eJ

. urnler'a Human Cclinedy;" Is tram
the Ohlo Ftllllldalbl on the Arts
and W8l jHti)Uied by Christine
Dyer of Allen Memorial 'Art MU·
seum, lt Is comprised of79 Ulhogra·

phlc works that expklre Daumler's
stylistic development between 1&amp;1l
and 1864 on a broad range of topics.
Gallery. hours are Tuesday and
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
and Saturday and Sllilday from 1 to
5p.m.
Coming events are:
,Sept. 13 - Southern Hms Arts
CQuncll will meet at Jindra WlneiY
aH:30p.m.
·
.Sept 18 - BaUet classes will
bt!gln and run for niJ!e weeks with
ln!ltructor Cindy Nau. Fees for preschool students · ·are $27 for
rol,nbers lllld $29.50 for non·
niembers; lntem'ledlate, $31.50 for
members and $34 for non·
rn;t!mbers; and advanced, $33.75 for
members .IIJid $36.25 for non·
niembers. Call Judi Sheets, 446'llfJ5, to register.
-sept. 19 - Trustees meeting at 2
p.ip. at Barbara Epllng's home.
:sept. :al- Painting and drawing
c~ taught by Phoebe Carey every ·Monday night for six weeks
frOm 7 to9p.m. For teen-agers and
adults, fees are $24 for members
111!'1 $30 for IHlll·members.
Sept. 21 - Interdepartmental
meeting at 8 p.m.
Sept. 23 - ''The Building Doctor"
by Judith Kitchen, who Is a (jepart·
ment head for the ohiO Historic
Pi'eservation Office. She wtll review standards for rehabWtatlon,
common problems when rehabilit·
a1ng and federal tax benefits.
Sept. 25 - Oktober!est/sllent
auction will begin at 7:30p.m. Cost
Is fl each for members and $8 each
for llOII·members for tickets pur·
chased by noon Sept. 24. Tickets are
S9 each at the door.
Sept 28 - Trustees meeting at 8
p.m.
Oct. 6,7- Antique seminar at Rl·
verby from 7: l&gt;-9: 30 p.m. Oct. 6 on
old and new baskets, $5 fee; from
9: 30 a.m. to 3: 30 p.m. Oct. 7 on an·
tlques, heirlooms lllld relics, $8: 50
fee Includes lunch.

Mr. and Mrs. Bellomy, 50th
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Uoyd and
Elizabeth Bellomy will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary on
Monday at their home on Bellomy
Lane, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Box 75.
They were married at Price, W.
Va. In Lincoln County, byRev.John
Sperry on Sept. 13, 1932.

They are the parents of two child·
ren, Mrs. Eugene (Dor~) Bare, of
Rt. 2,· Gallipolis, and Gar)t·Bellomy
' five
of Crown, W. Va. They hao,:e
grandsons and qne great-~n
and two great-granddaughters.'.
Friends may call or send cards.

Larvo

oillllty -

, -

,

lla- -

. . . . . ....
dooq • open WOIII: ..... cllcor~

•tor color~ In bekld

gan College and Is employed as a r-;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
mortgage loan servlcer at Couch
Mortgage, Houston. The groom Is a
graduate of Meigs High School, at·
tended Ohio State University and
Do~ol
Ohio University and Is employed as
a real estate appraiser with Cole,
"1st Year Free Tank Rental
Layer and Trumble Co .. Houston.
"400 Gallon Plu s Installati on S334
Area residents a !tending the wed·
'Discount on First Fi ll
dlng, besides the groom's parents,
were Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Custer,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Freed, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Serey, Mr. and Mrs.
James Thomas, and Mr. and MrS.
Grayson Wllllamson.

You Get Value and Price
at
Propane

POMEROY- Mrs. Ronald Mor·
gan,.McArthur, and Robert Glay of •
Miamisburg, are announcing the
engagement and approaching mar·
riage of their daughter, Caley Renee Glay, McArthur, to Steven
Wade Norton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Norton of Chillicothe. The
Nortons are former residents of
Meigs County.
.The bride-elect Is a 1981 graduate
of VInton County High School and
attends Ohio State University. She
Is employed at Poncho's Family r---~~~~~-------------:._
Restaurant In Chl!Ucothe.
Her !lance, a graduate of South·
ern High School In Meigs County,
class of 1980, attends theChllllcothe
branch of Ohio University. He Is
employed at Rink's Department
Store, Chillicothe.
The wedding will be Dec. 18 at
Adena Road Church of Christ,
Chillicothe.
The prospective bridegroom's
grandmother Is Mrs. Ralph Norton,
104 Ebenezer St., Pomeroy.

--·

WARDROBE CLOSET
W/EASY GLIDE DOORS

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

........

ful - - - · -

Buckeye Gas Products Company w1ll redeem- th1s
coupon only when used toward the f1rst f11 1of 400
gallons of propane m a new Doxol Propane system
tnstalled between August 20 lhru November 17 1982

_____j

Gallia senior center

ONLY

AcUvities lor the week of Sept. 1317 at the Senior Citizens Center
located at 220 Jacltsorl Pllte are as
foUows:
Monday, SepL 13 - Ceramics
&lt;::lliaJ. 9:30 a.m.·l2 noon; Vinton Site
Ellilrclsea, 11:30 a.m.; Chorus, 1-3

·RIDENOUR GAS SERVICE
985-3307

IBUCKEYE GAS PRODUCTS
. 992-5097 " .

p.m.
'l'lleldly, Sept. 14 - S.T.O.P.
a8i4, 10:38-a:m.; Pbyalce1 Filneas,

DDXDL (fn}) PROPANE

Hutchinson-Boyer
POMEROY Mr. and Mrs. ltoger
Hutchinson of Hayden Run Road,
Amlin, are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Ada Renee,
to Bruce D. Boyer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Boyer, Kennewick, .
Wash.
Hutchinson Is the granddaughter
of Gordon Caldwell, Tuppers
Plains, and niece of Ray Riggs,
Pomeroy, and of Lois K. Riggs Leonard, Tuppers Plains.

'

.,

.

COMPANY., INC.
POMEROY, OHIO
LEO VAUGHAN. Mgr.
PH. 992-26811

11:15a.m.; Bible Study, 1·2p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 15 - VInton
Nutritloo Educatloo, 11:30 a.m.;
VInton Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Card
Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 16 - VInton Site
Cr$fts, 1 p.m.; Cowlty Council, 1:30
. p.m.
.. . Friday, Sept. 17 - Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the foUowlng menus:
Monday - Spaghetti/cheese top.
ping, caulifiower, tclued salad, ·
Italian bread, butter, apricolll, milk.
Tuesday - New England boiled
dinner, cornbread, butter, peanut
butter,cookie, milk.

.
.
QUALITY HOTPOINT
LAUNDRY PAIR SPECIALLy·PRICED!

Wrtollt 'o•• Gllmk

242 Pike St.

327 Juliana

t

0.111 •

• 0.111. •

6 p.m. M·T·W-F

Hn: 9

Noon Thura.

f

0.111. •

.
·J

6 p.m. M·W·F

374-2211

S
im
Is
In
Like to Lose up to 50 Pounds or more
by Thanksgiving?

WHERE: DIAMOND SAVJNGS &amp; LOAN
MAIN ST., _POMEROY

RND OUT HOW YOU CAN

'.

.

Come to the Open Meeting of
Parkersburg/ Marietta Medical Weight Loss Clinic
.
(Meigs County Branch)
·
WHEN? September 18, 1982Saturday at 1 p.m., 4 p.m., &amp; 7 p.m.

ll!J

Large capacity washer fl] Heavy-duty trans·
mission lliil No-kink drain hose fml Timed dryer
with selections up to BO minutes f1 4 Vent.ing
optibns Bl.Separate start ~antral.
,

'·

i::. S525f&amp;~ PAIR'.

1· I~' p••in---1

STARTS AS AVALUE
•••STAYS AVALUEI

JACK

--01.... ....... ··.. ..
THE ODDS ...

OtldoCiwl-300.,.flam

POMEROY, 0.

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

·~"'

0000100

'"''0.-

1• .000

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SEPT. 18, 1982

IS.tiO

~

TOflol.

~

"'

$ 49

BUCKET

Cube Steak........L!.••
$
29
Ground Beef...... :!·•••
~

GRADEA

'
$ 59
Ground Chuck .....L~
.••

WHOLE CHICKEN ...................... :. 53~
COUNTRY STYLE

SPARE RIB$ ............................~8:. $1.39
FRESH

PORK STEAK ......................... ~~-•.$1.39

0

'

w..CARSEY, MGIL

......
...
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....
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-...

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-"

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Meigs senior center
POMEROY - COAD Senior Nu·
tritlon Program menu Sept. 13-17: .
Monday - Baked spaghetti·
cheese, Brussel sprouts, tossed
salad, peacbes, Italian bread, but·
ter and mllk.
Tuesday - New England dinner
- ham, cabbage, carrots, onion,
potatoes, peanut butter cookie,
breed. butter lllld mllk.
WedneSday - IJver-onlons, but·
' carrots, buttered kale, pears,
tered
~. butter ancs mllk.
Thursday - MBcaronl-cheese,
colesiaw. gneen beans, cake, bread,
butter and milk.
Friday ...:.. Fried chicken, but·
~beets, mashed P!Jialoes, Ume
&amp;ektln·frult. bread, . butter lllld
lllillh
Lllnch Is served flve days a week
to li!nlor cltlze!IS age W and older.
Malle a meal reservation and )olD
. us 'tOr lunCh lllld partk:lpate In the
acltYtlles at the center.

..-....

-•.
•

~

MAXWELL HOUSE

lldel

~-2181

Ow:tlcut when Ill doors open
· llltt )11!11'; Hartford's City' Place
• will be oae ci tbe 'tii!W'Ielt'' lltJUC.
tbe . . . lkXDdllc ,to Ita

, . 31 't I)'

IQM!I" will

haW 8

ceattal**iiC*IF to~overaad

..

,
1

=~t~=il:
~ IIIII 11ft 1314' ••
'

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..

$ 49

....

•

-•

RED or WHITE

GRAPE$ ............•.••..•••.•••....••...... ~~~·.69~
VALLEY BELL

PLASTIC GAL. $1 59
2 0//0 MILK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
4

•

..

PARKAY MARGARINE ••••..... ~~-...2/$1 -.......
..,.
DINING TREAT
3
POT PIES •.•••...•..••••..•••..•..••.....•~?~;
......
'"'...
.-..
ARMOUR TREET
FLAVORITE
~
SUGAR
LUNCH MEAT
i

--

.COUill'al··......
~~,.

bi!tue tbe tallest blgh-!'lle In

=-

...

"l.

Coffee•••••••••••••••••••
3 LB CAN

lfAR'I'FORP, Conn, (AP).:.,. Be-

· lllivt AUlllt' llld SM Alat-DIIWIIY W11in 75 llliS ·
_..
Yes. W. llnllctlt ,_laatl Mul!iollt Dllllr
·
. Stan llaft U0 II 5:30: II Clllld It 5:00 P.l. -·
. Stnlrc- ·1111111• ..... Collllles .

'I

HERE'S HOW TO PLAY

298 SECOND ST.

0.:U., buUcQng

POMEROY LANDMARK

•

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

buttered carrots, buttered kale,
bread, butter, f~ fruit, milk.
Thursday -Macaroni and cheese,
~ beans, coleslaw, bread, butter', baked pineapple, milk.
friday - Chicken, mashed
JIOI;aloes, buttered beets, brown
bread, butter, lime gelatin/fruit,
milk.
Choice ol beverage served with
each meal.
"ljervlces rendered on a nondiscriminatory basis...

Sltbtcal ·
._•• Gtlbllc

•J,ooo
CASH!
IN OUR GRAND PRIZE DRAWINGS!

Wednesday - Liver and onions,

VINTON. OHIO
JAMES 0. BUSH, Mgr.
PH. 388·8603

.

•r~Mt

OR

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

YOU ·

PIE FILLING

t~~:.-3 Pl_ease

age .

•Limit One Per Customer \
~ood Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 11. 1982

~

FLAVORITE

TOMATO SOUP
10.750z. .
Limit 5 Ple_
ase

5/$1.
.

.,

Limit one Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
18, 1982

1201.
Limit 2 Please

.

•

•••

$}09
.

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 18, 1982
'

.••.....•......

S Lb. Bag

$}59·

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer E11pires Sept. 18, 1982

• ••••••••

..
....
....
.....
3:
...

l

�. &gt;·'

•l

B-8-The Sunda lomcs-Sentinel

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING will be observed Sunday at the
MlnersvWe United Methodist
Church. Sunday school and worship service will be held In the
morntng after which there will
be a cany-ln dinner. Featured
singers will be the Angelalres of
Lancaster. The publ!c Is Invited.
THE ANNUAL HOMECOM·
lNG of the Rock Sprtngs United
Methodist Church has been set
for Sunday with Sunday school
at 9:15 a.m. and worship at 10
a.m. to be followed by a basket
dinner at 12: ~ p.m. An after·
noon service will begin at 1: 30
p.m. The public Is Invited.
POMEROY - Homecoming
at United Faith Church, Rt. 7 bypass, Pomeroy,Sunday.Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m., morning
worship at 10: ~a.m., dinner on
the grounds at noon. Hymn sing
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Special
singing by Harmony, Coleman
Trio, Gabriel Quartet and Good
News Trio. All singers welcome.
CHESTER - Homecorntng
Sunday at Chester Church of the
Nazarene. Basket dinner at
noon with afternoon services at
1: ~ p.m. Beulah Land singers
will be featured. The public Is
Invited.
MIDDLEPORT - First Unl·
ted Presbyterian Church,
Middleport, will hold rally day
Sunday during Sunday School
hours from 9: 15 a.m. to 10: 15
a.m. Purpose of the rally Is to
Invite members and biends to
help kick off the new program
and material for the school this .
coming fall. Refreshments will
be served.
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
will hold a famtly picnic Sunday
beginning at 2 p.m. at the Racine
Locks and Dam Park on the
West VIrginia side. Meat will be
provided. Everyone Is asked to
bring a covered dish. AU Pomeroy Lodge members and their
famllles are Invited.
Dr. and Mrs. Wilmer Lambert
·vm be guests Sunday evening at Rutland Nazarene Church. Dr. Lambett,
of Columbus

t-Ga

is, Ohi«r-Point

Pte~s~n

w.

Calendar

district superintendent of the
Ohio District, will be the
speaker. Immediately following
the service, there wlll be a going
away party at the fellowship hall
for Wayne and Debbie Searles
and sons.
MIDDLEPORT - Ameri·
can Legion Post 39 picnic at 1
p.m. Sunday at the Middleport
Park. Take covered dish and
own Ia ble service.

VINTON Baptist Church In·
vltes the public to attend the
Installation service for the
church's new pastor, Rev. Dennis Tabor, on Sunday at 2 p.m. A
potluck dinner will precede the
service.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla
Twirlers Square Dance Qub wUI
hold two free square dance lessons on Sunday, Sept. ,12, and
Sunday, Sept. 19, from 2to4 p.m.
at the K of P Building on Locust
Street.

ANNUAL PICNIC of the
Drew Webster Post 39, Amerl·

can Legion, will be held Sunday
at 1 p.m. at the Middleport Park
shelter. Those attending are to
take a covered dish and their
own table service.

GALLIPOLIS - The Living
Word, a film, will be presented
at Grace United M,ethodlst
Church, Second Ave. and Cedar
St., on Sunday at 6:15 p.m. The
show Is free and open to the public. The film weaves together
scripture passages, religious
art, music and color footage of
the Holy Land.

EUREKA - Homecoming
will be held at Eureka United
Christian Union Church starting
at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. The Un·
roes will sing In the morning
with Tom Stafford holding ser·
vice. The Christian Messengers
will pertorm In the afternoon
and Dennis Parsons will hold
service.

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - La Leche
League will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at 563 Jay Dr. for a
discussion on "Baby Arrives:
The Family and the Breastfed
Baby." For Information call 4466314, 4464010 or 2S6-4990.

LECTA - A rntsslonary ser·
vtce will be held at Lecta Taber·
nacle at 7 p.m. Sunday with Rev.
Bob Nunley of Haiti. The public
Is Invited.
ADDISON Freewill Baptist
Church will hold homecoming
Sunday beginning at 10 a.m.
with guest speaker Rev. Miles
Trout. Singing will be provided
by the Unroe Family and Addl·
son Quartet. A covered dish
dinner will be served at noon .
Pastor Walter Patterson Invites
past and present members.
CROWN CITY - The Grubb
Family Singers will be at Fed·
eral Creek Church on Sunday at
7 p.m. with Rev. Bob Grubb
holding service. The public is
Invited.
GALLIPOLIS - MI. Zion
Baptist Church, Old Route 7, will
hold homecoming Sunday begin·
nlng at 10 a.m. A basket dinner
will be served at noon. Speakers
will include Rev. Monte Sheets
and Rev. 9ohn· Arnold. There
will be singing. Pastor Richard
Steels Invites the public.

are being offered in Gallia County.
For qualified veterans, fees may he
paid by the Veterans' Admlnistra·

Information cal! the department
at 446-2523.

GALLIPOLIS- Ohio Valley
Chrlstlan School Booster Club
will meet Monday at 7: ~ p.m.
Following the business meeting,
the seventh and eighth grade
students will present a musical
program under the dlrectlon of
Barbara Stewart. Jeff Smith
will speak on "Bibllcal Christianity Versus Secular Humanism." Refreshments will be
served.
j
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 7!0,
Eight and Forty, will meet Man·
day at 6 p.m. at the Route 33
roadsl~e park for a picnic.
POMEROY - Eastern At·
hletlc Boosters wUI meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the high school.
POMEROY - Gospel meeting at ChurchofChrtst, corner of
main and Butternut, Pomeroy,
will continue through Sept 19 at
7:30 each evening. Paul Ca~
bolt, Paden City, W. Va. Is
evangelist.
POMEROY PTA will meet at
7: ~p.m. at the school tor "Meet
the Teachers Night."

BULA VILLE - Addavllle At, hletlc Association will hold a
business meeting at Bulavllle
Townhouse on Monday at 7 p.m.
Uniforms and equipment should
be taken to the meeting.

POMEROY - Southern Local Junior High Athletlc Boos·
ters will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
at school. AU parenf$ are wei·
come to attend.
·

GAlLIPOLIS - French Col·
any Chapter D.A.R. wtll hold a
tall luncheon Monday at 12: 30
p.m. at Grace United Methodist
Church.
CENTERVILLE . - An
O.A.P.S.E. meeting will be held
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at Centerville Elementary School. ' AU
classified employees In the Gal·
lla County Local School District
are Invited to attend.

GALLIPOLIS - The regular
meeting of the Gallla County
District Library Board of Trustees will be held Tuesday at 5
p.m., In the Rare Book Room of
the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library, 641 Second
Ave.
RUTLAND Skating from 7 to
9 p.m. at Rutland Civic Center
both Tuesday and Thursday.
Children, $1 and adults,$'.!. Take
your own skates.

GALUPOLIS- A flu vaccine
clinic will be held Monday at
Gallla County Health Department, 412 Second Ave., between
9 a.m. and noon and 1to 3 p.m.
There will be a S3 char~e. For

HARRISONVILLE - Free
blood pressure ctlntc Tuesday
from 10 a.m. to noon at Harrl·
sonvllle Senior Citizens Club
with Mrs. Ferndora Story, R.N.,
In charge. The public Is Invited

tton for counseling received
through the Community Mental
Health Center.

Announcements
Dues are payable now, Mrs. Velsia
l'Oll8h, membership chairman of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middleport, has announced. Currently
dues are $5 for seniors and $3 for
juniors. Effective Oct. 1, the dues
wlll be increased to $7 for seniors
and $4 for juniors. Payment should
be sent to Mrs. Rotl8h.

•

TUESDAY

A local VIetnam veteran, Larry
Cremeens, said, "These services
are part of a program that VIetnam
vets have lobbied for and worked
hard for over the past several y~
ars. This Is a program sanctioned
by Vietnam vets to help the VIet·
Problems that can be helped by
the new program may be obviously
connected or seemingly unrelated
to wartime servtce, according to a
center spokesman. Nightmares,
depression, sleeplessness, anxiety,
feelings of distance .from family or
friends and flashbacks are
common.
With the new contract betweeq
the V~ and the Community Mental
Health Center, therapy Is provided
by trained professlona)s - Galua
County, David Hough, A.C.S. W. or
Jim Lansford, A.C.S.W.
For more Information contact
the Community Mental Health Cen·
ter at 446-5500.

HARRISONVILLE - Lodge 411
will hold a picnic at Forest Acres

Park, Rutland, Sept. 19, at 1 p.m.
AU masons and tamtlles, Eastern
Star members and families and
Widows of masolis are Invited to
attend.

· POMEROY - Eastern Band
Boosters will meet at 7: :.l p.m.
TueSday In . hlgh school banl1
room. All parents of Junior and
senior high school band
members should attend. Refreshments will be served.

OSU,rallies to defeat Baylor

3186.

SY~CUSE

PI'O will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. In the school
gym. All parents are Invited.
Memberships will lle accepted.

EASTERN Local Band Boos-

ters will meet at 7: :.l p.m.

@

@

GAlLIPOLIS ·- Riverside
Study Club: which maintains
membership In GFWC, will
· meet with · Mrs. Ben Eachus
Tuesday at 1 p.ni.

.

m..

@

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday, 7:.ll'p.m. at the
Meigs Inn.
HARRISONVILLE - Senior
Citizens Club wUI hold a free
blood

GA!l.IA COUNTY Heart As·
soclatlon will meet at the French
Five Hundred Room, Holzer ·
Medical Center, on Tuesday at
7:.ll p.m. Dot Neutzllng, R.N.,
president, will preside at the
first meeting of tile' fiscal year.

CHURCH OF CHRIST
Corne'r of Main &amp; Bu"ernut Ave.
POMEROY, OHIO

DATE: SEPT. 13 THRU 19
SERVICES EACH EVENING AT 7:30
'
•EVANGELIST: PAUL CASEHOLl
Paden City, W. Va·.
EVERYONE WELCOME

SECOND OF THE DAY - Ohio State lullbadt Vaupa Broactnax (38)
pweers 1111 way lllroulh Baylor Unlverslty'defetldenl Pat CoryaU (tl)
and Cedric! Mad&lt; (3'7) for hiS second touchdown of Saturday's gtUlle In
Columbail. 1be 800re came oo a four yard nm In the seoond perlocL( AP
Ja-erphoto ). ·

New

Alabama routs Georf¥a Tech
ATI..ANTA (AP) - Jesse Bendross dashed 58 yards on an end
around and Walter Lew1s raced 41

yards for second-quartel' touchdowns as fourth-ranked Alabama
crushed· Georgia Tech 45-7 In college footbBll Saturday. · '·
·Alabama scored on Its llrst five
poi;sesslons as the Crimson Tide
launched the season In Impressive
fashion In a light drizzle, avenging a
24·21 upset loss to Tech a year ago.
It gave Paul "Bear" Bryant, the
all-time leader In coaching victories, his 316th career triumph on his
69th birthday at the start of his 38th
season.
The Tide cashed In two pass In-

~,

A boneless breast of chicken charbroiled Shoneys own
spec;ial way so it's incredibly tender.
.'
We c!M!r it with your choice of Shoney's own barbeq~ 9r
sweet ri sour sauce. Or choose any combination of our three lin!at
toppings-onion, mushroom and cheese. Or no toppings 8i aD.

Served with grecian bread, fries (baked potato~ .
alter SPM ), and.aU the hot homemade soup and garden

frelh

salad~os:.ey) own ·~a
· oNEft
. lbmato \\lgetable Soiip
CJAme'ricis
'JCJ
Always a favorite! A
· ~t

ATLANTA (AP) - Dave Con-

328 VIAND STREET
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

MIDDLEPORT - Annual pic-

'

128 Feeney-Bennett will be held
on Sunday, Sept. 19, at 1 p.m. at
the farm located on the Bailey
Run Road. In the event of rain,
the picnic will be postponed a
week.

Light side
Car support
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP)- A
man who got custody of two cats In
an uncontested divorce settlement
haS been awarded a $5-a-month cat·
support payment from his ex-wife.
. A Judge signed an order granting
John Ross Nolan the payment from
his ex-wife, Karen L. Nolan, tor
support of Rebel and Dixie.
"The history of It Is, he Is going to
keep the cats and she wanted to
contribute to the support of the
cats," said J. Lawton Stone, lawyer
tor Nolan, 22. "I think It's a rather
sweet gesture."
..
Judge Pat Priest of 187th District
Court signed the order Wednesday
making the uncontested divorce final for the San Alltonto couple who
were married on Jan. 10, 1!81. The
14!(tlement Includes the monthly
cat-support payment.
. "I thought Judge Priest was go.
1ng to fall out of his chair" when be.
saw the cat-support provision,
Stone sald.

•

·New Buicks and Pontiacs In Stock
,

1 Phoenix

2 TlOOO's

Singer ZlstZag
Model6136 .

'SO

2 J6000's

Savings Off
Reg . .Pnce

Rebate
$ 25 from
Singer

3 Gran Prix
1 Bonneville
1 Century·

4 Regal~

5 LeSabres

3 El~ras

ALLAT TREMENDOUS DIScOUNTS

'75 Total
Savtngs

Also a sneak previe'*" .of t
'83 -models· · ,
Sunday Shoppers Welcome

SINGER
PROOUCTS

THE FABRIC SHOP
115 lUnd

C!tlht ,,., - -••••,., .. _

~OIMniJ. 0 H.

Stnin&amp; Mtils &amp;Glllll C.. ·
r As Y01r Siqer A• · 1111lllllltr

1

seven crowns between 1923 and
1931, have won more.
The victory kept alive Lloyd's
srreak of winning at least one
Grand Slam singles title each year
sinC&lt;' 1974, and Increased her· re!'ord to 66 match vjctorles.
Mandllkova collected $45,&lt;m for
hC'r runnerup finish .
Lloyd struggled constantly to
hold serve, but always came up
.with the big points when she needed
rhem. She never lost serve, although three times Mandllkova
ba tiled to deuce.
The young Czech right-hander,
on the other hand, alternated brll;
Jtant shots with unforced errors,
losing her serve In the second set In
the second and sixth games.
Mandllkova, who plays an all·
court game, cha.e to stay at the
baseline for the most part and trade
groundstrokes with Lloyd, consl·
dered by many to have the best
groundstmkes In tennis.
It was Lloyd who had the first
struggle to hold serve, staving off
one break point In the fourth game.
But hold she did, then broke the
Czech right ·hander In the seventh
game at love.
Mandllkova came right back In
the eighth game, reaching break
point three times before Lloyd fl·
nally held for a 5-3 advantage. The
game went to deuce five times.

Lloyd then closed out the 33minute set by breaking Mandllkova
In the ninth game when the Czech
netted a backhand volley.
Connors, a three-time winner and
the only person to win on all three
surfaces the Open has been contested on - grass, clay and hard
court- came out blazing In theotr
entng set, breaking VIlas In the
fourth and sixth games, the fourth
at love.
VUas, who lost to Mats Wltander
of Sweden In the finals of the
French Open earlier this year and
beat Connors for the U.S. Open title
In 1977, when It was on clay, came
back to capture tbe second set before wallowing In a sea of double
faults and unforced errors.
The Atwntlne, ranked fourth In
the world, double faulted at J5.40 to
lose serve In the sixth game, then

double faulted at set point In the
eighth game of the third set.
The match's momentum atr
peared to shift on the final poln t of
the fifth game of the third set. Connors, serving at 40-love, hit a forehand volley that hit near or on the
sideline. Vilas thought It was wide,
but the official ruled It otherwise.
VIlas then proceeded to drop his
next two serves.
Fighting to hold serve every
time, Vilas !lnali,Y succumbed in
the eighth game of the fourth set as
he netted a backhand to hand Connors a break point at 3040, then put
a forehand into the net.
Connors, who was visibly
charged up after breaking VIlas,
then held serveat.lltoadvance Into
the finals of the U.S. Open for the
sixth ttrne. He was runner-up In
1975 and 1977.

Georgia defeats BYU,,17-14
ATHENS, ' Ga. (AP) - Sophomore Kevin Butler booted a 44-yard
field goal with 1:11 remaining to
cap a fourth quarter rally and 11ft
the sixth-ranked Georgia Bulldogs
to a 17-14 college football victory
over Brigham Young on Saturday.
The winning kick was set up
,when the Bulldogs, 2.0, marc bed 40
lardS In the last three minutes,
keyed by a 23-yard burst by Herschel Walker to the 'Cougars' 33yard tine.
Walker, who rushed for 124 yards
on 31 carries, had gotten Georgia
even at 14·14 with only 5:36 left
when he dove over for a ! -yard
touchdown.
Ronnie Harris preserved Geor·

gla's victory over the Cougars, 1-1,
when he Intercepted a Steve Young
pass on his 25 with 43 seconds remaining In the contest, which was
played In a steady rain the entire
second halt.
Young, who was Intercepted five
times In the first hall, connected on
a 21-yard TD strike to Scott Collie
late In the third quarter to put
Brigham Young ahead 14-7.
The score was score was tied 7·7
at the half, with Georgia scoring
first on a 12-yard run by Bany
Young In the opening quarter before the Cougars tied It moments
later on a pass Interception which
Tom Holmoe returned 63 yards for
a touchdown.

Stanford dumps Boilermakers, 35-14
WESTLAFAYEI'IE (AP) -Senior quarterback John Elway
threw four touchdown passes and
picked apart a young Purdue secondary for 333 yards as Stanford
scored a 35-14 victory . Saturday,
spoiling Leon Burtnett's debut as
the Boilermakers' football coach.

'Elway, who completed 29 of 36
passes, had a .J}.yard scoring threw
to fianker Mike Tolliver and a 5yarder to Chris Dressel In the first
half. He then connected wtth tall·
back VIncent White on a 25-yard
play to give Stanford a 21·7 lead
with 4:041n the third period.

JOY OF VIOI'()RY - Jimmy Connors jubilates after winning
semi-finals maleh over Gulllenno VIlas In the Men's SlnJies at the U.S.
Open Tennis Tournament In New York on SalunJ,ay. CoMors advanced
to the finals on Sunday with a6-l, :HI, 6-2 and 6-3 win. (i\1' Laserphoto) .

Southern ends long losing streak; Eastern string snapped

..

EBATES.

mer of the season.
Meawhlle In Houston, Dusty
Baker drilled a two-run homer and
survived nine hits as Cincinnati
winning pitcher Jent Reuss con·
edged the Allan~ Braves 4·3 Satur-. tributed a run-scoring double as the
Los Angeles Dodgers topped the
day, snapping a seven-game Reds'
lOlling streak.
Houston A.str9s !&gt;-3 Saturday.
Atlanta's loss reduced Its lead In
Reuss, 15-10, allowed seven hits
the National League West to just In 7 2-31nntngs. Steve Howe pitched
one-half game over Los Angeles,
the final 1 1-3 Innings for his 13th
which beat Hquston . . ,
save.
Solo, 12-11, struck out five to run
Baker teed off on loser Vern Ruhis major league leading total to hie, 7-13, _1n the first Inning with his
241. He walked three.
23rd homer, giving Los Angeles a
Atlanta ~Tommy Boggs, 2- . 2.0 lead.
1, had trouble fr?m the~. He ·.
Houston tied the score on Terry
· walked Gary Redus to start the
Puhl's RBI stngll! In the third on Bill
gaml!, and thell hit Ed!ile Milner • Doran's run-scoring single tn the
with a pitch: ConcepiCion · then fourth, but the Dodgers went ahead
slugged a 400-foot drive over the
to stay In the fifth .
center field fence for his fourth hocepclon drilled a three-run firstInning homer and Mllflo ~to

I\!____T-LL .
1JIIIIlel" liiUie .~

tasty vegetables.

terceptlons an!! a fumble recovery
for first-half touchdowns and
amassed 317 yards In offense by
intEhnlsslon.
'Barna's other first-halt scoring
came on a 40-yard field goal by P~
ter Kim, a 9-yard run by Paul Carruth and a &amp;-yard run by Ricky
Moore that stretched the lead to 310 with 7:01 left In the second
quarter.
The Tide opened the second half
with an 80-yard scoring drive that
ended on Craig Turner's 1-yard
plunge. Lewis connected with Jeff
Fagan for 35 yards on a second-andll situation to key the drive.
_

Reds top -Braves, Dodgers win

tangy

tomato base chock fuD of

YORK (AP) -Chris Evert
Lloyd, displaying patlence from the
baseline and capitalizing on her opponent's errors, won her sixth U.S.
Open Tennis singles championship
Saturday, trouncing Hana Mandllk0\·a of Czechoslovakia 6-3, &amp;-1.
It ~&lt;'aS the second time In three
.\·cars the two had met In the final of
America's prerntere tennis tournamPnt. and the second time Lloyd
has prevailed.
F:arlier. second-seeded Jimmy
Connors defeated Guillermo VUas
of Argentina 6-1, 3-6, &amp;-2, &amp;-3 to ad,·ance Into the men's final, which
will be held Sunday oo the hard
courts at Louts AITTIStrong Stadium. Connors will meet the winner
of the other semifinal, wlilch pitted
defending champion John McEn·
rDP against third-seeded lvanl..endl
of Czechoslovakla.
Lloyd, who had to go three sets to
rop Mandllkova In the final here
two years ago, only had to keep the
bali in play Saturday as her ~
vmr·old opponent made numerous
errors and several crucial double
faults.
The 27-year-old Lloyd took home
the $90,(XXl first-place prize and became the third woman In history to
m pture the U.S. title six times.
p nty Molla Mallory, who won eight
1omes between 1915 and 1921i, and
Ho&gt;len Wills .Moody, who captured
~EW

-AT-

$4.59

Tomczak, making his first college start as Art Schlichter's replacement,
led Ohio State on a 37-yard, ntn~play drive that was set up on Garcia
Lane's 18-yard punt return.
The Buckeyes, returntng to their famous ground gatne, used all rushing
plays to score the winning touchdown. Tomczak carried the final yard with
9:52 left.
Ohio State's running backs, partlcularly fullback Vaughn Broadnax and
tailback Tim Spencer, enjoyed big days.
Broadnax, a 252-pound J!mlor, scored twice on runs of 3 and 4 yards to
provide Ohio State a 14.0 lead In the first 17'h minutes. Broadnax rushed
tor 101 yards, his top day as a collegiate.
Spencer, a 21.2-pound senior, rolled up 147 yards In 30 rushes and became
the school's sixth all·tlrne career rusher.
Baylor, a 12-polnt underdog, tied the score at 14-14 late In the third
quarter on fullback Robert Wllllarns' 11-yard run.
Baylor's first touchdown came on quarterback Mike Brannon's 23-yard
pass to tailback Allred Anderson late In the first half.

Lloyd, Connors win championships

GOSPEL MEETINGS

nic of the American Legion Post

The Ohio Village Singers will re-ereate the social entertainment of
the 19th century In a concert at Our Houoe Tavern, Gallipolis. Sept, 18.
"A candlelight Coocen In The Courtyard," cHponsored by the Ohio
lflstorlcal Society and the Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce, wlll Include an evenln11 tour, the coooen by the Ohio VIDage Singers and a
dessert buffet.
.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Spolts Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio State rookie quarterback Mike Tome·
zak was more critical of his perlormance than his coach after leading the
14th-ranked Buckeyes toa21-14 victory aver Baylor Saturday In nonconfereoce college football.
"I stW have a lot more work to do with my passing. I forced a few," said
Tomczak, Art Sctiuchter's replacement. TIIE1,sophomore from Calumet
City,
completed 6 of 15 passes for 93 yards.
Tomczak threw two Interceptions, bUt Schlichter had five Interceptions
In his college debut In 1978, a 19.() home loss to Penn State.
Tomczak's 1-yard run midway through the final quarter salvaged the
victory· for Ohio State, which had blown a 14-0 lead.
The Buckeyes, opening their season before 88,622, the second-largest
crowd In Ohio Stadium history and Its 84th consecutive sellout, handed
Baylor Its t1rst la&gt;softhe season. The·Bears had opened wltha21·17defeat
or Nortl) Texas State last week.

Tuesday at the high school band
room. Parents of all junior' and
senior high school band students
are requested to attend. Refreshments will be served.

RACINE Lodge 461 will meet
Tuesday at 7: ~p.m. All master
masons are Invited to attend.

MEIGS High school vocal
Music Boosters wlll meet Tues·
day at 7: 30 p.m. In the music
room at the high school.

orts

Chicken Dinner

nam vet."

GAlLIPOLIS - A revival will
begin Monday at 7 p.m. at Bell
Chapel Community Church with
Rev. Miles Trout, evangelist. There
will be singing. Pastor Everen C.
Delaney Invites the public.

. .
from 10 a.m: to 12 noon with Mrs.
Femdora Story, R.N.,In charge.
The publlc Is lnvlted.lo tak~ pat;!.
AU members of the Harrisonville Club who are Interested In
attending ~ Jackson Apple
Festival 6n Sept. 24 are asl&lt;ed to
contact Mlnnte McGrath, 742-

to attend.

Veterans get mental health counseling
GAlLIPOLIS- Specialized lndl·
vidual, group or tamtly counseling
services for VIetnam era veterans

'

v~ .

-·
.
While disappointment loomed in
By SCOTl' WOLFE
reeled In the opening· klck.oft but tense. Russell, on a fourth and
the Federal Hocking locker room, a
RACINE - Southern Tornado was S!!?~ Inc~\!!!! shy of a llrst Inches call, lost the handle near the
football fans were Uterally "dancln' · down on. four altempts. Federal endzone where fullback Kevin Hycelebration began In the winner's
circle. Both Southern co-coaches,
" In the s~·· Friday evening to Hocking took over and ,managed a sell made the recovery for a score.
Darrell Dugan and BUI Porter had
the tune of'a z:usty, but.approprlate first down, -but ~ted qn the next The PAT run failed, the score 14-12
nothing but praise for their young
vlctol1liell ·ast!louthern l'QIJed to a series where SHS took over on Its ·which It remained at the half.
' .· .
34-:ll ~:VI!:fAlry aver the Fed- owp 46.
Although Southern dominated • club.
enil RocJdiia' Lancers.
Southern persistently, worked Its the first hall statistically, the game
Coach Porter said, "Our boys
For 'southern, the win was long way down fleld!On the sixth.play of ermalned close on the sCoreboard.
earned an outstanding vtciory. It 's
awal~. The 1'6rnadoes cia!rned the drive CoJ11181lY saw dayUght on 1 SHS had li3 yards In the first period
all theirs! Two years of hard work
their f)rst VICJOry In thn!e 51!asons. the far sideline and· weqt 47 yards and 104 In the second.
on their part has paid off. They all
With 6: 27 showing on the scoreSouthern's last football win was In !or the first score o! the game. Talplayed outstanding ball on offense.
ear1)1)979. '
bolt carried for the PAT run and . board, Derron Welch capped a 55
The Tornadoes pounded out 387 SHS led S.O.
yard scoring drive for FH as he
"Tonight they've seen they can
grinding yards before a large
Coach Ray Watson's Lance!'$ burst through the line for the score.
be an offensive machine. I was very
standing room only crowd that seemed to tie well prepai'ed for·the FH ))ad Its first lead of the game at
pleased with them."
Coach Dllgan added, "I thought
lined.the sidelines.
Southern defense as his club 20-14 and shifted the momentum In
All at SOuthern's offensive output grabbei} the ensuing kick-off and
Its cllrectlon as Allen Koker added our defense looked really good. We
came on till! ground as a result of · drove down fleli1 &amp;l ')'ardl for a· 1111! pigskin on downs. Connolly, really blocked w~ll ana fired out.
Our defense was tough at times,
dazzling ball handtlng In the back- sco.re with 1ll: 51 left In !IIi! llit:GIId , ~~oWever, pulled down an lntercetr
too.
'field and determined second and pertod. RAndy fb!sltelllllpped Into tton setting up a 14 yard drive that
'·'I'm really proud of them to. tlliJ,'d etforts by Its running backs. the end~neoff-~ldeon'aslxyanl Keith Cook drove In for the score.
, Sl!nlor running ba&lt;;k Dave Tal- run tor the score. The P.\T tailed. Southern's PAT failed. but south- ntgl)t. Now we have the rest of the
. ' tlott lied a klnll line of Southern of- 'The 'score w/ls now 8-6.
es:n locked the scilre at 20-~.
season to look forward to."
,. '•uws as be rambled (or 172 · SHS welrt'rlgllt to work as Talbott , The Tornadoes gained new wind
Southern had two Interceptions;
· ' Yard~ OD 1J canles;. scored three .added bls tint at~ touclldowna In the fourth quarter and blew up
,touciiOOwns, and added one extra , on the next drive. Talbott quite a stOrm. Tallllltt dashed lniD . ~ by TalbQit and one by Connolly.
Rusty Flagg and Jason .Hill recopoint run.
;·
·scrambled 27 yards to cap the 48 the end zone for a score thea revered tumbles, while Dennis TeaTaillott'aperformancec!lmeasa
Y!lnl"drtve.
The
PAT
run
failed.
turned
moments
later
for
another.
.,
.,....afadetllnnlnedetfortand·a n
The LaDa!r em~ put tq. In thi! !lnale Southern's vtctoryford had a sack.
GoliDOIIY aild Brlall Allen each
ll h
by Southern's ~- aetber 1110t11er JJ'teDtlt! drM U. t11t1q . i •• aeemed to iet to.
had s1x unassisted tackles, while
,_,.IIIIi.
scraped and clawed yardaaefrom Jdlbt, ~ a clamp on FH's
Jlllllo!;' back Wade ConnoUy tight, but lncon81sient Tornado de- .otfenllve sting..
Tal~tt had ~ and six a!!S,Ists.

o....,.

a•

, I.

,,

'

.'

turf.
A broken sweep play to the right
of the field resulted In the mar·
side
Kevin Hysell was the leading
gin of victory for the hosts as 5-10
ground gainer tor Federal Hocking
167 pound Junior tailback Jerry
wtth 7l yards on 34 carries. Randy
Green sought ' freedom while btaz.
Russell wsa 15-51 and Allen Koker
50 yards on seven carries. Steve lng a 36 yard trail to the goa lline.
The bulk of the battle took place
Collins had nine tackles for FH.
between
the 37 yard lines. Neither
Southern, which suffered
team
broke
inside the 37 yard line
through winless seasons In ·~ and
more
than
once
as a heated defen·
'1!1, now owns a 1-1 record against
slve battle, or perhaps offensive
on-league opponents as does FH.
Southern plays Wahama next drought, took form early in the
game.
Friday In Mason.
During the first series of downs
neither team could get unt racked,
but both teams looked much better
on Its next four changes. EHS put
together a drive that halted on the
37 and Alexander went to work with
8: 14 left In the first period.
The Spartans ' ground game,
built entirely around Jeny Green,
6 14-34
gained utrthe-rntddle yardage at
six to seven yard a clip. The hosts
drove Into EHS territory on a gruel·
AJexAIIIIer 1 Ellllem 0
lng 17 play dri ve. Although penal·
ALBANY ·- Friday night a 14ties proved to be a setback
game wlnnjng. streak In the EastAlexander slowly moved on. With
ern football eynasty came to an end
fourth and two to go for a first down
as a strona and pbyllcal Alexander
Roger Bissell picked ott a !ipartan
~brlgadeconqueredtheEa- · pass and returned It to their 44 yard
gles 7;o here on t,be Spartan home
Continued on C-4
Teaford had three unassisted tack·
les and 10 assists.

• •

•

�Page

C·2

September 12, 1982

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

The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks hand Mei~s 29-7 ·grid seiback .
By KEITH WISECUP
PT. PLEASANT - Escaping an

early scare, the Pt. Pleasant Big
Blacks came from behind to take a
:29·7 win here Frtday night over a
·gutty Meigs Marauder squad.
The Big Blacks applied a pres·
sure defense that allowed the Ma·
rauders only 12 total yards in the
second half with a minus six yards
rushing.
The game's direction changed
course when a Meigs fumble at the
Big Black 13 stopped a Marauder
drive and go-ahead touchdown with
the score knotted at seven. Pt. Plea·
sant then zipped 'G1 yards In the first
half's final two mlnutes to take a
14·7 lead to the dressing room.
"Thatwastheturningpoint," Big
Black coach Steve Safford ac·

corded after the game. "Up unW
then, we were In trouble. We outmuscled them as the game went on.
Meigs has a bunch of good, hard·
nosed kids," Safford agreed.
Meigs capitalized a first play
from scrimmage Pl. Pleasant fum·
ble to take an early lead. After the
Big Blacks lost the ball on their 22,
Mike Jackson circled his right end
to paydlrt on the next play. Dave
Barr booted the extra point.
Pt. Pleasant tied It two possessions later when fullhack Craig
Hesson rammed live yards capping a nine-play 41 yard drive. With
nine mlnqtes remaining in the first
half, Kevin Smith's kick tied it .
You drive' s biggest play came
when quarterback Scott Rutherford sprinted 16 yards to the Meigs

19 on a fourth and four.
Meigs came storming back con·
trolling the ball for seven rntnutes
In gotng 62 yards before the aforementioned fumble. Quarterback
Nick Riggs, making bls first' start,
hit Rick Edwards for 19 yards and
Scott Pickens for 16 while Jackson
rambled 17 during the drive.
After Pl. Pleasant Randall Cror·
rie pounced on that loose-pigskin,
Rutherford passed to end Jeff Rife
for 36 and to halfback Mike Patterson for 'n before rifling to halfback
Kip Atkinson from seven yards for
six points with 13 seconds lett In the
first half.
The final Big Black scores came
on a three yard run by Hesson In the
third period and a fourth quarter
·

seven yaril jaunt by Patterson. .
passes and played well on both
The former was set up when sides of the ball. Linebacker Chris
Meigs fouled up the snap In punt . Burdette suffered a concussion
formation to give Pt. Pleasant ow- early In the second quarter and
nersblp at the three. ·
never returned.
1
The last score 'came aiter a
Several Marauders excelled on
Meigs fumble at Its 48. It took the defense as Greg taylor, Blll Hoi·
Big Blacks ntne plays from there.
comb, Andy Iannereut, Randy SteRutherford passed to Todd Simp- wart, Edwards, Riggs, Jackson
klns after the snap went astray for and Perrin divided 50 tackles al·
two of the extra points and Smith most equally. Taylor led with ntne
made it three for three on the other while Jackson added eight.
TO.
"It was a good teatn effort," said
Jackson led all rushef!! with 69 Mel~· coach Charles Chancey. ,
yards In 12 carrtes. Wingback Jon "We Improved a good bit but lnjilr·
Perrin, who played an outstanding ies just wore us down," added
game tn going all the way added 22 Chancey.
yards on eight totes.
'
'Hesson led the Big Blacks tn
Riggs, fUUng In for the injured rushing with 52 yards In 10 carries
Rick Chancey, hit on five of six whUe Patterson chipped In 51 on

came out smoking In the first quar·
ter and "jammed It" down the Pi·
rates' throats.
A two-yard run by Mike Ousley
resulted in the host's only score of
the game with 4: 26remalnlngln the
first canto.
The Pirate recOvery was quick In
coming. Junior back Eric Penick,
used sparingly in last week's game
due to some mfnor InJuries, per·
formed well when he took control of

nine trips. Rutherford bltonfourof
six passes for 'G1 ya~. No Big
Black had more than one reception.
Pickens led the Meigs' receiving
corps With fOU1' catches for a,
yards.
.
Friday, the Marauders travel to
·Warren Local. The Big Blacks take
on arch·rival Gallipolis In the old
French City.
,

llepaot"*1t

the ball with 10: 42 left on the clock
in the second quarter. Penick
scored on a two-yard run. Senior
back Paul Houtngshead promptly
made good on the extra point conversion, making It S-6 Just .before
the h!llftlme lntennlsslon.
Penick again scored with 6: :Kiln
the third canto, repeating a twoyard run. The extra point failed.
The Pirates, under Coach John
Blake's guidance, came back In the

fo~

M

pp

9
41-68

~":t.~
v!ros ~
Total net y3!ds

13
42-178
96
274

m

128

5-~

6-J.()
4-2

~

~~g

4-3

4·133133.3) 1-25(25.01
• 54
52

Return yards

Penalties·

4-35

(}l)

52

52

~quortwo:
·MeiRs , ·

7000--0
0 14 8 7-29

Pt Pleasant ·

North Gallia downs Vinton County
McARTHUR - Host Vinton
County stunned North Gallla with a
first-quarter touchdown, but the PI·
rates regrouped quickly, stopped
the Vlktngs cold and recorded their
second win ef the season, :.l(M,
North Gallla played its first road
. game Friday night after winning a
. hard-fought liHl victory over Hun·
tlngton of Ross County tn its season
opener last week
Coach Jeff Whittaker's Vlktngs

.

second grid win

fourth with 4: 10 remalrtlng, scoring
on a four-yard run by Penick.
Keeping Penick's energy In reserve apparently worked, although
Penick totalled only 57 yards In 18
r:ushes lor the game. This was
matched by Holltngshead, who had .
57 on 12 rushes.
~
Senior Mike Mays enjoyed a good
night for passing, making two for a
total70yards. In the Interim, Pirate
defense kept the Vlktngs at bay,

thanks to 15 tackles by senior Bob
Adkins; and 14 recorded by senior
Kenny Neal.
On. paper, the Pirates outdlst·
anced their hosts In all depart·
ments, totalling 255 yards to their
101. North Gallla 8tsO hat! 10 ffrst
downs to Vinton County's four; and
totaled 53 yards In pe!UI)tles.
The Pirates go Into action again
Friday when they travel to Sou·
theastern of Ross County.

STATI8t'IC8

Np

DeparirtMIII

vc

•
...1 "
'I ''
'
2·20
10
14.1
172

First downs
Y uds rush ina

'lards pau lns
Total yards

8')

101

Pas• attempll
Completion•

I

lnte~ tlona

Fumbles

2

Lost tumble~
Penalllet

......

2

&amp;-SJ

2"1

3·82

. Qt.

8eore by quarten:

086i-20

North Ga llla

ao o a-s

VInton County

:Hannan Trace captures fii-st · win of season
. MERCERVILLE - Late in the
1hlrd quarter, following a scoreless

·IJFs! half here Fr'lday night, Han·

•

nan Trace-Hannan, W.Va. players
came alive and the the result was a·
12·6 victory for the Gallla

: . : ON 'OOP - Hannan Trace players Alan Bailey (30) and Ronnie
· · )iaunders (53) arrive at the scene of a Hannan, W.Va. sack during
: Friday's non-league game at Hannan Trace. Hannan scored Its single
: touchdown of the game late In the thlnl quarter.

Meigs horseshoe winners· announced

i'

POMEROY -The Meigs County Gary· Drenner copped the playoff,
Horseshoe Club recently held its whUe Aelker took third place. Ottie
September Tournament In three Jarvis and Harlan Whitlatch each
had five wins and two losses.
classes for Its 28 members.
Winners
are Gary Grenner, Keith
· In Class A Fred George out·
· pointed his father Earl George for
Aeiker, and Harlan Whitlatch.
: first place In a play-off.
After a three-way. tie for first in
In a fine field of six pitchers the
George famtly staked claim on the the C class, Art Musser came out on
top three spots. Winning respec- top. Musser,. Roy Holter, and Rotively were Fred George, Earl bert Williams each completed the
·top ten.
George, and Bill George.
The . Meigs County Horseshoe
In Class B seven pitchers saw ac·
tlon and went for the top spot. Gary club meets Sunday afternoon at the
Drenner and Keith Aeiker tied for fairgrounds. Pitchers should apply
first with six wins and just one loss. for membership. '·

when HI' junior fullback Melvin
Clagg picked up a Hannan tumble
and ran 14 yards ln,to the visitors'
end zone, making the score 12-6.
Coach Lowell Rakes' Wildcats,
who dropped their season opener,
28-0, to Fort Gay, w.va. last week,
•put Up a strong defense, Despite
HT' S DUffiber In pIayers, Hannan 'S
line size had HI' head COBch Brett
Wilson concerned.

COuntlans.
The HT lead did not come, how·
ever, unW more than a few anxious
moments passed when both teams
. tied at the opening of the final
canto, thanks to a spectacular 7(}.
yard run by HI' freshman halfback
Phil Batley.
The first half passed without lncl·
dent and lillie penalty-calling as
both teams of Wildcats scrapped
each other to a standstlll, resembling In some respects Hl''s 0.0 tie
with Symmes Valley tn the season
opener last week.
Fans were antiCipating an
·equally dull second half, lilled with
strong defense and broken plays,
when Hannan's fullback Allen Reynolds threw a pass to quarterback
Landon Powers with 2: 17left In the
· third quarter.
Powers 'connected and blasted
through a hole In Hl''s defense for
Haiuum's single touchdown of the
night.
Stung by thts surprise 'break·
through, Batley -who was unable
to tackle Powers when he caught
Reynolds' pass- caught a Hannan
kickoff with 2:04 left In the same
quarter; rushed Into a similarly
weak Hannan defensive spot and
brought the crowd to its feet with
his sprint from the ~yard line, ty·
log the score at IH&gt;.

HI

Barnes, with five sacks and six as·
slsts. Clagg complled three solos
aJ¥1 three assists, and Mike Beaver
had five assists.
.
Now 1·1.0, liT returns to the field
Friday when they hast Green Twp.
of Scioto Gounty.
·
HT

"

P"''"•

''"''l yards
Tota

felt we were stronger, he

Pan a tiE'mpt s

tl

8 ·

~~~~~~~~~~s
Fumb'"

11 ~

0

'

.,

H
4
0

0

Lost fumble•

ours. But we did well against them
Peoattl••
from the first quarter on."
Punu
S.on hyqmlon'
Although defense Is what kept HI' Hannan
Trace
In the game - the Gallla Wildcats
"'"'''
contributed "100 percent and
more" In that respect, as far as Wll·
son was concerned - offense is In
sore need of repair.
"I thought we had a good week
on offense In practice," he com- ·
mented. "But the llnf! was not f1rin8
out, our backs had trouble finding
the holes and we slacked off In the
second quarter. We did better In the
second half, bui we dor)'t have the
punch yet to put It in the end zone."
The answer, he said, lles In establishing a more consistent offense.
Also throwing HI' for a loop was
Hannan's strength, which contra·
dieted earlier seoutlng reports.
On offense, however, senior half.
hack Daniel Bays led WUdcat
rushers with 42 yards on 19 trip&amp;.
Assisting with 14 yards on four
rushes was .AJan Batley. Jeff
Barnes had 18 ori tliree attempts:
The evening's top tackler was

..

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I

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... ....... _.....,._..Page-C-4-The Sunday Tim es-Sentone l

Gallipolis defense shines in 15-13
COAL GROVE - "When you
face that kind of adversity a nd
never give up, It makes you feel
proud of every last one of 'em."
That's how Coach Tom Korab
described his GaUia Academy Blue
Devils after a 15-13 non-conference
grid victory over host Coal Grove a t
Patterson Field here Friday night.
More than 3,(KXJ shirt-sleeved
fans watched as Coach Dave Lucas' Hornets took the game's openIng klckoft a nd march ffi yards In
nine plays to take a 7-0 advantage.
The score came on a 14-yard
scamper by Joe Ross, 180-pound
junior taU back with 7:38 on the
clock. BUI Rigsby's kick from
placement was true.
Devils Strike Back
GAHS struck pay~on the final
. Quarterplay ol the first pe
back Scott Kora b t sophomore
flanker Jimmy Beaver with a 70yard strike - Beaver crossed the
goal with no time showing on the
scoreboard clock. Korab's ftrsl
kick from placement was true, but
It was nuUifled by a penalty. His
second attempl also spilt the uprights to knot the count at 7-7.
The defending Ohio Valley Conference a nd Region 15, Division IV
AA champions threatened again
early ln the seeond period foUowlng
;an . exchange of fumbles. CGHS,
IY!th a spectacular 43-yard run by
'.Ross, marched to GaUia's 1!1 before
:Korab Intercepted a Steve Murphy
'·pass In the endzone to halt the
'4rive.
Following t hat Interception,

Grid
standings
ALL GAMES

TFAII
ironton

200'N!38
L . T. P. oP .
w.

WlM.•rly
JaCkso n
Gal li polis

2 0 0

Pt . Pluun t
Coal Grove

I I 0 lG 17
I I 0 ~ 21
U I 1 14 17

6

Todd Sheets got Murphy for an
eight yard Joss; Kenny Russeil batted down a Murphy aerial and
Korab picked off his second pass
Interception with a little over a minute left In the game.
It wasn't over. GAHS was penal· lzed bal)k to the three for clipping.
Three plays later, Dave Garber
was forced to punt from the end·
zone with 58 seconds left.
Garber's punt, a 38-yarder, got
the Galllans out of trouble,
momentarily.
A 15-yard pass Interference pena lty against GAHS gave CGHS a
first down on the Devils' 26.
Murphy lost one. A Murphy pass
felJ incomplete. Juan McCabe and
Tim Tawney snagged Murphy for a
seven yard loss as the final seconds
ticked away. A Murphy pass feU
Incomplete with nine seconds left,
ending the Hornets' chances.
"Coa1 G rove h as a super team, "
Korab said after the hard-fought
battle. "You can't take anything
away from thein. They reaUy like

10 plays early In the final period to
reduce Gallla's lead to two points.
Fullback Jim Carey's two-yard
run with 7:ffi left made It 15-13.
Murphy's pass for a two-point conversion fell Incomplete.
The final seven minutes kept fans
on both sides of the field on their

to hit people. Our kids really rr:;:=~=:;;;;~~~~~ii
wanted this one tonight. They
showed lots of pride out there,"
Korab added.
Too Many Mistakes
Coach Lucas said, " Our l)oys
played aggressive ball tonight, but
we made too many mistakes."
In tll plays from scrimmage, the
Hornets gained 129 yards rushing
and liD passing tor 232 total yards.
BOOTS
~;toss was the top ground gainer
with 79 yards In 12 trips. Carey had
Bench crafted
61 In 16 trips. Murphy, who was
Quality Since
sacked eight times, twice each by
1863
Larry Arthur and Isaacs, completed seven of 15 passes . Nick
MU!er caught three for 68 yards.
Ga llipolis had possession 44
., •·eond
plays. GAHS gained 100 rushing
ea~ 11 ~ ~
and 121 passing tor 221 total yards.
1C Laloyelle ~loll
D
G be flllln In t the Uln
GaUl polio. o .

FoUowlng the Hornets' score,
GAHS picked up a ttrst down, but
gave up possession on lis own 38 on
a fumble.
Defense Stiffens
The fired-up Hornets moved to
the GAHS 25 In two plays. AI this
point, the Blue Devils' defensive
unit turned In four consecutive brilnant play.
Steve Patterson tossed Murphy
lor a one-yard loss on first down.
Kev Isaacs, KeUy Galllan, and

Portsmouth

020

·Rock Hill

Aaron Saunders at rlghth4lf, led
Gallla's rushers with 44 yards In
eight trips. Korab hit four of seven
passes. Beaver caught two tor 81
yards.
GAHS, 2~, will open Its home sea- ·
son agalnsi Pt. Pleasant Friday.
Coal Grove, 1-1, will host Trimble.
The loss snapped Coal Grove's
regular season winning streak at
eight. The victory was the eighth In
a row by Korab's Blue Devils over a
two-year period.
Statistics:
ST..\TI8TIC8

o

DEPARTMENT

~~:,:,•;,::~;,,

1~

Compl•"•• •

~·;::.,~:;::'1 :;

232

':., ~·

rumbl••

4

Loat tumble •
Penallles

3
.
4 27

Pun"

,_,.,

..,., b&gt; ., ..,.,.,

Galllpoll!t
Coa l oro-.

Smith V1clor

2
1
0~

'Aiflena

020773

• Sept. II ru
Gallipolis

ultA:
1~

u

Coal Grove 13

Portsmouth 6

· Wayne 25 Rock Hill 0
• Pt . Pleasant 29 MelliS 7
Washington CH :W A.1hPns 7
·· Jackson 13 Wheelersburg 12
• Whitehall w Lo,R"an 1
• Ironton 49 McNicholas 24

7 R o G-15

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Valunla COntrol.

The ._

LI'PER 11· 7

PHONE 446-4517
GAWPOU$, otiO 45631

WAILILR[))AI§
SEPT. 12 - SEPT. 25
12 BIG DAYS

· . Mf'i)lsat Warren Local
: Wheelersbu.r11 at Waverl y

• Nelsonvllle-Yorlr. at Lol(an
• Ironton a t Portsmouth
• Clrrlevllle at Athens
·: Rock Hill at CrHnup
, Trlmblt' a t Coal Grovt'

BLOCK

PINNING

:Southern...
Continued from C-1
·llne, putting EHS In good field
'!)osition.
• The usually tough Eastern of1ense stalled shortly afterwards.
Alexander again regained control
on Its 37 with 1:59 left In the first
period. Alexander m arched from
·1ts 37 to Eastern's 37where Its quarterback fumbled . Roger Bissell recovered for Eastern.
. On the very first play Eastern's
·Troy Guthrie suffered the same
·ha ndling problem and the eventual
winners had their second chance.
Chuck Elliot was credited with the
recovery.
On ihe e nsuing play ~lgnal-caller
:Mark Kovach pitched wide on the
·end sweep to Jerry Green. Green
·dropped the baU and In a mad
scramble by both clubs had It
bounce back Into his hands without
breaking stride.
As If that wasn't enough Green
tried his juggling act again, trlggerJng anothe r melee.
: Miraculously, with the Eastern
pursuit scrambling for possession,
'the ball squirted bac k Into Green's
hands where he went untouched to
the goalllne.
John Spires booted the convers ion for the ga mes only score at 7-0.
,From the scoring drive on, the
remainder of the action added wear
to the middle of Alexander's turf.
With the exception of the last series
of downs where the winners penetrated to the 21, most of the action
occurred between the 40s.
Guthrie again led Easte rn rushIng with 45 yards on 10 carries, a nd
Cliff Grttflth had 28 on 13 carries.
Green was a one manolfenslve machine for the Spartans as he gained
157 of the team 's 187 total yards.
Green had 139 yards on the ground
on 29 carries and caught two passes
for 18 yards. Keith Jordan had rush· ·
lng yards In nine attempts.
Mark Holter had a good defensive game for Eastern with 12

-tackleS.

~ &gt; Eastern travels to Federal Hockthis Friday to challenge the
,J»Jlcb Improved Lancers.

lDk
"

~~~

:f1:nt Downa .

STATISTICS

t.:
. .. .. .. .. . .. . . . . . . . . . 3

A '
12

~rdl rnhlng

'__,)tte mptl·madel

. .. ... 32-53
...... J-3
Jltttrceptf!l . . .. . . . . .
. .... 0
f:'ll•lnr yards . . . .. . .
.. ... 6
qu1 yardage ....................... 59
~Illes ........................... 4-16
f'iJDtl {aVI,) ..... , .................. t -33
~tnb&amp;H--rumtllfoa los! . . . . .......... 2.-2

~~ ---·········

~;.;.~~',

~- 151

:1-7

2

3G
187
7-111
3.JO
c-3

0-o .

.......... 0 0 0
AtlaaGer ......... .......... . .1 .. 0 7 0 0--7

ONLY

S-25-12~'................... S129.99

S-25-14'.'................... S189.99
S-25 DA-16':............. S229.99
S-25 CUA-16:~ ...........s269.99
3400 16"............... $299.99
3400 - 18': ............... SJ19.99
U. S.

control.

The win pushed Wahama's remrd to 2.0 whUe Kyger Creek suf·
fered Its SECI.llld straight loss. The
White Falcons host Southern Frtday whUe Kyger Creek goes to
Alexander.

8x15-88.12 sq. ft.. .........................Sl4.29
4x23-135.12 sq. ft ......................... S2l89 ' ---~
6'/zx15-48.46 sq. ft ........................ Sl2.99
61/2x23-75.07' sq. ft.:..................:.. ,. '1'.~9:

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12x8:............. ~500.00,
12xio:............ 560.00
12x12: ... ~ ........ 640.00
12xl4~ ............ 720.00
12xl6: ............ 800.00
12x20: ........... :980.00
Prices include all building · materials requiredShi~. roof, hii!IIS. etc.
ALSo .

.

when senior runnlngllackDooCaiT ·.
capped a solltl march with four
yard run. A
the conversion
taUed.
Big plays during the drive were a
26-yard pa5s trom~quarterback Steve Pelti-ey to Rm CaiT
andal!lyarddrawplaybyfullback
David Nkla.
The HJghlanders went to the a1r
In the second quarter, but a Peltrey •

"
262

64
326
11

Total yards j rush· passt

Pass attem pts
Completions
Intt&gt;rcepted by
Fumbles

4

Lost fumbl es
Penaltle1

·Do-lt· YourSf_ff
Special .···

Seen. b)' quarten:
Crt't'k
Wahama
Ky~~:er

WRANGLER
BIAS PLY

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page:-C~5 ,

pass was intercepted . .Not an1y dJd
. It halt the 1'114reh, It Ignited Sou-

lheastern's offense. Junior quarter-

back J'untor Skaggs capped the~
yard drive with a one yard run.
A ldck tor the EP was blocked .
In lbe fourth period, following
wbat proved to ·be the winning

drive, Southwestern marched
downfleld by mixing Its running
and passing attack. During that

march, Pelb:ey hit Don CaiT for 11
yards, Roy )',fcCaJ1;y for lS and Will
Halslop for 33 before smle t'OStly
penalties and time ran out.
The drive ·o(!tlded on 1111 lllcomplete pass 1ft the etld ZOI!e.
Hatlfleld was the gatne's leading
groundgainerwlthlliS'lifdswtille
Ron Carr ledSouthwestem with43.
The loss Ieft SolithiVestem with
an 0-2 slate while Southeastern

gained Its

~~~T~~~Ight win.

............
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v... , poulno
~~.~

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SE

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Punu-ya rds

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The Fol
•

RICHMONDALE . - Junior ful·
!back Paul Hatfield capped a big
night with a 36yard touclldown run
In the Jourth quarter, giving Sou~m·s Panthers a thriUing, 146 victory over Southwestern.
In what Highlander coach Jack
Jamesdescrlbedasthehardesthitt1ng game his team has played In
the past two years, Southwestern
jumped ahead In the opening period

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r_::__::~::_:~~_:~~a~v:e~ar~~r~,~~g~~o~r~~·~~gl~::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;=~~~~~~

• Sept. t1 rame. :
Pt . Pleasant 11 Gallipolis
• J~eluon at Wells ton

&gt;

Wahama took charge by marching
til yards In eight plays. Junior taUback Don VanMeter broke the
game's scol'!ng Ice with a lJ yard'
run. His kick for the EP salled
wide.
On the first place following the
White FalCon kickoff, Kyger Creek
fumbled with Damon Gibbs reCovering for the West VIrginians at the
Bobcat 23. Six plays later, VanMe,ter streaked over from the four.
Quarterback Mark Roush added
the two point conversion on a !'lin
for a lW advantage.
;
On the. next KC series the~
thing occurred with a fumble l'eC9V·
ery by Wahama deep In Bobcat territory but a penalty and.
Incomplete passes_halted the drive.
In the final minutes of the first
stanza, Coach Mark Hartman's,
young club began Its best drive of
the game only to see It end on an
Interception by Roush.
After taking control at the 33 yard
line, Wahama behind thechurqlng
'
legs of Van Meter, fUllback Todd
Troy, and halfback Steve Lyons
moved downfleld again. Roush hit
end Eric Embleton on a 16 yard
pass play to put the ball at the 00.
Two plays later, Troy ramb\ed
. around his right side for an 18yarcl
line. Van Meter kicked the EP for a
' 21~ lead.
Kyger Creek's sputtering oHense
· again taUed to move. On a fourth
down punt situation, J.D. Brad' bury's kick was blocked. The ball
rolled Into· the end rone then out the
left side for a safety,
On lhe first play foUowlng Bradbury's free kick, quarterback
Roush hit Mike Pethtel on a 27 yard
TO play. A run for the conversion
faUed.
Kyger Creek then moved the ball
from Its 26 to the Wahama 45 before
becoming bogged down again.
Wahama's VanMeter hit paydlrt
three plays later orl a 37-yard run.
His boot made It 37-1&gt; at the half.
Kyger Creek took the 'ojlenlng
third period kickoff from Its 15 to
the 35 before being forced to punt.
At that point, Wahama's second otfenslve unit entered the contest
which became a slower tempo
game the resl't&gt;f the period. Waharila moved deep Into KC tetrjtory
once again, but KC's Barry Matthews picked oft a Ron Bradley aerial to halt the drive.
'
After throttling the Bobcat offense once again, another fourth
down punt by Bra~bury was
blocked. This time the ball was ~­
overed In the end zone by Embleton
for a touchdown. A pass to Mitchell
pushed the final score to 45-0.
The fourth quarter was a long
drawn out affair capped by penalties, Injury tlmeouts and ball

Camera
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--·-·~-----

F~the~ldc~H, ~~--------~----------~~~----~~--~----------------------~------~====~----~~~

1~

22 1

~~~:, '""'

previOus week, Coach
BW Jewell's Wahama White Fa!Cons blltzed ihe!t opponent early,
thenlnserl.!!dthelrsecondotfenslve
unit In the second hiUt for an easy
non-:conterence victory. This time
Kyger Creek was the victim, 45-0.

. .. . . . . VR-8118

1

1~

Tolal "'"'

copy of the

WhlleTIIQLaiU

~

4

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, bhio--f'oint Pleasant, W.Va .

CHESHIRE • In almost a carbon

VIDEO SPECTAClJLAR

':,
1
48

21

~!!,~~~~~pt•

· '

co

1~

L&lt;&gt;al '"'"''•

hiiiii;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-.
Sp•clal Burl
P•n••onlc PV-5500

I

~

Falcons·
~outhwesterri ·-Hig~anders drop 14-6 decisiQn to Southeastern Panthers
r_omp. 45~0 .
a
Jla&amp;'l tor

627

020 639
02075(1

'Ntilgs

'

September 12, ltB~

•
WID

GAHS marched 80 yards In 13 plays
to take a 15-7 advantage.
Big gainer In the game's winning
d rive was a 27-yard pass from
Korab to right end Kev Isaacs.
Game-Winner Conlrovel'!llal
Ken n y R ussell, tailback,
smashed over from the three with
1: 52 left In the half. On the tly for
extra point from placement, Korab
bobbled a high-pass from center,
picked it up and wheeled to his
right, then shot an underhanded
pass to Russell In the endzone.
Hornet Coach Lucas protested,
calllng It a "forward la teral," but
the oft!clals stood firm on their call .
It proved to be the dllference In the
final outcome.
Neither team scored In the third
quarter. GAHS stopped a Hornet
drive on the Blue Devil 25 early ln
the period, shortly before the olflclals ejected Gallla's Beaver Stephens and Coal Grove's Jeff
Harper for un sports manlike
conduct.
Coal Grove marched 64 yards In

teet.

September 12, 1982

2003!1 18
20029 13

Loaan

~ wavfrty

u

w. va.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea·sant,

... -- -·--

Fiiday's
results

Price FH
$107.00 $3.96
114.00 4.28

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HOME CENTER
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426 VIAND STREET PT. PLEASANT
PHONE 675-3930

all

i

�Page

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

C-6

Pomeroy

Septem~er 12,

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

1982

Ironton, Jackson and Waverly capture non-league triumphs::.
I

f&lt;eystwl' 13, Bladl: Rtv£or 12
Lancaster 6, Grovt'pOM 6, tk&gt;
UckJna Val 33, Granv!UI.' 1

Hannan fiaCE' 12. Hanna n, W. Va. 6
Hani!lon ~. laWI'elk.'t'WrJ, Ind. 12

Uma S1lu-nee .n. ~ u
Elm 1), Uberty lJnb1 6

lrooton 'B. Cln. McNicbolas 24
Jnckson L1, \VheelersburJ 12
Jeffmon 1.1', Kirtland 0

Levan

Luca.wt.JJe Val 36, Ptkecm 16

Mad!Dl Plains ~. S. Charlettor! SE
Martins Fercy 1•. J~ UniOn ti
Marytvmt 26. Delaware 0
Ma.WlJoo )7, Akron Garftetd 1(1
Mlami 'I'rac. 16. Col. Wehrk- 6
Mldpttr1l. 13, Bay 0

o

MWon:l6.. w~u
MonrorvWe 16, Smeca E. 8
Morpn 7, W. MUJidnpnO
Mt. Glleld 21, Ncrtbr'ncl' 8
Neloonvllle- y ...... MJU..- 0
Newark 7, WlX1hlngton 0

N. G.alla Z). Vinton Co,. 6
Olk HW 8. l..1JOOio 7

o

Pouldrc
111""""'
_ , 23. ''·
Allltlbula10'
,.,.., ,._ ...... GloM 13
Poln.t Pleasant
va. 29. MelD 1

w.

as Columbus Whl_tehall doWIII!d the
Logan Chieftains, 10-7, lit'
Whitehall.
.
'
The Chiefs' offense was smo- ·
thered as they showed just five first , •
downs, 3&lt;1 yards I'UBhtng; and minus
eight yards passing. , .
The only Logan score came on
the opening kickoff of the l!llCQII!!
half when Bryan Walke raced 90.
yards to paydlrt.
.
Whitehall's Rams ran up a lot ot · .
yards as they ftnlshed with 13 first .
downs, 156 rushing, and COnnected , •
on seven ot 17 passes for_lOO yards.
&amp;lore by qaarten:
Logan ............ Q 0 7 o- 7
Whitehall ......... 3 0 Q 7-10 . .

quarters.
Portsmouth, with eight sophomores as starters, dropped their second straight contest but stlU
managed to win the total yardage
l)atue 170-157.
Andre Pursell paced the Tigers
with 78 yards on 25 trips while K. B.
JohnSon rolled up 106 yards on '11
carries tor Portsmouth.
&amp;lore by quarters:
Waverly ....... ,...... 14 0 0 D-14
Portsmouth- ........ 0 0 6 o- 6
WhltehaD 10 Lolan 7
COLUMBUS- Mitch Brown's31
yard tleld .goal In the first quarter
proved to be a winner Friday night

Latus build you a garage fof, ....
13200.00

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Friday's Ohio high school football results
Continued from C-5

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Majors
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AMERICAN LEAGUE

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Pet.
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GO

.:116
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Bos10n

1M
79
71

.51)4

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67

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Nev.r York
Cleveland

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Toronto

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C1akland

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Tf"xas

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Kansas Cll}'
19 61
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Callfom la
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Mlnnt&gt;!iOW at Kama s Cll)'

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NA'DONAL LEAGUE

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St. Loul5
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Pittsburgh
Chicago
Nrw Yorll

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Monii"Pal 7. f'hlraRO 2

Philadelphia 7. Pll\sbuq;ch
Allanlll M. f'lnrlnnfltl 'l
Nf'W York Z. St. Louis 1
l.ll"i. AnJ!f'IPS ~. Houston 1

~

Sunday'" Gamt~~
Philadelphia at Plttsbul'!lh
Cloclnna tl ot Atlanl.a
Nt'W York at S1.Lou\s
Montrt&gt;al at Chlcaii'O
l.ll'l 1\n~k.&gt;s at Houston. l nl

Tran!!actions
BASEBALL
MAJOR

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BASEBA LL -An-

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Amerlou IA!ape

SEATILE MARINERS-Activated Bob·
by .B r own, ouUieldl'r, from lht&gt; 2l ·day d is·
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National Leape

NEW YORK METS- Traded T om 'Hau ~ ·
man . pll cher. to the A tlanta Braves for
Carlos Dl az, pitcher.

BASu:TBALL
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BOSTON CELTtCs-Tradfd Davp Cow.
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NE W YORK
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FOOT II ALL
Cana dian FOolhaU Leaa;ue
OITAWA. ROUG H RIDERS.....Sianl'd

MutthewTpagu{' a nd J ack Williams. derc n slvr- cncb. and ¥ ark Seale, def~n5 lv~
tackl f'.

:'ll lltlonal Fnothall lA! que
DALLAS ('0W80YS-Rt'·51Rnl'&lt;l Brad
WI"IJ!"hl,
qua r te rback . Plart'd Robert
Shn w. C'f' fll f' l". on thP Injured r"f'rvl' ll ~ t
WASH I NG T ON R EO SKINS - RP ·
~ l g nf'd

Garry PuNz, offpnslvt&gt; l l nt&gt;man. Cut M PI·
vln Jo nes, fi:Uard .
SEATILE SEAil AWKS-Actl vatf'd JOhD
Harris. sa fet y, a nd pla cpd Fredell Ander·
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Unltro Sl aW; Football L€'81ifU(' .•
P HILADE LPHI A STARS-5\Rned B r ia n
Rronmt"ll . quortt&gt;rbar k: Mark McCaniA;
dC'f('nslvP bac k . Stt've Conj o•·. tln('backer:
Grf'll: Mr&lt;'ault'y . tl ~~;h t t&gt;nd : and Hom t'r
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HOCKEY

Pu r c ha~

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SAVINGS.,,
.

..

'

.

;.

KNlCI&lt;S-SI~~ Paul
Wt"st pha l . !IUEird. to a multi-year contract ,
a nd E rnl t&gt; Grunfeld , forward, to an o'ffpr

N.Uional Hod.f'y
DF.:TROIT
RE D

"There comes a ttnne when con- . sippi, James McClure of Idaho a.'ld
science and principle transcend
John Tower of Texas. The other
loyalty to one's party and one's
three were Democrats Erne!!! F.
president," Hatfield said. But he, Hollings of South C8rolln8, John
Reagan as the Senate oveiTOde his too, made It clear his support for
Stennis of Mississippi and Uoyd
vtito of a $14.2 bllllon spending biD the president was not waver!ng.
Bentsen of Texas.
$11Y·they still are-committed to his
Just before the vote, MaJortty
Aides said all but Tower were opeconomic program despite their Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R- posed to or leaning againSt the veto.
vall!.
Tenn., begged senators to contlriue
Only once before had Congress
Reagan, meanwhile, sald that Congress' "partnershlp" with the
overridden Reagan's veto, and that
while he was hurt by the defeat In president In the effort to control fed·
was on a relatively minor copyright
Congress, the outcome would not eral spending.
protection bill.
dls&lt;:ourage hlnn from vetoing other
One Senate source, who asked
"~
.. "~ lsi!JOI the time to end that not to be quoted by name, said
... J.. ~. • .f!akel'' saltl, noting Baker made a last-ditch effort to
Se- the deCline In Interest rates since · sustain the veto by asking several
ii'rtday by al- Congress approyed last month leg- senators If one would withhold his
lowing
to
law. The Islation to Increase taxes and cut
vote, thUs palr!ng with Tower.
vote was 60-00, exactly the two- spending. The ~kage was deIn a so-called "Uve pair," a senathirds neces8azy 'to override the signed to cut the dellclt.
tor announces his preference but
veto. The House voted 301-117
Nonetheless, Reagan, when
withholds his vote out of courtesy to
Thursday to reject the president's asked It he was angry at Republl·
an opponent who Is away, with the
veto.
cans who voted against hlnn, sald, effect of.canceUng one another out
Twe1,1ty-one Senate RepubUcans "No, I'm not angry. I'm just terriTower, who was absent, would
voted against the president.
bly, terribly hurt. .. . Oh, I wish
have supported the president. The
Senate Budget Corrunlttee Chair- they'd behaved differently, but Texas senator had left earlier In the
man Pete V. Domenlcl, R-N.M., then everybody makes mistakes."
day to attend the RepubUcan state
who voted against Reagan, said the
The president, who was travellng convention ln his home state, desmove "has Uttle or no relevance to In Utah as the vote was taken, said
pite Baker's request that he remain
austerity."
there could be more vetoes.
tn town.
He also denied that the vote has
''TI!ey'd better practice at that
This source said three RepubU"fractured the discipline we have (overriding the veto) because cans - Sens. Charles Grassley and
shown" In reducing federal spendthey're going to get a chance to do
Roger Jepsen of Iowa and Altonse
Ing. "I klndofnvetthathe's (Rea- that every tlnne they send an approD'Amato of New York- spurned
gan) been led to believe th1s Is a
priation down that Is over the
the offer and the effort fatled.
budget-buster," Domenlcl saki on budget," Reagan said. "I'm going
Had Baker been successful, the
the Senate floor.
to veto It again."
veto might have been sustained.
Sen. Mark 0, Hatfield, R-Ore.,
The 10 senators who did not vote
Tower sald later from Texas,
chairman of the Approprtatlons Included conservative Republicans
"I'm not sure I could have turned
Committee who had shepherded Harrison Schmitt of New Mexico,
the outcome around. The ledershlp
the measure through the Senate, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania,
was unable to do so. And I think th1s
disputed admlnlstratlon claims It Dan Quayle and Richard Lugar of was the kind of situation where evewas a budget buster.
Indiana, Thad Cochran of Mlsslsrybody has his mind made up."

on the withdrawal of foreign troops.
By the A810claled Press
Secretary of State George Shultz · As for a comprehensive peace
says the United States wtll move settlement In the region, Shultz
· swiftly to get foreign troops out of said, "that goal can hardly be ac. Lebanon, but It wtll take long, hard complished In a few short weeks."
"We ask you to slay With the pres• negotiations to secure peace ln the
Ident ln his determination tb sustain
" Middle East.
· Under questioning by the Senate th1s effort and to look for the longForeign Relations Committee Fri- term, just solution,'' he told the
day, Shultz saki he and his aides committee.
Shultz testlfted that a newly
have talked about a timetable for
• withdrawal of Israeli and Syrian adopted Arab league resolution
: forces from Lebanon, but he would would represent a breaklhi'ough ln
Middle East peace efforts It It
not dlsclcse It
He added, however, that the pres- means, as. some have suggested,
- ence of foreign .trooJ:6 In the war- Arab recognition of Israel's right to
~ torn country Is " basically exist.
The declaration approved Thurs: disruptive and has to be ended,"
day night by Arab leaders at Fez,
: and the admlnlstratlori wt11 seek a
Morocco, provided for U.N. Secur: synchronized withdrawal "before
Ity Council g\Jarantees of "peace
~ peqJle get too settled In to where
among all slatesoftheneglon."The
- they are."
- "This Is something that we need conference chairman, King Hassan
: to keep the pressure on," he added. II of Morocco, said the llrst stage
Shultz estimated there are 30,&lt;ro would· Involve a "state of nonbelligerence" under United Na: Syrian troops In Lebanon. He did
• not give an estimate of Israeli tions auspices.
Shultz said he was not sure
forces.
·
He saki their 'presence Involved whether th1s represented Implicit
the posslbWty of an anned out- Arab recognition of Israel's right to
. break arid, "If ·tlleY stay too tong, I exist.
If It does, he said, "that's a breakguess you would have to say the
through. No\v It may not sound Uke
• probablllty of an ootbreak."
President . Reagan· has an- much to you, but It Is a big piece of
nounced _he wlll·sendDeputy Assist- movement In people's attitudes.
ant Secretaiy of State MoiTls It's very, very Important"
. Draper to LebaDOn, with the rank of
The Arab leaders alsO called on
: amba-dor, to begin negotiations Israel to withdraW from aU OCCU·

Snn f'ranr\sro !;, San Dll&gt;aO 1

no unc ~

LeMJIU l'

W I NGS-

Strvf' Weir. crntf'r . from 1ht Ed m onton
011ers .
M 0 NT REAL Ci\N,\O I ENS;_
Slgnf'd
Murlo Trt'mbla.\ ·. rll(ht wlnR . Tr aded
Bria n Enlfblom and Rod LanlfWad. dPf('nsemrn : DQu~ .Jarvi s. Cf'n l cr. an Cro tlt
La u ~thlln . rll[hl wing. to the Washl n1[1on
Ca pitals for Rvan Wa lltr. rorwa rd . and
R ick Grl't&gt; n. dt&gt;/{' nSf'mn n
PHILA DELPHI A F'I.YEfl5-SI J!ned Ron
SunPr. ct'n le r , to a mul ll ·}'~&gt;ar contract .
WI NN IPE\. JETS-SIRJt.,.d John Ff&gt;rRU ·
ro n, ~ten€'ral manager, to a !our·)'('ar cc n-

trac t .

Plan tournament
RUTLAND - The Rutland
American Legion will be sponsorIng a Men's slow pitch softball tour-.
nament Sept . 18-19 a t the
Middleport park. Entry fee ts $ll5
plus two A.S.A. approved softballs.
Trophies will be sponsored for the
ftrst three places with Individual tshlrts going to the tOp two teams.
For fl!rtber liltormation call Dennis
. McKinney.at 742-2279 or Kenny Mlehael at 9!1'2-7442.
·

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· money market 1nterest rat~ for funds on deposit for a term as short
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At maturity, you can withdraw your funds or just the interest you've
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There is a substantiOI inr..,.t ponoi!Y ~ urty witttclilwol.

.

- .

I

-

VETO OVERRIDE COMPLETE - Sen. Mark
0. Hatfield, B-Ore., left, J101M!8 with Sen. WUllam
Proxmlre, D-Wis., after the Senate joined the House
In overriding President Reagan's veto of a SlUbUUon spending biD. Hatfield, chairman of the Sen ale

Appropriations Committee, said before the vole: "I
cannot support the president of the United States on
this veto." Proxmtre, the ranking Democrat on the
panel declared, "This Is not a budget-buster In any
way, shape or fore." (AP Laste.,hoto)

,'

.,
•

I

In the 1!m congressional campaigns against the Republicans
who voted to override the veto,
White House aides say.
"We're trying to elect good Republicans. They voted for us 99 poccent of the ttme," deputy White
House press secretary Larry
Speakes said Frtday.
Reagan was ln Hooger, Utah,
campaigning for conserl-a tlve Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch when the
Senate acted.
Hatch was not at the rain-soaked
picnic with Reagan because he had
returned to Washington to cast his
ballot on the spending btU.
"Orrin climbed on a plane· and

went back to Washington. His trip
proved fruitless. It would have required 31 votes (to sustain the
veto). We got just30," Reagan said.
Reagan flew back to Washington
tate Friday, and left tmnnedlately
forCrunpDavtd, Md., the presidential retreat where he wtll spend the
weekend. He planned to deliver his
weekly radio address to the na_tion
Saturday.
Ed Rolllns, the president's assistant for political affairs, said that
such defections would not be costly
to the candidates. For example, ·
Reagan will make an appearance
on behalf of Rep. Millicent Fenwick
next Friday In New Jersey. ·

pled territory and urged creation of
a Palestinian state. The United
Stall!s opposes a Palestinian slate
but has proposed self-government
of the Palestinians on the West
Bank of the Jordan River In association with Jordan.
· Meanwhile, as the last troops ·of
the mulitnatlonal peacekeeping
force prepared to leave west Belrut, a PLO leader said the Palestinian guerrlllas were regrouping ln
Lebanon to continue their war
against Israel.
Nayef Hawatmeh, leader of the
pro-Soviet Democratic Front for
the Liberation of Palestine, told a
news conference Friday that the
guerrillas were gathering In the
eastern Bekaa Valley and the north
"for an tnch-by-tnch war against Israel," the rightist Christian Voice
of Lebanon radio said.
He reportedly was at an unidentified refugee camp near the port of
Trlpoll, 50 mUes north of Beirut,
where he arrived from Syria on
Thursday.
Hawatmeh, whose guerrlllas
were evacuated from west Beirut
under the supervision of Amertcan,
French and Italian troopS, said the
Palestine Uberatlon Organization
would "continue Its operations
against Israel from Lebanon."
Another 2,&lt;ro fighters reportedly
remained In west Beirut under a
_$1!Cret pact

ARRIVE'! AT HEARING -- Secretary of State
George SchUltz chats wHh Senate Foreign Relations
Commlltee Chalrmari Charles Percy of DDnols, rlgbt,
and panel member Sen. John Glenn, 1}-()hlo, Friday

on CapltoiiWI prior to appearing as a witness before
the conunlltee. Schultz defended President Reagan's

Mideast peace plan In his testimony. (AP
Laserphoto ).

Celeste tells businessman Democrats aren't ~he enemy
Sunbelt.

being pro-busliless, and the Democratic Party Is perceived as being
antibusiness; that's something we
must do something about," sald
Dick Celeste lias promlaed to help that there Is no basis for the Idea Warner; a Cincinnati financier, lnOhio businesses ampete In wtrld that Democrats are the enemtes of dustrtaust and sportsman.
business,
.
Warner, who introduced Celeste,
markets by replacing the state's
He saki as governor he would · said business leaders should reject
• lobbyists Ill Wasb~Jwton, D.&lt;;:.
.. ~- ~ Frklay to the ''reach out to the buslnessCOIIllllWI- the "psyche that the Democratic
· .. Greeter ClnclnllaU
of • Ity'' toftt4buah a business councn Party represents everything but
.
.
_ Cmvnerc:e, called the slate's 'cur- - ''aneconomlcS.W AT. team"- business."
Celeste also urged lmplemellla:. rent group there "the J1IOBt lneftec- to advise state government.
"Those who survive In thele 1emt tlon ot a competency testing pnr .
• tlve alllll)' 1ndustrlal slate-"
gram In Qhlo ·schools, and
times wtll &amp;wish as we move
· "PIIttljc policy In Wublllgtoo Wts
. government encouragement forde• ·apt•L us," Celeste said, noting ahead," Celeste Said.
velopnient of hlgh-teclmology edu~ appearing WI\S Marvin
• tbat little 11JJ11eY II allocated fir re.ht"'ddn.r the decaying. lnduslrlal Warner, l'ouner l).S. ambe•e+r cation and Industry.
.
''Education .Is the comerstooe al
.. clleloltbe Nartbeut butlai'ge~ to Switzerland, .
"It's very Wifortunate that the a bealtby community and a vital
: IP'IDII are a.ted 11r water pro:, - ..lllllllthl!f dt!'\i!lop~li!il,l In tbe Republlcan PaJ;ty II perceived as . ecooomy Jn the year$ to come;' Ce-

By TERRY.KINNEY

•

Oregon, chalrmanoftheSenateAp.
proprtations Committee, two of 21
Republicans who bucked the
president.
They and others said ln unnntstakeable terms they did so because
the.bill was well within the budget
Congress set out for Itself In JW1e.
Otherwise, they say they are almost sure of enough votes to sustain any more possible vetoes.
"Any ttnne you lose anything It's
a serious setback," one Senate
GOP aide copceded Friday after
the Senate voted 00-30 to ovenide
Reagan's veto. "But I don't think
It's a lasting thing."
Reagan wtll not seek retribution

ery future veto on approprtatlons
bills th1s year."
Even Democratic aides In the
House conceded tt would not be
easy to override Reagan In the"fu.
ture. Their efforts last week, they
said, were helped considerably by
the tact that the vetoed bill actually
contained less money than Reagan
asked for.
So, too, In the Senate, where the
nonnal GOP core of support for
Reagan's economic program
melted away.
Prominent examples were Sen.
Pete Domenlcl of New Mexico,
chairman of the Budget Committee, and Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield of

SchulJz says peace won't
come, soon; PLO regroups

..li9

Frtday'N GIUilel'l

D

Septell'lber 12, 198t

By CIJFF HAAS
· ·' AMOCfeW Pre..Wrtter
· 'VASHINGTON (APJ -TheRepublicans wllo deserted President

vernment becomes hamstrung
when thousands of federal workers
are threatened with furloughs and
each party blames the other for the
predicament
All the while, elections will be
drawing nearer - elections In
which Reagan wtll be trying to turn
election-year session.
the
"big spenders" spotllght on the
But Republican leaders In both
Democrats
and Democrats will be
houses say the president'~ stinging
campaigning
against Reaganomdefeat on the $14.2 bUUon appropriIcs.
"The
politics
are going to be
ations measure at the lland5of sudvery
thick,"
said
Sen. WIIUam
denly rebeWous lawmakers does
Proxmlre,
D-Wts.
·,
• not necessartly mean he has lost his
abWty to get his way Jn Congress.
House Republican Whip Trent
- What It may forecast Instead Is Lott of Mississippi supported the
·-:either a series of bitter confronta- . president, contending, "I have ev!Ions - or one major one - as go- ery confidence we can sustain ev-

Srattko 5, Texas 2
Mln~!IOta 5. K.an.'l&amp;ll City 0
California G, Toronto 2
OtleaR09. OaklAnd J
SuBd"Y'' GafllfJ'
MllwaukN' AI NI"W York

Philadelphia

Section

GO.P insists on commitment

WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Taking
President Reagan at his word, Friday's dramatic veto struggle Jn the
House and Senate Is just the pre. tude to further confrontations when
Congress deba~ the remaining
money bills near the end of an

l~tnU\g~

........._._....

""-- te11ti11et

_Despite defeat, Reagan can still ·get way with Congress

Detroit 6. Boston 4
Mllwau1cf'lt' 5, Nt!w York 3

Clil~·ai(U 111

ational

•

IRONTON - Cincinnati McNl· with 40 yards on nine c~rrtes. ·
on a paJr of one yard runs. He C.H. past Athens, 3&lt;1-7.
. The Ironton offense rolled up 10
cholas was welcomed to Southeastkicked the Winning extra point.
Dan 'I'reYas was !he only bright
first downs, J.:15 yards on the
ern Ohio football Friday night at
Botll JHS scores followed the rec- spot for the Bulldogs as he carried
ground, and 86 passing · while overy of WHS fumbles, on the 21 · nine times for 81 yards, Including
Ironton where the Tigers walloped
McNick totaled 17 first downs, 116 and 40 yard strtpes.
the Rockets, 49-24.
the tone Bulldog touchdown on a
rushing, and 148 passing.
After the defendin g SEOAL
Jackson (inlshed with 18 ftrst four yatd run In the third quarter.
Score by quarters:
champs rolled up 22 points within a
downs, 196 yards I'IIBhtng, and .hit
Athens showed 12 ftrst downs, 129
tlve minute span In the third period, Cln McNick ........... 6 0 6 12-24 two of 12 passes for 30 yards,
yards on the ground, and hit eight of
Ironton ............... 7 20 22 0--499
Coach Bob Lutz Inserted hls
Wheelersburg netted nine first 20 passes for 22 yards while the
substitutes.
downs, 182 yards on the ground, and winners had 13 first downs, 252
The younger Tiger players alcompleted three of 10 aerials for 56 • rushing, and completed five of nine
yards,
lowed 12 points and over 100 yards
Jackson 13 'Burg 12
passes for 81 yards.
to the Rocket starters.
Ray Varcalle rushed 111yardson
WHEELERSBURG - Jackson
&amp;lore by quarters:
The llnal statistics show McNick puUed off a big upset Friday night
28 carries for Jackson•while Todd Athens ..... ...... ...... o o 7 o- 7
completing 14 of 22 passes for 148 as the Irorunen came from a 12-j)
Ruby led-the Pirates with 115 yards Wash. CH ............ 13 7 7 7-3&lt;1
In 12"trtes.
·
yards, but 10 of 15 and 109 yards dellctt to sllp past Wheelersburg,
were accomplished against the . 13-12.
&amp;lore by quarters:
Tiger subs long after the game had
Jackson ............... 0 0 7 S-13_
Jackson dominated the contest
Waverly II l&gt;o1111mouib 6
been decided.
Wheelersburg .:..... 6 0 6 o-12
with 71 offensive plays to 41 for the
WAVERLY - ·The ro,nblnatlon
Junior Mike Smith returned one Pirates and did not permit the
of Tommy Thompson to Rusty Coppunt 73 yarcls for a touchdown, home team beyond Its own 30 the
ley accounted for both touchdowns
added a 99 yard kickoff return, and entire first half, except for Todd
Washlnpon CH Sf
Friday night as the Waverly Tlgen
led the Tigers ln rushing with 62 Ruby's 84 yard touchdown run ln
Albea87
upset the Portsmouth Trojans, 14.6.
yards on just six carries.
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE
The tjgl!rs, now 2-j), saw.Thomp.
the ftrst quarter.
McNlck's quarterback, Kerry
son hit Conley with a 15 yard strike
After Eddie Miller's third quar- - Todd Thomas and Jeff Shaw
Byrne, tossed for a pair of touch- ter TD gave the Pirates a 12-0 lead. each scored a pair of touchdowns
and later with a 19 yarder and then
downs and led the team ln rushing the Ironmen turned AI Collins loose Frtday night In leading Washington
play solid defense for three

leste said. "If we're notable to work
s~r ... we will be ln a period of
permanent decline."
In other poUtlcal news Friday:
-celeste Issued statement crttlctzlng his RepubUcan opponent,
Rep. Clarence J . Brown, for being
absent from the U.S. House when It
voted to o\oertde a presidential veto.
He sald Brown miSsed the roll
call Thursday on the override of an
Important supplemental appropriations bill. Celesfl! said ·the vote
would restore, pending Senate approval, a federal program which
emplOys 3,1XX) low-InCome senior cltlzefts In Ohio, along with other prOgrams which assist handicapped
and disadvantaged children.
Later Friday, Brown'scampalgn

............. ..._Writer
Celeste, 44, a former Ohio UeUtenCINCINNATI (AP) - Demo- . ant go\rernor from Cleveland, was
cratic gubernatorial candidate trying to persuade bus!nessmen

a

a.mber

~

.

' ~-

headquarters Issued a statement ln
which he defended his voting
record.
The congressman said his own
overall VC?tlng attendan~ Jn Con'
gress has been 86 percent - "the
same as the average for all of the
House of Representatives during
the 16;year period."
Brown conceded that his attendance dropped this year, but asserted that he had "an obllgatlon to
prelient my record and views to the
people it Ohio as a candidate for

governor.''
· -Phyllis Goetz. Libertarian candidate for governor, called for
Brown's resignation from .COngress, saying he Is campaigning
full time and neglectJng his dulles

I

fl.

-

-----..-----

as a congi-essman.
"The Tax Foundation, a Washington, D.C., group devoted to
lowering taxes, has calculated that
each representative cost us$846,&lt;ro
a year," Ms. GoelZ said In a statement. " It will cost taxpayer$
$225,&lt;ro to keep Clarence Brown In
otflce for the three months he wt11
have spent campaigning full tlnne
In the governor's race."
-Republican attorney general
candidate Charles Saxbe said there
shOUld be a substantial revamping
of the office to provide for more use
of computers and fewer outside private attorneys.
''The staff and the salaries 11
commands are both bloated and
need to be slashed," Saxbe said.

�w. Va .

berl

.

~I

J- '

4

'

...

Giveaway

2 female hatf doj&gt;erman, ' Garage Sale Sept. 1~ and 15
half shepherd puppies. 61~- . on Georges Cree~ Rd. 2 112
99H458.
:!'lie from Rt. 7. Res. of
.. ecky Lane.

'1

6 puppies-medlu"J. sized
dogs. 6 u -,.9·2.cr.l.

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

51X puppie_J. parT Cocker
Spaniel a, pert Collie, 304·
675 -321 : 1
Puppie! • half Gorman
short hair and half Collie.
304-773 -5403 after s p.m .
One Beagle puppy. 304·675·
5164
- - - - -·r- ·-- - - - - - '

6 .. - i oslancfFound -

-------- - -

.

LOST 6 mos. old black
Doberman in the vicinity ·of
BidwelL Call6 14-388·8155 or

4~ · 6610 .

--------

--~

Lost : Red Dachshund. 3
years old, male. La st seen
Thursday, corner Grass
Run &amp; Seec h Grove Rd .
RewardS 100. 61•-7•2·2548.
J-OST : Irish Seller, 2 year
old neuter ed male. Pet, not
hunter. Melvin Cross 742·
3176.

- . ------------

Ul81NG STREAK OVER- A Jubilant Southern
lockerroom Is sjlown In this ScoU Wolfe photo lollowlng Friday's M-~ vidor)' over Federal Hockln~r. The

Found-Puppy -half Collie .
Found at the lop of Beech
Gr ove Cemeiery . 614-992·
3546 .

win snapped a losing streak dating back to early lS'79.

Soutbem now 1-1, goes to Wahama Friday.

Losi·Biack Border Collie ,
stub ta i L M cKenzie Ridge
area. Call 614·949·2009 .
$5.00 reward .

Cleveland at Seattle for 1982 grid opener
SEATI'LE

scored the winning polnta ID Friday nlgbt'a 1$-13 vJc.
tory over Coal Grove. - Kel&amp;b W1laoa pbotoL

SCORE&gt; WINNING POINI'S - GaiUpoiiA' 165pound senior tailback, Keouy Rwllell, (with baD)

Alter a

(AP) -

•

tenslon·fllled week following therelease of Seattle player representa·
live Sam McCullum, the Seahawks
will launch their National Football
League regular season schedule
against the Cleveland Browns In
the
Sunday.

The Seahawks' players met Frl·
day night and decided to play the

game, adhering to an NFL Players
Association appeal not to stage a
strike.
McCullwn, a nine-year NFL
veter an who was the Seahawks'
MVP In 1Jl8l, was cut Thesday and

that triggered tempers and speculation that Seattle's players would
strike Sunday's game.
•
The NFL Players Association
and the NFL's
CouncU currently are locked In a bitter
struggle over a new contract. The
old pact .expired
15.

FOUND · small
lemale
Poodle with one blind eye .
Phone 304·67B•16 after
3:30.

Management

Yo ung brown puppy lound
near 22nd St . 304·675· 2104.
Diamond necklace In Point
Pleasant area Thur$day .
Reward . Phone304·675·1960
after 5PM.

Bengals host Oilers in NFL opener today
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Clnclnnatl Bengals aren'tfoollng any body wlth their 1-3 preseason record.
says Houston Oiler Coach Ed BUes.
He considers the defending Amerlcan Football Conference champions " the class of the Central
Divlslon" and the odds-on favorite
over Injury-wracked Houston In
their National Football League op-

y·;; rd sale_ __ . - --·-·- -- - - -

7 - - -- -

Yard Sale 501 Jackson
Pike. Friday and Saturday .
Ke ywindcl~ck. m isc.

backup people an awful lot or time
to play.
"When their regulars played together, they were a devastating
football team. U:lok at the scores of
thequarterswhentheyplayedtheir
good people and you'll get an lndication or the kind or football team
they are."

ener Sunday.
The 1 p.m . EDI' game will be tel-

evlsed by NBC.
"The thing about Cincinnati ...
they were able, because or the posltlon theywereln, tousethepreseason lor exactly what It Is," Biles
said. ''They didn' t play their reguIars very much; they gave their

'"

Moving Sale 1 day only .
Sun. 10 unlil dark . Lots of
misc . ' 446
1st.
Ave .
Ga llipolis.
Yard Sale 1 mi. out
Georges Creek Rd . from
Rt: 7, Sept . 14ih. Winter
clOthing and more, 9AM to
SPM,

1 _ _.;__ _;__.:....::__;_;;.:.._ _:;__ _ _ _ _ _ __..~

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of any price cuts which may applyl ·

THANKS
1 sincerely thank my
many
friends
and
neighbors for coming to
help •celebrate my 95th
blrihday with their love,
cards, flowers, gifts and
tetetlhone calls. Thanks
to mv good neighbor, ·
Mr . 'red Perry and my
dear
daughter,
Elizabeth, 'who planned
this great surprl" .
May GOd Bloss All.
MAUDE NIDAY

l.:X:::.•'&lt;•.. ~J
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An established growing publish!r
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RADIO SHACK STORE,
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'fAKES OFF- NorthGallla's
quprterback Scott Plckell!llooks
for running room against VInton
Coimty Friday night. The PIraCes captured tbelr second
st.,Ught

A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPOR~TtON

•1812 Tinily Corp.

PRICES MAY VARY AT tNDIV19UAL STORES AND DEALERS

(AP) -

1htto posltioos •• con..U,
milotllo In oor ~ Office,
tout, will be ......., ia IIIII

El074t

rout Indians

2-speed 6-cycle
5-temp. washer

Mike

Flllll3gan scattered nine singles for
his ~lxth straight win and Eddie
Munay drove in three runs to pace
a 14ohlt attack as the BaltlmoreOrtole!f routed the Cleveland Indians

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::y

Moving Sale. Furniture,
clothing, household items .
12 · 13 · 1~ . 9-3. Rl. !24 iust in·
side Rutland Corp. limits.
Yard Sale. F ri. &amp; Sal.,
Sept. 17 &amp; 18 . Rain or shine .
Bill Robinson's, Alfred, Qh .
Patio Sale-Sept. 13 -14. Corner of College and Locust in
Rutland . 614·H2·2233.
FRIDAY &amp; Saturday, 9·3,
2~02
MI . Vernon , Pt.
Pleasant, 19 11 co lor TV,
bicycles. drapes &amp; boys
clothing.

8- - - Publ i c""Sate - --- ~ Auction _ _ _
Rick
Pearson,
Ex ·
perienced AUCTIONEER .
Estates. antiques, farm .
household. Licensed Ohio ·
WV. Buying antiques. 304773·5785. 773·9185.
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conslgments of new and
used merchandise always
wel c o·me .
R i chard
Reynolds Auctioneer. 275 -

3069.
m - ---- - ·- -- -- - --Auction, Farm Machines,
Industrial
equipm ent ,
truck and trailers of all
sizes, Saturday September
18th, 10 AM. M cCully Trac ior SVALES . Phone 304·
273-2611 . Sale Yard at San ·
dyville, W.Va . 30073-3700.
9_ ~ ~.!'!!.~.I~~ uy ~ .
WANTED TO BUY Old fu r·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,

Buying
Gold,
Silver ,
Platinum , old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. D aily
quotes available . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale. Spring Valley Trading
Co .. Spring Valley Plaza,
.W.-8025 or •~· 6026 .
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
446·0069

OLD FURNITURE , beds,
iron, brass. or wood . Kit ·
chen cubbards ol all types.
Tables, round or squ are .
Wood ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
complete household . Gold.
silver. old money , pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
etc. Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buy ing baseball
cards . Osby Martin 992 ·
6370.

~

.. : :: :.·.: .. : :. :

l,_,t_~_,H,e:.:Jip,_W
=•:::n.:::
led
=--­

WILL do body work &amp; odd
jobs . For free estimate cal l
---r-~1 Jeff's Body Shop . 30H75·
2995
days ,
675 -2207
evenings.

Invest i n the future, ·Invest
In yourself. Pinewood tn•
come expansion. For Information ca ll Jim , 4&gt;16·

CH ILD care in my home,
full or part time, behind
school, 304·675 2784 .

1343.
FULL - TIME
EM ·
PLOYMENT in your own

~

Workeraswith Home
Buckeye
Com·
Service
home
munity Services. Provide a
home. tr l endshlp. and
guidance for a 33-year old
man with mental retardation and earn a salary,
p lus benefits and room and
board rates . No degree
reqtJired. We will train you
to help another person
grow and develop. For lurther information contact
Marie Hobbs at 379-2639
between H :OOPM . Equal
Opporluniiy Employer.
Attention
Rock
Ban s
audition now being given
for 7 couniy battle ol the
bands, SSOO cash prise,
mvst be demo record Ing.
Call lor appointment , 614 286·7068 .
Wanted R N medical coor·
dinator programmer for
pr ivate corporation . new
adults
g roup
hom es .
Responsibl e for supervision and contractual ser ·
v ies, team approach. Con·
tact Ohio Bureau ol Em·
p loyment Services, 45 Olive
St .. Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
Baby sitting in my home
Mon.- Fri. Call 614·388 -8101.
leave name &amp; number .
Attention
RN'S· Pomeroy
H.C.C. now has opening for
full and part l ime RN l or 3
to 11 and 11 to 7 shi fts.
Upgraded sa lary and shill
differential. Contact Nancy
VanMeter director of Nur·
si ng. 61•·992·6606 .
AVON. Need extra money?
Set your own hour s. Sell
Avon . (Must be 18 or over).
Call
now 614 ·698·7111
coll ec t .
Electronic Tech. fo r TV
re pair . Experienced only .
Part or possibly full tim e.
614·99H259 .
WAITRE SS, maids , bartenders &amp; clerk s wanted .
Write qualif icat ion &amp; phone
number to : Job Place m ent.
P.O. Bo• 102, Henderson,
wv 25106.
WANTED : Musici ans &amp;
vocalists t o form SO's &amp; 60's
plu s non rock group, 304·

675-5370.

IIH--101'$I&gt; _
I f ' _ l oo\."•
u~.,.,.,,..~­

Housework
~~~~~~~~~=~~;~~~~=~=~ 1237
.
.-~--H-elp Wanted

18

JU ST graduated &amp; unsure
about your f utu re? The
west
Virg inia
Army
National Guard tan help
you decide. We are looking
for high schOOl seniors &amp;
graduates to train in com ·
mu.nicatlons ,
ad ·
ministration , supply ,
mechanics, &amp; many other
f ields. If you qualify you
may be eligible for an
enl istment bo nus and
c ollege
or
Vo · Tech
assi stance. Be one of West
Virginias best. For more
information. ca l l 304·675·
3950 or loll free 1·800·642·
3619.

Lawn M ow ing no yard to
big or small . Reliable and
dependable . For estima t e
call 446·3159 alter 6PM 256·
1967.

Situations Wanted -

12

--- - -

----~-

--~

Need a r ide to and from Rio
Gra nde College from down·
town area . Will help with
gas. Call4~ · 2629 .

&amp;;e~~v~l.

Tr ee tri mming61H4n129 or 614W1-6041.

---·-- - -· -

------

1s

-

Child Care in my
week da ys
until
Across from V inton
school. Reference .
Didd le. 614-388-8832

--·- --·-- --

--

Karate the ultima te in self
defence all private lessons,
M en. women, &amp; chil dr en.
Instru cti on tnru black belt.
Also avai l ab l e Karat e
uni forms puching and
kicking bags, and protect i ve equipment . Jerry
L owe r y &amp;
As sociates
Burlington Rd .• J ackson.
Karat e St udio,
14 3
Oh . Call6 14 286 3074.

home
SPM ,
gradq
V icke

House Painting &amp; all types
of construction work . Call
446·7283.

TEACHING ASSI STANT ,
preschool program at New
Haven, must have ca r and
W.Va. Driving license. Apply bv Sept. 14Th . Child and
Family
Developm e nt
program, Southwestern
Community Council. 540
5th Ave. Huntington , WV
25701 . 30025·5151.

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Elpert' Insured

Worlmen

BOB CAMPBELL

PH. 949·2460
9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
M011. thru Sat.

LAST CHANCE, House of
Lloyd, needs f ive demon·
strators to show our line of
toys-gifts.
Our demonstrators earn about $5 .00 an
hour , paid weekly. Our k it
is on loan. no investment,
collecting or deli v ery . Call
Me Collect. 614-992· 7046 .

home compa ny , We hav e a
few protedted areas (coun ·
ti es) open for dea lers. If
you have been wanting to
be involved in log haines
and can sell, do yours elf a
favor and ca ll or write me
for an appointment. Mr .
James Brown, Exec . V.P.
ol
Sa l es.
B ox
488 .
Ston eboro,
Pa . 16153 .
Phone 412-376·3076

t;=======::;;::;;±:=========;-1
PUBLIC AUCTION

SAT., SEPT. 18, 1982-10:00 A.M.
Located at the late George Melnhait property . 94
Hudson St., Middl,port, Ohio.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Child's wicker rocker, stands, rockers, highback
bed, chifferobe, dresser s, hall tree, tin box, baby
dresser set &amp; clothes. green glass tea set still in box .
Japan kni ck ·knack s, lots of dishes, wood chest, H .S.
Roush &amp; Co. and more.
"HOUSEHOLD"
4 pc. bedroom sui te, gas stove &amp; refr igerator, tabl e
&amp;. 4 chairs , lot s of l inens, living room suite. piano
bench, glass top coff ee table, electric sew i ng
machine, m irror, desk from court house, couch,
chairs, end tabl e, lamps, pots. pans. dishes, metal
cabinet &amp; trunk, t ypewri ter sta nd , T .V., fan, add ing
machine, 78 RPM records, bab y bed and much

~~~~======:±=========~
FRIDAY, SEPT. 17, 1982
10:00 A.M.
Loca tion 20 N. 2nd, Middleport, Ohio. Osby is out of
town so we are going to clean out his store.
" ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITE MS "
Ruby punch bowl &amp; 12 cups; High back bed, 1906 Vic ·
troia, Empire couch, wicker baby bug gy, oil lamp.
green, pink, blue glass it ems, walnut bed, Queen
Ann dresser, bottom of roll top desk, high m i rror
buffet, Duncan Fife table &amp; 5 chairs, wicker
stroll er, six 117 air back chairs, dresser s, 1959 ca len·
dar plate, strai ght razor, ink well , rocker s, school
desk, tin items. ca mpa ign buttons , Baker ca binet,
pulpi t cha irs from Hiland Church, and lots more.
" MISC . JEWELRY "
10 &amp; 14 Kt. gold r ings, gold charns, sterling silver
r ings, Easter n Star pin, baby ring , di me brae let .

"~~-·..--­
'''...,_ .......,....,
,, .........."····""~

OJIMI!o le~ t .. ~''" '

1 6 1 -. IW I CI I..,...,
1/ M •WPII-'

:f :::;.......-;;:.,

otH.,._18fl"'t

..... ,,.....................
_... ..... . ..
Oli·Ot"'" ........

'
Ractnf! S. :W. Federal Hocking :.Yl
Ravenna 10, AkrOfl N. 1
Reynokbbuf"R :10, COL Hartlt&gt;y 5
~ Dale SE 14. Pa~ SW 7
~ ~. Rlwr VIew 0

:

$174

49

fl'f:,

$26499

W"llh 10' Discauoll'231.99

W"llh 10!1. Discolftt'l57.99

Silerwood FairviE&gt;w 17. Ayersvtlk&gt; 12
SiJney n. BeUefontaire o
T•Lawanda n. Ross 14
Tlnon 7, Holgatt 14

Tol. Macomber J5, Tol. Walle 8
'l'ol. Start 13, Col. Marion-Franklin 0

Oty 11

"",.,. 1

W-:JI,Om1lle0
Watwna, W. Va. .S. I&lt;Yier C'reelc: 0
w~ 3t. van Wert 2
Wam!n ~ 21. Ywna. £ut 6

».

Wanen LociJ
c.:kt.wn 6
'tfilbllll(ln C. H. 31, AthenS 7
1/1.I
- ' - s.1!,:11,lAn&lt;\01! 1_ ,
I

....-u 10, L&lt;lpll7

-n.--Col,-··
-6
""""' Ill " " - 16
Ul &lt;MIIIle 14
- i l.Tr1woy21

l'"-·lhwlilliie !14. Loroln s...- 0

tlooo......., 21, MI:Dennou NW 14

E9t721

Whole·Mal
. microWave oven'

E6191t

fm, S39849

111110!1 .........

.Rehlgerator..free._.,
with lcl'••ller

~

$6669!,..

. -----

.mm.___ . ._____ . . . ,...
Elich GI,IMIUChUi II

IVIIIM;IIel'or ute •

~

---

... """""'within •1ow..,.
1

..........all)'
8lhU IIWd.

ISearsl .is'-;'
SIIUIS.IIOIIUCIC N11D CO.

,

I ) ........ '"""'

Ill·""~
'
..
~., &amp; &lt;; roon

..... ....... .......-......

.

"''-•• ..... ,,

-.. -·-_,

a.MH·-"

1111 """"""'"""''""'
11\1_1.... ,

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

======±''

· /·~ NTIQUE STEAM-GAS
Et:NGt•NiE•, !I TRACTOR
SHOW Sept i7, 18, 19, 1982.
Frasier
Botton WVa.
EngineS operating, Flee
Dear Friends· Thanks for Markets, music, molassess
youe help, cards, flowers, making.
visits, food and most of att
your prayers during my
hospital stay . Roy M .
Golf
L essons .
John
Wiseman .
•
Tealord. Chester, Ohio.
' " --. ···.·· - -- ·
-·
( =- - ~~~e~.:ra-m
Finatty Gpening -Capco.
In memory of Adrienne Antiques. ' collectables,
Hubbard who passed away used furniture . &amp; ap·
sept. 11, 198'1. Sadly missed pliances. Something for
by Carl, Mlld_red and' everyone. 9:3Q a . m .- ~ : 30
family. '
p.m. Mon ., Wed., Frr:
Oth~r
1i mes 'by appointmenf, Buy-Sett-Trade.
:L ==Ann~ncemen~
527 F ifth St., Ivan Powett
. SWEEPER · and sewing Res., Raci,ne. Oh. 614-9~;;nachlne repair, parts, and 2455.
.
SUPPIIH.
Pick up and
--.....:.
--~··
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up Fall beginners Karate
Georges Creek Rd. Call Classes. sept. 9 &amp; 14. 6 p.m .
at the Carleton School gym
~0294..
In Syracuse. 61~ · 992 ·5421 or ·

- .....

.. .

-=

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

·- --

Balloons lor Birthdays. Gel
Welts,
Anniversaries,
SWftlltearts or Partres.
Call Bait- and Co., ~
4313.

-

61~-992-5896.

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

No hUntlnQ or trespassing
m~ property . Har~ll
Curp. Ball Run Rd.
'

on

FALL CLEARANCE
SALE

II l mpt"l.,..,...ll
i11PI_Io ... ·~U lo&lt;O.,.I ...

II f ...... , . . _ ,

_, ,

__ _

'01- V~ 7, Maysville 6

Tltmbk&gt; 12. Danvllil&gt; 6
Union Local 7, Shen&amp;n:kJah 0
. Upper Art~ 42. Col. Walnul IUdfle 7
Upper Sandull(y 14 , Mans. Malabar 6
Urt».na 68. Granam 1

Mono ••• '"'",.._"

:;;:~~~or.::.-

uotot•-r.

Onoll•'

_,.,

U,IDI!WWft

Tllr ..... l

-IIIII

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

.. I .... _ I I I I ' I MII
, ... l .....

vai:

wlth21peeds

''" '""'"'"""
lf Awtoll"""
,. c............ t..,.,.....,

Jo ll,........., .... ,. .......

1~$1-lmtr"'"IIOO

•-lng machine

)I

SUNDAY. SEPT. 19th AT 11:00 A.M.

Jul""""-

........

...

••
•• •

DeHght thai little Boy or
3 lemale kittens 10 wks,
Girl this Chirslmas with
old. ••Ira fuzzy, 2 att black ,
theq! very own Broomstick . 1 'while paws . .Call 6,1~·367Horse. Made of .calico or
0482. -J
denim . Place " yooir order
now in time for Chr'istmas.
2 Beagl e pups about 3 mos:
Catt .W.-9&gt;165.

. --

--- -- .. --.., -·'· PERMANENT

~

•

old, ·1 mate and 1 female~ :
Ca/1446·430.-. , . ·~ ·"
. ~ ...

Prof!!~i~~=E~?~~~Iysis Dn~ sri,~ II 'do~: .Wil r tr~de

I

l

cu. in..•..............•. .'.. $309.95

. -- -

- -; -

----:---

To give to a good horne one
black puppy ml.ed breed,
aboUt 9 wks. old. Will be
small ·ctog. Call 61H56·

165A.

)

..

----,-- ·- -·--

-·--·- ·-----··-- .
•

~ --

6 wk ·old 'kinons. Call -446..,.n_
7- --·- -· ~~-. ... ...
.

eo.. 430 Dst.
llf 10 Ill
~F 20 loorleo, 950 hn.
.
Olitorl%50 loorleoiW/IIIrll
CA Allis Cllolmlf1W/ -

:

r.id blcllooe, -

UsN lrutlo Hots 4, 5, 6 fl

Moiher cal &amp; • kitten,/ ••

Sf'ECIAL PRICES
tutinl\\-4-5-6-7 ft.
Disc. Widos, P.H. dlatn

4129.

Disc. ....... hi! .....

~
~ ... ..... ·~ :
1

NEW EQUIP.

~ ~~=.P!~~;~i~=~~: ~~~-a~c~l~-~ ~~~· ~~~:.~~ 1
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
cotumn. T-here 'w ill be no
charge to the advertiser.

2-U Foods
!-For&amp;. 20

::!

Cenl~r. A .M .A. approved,,- for a small pup. Catt ~Doctor reterats, by 1 appointment only. · 304·675·
623.4.

:-

JD-LA wl cufti·lD 10
w/mounted picker
INI-1066 Dst., 574
F1rmaiiM, 2-A'swt culti.
5IOC hoo, loodol
Cub wl noowto, pltw, di&lt;c

Good watch dog Shepherd .
and Cottle. very smart,
need good home in country.
Caii61H88·8500.
I!
·· -- · --- .. - - ~ · .. ·- .. '
Electric range. Oven needs
repaii"e!l: 614-992·3955. '
't . . - .

...,. _____ , __ _, ...

Full blooded German
Shepherd. Appro•. 3 ~rs.
old. Been spi&lt;Md. GOOd
with children .614-~ -3577 ,

•
:
•

:
•
~
•..;,
:
•
:
w

-- . ·--- --- ·1'- ,. . ... :
Fre, kittens-1 whlte-1 • ·
black, Appro•. 6 wks. old. :
614-992·5818 .
-

-

brll blldes, Jlld IIUs
l ..d21GWCvti-

-RK-1ooS. 9,s0o BTU/HR ...... :~.:: .. ~..
~MQ.VM.I.E TANK
S
RK,220, ll,IIUO BTU/HR ................ 206.95 ·
.

tt!MO\'DJ:ET~IS

RI-SOOC. 15,500 BTUt nR
GRA

, .THE •
~-y

SYSI&amp;IA

S1S9.95
$186.95

. "

11ow 11a1..,~ a..,.. no

lotowt:ool
.... will 10147. 2t""'

$75
- . . . , -llrlck WroH

JIM'S FARM ·
EQUIPMENT
. CENTER
,.

'

MANNING ROUSH-OWNER

204 Condor St.

WifiiiiS5,61Doo

0...

PH..112-2871

..

Por.U.uy, •

Rt. 35 West
Gallipolis, Ohio .
Phone 4U·t777
446·3592
)

... " .
• :

: ~

• •
"" :
~ •
•

1979 Sec tion al house, Buck ' :
stove, fully ca rpeted , total ; ~
elec .• 1.400 sq. fl . living -:
space . Moved f rom m y lot .. ......
528,000. 61067-0478 or 614· : •
36J.7534.

·- --· -··

ESTATE AUCTION
(Athens Co. No. 329711
SAT., SEPT. 18r12:00 NOON
STEWART, OHIO
Take Rt. 7 NE ol Gallipolis until you come io St . Rl.
144 &lt;iust past Coolville), turn left &amp; stay on this
route until you come to sale . Personal property of
the late D. w. " Babe" Sams.
M achinery , Tools, Truck / Car &amp; Misc. Farm Items :
Includes a 165 MF Diesel trac tor w / only 1.519
hours ; 1965 1nt . 112 ton truck w / stock ra cks w/~,000
mil es: 1973 4 door Chev. Bel Aire w/40,000
miles J3- 14" AC 3 pi. pickup plows: 4' spring tooth
har row ; 2 whee l trailer ; 2 elevated 150 gal . storage
tanks ; doors ; 'lots han d t oo ls. ca rpenter tools &amp;
farm items.
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLES : Several pi eces old
furniture which needs restored ; 2 pc . walnut break·
front cupboard w/ gtass top doors; 60" round oak
pedestal base table w / 2 l eaves; sofa bed &amp; mat·
ching chai r wlmass ive oak arms ; Seller s kitchen
cabi net ; rockers ; old furniture parts ; 2 single bo&gt;&lt;
oak wall telephones ( 1 needs pts.); dinner bell; 30
gal. iron ket tle w t stand; extra nice side saddle;
potato grader ; sausage gr inder on bench w / motor ;
lard pr ess w / sausage stuff er ; stone jars; 2 pr .
steelya rds ( 1 weighs up to 1,500 lbs.) ; spring scales;
fodder chopper; plow ; Model A wheels ; quil t ing
frames ; m any other old items &amp; a few pieces Of
household goods .
No viewing until Sale Oay. Terms : Cash or good
check w/ 1.0 . Eats by Fire Dept .
CLARENCE&amp;FLOYDSAMS
Co-Exec . of the Estate of 0 . W. Sams , dec .
C. E . SHERIDAN. AUCT.
Ph .: 614·448·4263, Am esville , Oh .

OWN E"R- JOHN MAYER
Cash
Positive 1. 0 .
Eats
Dan Smith
Jim Carnahan
949-2033
949 -2708
' ' Not res~onsible for acci dents or loss of property .''

JACKSON,.. OHIO

1\ a-•~ ·
1111 Auto ,.,~ I.

- ----- --

mnrP

ANTIQUE AUCTION

RCS REALTORS

An (qwll Oppor1untf} (mploye! Mt f 1

nII ¥~"'
'"'""I '"'h"'
0 .. 0

House and 10 acres of land.
Sa l e or rent . Newley
remOdeled. 2 room s and
bath up, 4 rooms and bath
down. New gas furnace and
gas hot water heater .
Locat ed Mulberry Hgts .,
Pomeroy . 614·992·2508 or
call co llect, Columbus, 444·
8601 .

g r owing Pennsylvania tog

" MONEY"

$$$

•

TUSSE~~~~~~~~I NLOG h;:=:=::::::::::::::±:::::::::::::::::=;

Si lver dollars, Indi an head penn ies, silver dimes,
and other monev .
OWNER - OSBY MARTIN
Can Smith
J im Ca rn ,a han
949· 2033
949-2708
Cash
Positive I. D .
" Not r espon sible for accidents or loss or property .''

Cal 1-693-6671 or 992-6312

~ONtllll

-~

~~-~ ... tOt\.ol&lt;

w.. .- . .

......... c..
r.o. .. Yl

OPPORTUNITY

..
•

Attra c tive 2 bedroom
home, located in ci t y .
Reasonably pr iced. Shown
by appo intmeni. Call 4&gt;16 ·
6337 .

BusineSS ·

PUBLIC AUCTION
Syracuse - Racine
RESIDENTS
New Sewer Hookups
Being Scheduled

Homes for Sa l e

3 Bedrm .. 'h
acre ,
basemenf. ci ty schools,
cotJnty water, 10 m in . to
Ga llipolis.
116· 734 -3734
Eveni ngs .

Phone 304·675

' '

Will trade my equiiy In a 4
unit apt. bldg .. for a trailer
&amp; loi or a hovse &amp; lot.
Balance ca n be paid by
land contract. Call for
deta i l s 4&gt;16·3937.

-~-------

M other woul d l ik e to 22 ___~o!'e.¥ !!J_L ~a!'
babysi t in her home. Ex· HOME LOAN S 14% fi xed
per ienced, country setting . rate. L eader Mortgage, 1
Ca l l 446-8264 .
800·341fi554 .

---- -· -· -

Schools Instruction
~--

-

-

Real Estate

HOM ES Inc . We are a fa st
Trash collection &amp; hau ling.
l?:all446·4480 .

-~-

SANDY AND BEAVER In ·
surance Co. has offered
serv ices for f ire insurance
cover age in Ga ll ia Cou nty
for alm ost a centu ry .
Farm, home and personal
proper ty coverages are
available to m ee t in ·
dividual needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, agen t. Phone
379-2204.

11

In ground concrete pool on
2 acre lot. Also has a 3 bdr.
t~ir conditioned house with
full basement, 2 WB
fireplaces, new carpet .
Would consld'r lower
valued property on trade or
will fi nance w ith low down
paymeni and 10% lnleresl.
Located 123 Garfield Ave .
Ca ll446· 1546.

PIANO
lU NIN G
&amp;
REPAIR Call Bill Ward lor
a ppo i ntm ent ,
Ward's
Keyboa rd. •~· 4372.

31

Home510r Sale

31

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all types ol businesses.
Carol Neal
4&gt;16-3862

F 1nanc1a1

Wanted to Oo

Insurance

13

""""'
LAc••lloiiNIE\141D"'ont...,

n•--~

·gh school scores

PUIUSIIIIIG

$$$

2] '""- - - Protessiiinalserv lces

Wil l do house clea ning of
any kind . Phone 304·675·
AAI~PE, II§IH 2028 .

Is what this 149 acre 1\utland fann offers. Anxious seller has priced accordingly. Includes: rural home. bam, garage, minerals, and much,
much more. 1'1 you have interest in a good
country 'fann oi minerals, don't pau up your
opportunity.

1300 lllnl Cl. . lh.

---

..-

\ I H . .- ( ; _ , . ,
1J ( I , l ¥ . . . ... f!..,,,._.o1
IJ ...... _
1 111101&lt;11"'1~

...-lo•..c •. . e-·

Power-Mate~&gt;

"'"•••r•

... Mo ..

• l'uf&gt;l '( ~ ....

Kenmore I O.stltch

~, ...,.,__.,

.,._,.,l.o..

, ..... s.. ......................,

. ,....., , .. oo

-!I.

li iiN-\()pplitlltnh

n _,rtLMrl

, ...........:........h

!osS.

EICinont

....... ~~~~~

-=.-·~.:::.:

LRry

liofldfrlt ..

P......ol~t
CHULES E. MERRilL

•

'I

-: G?F -

rn

Oltlo.

~·Son~ ...... "'

12f0.91

Flanagan, 14-10, allowed only
foW: hits over the f lnal6 1-Jinnlngs
as the Orioles won for the 19th time
iheir last Zl games. The iett.
hani:ler recorded his lOth complete
game of the season.
Sorensen, 11-12, took the

aor -

Ia

Jiuto,.itto,

8-1 Saturday.

Utica 14, HeeUI 7
V~••lollo l&gt;lller ro, v~ 7, Sandullo&gt;

Babysitting in my home .
Call4~ · 0390 .

our science series.
i

CLEVELAND

Would l ike to do house
cleaning $4.00 per hr. Cal l
614-367-0396.

manuscript coordination within

win, 20-6.

O~oles

Carport sa le Thurs. and
Friday . Sept. 9· 10. 10 to 4
p.m . 531 S. 2nd. Middleport.
Oh . Rain or shine.

wanted to Do

DOZER WORK
land
c learing, special farm
rates . Call61079·234!l .

4

PlanTs &amp;
Family 10 to ?
Sept. 17, 18, 19. Over 100
plants, wood cook stove,
neiN handmade qu ill s,
bicycle motorcycle and
parts. Lots of m isc. Janice
Sheets. Take 325 thur Rio
Grande, turn r ight at Vel.
clinic go 1 mile turn right .
lsi gravel road, lsi house
on l eft. Signs posted.

Sclince

&amp;Arge capacity
Kenmore~&gt; pair

18

--·- ---- ------

Gold, silver. sterling,
- = = = = = = = = = : ; i jewelry, ring s, old coins &amp;
rcurrency. Ed Burkett BarIHINIIIIG Of
ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
UAVING matiNG!
3476.

lj;.

wanltd To Buy

~ Family Yard Sale Monday only, Sept. 13 on
Shoestring R ldge. Clothes,
afghans, lots of household
i.! .e!!'!:_____ ----'--- _ .

-=========:;I.W.-3159 or 256·1967 in the
r
evenings.

39995~

E~ glu&gt;flpe1t4 Viaeowtt

.....

'

Times·Senlinei-P

I Ml LE EAST OF ROUTE 788
Two oak curved glass china, ( 1 oldl. ( 1 new) ; m ar ble top wash stand ; 3- 4 d r awer oak filing cabi nets ;
5 drawer mapl e chest on c hest ; Birdeye mapl e slan t
lront desk; 6 oak chairs; 2 square oak table : oak kit·
chen ca binet sla g glass doors; 1 oak highboy chest;
2 mahogany chest of drawers ; 1 wa l nut chest claw &amp;
ball organ stool ; roiHop maple desk; walnut tabl e;
old tool bo&gt;&lt;; cedar blank et ches t; old spindel
back lift top bench ; 2 oak slant front desks; ni ce side
board base ; wi cke r se wing basket ; I sffiall hotel
trunk; 3 stack oak bookcase: walnut spi ndle bed;
oak seve/ dresser; old baby buggy (nice); oak side
board ; mantel clock runs good.
16 gauge Stevens si ngle barrel shotgun; J .C.
Higgins 16 gauge; oak press back rocker ; wa lnu t
square stand; wi cker rocker and ch ild's rocker ; old
tricycle; 1 set {4) fold-up chairs; 2 ox yokes; several
chairs; night stand s; lamp tab l es; Seth Thomas
steeple c loc k .
Antique pieces from many estates: A fine co ll ec t ion
of beautiful sione jars: Tne rare John Epple .
Pomeroy, Ohio, plu s P en nsylvt~nia , Parkersburg
and other hand painted jars.
A beautiful old pyramid corner cupboard and pi e
shelf and silverware drawer in center 61!2 ft . tall ;
large old "S" type rol l top desk ; 10 fancy Iron beds
with ,brass; 3 ve ry nice secretaries (one is leaded
glas door) ; 2 cider presses; 2 large old l ime ·tool
boxes with old tools to be sold with contents; 4 piece
old tirne bedroom suite; very rare copper washing
machine ; 2 round oak tables; old glass churns ; 2 pie
safes; old wicker baskets; old clocks; round green
buller dish ; brass and large copper kettles; buller
molds; old wall phone : coffee mill ; oak dressers
Ivery old) ; tools: set 6 press back chairs: Old dish- ·
wore; RR lanterns: old postal cards;. many old
pieces glassware; old brass wash boards; sad
Irons; depression glass, loo pieces green &amp; pink;
carbide lamps some w / cloth ha)s: compote; stone
Jugs; old wash siands; br~ad axes: several gun\; for
collectors: old trunks; noce LOWboy &amp; 11JCkers; 3
very rare books; flat wall cabinets old crocks; very
old dolls &amp; Orphan Annie; old rolling pins; dinner
bell; much old advertisements; towboat with oars;
shoe lasp ; high wOod bed~; collector wrenches;
corn grinder: wood ·planes; electric grind stone·
collector pencils Meigs Co.; copper boilers'· ·
Roosevelt campaign badges &amp; 'others; Amb.,;.
colored 1858 Jar: 3 rare mustache cups.
Relreshmen'- wfll be served.
• COLEMAN BELLAMY
Phone 614·216-2JM Buslnan-2•JNs Home
.
JOHN NOTTfiR: AUCTIONEER

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 25, 1982
SALE STARTS AT 10:30 A.M.
Sale

located at 21 0 Uncotn Hill Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

Or. and Mrs.
the area and

N. J . Ehlinger are
have atlkad us to

auction many of their personal

moving from
sail pt public:
items,,Also we

will be offaring for sale a building site) consisting of nearly two acres.
'
1 Pecan glass IDPI&gt;ed ~mp lal*s. 4 secliin natural lnd~ clollo cw:h,
octagon pecan glass topped ~mp table, octagon pecan wood topped end
tamp table, obilog pecan glass topped lamp lable, blaqk ~unge chair.
lelrdrop wall clock-8-day, rourd leather lo!Jped lable, llC XUOO 15'
cokr 1'1, coastered metal leg walnut 1V stand, 1pair black~ nd brass lal&gt;e
lamps }way, ship's galey lamp and shade 3-way, BeniWOiiilrocker, maple
des~ plant stand marble-J lees, martlle loll roord endtable, wMe cw:h,
mahogany drum table, octigon maple lool end table, drop ~I Queen Anne
[Heritage) lamp ta~ brass lamp (vety special, ~d l!amed oblong
m1nor. complete ~replace set w/tools (said brossj, painting.,.-winler llarn
and brook scene, handmade and painled Mexican floor vase, lea and hay
set w/5 PieCeS sioer tlate OYer copper, I set 1 candelabra sim piO! on
coppe&lt; (3 cand~ holders), black metal secretarial desk, Sloaro digital
cakulator. set ollour San Francisco pictuoe scenes. gold ol!loog wan m1rror,
gold ltal~n table, 1 globed hunicane lamps, 2 blue hurricane bedroomlamps, 1 bookcase ools, I double globed "Gale W~ The Wind" Fenlon
lamp, walnui bedroom slfle w/2 side tables-doesser and bed, pa11 cj
~ass i\lbed go~ hurncane lamps, maple table, 2 gold upholstered arm
ch311S w/coastell, ~d upholslered loot (j bend bench, Emerson Quiet
Koo auto au cmdilioner. 18x l 4 ru~ dinette set w~ 4 chairs Juptolslered), mounted sword fish, chime clock doorbel )wall moonled), Kooby
Oassic 3 Yacuum sweeper with al attachments (new), white decorator
minoo. patio han~ng lamps, winclchime Hawaion sea shell~ sand &lt;!Qia~
Smih Corona typewnler wlh 8 ribbons and case, antique ~pe tdder ol ~~
and vase PerSIOil ru~ ~oeplace scoeen.GUNS- WIIIChester 12 gaul!"
sh~gun [15roXll wrth 3 chol&lt;es and case (new), Reuger 22 rill! with
case new. Remingi&gt;n 306 5-shol nile witt1 case (used once); Paintingwood s and """ 2x2. hard pambng Sunset Seashole with lrame 2'6" by
2'6". auto. cdleemaller with accessor;,s, tmeywen BMM ll10Yie project&lt;r
[new 10 tio•). wal mount walnut shelves and storage cabinet!, 3 pc. set ol
Samsonrte klggage, Eagle m1rroo. ElDorado Bravo cool&lt;out set w/tank ard
cover, •ate roofing {large amoon~ . storage ca~nels. inside pine door 26"
by 6'1a' with haodwe and lrame, lramed outside door 38" by6'10" glass
UP!&gt;'•. oak gde panel lrames witt1 trim ard C!si~. 3 ... oak !!(ling doors
[1-54" and 2~'1 w/trim and ~~es. water hand pump, 3 o:hannel
irons 24" -26' -9", 5 steel post&gt; 8'&gt;6", i!rden hose 100 w/ooule, steel
broom, seve111 misc. garden I!Jjs, 7' alum. stepladder, garbage cans, auio.
batteoy charger 6 and 12 vc1t, 14" YoOrk set complete, clock chimesdoorbell set ~ce bedspread, set maple cannislers, anvil and vice, 4 set
cuff l~l&lt;s [gems). Vernon Bmm ll1ll'lie edilor, C!meraliijXJd, Sony am~ilier
d•l set. Poloroid Land camera w/leatheo case, film splicer, equpment
case, books-lamous author set. elec. hedge himmer, elec. jlinder and
sharpener. ~eel milre bo~ l -shaped sect desk·5 drawer.sect padded arm
chair w/coasters, sect chair (swivel w/coasters), set ol 02 tanks w/ lcc..
cakuolor w/ plint out black Nalgahyde lounge chair.
THIS THIS A PARTIAL USTING OF ITEMS TO BE SOLD.
Tho following lilt of it-. ... to be orotd with...,.,, Il ia
the opinion of the - - that the reoorve on oft of
lhooe llemo II within 1111110n end wol below repiocement COlt.
Brown leather chair w/otlllman, loveseat 2 ight ~ue uplldstered arm·
chair; w/coasters {Herlage), tilt topped Queen Anne ciocular malllgany
table, brass figurine crystal 3-way lamp, gold globe figurine brass lamp
}way, leaded crystal ~mp 3-way, antique !'ower picture w/ook loame,
Queen Ann mahogany Globe Heritage doning room table w/6 chair;-2
lea~ and pad, dropleaf Pembrool&lt; table in mahogany {llerilage), lowboy
Queen Anne Globe Heritage. artque sld1ng glass dooo ch'"' curio ca~net.
~I.e. Eagle pict\IA!, copper decoralor bul!:her block witt1 pol hangers,
Dlantentiley Rose glass table w/6 chars pat~ set. Chanten~ley Rose 4
louniJI! chair; patio II!!, Clurn!entilley Rose large ~ass IDp table. O!anlen~·
~y Rose med. joss toP table, O!anten~~Y Rose square metal table, 2
Queen Anne Globe (Herillge) chairs-~ke ""'· master bedroom so.ite-1n
oxcelont condition, irdudes 5 pieces
REAL ESTATE:'to be oold with reHfVI, will be oHOiedlll
1:30 p.m.
TERMS: Bllyer must deposit v.tth the aocl!oroeeo-real estate broker, a
certilied check for $5.000.00 at the time ol sa~. Taxes wil be pro-rated lo
day ol closing Closing must be on or belole lkt&gt;beo 25. 1982.
P;operty fur sale is located 011 Urc~n Hill in Pomeroy, Ohio, oveoloo~l'€ the
Ohio RIYer. Land COI1Si!lsof nearly 2 acres witt1 public water,also arecently
Wit two car garage.This is an excel011t building sot~ Homes ~ the area ol
the, e&gt;r8Wiive type. F&lt;r more inlormation call the auctioneer-real estate

lit*.

1ERMS OF SALE PERSOOAliTEMS: Cash or check with IXOper 10. "sales
' final all items must be paid for bebre removal. Boyer is resjl911Sible lor aM
items purchased.
Dwrw' Or. N .J . Ehlinger. 210 IJn&lt;oln Hilt Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio. 45709 .

s~ cone~.-

w. M~GKEE
AUcnON CO.

P. 0 . Bo• 191, Golllpalio. Ohio 46631
Ph. (814) 440-011112
.
A - end Rule- -M. L "Bud" McGt..
. Ohio end Wilt~ .
,., ' . - .
..
'

-

-~ -

-

.

�-

..,
Ohur- Po•nt Pleasant,

The Sunda
Homes for Sale

31

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sal e

42

4 65 acres. approxtmately 3 Ha If acr e, one fourth m lie
acres t•llable or coul d
Greer Rd Land m

-dtv tde tnto lots 2 story eludes 100' wel l, 1000 gal
'house. alum tnum stdmg 6 septtc system. 1973 14x68
.J.ooms. bath electr•c coun Hollypark tratter w tt h cen
-ter top stove. double ovens . tral atr, all etec tn c, 6'x10
~•shwash e r d• s pose~l car
metal bulldtn9' and many
:Pe ttng, ce ntral atr con ex tras Excellent butldtng
-dtt• oner . ga s furnace, near " le 304 675 3025

"Sc hools stores churches
)&gt;a nk and post office •n
R ac •ne on Elm Sf bes tde 3~ __ _f arm~ ~ ~Sa ~ _
"G ulf G as Statt on

$35 000

For sa le Farm 207 acres
on Parker Run Rd Land
contra ct ava i lable $16,000
down 12 percent tnter es t
No
'For sale or trad e 7 .1c r es 3 M1neral nghts me
.hd room la rge ga ra ge, 2 house Ca ll 388 9346
iJd room r ental Call 614
j67 0611
I have several l42 acre farm nea r Rto
Cth er ptece s of property for Grande, house, butldtngs
sal e
mtnerlll nghts w1th or
wtthout livestoc k and
i ':lfory S bedroom home on eqUipment, 614 446 2599
Jtpproxtmately 2lf2 acres,
c lose to Rutland Grade 28 acres toba cco allot
~choo l on College Ave W•ll ment mmeral nghts, no
;ell fu r nished or un
bUIId.ng s, $7,500 Call 304
i urn• shed 614 742 2661 or 675 6851
614 742 2511
Farm for Sa le, Wes t
REDUCED 8 room house Co tumbt a 62 acres 6 room
Jwo lots. double garage, house tn good co ndttton
corner lot, very cood Plus A C tractor and tm
IJ)cal•on
680 S
2nd
ptements and 4 whee l dnve
suburban Mmeral nghts
"Ave M1dd lepor t
$14,900
:1\boul one acre 101 •n Brad
mcluded $20,000 tor a 11
bury
Tra1 ler hook up. Phone 304 773 5936
water, gas, electnc, sept tc
lank Call614 992 2602

l 2x65 2 bdr mobile home
on Bob M cCormtc k Rd.
new carpet, clean &amp; r econ
dtttoned Adu lts on ly no
pels, sec dep &amp; r ef , Sl 80
perm o plus ut1ilttes water
pd Call446 4491

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sola chair, rocker, ot
loman, l tables, (extra
heavy by Front•er), $685.
Sofa , cha 1r and loveseat.
$275
Sofas and c ha~r s
pnced from $285 to 1895
Tables, $38 and up to $125
H•de a beds,$440 and up to
1525, queen s1ze. Sl80
Recliners, $175 to $325,
Lamps from $18 to 565
pc d.nettes from $79 , to

Call614 949 2491

t.and

contract, $35 ,000
l: h esh~re V•ll age Call 614
.:)67 7553
:HousE Meadowbrook Ad
t:htton, 3 bedrooms, fam tl y
toom Wtth f1repatce, cen
lral atr. basement phone
004 675 1542
t.ClT OWNER S II your an
r.ual income ts between
Sto,ooo and 117,000 you may
qualify for a low rnterest
:government loan on a
1Jn1b1lt Home For deta il s
CB'I 0 &amp; W Homes 304 675
&gt;1424 or 614 286 3752

.

'CAPE Cod style collage
}lome, n1 ce rtver v tew 7
.rooms, 11h ba th s, ca ll 304
t73 571 2 or 882 2836 Upper
' O's

---

'-

--

---

s

,-

Two acre lots 150 II road
frontage , c tt y water ,
beh.nd 84 Lu mber Call 304
675 68730r675 3618
ONE acr e lot 3 miles from
town,
rural
wa1er
ava ilable 304 675 1564
20 Acres, Greer Road ar ea
Cal l evenmgs304 675 7541
36

-

)eauttfully restored Vtc
toroan,
bedrooms, 4
f.replaces, ornate carved
Woodwork , a1r cond1troned,
lnsulated owner f1nan cmg,
.104 675 6999

. ----

35
For sa le one and half acre s
mor e or
le s s,
ap
proXImatel y 600 tt road
fronta
on
Cor a
ot Rd near Cen
S3 000 00 Phone
168:1-69•14

Wanted Block house w1 tr
basement. m tn t mum 6 tn ctroof overha ng Cash 1f
reasonable , 304 757 9504

Rentals

--- --

"'"HREE bedroom houe,
'Crab Creek Rd , Mason Co
All elec tn c, 304 675 3329

Real Estate
Wanted

41

Houses for Rent

112 acre, fhree bedr home.
F OUR room house, 1dea 1 basement, c tt y school ,
~or elderly coupl e
good coun t y wa ter Ca ll 216 734
3834
1ocatoon , 304 675 1302
~ ----------

l

room house, 1 acre along
l&lt;anawha
R 1ver
Ca ll
tvemngs 304 675 7541

-------

---

...~-

&lt;Remodeled 3 bed r oom
J1om e S1d1ng, carpet, tn
.sutaled, lull basement, low
pnced on •n
-ut1llttes
' pect1on 304 675 4338

.

---

- -- - - - -

~ bedroom house, large en

)ry hall , two baths. sun
i&gt;orch, garage and out
'bu•ldmg 139,000 304 675
:lt208
Mobile Homes
for Sale

-• -----

-

"'TR l STATE
MOBILE
j1 DMES
USED MOBILE
~OME S, CARS TRU CKS
-GALLIPO L I S
CHECK
'OUR PRICE S CA LL 446
)572
£ LEAN USED MOBILE
+!OMES
KESSE L 'S
'QUALITY
MOBILE
:tiDME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST, GALLI POLI S RT
~S PHON E 446 7274
1980 W.nd sor 14x70, new
~ond Delu)(e kttchen large
-ttvmg room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm Htdden uttl room
ll79 23 10

.:_-

-

MOVING MUST
~2x60
Kt r kwood
11ome, 2 bdr , n~w
:Ca ll 614 367 03 27 or
11750

SELL
mobtle
carpet
614156

"Very beaut ifu l 12x65, 1968
'"Park Estates wrth ex
:Pando, underprnntng, fully
'Carpeted, gas, $6,500 Call
9380

:446

'1981 14• 65 Ventura 2 bdr ,
:exc cond , complete ly set
1JP Call 614 256 1785 or 614
:_256 6265
Jl.lobile home w •lh land
.Near J eno1S, Jackson and
-Galli a county ltne Cash or
lerms c heap Ca ll 614 384
:S140
R•chardson Mobile home
-10 • 55 lurn1shed Can be
-seen at 42635 G1bson Rd 3
,itules S of Albany Real
-good buy $3000 6 l 4 992
or 592 6060

3 bdr house, garage, Rod
ney VIl lage II Call 446
4535
5 rms &amp; bath, 1 ch1l d ac
ceptable, no pels , Bob M e
Corm1ck Rd Call446 2650
3 bdr house 1 block from
grade school Ca ll446 4110

2 bed room tr ailer Real
ntce adults only Brown 's
Trail er Park , Mtnersvtll e
614 992 3324

le!~!!!~~~~~;:::::::::::::::~

Untur n1 shed 2 bedroom
$150
per mnlh
Ca mp
Conley 304 675 1371 or 675
3812

44

Apartment
for Rent

--------·
lst floor furntshed apart
ment, adults pr eferred ref
&amp; dep requded Call 631
4th Ave GallipOl iS
Furn 1shed 4 rooms &amp; bafh
clean. no pets adults on ly
dep req Call446 1519
HU D ava• lable 2 bdr
de luxe kttchen furnt shed,
good locahon, u t tltt tes par
ttalty pa1d 5 rm house for
rent Restdenttal and com
merc ral propert1es for sa te
A One Real
or tease
Estates, Carol Yeager,
Realtor Ca ll 304 675 5104 or
675 5386
2 bdr downtoWn , all car
pet complete kttchen all
c lectrt c heat atr cond ,
Washer dryer Cal l446 4383
days 446 0139 eve
Furnt shed efftency
607
2nd AVe, Ga llipolis Sl45
uttltttes pd, one person
Share bath Ca ll446 44 16 af
ter 7PM
Furn1shed 3 r pnvat e bath,
845 2nd Ave , GalliPOl iS
Ref preferred Ca ll .4-46
22 15

Stx room house, fou r mtl es
from Pt Pl easan t 304 67 5
17 41 alter 5

Small furn tshed eff1ency, 1
pr ofesstona l 1ype male
only Center a tr &amp; heat
Ca ll 446 0338
Downstatrs ap t tn Vrnton
Unfurntshed, cl eaned, con
venren t loca t1 on Call 61-4
24558 18

4 room house unfurntshed
Camp Con ley $140 per
mont h Phone 304 675 1371 Ntcc 3 ro om , upstarrs apt
1nqu1re at 108 Loc ust ST or
or 675 3812
call446 0698
42

Two 2 Qdr tr a lier s com
plelely tu r n•shed Ca ll 446
9669
2 bdr mobile home fur
n1 shed. adu lts on l y Call
446 4110
2 bdr mobtle home 1n cr ty,
ref &amp; dep reQutr ed Call
614 256 1922

Unf
apartm ent, ad ults
only , no pets, $150 per mo
plus utlltftes Sec dep req
Ca ll446 2129
3 rms &amp; bath furn rshed
adu lts no pets Call 4-46
3733 or 446 0171
3 room furnish ed ap t $250
mont h tn dudes uttllt1es
lnqu 1r e at Me1gs Inn 10
Pomeroy

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY
Now renting 25 one bedroom apartment un1ts,
rent1ng lor lO percent of your adjusted Income
under the Departrflent of Housmg &amp; Urban
Development Section 8 program. All ul1htU!s
mcluded.

Phone 882-3121
New Haven, WV

?055
..

..

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- --- -

HOME

---

O'Brien- row
Realty

we want To
ustY.our
Home

~I

Garage apt New Haven, 3
bedrooms , unfurntshed
$200 month, plus utt l tttes
304 882 3356
THREE room lurn,shed
apanmenl ground floor,
pr1vate entrance outskrrts
Henderson, ut1l tt1es fur
mshed $225 00 month 304
675 6730

Good GE range $25, cabinet
model AM FM rad•o and
record player $20 Cal l 446
0676 after 4 30PM

One bedroom furn 1shed
apartme nt, Potnt Pleasant,
Depostt reQUired Phone
304 675 9760 or 614 446 4229
Furntshed
Rooms
-

4S

on

near

Sea ly luxury guard mat
tress &amp; box sprtngs Head
board &amp; fram e, 1100 Call
614 367 0172

C~rc l e

s Motel, telephon e
446 2501 For Rent, Weekly,
1 person S60 00, 2 persons
$70 00 Cable T V , a~r tond
Furntshed

room

$1 15

uttltttes
pd. 919
smgle
share bath
2nd male,
Ave,
Ga ll•poll s Ca ll 446 4416 af
ter7 PM
_Spa~e for

4&amp;

Set of weddtng nngs, s1ze 5.
approx 115 karat Wtde
wedd.ng band ssoo 614
992 287&lt;

For Sa le Macrame cord
G E
Heavy duty 185 , (Chnstmas color s! beads,
Maytag wnnger wash er book Good pr1ces Phone
$85 , Hoover portable 614 991 3436
Ask
for
washerSIOO 614 742 2352
Rhotean

NEW LISTING - Located 1n Syracuse Th•s home
has an extra targe lot and 5 poss1ble bedrooms. The
d1n1ng room and kttchen are spaciOUS, ktfchen tS
fully equ1pped •nclud.ng diShwasher Ask1ng
$32 000
l TRAILER S - Can be used as add ons, small
bus1ness, or construct1on off1Ce 2 tra1lers Cask1ng
U500 &amp; S5500l are 10• 50 w1th 3 rooms each Furnace
&amp; central atr One has 'h bath &amp; hot water heater
The th~rd •s 10•35 (askmg Sl500) with 1 rooms, fur
nace, central atr, 117 bath &amp; hot water heater
HOME on appro x 2 acres Basham &amp; Eagle Ridge
Needs handym an Ask1ng $25,000

OAKHILL,OH,45656
PHONE 682-7443

M ay ta g washer delu•e
model. extra n1ce. $120
West.ngj1ouse dr yer $90
GE and Whir lpool also
Ca l l6 14 256 1207

Kelvtnator
frost
free
refngerator, GE frost free
refngerator, G1bson frost
free 15 cu tt chest freezer
Call446 4818
P•tlsburgh Number 8 house
coal M1ne run 80% lump
Sl5 a ton DELIV ERED to
GalliPOliS 137 a ton to Po.nt
Pleasant, wv

App les Rome Beauttes,
Gr tm es Golden, Golden
Delicious, Mcintosh, Red
Del• c tous ,
Jonathan.
sorg hum
molasses.
potatoes on1ons, red apple
house RI 35, Henderson
F ~rewood S30 p1ckup load
mostly Oak and Ash
Already spl •l 304 675 2571
Sears best J;,. deep wel l
pump w1l h
35
ga l
lank Phone 304 675 3538
Wedd1ng dress and vall
me 6 $50 00 Phone 304 675
5829

HILLCREST KENNEL
Board1ng all breeds AKC
Reg Doberm'lrs pups and
Doberman Sflld Serv1ce
Caii446 -779S

.

AKC Poodles Ca ll 614 245
9184 alter 4PM

Amen can P1t Bull pupptes
Ca l l 6l4 388 8547
Groom 1no serv1ces Will
cl 1p Sc hnauzer s and etc
614 992 7342
AKC Reg
Coll•e pups
Have been wormed by Vet
614 992 3923
MALE Boxer for stud ser
v• ce 304 576 2919 call after
400
Reg1stered Beagle pupptes
tarsale 304 458 1552

----------~

s_s ==~uiJdi.lgs~pf!~es -

57

MUSICal
Ins tr uments

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

Early Amencan couch &amp;
cha1r, go cart , seats 2. a
fireplace .nsert tubes W1lh
blower Call alter 4 00, 446
2323

suttdlng matenals block ,
bnck, sewer p1pes, win Beauttful Baldwtn sp1net
dows, ltntels, etc Claude ptano, perfect co nd1fton,
Wmters, R10 Grande, 0 $1,200 Call 773 9158 or Box
134, Mason, wv
Ca l l 614 245 5121

used Bassett peca n d1n1ng
room sutte, 6 cha tr s, table,
hutch, custom table pad
Call446 0765

Saw M1ll Lumber Com
puter m1ll Will cut &amp;
deliver Call anyt1me 1
614 886 7311

Bundy clannet w trn case,
like new Marl1n electn c
steele guttar, 10 stnng,
w1th crate llR amp Ca ll
614 379 2340

Phone

H 614 )-992-3325
In tile counlry
with wa1er me!et, electric and nat
gas IVOI~bie $,l,500
3 ACRES -

POMEROY- Wanlareasona
tle 3 bedroom mme wrt11 bath, an
IAilties, aummatic gas OOat, carpet
lfl&amp; basement and small yard lor

BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION! - Two story
home presently bemg us"::.,
duple•, could be
eas•IY converted to ••nQEuu""'·Y Ctto1ce localton
near Washmgton School Lall for deta,lsl

RACINE - 2 houses fo&lt; one
pnce. 9 rooms , one and 4 m
- Bdh have baths and natural
gas heal Wil sel "" $]7,500
SYRACUSE - 7 room lrame
IIJuse on two love l&lt;n Will take
$16,500.00 lor • qu~k sale

BMR 41lFJ - M1n1 farm located lUSt off the Ap
palach•an highway near Jaqkson 3'h acres m/1
w1th an older two BR home, several oulbu 1id1ngs
tust rtght for let sure t1me or full ttme ltvmo .

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066

BMR 414- 12•60 mob1le home Situated on a 1 acre
+ lot Inc ludes furntture . has rear patto w/cover,
covered front deck, 12x2.4 garagewtth storage

EVERYTHING SELlS IF
PRICED RIGHT CALL I

BMR 415 Ex~ra nice bl-tevel, 1ncludes 3
bedrooms, lg lam,ty room W1lh brick fireplace
18•21 living room, eat m k1lchen, lg utility room:
and garage Situated on large lot C1ty school
d1stnct Call lor details•

OHIO RIVER LOTS
FOR SALE
Located 3 miles
below Eureka Dam,
ideal for camping,
building or mobile
homes. Call RAN·
NY BLACKBURN at
STROUT REALTY
446-0008.

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
3 baths, 4,624 sq II of llv~ng space
Sure you do' And here IS a bargain' Matn entry,
huge formal ltvtng room , formal dm1ng room
wllarge gleam tng cande lter Completely equ tpped
krtchen w 1th 1sland Jen A1r gn ll, bar Wall to wall
masstve stone f~r ep tac e m the famtiY room Rec
room, master bath features a garden tub 3 car
garage Th1s home features much more Ltke to buy
a lot for your money? Th en thrs home IS for you•

s bedrooms,

POMEROY - 28 acres ol ~nd for
tile children and pets. 3 bedrooms,
bat~ basement and gas lurnace
$25,!XKJ
SYRACUSE - Mobi~ home
on~ 7 years dd Really mce and
mostly lumished Has a 2 car I*Jck
m~and chain link ience Asking

BMR 398 - GET READY FOR SUMMER! Owner
transferred and must sell lh1s 3 BR ranch Close to
town mcludes detu•e IS.J6 .nground pool Call tor
an apoomtmenl today'

Real Estate - General

982·3878.

BMR 416 - Want a n1ce 3 "tPcifttnch style home w1th
a top of the ground PRt,OU ''-'!,no a posSible 8 50%
mortgBge assumpttor, so, call now

Real E11ate - General

BMR 418 - New L1SI1ng - Br~ck &amp; frame Situated
on 5 acres. Includes 3 A!ill.iu&lt;'n ths, lg ramify room
w1th fireplace and ·K~~lfl'll'er, to llv~ng room,
dlnmg room and delu•e kitchen Call lor details

IIOBSTEITER REALTY

BMR 421 - New LISimg - Poss1ble Loan Assump
lion at 8'12% Interest Nice 3 BR ranch on lg flat
lot priced at $35,000 Better call on this one today 1

WllOI

bedrms.,

2 ACRES, with mobile
home, concrete block
building and older farm
hOuse. Located along
Story's Run Rd Special,
special, special buy lor
$10,000 00

SUPER BUY - 1971
Homette mobile home.
12'K60', new carpet,
central air, fully furnished, sell with or
without
furniture,
Rodney ,
#1026

2 BR MOBILE HOME,
lltualed on 1h acre of
land along the Ohio
River Only $7,500.00

BMR 422- New Listing - f\l•ce ranch located on
Roush Lane is pnced to sell at $38,000. Large LR, 2
BR, kitchen Includes range, eYe-level oven, d1sh
was~er, and disposal. Call IQ see.

t/: :

iMR 423 -New Ll; tintl In town location. Walk
school. Large two)tory home Includes~ bedrooms ' ,
ltving room, d tning room , formal entrance, to. coun'.. :
try kitchen, lull basement with lam11y room, 2 •
fireplaces, plus more, Calilordeta1ls
:

•

2 APARTMENTS .
Range and frlg , furnished, adults only, no
pets From $175,00

BMR ~24 New Listing. - 2+ acres with a very :
nice 3 bedroom rar\ch style nome You will lote •
the country atmosphere. Possible loan assump- 1
·'
.. .. :
) tion.

2 BR COTTAGE along
White
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
l~medlate
possession $18,500 00

BMR 425 New Listing - Executive type brick '
hOme. In Frnch Provlpclal Featuring 2,100 square
feet of living area on the main floor plus a lull
walkout basement, This fine nome 11 qnt 01 a kind
lnthisaree Belllellrstlo-thlsone, Call..-,

'

•.

•

P•lcecl right at t:~7,a. It n.. anJ
11111rnallle lOan With only tv.~ 1"'-rtat,
are
!liking llbout a wry clean, 3 B R ' - lltu.lllld on
nice flet lot In a ftlmlly arlenled MIGhiiClriiCioc1 call
hlr,COii'tP~dMiiiS.
BMR 4H -

(

BUNDY flute, good con
dll1on 304 675 6489
FOR sale, Sp.nel Console
P1ano Bargam Wanted
Respons•ble party lotake
over low monthly pay men
ts on Sp met p1ano, Can be
seen loca lly Wnle cred1l
M anag_er P D Box 33
Fnedens, PA 15541
Bundy a 110 sa• exce l I con
d1t1on , case, new Band
Today book, mustc stand
mel $250 f~rm 304 675
3591
Clar1net, Selmer
Model 9
Good
severa iyear s old
$300 304 882 2822

Pans,
shape,
askrng

Used trombone, good con
d• t •on 304 675 4090

----

__ ___!._y~g~~~ ':! - - GOOD
THINGS
TO
EAT
CANNING I'EAC
HES
Yellow Freestone
cann t ng peaches now
available whtle the supply
lasts
BOB S MARKET
Mason W VA 773 572i open
7 days a week
APPLES severa l vanetys
of ava tlable Hours 9 to 6,
Fttzpatnck Orchards, St
Rl 689, Wdksvllle, Oh, 669
3785
Potatoes $10 per hundred
lb Cecil Toban For tnfo
ca ll 614 992 5045
Some
w aterme lons

S!= =-fo! faleOr)fa~~2 ton wrecker 5 15 Holms
wench $1900 , 1979 F1at
$2800 , 1954 Ford 43,000 ac
tual miles $1200 W1ll sel l or
trade all lor a four wheel
dnve truck See at Ed
mends Grocery, Jerrys
Run Road

we

~ OFFICE 446-7699

dem axe l el ect whee l run
nmg gear $6,600 00 1 New
Holl and no
28 forage
blower
spec1al
pric e
$2,000 00 1 Used model 718
chopper, 1 row head $3 ,.400
choOO 1 Used Super 717
chopper
1 row he ad
$,1200 00 1 Used Super 717
chopper I row head pa1n
t ed
good c ond lt ton ,
$1,800 00 S1 t up for a super
deal on any All1s Chalmers
tractor from 40 HP to 110
H P Keefe r s Se rv 1ce Cen
ter. St Rt 87 13 mil es
below the new Ravenswood
bndge Phone 304 895 3874
8 N FOR 0 Wllh 4' bu sh hog ,
11475 00 Cub w 1th belly
mower, $1450 00 706 IH , ex
ce llent, $4250 00 310 N I
corn p1cker, $750 00 MF
ad 1 d1sc 7' , S375 00 1mco
brush hog, 5', good, S325 00
Siders Equtpment Phone
304675 742 1

75 I H stng le a)(el road tr ac
tor, ex t ra good, 39,000 ac
tual m iles, Sl500 00 J D 410
back hoe loader, $9500 00
ca ll 304 675 7421

A PLACE IN
THE COUNTRY
w1th all the charm nf
Yesteryear and all the
conven•ences
of
Todayll
120 acres M &amp; L with a
moder niied
6
rm
a1um1num
s 1ded
car efree home Livtng
room, 3 or A bedrooms, 2
baths, country k1tchen
w1th breakfast bar,
utility bldg , tobacco
base, fru1t t rees, and
mtneral nghts Won't
last, ca ll today
1553
GRACIOUS LIVING
IN A COUNTRY ATMOSPH E RE
Truly gr ac1ous famtly ltvtng can be yours 1n thiS
beautiful .:1 bedroom home a'Jjlprox 8 mtl es from
Gall •poiiS The k1!chen •s a gourmet's deiiQhl Un
believable d1nmg room and famtly room Built for
the most dtscrlmlnatlng homeowner 20 Acres
Pasturetand, Horse Stables Another 73 acres
ava1lable Many, many amen1t1es
, 542

WHAT A DE ALit
527,000
Come see for yourself
Cozy 6 rooms and bath,
washer, dryer, dish
washer, refrigerator,
woodburner, and all like
new Storage bUilding
and 2 car ca rport
Kyger Cr eek School s
052

39 ACRES IN CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM
Frame -4 r oom cottage, bath, eat tn k1tchen
Assumable loan Tobacco base, 892 tbs Lots of frutt
trees All mtneral ngh1S go Clay TownshiP Phone
for all the detatls
I 545
IN GALLIPOLIS- WALK TO SHOP DOWNTOWN
6 rooms 3 BR, full basement, n1ce lar9e front
porch No upkeep Vtnyi stdrng Natural gas fur
na1 e. n1cc large shade trees low taxes Home you
.-:,out d check on
1530

Reel Estate - General

WE OFFER YOU THE BEST - 9
acre esta te Spnng fed, stocked pond
3 bedroom bnck, 31h baths, large
walk'" closets Foyer, lt v tng room ,
family room , kitchen, bar , breakfast
nook, formal d.nlng, basement, 2400 sq
fl , Green Town sh ip
N 148

NEW LISTING LOAN ASSUMPTION
Wtth a low down pay m ent you can
assume !he present VA loan on thiS
remodeled 2 bedroom home Well tn
sulated Outbutldmgs 1 acre, more or
less Pnced tn the 20s
#1 76

Geo. S, Hobstetter, Jr,
Broker
Office Ph, 742-2003

BMR 402F - Check on thiS one - 37 acres w1th
1401 lb tobacco base, 30•30 barn NOW available
on land contract at 10%1nlerest Call for details

2 STORY .' l BR home
rect ttly
renovated
New kit,. new bath, new
furnace, new hot water
tank, 42\h II •170 It lot,
within Gallipolis, Priced
In 20's,

Mustcal
Instruments
Lowery Gente el ectnc
organ
Ca ll 446 3935
even1ngs
S7

s8 ____ FrU1 t

PICTURE PRETTY and firSt l1me on
the market 3 bedr oom ranch w1th k1t
chen. 1tv1ng room, large familY room ,
ma1n b ath, utility room 1 large covered
pa tto and front porch Thts home s•ts
nestled on 1 acr e of love ly landscaped
lawn
N 135

MIDDLEPORT
Lovely 2 story("frame
home w11h 3 bedrooms,
one bath Gas forced
air furnace. Close in to
stores and shopp1ng.
Must see to appreCiate
PRICE REDUCED to
$30,000 00
LIVE IN ONE- RENT
THE
OTHER
Located on Mulberry
Avenue
4 bedroom
nome with 1'h baths,
lull basement
Addl
t1onal rental 1ncome
from the ~ room garage
apartment Both lor
$30,000.00 or make
reasonable offer' I
SYCAMORE ST. - In
Middleport, Extra mce
3 bedroom nome, like
new Modern kitchen,
family room with
fireplace
Full basement with woodburner.
Sells for onlY $.45,000.00
ST, ROUTE 143 - 1.88
acres with lovely 3
bedroom Barrington
home. Extra nice kit·
chen with double oven
and Island .range. 2
bathS ~nd add·on faml room w/,woodburner,
Asking

IF YOU LIKE a very livable home, a
good neighborhood, a conve n1ent
locatton , this home 1s for you!
Featunng 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central
a1r, ftreplace, large lawn Ass umable
m ortgage
, 160

TIPTOP SHAPE!
Just a little prett1er than so m any Modern 3 4
bedroom bnck home Formal ltvtng &amp; dtnlng room
Large k1tchen Full basement Large 2 car garage
workshop &amp; barn Sttt1ng on 5 9 aues. m ore or less.
of landsca ped grounds Spnng will be breathless
here' Ownerw1ll helpftnance, 10% tnt Rate

Housing
Headquarters

NEW LISTING - BMR 420F - ThiS f1ne home IS
only three years old II features 1400 sq. ll,ol living
space, with 3 large bedrooms. l'n baths, large living
room and a lovely kitchen w1th dining area, lull
basement, Pr~ced a! only $60,000, Oh yes, I am sure
you will also f nloy the Uacres of land ltsltson

J BR HOME situated
along old Rt. 7, Lower
River Rd. 1,31 acres,
OWner anxious to sell
and will accept,
Reasouble
Ollttr .
Listed lor $32,500.00,

8

::::::::::::;::::::::==~ Stde.
Forageroof.
boxWtfh
, 3 beater,
ext
12 ton tan

- Sol1d older Mid
excellent cond1t1on
Modern kitchen, ta?'ge d •nlng room
wtth a beauttful chandelter , llvmg
room , 'h bath and formal en try 3
bedrooms up, fu ll bath, 2 walk 1n
closets Full basement and 3 car
garage
K131

1'

[H

~

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

ONE New Holland No

0 -"'...,_,_

S17,500

BMR 38?- This f1ne home has 4 bedrooms and 1s
located close to town You Will have a large lot w1th
a country atmosphere and have all !he CIIY con
ventences Call now•

Real E11ata - General

• Willis T, Leadingham, Realtor, Ph, Home446·953f
• Phyllis Loveday, Phone 446· 2230
• Joan Boggs, Phone 44~329 4

BEAUTIFUL SETTING
BEAUTIFUL HOME
1 acre plus - 8 rooms plus, full basement, 2 fu l l
bath s, w1th showers, tam1ly room, ltvtng room ,
dtning room, niCe step saver k1 t chen, 3 or 4 BR Len
nox heat pump, also coal and wood burner furna ce
Nice landscaped yard All of th• s lor only 153,900
Needs small amount or work to 1.n1sh th•s NEW
HOME
COUNTRY HOME
&amp; 40ACRES M. &amp; L
9 Room Country Home- 5 bed room s, bath, shower,
some carpeting, drilled well with pump N1ce tobac·
co barn Two corn cribs Garage All mtneral nghts
goes Several natural spnngs, some fru tt trees
Located on Slate Highway Pnced only $30,000 00
NS43
6 94 ACRES
VACANT LAND OF F RT lS
Roll1ng l and - bes1de Did U S H1ghway 35 In an
area that IS dev eloptng fa st Rt 35, shor t dtstance
West or Ga llipolis Get'' now
, 544

VIRGIL B, SR, IEALTOR

216E.Jnd~.

BMR 412 - Older home located m Thurman. Con
tams 7 rooms and bath, 2 fireplaces, professionally
Installed wood burner, forced a1r fuel furnace Out
s1de fel!ltures a garage and a screened, summer kit
chen with bUill m gnll Catllpr appo•ntmenl

ASSUME 81h % LOAN - Lovely ranch a!the edge of
town •s priced to sell at $49,900 Features are 3 BR,
1'/, baths, large LR with W 8 fireplace, modern k•l
chen &amp; din1ng area, laundry rm I garage &amp; gas heat
Call lor appointment Call RANNY BLACKBURN
AT STROUT-REALTY-446 0008

Rul Eltllte - General

GE HL Forage chopper,
I HC &amp; Gehl blowers Gehl
&amp; John Deere Forage
Bo xes new &amp; used 304 675
3963

All Breed Grooming, 7 days
P1ck up and
a week
del•very Call614 367 7877

-----------

Times-Sentinel-

John Deere dozer. model
4509 6 way blade Ca ll 614
379 ~340

POODLE GROOMIN G
Cal l Judy Taylor at 614 367
7220

EAFORD(H

Caii446-0SS2 Anytome

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

11v 1ng rm se t $375,
$75
stove
$175 446 8382 after S p m

Atr fight wood burnmg
stove SJSO Call 614 388
9667

Pets lor Sale

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow
puppies , CFA
H1matayan, Persian and
S1amese k•ttens Cal l 446
3844 alter 4 p m .

ACK Reg Doberman Pin
cher Pup and adult female
Cal l 614 367 0556

· Farm E'l_!lipment

Broker-Auehoneer

Real Estate - General

ireD

r~?frtgera tor

----

The Sunda

FALL TRACTOR SALE
J IVIDENS FARM EQUIP
MENT
446 1675
Long tractors, Vermeer
bales, hay equipment, bale
mmovers
&amp;
feeders ,
wagons, rotary h ti ers, disc ,
seeders, rotary cutlers,
blades, gates &amp; cultivators
And See Us To Get Your
Pairs &amp; COMPLETE SE R
VICE
Used Equ tpm ent
I H Hydro 70, Ford Jub1lee
135 MF, 600 Ford, Massey
Harns pony, 70 Oliver, 8 N
Ford
Plows, dtsc, J D
manure spreader
We buy Used EqUipment

Metal sheets lor all
building"' pUrposes
Flat
porcellan enamel coa ted
4•8 lhru ~ x 12. Prices, $7 00
toS9 60 614·667-3085
S6

61

Real E11ate - General

~=F=r=•=e==E:•:':':m::a:t:e:•=:R:e:a:s:o:n::a:b:l:•=:P:r=•c=•=s=~
LIFE
INSURANCE

.GE washer &amp; dryer pa1r,
r eal ntce, other Kenmore &amp;
Whtrlpools Guaranteed 30
days Ca l1614 256 1207

7ft pool ! able, good cond
$100 Conn trombone $75
1975 Chevy Monza 1750
Call 308 895 3999

by Larry. Wright

Real Emte - General

R~~ ~ ~

Whtrlpool washer &amp; dryer,
n1ce guarant eed, $225 Call
446 818 1

K1MBALL console--;,~a;;-o~ 1
dm.ng
year old, $1500
room hutch, $300 00 304
675 1482

'N' CARLYLE ,w

Building Supplies

Bohns 10_ horse lawn &amp;
garden tractor Exc cond
wtth mower deck, snow
blade, turnout plow, ut•I•IY
wagon &amp; cha1n 614985
4:146

CALLUSTOBUYORSELL
Nancy Jaspers - Assoctate
PH . 84] 207S

Over 12 yrs, of high quahty pole buoldong 1n lh1s
area Custom designed and buill post-frame
bu1ldtngs. Htgh quality matenal at compehttve
prices .
Year-round construet1on- Sahsfachon Guaranteed

Call Robert Harper for G1n
seng
and
Yellowroot
pr.ces 304 675 1293

55

For sate 1 couch, 1 cha1r. 1
queen stz e m at tress. box
spnngs w1th frame (new)
End table cofleetabl e, 2
chests 614 992 5186

RENTALS
Bnck hom e for rent m Letarl, Dh10, $275 00 a month

LARRY DUNN

Mise, Merchandlce

W.Va.

Firewood 135
load
$45
delivered 614 949 2542

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - L1v1ng room has
woodburn1ng !~rep lace, 1'/2 bath, hardwood floors,
well constructed nad tnsul at ed Ask1ng $35,000

L&amp; LCONSTRUCTION

54

Used V 30 D•lch W1t ch tren
c her 1 614 694 7842

3 FLAT ACRES - In Racme, Oh10 Owner Will help
f.nance Ask.ng$16.500

- iiousehoidcooiis- -

new,

TV

CENTRAL

-----

Gas stove 135, S1de by s1de
refngerator freezer S125,
atr condtftoner SSO Call
614 388-9793

Mosc. Merchandlce

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Rou te 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479

51

£ 8mtth

Real Eltllte - General

RT . 4,BOX2108

carpeted, covered carport, garage. nice to!.
Look today ,
I 1041

BEST
home was built in 1894 and must be seen
to appreciate, Large open foyer and starr·
way, LR, dining rm ., parlor, comletely
equipped modem kitchen, 4 BRs, 21h
baths, new siding, garage, near schools,
shopl)lng, etc;. Call RANNY BLACK·
BURN for an appointment at STROUT
REALTY, 446·008.

deck

Fulllnformahon
V1rg1noa L Smith, Realtor
3811-882'

Dtmng room set, 4 cha~rs
and
table, cush10ned
c ha~rs Call 458 1997
-- -S4

_..____ ~_

II rpolt s, Oh•o-Point

F1rewood , spltf, sea soned ,
delivered, sso 00 P• ckup
load, Phone 304 675 3030 or
Now
a nd
alordable 675 3431
Security Alarms lor home,
Business Phone tap alerts
to close c~rc ult Save 100 to Warm Morn1ng wood bur
400% on pen meter alarms , n1ng stove w1th blower 304
100% warranty Call Jim, 675 2128 alterS
446 134:1
Yearbooks, 1971 thru 1980
S ban Hustler verttcal an Sso 1977 Atl as SIO , set of
World Book dlcl•onanes
tenna and 3 wheel b1cycle
$35
set of Medtcal En
Call446 3935 evenmgs
cycloped•as SJO 304 882
2654
Control hunger and lose
we1ght W1lh New Shape
01el Plan and Hydrex New maple bed wtth mat
lress and box spnngs $150
Water PillS Fruth Phar
304 675 6922 after 7 30 p m
macy
I'" -

388-8826

APARTMENT S for rent,
unlurmshed, ca ll 304 675
2218 between 8 &amp; 6 and 675
6753 between 6 &amp; 10

TENDER
CARE frame home Js

"t973 Manon mob1le home,
electrtc, price $4,500
,a4 67 5-7385

Generol

THREE room furntshed
cottage, uttl1f1es furntshed,
adul ts no ~e t s , 304 675 2812
or675 1580

OFFICE

::.11

Reel Emote -

Three roo m furn1shed
apartment, adu lts, no pets,
Po.nt Pleasant Call 304
675 2453

446·7013_

,975 Cameron mob1le home
:i 4•70, 3 bedroom, one and
.one half bath, central atr,
'\ltll 1ty bldg ,ncluded 304
')73 5143

ed
ith
Newly remodel
W
acrp lot. Priced low S20s.

c----0

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY

- ----- --

~

APARTMEN T S, mobile
homes.
ho u ses
Pt
Pleasant and Gall •pol•s
614 446 8221 or 614 245 9484

SWAIN
AUCTION F URNITUR E &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Dl1ve St,
Galltpolls Couch, loveseat
an d
chair ,
1199'
wallhuggers 1125, bunk
beds w1th bunk•es, $170 '
box spnng and mattress,
$1 00
F•rm , $120 '
recliners , $80 • 9 x 12
l •noleum rugs, 122 maple
rockers, $49 , wrtnger
washers. refrtgerators,
d1nette
sets,
chest ,
dressers, bunkte mattr ess.
$40 Call446 3159

Real Estate - General

:MOBILE HOMES MOVED
..t_1censed &amp; Insured Call
,;J04 576-2711

--

Apartments 304 675 5548

___ ____ _ ____
S_! __ H~s_
e_
ho~_Q~~ ~ -

__

For Sale Rawte1gh Produc
Is, 1924 East ern Ave ,
Gallipolis Call 446 9516

IN MERCERVILlE

Vt'rgt'nw

Real Estate - General

---~-----

'USED MOBILE
)76 2711

- -A-p-a rimCn_t ___
lor Rent
---------2 ntce Apt rn Middleport 1
furntshed w tth uttl1t1es 1
unfurniShed, you pay
utll ttt es No pefs l 614 992
3190

- . ----

-

Wood burning add on fur
nance
Stilt In factory
crate, $450 Call l 614 256
1216

1395 to $650
Desk $110
Hutches, SJOO and S550, J _ _ _ _ _ ____;R.:.•:.:•:.I.:.E.:.•_ta_t_e_-_G_•_ne_ra_l_ _ _ _ __
maple or ptne flntsh
Bedroom SUites
Bassett
Cherry, $795
Bunk bed
comp lete w1th m attresses
S250 and up to $395 Baby
beds, 199 M attresses or
box spnngs, full or tw.n
SSB, l~rm , $68 and 178
Queen sets, S195 4 dr
chests, 142 5 dr chests,
REALESTATE
$54 Bed frames, S20 and
$25 10
G
b
IN VESTMENTS COMM [ACIAL
RfS I OENT I AL.
'
gun
un ca •nets,
$350 , d.nelte c ha~r s $20
and $25 Gas or el ectn c
ranges ,
$325
Baby
matresses, $25 1 135, bed
"T URN OF THE CENTURY" CHARMER
fra mes 120,$25, 1$30 Used
Sugar plums dance in your head when you see thiS
Furniture
bookcase .
huge 8 room bnck home But 11 is waiting lor the
ranges, chairs, end tables,
spec •al buyer to refurbish and return '' to beauty
recliners and TV s 3 mtles
Under $20,000 00
out Bulavllle Rd Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon thru Fr 1 , 9am
200AC
toSpm, Sat
Large cou ntry home Wtth 3 bedrooms, flshtng lake.
446 0322
mtneral nghts &amp; much more

3 Pc

Mobtle Homes
for Rent

Plastic Septic Tanks Stjlte
and county approved, 1,000
gal tank, price $340, Other
sizes In stock, haul fn your
piCkup truck. Call 61~ 286
5930, Jackson, Dh. RON
EVA NS E NTERPR I SES

Call 256-1464
S385
pc , Y/llh
$189SIXand
up ~=========::::=========':!
Wood 7table
ChaIrS

c omplelley turn•sh ed 3
bd room. total el ec ,n1ce ~
local•on $250 mo plus
depostt and electrt c 614 44
992 3955

Tara Townhou se Apar1
4 r house renovated &amp; tn
sulated on I 1/ 3 acre lot menls 2 bdr 1 1/2 baths ,
w1th garage, adults only 8 d tshwash er , dtsposa l cen
m• Sou th onRI 4 Cal l6 14 rral cur pool party house
bask e tb a ll
court.
2561 113
playground, laundr a m al,
f 1sh1 ng pond, funnshed &amp;
2 bdr house Lower Rt 7 &amp; unfurn•shed Ca l l 614 367
a 5 room house rn Eureka 7850
Ca ll614 256 141 3
One
bedroom
house
ava ilable Sept 18th , 30.4
675 2973

s

Com pletel y furn tshed 3
bedroom Tota l el ectnc,
nt ce locatiOn $250 month
plu s depostf &amp; electnc 614
992 3955

1.4x70 three bedroom , all
electr1 c, unf $200 monthly
plus eleclnc Glenwood
W Va 304 576 2441 or 304
576 9073

------

~· _ _"::ise, Merchandlce

GOOD
USED
AP
PL lAN CES
washers,
dryers,
refngerators,
ranges
Skaggs
Ap pliances, Upper River Rd,
bes1de stone crest Motel
446 7398

2 rrall er. nat gas heat,
clean, nverv tew Call 446
1602

2 bedroom tratler $200
monthly
$100
depostt
N1ce '" Ra c1ne 614 949
2726

12, 1982

w va

s!Household Goods

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

' l~

THIS IS AN EXCEPTIONAL HOME Clean, well kept lour rooms and bath,
ut11tty room, breezeway, ca rport Gas
furnace, CitY water You must see to ap
prec1ale Pnced .n the $20's
KISS
NO INTEREST- LANQ, CONTRACT
- Owner IS Willing to fmance this 41
acre farm wtth reasonable down
paymentw1lh NO INTEREST 2slory3
bedroom home Large barn Cellar
Shed and ch 1cken house Tobacco base
Pnced $40,000
K 141

TIME FOR A CHANGE I STOP PAYING RENT
With only $2,500 down payment you can buy lh1S
beautiful 3 bedroom bnck ranch S11ting on 3 acres
of scemc woodland N1ce pond, all fenced. Only 9%
In! Rate'You can't beat a deall•ke this one I South
western School District

COTTAGE HOME located 1n the c1ty 4
rooms and bath down 2 rooms tn attic
Need of repatrs
K128
ATTRACTIVE BUY! Get away from 1!
all w1lh thiS 7 r otting acres Good s1te
for bu •lding or mob1le home Large
oarn, sept1c tank, rural water. Pnced
K139
to sell
NEEDS REPAIR but aflordably
pnced 3 bedroom frame home w•th
bath In the Village of Bidwell nice flat
lawn Owner l.nanclng $17,900
, 166

DRAST I CALLY REDUCED lm
medtate possess 1on 3 bedroom mobtle
home Expando plus fa m1ly room With
woodburner Covered pat10 Garage
Cellar Pl.. acres Exce llent finan cing
terms
I 165

56 ACRE FARM - Appro x imately hall
of f arm rs ttllable, large toba cco base
The rest 1s wooded and fenced Elec
tn c, CISter n ~ n d sepl•c tank all1n place
Pr1 ced 1n the low 20's
6169
$19,500 - 3 bedroom home located m
Kyger Creek area Large hvtng room,
Kttchen and matn bath Na tural gas rap
County water and 1 acre of lawn Ex
cellenl buy and great po!ent1a1 1n thiS
home
N163
NEVER GIVE UP ca use here's the
home you r e lookmg for 1'12 story 3
bedroom hom e 4 acres Large garage
and work shed Cellar Mob1le home
I 119
hook up Kyger creek Schools
ATTRACTIVE BUY! - Getaway from
,, all with thiS 7 rolling acres Good site
for buddtng or mobtle home Large
barn, septtc tank, rural water Priced
to sell
Kl39

NEW LISTING - •Owner of !hiS 3 2'1' ACRES located along Route 7
bedroom ranch needs a qu•ck sate Pnced so low you can't alford to pass It
WOOdburner. 3 acres, more or less up Callfordetaits
, 147
Hook-up lor mob•le home Priced at
$2~.900.

, 182 NEW LISTlNG-7 .5 Acres with double
w1de and older house
Partially
WHAT A BUYIIl Newly decorated wooded, Rural water Priced In the 20's
mobile home. 3 bedrooms, large living
Owner financing,
room &amp; kitchen, laundry room&amp; bath
Will rent lot Near Rio Grande,
1161

LOOK OF LUX URV
E xce ll ent des1gn tn a home that coul d be yours
St y le plus com f ort all combtned Luxurtou s master
bedroom w 1th prtvate bath &amp; wa lk 1n closet Equtp
ped ru st1 c style k1tchen w1th br£'akfast nook Large
recr eat1on &amp; family room wtth open stone f1replace
plu!. forma l d tn1nq room &amp; liv1ng room Walk out of
entr ance foy er to an except1 onal courtya rd Assum
ble loan
02S
WOW! $39,900.00
wow 9% owner f manctng WOW 3 B R 2 baths,
cen tral a tr, garage, storage butldmg, all furn1ture
1ncluded 5 mmutes to downtown Ga t11polts Crty
Schools Large level tot
# 407
GOOD HOUSE SENSE
RETIR..,MENT OR STARTER HOME
Comfortable, nea t, home wtth large !lv tng room,
eat 1n kitchen wrth but It rn cabtnets, 2 bedrooms,
storage room bath and carport Very con ventent
loca tton Ca ll for further details
11 Sl3

•

l f O.r NG FOR PRIVACY•
\A f WOUL1 liW E TO SHOW ~OU THI ~ ONE
w nodrd sr Tf1nq at C.haro!a 1s H Its ov cr1ook1ng th e
l&lt;~k e Step 1n ro the entry on the sec ond level and
v 1cw th C' bi"MUt1ful atnu m from the lev el below Tht s
cn ntrmpori'lry un1que destgn 1S a deco r ator's dr eam
r omP tru r&gt; Indoor pool off tc e well eQUipped ktt
r '•Pn w1th built m food •Siclnd extra larQC" l1v1nq
room, 1m ported t1te floor grace the spac1ous lam
room, 'J. ttreplaces, 2112 baths. balcony on front of
tm rh tr vels Cc:tll for fl personrtl show rn q and ltnd out
t hr m r1ny rlc t ads too numerous t o ment 1on tn tht s ad
031
3 85 ACRES OR 18
In Gree n Twp close to Gall1polts, fa rm home
Sc reened rn front porch glassed tn back porch
Perm stone stdtng, chtcken house, 2 storage bldgs
L ots of shrubbery and 1rees Pnced to sell See th •s
lovely land and country home
W534
DUTCH COLONIAL
Sty l e. beau ty charm , comfort - all descnbes th 1s
home , 4 BR , 211-1 baths. equ1pped eat 1n k1tchen,
family room wtth ftrepla ce, formal ltv .ng and dtn
1ng room You won' t belteve thts home unl es~ YCIU
see tt for·yourself Make your appomtment today to
walk tnto the entrace ot one of the most love ly
homes tn the area
/1312
1 ACRE 2 BEDROOM Ci&gt;TTAGE
Ntce comfortable home Wtth n1ce larg e shade trees
concrete fr ont porch, lots of fru•t trees (apple,
c herry , plum and peach). grape arbor r aspberry
vmes, good garden land, all level In Green Twp
Rural wate r, 2 car garage, fuel 011 FA furna ce
Basement , barn approx 16'x24' Pn ced •n th e. $20 s
1491
8ACRES
Wtth.n 10 mtn drtve to downtown Galllpolt s Clfy
School System Has hookup fo r mobtl e hom e Gallra
Rural Water, electnc and sept tc tank n1fe l1ght on
pole, 20011 frontage on Graham School Rd T•mber
Building s11es Call Now
1477
SPRING VALLEY SUB01VIS10N
Vacant lots, n1ce SIZe butld1n g lots wrth all uti11f 1es
there Lots1ze101 8 by 171 2 Better get ' um now
, 456
OWNER WILL FINANCE
Watk 1nto formal entrance w1th open statrcase to
lh1s lovely completely r edecorated home loca ted 1n
!he city Within walking d•stance to shopp.ng area l
bedrooms, 2 full b&lt;lths and charmmg large k•tchen
Spacious ltvmg room wtth woodburn•ng ftreplace
• Th1s grac1ous home has a natural gas F A fu r nace
like new. lmmedtate possess1on We're watttng for
your call
1 146
REMODELEDCOUNTRYHOME
tn OhiO TownShiP, se!S on 2 acres more or less, has
aluminum siding, 3 bedrooms and barn Pnced
$21,900 See by appo~n~menl only
1473

I

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�·-.

The Sunda Tim es·Se ntonel
61

1976 AMC Pacer 72.000
miles new shocks, muff ler ,
etc Cal 1614·992 3964 after 7
pm

w1de front end, 7 ft bush
hog m ower -John Deere,
post holer dtgger 2 auger s,
3 hitch log splitter, scrap
per blade , sick le bar
mower $6,500 Ca ll 1 614
875-6009 or 614-388 9667

WISEMAN ·

Heavy dut y tr ailer 3 axle, 8
ply rated ttres, all brakes
are hooked up Ca ll 614 256
1208

1950 2 dr Ford, one owner
Call614·379·2145

LIVes tocJI

WI NDOW TINTING Auto
Cut
REG QUARTER HOR SES Hom e Commerc1a l
energy
cost.
Tra 1ntng ,
showt ng , high
breedmg, sa les and boar profeSSIOnally 1nstalled
dtng Con t act Dan Bea m , Call446 3100
Galli POl iS, 446 0183
1976 Dodge Monaco fully
25 Feeder ca lves, 500 l o 600 equipped w1th cru1se, tape
tbs . all shots &amp; wormed, player, low m1 1es, good gas
farm raiSed Ca ll 614·379· mlleage, almost new cond ,
$2,400 II rem. Ca ll 446 4630
2590
or see at 47 Chlll•cothe Rd ,
Gallipolis
Super Ch1x colt, Super 81
guilded. 17 months old,
brillant c onformation , 1978 Ford Fa~rmont , 4 dr ,
blaze face, 1 white sock ex clean, $2,200 Ca ll 446
Excellent temperm en l. 4782, Gall1p0I1S, OH
$800 form Coil 992 7205
mornings or 446·9510 af 71 Mercury Comet perfect
ternoon, ask for Paul
cond t 1on. good t~r es. $500
Ca ll614 388 9328
Bred Gilts for sa le Call
614 256 1353
1976 Cutl ass Supreme
burgandy w1 fh wh1te vmyl
AC. PS . AM FM
1 Nubtan pilly goats, 1 112 top
cassette, 1n dash rad10 260
old Call614 256 6041
small v a. new ttres on
front , new brakes&amp; shocks,
2 yearling hereford s tor good gas mileage, S2,000
sale 614 992 7698
f1rm Ca ll 992 7205 mor
n1ngs or 446 9510 afte rnoon,
Regi sterd Appaloosa Mare
ask for Paul
WOOd burnmg sto ve 304
882 3242
For Sal e or Trade 76
Musta ng II , runs good Will
trade for large car Call
6} :=-::...::-H~=(c;.!:!'}n=
614 256·1967 alter 6PM
For sale Hay Call 614 379
2157
1973 Ford custom 500, good
mecnamcal cond , good
EAR cor n for sale, ca ll 304
!ores. S600 Call446 7649
675·4308

=

HA Y for sale, $1 75 tor
b ale, 1n barn at first cut,
304-895 3666

unscramble tntse four Jumblel.

1980 VW Rabbi ! 4 spd •
AM F M stero, a~r cond ,
fog lights Ca ll 446 702 1

1976 P l ymouth Volar e
wagon Will cons1der older
car or truck on part•al trde
985 4335 $1380
1975 Nova Runs good, t11t
steertng whee l, am fm
rad10 tape pl ayer, needs
body work S600 614 985·
3811 even mgs after 4 or
morntngs before 9
1977 Mavenck 2 dr • p s .
p b, A I cond $1,795 614
667 3085

1976 Ford LTD, 2 dr hdtp ,
p s. p b, a1r Low m1leage,
exc co nd $1,695 614 667
3085

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

ontletter to each aqu1rt to form
lour ordinary WOfd•

1960 Dodge Dart 4 door
seda n Good ong1nal cond ,
exce llent 1nlenor
S800
Negotiable 61~ 949 2693 or
614 985 35~2

PHONi 446-3643

I ROBOK~~.......--

I I

I

Yesterday

1975 VW Dasher . 4 ar
wagon Good cond $1,195
614667 3085

5

I

Now

.,•no•

the drcted

'-tt•rt

1974 Ford P1nto
2849

614949

1967 Dodge
Charger
Almos t show cond1t1on
Body 1mmaculate Rebuilt
318, Holl ey 4 barrel .
header s Must see to ap
prec1ate No cheap Ca ll
614 992 6569 after 12 noon
HART S Used Car s. New
Ha ven West V.rgm1a . Over
20 less expens•ve cars •n
stock

Real Eatate - General

STROUT~~ REALTV

gesttd by the above canoon

TAP HIS WIRE

Real Estate - General

Inc.

=.

NEW USTlNG - RACINE - Your own re&lt;mlionlland ClmllOl&amp;
IJ!rk Bo!M&amp; • f!Shin4 - Hunline lwo~ml1elt 11 acres of
beautiful
crmpsites wah pnvate wa!ef' mloit Eiectri: ond Wiler II

STYLE ... ELEGANCE ... A WAY OF
LIFE - Forst time on tne marker for
thi s l1ke new contempora ry, 3 or 4
BR 's, 2 ba ths. large open LR w•th
ftrepl ace &amp; beamed ce tlm gs, k •tchen
mctudes range, OW &amp; r ef ng
full
ba sement, wrap around deck, cedar
s1 d1ng, 12 )(24 above gr ound pool.
garage, bar n &amp; 10 acres near Eureka
C•tv schools
LOG CABIN - Very untque, old hand
hewn log beams, sleep1ng loft, large
stone fireplace, modern barn, 14 acres
woods, located in the Wayne NattOnal
Forest, 20% down

RIO GRANDE AREA R10 Cen·
terpo1nt Rd (C herry Ridge). approx 75
acr es woodland, fronts on 2 rds., county
water available Owner may help I .nan·
ce Pr1 ced to sell at $400 per acre

GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE - 131 fl
front on State Route 554, corner lot,
over 3100 sq fl , 5 bays. presently used
for auto, tractor &amp; farm equ1pment
repatrs, part1al finan c tng available

RECREATION LAND - 25 acres mil,
mostly wood s, front son L1ttle Raccoon
Creek &amp; St ate Route 325 near Tycoon
Lake Sl5,000

HUNTERS PARADISE - 48 acres m / 1
on Raccoon Creek near Ewington, a p
prox 10 A tillable. balance woods. 1'/'
story log cottage, ce llar house, 12xl5
metal bulldmg, extra n1ce l4x70 2 BR . 2
bath mobile home All th1 s for the
ask1ng pr 1ce of S39,400

GR EE N TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has Iron
tage on Stale Route 588 Fa•rfield Cen·
tenary Road&amp;. Vance Fairf1eld Rd. Ex·
cel\ent for farming or development.
Older 5 rm . &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
s110 mcluded OWners will cons1der
selling smal ler t racts of short term
tmancmg Call for more mtormat1on

PRICE REDUCED TO Sl2,?00 - 50
acres more or less near eureka, ap
prox 15 A grassland, balance wood·
ed, mcely re modeled 6 rm and bath
home, WB f1repla ce, stove, refng ,
several outbulld.ngs owners Jeavmg
the area and wovld like a quick sale
MORGAN TOWNSHIP - Li ke new 2
BR home, 4 yrs old, stove, refr.g., air
conditioner, WB stove, 20x30 barn wtth
carport, 2 sheds, al most 2 acres, ask1ng
$21,900 with an assumable loan Be the
first to see thi s one
PRICE REDUCED527,000
MAKE US AN OFFER
1 lhtnk you wou ld say that th1s
sprawling br1ck tn level 1S one .of the
nicest country homes you've ever seen
Thts beauty tS Situa ted on 4117 i'lrrPc;. nf
land about 3'1' m 1lesfrom Rodney wn y
not let your fam1ly en,oy 5 BR s, 3 baths,
large living and d1n1 ng rm , complete
kitchen. family room w •rn stone
fireplace and 2 car garge

LARIAT DRIVE - OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - L ovely 3 BR , I
story, 15x21 LR , forma l dln1ng, full
basement with 14x 27 fam1ly rm .
f 1n1 shed tn knotty pine, 2 f.replaces, 42
ft r ear screened m porch, garage and
100x300 lot Can be bought with or
w•thout f urn•lure Asking $59,500 w1th
25% down and 1294-- on the balance.
11% FINANCING AVAILABLE - 5
YR OLD SPLIT-LEVEL- Features 4
or 5 BRs, 3 baths, 30 II LR, 2 lam11y
r ms, 2 woodburn1ng fireplaces, large
k ttchen and dtntng area, 2 car garage,
one of the conty•s nicest pools (20x501
and a tru ly profess1o'nally landscaped
lot Located on Debby Ortve Owner
says
sell
so
call
RANNY
BLACKBURN for a personal showing.
You'll be pleased you did
HOLIDAY PARI&lt; - 2 Camping lots,
furn1shed 26 tt trotwood travel tra11er,
sheller house, util1ly building, county
water, sewer, access to Raccoon Creek
Priced for a qu1ck sale

992-6191
949-2660
992-5692
.... 992-2259

LOVELY BRICK ' &amp; FRAME RANCHEII plus 78 acres of land in Cheshtre
Twp offers lots of good living tor our
gfOWing family Home 1S ju5t like new
with 1438 sq 11 of I1V1ng area plus an attached garage 2 spacious BRs, 2 baths,
8x27 LR, 10x24 kitchen W1lh refrlg ,
disp., OW, double oven and range,
washer and dryer stays in laundry .
Land is mostly rolling pasture land w1lh
approx 25 acres wooded

RODNEY -CORA
'
ROAD - Approx 30
acres woodland located 3 m 1 from
Rodney
County water ava•lable
$12,000

$18,dGO- NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD 4 bedroom sectional home, must sell
th• s month to settle estate. Call for Appomtment

OWN YOUR OWN CAMP SITE - tnthe
wilderness of tne Wayne Nat•onal
Forest. 5 to 9 acre tracts of woodland
now avatlable. adioin1ng thousands of
acres of government land . Public hun ·
ling, fiShing and camp1ng perm,tted
Prices start at $3500 w•lh financin~
available.

GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 33 acres m/1
on State Route 160 near North Gall Ia
High School Mostly clean rolling
grassland, stock pond, 3 Bl! ranch type
home with full basement, gciod barn.
Out of town owners says SELL

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m/1,
located south of Mercerville Approx . 20
A Tillable, balance woods, lob. bose.
oWners will help finance

BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY 132
acres m, mostly clean hill pasture, good
fences, llf• story home, large barn. lob.
base, fronts won 3 roads near Mudsock.
Price reduced to $64,000.

liT. 35 near ROdney on Rt 35 3 bedrooms,
woodburner, new bath, new roof in·
sulallon , attractive decorating, garage
w/ workshop, storage building and 9W1b
mt assumpiton $49.900 Call B. J Haor
ston .
BRICK RANCH- IN TOWN - Quality
built and i mpeccably maintained ranch
located tn good in-town netghborhOOd.
• This 3 bedroom home offers an equ •p·
ped k1tc hen and f ormal dining,
fireplace in living room , cer am1 c tiled
bath, nat gas. central air. new roof, U
breezeway &amp; oversized garage, new
carpet, all cedar closets plus a 7Sx119
flat nicely landscaped yard $55.000.
Call Jim Cochran.
OFFICE 01! RETAIL BLDG. - FOR
RENT - Good locaiiOn on 3rd Ave.
near old library 1n town. 2 story struc
lure has been used for last 2 years For
thriving business. Will renlfor $275 mo.
OWNER SAYS SELL NOW! - Energy
efficient home near Rodney . Attractive
well planned 3 bedroom home offering
equipped eat·ln kitchen with bar, 2 lull
baths, dining room, elect. heat plus 14"
insul. in cei ling, 5" in walls &amp; 6" in
floors Flat yard. owners want offer.
Priced at $42 ,500. Call Jim Cochran

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REALTY

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BULAVILLE ROAD- $125,000 - Prime building
sites. 137 acres Frontage on 8ufavllle: Morton
Woods and Yale College Roads. 60 acres tillable, 15
pasture. rest timber Nice 3 BR ranchhome. eat-In
kitchen, storm doors and windoWS. Kyger Creek
S&lt;;h0015, 6 miles from city . , • ' .
BUSINESS OPPOR-TUNI T Y ·:.._ Brick and bloc;,
building on oiO'xlSO' lot on Eastern Ave. ' In
Gallipolis. Presently In use as carry-our. Excellent
locotion. Call lor showing. $43,500,
GALLIPOLIS - $16,000 Two bedroom frame ranch,
eat-•n kitchen has range ond refri11erator. o40'x150'
lot. GOO&lt;f starter home E~cellent for retired couple.
' \
'
$1S,ooli - Two · bedroom !tame wlth aluminum
aiding on \'J Kre lot. API!f'OX. 6 miles from citY.
Kyger Creek Schools.

.

washers
1

e Ranges • Refrigerators
e Dryers • Freeters
PARTS and SERVICE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

CHARLIE HATFIELD
OPERATOR
PH 742-2903
9-3 1 mo pd

- ·POmeroy', o~ .
Ph. 992-2174
2-26 lfc

+

WEST
Ullllll

'I

+tD 71
+AQi

co~\lJb,oN
New Homes - ex·

1

tensive remodeling
• Electric work
eCustom Pole Bldgs &amp;
Ganges
• Roofing Work
• Aluminum &amp; Vinyl
Sidings
15 Yean Experience

..

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.
Vinyl • Aluminum
Complete autter m,
COIIpllle remolleling, tOOl·
in1 of all typa. Worled in
home 1111 20 Jt111.
Fr11 estimates

Call843·3322

Also Transm1sston
PH. 992· 5682
or 992-7121

8-25-llt'Q

...

Teachers ,
Scout
Leaders and Organ.za·
hons, Come In and
Take A Look AI Our
Package Deals. D1s
counts Available
LESSONS STARTING
CALL or STOP IN
E
TO SIGN UP
7
SALE ON
"'
ORNAMENTS
0.

o

1969 vw. $500 304 576 2581
1972 Chry sl er Newpo rl 304
675 son
197'1 Chevrolet Mont e
Carlo, most reasonab le of
fer Ca ll after 4 P M 304

----------------~~------------------~-----------------167 5 6456

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
.Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
•20 Yn. experience

Oewayne Williams
&amp; sconie Smith
All ma~es and models
Antenna InstallatiOn
House calls and shop
serv•ce available.
8·13-1 mo. Pd

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
'Addofts and rtmodtllnl
-Roef1n1 and cutter work
...f.otlcrelt worl
-Piumbintond
electncal worl
(frH Esflmaln)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 94f-2160 or 949·2322
~ 20 lie

992·6215 or992-73 14
Pomeroy, Oh1o
9 30 tfc

12 - - TruCk' s for Sa le

S&amp;W
GUNSMITHING

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers

AND CUSTOMIZING
PH. 992·7656

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trenc.her
-water '
-sewer
.-Gas lines
• -;-Septic Systems

Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, Parts, Etc.
STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
HUIITIIIG UCENSE
AVAILABU
9-llmo.

L:arge or Small Jobs
PH. 992-2471
9-3-1 mo pd

. J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

P1nsburgh No. 8 A
Mine Run (Strip)
Delivered Pr1ce:
POMEAOY-$31.00 Ton
MIDDLEPORT
AND AACINE -$32. 00
Ton
Me1gs Co .-$3 1.00 Ton
I Plus Delivery)
4 Ton Min•mum
C.O.D.

PH . 992-2280 or
992·2618

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

tJI&amp;I l
+10 8 73
SOUTH
+1711
'QUU

_

Starer aft fold out. u sed
tw •ce. exce ll ent cond
$2495 Located Ma1n and
Second. M tdd leport . OhiO
6149922828
9

Fold down cam per, 73
Lark,
s leeps
6,
retnger ator , stove and fu r
nace Phone 304 458 1825

79

1960 GMC 112 ton flatbed.
e)( tra spnngs, 4 speed, V 6,
f1rst $200 fakes 1t Call 614
256 1919
81 Luv 4x4, l ow miles good
cond Cal 1446 2706

1977
Chevy
P1ckup
PB , PS ,AC.
Au tomat1 c.
w1th topper, new t.res,
sha rp Phone304 675 528 1
73

V,1 ns&amp;4W 0

77 CJ 5 Jeep, 4 wheel drtve,
$1,500. w1th header s Call
614 367 0212

lnte} natlonal Scout 4 cy l , 3
spd . 4 WD. runs exc , body
good, btg f1res, good shape
New battery, $750 or t rade
for auto car of eq ual valu e
Rt -4 Box '15 Texas Rd , on
Hi l l
1979 Chevy Blazer Am Fm
stereo, a1 r. o s, p b. 350
automat•c. 33,000 miles
614 992 6771
1979 Dodge van P S . p b ,
automat1c tr ansm1SS10n,
a1r, cru1se am fm , par
f1ally custom 1zed, 46,000
miles S5.600 or best offer
614 992 6330

••

1974 Apac he f iberg lass pop
up, slee ps 6, turnance and
stove, good cond Cal l 614
245 9153 after 5

81

Home
1m_pro~e_m e nt s

ST UCCO PLASTERIN G
textured ce 1ltngs co m
merc1al and res1den t•al ,
freeest 1m ates Ca ll 614 256
11 82

JONE S BOYS WATER
SERV ICE Ca ll 614 367 7471
or6 14 367 0591

Marcum
Roof1ng
&amp;
Spout1ng
30 years e)(
penence spec1allz1ng 1n
bu1l t up r oof Call 614 388
9622 or 614 388·9857
CAPTA IN STEEMER Car
pet Clean1ng featured by
Halfell Brosthers Custom
Carpet s Free est1mates
Ca ll 446 2107
Masonary work, Logue
Con tr acf 1ng,
Rf
1
Ew1 ngton
Ca ll 614 388
9939
C HRI STIAN 'S
CO N
Constr
STRUCTION
roof1ng S1d.ng, spout1n g
fenc1 ng, pa.nt1ng, r epatrs&amp;
clean 1ng
446 2000. call
before 8 and affer 5 30
BIN GS CONCRETE CO N
STR UCT ION 5pec 1ai1Z1ng
1n concrete dnveways
Sidewa lk s floors pat1os
etc 11 yr exp Call614 367
7891

rll rt

1976 Suzuk1 550, road b1ke
Call &lt;58 1997
Motorc ycle .:1 S.11c
1979
KTM 420cc
Extremely
clean, many new parts w 1fh
r ecet pts $600 614 992 3082
75

C. R. MASH
lX)NSTRUCTION

.

' '
' c.tlom

~iaoms.

Rtllllldtlin1.

a4wns new komn,
-ni. elecbic, sidini

FREE
ESTIMATES
.PH. 992-6011.
'

.,
,
0

·

ML
cONTRACTING

14 It 51arcr aft al um se m1
u haul 10 hp ,Johnso n top
board. ttlt trailer , new con
dtt,on$1200 304 675 2651

1

76

Doar IBDhc. Senice,
Wiler, s.ws, Ponds
F01ndatlons, ltcllfllilions
"fEE EsTIMATES"

and

kllthens

8-30·1 mo.

8 201ft

OLD&amp;
., 3 w•shlngton st., Ravtns•-· w. va. 26164
Phone c;1041 27NU5
MONTH
SEPTEMBER

0,

ANN"iERSAIY SALE
Guns

Golf Clubs
~ Fishing Supplies\
~ Rttr 1ever 1100
) •• Scopes
Teotb
WeltllfS

WeiiMBMCheS

'

Traps
Boob

MUCH, MUCH MOA E I

'OIIH t .. a Mond•Y pru Saturday

•l

Lowest
Prices
Ever
On

Phone 949·2293
or 949·2575

,

0 0

NOTICE

we Specialize ln
Racine &amp; Syracuse
sewer Hookups

"

Bonts i1 nd
Motors for S;de

New,14' Wide
MOBILE .
HOMES
From
$9,995.00

D&amp;W'
,·ESTATES, INC.

Au to Part s
8. Accessones

vw Beetl e eng 1ne f1ts 67
and up $200, also have
Chevy V 8 heads $50 a set
Call 614 245 5067 or 614 2459436
1974 Toyota Carella 1600 cc
Motor $150 Tran sm iSSIOn
$75 Rear end SSO 614 985·
3833
8 II Alum truck topper
$50 00 610 II Alum. truck
, topper
575
614 985 3373
Idays and 985 4115 eve. or
w eek
en ds .
US ED tores. Hanshaws
T1res, Lucas Lane, Pt.
Pleasant, phone 304·675·

7360

RON'S Telev 1s1on Serv1ce
Spec ialiZing 10 Zen1th and
Motorol a, Quazar, and
house calls Ca ll 576 2398 or
446 2454
F &amp; K Tree T nmm1nQ
stump removal Call 675
133 1
RIN GLE 'S SERV ICE ex
penenced ma son. roofing,
c arpenter.
e l ec tr~ c t an
ge n er al r e pa1r s and
remodel1ng Cal l 304 675
2088 or 675 4560
Water Well s Commerc•a l
and Oomest 1c Test l10les
Pu mps Sales and Se rv• ce
304 895-3802
ADVANCED
Seamless
Gutter- Door s
Oft ertn g
con t1nus e
gutt er 1ng ,
sea mless sid.ng, roofm g,
garag.o
doors.
fr ee
est1ma "· 614 698 8205
PAl NT I NG 1ntenor &amp; ex
terior, free est1mates. 304
675-1128
82

:~

:_ :: :::- =-=--

_.

~

Plumbtng

_!_!!ea~~

_

CARTER'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Ptne
Phone ~46· 3888 or 446·4477

... ·- ---·------

a4 ---Eiictr.cal -- l..

With 2 Locations
Rt. 93 North
Jackson, Ohio
216;3752
or ,
corner 2nd i Viand
Pt. Pleasont, W. Vo.
675-44,4

•'

7~ :-.:::::::::-A~t;'R'epalr

-

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

_ _ !JI_!!friger~~ __

SPECIAL
Complete SEWING Mach me repair s,
enamel pa•nt jobs from servtce Authonzed Stnger
$300. Sunroofs installed Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
FabriC Snap,
from $225 Auto Trim Cen· Scissors
Pomeroy .•992 - 228~.
ter. 4JI6·1968.

'0

fOR PROfESSIONAL SE RVI CE CAll
24 Hou• Emereenc, SerY1ce

Need somet h•ng hauled
away or som eth 1nq moved"
We' ll do 1t Ca l l 446 3159 or
614 256 1967 after6

II No Answer

446-2062

SOLUTION

Now Hau lmg house coal,
lump or stok er up to B ton
Limestone , top soil, f1ll
d.rt Call614 367 710 1

...

upnolstery

87

"

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 63 Sec Ave, Ga l l1poll s
446 7833 or 446 1833

Furn1tur e rcpc11rcd
an
f1Ques res tored . cuslom
cab1nets, 304 675 3671 aft er
5p m

SUNDAY PUZZLER

PAI NTIN G
1nter 10r and
ex t e rtor , plumb•ng ,
roof1ng, some remode l1ng
20 yrs exp Call 614 388
9652

Ca rp e ntry
repatr
&amp;
remodei1ng, wall pane/mg.
celi1ng tile &amp; S1d1ng 614
992 2759

Motorcyc les

" .....,.,lNG SERVICE

MOWRE YS Upholstery Rl
1 Box 124. Pt Pleasanl. 304
675 4154

serwlees

Gene's Steam Carpel
Clean Scotch Gaurd Free
es t1mates spr1ng special s
Gene Sm•lh , 992 6309

j 1974 Yamaha endre
b1ke Call 458 1997

Nu· Prlme replocement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doon
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Polio Coven
How met scrun rooms
Mobile homt ownlngs
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Mllltr DriYt
446·2442

INDUSPIALoCOMMERCIAL•RESIDENTIAL
•S"tolchgard 3m
•Carpel Cleaning
•Insured
•Furnitute Cleaning
•Pet
Odor Removal
Upholstery &amp; Vin1l
•Fast
Orying
•Acouslical Ceilmgs
•Propane Bufhng IH1gh Speed)
•Insurance Work
•Furn1ture Moving Included
Water, Smoke, Fite
•We Rake Pile
•FREE Fr1endl1 Esl1mates
FALL SPECIAL

General H rwllng

85

ACROSS
1 Confirm

6 Aroma
11 Swift
16 Do a deco~
rating job
21 Part of
Jacket
22
- to get
ready ·
23 Angry
:24 Assistants
25 River Island
:26 Stable
reSidents
28 Put off

30 Ponder
32 Cooled lava
33 NFL score
34 One of the
Grants
35 Menu words
36 Replete
37 Transgress
38 Worm
40 A1da for

71 Street In
Paris
72 Cupid
7-4 Whiskers

76 Bishopric
77 Pack away
78 Fourposters
79 Rudimentary
82 lrlsl'l seaport
84 Track
events
85 Rage
86 Ark builder
86 Flow
89 Strong w1nd
90 Wide-awake
92 Cheerless
94 Feelings

98 See 70
Across
99 Meadows
100 Tennis
stroke

t02 Alps
t03 Couple

one
42 Ex1st

104 Youngster

43 Learn1ng

106 Sailing

44

Large
amount

74

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Healing &amp; Air
Conditioning. All Types
Insulation Electrlcol
Wiring.
Call 446·8515 or 446-0445 '
tfc
af1er4 · 30pm.

JIMS Water Serv.ce Ca ll
J1m Lan1 er 304 675 7397

Motor Home
(____ Ca!!_"_ee_!s_

82 chevrolet 112 Ton PU , 6
cyl, stand trans, rall ey
whee ls &amp; r adials, 25 MPG.
8,700 miles Call446 0043 at
ter5

1974 F 350 Ford 1 ton truck
$1000 6149853373 days
-------------------~-----------------~--------------- 1 614 985 4115 eve ana week
ends

'

'"1-'' •
...-r\•G
\.lOl•

att.t\"'v

I

245-9113

••

71
Autos for Sa le
CARS 5200' Trucks $150!
Available at loca l gov' f
sa les Call (ref undable) 1
7145690241 ex t 1855 for
dtrec tor y that shows you
how to purchase 24 hours

3 24 lie

7 16 2 mo pd

, 711

ia - - - -cariii)ing- - ~===::~~==~:::::=:! - -~~q!!_emen_!__ __ ~

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR . .

EAST

+I

jack to ltJJ gueen. Then South
will ruff bli lui opade with
dummy"o 1111 trump and
cull the three lop dlamonclo
lei diJclrd two of hla three
clultl He will wind up IDling

two opades and a club ana
JCOrinl hla came
Tbere m1y be some com·
mentabout nice play, but no
one Ia &amp;oing to oee that East
could have defeated the
u
contract
+KJS
Actually, East's plar "
Vulnerable Neither
simple once you notice I He
Dealer: West
follows to the king of spades
and then ruffs bl.i partner 's
Soot
Norll Eaat
ace at trtck two
P111 ~
Obi
Aller that fine play It is no
Put
~
trouble lor East to lead a
Put
Pua
club West takes his ace and
queen and South is one tr1ck
Opening lead +K
short
North may suggest that
South bid too mucli- when he
went to four hearts Or 1f
By O.wtld Jtcoby
North is one o( those rare
lJIII Aln Solllal
souls who takes defeat wtth
In the normal bridge a smile he may conKralulate
aame North and South will East on hts n :cel lent
play some number of hearts defense
II they are &amp;ood active bidd· (NEWSPAPER EP'n'ERPRISE .'.SSN)

Plaster Craft and
Ceramic Bisque

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Free Estimates

lj)ldes. !Iouth wUI ruff with
dummy's oce of trumpa,
cull the
and lead the

tine

+1 II

992-2663

37 lfc

.. ll-11

+QJ
'A KJlO
AKQ3

Beg1nfng or Inter.
ALL AGES
TRIPS WEEKLY
Beautiful Golf Courses
Driving I! a nges
Call John Teaford
Ches ter
Also
PRO SHOP
CLUB REPAIR
Open Year Round
9-10·1 mo

POMEROY, OHIO

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Caii742-Jl95

ff-\"
f.t\Jv"'!..

I

NORTH

DABBLE SHOP

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

'\1'1,

HOME FOR ALL SEASONS - Pool in the back
yard for Summer ... wOOd burner to cut healing cost
this Winter. Low ma •nlenance U S Steel sld•ng, '
fully carpeted except k1tchen and bath. Wallpoper
in most rooms adds a nice homey touch. 3
bedrooms, large eal·tn kitchen A11ached garage.
The pr ice is great, too! 534,000.
•
FIVE ACRES KYGER CREEK AREA Remodeled 3 bedroom frame home. Equipped eatIn kitchen . 24x36 barn. chicken house. 1100 and
·
tobacco base. Beoutllullocatlon. $38,900.

l

OWNERS WILL FINANCE - LOW, JUST LISTED Energy effiC ient,
LOW INTER EST - OWners anxious for quality buill 3 bedroom, maintenance
an offer on this 4 bedroom ranch near free ranch lust 2 miles west Of to'Nn.
town
Has eq uipped kitchen, full ·You will love the care this 'fine home
basement, huge family room, ftreplace, has had . Includes 2 stone (treplaces, 2
l'h baths &amp; garage. Nat gas heat &amp; ceramic tile baths, w ife approved kit·
large yard Only $44,000 Call Jtm chen. full basement, family rbom
w/ bar, new effic1ent nat. gas furnace, 2
Cochran.
18 ACRES &amp; HOUSE LOWER car garage plus large covered porches
RIVER RD. - Stately 4 bedroom, 2 &amp; 20x40 in-ground pool. Call J
story home •n e~ty schools Has 2 wood
Cochran
burners, fami ly room , eq utpped ' kit· 994 MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION_
chen, 2 baths, 2 car garage and 18 acres MILES NORTH OF H.M .C. _ F~~~~~~ ~~
wOOded . Will sell house &amp; 3'1&gt; acres at sized 4 bedroom brick ranch lc
reduced price. Total price for all less than 1 m 11e. off Rt. 160.
$61,900. Ca\ICiydeWalker
ped kitchen &amp; dinette, family
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME
large and has nice fireplace,
RESIDENTIAL, PROFESSIONAL OFbasement Is partially finished and
FICES OR BOTH - Attractive 21/l
has workshop Utility room' and
chen, over 2 acres Of land in
story, 12 room house on 2nd Ave. in the
heart of fhe professional business com· wooded setting. li'rlced in S60
munlly. Includes
~ens, 2'1• baths, Clyde Walker
s. :
full basement
1\garage Top 161(1 ,tiCI!ES - 1 MILE SOUTH OF ~10
quality cons!!
,.,\l'lvn built a~d GRANDE - Attractively remOdeled a,
gOOd malnteno
thls a solid tn· redecorated 3 bedroom brick &amp; frame
vestment. A •.• rely atmosphere Is home on Rt 325 Has famil
·
provided by the-large rooms, hardwOOd ' baths large. dln 1ng room F~ room, 2
floors, fireplaces, etc . Call Ike full base'ment, woodbu~ner,a . {~~;
Wlse,m an
garage, plus some nice rolling land w ith
13 AC. - 3 BEDI!OO(JI HOME - 2 600' highway, frontage, stocked pond
miles from town you find this very nice large barn and several fruit trees Cali
home with barn and other. outbulldtngs, B. J . Hairston.
about 112 the hou•:.l....' w - the rest has
been complete
In excellent
faste. Nat. ga•
new beautiful
kitchen with 6
·!!•. Children can
have horses, t ... 1ne or anv other farm
activity and ' still be a city slicker.
$69,500. Call Ike W1seman
509 OAK · cR. - Beautiful 3 or ~
bedroom brick ranch that hu
IS M lfll[ TO IUY' IUOI£ 1M[
everything. This top quality home of1011 CM IEfllWlCE AT 111£.
fers hardwOOd &amp; teak floors, some new
carpet, superb decorating, 2 baths, 2
fireplaces, formal dining, family room,
'\
deluxe kitchen, full b•·~ment, plus ex- BEST BUY IN TOWN 1 YR.
ceptlonal l'!~dscapil , and large ' WARRANTY - Enfoy a shady lot, nice
heated pool. Much
ore. Call Jim . buill-In kitchen tamllv room or formal
CoclhSrTanA. VENUE- WHA.T A PLACE dining, 3 bedr'ij;ta~l fireplace, cen·
tralalr. Kid•
11'1'- .-_' 1 relax~ at·
'
LIVE- Romantic view all day long mosphere
·n a 2 car
but especially In the evening with t'\41 garage. w/~f-111"
rapes a~d curmoonr~~.:~be~a5ms reflecting ~If lhe OhiO s talna Hal. gL. ,,eatanclfloored attic lor
waters. one of tile best S65.000 - owner financing available.
In
and one of the fine Cell Ike Wiseman.
that dates
to I!T:Ri•::...
••'""'"'

• Sewer
eGos
• Water lines

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

J

.. IF WE CAN'T SELL·YOUR HOME
WE WILL BUY IT." (Qualified Homes)

NEAR SCHOOLS .. SHOPPING - Very n•ce ~
bedroom home, ea t tn kttchen, snack bar.- formal
d1n1ng low cosr gas neat. $~7 00 gas budget, garden
space A steal at U2 ,000.

All Makes
e washers • Dish -

J.A.R.
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY

Chester, Ohio

•

J

THIS HOME DEMANDS A SECOND LOOK ...:. The
decorating is fabulous, walls are mirrored,
wallpapered, nearly all have chai r rail , excellent
taste. Cozy den off k itchen has beamed ceiling ,
rust•c briCk nearth with Franklin stove, mantel for
clocks and things. Gorgeous drapes In living room
stay with home, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal d1n1ng
with access to covered deck, central a1r cond., at
!ached garage, large level lawn, back yard fenced,
visible from Rt. 35, near Holzer Hosp $69,900. JUST
LISTED!

8-25·1mo

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE

1

COST EFFICIENT SPACE plus pleasing ap·
pearance! You'll be amazed at the low heating and
cooling costs for th •s all electric home 3 bedrooms,
l'h baths both have ceramtc ttle Work saver k1t
chen with dishwasher, diSposal , range and hOO&lt;f .
Lots of counter space TV room or formal dln1ng off
ktlchen. Tw 1n wtndows 1n 11v1ng room allow the
roght amount of light for plants Attached garage
wtlh automa11c opener Near City $4'1.500 POSSible
Mortgage Assumption

lfc

Greg· Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or992-2282

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION -1.12 AC.
&amp; MOBILE HOME-owners have
transferred must sell this 1973 12x60 2 BR mobile home situated on over
1 acre off Rt. 160 Has fully equtpped SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOLS 18
kitchen, bath w/ shower, 14x70 cone. ACRES &amp; NEWER HOME - Located
pad, 8x24 covered porch, underpmnecl, off Rl. 775 near Raccoon Ck lhtS 2
storage bldg. &amp; underground utilities bedroom home is 3 yrs old and needs
SHARP' Must see to appreCiate. Call some hntshed work The 18 acres Is
Ike Wiseman . Priced at$15,000.
mostly wooded wtfh over \ 1,000' f ron· .
13, 250 DOWN PYMT. _ 16% IN- tage. Ntee garden area and 2 sheds
TEl! EST - Payments of under $300 $35,000 Call Clyde Walker. '
1
mo. (doesn' t include taxes &amp; tn- REDUCED T0$49,900 - LOCATED IN
surance) . Redecorated 2 story 3 RODNEY - A charming tudor'{ anch at ·
·
bedroom home located less than 12 a barga ;n price. Has 3 bedrooms (16' . - miles from town Th1s is an older home master bedroom w/ private bath).
r
In better than average cond A. offers lam •IY room, wOOdburner. 2 baths,
lam 1ly room , dining room , wOOdburner. equipped k•lchen, 2 car garage ahq v,
basement. rural water, central air &amp; acre yard Over 1400 sq fl. of com- •
more $32,500. Call Ike Wiseman
lortable liv•ng Call Ike Wiseman .

Ron Canaday, ReaHor, 446·3636
Audrey Canaday, Rea~r 446-3636
25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

u

KOUNTRY KLUB

NASKEY'S
FURNITURE
Stripping &amp;
Refinishing
446· 3896 or
446-3080

CHAIN LINK FENCE

West will atart br Iedin&amp;
out kllla. ace anij 10 01

FALL GOLF TOUR

-

AGES 3 &amp; UP

Call Barbara
Lawrence
992-3282

fi'adtator spec•allst
NATHAN ~ IG C· S
35 Yrs. E xpenence

POSSIBLE LAND
CONTRACT - Approx. 50 acres crop,
50 ac pa•ture, balance In WOOdS. ~.000
lb. tobacco ba se, 60x90 barn, 2~x38 barn
&amp; 18x6S s•lo. Concrete floor lrl barn
w/approx 4,000 sq . fl. concrete loafing
area Highway frontage on Rl 775 Al so
very nice 4 bedroom home with pool.
Call Clyde Walker for more Info
•
_
ACRES
_
OLOER
HOME
Get ·
25 8
our hammer A. pa•nl brush and put this .
2 bedroom home in good repair . 4
rooms , no bath, severla sm.all
buildings, 24x60 barn, 11e house (10x18')
wilh fireplace 1440 lb tobacco base.
Nearly 26 acres (remote) $19,600. Call . •
Clyde Walker
,
CEDAR Bl-LEVEL - ASSUMABLE
MTG . - Nice 3 bedroom hpme tn K.C.
SchOdls. Thi s 1 room home offers a •
deluxe buill-In kllhen, dl n 1ng room,
family room, f ireplace, 2 baths, 2 car
garage &amp; large wooaea lOti Low ••tereslfinancing CaiiCiydeWalker.
•
$5,000 DOWNPYMT . f360 MO .
PAYMENTS - What an oppo• tun•ty to
buy this nice 4 bedroom home in gOOd
condition Has equipped kitchen, dining
room, sewing room, enclosed porch,nice carpeting, new roof &amp; furn .,
acre
with large storage bldg &amp; mobile home
hook·up Located on Rt 160. Call J1m
1
Cochran.
' •
5 LOVELY ACRES - OWNER M,AY
FINANCE - Very attractjve location ·
near Rio Grande in C•IY School Pis! • •
The 5 acres lay excellent for horses &amp;
cattle 2 outbuildings The 3 bedroom
home has foreplace, LR, kitchen &amp; balh.
Call Clyde Walker $39,900

DENNY

belrll by South

USE "

KEN'S.
APPLIANCE

ladies Jazzercise

COMPLI'TI'
AIIDIATOII
Sf RVI Ct.
From the Smallest
t-f eater Core to the 1
lafgest Radtator.

.

•
erv1ces
offered

The South rises again

room, woodburner, rec. room, new car·

pet full batn &amp; plumbed f or 2nd bath In
lo..;er level &amp; equipped k itchen Call lor
appointment
$56,000. Call J l m
Cochran.

The

BRIDGE

r

•

115 AC. FARM -

MINI FARM - Approximately len acres ~nd with three bediOOm
r.~nch hoose. prod, Ollltluldm~ Goal pl8ce lor horse!! On~ $35.1100

SURROUNDED BY TREES AND FLOWERS - 3
bedroom, 2 story home. Extra large newly carpeted
l iv1ng room with fireplace . Country kitchen has
range and side-by-Side refrogerator freezer .
Bricked wall and flu for wood burner. 3 bedrooms.
Covered paltO. 24'x30' garage plus carport City
School D1strict $35,900 JUST LISTED!

w,z,

• Cutters
t r. nwnspouts

7

'

NEW USTlNG - Crew Rood - AniCe 1hnl0 bedroom home with
1w1&gt; bath~ lanily room. full basemen!. 1Wo W8 firejia&lt;:es. on •woxlmlllely
one a&lt;re kit Gar.l&amp;e, dec~ monv olher leatu""' $36,900

RACINE - Amce one lfoor three bed100m house · double kit centnll
'"· re&lt;ll~ niCe kifchen, full bl.!e"""tlovely carpetillf, foonal d11nn1 rODIT\
Iron! and rear !Mh 129,!m

:1
1I

.'

camp!i!es. Walnut. h&lt;kory, poplor, peach, and apple ~.... Athree bed100111 home ~ excellent condlion, free ps, new 2~ car prafl!. pn!en
space $68,500

Real Estate - General

PRICE REDUCED TO $69,5001 BUY
BELOW REPLACEMENT COST. Over
2100 s~ 11 ov living area Thi s all brick
rancher offers3 BR 's (master Is 16&gt;2?1
3 ba ths, 15x24 Ll! with fireplace , 13x25
tam •IY rm ., formal dinmg rm , galley
kttchen .ncludes double ovens, corn1ng
type counte r top r ange, OW &amp; d1 sp., gas
heat, cent ai r , att1c fan &amp; much more
Loca ted '" town on Spruce St Ex·
tens1on Ca ll Ranny Blackburn for a
personal showi ng

H. L WRITESEL

fREE ESTIMATES
;Ph. tt2-27t1
. orMt-22U

WOODED PRIVACY - CONVEHl
LOCATION - A very pict~resq•e
•;ng just m•nutes from town on Rt. 588 .
bedroom Dutch bi level with 2112 baths,
family room, 2 extra rooms 1n lower
level (can be whatever you need).
Equipped kitchen, 2 car garage, ._,,.. ,.
Tl NG - And priced at only $65.000.
wrap-around
deck &amp; nearly 1'12
Is a lovely ~ bedroom 5 yr old home
with a beaultful view and quiet se- with lots of trees S67 ,900 Call
cluded setting This ome has equip-, Wiseman. ·
ped kitchen. fireplace. 2 baths,
ba sement, d1ni ng room , office or den,
.!
WOOdbUrn1n g furna ce plus 30x50 metal
~ :
barn, 10 acres of crop, balance In
' ;
wOOds Call for appointment Call Clyde
i :
Walker.
I

608 L MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

REAI.IOI

OWNER WILL FINANCE - Great
family home with 3 Brs, 2 baths, 15x27
LR wttn gas foreplace. large modern
kitch en w1th rang e, self cleaning oven,
ow and d1Sp , laundry With washer an
dryer, pa r t basement and over 6 acres
of la nd at th e edge of town

home
mucrllefl for you to do
New carpet, wallpaper, insula ion,
paint, etc . Includes a nice foyer, fully
equipped kitchen, formal di ning, 2 en·
closed porches. 2 full baths, basement,
not gas hea t (budget $90 mo. I, plus
oversized garage &amp; workshop, brick
barbecue plus-private fenced backyord.
Se llers may h el p finance . Priced at
$55,00. Call J1m Cochran

Jumbles PANIC WHOSE QUAINT SKEWER
Answer How to find out 1 tightro pe walker's secret-

lB

RIO GRANDE - Corner lot. zoned
commerc1al. l40x l56, all util iti eS
available
Ready for your new
bUStness

' 9'11 94 ASSUMPTION KYGER
CREEK SCHOOLS - Br and new listing
located on an attractive 1.2 acre tree.
studded yard. Has 3 bedrooms, family

to

form the IUrprtM answer. as aug

REALTORS!
Henry E Cleland, Jr., GRI .. .
Jean Trussell
Dott•e S. Turn er
Off1Ce

'

• f'amtin9

·I

FOR FUTU

BARBARA'S SCHOOL
OF DANCE

I uewor R~patr

1980 OLDS Omega, 2 door ,
automat1c. ex tras. 304 675
2580
1975 Ford Granada 6 cy l ,
st iCk sh1ft, good cond good
!~res $995 614-742 2352

;I I

w. v a.

en the contract will be lour
SIGN UP 111M FOR
fALl EIIIOI.I.MENT

~] I

Ohio-Point Plea sa

Bu.siness Services

I' '

IEM.IOII -'

idd

-

.I..( ...._

iO MAKE iHIS,iHE
FARMER'WOII:E A
&amp;HOE THAi WA5
iOO TIISHT.

tJ

tNORACEj
) I K

•"tf~Eve.

.......

R. J. H.lirston:Asilc.

KJ [J

ITURTEUJ

m
·---

-, ~-

Ike WKellan, Broiler, 446-3796 Eve.
Jim Cothrlll, Associate, 446-7881_EM.

~~-=---

1

••

'illiiiiiil~----------------,.__.

Farm Equipment

2010 John Deere tractor

63

September 12, 1'982 ·

lipolis, Ohio-Point Plea

45

Mods nome

47 Court game
49 Confla·

grat1on
50 Long flsn
51 Mortified
54 Performs
55 Toward

sheller
56 Ached
59 Damp
60 StitCh

62 Books of
map s
64 Skidded

65 Corp off1cer
66 Allen of a
sort lor
short

67 GreeK lelter
69 Judgment
70 Narrow

opemng

official
135 Once
around a
I rock
138 Grain
139 Workman

111 Bellow
112 Desk Item
t t 4 Conducted

116 -clear

day
2 words
117 F1xed

amount
119 Develop
120 Filament
122 Ladle
124 Vast age
125 Cast1le
t 26 Hun ting dog
t26 E.dlncl b1rd
129 Bird s home

131 Beer
lngred1ent
132 PrOM )It
133 Aomsn

ruklrs

27 High
mountain
28 Pilcher

parts

AmeriCan
animal

92loved one
93 Booty
95 FOllow

96 Twist
together
97 Radar 's

1.a Moray

31 Rubber tree

14 I Time pe&lt;IOd
1"2 Frendl

36 Golf cry
37 Merit
39 Fireplace
feature

101 Fuss

•o Poems

105 Advantage

•1 Celebeso)l
42 Passage·
ways
43 Tall tales

106 Soft mud
107 Fuel

article

143 King of
Buhan
144 Nobleman

145 Expe&lt;lence
147 llppcrtlona
149 Summer. ln
Paris

150 Slumt&gt;er
152L.....,
t54 Climbing
plant
156 Sum
158 Weird
159 Smallest
number

t60 Collect
t6t 1492 and

1776

105 Legume
-vessel
t08 Free of
109 At home
1t0 Prin ter s
measure

20 Romanov

DOWN
1 P1ece of
c hma
:2 Forays

3 Choose
4 Brother of
Odin
5 Shade tree
6Mam . eg
7 Applaud ed
8 en ter vetcn
9 Compass
polnl
10 Knight

ofTV

«Servant

46 Near
48 Seines
49 Escape
50 Canter or
gallop
51 Norseman
52 Part of a
da1sy
53 Proper
55 Declare
58 Cultivate
57 Musical
study
58 Frock
6 1 How 's thai?
63 Dlllseed
64 Wild plum

68 Asian
70 More s tnct
71 Lately
developed

73 Sea nymph
74 Twisted
75 Refuse
77 Rain and

hall
78 Bundle

80 Emporium

t1 Weapon

81 Sweel

12 Reglon
13 Equality
t4 Pronoun

83 Three -toed

15 Modest

16 Cloy
17 Belli

18 Cypnno1d
tlsh
19 Approaches

potato
sloths

84 Bellwethers
87 Consecrate
89 Encircled
90.Showy
tlower

9t Sou1h

relatl\#8

99 Spare

tl t Disturbance

t ti Unruly child
1t 3 Ceremony
115 Coin
116 Gemstone
118 Trial
119 Prec1ous

metal
12t Blushes
123 ltallan
river

125 Open shoe

126 Seasoning
t 27 Lassos

129 Loop
t30 K1ng of
birds
131 Deface

132 Perple.r;
134 Caustic
substance
136 Place tor

worshiP
t37 Skins
139 Fond WISh
140 Breakfasts
144 Aloha

symbol
145 Chinese
pagoda
146 Guido note
147 Goat's cry
148 P[9pen
149 A~rllne abbr
151 Teutonic
de1ty
t53 Ex.1st
t 55 Nag alive

pref1x
157 Faroe

whirlwmd

'•

�'

Ohio-Poillt

12,

sant, W. v a.

.

....

I .

'

~nnill- i'ennntt Section ~

No on~ injured in bus-car collision~:

·

. '4

GALLIPOLIS - No one was In·
motorcycle accident on Sutton
. Donna M. Shato, 3&lt;1, Galllp!UI, IIi·
Jured In a collision between a school
Twp. Rd . lZl In Meigs County at sufficient tunds; Clarence Bums·
bus and a car Friday afternoon, the
ll:35 a.m. Friday.
Jr., 44,GaWpollS,menaclng; DIBI!Il
GaWa-Melgs post or the Ohio State
Bobby L. Porter was reportedly Bowman, 22, RcdneS' • .s~~
Hlgtr.vay Pattol reports.
southbound when he lost conttolln James M. Sams, 3&lt;1, Wateiiora;
speeding; Rick Saunders, 26, Nol"'
According to the patrol, Lola L. a curve and overturned.
Johnson, 47, Crown City, was driv·
The motorcycle was sllghtly thup, speeding: 'James R. ~
lng a GaiDa County Local School's
damaged.
28, Gallipolis. speeding; Randy V'f.
bus eastbound on Ohio 553 at 3:40
Gallipolis City PoUce cited seven Phllllps, 28. Crown City, qlell
p.m. when the accident occurred.
persons Friday:
container.
•
Robert Brumfield, 16, Crown . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : . .
City, attempted to pass the bus
when Johnson allegedly went lett of
• center, strlldng the car.
·
Both vehicles were slightly dam·
aged. No citations were Issued.
The pab'Ol was also called to a

12, 1982

Goodyear promotes Carty;
Rutz transferred to Houston

ROYAL OAK BALLROOM DANCE CLUB

Vele1'81l8 Memorial

and Dr. R. R. Pickens, presldentolthelocalclub, and
District Govemor Thomas Fltzpatrtck and Mrs. Peg
Fl17.patrick, Columbus.

Dl8l'RICfGOVERNOR-The&amp;WyDistrlctGovemor vlllted the Mlddlepori-Pomeroy Club Friday

nllht- Shown

from the left are Mrs. Mary Pickens

District governor addresses Rotary
MIDDLEPORT--"The Power of
Rotary" was the topic of District
Governor Thomas Fitzpatrick, Columbus, Friday evening when he
addressed members of the
Mlddleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
and their wives at Heath United
Methodist Church In Middleport.
Governor Fitzpatrick urged
members to leave of measure or
their own Immortality through ser·
vice to their community In all of
their activities. He also told of a

meeting of district governors from
all over the world held In Boca
Raton, Fla .. and how the experlen·
ces related by other district gover·
nors brought home to him the
power of Rotary.
The annual loud shirt contest of

the club was held and winner was
George Morris. Winning arrangements of flowers used on the tables
were MJ:s. Roger Luckeydoo. Mrs.
John Ridgway, Mrs. Edison Baker,
Mrs. George Morris and Mrs. R. R.
Pickens.

Admltted··Marjorle Kesterson,
Rutland; Charles Bush, Pomeroy;
Anise Greenlee, Bidwell.
Discharged--Sharon Caughey,
Florence Horton, Ralph Frank, Robert Van Meter, Brenda NeutzUng,
MUdred Smith, Alfred Meadows.

RACINE--Racine Village Counvillage hall. A representative of the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources will be present to explain

Court finishes
several cases

CALL GIG POWELL-992-2622

We have the cars..... .

And We're Ready

To Deal.

Flood insurance on Racine council agenda
ell will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at

DANCE CLASSES WIU RUN 12 CON- SECUTIVE WEEKS BEGINNING SEPT. 16
AT ROYAL OAK PARK.

Kaiser, Texaco reach agreement

the national flood Insurance program that Is available to quautylng
villages. Residents are Invited to
attend.

RAVENSWOOD, W. Va. Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
.Corp. announced It has reached an
agreement with Texaco, Inc.;on an
amendment to the contract under
which Texa&lt;;o . suppUes gas to
Kaiser Alumnlnum In Louisiana.
Ondey the amendment, Texaco
will pay Kaiser Aluminum approximately $181 mllllon In cash In return for ihe latter's agreement to
accept a reduced gas avallabUity
and .wllllngness to pay higher prices for future contract deliveries.
A Kaiser Aluminum spokesman
said It was expe&lt;;ted that a substantial portion, If not all, of the proceeds · resulting fro,m the
t1'811Sl!etio~ would be recorded as a
non-recWTl"g gain In the third
q.uarter.
-.
.
, The spokesman said the amendment .was requested by TexacO to

ELBERFELDS

GALLIPOLIS - Several trartlc
cases were disposed of Friday In
GallipoliS Municipal Court.
Robert D. Nibert Jr., 18, Patriot
Star Route, charged with assured
clear distance, forlelted $40 bond.
Charged with Insecure load and
forleltlng $.1i bond each were
Randy K. Thlvener, 18, Gallipolis,
and Dwight F . Grow, 57, Jackson.
Sharon A. Russell, 31, Gallipolis,
charged with tallure ·to obey a stop
sign,·forfeited $40 bond.
Charged with taUui-e to yield and
forleltlng $40 bond was Lisa N.
Crump, 18, Henderson.
StevenA. Howley, 35, Rt.1, Galli·
polls, charged with unsafe vehicle,
fined $15.
Forfeiting bond for speeding
were:
Ballard D. McGuire, 33, Kenova,
W.Va., SU; Robert E. Daniel, 41,
Galllpllls, $39; Wllllam D. French,
64, Palm Harbor, Fla., $40; Chris
E. Wagner, 24, ChllUcothe, $42.
Harold Batltls, 29, Fort Worth,
Texas, $39; Thomas E. Rite, 37, Rt.
3, Oak Hlll, $44; Michael F. Slm·
mons, 32, St. Augustine, Fla., SU;
Robert E. Burger, 49, Gallipolis,
$44.
Jo A. Buchanan, 50, Rlchmoml,
lnd., $39; Bllly R. Hinkle, 31, Grove
City, $39; Ina W. Jones, 53, Fairborn, $40; Jettrey s. KraJnak, 24,
Ravenswood, W.Va., $42; Deborah
M. Francis, 32, Gallipolis, SU; John
H. Engle, 39, Cincinnati, $42; Clar·
: ence Hannon, 55, Fort Myers, Fla.,
$43; Richard L. Rite, 38, Rt. 1, Dex·
ter, $43.

HONORED FOR TOP SALES - . Bo8o Agri- seooild irom right, aocepCa ~award from BU!Myen, Eut Central Division sales DliiiUIIft' lor Bo8o
deleanhlp, Ga!Bpolls. was ho~ recently by Ceatral Soya Co. for IJidBbndlng · Api-Center. Blhl's wUe, Teresa, looks on along with
sale\t and I1UII'keUng achievements durlnl the past Merle Allstlel, eaa*em regional operations director.
year rill lhe linn's Century Club Award. Don Blhl,

Cellter-Maater Mix

gement with Its largest Louisiana
customer, Louisiana ' Power and
Light Co.
In a simultaneous announcement, Kalswer Aluminum said It
would take another &amp;!,!XX) tons of
aluminum capacity out of production by closing additional potllnes at
Its smelter In Louisiana.
The shutdowns, which will In·
volve three lines at the Chalmette
smelter near New Orleans, will be
accomplished over the next three
weeks. The move will leave two potllnes In operation at .the Chalmette
plant which has an annual rated capacity of 260,00J tons.

Approximately 680 workers will
he affected by the shutdown. Closure of the three potllnes will reduce Kaiser Aluminum's operailng
!
x1m 1e1y 26 ·
.iisslitlt \Vi'ul matC_
Iilng' Its
~ris1.~-rt~'1of I~ ~~:~·
ana natural gas reserves with con- paclty of '724,00J tons.
tract deUvery obUgatlons. In Jljlle,
The company said alumlitum
Texaco announced a slmllar arran· orders are holding relatively

198'1 OLDS OMEGA 4 DR.

w

LOillsl-"'

u.s.

Dartt carmine with burilandy c:ustom cloth interior. Cruile eotobol, AM/FM r8CIIo, ·
locking wire wheel covers and pow.- arrtanna. Front wheel drMtand much, much
mon1.

Pictured Above: Buck ·Stove
Inserted in existing fireplace.
Pictured Below: Buck Stove
Free Standing Installation

AT HAIR CLIPPER - Dennis P. Johnson, son of Mr. and

POMEROY - David Barnhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. William
Barnhatt, Rock Street, Pomeroy,, has beei\,PI'Omoted to manager or
the Ann Aibor, Mlch.·based network operations of the Autonet DivIsion of Automatic Data Processing.
·
A Meigs High .School graduate, Barnhart will be responsible for
directing the functions of ihe network control center' one of three
centers providing 24-hour-a-day, week-long monitoring of the International data network.
.
.Barnhart earned an associate degree In electronics from the Ohio
~~tute o( Technology In Columbus . .He has ~with ADP since
Autonet Is a public, value-added data communications network·
· transpoi'tllfg data between,computer terminals In geographically
dispersed lbcations. Access to Autonet Is available In the country's
.
major business centers.

D~ops interest rate

. CHECK THESE CARS LISTED FOR AN EXTRA SPECIAL

979Pont~a~Bonneville 4 _.,,-... 981 Pont. Grand J.:'rix-.:
I

978 Chev. I~pala 4 Dr.
.
STOP IN EL.ERFELDS WAREHOUSE

I,

:.

'

Chev.:-Im~
.

4

(

1980 Pont. Tnins.

1977 Ford ~ranad~ 4 Dr.

TheoneandonlyBuckStore.

(. C t

'

1979 B~ick LeSabre 2 Dr. 1981

.

WADDY, Ky. (AP) -The mall
- 500 pieces at lt - shoold
have been delivered In 1920. But
IIOIIlehow two sacks tu11 got mlalaJd
unW this year when the bulJdln&amp;
that lll!n'ed 81 the )lOll omce here
from :1811110 1914 was Ieuoodeled.
Never ooeato. a cbore, pos~ authorities did mallie an effort i
. eel that maD tlll'oulh· Alter
natll!l the ~ , ciJ. llars,
•the Deild Letter Otflce sent out
pteces d. maD.

.,
j

Barnhart receives promotion

POMEROY--Local units answered tlve calls early Saturday
morning, the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service reports.
At 2:1»1 a.m., the Pomeroy Unit
took Jeff Hllleary to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital; at 7:42 a.m.,
the Pomeroy Unit took Hazel DUes
to Veterans Memorial; at 12: 22
a.m., the Middleport Unit took Cha·
rles Gallagher to Veterans Memor·
lal, and at 2: 37 a.m. took Sherry
Flesher from an auto accident In
Middleport to Veterans Memot1al;
Syracuse at 1:50 a.m. took Charlotte Adkins to Veterans Memortal.
On Friday, the Rutland' Unit at
10: l5 a.m. took Wllllam Young to
Veterans Memot1al and Pomeroy
at 7: ~ p.m. took Charlotte Eakins
to Veterans Memot1al; at ll: 'II
. p.m. Friday, the SyracUse Unlmt
took Bobby Porter from the scene
d. a motorcycle accident on Snow·
ball Hlll to Holzer Medical Center.

,Mail bag

.

Business Briefs:

Answers five calls
'.

steady. While Inventories are on the
dectlne, these additional Une closures are required to bring them
Into line with current requirements
more quickly. With today's high In·
teres! rates, carrying costs for In·
ventorles pose a significant cost
burden which wlll be eased somewhat bv this move.

AND FIND OUT HO~ A NEW lUCK .
..

~

.

.

'

YOUR HEATING BILLS THIS WI.NTER

EtBERFELOS·IN POM
'

.

1978 Chev. Diesel Pickup

198l Chev. Monte wlo

See us for your next ,cleiJ"! lat8-model Ul8d car.
·,

rellchtawn c' ar- Co.'... 1640 Eastern
An.;,Ga!lipolis
446:.l»069
Bill Gene John1011 - Terry HMIIIton' - Gilt MHIInln .

.

buYel'. . ."

.'

..

.

. The rate Is calcula'ted by blending the!;ell~r·smqrtg;tge arnQIIIIt at
his note rate, plus a certain percentage with the addltlcilal m00ey
the buyer rieedsto,purcliase the house at thecurrenqnarketratefor
'a one-~ adjustablfNnortgage loan.
·
·
.
,
The. Interest ·rate Win be fixed.for two yeats, then adJusted yearly
for the life or t,he loan.
· . ·
·
•
"We are trying to st\mulate the hoosing market by ot!erlng Inter·
est rates people can artord, and to Increase tile,real estate bu.siJ!ess
.tor Diamond Savings 8Jid area relators," Donoyan said. · · 1
•,

. ·.

.

Retires. from .Kyger ,.Creek p~t

• 8:11 Pearl St .• Mkklleport, ·re-.
CHESHIRE - Robert o Schmoll,

C;entJy retired from Ohio Valley EleCtric Corp.'s Kyger Creek plaDt
lifter '11 years d.,aervk;e with the Company.
.
fie~ Kyjp!r Cn!ell bt June 19111181 a tallpOtaiY l\l8rd In the.
pel'iQililel ~t BJ!d late!' .tra11Sterred to the results cleliart-'
meat, wllere he
to lnstrurtlellt llll!!)hanlc B, !he position he

advanCed

lield \llltiJ.Ills. rettrenlent: ·'

.

'1 _ · . · .

; ·

lldlnoll, a MtnerMJ1e native; sei'M!II o,ytththl! U.S.AirFormfnln·
.acay l!IClto November 1.945: • .
. .
'

..

I

";I

'

lze In bttroduclng color work,

frosting and pel'nllUielli waves.

A 1973 Southwestern High
School graduate, Johnson recently received his degree from
the Hwttington Barber CoDege.

Murphy net
•
•
mcome
nses
McKEESPORT, Pa. - G.C.
Murphy Co. has reported net In·
come lor the 13 weeks which ended
July 29 of.$),895,!XXJ, or 48 cents per
share, up 40.1 · percent from the
$1,353,00J or 3&lt;1 cents per share for
the comparable period last year.
For the first 26 weeks of (!seal
1982, net Income was $l958,00J, or
50 cents per share compared with
$2,849,00J, or 72 cents per share for
.the first half of 1981.
Sales for the 13 weeks ending July
29 were $193, 731,00), up 4.3 percent
over the $1&amp;5, 7:rl ,OOJ for the second
quartel- of 1981. For the 26 weeks
ending July 29, sales were
$389,25l,OOJ, up 5.2 percent over the
- $369,976,00J for the same period last
year.
·As of the end of the reporting period, the company was operating
427 stores, 13 fewer than the same
time last year.
Charles H. Lytle, Murphy presl. dent
,, and chief executive officer,
s8jd he was pleased with the company's strong second quarter per·
. f~rmance In a dl!flcult retalllpg
eavtronment.
· ·

'

ary 1965. He recentlY completed .an

winner.
Carty and hls wUe, Gretchen, are

the parents or two chlldren and
p.-esently res1de In GalUpolls. He
has been active In hls church choir
and other church activities, coachIng Uttle League. He Is also a Jay-·
cee and a member of the GalUpolls
City Planning Commission.
Rutz came to Goodyear In June
1957 as a technical squadron trainee at the finn's atomic plant. He
transferred toAppleGrovelnJanu·
ary 1959 as a chemist. He became
quality conttol manager In Febru·

KURTRUTl

"Accelerated Production Management Training Course" In Akron.
·Born In Chicago, Dl., Ru)Z graduated from Luther Institute and attended the University of llllnols. He
recelvecj his bachelor's degree In
1957 from Valapralso University In
lndlana.
Rutz and ius wife, Aileen, are the
parents or three sons and have resided In Galllpolls until the transfer
to Houston.
·
·
Goodyear management said the
moves are effective Sept. 16.

JOHN F. CARTY

Staff changes made at R&amp; M
DAYTON- Two executive appointments have been announced
for Robbins and Myers, according
to Fred G. Wall, president and chief
executive officer.
They are .James T. Sakal, previously president of the electric motor division, who has been named
president or the International dlv.lslon, and Stephen Sorak, who has
been appointed president of the AC
motor dlvlslon.
Sakal, alsO a vice president of
Robbins and Myers, Inc. , will relocate from Springfield to the company's corporate office In Dayton,
Wall said. Sorak previously served
as vice president and general man·
ager of AC Motors and wlll assume
hls new duties at division headquar·
ters In Springfield.
In addition, the electro-craft sub-

sldlary of Robbins and Myers. In
Minneapolis, Minn.. previously reporting within .the electric motor
dlvlslon, will assume full and separ·
ate responslblllty for Its motor
markets and operations.
Sakal joined Robbins and Myers
In 1917 as vice president, electric
motor division In Springfield. Previously, he served with Reliance
Electric Co., Columbus, Ind., for 24
years, the last tlve as general manager of the Master-Reeves dlvlslon.
He was also responsible for the In·
ternational operation of plan(s In
Toronto, Mexico, Brazil and
France. Sakal has both a bachelor' s degree In mechanical eng!·
neering and an MBA from the
University of Michigan and a professional engineers certlf.lcate from
Ohio.
Sorak. who joined Robbins and

Myers In 1981 as general manager
of AC motor operations In Spring·
field , Gallipolis and Tallahassee,
Fla., was appointed a vice pres!·
dent of the unit In 1982.
Sorak joined Robbins II Myers
from Dlsston. Inc.. Greensboro
N.C, where he was senlorv.lcepres:
!dent for Industrial and consumer
divisions and export affalllate, Dis·
ston, Mexico.
His experience Includes product
development and manufacturing
start-up operations for transformers, 'DC motors, battery
chargers for power tools and lawn
care equipment, and joint venture
operation In the Far East, producIng small DC motoj s. He Is a gradu·
ate of Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, N.Y., with a liachelor's · degree In mechanical
engineering.

Contractor ready for business
GALLIPOLIS- Anew electrical
contractor has appeared on the local scene.
C &amp; H Electric, operated by Carol
and Harold Vreeland, Rt. 1. Galli·
polls, Is avallaOle to do nearly aU
large and. small-scale electrical
contracting jobs In the area.
"I beUeve there's' room. enough
for somebody," Harold Vreeland
said. "It's slow, I'U be honest with
you, but we're lrylng to keep our
·overhead low and keep saving."
Despite the fact the business now
operates out of the Vreelands' residence on Georges Creek Road, they
have picked up some major jobs
.lately, Including the Gallia County
Junior Fair and Universal Mine
Supply's .new local outlet.
Vreeland said C &amp; H wlll do work
both by Job or on an hourly basis, In
addition to all small repairs.
Vreeland, 3&lt;1, has been Involved
In electrical 'work.since hls gradua- .
tlon trOtn high school A Fairlawn,
. N.J. native, he came to the area In
1974 as an employee of the now. defunct Pantasote plant. When
caught In a layoff a few years later,
he returned to electrical work with
Pasquale Electric In Galllpoljs,
With whom he was most recently
employed.
Betorl! hls move to Ohio, Vreeland also received training In busl·
ness administration from National
Cash Register.
He s8id he began thrlnklng of
brariciJlng out on hJs.own two years
ago, and decided to take the plunge
wlthln the past year. The business

..

Is on a mobUe basis at this stage.
"Ninety-nine percent of my busl·
ness Is not done here," he said, ref·
erring to hls home. He does have
plans to eventually build an 850square-foot block buUdlng hehlnd
hls home to house tools and other
supplies.
At this stage, C &amp; H has a parttime employee. Bob Halley, who
works with Vreeland on various
jobs.
"I anticipate hiring someone on a
fulltlme basis, but I don't want to

get In over my head with em·
ployees," he said.
CallS for work are now being
handled by hls wUe and through an
answering service. 'Through contacts,- the business can also get
equipment from most of the major
suppliers.
Although things have been slow
reflecting the area's economy:
Vreeland said he's managed to stay
busy.
"I just like to get out and do the
work," he said.

. READY FOR B~INE!!S- ~ VreelaniJ loads a box of supplies
boto his truck as he ~ to go out oo a job. Vreeland and his wife
Carol, ~ate C &amp; H Electric near Gallipolis, which handles job and
hourly con~

proJeds,

~·::~~~~19llea:: Fitriners seek paid. land diversion.

eluded a !list quarter gain of JO
l
' cents per s)lare attrtbutabie to a . ' COWMBUS - A group of Ohio
. n!J)IU'Chase ot ,sinking fund delienagricultural leaders have urged

\ .

. ..

Autlloriz.t Deller for .... end Gall~ Coulllitl
PHONE 992-3671

1978 Dodge Monaco 2 Dr. 1980 Chev. Monza

.

STOVE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON ·
.

1978 Ply. Volare S.W.

POMEROY - Dlamoml Savings and Loan Co. has dropped Its
mcirtgage loan Interest rates to the lowest point since March 1981,
· and for two months waived the closing cost origination fee on Its
buyer's and seller's assistance program.
Larry P. Donovan, senior vlcei)resldent of the real estate service
division, said Diamond Savings has dropped Interest rates on Its
five-year adjustable rate mortgage loans by 1% _percent to 1471
percent, with a 10 percent down payment.
.
Thti adjuStable· rate mortgage loans are also available with five
percent dOWn :payment. These loans wU ·have a. fixed rate for a
tlve-yejll' period.
·
~Sept. 1 an(j running through Oct. 30, Diamond Savings
WUI-Dot cllafie customers origination tees for Its buyer's and seller's
assistanCe program. These are horne$ cuiTently financed by Dla·
mond, and the.seUer ·c an offer a below-market lnterest rnite to the

Mrs. RandaU Spencer, Patriot,
has recently joined the stall of
the Hair Clipper, 145 Jackson
Pike, 6alllpllls. He wlll speclal-

APPLE GROVE - In several
staff chariges announced this past
week, John F. 'Jilek" Cariy has
been appointed to the newly-·
created position ot quaUty control
manager for laboratories aml environmental services at Goodyear
Tire ~ Rubber Co.'s Apple Grove
plant.
ln addition, Kurt Rutz, previously- q\18Uty , conb'Ol manager,
·has accepted an assignment at the ·
company's Houston synthetic
plant, according to E. Wllllam
Campbell, plant manager.
Carty, a• Manchester, NH. native, Is a graduate of Bishop Bradley High School He received hls
bachelor's In chemistry from the
Unlvl!l'!llty of New Hampshire at
Durham In 1964, and In 1974 he com·
pleted hls master's In business ad·
ministration at Marshall
Unlvl!l'!llty.
Carty began hls Goodyear career
In June 1964 as ·a start squad tral·
nee, assigned to research and development at the firm's Akron
headquarters. He .-emalned there
until March 1965,. when he transferred to the .Apple Grove plant as a
chemist.
In March 1970. he was promoted
to section manager of the lab and
technical services division of Department 102, the position he held
until his current appointment. He
was the 1~ plant spirit award

·

problem."
prices.
The group concluded that a paid
Represented at the ~tlng were
diversion
would he the only effective
• llm!ll and a second quarter gain at . Sectetary at Agriculture John Blclck the Ohio Fanners Union, the Ohio
solution
to
the surplus problem. A
~ a!nta per ~hare from the settleto Implement a paid land diveraion Fann Blll'llliu Federation, .the Ohio
1983
paid
diversion
would strengthen •
~ of a •111!1toratlon Uablllty refor Uoe ~183 wheat and corn crops In Corn Growers A8s0clatlon, the Ohio
1carded prevnwy.
prices
by
reducing
1983-84
~~. cf\l'b productluppllon and cut . Soybeonalan Allsoclation . ·and the
marketing
year
supplies
and
by
, In addltl!ln, the amount reeerva1 ........_ grain a
ea.
·
Nat!
Fanners Organization.
)imitlng
the
buildup
of
stocks,
the
. a leakage bt 1982 )las beell Ill- llepraallat1Ve8 fnm five farm ''We are· facing a desperate
creued bJ ~ ·to IIIIi actual
~ the ,Ohio ~~ of' situation 111agrlculture today and we group said.
The group also agreed that the
~ If a.alts eqerhced duf. , A&amp;J:jculture arn;l the stale ASCs at- ~· to take wilfted action," Vil'gil
diversion"
program should provil)e
Jar l!IIIL '11lele factor1l cmi!tleo ed, . flee .-oUy met at !be Ohio Fill'- .ThornJliOII, president of the Ohio
enough
incentives
to fanners to idle
bellllt,~~COIIIPBIIY's IIIII'IUnionoiflceheretQformulate· •
.Union, · said. ilurllig the
.
at
least
20
percent
of the national
1182 perfDmoance b' the first six
an ~ency plan des~ to ·meetlllg. "We must find ·a way
--"-. , .
. ·
red~ grain siockplles and llllpi'OW agreeable to aU to deal with this wheat and corn base.
n~w•
,
. ·1/&gt;

Fanners

�l

I

September 12, 1982 ·

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, ·Ohio-Point Pleasal)t; W. .va .

rage-E -2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 12, 1982

·P~ERS~ ·aGallipolis·.Diai-y,: ;·.:

Facts abpztt 198~ farm .science. ~revi~

·,,

Homemaker's
column

Dates to
remember

grain slorage bins with two loadinl systems,
auger system and leg system.

aD

Expect plenty of.
hay for livestock

tory, the number of~~~~ which
will
consume hay and other rough· ·
By BETI'IE ClARK
age
may be down sllgh.tly thls win·
Extelllilotl Agent
ter
from year-earlier levels,
Home Economics
said. If that happens, hay
officials
Gallla Co11111y
prices
probably
wlll.average less.
GALLIPOLIS - The Coopera·
The
aU-hay
price
In mid-August
tlve Extension Service offers many
was
$65
per
ton,
up
ftom $62.90 a
"services" to the citizens of Gallla
year
ago,
according
to USDA
County.
records.
Among these many services Is a
Hay prices - as well as quality
homemakers' newsletter we mall
11
WASHINGTON (AP)- New goand
supply - often vary widely by
to any person In the county who
vernment flgures show that-only 5.8
regiOns and states. Last month, for
asks tor It. One purpose of the new·
mUllen Americans Uved on farms
example,
the all-hay priee aver·
sletter Is to carry helpfullnforma·
last year. That's about 2.6 percent
aged S85 per ton, baled, In CalUor·
tlon on clothing arid texWes, f.amlly
ot the nation's population, or ·one
nla and as nttle as $39 In South
and personal relationships, foods
out of 39 people.
Dakota.
and nutrition, money manageA year ago, the government reIn New Mexico, hay averaged $67
ment, housing and home ·furnishported that 6.00 mllllon people Uved
per ton In August, comPare&lt;! to $'15
Ings, home management and the
on farms In ~; about 2. 7 percent
a
year earlier and$U41nAprU 1981,
use and care of household
of the U.S. population.
before the new crop was ready.
equipment.
The Agriculture Department ls
The outlook for the record hay
Of course, no one letter carries
scheduled to release a report excrop thls season was based on a 1 plaining tile new Iarin populatiOn
Information on all the above suiJ.
percent Increase In acreage to 60.5 figures In the near fllture, otllcfals
jects.Another purpose of the homemUllon
acres and a 5 percent boost said Wednesday.
makers' newsletter Is to let people
'
In
y!eld,
to an estimated 2.5 tons per
know the time and place for s!ieclal
· Meanwhile, a profile or the 1981
acre.
happenings of the home economics
farm population was •fnclllded·.tn
Based on the Aug. 1 outlook, total
department of the county Exlen·
the September Issue or Fannlfne,
1982 hay pmluctlon Is expected to
sfon Service.
published by the department's EcoInclude a record amount of alfalfa
It was brought to my attention
nomic Research Service.
and
11Jfal1a hay mixtures- 90.5 mil·
recently that many of you who read
Vera J. Banks, a population ex·
lion tons, up 8 perCent from last pert In the agency, sa!d the Farm·
this column do not get the newslet·
year. )&gt;roduct!on or "other" hay
ter, b11t are Interested In knowing
line report Was based on a draft or
also was forecast at a record, 61
about our classes and meetings.
the analysts which should be ready
mUllen tons, up 3 percent.
So - we decided to let you know
later thls month.
Nearly a third of the 1982 hay
about some of the things that are
Ms. Banks saki the report would
crop was forecast to be proouced In show
happening In our department. In
the U.S. farm population at
five states: Wisconsin, 12.3 mUllen 5.8 mllllon lind that the Fannllne
the fllture, 11 you would like to remns; South Dakota, 9.3 mUllan;
ceive your own copy of the homeproffle was based on that figure.
Iowa, 8.66 mUllen; Minnesota, 8.fi5
makers' newsletter au you have to
CuiTently, the government demfllfon; and Nebraska, 8:06 tines a farm as a place In a ·rural
do Is call our office (446-7007) and
mUllon.
give us your name and address and
area which sold or normally w.ould
you will begin getting the letter.
have sold at least $1,(XXJ wortjl of
Wednesday, Sept. 15, wfU be the
. agrfcultural products ~urlng the
regular meeting of the Gallla
year.
·
rta"
where
spring
wheat
Is
grown.
Farm
population
statiStics
show
County Homemakers' Meeting.
WASHINGTON (AP) _ A team
According to. depar!J)lent est!·
that In 1916 a peak or 32.5 mUllen
This meeting had been scheduled of American wheat specialists says
people lived on farms, aboUt ~In
for last week, but our speaker, their trip to the Soviet Union pro- mates, the Soviet Union's 1982 total
every three Amrtcans at the time.
Ginny Powell, couldn't be here untU vlded no firm lndlcatfon of the size .grain harvest ls estimated at 170
thls week. Beginning at 1 p.m., of this year's harvest of spring·· mUllon metric tons, the fourth short
The tann populatton d!d not decrop In a row. A metrtc ton Is about
Ginny will show slides and tell us planted 1\'heat.
cline
every year since 1916, but the
about some of her eKperiences In
"We really didn't see enough on 2,205 pounds.
Botswana, Africa. The business this trip to be able to predict the size
meeting wiD begin at 10:30 a.m. of the total crop," said Keith Sewlth a carry-In dinner at 12 noon. verln of the deparment's Foreign
Bring a covered dish and your own Agricultural Service, the team's
table service and join us for a de- leader.
'llghtful meal.
Severin said Wednesday that the
If ·you have never attended a tour, whichwasconductedAug. 16county homemakers' meeting, Sept. 3. Included vfsfts to farms In
.
please feel perfectly free to join us five regions which represented 25 ·
because this meeting, as are all ed· percent of Soviet spring wheat
ucattonal programs and activities · production.
conducted by the Ohio Cooperative
But he added that "we were un·
· '
.
. • : NearA.l bany,OH.
• ,:
ExtenslonServfce.Isopentoallcltl· abletoseesomeofthemorelnnpor·
'
Farm Animals, Horses, and Pets
zens Of •~ecountyonanondlscrlml
~·
· tant producing areas of the
BY APPOINTMENT
PH. 69a:.7270
natory basts without regard to southern Urals and western Sfberace, color, sex, national origin, ~:=:::::_::::,:~~~~~~:..1~==~=======================:;:;=::::~
handicap or religious affiliation.
The meeting will be at the PCA
buDding on Upper River Rd.
Another meeting you may be In·
terested In ls the 1982 District
Health Conference on Thursday,
Sept. 00, at the Jackson Area Cen·
. .
ter. The theme of this year's meetIng Is "Your Family's Health Is Our
Concern." Then! Is a $2 registration
'
.. .
fee U you send In your,reglstradon '
by Friday, Sept. 24, 1982 or $31f you
.
walt unW the day of the meeting.lf
you are Interested In knowing more
about the health meeting call our
otflce and we will give you more
*HOME HEATING OIL (No. 1 &amp; NQ. 2)
details.
On Oct. · 5, we are planning a
&amp;
workshop where ,you will learn to
EQUIPMENT
.
clean, oU:· and adjust your sewing ·
machine. It Is n9t a repalrcllnlc but
*GASoLINE
just a workshop to help you learri to
maybe operate your machine more
LP
For
f'or
, elflclently. I must k6ow by Sept. 17
U yw plan ki attend thls worksliop
t.leeause ~man who will be teach·
1ng will only take a llmltedJiimlber..
Again, , call 446-'1007 U Yll1l want
more toformatfoo about the sewing
machine workshop. We will have to .
c~~arge a $10 registration fee for the
workshop.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department says there
will be a near·record supply of hay
on hand to help feed livestock
through the winter.
"I don't know ot.any region that's
In severe shape," says Larry Van
Melr of the department's Economic Reyarch Service.
. Based on Aug. 11ndlcatlons, hay
output Is forecast at 151.6 million
tons, up 6 percent from 143.1 mUllen
last year. Van Melr said Tuesday
that nothing has happened to
change the outlook significantly.
Revised hay pmluctlon figures
will be Included when the depart·
ment Issues a new crop report on
Friday. Those will be based on pros·
peels as of the first of this month.
The hay marketing year begins
on May 1 and runs through the fol·
lowing Aprtl 00. Last May 1 the hay
left over from previous crops totaled 25.2 mUllan tons, about the
same as a year earlier.
Counting thls year's crops, the total supply for 1982-83 Is estimated at
176.8 mUllon tons, up from 168.6 million )ast season. The record high
was 177.9 mllllon tons In the pipeline
In 1979-ln.
Total use last year rose to 143.4
million tons from 139.8 million In
198).81, partly because of the seVere winter.
But the hay supply last year was
larger ani) helpelj hold prices down
to a national average of $67.10 per
ton for baled hay In 1981-112, com·
pared to the record of $71 for the
drought-reduced supply In 10081.
Based on the July 1 cattle lnven·

· :

DOCTOR OF ·

VETERINARY MEDIQNE
HAS OPENED

BRIARHIU VETERINARY CUNIC.

*DIESEL .rut(·fOi TRACTORS

* Gas .YOu~ ~~in DIJer•.

OtHER

· .

•• •

,

hal

1

gemen~coy!dll'tbema~ ·J.!IIlm,' ::~wa:::·t:~=

. rfver aide ci 'the Firat anci COurt
corner Thl! hotel was·bullt lh 1816
·
for Claudius M.enager, who had o~
erated a tavern. on that spot as

,.....~

sfeur Feugrfes conducted his
French School for Boys there.
IN J8C C.D. WAU purchased
the hotel and because the comer of
First and Court was no longer a
suitable place for a hotel what with
all the CMI War traffic there, he
had the bulldlng moved to Locust
Street (between First and Second)
opposite the Court House. John Myers, the mover, sa\Ved the hotel In
two before he could move ft.
C.D. WallnotonlyrantheAmerf·
can House Hotel on Locust from

PAT WJDTEJIEAD, LEFT, EXPLAINS AP laserphoto machine
to 91-ye&amp;NJid H. EDisSibley. PJ!blf&amp;her of the Tribune !rom l.B'.altol924,
Sibley was the son of WUDam,GiddJnP. !!lbley, wbo started the dally
paper Oct 4, 1893. EpJs Sibley eq~reM!!d hfrnlelf as. "~". at the
p~ In news de\llces and the IUI'\IIyablllty of smaJJ ~n.

~~~~----~~·
·u. ELLIS smLEY Js&amp;Mwn 1n
a picture lUted from the 10th aq111\lenary ediUon of the GaDipolli1 DallY ~ Od..4, 1943.

.30' x 40'·x9'8" ·cLEARANCE

1-15'x9' Sliding Door, 1-3'x6'8" service Qopr. 6x6
Pres. Trtd: Timbers, 29 GA. Painted. Steel·· Siding
(cl)oice of 12 colo~sl. with 5·year ·warranty, 28 GA Gal·
volume Steel Rooting with 20-year·warranty, 4 Skylites.

'

. $5,440 TOTAL ERECTED PRICE · ,
'

/.

. Price Includes Tax I. Dellve,Y

I

. Many other building liizes and options
• ·.
·
. available.
.
. · ·
1
1

. .-.

OR. GEORGE W. DAVIS
- - - - OPf OMETRi ST - - - -

EYES IN ERROR:

AS11GMATISM
If you have a vision problem.
you have lots of company. An
estimated one out of every two
people In the U.S. also have eye
problems. One of the more com·
mon Is astigmatism.
This Is caused by an fmper·
fectly shaped cornea. This Is the
window of the eye through which
light passes to the lens, where
the Image Is focused. If the cor·
nea Is out of shape, thelnnagewU
he blurred. Instead of rays of
light coming together at one
point, they come together at two
points, creating two separate
Images lns~ead of one.
The kind of astigmatism you
have depends on where the

.

..

'·'~ ~ ~·· '

'

J ,

I

"'

•

' • .THE PUJLIC U'i'ILITIES
COVVDIIION.OF OHIO
By: .O.,ul ~ ..u, .. Polk.
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" . : t.\1 • . .
'

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.-

Phone 4'6-l:..Jii

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, 8AI.LIPOLII, 0Ht0,4W1·

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458 Second Ave .. Gallipolis

Satin
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*******

•
ow
us
re
a
L L t St

"ThEn f'eler said unillltlom, RePent and be baptiled every one ot you mthe namo d .le!us Oui!t for
the remiSSIOil of sins, 1111 je shll rec:eMl the &amp;ift of the Holy Gllost" V&lt;;ts2 38)
The
has relmncelll"lllltloritY IIIII _..and o used to express ewlything(lll
11111toritJ and eonu•*!!III.Jhe · - · indudes.lltpefance and bo~ are comlllanded by the
aul!xriy.of Jesus and lliQRd! the cue of OlristiaoiiY oo earth. In biiJtism, we~ and
~ the lord's authoriy and command~
· Lu11!!:111eau111or of Ads, penned- oadsolthei.Drd, "Andttllt,.....biiCOremis!ionofsins
.sllould be. Pleldted in lis..,. arooneal nations: beiinningat Jerusalem" ll~ 14:46. 47). Jesus was
insln!dintlhe afllil(les IIIII! IIl preodi and for what IMIJIOII, -......-and lllllissicn of sins
(llllttiatt." by..,,IU!hority ~ woslo be f)Miclled. ,, his-" towllom has Ill bo pruohed,
•...,. ~ lllliall;' nlwlln ~ ..SiobetiiniD be Pfel&lt;hed, ·• .llrullllm." When you lim ill the
sean! chapter d Acts, you seethe lnslrudilnsd .Jesus being canied lilt. H..,ln.lwullllttloothe
lily of~ Ptllr lllltld(hrtst IS ~\~&gt;in&amp; beeni\IIIIIIMd of God V&lt;;tsl.22):IS having been
l:llldlild V&lt;;ts2:23): as 1tmrw been illlldfntm \heiDI ~ActS 2:241: ashavingiiiCtlldldmlleaven
loliccupy the promised11iuM (Ads~ lnd 11111 become !*h IDnland Dwist V&lt;;ts2:31ij. I'*
COfl'liriced the Jews 1!111 Christ WIS i.Drd,llllf being i.Drd, Ht had "Ill authorityr Tltt Jowl boq
conilltld, 'lrtcud In llillr Mil" (Ads 231), llllllld Ill - w\101 they must do to be saved fntm
• 1!1eirsils. Wltot do we see "*''tnochi1?, :; IMQ..tillltliAII"Tollloilldidf'el!rdiredlls
oadsl "£...,..., at you~" (lhij has
1D the Jews who had been ~~ fly lll1olt
. atttmy - ttwy ID repent and be ~"In till of .tesas OWistr for liNt fUPOit
were they to repent~nd be boptiad? "foitlll
olllllll"l'ier was d&lt;i1111 whit He was told
to do in .lenlillem, Pll\dliw ,.......... ..t illltlblt oltlllllltllorily oi.Jms (In His -)lor
t11111111iSslctn of 1111!
. .
.
l&lt;iieP in mind 1!111 the-., ...... br "'ffl·lllloorily ..,j _ .. l bei111! by His
11111toritJ lnd powtt it embrKa lis.
. Motlhew ta:at~s the Lolis ~ He
• stipdaled it\ the ID'M COOIIIIi!sian, :u ,.... is ;..n !ll'i? me i1 heaven and ~ earth. Go ye
tt.tlwe and 1ach llllllioos, blpliziw tllem intlte twne ollie Fllller, n1 of the Son.lnd of he tilly
fht ,,. 28:19, ~· Notice .... - doll net soy · - · (p\ula! bit · - · (si91ttlrj,
~ ~ tlllllll1orilf of the ... 1111 _ . (aJmctillil Qodl1lld" When ooe is bojttized it
'tilt- .of lit Lonf.' he is blptiad Iw the
the 01111111l!llloll (amlll*) Gool1..t.
. the Fltfter, the Son, lnd the tilly 1)1011, . . . - IS His SIViar,I.Drd,llld Ki"' enle(ing the
Chri!titn priJfession to 11!1\der I dMii!d itrld fliltiU ..at
•
To bi1d ·he "1111111!" d Jesus ..-,, ID the IIICUilan at the Fllller IIIII the ~ Q10SI. is ra
keeflil1lt with tfte J&gt;SPO!
.
.

.....n

Tile Public Ut111tles Com·
mlillllon or Ohio h~ set
for . P,ubllc hearing Case
No. ~2·l~·EL'·EFC. ,to
review th.e fuel procure·
ment ·practices and
pollctes or ·the Columbus
&amp;! Southern Ohio Electric
Company. ~h:t o,Peratlon
Of ·Its Electric F'uel Qo111•
ponent, and related mat·
\ ters . This hear\jlg ·Ia
ii scll&amp;duled to begin at
: . 9:30 ,a.m . on Beptem.ber :
13, 1982 at the otrlces of
' the Public ututtles-Com·
·mission, ·of Olllo. · 376
Boutti High Street,, Cl&gt;l··
1.1mbus, Ohio ,43216.
' All I.J)terested parties .
wm be ,gtven an :Qppor
tunUY to 'be heard. F'ur
tiler Information may be
obWned by ·oontsottng
,~e Comll'illlelon. · ·
,.
1

points of focus are. It can be
nearsighted or farsighted astlg·
matlsm. Or It can be a comb!na·
lion of both.
If you've noticed a blurring of
vlslon when looking at objects
close up or far away, you may
have en astigmatism. Corrective e) eglasses or contact lenses
can take the blur away and
make your vtslon clear again.
Alllt takes Is an examination by
your optometrtst to find out how.

Flat

.-...:e

•'
.LEGAL NOTICE

' .

'

•

One coal house paint with our
exclusive 3 year mildew·
resistant warranty In 35 col·
ors. mixed while you wait.

William B. t&lt;u9hn

S.TIHJ:.

State F'arm lnsuren(:e Compan ies
Home Otllces : BloominJI!on . Illinois

111!11 COon wOUld ha\le to rank as one of
the loveliest not only In Galllpollls but In the Slate of Ohio as weU.
Gallipolis' flnlt hotel Willi built oo the rl\ler side of First Avenue about
where a lree Is now growing. In 1863 the hotel WitS sawed In half and
moved to Locust Street.

·SALE

Word·-·

ir lfNit.

so that she could have a house
erected on that spot.
Bo¥92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115 Is
the address of James

Weatherbeciter Ex·t erior

BAPTIZING IN THE NAME OF JESUS

I

·'

tas.uta.

......llbor,

~

THE STEVE YATES
·BAND

OIESTER, OH.

'A" .,,,.,

. A F(RE AT THE Ecker Ho~~se 1n
1904 whfle Bert Irion was Innkeeper
damaged the structure and though
repairs were made, business went

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

SUPPLY

Uti

'

~~a~~ ~:~=~amasLeftHandand ~trur.:~~~d~.!t~~~a:~~~

;:tur=:
Avenue, even fnt.ci the altli century.
At one time GaWpolls was one of
Ohl • 1
coU::~es.eadl11g cigar pmluclng
IN FACT TilE cigar Industry

Featuring

Tilt

/nturance
need•. CAROLL
EN
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
pnone 446·4290
Horhe446·4518

the

NOW OPEN

..'

rour tamiiJ

this

.

Sloan. Also during this time Mon·

RIDENOUR

the

.------=:c--

5Iihi' 02B Wood Boss•plenly of muscle for any cutting
chore large or small. Easy to ·
handle. Wood Boss•digs its teeth
in and won'tlel up until you doi, .
There are lots of chain saws on the
market, so why buy Slihl? Simply
because you get what you pay for!

·totall

19th

mew

'•

Ollt
lOtH

.

··;:;;;;::;;;;;;;:;;;m;;;;;:====-==;....------,

.

'· ON THE MOVE.

•

.

FUEL ·fOR THE .FARM.

CITY Ia AND FUEL HAS. THE . .
PRODUCTS
. TO KEEP YOUR FARM

' •

1•

Trip to Russia proves fruitless

..

··
tn~ ~~~=~; :~. ~~!~~rS!u~~:t:~: ~tet9~:~s~~~~~~:a~~
1

=::or:·

.i

-Nlnet;y-flve of every 100 farm ·
residents are white, compared to86
of every 100 non-farm residents.
-'-Among farm adults al and
older, tltere are 107 men for every
lQO women. The non-tann ratio !s
opposite - 88 men for every 100

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page E·J ·

IQ.Z4: · ED1s Sibley
Rl~hafds,
'
earJ'~as amoog'the French was so lnnportant to the town's sur,.
Succeeded ~ Father
500 and was born In 1757 In lilor- vlval that a heavy tax was·placed
• ·On Paper.
. HE NO~ l,'lESIDES with grand·
mandy, FranCe, Cla\ldfl!B' maron all cigarettes bought fn Gaurpo.
f Yet 1.WIIllamGfd(lingsS!bley,the Claughter Del-Re at lotlO White
rfagefnNovemberof 17!10toMarle lis. None of the "coffin nalls," as
Bobine Is
arded u Gallipolis'
cigarettes were then called, were
ather of H. Ellis Sibley, continued.. Trout ,I;.ane. Tampa, Fla., 33618.
to write for the Trfb!me evl!!l alter ·.: Pat Whitehead, Ohio V~ Pub· reg · · tUuf
made In Gallfpolls and so the city
he had left to help out a friend In '· llshlng's ~lstant publisher, and
~~:..am=~ wanted to encourage residents to
Omaha.
Executive E;dftor Hob;!irt Wilson
Ia
theho oltheFrenChKlngs
use'products madelocallyllkecfg·
· were- both fl!1pressed with thls
ce,
!Ill!
· ars. The tax was so effective that In
·~MY SON, H. Ellis Sible)', has , lii(UI's physical-and mental condf· · The ffve clifldren of Claudf1!5 ~ 1894awrlterfortheGaWpollsTribglven up his work In Dayton to ~!ike · t!on: at 91 years of age he ts physl·
Marte became prominent ln .G
11M .remarked: "There Is not one
ch~ge ot the Tribune whll
, e 1 am cally straight aftd mentally alert!
polllslffe:.Mary, Peter, Edwards., c•warette In the whole cfh•."
Lewis, and Roman. Claudius was
"'
'3
go •" Willlam Gf~ Sibley
·From 1.8'18 to 1912 the hotel on Lowrote;on Feb.; 14, 1920. •
· OL' SAM PEEPS once went to . ~=~: ~:C::
eust was known as the Ecker House
.
Northwestern for a journalism seowned In town lieBides the hotel-a
becaiJS!! Willlam Ecker. was the
NOW EI,.LIS SIBLEY himself mlnar, and Ellis Sibley, friend of
mUI, pork packing house, flatboat
owner and proprietor. Owing this
comes Into th~ Trlbune.otffce 62 ye- not only Peeps but _also of Peeps'
company, jp'oceiy story, dry goods ' time the Ecker dlnlng hall fit Into
ars later and haS a long coriterence pop, hosted hlm In Chicago and en·
the old saying: . "The food Isn't
with Editor Hobe Wilson, . while vfrons. 1'1\JS. Is several years ago
~oi~sto~!e~~~ 'good, but you get plenty ot ft." As
Asst. Publisher Pat Whitehead now. Peeps reg(ets missing Ellis
town's wealthiest man.
such the Ecker House was the fa·
·takes the ex-editor a.lld publisher on .
trip, hls first totheol' Tribune
MRS. MENAGEK RAN the hotel vorlte stopping place for hungry
a tour of the modern plimt and !tS THIS.
In 33,years;,but Peeps Is. glad that
rfvermen arui athletes;
1
Pat and Holle met hlm and gave
unW 1838• wh!!n 'lt was sold to:John
For Instance we fflid thls column
fadUdes.
h f m some Sou t her n 0 h Io
Hoy· The name was changed to the
from the 190l . ~iilletln newspaper:
Gallla House and ads stated that
HE· TAUG!fT the late Shirley hospltallh•.
"3
"'''hf fool.ball ..... betWHn the hlfrb lt'tml boys
the Inn was located on Water IJld 1110 Hunli...,Oil- was- by our- by.
Ele(;k BroWn how to operate a linoStreet. First Avenue through the. • ...... cHhndWOiplayecllnmudandwa""· """·
type machine "aroiind 1921." Alin·
ELLIS' faiher, who r~ a weekly
)'ears has ~known by at least lln&amp;10n.,..atnntbUtourf2IIOWI•·•'""tor-••
ot)tpe wa~ a -dinosaur size three years before starting the
five Dames. Besides the two W· 11" lul and , ....... lhfm oul. '""'Hun......on boys
were en~ 111M~ Hade . ..\ll pult'd with
typewtlter (more or less) which Datfy Tribune, was hom In Racfl1e ·
ready mentioned there were Tele- "' ... tiua~~y ,.._ "'""" .... """"""" •• ""
In Meigs County on Feb. 29,18611. He
dropped brass matrices Into a slot
. graph Street, Front Street, .al1lj ,......, ror ...
to cast hot
lines. Prior to the
married Miss Frank.Robertsot Ra·
First Street, whereas ft clearly wasThe unusual score can be aclinotype, type was l\8Jldset.
cine on Aug. 18,1886. W. G. Sibley
an avenue.
counted for by the tact that In 1901
founded the Meigs ·eounty Tribune ·
Hoy was also hotelkeeper for sev- touchdowns counted for fl&lt;'e points
.ELLIS SIBLEY recalled the m1.887 before moving to GaWpolfs .
eral other Gainpolls hotels. Hoy and ffeld goals for two. It would be
place where they lived: 509 Second He Wed January 00, 1935, at hfs
was an ·early advocate of temper· another decade before the present
home In Gallfpolfs at the age or 74.
Avenue. Among manydthers, Eilts
ance, and at hls death was travel· scoring system would be adopted
recalled 0 . 0 . Mcintyre, whose Elfls' mother died In 1949.
lng t)le world lecturing on for football. The members of that
widow he wanted to vfsft but arran·
temperance. One of hls ventures Gallipolis team tneluded: Maxon,
was the publication In Gallipolis of
a newspaper called "The Bottle
Stopper."
DVRING BOY'S TENURE the
hotel was ·the stopping place for a
number ot uniiS\Ial characters from portrait painters like James
Osborne to daguerrean photoUNDER NEW
graphel')l (as early as 1850); frOm
MANAGEMENT.
doctors who graduated from such
places as the Memphis Institute to
. THE All NEW
self proclatmed pllys!clans like Dr.
FRENCH QUARTER
Burge, ·the Indian doctor. •
In the 1850s .the name had been
changed back to the American
House and the Innkeepers 'l'ere
James Rlctulrdson and Wllllam

...-----------i

r;::==========;;;::=========;;;;;rl
CAROL.OSBORNE

., '

..
·man Porter the ftnt (father It~
versary ·'!!dftfon of .the Gallipolis ' 74-year ·old ~ now reporting
DaUy Tribune Oct. 4, 1943, the · for the Trtbime ma!nly, on senior
ban.ner headline on Page Nine citizen doings), HatTy R. Hum,
reads:
Squire Mauck and Ruth M.

YOU GET
.WHAT YOU
PAY FOR

women.

~. ~

.. , ·• :.I" : ·

G.~~LIS-In the 50th ann!·

trend has been generally down. In
-Seventy-two percent or farm
the Depression years of the 19.'lls,
women 15 and ~der were married
for example, the farm population
and tivtng with a spou!IE!. Only 54'
Increased, rtsing from about 29.4
percent of the non-tarm ..WIJllen · '
mllllon In 1900 to 31.2 mUllan In 1933. · were In that statuS.
~
By 1936, however, ft'had dropped ...----'------.:....-:--- .:,
back to 00.4 mUllen and al years
•
later, In 1956, the farm population
was down to 1. 7 mUllon.
According to the profile In the
Fannllne report, people who live
on fannsareolder, on the average,
than non·tann people.l\bout 51 per·
cent are 35 or older, compared to 42
percent of those who do not nve on
farnis.
Other~: .

.

,.' 'BJ.'.J.~}&gt;~ . ·..

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

One out of 39 individuals
in U. S. resides on ·farms

.··. : .

w. va.

, .~=:~~::=:. :!tto
~ at. ~odem ·equipment .:0~~110111~·~:= :n~!,Y1~~xs~·~~::; . =·n.~~~~~:~o~~~ ~9r;wJf.a~~7~:0~~~~ Yt~:
l1ll!lld aeetn&gt;tbeflnlt It the
Wall family left
hotel, they that the Bulletin referred to
building then, sold ihe Ecker House

SPONSORS
The Review Is sponsored by the Ohio Cooperattve
Extension Service. The OSU College o(. Agriculture
and Home Economics, The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center and thf!Oh!o Expos!·
!ions Commtss!on.

COUEGf;OF
.
AGRICULTURE Pi.OTS
lr) thls area will be agronomy and horticulture
displays Including com and soybell!l demonstrations,
shade trees, decorative trees,. dwarf apple trees,
hedge plantings', forage demonstrations.

~~

I

, ,· ·, ,1.. · , d · . · ·
.· . · Galli 1· ··
po 1s
8 ot~m., reare ·two-story height m ear1y

~!s. ~~ley VISI~~ .pa~r, .

DATES - ~pt. 21, 22, 23.
·'
.
: '1JN1Vi!:RsrrY LIVB8TOCit
HOURS- Tuescia,Y 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Wednesday
_
FAco.rrn!S
.
. 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.; 'lbuq&amp;ly 7 a.m. to.4 p.m.
The livestock barns WU1 be Olli!D to Revfew vfJ.
PlACE - On 700 acres near Don Scott Field, !tOrs. The swine, horse and sheep centen will be ••
The Ohio State Qnfverslty airport, In northwestern open. At the beef b~. you can eet lnfonnatfon
Franklin County. The site can be reached by driving about sUo tllllng. Faculty will Ill\ at the barns thro\lih1·71 or l·'lOto Columbus apd taking the 1·2'70 outerbelt out the day to answer questions.
to the Sawmill Road exit, or by approaching on State
ROME l!lCONOMICS
Route 161 from DubUn or from the Worthington·
· Home ecollomlcs demonstrations will loCus oo
Llnworth area.
· ·
"Steps to Better'Uvfng," Topics Include Nutrltloll fdr.
Vlnn. VIgor, VItality; Stress - Are Your Ctrcults '
EQUIPMENT IN ACOON
Overloaded; Sewfni for POOttt; Ohio Fish and FamMore than s.ll mllllon worth of fatm equipment Uy Meals; Keep the Home Fires Blll'llfng- sate!~\·
from many manulacture111 will be used In dally ffeld ·Making Appllances Work for You; and Food Drying.
demonstrations. VIsitors may compare equipment at See and hear about ,these at the Home Economics
work from 9 to U:30 ·a.m. 8nd from 1 to 4 p.m. Tent.
Harvesting, plowing and tillage will take ptace Iii the
AN'nqUE FARM
Review ffelds ..
EQUIPMENT
More than 400 pieces of farrt\ machinery dated
· .COMMERCIAL EXIIIB1TS
from UllO to 1930 will be on display. People are tree to
There Will be 498 cornrnercW exhibitors In the walk through the area and see the equipment, whlcll ·
Central Exlilbft Area. New eqillp~t and supplies Includes an :oo5 wOO&lt;Il!n moldboard plow and an 1800
from most agrtbus~ cdmpanfeswlll be displayed. MUwaukee reaper. Acorresponding Sorgum·maldng
·'
demonstration will beheld.
CROP DEMONSTRATIONS
VISrl'OR SEKVICE.
Com companies have planted 410 hybrids tor ReFree parking, rontinuous bus service and.food at
view visitors io compare. Also Jj6 soybean varieties
. reasonable prices are offered to visitors. Alumni are .
and ZT aJfalfa vartettes will be displayed. Chemical
encouraged to register .for prizes at the CAHENR
weed control demonstrations on soybeans and corn
Hospitality tent. Iotorrnatlon about OSU's Coli~ of
.
and other fnterestlnll' plots may tJe seen.
Agriculture and Home Economics as wen as pJa.ce to
rest between exhibits will be avllf)able ,In the c.A·
GRAIN DRYING
HENR
Hospital tent for an visitors.
Seven dlfferent ktods of grain storage bins w!th
· ADMISSIONS
two loading systems, a leg system and an aug~r sysTickets are $:l In advance from Extension offices
tem, will be used In dally corn drying demonstrations
and commerotal exhibitors, or $3 at the gate.
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. ·
• \of

DAILY CORN drying demonstrallons at the
Farm Science Review will feature various kinds of

Pomeroy-Midclli!port-GaUipolis, Ohio-Poin't Pleasant,

Phone \
446-2770

Let us dO' your painting.
Call446·2770 For ..
F.ree Estimates

or Your Money Back

Sears
.• ..

SEARS, ROEBUC.K AND CO.

j

�,.

1982

.;

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

· September 12, 1982

Mei~

Page-.E-6--The Sunday Tlmes·Sentlntir

County considered first in. maJijuana cultivatiOn · ···

By PAUL ALEXANDER
Assoclaled Press Writer
POMEROY, Ohio (AP) - On a
warm late summer afternoon, sev,eral men dressed In camouflage fatigues sling rifles over their
shoulders and fan out across hilly
terrain, struggling through thick
underbnlsh.
An airplane circles aoove, malntalnlilg radio contact and directing
the men to a stretch of land with
severn! 10-to !Hoot-tall bushes
with long, thin green leaves.
The quarry Is Illegal marijuana
growing In sparsely populated
counties of southeastern Ohio. The
men are law enforcement officers
aiming to crack down on .growers
and put a dent In their unlawful
business.
Sometimes the take is small - 15
or 20 plants spread over a half -acre
or more. Then there are the gold
:mines - fields -with thousands of
'plants, just a couple of weeks from
prime harvest time and shipment
- to buyers outside the county.
With a harvest that has been In·
creasing steadily tn recent years
·and moving up the list of Ohio's
cash crops, marijuana cultivation
llas become a game of cat and
mouse.
If growers reap their crops, they
can earn from $400 a pound for lowquality marijuana up to $3,00) a
·pound for the hlghest-quaUty sensl·
:mnul\. a type for which one Ohio
:COunty has galrted national repu:tatton as "Meigs County Green."
Considering that a healthy plant
allo,wed to grow to Its peak will
yield between one and two pounds
cif marijuana, the ventures can be
:lucrative. A field with 1,00) senslmlllla plants could yield $3 mllllon
:to.$6 rn41Uon.
The risks, aside from losing a
crop to sheriff's deputies or
poachers, appear small.

a

In MelgsCoimty,conskleredNo.l

In the state in marijuana cultivation, no arrests have been made in
the past two years despite sw~tis
that yielded alxlu18~ tons of plants
In that time.
The same Is true In adjacent
Athens County, although Sherltf
RobertS. Allen hopes to have a cou·
ple of strong cases to present to a
grand Jury.
Sheriffs throughout the area say
they face similar problems - man·
power shortages that make It dlffl·
cult to arrange the stakeouts
needed to catch growers ln,the act,
larger cultivators who use outposts
like pickup truck ciunper shells to
watch over their crops, and the
large amount of land the growers
'can spread their 'crops over In an
effort to avoid detection.
A "field" Is considered wellpopulated It It has 50 plants to an
acre. It ottenlsdlftlcu!ttospot from
the other tollage, although Allen
and Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffllt say they've picked up a
knack for 1t over the yearS.
The growers take their 6us1ness
· seriously, apparently arming
themselves to protect thelf crops,
leading law enforcement offlcers to
take guerilla tactics.
Offlclals say they aren't aware of
anyone being lnjw-ed yet, but a VInton County deputy reported being ·
shot at during a recent raid.
The sherltfs say there's noway to
eliminate the problem, so they take
another tack. They hope to put
enough of a dent tn grower profits to
force them to move elsewhere.
This year, large confiscations
have been recorded tn at least six
counties - Meigs, Athens, Wa·
shlngton, Allen, Vtnton 'and Mor·
gan. Lionel Stewart, agent In
charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcemen~ Administration office at Cincinnati, says the crop Is SPreading

tl1roughout southern Ohio_
. day.
"It's Increased trom last year,"
The take over a span of several
Stewart saki. "If It contlnues at the days last year totaled about seven
· ratelt'sgoing, therewWbealarger tons. 'I'lltee-quarte ot ·It was the
crop next year."
· '
top-grade Meigs .County Green,
· Agricultural agents tn Meigs and meaning the sheriff mad!! a possl·
Athens counties say they don't ble $.l) mllllon !0 $00 million clertt In
know how preValent the problem Is, the crop.
and no one else Is wUllng to venture
The .hybrid, seedless plant rea guess. As one state agricultural quires special care :_ weeding out
offlclal said, "MariJuana Isn't on the male plants and allowing qniy
our crop report."
the female plants to ~ to
Meigs County, a 436-square-rn!Ie
co!Jection of . ro~ hills and backwoods across the Ohio River from
'
Kentucky, has been a hotbl!d for
growers tn recent years.
,
lbe sea ttered popula Uon of
23,00), combined with hot days and
cool, humid nights, provides a
nearly Ideal growing spot. Proffitt
said that for a county with relatively little agricultural output, rna·
rijuafla Is the No.1 cash crop,
· although he wouldn't guess at the
size of the annual harvest.
Proffitt, 54, said m!lit ot the big
growers come In for the summer,
grow their crops, then leave to
spend the winter elsewhere, living
off the illegal protlts. They maintain a low profile while here and try
to keep out of any trouble that
would throw a spotlight on theril . .
Other growers may be full·tlme ,
residents who pick up a few thousarid dollars a year bY planting a
handful of plants here and there, or .
who have large operations and
keep to theinse!ves.
Proffltt said his staff ot five deputies and an investigator Is too small
tor proper surveillance. So, like
nelghoorlng sheriffs, he conducts
raids.
Last year was the first serious
effort at 'a crackdown. Deputies,
aided bY state Bureau of Criminal
Investigation and Identification
agents, gathered nine pickup
trucks of the illegal weed the first

· New . ~ 100 mil-ion stn~cture - ~
II

w're

rer-• ·

'

' _.

The fields may be a tl!w sparsely
planted acres In the mlddle ot a 300- ·
acre spread, with .or without the .,
owner!s knowledge. Or' the plants·

Develqlers be~ tl,le market·
place, designed alan&amp; lines cf. 8os-

bulkllngs.

~ but an entertallunent center
lilong the river,'' J!algh said. ''The

· TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - In his

~momentsofreverte,GeorgeManol

·gazesouttheplcturewlndowofttts
downtown City Club restaurant
·while . mixing drinks, washing
glasses or opening a ooitleof wine.
He sees aging brick buildings
· overshadowed bY the gleaming
Owens·Dllnlos Inc. world head.quartei'S, a 32-story, $100 mllllon
lOWer ot glass and steel that Is the
hub of Toledo's downtoWn rebUih.
To Manol, the contrast is encouraging - few patrons tn his one-floor
walkup restaurant know the streets
of downtown Toledo as well as he
does.

. When businesses began their
1llgllt to the suburbs of Southwyck
and Perrysburg and Sylvania,
Manol stayed downtown where his
career began when he was 8 years
old.
"I stayed downtown because I al·
ways ttad faith the downtown would
come back to what It once was,''

home to tell my mother. She
cOuldn't believe tt."
· Banking on a downtown rebb;th.
Manol, 56, "stuck a bunch of money
lnthlsplace"toremodeltherestau·
rantherunswithhlswlfe,Jeanette.
They draw a lwicheon . Crowd
m!IIUy, but he has an eye on the
after-work crowd and plans to add
a musical Uio tor a cocktail hour.
A tew blocks and many mllllons
of dollars away, George Haigh
looks out a window of his office and
contemplates the metamoz:phosts
of downtown Toledo.
"It was a wasteland. A wasteland," said Haigh, president of
Toledo Trust Co., the city's largest
bank. "lbe downtown then - 1n
1975 or so - was either vacant
buildings or vacant lots. There
were no plans, publlc or private, to
make It better."
Slowly, the community annexed
outlying areas. Housing developments and shopping ~enters

How SoOn college!

come full circle.
"I think we've Inherited the problem ol being next to No.1 ~
ln1gatton systems are not un- · County,' ~ ~ ·Allen, 49. "Plus,
C!JIYilllOO. along with-guarded-out·· we've lot the market hlire (wtth '
posts to discourage poachers. Ohio UI1M!\'IItY, acoupleaftechnl·
Marijuana growers have to protect , cal sehools · aJid several b(«h ·
ti!Emselves tram thieves, Prollitt 'schools), aDd a lotothllls. We're In
'said, "Becausewho'sgoingtoepm- the foothllls of the Appalachian
plain to us? We IK1ard about one · Mountains, and tbere'salototunat·
grower who said he would grow, teixled land that people just don't
three ·crops next year :- one tor
check."
•
profit, one tor himself and one tor
Thls
Allen and his fuen'ga·
the thieves."
thered about six IDns of mariJuana
Proffitt belle-.oes marijuana' was In raids over a tiJree.county area.
Iptroduced to the area 15 to16years lbat's about half last _year's take,
ago, possibly bY Ohio t,lnlverslty - but probably onty 5 percent of the
: students In lldjacent Athens total crop; he sajd. '
. County.
· ; "It J~t kept spreading and
Stewart of the D1:u« Enforcement
~said there's not much
~reading,"- he said . . "~t It's
federal
help tn sight to battl! the
peaked, I'm sure."
culttvatton
problerilln Ohio until It
( , Allen said If . that's the way It
gets
worse
because other states
started, the cultivation sysiA!IJ1- has
QIIIY be found 8!ong a naJTOW ra·
~ tO make them harder to spot.

Will you be ready
when they are?
Life Insurance can help.
Call Gailind M. Davis
• · '
512 second Ave. _ . - -Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446-1235
l1!!.rn• _P h, Jff:?t.tl~ -~

MODERN WOODMEN
. OF AMERICA

year:

Frt~lernt~l Life l"sNttl11ft ·
Office - lock l•lal'ld, Illinois

·

.

fNo

...-~ -

t
t

-

..- .....-.-:

NOTICE .

,-_

t
t
t

connections can be made to the
sewer system 1n .Syracuse or. Racine until oHiclal notice Is given by the .
Syracuse-Racln~a · Regional
Sewet:
Dlstr_lct."" ·tt ·lz. f·s. -(ln't'ldpatn that- ttils
t!otlce will be glven around the end .of
Septembet. ·
'
·

seemed to grow·overnight. Down- · cated In a rald Oll fields
town businesses followed the now
·near Marietta. Deputies
of dollars to the suburbs. li'lrst· · estimated the 'plants .
generation Americans prospered
and moved out of old neighborconflscateciwerevalue4
hoods. The decline of streets, sew·
at $3.6 miDion. (AP
ers and city services followed.
Lase
In the rnld·7ns, community lead· · r__:=::rp~'=ho=to::_:)~---...:L._j_-==-==-===-::·:::=-~~:_:~:_:~~~~~~~
·:
ers began ·to realize 'that dow.ntown
was sick and the PI'Oj!IIOSis wasn't
•
good . Haigh assumed the role of
•
midwife. and was a lealo!er· In Its
rebirth.
An earlier ilttempt to revitalize
t;lowntown had failed tn the late
1960s, Haigh said. But In the mid·
1970s-justashemovedfrompres:
!dent of the DeVilbiss Co., a division
of Champion Spark Plug, to Toledo
Trust..:. the pieces to the puzzle began coming together.
"We created the slogan, 'Ohio's
Newest City,' and the reason why
1s, If you look at all theother clUes in
Ohio, they've developed their down·
(Continued on Page &amp;7)

.

THE 1982 WORLD'S FAIR
TOUR
,.GoGnMnr.d
OCTOBER 14-17

-

The

NOWAY

..

'

40m.
.

CHRYSLER LeBARON .
CHRYSLER LUXURY WITH FRONT·WHEEL·DRIVE.

·be required. ·

a

'

'

,.

•

'

'

·CHRYSLER .

Inc.ls celeb!:atln&amp; Its 175th annlver·

sary th1&lt;; year.
The tlnn was established here In
1lm 17Y Charles Wiley as ·a small
printing operatklll. The company
now Is an International operation
publlshlng_..Jn - more than 40
languages.

,

. 89~

IF' SO••~

Sun Giant Raisins

D&amp;W HOMES ·

7oz. Package of 14 mini snacks. G real for
lunch kits. Californi11 seedless.
FOOD DEPT.

'

1.09

'

32 Oz. Heinz Cltlup

- ,
'

FOOD DEPT.

Sktn Bracer
... L '• '1 I

o o· o a ·o
•) 0

0

1·.79

1.57
oz.
14

''

John11111'1

60z. Minnen
Skin BriCe!'

··~.~ -

·. 1 Yur
2 Yurs ·
.
... OFFER PERTAIIIS TO GAS &amp; WCTIIC OILY, STOP III.AII.DUE
·
- D&amp;W HOMES FOR IIQit DOAILS. · ·
'

.

""'! ~~~-~- w. ~·· . '
(104) 671 -.t42'4
• '

'

de li ci ous

assorted flavors.

·-

You can 1lway3 dtpend on Dfeam
Whip for deli&amp;htful dmerts.

2 Loc:Gtlons 'To S.nre Youl
, . .' s.M &amp; ~nd . Stn'lt$

&gt;

easy,

dessert that kids and adults
go crazy over. Choose (rom

---

Whip up some o... m Whip toppina
for delicious deserts and crtamy pits.

*

Qu ick ,

~
J'H'""*'
;ens:.

5 Oz. Dream Whip

·Your GurantHd
Fuel Cost

Jello Instant
Pudding

FGGO DEPT.

91C

'

::
· ·

·.cAJtR9LL.. , NORRI~ ~~t·I~C.~,·
.
..
.

'

I

· DIII'T- out SEE YUill

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

NEW YORK (AP) - The pub-

Ushlng houae ot Jolm Wiley &amp; Sons

HAS AN
INTERESTING
'
. OFFER FOR YOU!

'100
• JSO

'

Ct.
MP0°

·

......,lor""'

"

Anniversary

•zoo
•tso

'-

t 5 years or 50,000 milee, whlc- comes fifst. Seo your
dMolll.
•
'
•''
• Ute EPA 111. mpg for corilparison. Your mileage may differ, depending on epeod, trip length and '"'"~"" conditio~Highway miloogo will ~ bo lest.

•

ple from OhiO."

And Up

'

.

. ·
·, . · • .·
· .. · ·
~ ·outer~body rust~throogh protection. Limit~ ~arranty.'
~ Free ~Chedliled M·~ntenanee. ... · ,: · · : · ·. . .,

1 I pea .J.o'

Probably next year, some effort
wiD made to traln some ct the peo-

Purcha• A New \lnlbllt Home
From D&amp;~· Hoinas Within.30 i»f;;yi.
, · .PaY Only •solo Per Month For .
2 Jeart· Wl'thi .. ! 60Days~ And Pay

[j] Engine and j)ower train. Limited warrantY. Deductible·may.;'

111l11t • '

''We run some training PJ'Oil'8ITIS
1.9 help IQentlfy It trom ihe air tor
those states with an acute problem.

3 for 1.00

,rws GET CIIIYSISI's·s YEAii/50,000 .o r1Roa£C110Nt .

. Captlla .D'I..

IDitll harvest time.

·Only •scJoo ., ., ~o.nt~ For 1 Year.
ASK US: MORE

"

•,

Ut,lllty·

Blues?

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALERS

HW'I.

.: fried 10 a~ brown : • 2 .,.....,., flfle11 • crllp
· frenoh frfea • ~my cole
• slaW • 2 SOufhefillfyle hUih
· • puppies.

'

' Iiiii'

.

'

'

have blggl!r problems.
"It takes a bt ~ manpower," he
saki. ''The only way you're proba·
bly go~ to catch !IDI'I1I!OIIe Is walt

'

Hcive .
You ·G ot

~-

.. • u.s. Choice .... lfrlpa

I

' -

.

•

'

'

'

says
ManoL
wasmost
never
tempted
to move
away"IUke
of the
busl· Irw;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;~·~-;;;;;--~
. nesses. Sooner or later, I thougttt,
Presents
things would come back."
Manol, son of Grecian lmmlgrnnts, recalls selling the old
Toledo News-BEe for a penny a
paper as a clilld on street comers.
"One Christmas I remember, I
Y/1 ....,._lka--vo...
made $65 In Ups and from selling
the papers In .front of a cafeteria
5% Senior Cltize~~111\ GALLIPOLIS ' DEPARTING
downtown,'' Manol saki. '"Things
Discount Cards in
~
GAlliPOLIS
were tough tn those days ... My kids
Elfect.
'I"''MM Agency
.
don 't belleve how tough they were.
360 Second {lYe .
PH. 446·0699 ·
When I made that $65, I pinned It
Serving the general
Inside my coat and ran all the way

"&gt;

• ~I

THE LARGEST OF
· shlngton eounty deputies inspect the largest
of 300 recently
marijuana.confisplants
they

·

''The fes~al rnark,etplace Is no-

~- -

~fiWIIIU

concwon

ton'~ Faneull _Hall and Quincy
Market, wiD bring !'IW)re than $40
, million In tax 'revenue &lt;I!JwntowrL .
'n1P development Is expected to tn·
• cl~ · ltO small Sbope, liervloe
outlets and restaurants In two glass

300 PlANTS _. Wa-

·---"~

public and ,grlvate funds has File ·Smaller .b.."l e1 are also lOcal·
.toward the rebirth ot downtown ing In the ne!ghlx)riiOOd, and there
Toledo. Much more ts ~· Is an ·ernphasla em blrlng reeldents·
The
Ill the ecaq has ot the area wblch bas a neighbornot helped; as Toledo's unernploy· hood, 'unanpioyment -rate of '32
ment level went over 10 percent. percent.
·
Conununlty lndustzy, bellv!zy tied
The concept ot public-private
to the autimakers and new tune C)XJjleratlm attracb:id the attention
' C!mlliJctloli, bas ~ct Pu:iklent Ronlld Reagan, a
While the .nellhbol hoods were backet:ot such "enterprise zones."
deca'yJng·because 111 a lack onax
''In the ·~. you were
dollars to fix minor problems,
looked at as tmllh )100 wen! nuts,"
· Haigh said, some community ~· ~ candidly said ol the rebirth·
er!l ~that all thefundsavallil.' - ~'It's been qutte an edueatklll." .

the river lront at an estimated cost

f4ome

New $ ~ 00 million structure
center
of
Toledo's
rebirth
.

h
, ere

ot $15 rpl1lJon to $17 million.

(Continued on Pqe. E-7) .

·
.·

diM&gt;il.,.._ ·

--'*-"'· ...,.._,..

'

imlma!s.

i.e

point 111' tbat peiJple aten't awl to
were loq
~ back dowDtown It tbrre'ano"It wun't true, but t11ere Wt.Jia
thing to do ...._,......___ "
' '
' '
...,.."'¥"'"'
· lle)ceptloo
tbat ltWM true," Hafih
:Amtbl'rproJectiiJidercoaaldera· ' Said. '"l'hat'a why II'!Vate eaterttm ts a .OO.m:m 1101e1, oo ,... _ _. ...._._. " ·,·
what
doing
lri,l'oledo.'' j)lahnEd tOr lilt riwrtioot marbt· ,.._,..... .,...._..
•
Tlie~ctll:fvateallapi~ ·
Haigh said •
place site. ·
.
•.......... e~~~ · ........,b'....,......._
The ()wens,Illtnols ~ m
:·, ~new puldllg aaraae 1w
etudes. shops that draw custmlers been cm~pleted adjacent to Sea· ='=~%,~
from Its 2,«XXX employees as well as
Gate and a -second Is belli&amp; primar1Jy bladn""cN'"!Dxx just·
from .neamy olrk'e lJulldlnas. Its
cooaldered.
.
. - ' 1 ott the W$ llde Ill tilt dolriuown •
sub-level SeaGate ~ InWithin the doWI)town ·area, the busm. ~ It 11 u 118 Ill
eludes a restaljl'llllt, Ricardo's, · Toledo ~ Repwl TranspOrt. high Cl1me, blgh ~t ·
which-looks out onto private boats
tiOn Allthcdty hal 'deYeioped lli!w and low ~qe.
and cmunerclal rretgbters plytng . l;dUtes and stope tor the city bus
the Maumee River.
$Yilem.
·
· ·••
Haigh, pr'!!lldalt ot the TO~
Halgh'svantagepolnttsfrom~
.SummttStreet,slteotmostOtthe . Ecaun1c Plannllle C,O.iDCtl, atnew Toledo Tiust $12 mUllon head· new cOOstructton, paranels the t:racted ·the Mbmalpolls, Minn.·
quarters, also alOng the river.
river and has b!en widi!ned to ac- bated Control Data Corp., a
Between the two bulldlngs, a fes. CO{MIOIIdate IDcrealed tramc.
~lulology tirln, to \lUlld a reoll't!val marketPlace ts planned along . In an. well f1Yf!t $lt0 mUllon 1n cea ceilter In w~
(C
todlram Pile IIW) .
·
towns but aot·the nellblJo:rhoods'' ·
Hatglllllicl.
' "'
"'bB • ,.., .......... ha
'
t 8 w.~ ...-vi- ve CQme
tron'! all f1Yf!t the counti:y to see·

''

sweep thlB yeat - the largest field
harvest.
.
"We just go 6ut and harvest It, with 350 tO 400 plants - althoUgh•'
the sber!tf Wouldn'.t !lilY he was 1
bring It In and destroy Jt;" Proffltt
;~
saki. "We teelllke we'redlscourllg· done- for the yeru:.
"We' know then!'s still.a lOt ot I.
. ing the big growers who don't like
out !heM." Promtt sald;~~qr
being ripped off bY us. ,
"It does put· 1t1e probleni some- that the 1~ raids ylek)!d 11t1out 10 .
where else, though. -Our loss Is ' percentot'thecrgp. ''RightnoW,It's"·
kind ot hard to pick out; every-··
somebody else's gain."
lbe six-year sheriff said word thing's so green."
Proffltt said larger growers have
must have gotten oiJt. Officers had
gathered only 1~ tons In a two-da;t . elaborate operations that often In-'·
elude chemicaJiy •analyzed dirt
mJxtures with poti!Dg so11 ·mid
tlllze~,' relntorcing, roilS as jllant •·
.stakeS and wire n\esh S1JJ'I'OOIIdlng
the plants to keep away •snulll

~

t

:

'
' .

..

teoe .......Street, 1t. ts lliftll
Jil' PI 01111

'

1.64 .:
ltoz. Woollte ·

1..19·

ColdWater
Wtllh . ··

Jar fits ·most work ·
lunch kits . Has ex~~~!lve. lre&lt;!zer .lid ... . keeps snacks

Reg.'l.f3

·

�-8-The

w va.

Times-Sentinel

''PRESENTS"

The .. ULTIMATE" In Thermal Prime
.

.
.

.

'

.

.

'

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•.

·. REPLA·CEMENT .WINDOWS
Only@)
-Sash . ·.
$ft You The Best
In Work-saving And·R_
. A guide to local
television programming,
September 12 thru 18

PER WINDOW
·PER WIND~OW

OT
OT

. I

•

•

'

•

'

•

•

'

l

'

A guide to area entertainment
Includes complete

·uP TO

100

UN.ITED ·
·INCHES
listings

QUI~IFIES . FIR
'

'

ESPN listings

GY

Page3

·Ill.CREDIT
,
.
''

Telewaves
Page4

Hazzard dispute
Page6

Hollywood
PageS
The "NBC Sunday Night at lhe Movies" on Sept. 12 stars Bette Davis,_Suzy Gilstrap and
Howard Hesseman (1. tor.) in an encore of the GE Theater presentatiOn of SKYWARD.

ONLY

~ . F.EATI.IRE

.(PLEASE l'ttiNT ALL INFO liMAliON &lt;;LEARLY)
Name •• ·••• : .......................... ~ •••• , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .

THESE QUALITIES:

. •Addre1a ••••••.•.••• • •·• · • • • • · • • · .• • " .. .. " · ... • • • • · .". " " • • : . • • · ; · ' tNC.
·
, City • · · · · · · · : • • • · • • · • · • • • • • · • • • • · · · · · · · · State • · • · · · • • ·..· · · · · · · '···p .0. Box 76Z

.

2 ib...,.. cloulllit ~

• ' . . "'lftlldoW·blfl»lnc!!wtir.
. Made with (Ill airtight hennetlc
.• ·&amp;ebJ. theee windows are 1-1/16- .
' · Inch thick tor greater ln5ulat!on
and outside noise ~uctton .

,..

, ,.

~n•

0

.·' MY.HOME IS

.FRAM~

0

0

' 4$63l

.

r=r.:;:

Tht1Couponrnwt

0

BRICK · OTHER : . ·

~

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MORNING (S] AFTEIN&lt;)ON

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PIRKTrONS ~Q vO.,• HOM/
' . . . ' . . ' . • ~~ . ' '

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EVENING ,;.

tAM INTEQSTED IN 0 SIDING 0 WINDOf'$

:.

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NO

LO~

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0

D MEDIUM El HIGH'
· ~~
M_Y HOME WOULD MAKE ~·GOOD DISPLAY HO~ 0 YES p NO
fWO.ULD .DO·IT-NOW IFTHE PRICE IS lltGtn D YES, 0 ~0

MY FUEL B.l~LS. ARE

· CALL

•

.. ; .......... ~ .......... ·,... , ...... . lip .••• ~ •••• •.•••...• "Gallipolis,·OH.

I DO OWN MY H~ME DYES

l

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

BUILDERS

I

. ' ' ··

' '. . '..

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United Stat's still
. • WINDOWS • . '
.

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�</text>
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