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12

The Daily Sentine l

Pomeroy

Friday, July 3, 19Rl

Middleport, Ohio

Area. IPgli~ay :prOjeCts to ·total $1.6 billion

Police, patrol che~k several wrecks
Several Thursday accidents were
reported today by the Pomeroy
Pollee Department.
Pollee said an eastbound car on
Union Ave., driven by Shirley Wolfe,
Route 3, Pomeroy, went out of control and went over an embankment.
Wolfe was not Injured and there
were mediwn damages to the

vehicle.
A car owned by Kenneth Cook,
Middleport, received dama'ge:~ to the
rear when it was struck by an
unidentified vehicle on the Kroger
parking lot Thursday evening.
A car driven by Jll6eph W. Wayne
received extensive damages to the
front end when it was struck by I!

Meigs County happenings.
Plan barbecue

To end marriages

The Eastern Athletic Boosters will
stage a July 4th celebration Saturday at the Eastern High School.
There will be barbecued ribs and
chicken served starting at II a.m.
and little league baseball games at I
and 3 p.m. There will be a basketball
free throw contest with trophies to
be awarded the winners. From 9 to
11 p.m. there will be a dance in the
high school a uditorium with Mus1c
Unlimited to be featured .

A petition for dissolution of the
marriage of Paula Kay Queen and
Jerry A. Queen, both of Route I ,
~ville, has been filed in the
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
An action for divorce filed by Mary
Sue Nelson Reedsville, against
Robert L. Nelson, Mansfield, has
been dismisse&lt;j.

Undergoes surgery

/

RED, WHITE AND BLUE BIRTHD,\ Y - Betsy Ross, a seven-yearold from Korea. holds an American flag bigger than she Is after she was
naturalized last Friday. Betsy, born on the Fourth of July, was brought
into the U. S. in February 1976, America 's bi-centennial year, and adopted by the Bill Ros~ family of Adrian, Mich. lAP Laserphoto) .

, Mayor's court
One defendan t forfeited three bonds nd SIX others were fined in the
n &gt;tlrt of Middl eport Mayor Fred Huffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Timothy
Basham . Rutland. $200. posted on a
charge uf fl eeing a poll ee offi cer :
$1!&gt;0. reckless operatiOn. and $1!&gt;0.
dr iving whi le unde r suspensi on.

Fined were Wes ley Clark. Ra cine.
$225 and costs and three days m JaiL
dn vmg wh1lc intoxicated. and $100
anJ costs, dri ving while unde r
sus p ensi on ;
T ony
H u t t un .

L&lt;ln gsville. $225 and costs, driv mg
while intoxicated: $100 and costs.
possession of marijua na : $200 and
costs. res1sti n!=!. a rrest, and $100 a nd
cos t s. obs tr ucti on of offi c ial
business Ro!· Boggs, Middleport.

$100 and costs. di sorderl y manner :
Ruth Fra ncis. Pomeroy , $10 and

costs . fa il ure to maintain control:

Mick Oiler. Pomeroy. $100 and costs,
driving while unde r s uspens ion, Jnd

$225 and costs and three days in jail,

driving while intoxicated ; Da vid
Pa rs~ns , Long Bottom, $100 and
costs. possessiOn of marijuana : $2!i
dnvmg under the influence .
Gi ven a 10 day ja il sentence on a

disorderly manner charge
Donald L~vett . Middleport .

was

One defendant was fined and six
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pmnenly Mayor Clarence Andre ws

Tuesday night.
Andy Laudermilt . Pomeroy, was
fined $!&gt;0 and costs on a disorderly
manner charge. Forfeiting bonds
were Terry McNickl e. Racine. $30,
assured clear distance ; Robert
Spencer, Pomeury, $30; Donald
Jackson , Tuppers Plains, $27 ;
Wlllard Moore. Pomeroy, $28 , all
posted on speeding charges; Roy
See. Rt. 1, Bidwell. $!&gt;0, traffic light
vi ola tion : Le on McKni g ht ,
Pmneroy, dug running loose .

Area deaths
Norman T. Foss
Norman T. Foss. 79, Point
Pleasant . formerly of Pomeroy, di ed
Thursday at Pl easant Vall ey
Hospital.
He was manager for the Evans
Supermarkets for 25 yea rs and
retired from the Penn)fare Supermarket in Point Pleasant.
Mr . F oss was a church treasure r

and a choir member at Trinity
United Methodist Church. He was a
past master of the Masonic Lodge
and a past patron of the Eastern Sta r
in Point Pleasant.
Born in Pomeroy on Jan . 8, 1902 ,
Mr. Foss was a son of the late
William and Sarah Korn Foss. He is
survived by his wife, ldanell Reed
Foss; three sisters, Mrs. Florence
Davis and Mrs. Veda Arnold. both of
St. Petersburg, Fla ., and Mrs. Freda
Mitch, Middleport, and a brother,
George Fo§s of Athens. He was
preceded in death by a son, Donald

Mrs . Marie (Peg) Dailey,
longtime resident of Breezy Heights,
Pomeroy, underwent emergency
surgery Tuesday at the Chillicothe
Medical Center. Her condition is
reported as being satisfactory.
Mrs. Dailey, who will be 82 on Sunday , is in Room 2856, Chillicothe
Medical Center, Chillicothe, Ohio
45601, and cards may be mailed to
her there.

Veterans Me morial
Adrtlitted-Harley Koenig, Reedsville; Phyllis Clay, Rutland.
Discharged-Thomas Anderson,
Connie Manley, John Moon, Wilbur
Hanning, Nellie Price, Elizabeth
Yost, Barbara Smith.

a nd costs, no operator's license, and

$225 and costs and three days in jail.

Foss.
Services will be held at I p.m.
Saturdav at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral-Home with the Rev . Tally
Hanna officiating. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may call at the funeral
home at any time.

Probe theft case
The Meigs County Sheriff's DeparLment is investigating the breaking
and entering of 'a tool shed at the
Racine Hydro project that occurred
sometime after 11 : 30 p.m. Wednesday .
The shenff's department reported
that entry to the shed was made by a
person or persons going under a
chain link fence and cutting the lock
off of a door to a tool shed owned by
Ginder Construction Coi., Olney, lll.
Taken were a water pump, drill's,
guages, cutting torches and belt cutters.

0

Investigate mishap
Meigs County sheriff's deputies investigated a single car accident
Thursday at 2:30 a.m. on SR 124 in
Langsville. No injuries were reported.
Edward E. White, Pomeroy, was
traveling east on 124 when a boll
jomt on the left front wheel carne off
causing the driver to lose control.
The vehicle went off the highway on
the left ana overturned. There was
severe damage. No citation was
issued.

vehicle driven by an unlicensed
juvenile on Mulberry Ave.
..
Pollee also reported that the windshield on a truck owned by Bruce

.

Hoffman, Route 2, Pomeroy, was
broken out. The vehicle was parked
near the rear of the Pomeroy fire
station and Hoffman found the
damage when he returned to the
vehicle from his employment.

By JEFF GRABMEIER " ' · ·ties,· W8s announced Saturday l!Y
State Transportation Director David
Time• SeDIIDd Staff
GAWPOLJS ..:_ A' five-year, $1.8 L. Weir.

bUJion ·state. highway program,
which incltlcJes construction on the
· Appalachian Highway anc:l repair of
.bl(hway!.ln-Gallla and Meigs COWl-'

A Rt. 4, Pomeroy man was cited
for DWI and no operator's license by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol Thursday.
The patrol said Clifford Whittington, 48, was northbcund on SR
143 at 3:30p.m. when he reportedly
pulled his auto off the left side of the
road .
He then came back onto the road
, Into the path of another northbcund
vehicle driven by Lori Tucker, 20,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
The vehicles collided, causing
moderate damage to both and no injuries.
The patrol inve~tigated a minor
onH:ar accident in Meigs County
Thursday moming.
Dennis R. Wolfe, 22, Middleport,
was attempting to pass a northbound
vehicle on SR 7 at 9:37a.m. when his
vehicle went off the left side of the
road and hit an embankment.
Wolfe' auto then overturned,
causing moderate damage and no in·
jury.

0

Tournament Set
An ASA slow pitch softball tournament will be held July II and 12 at
the Mason ball park. The tournament is sponsored by the VFW.
The entry fee is $65 and two balls.
Call 742·2182 or the Mason VFW,
Mason, W. Va .

Market report
Ohio Valley

Llv~ tfM'k

Cn.

MARKET REPORT

Salt' every Saturday at I p.m. Prices tct hn
frum the ~:~ucti un vf &amp;tturday. June 27 , 1981.
Trends : Vea l ca lves steady, row::; Sl tv Sl.SO
hig~r .

Feeder catlle.steady. T o~l Head 493.

F'et.'&lt;ler Slet&gt;rs : Good atld Chv1ce 250 to 300 lbs.
GJ-69 ; 300 to too lbs . SU4 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 57.50-66 :
500 to 600 lbs. 5:Hi:l ; GOO to 700 lbs. 53.$0-58.&amp;0; 700
tll 800 lbs . 3!.50-:':111; 100 nnd over ta.so-64
Fl!t!de r Heih.'rs : Good ~wd Choict! 200 to300 lbs.
51~2 . 50 ; 3011\o 400 ]bt; . M-60: 400 to :100 lbs. 52·
61. :10 : SOO to GOO Jbs. fM).S7 .50 : 600 to 700 lb.s. 47-M :
700 tu iiOD lit~ . 42.5(J..a3 : 000 a nd over 42-57.
Fertler Bu lls : Good 11nd Choice Z50 to 300 lbs
00-4)'1 .50: 300 to 400 lb.s. 58-62.50 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 5500 : 500 to rbl Jb.'l. 52.5().S8 ; 600 to 700 ]rn; , 48-56 : 700
tu800 IUs. 46 .~1 : 800 Hnd over 41 .50-52.5() .
Holstein stee rs 11nd bulls Dl lu fmlbs. 4a-62.
Bulls l .trn lbs. and llp eM.;l.5.

CHANGE - A few years back
when motorists were stopped
along highways there were
flagmen to direct them through
the detours, one-way traffic
situations or w.1atever resulting
from construction projects .
Tlldayt however. lhe flag man
has become the flag person. Debbie Halley of Syracuse is one of
t&lt;Jday's flag persons and is shown
in S~racusc flagging traffic being
detoured due to the construction
work of the Ontario Pipe Co. Wednesday afternoon. Pomery has
women flag persons also working
with traffic during the sewer extension construction work.

Vol. 1s No. 23
Copvrlghted 1981

MAAT.INMSlH:I'EnEN'IN()•

JAM£5 r.

• - - - · 1\IIIIA...,

---~a

t~ntl r~~~~~~~;~~;;;J~iti~~~~~!~ii,~

t·uttcr:s :H-40.25 .
Slalll{hler
cows
utilities
38-44: Canners
:S by- tht•
he ltd 270.33!..
Springer L'UW
Cow!&gt; and calV I's by th e head 300-530 .
Vea l ca lvc .s - choice a nd prime 64- i 9: ~ oud 58-

6J

' COLO''
·
•
I hf ·t u'

Be~ by n

tlves b)' \ht' ~ad 45-90.
Tup huKS 210 tu 2.10 Ih.~ . 49-5! .
Boars 40-42.5(1 .
Ptg s by tht• hc&lt;!d 2!).-36 .
Suw:s 400100 . and up 4D-4-ol .5(1

r

•
-~·

,

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35 WEST

Second reading _ _ _-:-_
· (Continued from page
Pool; purchase a water "'
fountain for
servation Fund application

. NQW thru Thurs., July 9th

Phone 448-4524
8AROAIN . .TINEES ON SAT 1i $UN
ALl UATS J UST .S 1.50
A.DAIISSION EVERY fUESClo'IY S 1.50

I)

requesting $44,388 assistance for the
development of a marina.
The amount of money to be
available for fiscal year '82 is under
consideration by Congress and may
be greatly reduced from past years
the letter stated. The village will be
contacted as soon as it is known
what can be expected for the year '63
from the Land and Water Conservation Fund program.
Council in other business agreed to
have E&amp;R Tree Service cut down a
tree on Cherry Street; purchase a
weedeater and smalllaWJVTiower for
the ball park; place new locks on the
pump and chlorine rooms at London

use near the tennis courts; gave
Paige Cleek, pool manager permission to purchase necessary
equipment needed at the pool, and to
have the new addition to the concession stand completed.
Council also adopted its an·
ticipated budget for.J982.
Attending were Mayor Eber
Pickens, Janice Lawson, clerk,
George Holman, treasurer, Milton
Varian, chief of police, Wingett,
Willie Guinther, Mike Struble, Mick
Ash, and Katie Crow, council members, Jim Teaford, Paige Cleek,
Karen Guinther, Diddle, Herb Gitr
son, Doug Hemsley, Bill Cundiff and
Kenneth Cundiff.

ELBERFELD$

WILL BE CLOSED
ALL DAY JULY 4th

°·

•

Point Pleasant

Sunda

9 Section s 66 Pages

1981

·

3S Cents

Inc .

Cable TV firm may
expand services

fiiG1
KIRK DOUGLAS

$1!5a~o:··section In Brown Coun-

proJected cost 1s$3,?00,000.
Coun· ·
A bridge on SR 124 In Melli!'
ty will recetve maJOr re~, the
state highway department satd, at a
cost of $935,000.
Ohl
The run~y:utheastern
oa u onA-4

tnttS -

Emergency calls
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Union Ave., at I :04
a.m. Friday for Allen Hartley, who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

.'~'~tree gaps In the Appalachian
Highway wW be closed at a cost of

ty on SR 32 froin the end of the ne-W · on 81\32 rrom FmcasUe to SR 136 at
The stat.e Department of TranrO:U..Jane section at Sardln8 to us 62 W'IIIChester.
, sportation IS planning to reconstruct
south of Flncastie will be conAnother gap 1n the Appalachian aportionofSR5MlnGa!liaCounty.
structed
'
Highway to be clot!ed is In Adams
Target date for completion of the
The state highway department
County on SR 32 from Winchester to $1 ,800,000 dollar p~oject !s 11114.
.
tllso plans to complete a 5.4 mile sec- the end of the new four-lane section
A part of SR 338 tn Metgs County IS
tion In Brown and Adams COI!IIties at Seaman.
.
due to be reconstructed m1985. The

T i :"

: h·

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLiPOLIS - Expansion of
cable television service into the
Spring Valley area west of Gallipolis
may become a reality soon.
Cablentertainment of Zanesville
has "concrete, plans to run service
Into the area as soon as it buys Point
View Cable 1V from its present
owners, Midwest Corp., Charleston,
W.Va.
Bill Randles, Cablentertainment 's
vic.e president in charge of
operations, ·said construction of a
new line could begin as early as the
end of July once the agreement goes
through.
Randles said this would be done by
cutting the present line from Point
Pleasant at the river and putting in a
new line to cover the city area.
Although the transferral of Point
View ownership is one seen many
times before, the expansion is a
move a city official cited as one
"that could pay for itself."
The expansion is one of the things
the finn has outlined to communities
served by Point VIew. Randles has
been making the rounds of cities and
villages in the trioi:ounty area for the
past few weeks seeking local government approval of the transfer.
Approval by the Gallipolis City
Commission, which will hold second
reading on an ordinance approving
the transfer of . its franchise from
Midwest 'fO Cablen~t::talnrJI.e.n~•.ls.on
the agenda of the conunission's
Tuesday meetil\g.
Th~ ~ransfer bad been clouded since tlltl toritmlsslon's June 16 meeting
;';e1~~~c:lty~questloned a section of

tertairunent offered.
The section requested permission
from the commission to all ow the
lenders in the sale to take temporary
ownership of Point View in case the
finn should fail financially. The len·
ders would run the operation until a
new buyer was found .
The section came into conflict with
a provision in the city charter
barring advance approval of franchise transfer . Before approval, the
new owner would have tu be
examined by the conuniss ion to
determine his or her worthiness as
owner.
Randles referred the matter to his
finn's attorneys, and he said the
problem appears to have been
resolved.
Richard MacKenzie, commission
president, said he had not seen the
new legislation yet but the ordinance
which will be presented Tuesday
should satisfy both sides.
" It will amount to granting them
the right to buy the franchise."

MacKenzie noted, adding the transfer is being made with the understanding the present rate structure agreed on two years ago will be
maintained.
MacKenzie sa id several firms
have oWned the cable service in the
past few years, and each "has
promised us the moon," but the
present service has been the best so
far.
" I say it's a lot better than the
alternative - no cable at all, " he
said.
"However. it may be very wor·
thwhile, if they do what they say
they will do," MacK.enzie continued.
Randles said Cablentertainment is
thinking of offering some more pay
1V service when it takes control.
Ted Turner's Cable News Network
and all·sports network are being
seriously considered, he explained,
and while HBO I Home Box Office ) is
presently offered, a 24-hour movie
service, Cinemax, may also be added to the lineup.

Inside today...
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Insert

'~~~~~~}'t

'"'~Htl'llt:-~~'Pii'
'R~~

Jrd WEE K: 7: 10 I 9 :30 P./'1 .
SAT &amp; SU N MATINE£ S1: 10 &amp; 3: 30

Burt Reynolds
Roger Moore
Farrah Fawcett

~JUII4*-~

Afune for RededicatiOn

HAVE A SAFE WE~END

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

AMERICA

LIFT HIM UP

ARAB

141 ·SACRED SONGS
LIFT HIM UP-tompiled by

Don

Marsh

14 .1 songs arranged 1n lour~ p a rt harmony wi th
QUilar chords espec1ally comp1led 1n easy kE- ys fo/-

congregatlonal 51ng1ng . And there s a specia l ed1·
t1on fo r use at home or by an accompaniSI. Included
songs are: Lift H1m Up : Sometimes. Alleluia : 1 Ju st
Came .To Praise The Lord : This Is The T1me I Must
S~ng : Jesus. He Is The Son Of God II Thai lsn 1
Love : J.esus. The Resurrection ; The Blood Will
Never Lo se Its Power : Where 1he Spirit 01 The
Lord Is: He L90ked Beyond My Fault: Jesus Gol
Ahold o· My L1le : Greater Is He ; I Have Something
To Sing About: No One Ever Cared For Me Like"
Jesus : Only Jesus Can Satisfy Your Soul; Ever
Gentle . Ever Sweet : Love Lifted Me : It Is Well With
My Soul: God's Wonderlul People: People: Follow
Jesus ; Give Them All To Jesus. 1 Wish You All
Could Know Him .

TERMITE
CONTROL
' THE BESf'

80613 .... Congregational Edition
80614 . . .HometAccompan1st Edition .

A3478 . .Stereo Aeoording .
T3478 ... Stereo 8-Track Tape
.. $ 8.98
C:l478 .
Ster•o Cassetle Tape
. . .$ 8 98
Yt075 . Accompammenl Tepe/Reet .... $40.00

·'
'

'

BAUM TRUE VALUE

.$ 2.95
. .$ 7.95
.$ 8 98

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL STREET'

.

992-2641

POMEROY
.
FLOW.ER SHOP
\

.

~·

·--'

"The Way America

Ph. 992·2039

or 992·57_21 _

sends Love' '

~!,.

106 Butternut Ave.

.

Pomeroy, OH.

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

Wt -.tcept All Majpr fredit ("ards-We Wir(! flowers
•nvwhere.

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t. 'flew the 1Ml Oeirft •'Ill Rtver ltecnlitlilia re.~

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oiUiy ), IYtl I

~' Commentary

-

.

and perspective

rnultitudc of new offi~s and sen t
!l ither swcmns of ufficers to harass
our people and eat out their substa nce."
. The more th ings change, sHys the
French proverb, the 1nore they stay
Lhe same . A pu blieation is r~L hand
fro111 Uw American Enlerpnse In-

stitu te , met hodica ll y detailing
" Major

Reguh:1tury

Inilii:!tiv es

tlunng 1980." The shade uf old King
Gt•or~c.

somewhere in lim bu, llli:IY
be furgiven a ~hostly snicker.
Nl' W uffices? Swarms uf uffin•rs?
The despised monarch !lf 1776
couldn 't play in the min ur lc&lt;Jgut' of

hitlay's

I

~ureaucra cy.

('ount, the federal ~overnment had
56 major regulatory a gencies em-

ploying 89,000 persons and spending
more than $7 billion a year on

regulatory activities.
Consider, tf you please, just a few
uf the areas in which federal agen('ies took major initiatives in the

past year- and remember that 1980
was a year nf declining activity .
W&lt;:IS

pondering thl• comm iss ions paid to

travel agents .
The Consumer Pruduct Safely
Commission was engaged in gi:Jsfirt&gt;d space h~atcrs. uree:~ furmaldehyde foam insu lat ion and
wuud-burning stoves.
The Feder(:!) Trade Conuuission
hnd its busy hands on used cars.
t'YC.tdas:;es. tes timonial advertis ing
al1tl rrwdil'al prepayment plans.
On duwn the line. other agendes
\\t'rt' proposing, arncnding. revising.
r l'pea lin g or
promulgating

regulations on data processing services, low-power broadcasting
stations, credit cards, smoke detectors, trucks, railroads, buses and
freight cars.
Swanrts of officers, thanks to the
U. S. Department of Agriculture,
were unleashed to harass local
school buards on the sale of candy
bars. cupcakes and lollipops before 2
o'clock in the afternoon. That parti cular regulation , by the way,
required 15.000 pages of document.C:I tiorl in its prelirninary phases.

II I Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio

(6141992-2156

They were copmg with gasohol.

a ll

·

the se

regulation~

WASHINGTON - - On this Independence Day weekend, most
American:; are prubably more

l.tTfEJL"i OF OPINION an· ltdrnmt·d . Thn s hnuld bt· lt-ss th11n :100 wurds lun);\ . All
11"\to't' Clfl" o,Uhjl'l"\ tu t'tlitin~ .liOd mu~t lw 'i~ill'd " -ith r~t~mt·. atkin-s~ 1111d trlrphun1·
numhi·r . Nn urr~rl(ru'tlldtt·rs "'ill bo.· pllhli ~ ht•d _ l.•·llt'r~ s hnt~ld b.&gt; in ):•MKila.~h·. otddrt'~sin~
()l'f"llll411itit•\

wurried about the threal of rain on

the1r picnic than about a threat to
their fundamental freedoms.
Yet our most basic freedom - the

Sense, cents and nonsense

ri~ht

By Lowell Wingett
s~nds

the same pitcher to the legislative well once too

often. I naturally ask , "Why?"
Ronald H. James, D-Proctorville, for the second lime in this session, is
trying to get the mourning dove on the game bird list by pre&gt;enting a bill
making the dove and other wild animals on the fed eral game list subJect to
hunting in Ohio. He says the bill would include such dangerous threats to
Ohiu t•itize nry as the coyote and the crow. Wildlife officials say the coyote
Jues not corne under the bHI as it is wurded so th&lt;:~lll'ave.s only the crow and

flovc.
Everyone knows that crows are much smarter tha n hunters therefore

are not greatiy threatened . In spite of the phrase. " Make 'em eat crow ."
they are not considered a ta ble delicacy as ar ~ the quarter-pound muurning
dove. In spite of House Speaker Veranl G. Riffe's statement that this 1s nul a
duve bill , une would have to be a bigger fool than I hope the speaker IS to try
and convince the public otherwise.

The big question is " Why'"
Perhaps James knows something that we others don't. Perhaps the dove
carries a deadly virus like parrot fever and must be elimmated. Anytlung to
protect the voter ! Or perhe:~ps James received herty campaign contributions

fmn gun clubs and ammunition dealers who arc demanding their quarterpound of flesh . I have talked with hunters familiar with dove hunting and am
told the dove is a most difficult target. With the price of shotgun shells these
days . the price of a pound of dove would be greater than the price of a p&lt;JUnd
of caviar.

As I have said be lure. I l&lt;nuw very little about the mourning dove . To my
knowledge , I have never seen one. My only acquaintance with the dove is my
nu"lalgic memory uf its plaintive call in the evenings when I was a buy on a
windswept ridge in Letart Township. We called it a " turtle dove" then . ~n't
ask me why because I don 't know. I nnly know that its evening malin all
slays in my memory with other such nostalgic sounds, the lonesome wa of a
steam whistle on the B &amp; 0 Railroad across the river and the inviting music
of a calliope on a river show buat. To learn more about the dove. I consulted
our bird book:
"MOURNING DOVE" !From Field Guide to American Wildlife)
Thts is our only dove. with a long white-edged, pointed tail. Description :
size, 12 in. Wings lung, pointed; head brown, body buffy gray with a bluish
cast on wings. Slirrunerthan Rock Dove and with pointed tail. Note: Sparrow
Hawk in flight lacks sharp downstroke of Dove, has heavier head and
shoulders, and squared tail. Black spot below ear uf Dove distinguished it
from much larger, bluer, and now extinct Passenger Pigeon. Habitat: Open
woodlands. farmlands. suburbs. roadsides.
This is what one of our leading wildlife books has to say abuut the inof:;
.; fensive little creature which has caused so much controversy during this
;. session of the legislature. I first became concerned when I considered it
:: frivolous legislation which took the legislator's attention from sucb weighty
; ; matters as money for roads and schools. When the bill was rightly voted
. ; dawn by both the House and Senate, I had considered the subject closed.
. :; James, I reasoned, was entitled to the same opportunity to make an ass out
:, of himself as other members of the august body. But when he sponsored the
· ~ same bill again, though in different language, I thought he had abused his .
:' legislative privileges .

. ~

to free expression of opinion

under the First Amendment - is under increasingly heavy assault these
days. And the attack is being encouraged, indeed led, by lh&lt;·
Supreme Court uf the United Stales.
This probably would not have surprised the Founding Fathers. Th&lt;•
v1olallon of mdividual rights by King
George Ill. his courts and his

/ "James may
lose either way

Larry Ewing .

.

In recent decisions, however, the

Supreme Court has steadily chipPfd
away at the First Amendment's
pruledion. Instead of protecting the
people from their government, the
court has been protectmg the
t-!iiVt'rmnenl from its people.
It is an irony that would dismay

the Founding Fathers. though it
would hardly astonish them. They
knew all too well the tendency of
gt•vcrnment

to

tyrannize

its

even if it is
sct111elimes an irresponsible press -

a fret• press -

1s the people's sturdiest bulwark
against government oppression.
By narrowing the press's protection from ruirwus libel suits, and
leaving interpretation of the Fir.&lt;l
Amendment up Io local judges, the
Supreme Court is endangering the
~xistence

of the nne -institution

powerful en&lt;tugh to

battle the

politicians on anythin~ clo:-;e tu an

&lt;'ilizens: thai's what they tried to equal fO&lt;&gt;lin~.
prevent with the supposedly irunAs the people of Nazi Gennany,
clad proledions spelled out in the
the Soviet Uniun cmd ctll}" number uf
Bill of Rights.
uthl'l' dictaturship,.o,; have learned tu
One way the Supreme Court has
their sorrow, without a free press
parliament was an important cause
been eroding the First Amendment
they become defenseless against the
of (he American Revolution, and the is by slowly and systematically
onslaughts uf thuse in power.
trampling of free speech and a free leaving the defense of basic inOne effect of the Supreme Court's
prcs,_o.; was one reflection of this di vidual nghts to the lender mercie"
rulings against the press has been an
tyranny
of slate courts and legislatures,
epidemic of libel suits. In Oklahoma,
Su when the leaders of the new which are far more siiSeeptible to · fur example, one major Tulsa paper
Hation, their r'i!_,vulution wun.• sat
pressure from the special interests
estimates that since 1976 it has spent
down to construe! a new form of and other local groups with political
at leal$100,000 on legal paperwork lu
government. they realized that the , doul. No Iunger can the people count
defend itself against 12 libel suit.
peuple would nut accepl the Connn their Unl'lc Sam to intervene
that never even made it to trial.
stitutiun unle~s il ('Ontained un·
when the nc1ghburhJX&gt;d bully picks
"Libel litigation is a spurt in
mistakable guaranlc'Cs that would 1\ll them.
Oklahoma," a representative of the
protect the citizens from their gover·
Nowhere is this trend more
slate's beleaguered pess association
mnenl. And the first of these guaran- l'Vidcnt, or more disturbing, than in
said.
tees, the one Ihal was basic to all the the continuing abridgement nf
Last year, a county court jury
others, was the amendment that frec,lum of the press. The average
slapped the Daily Oklahoman. the
established freedmn of expression .
Citizen often doesn 't understand that
stale's large s t-circulation

newsP'Iper, with a $1 million libel
judgment. The successful plaintiff
was George Miskovsky, a candidate
for the U. S. Senate who drew less
than 2 percent of the vote in the 1978
· Democratic primary.
The interesting thing about
Miskovsky's libel suit is that it arose
from the newspaper's criticism of a
campai~n tactic that itself appeared
tu come perilously i:lose to
defamation. Two weeks before the
primary, ·Jdiskovsky called a press
conference to ask Gov. David Boren,
· the front-runner and eventual winner of both the primary and the
Senate seal. four questions:
"Do you know what a homosexual
or bisexual is? Are you a
homosexual or bisexual? Have you
ever been a homosexual or
bisexual' Have you ever engaged in
homosexual or bisexual activity?"
The Oklahuma press reacted with
varying degrees of outrage. Miskovsky, a la·wyer, offered no evidence
about Boren's sexual proclivities,
but said he had heard rwnors and
was merely asking questions. " I
have never charged and still don't
charge that Boren is homosexual,"
he said.

You look greatl========Art=B=uc=h=;wa=ld
Something happens to people
when they visit friends or relatives
in the hospital. I was forced to spend
a few days in one not long ago for
minor surgery, and had a chance to
observe the weird behavior of people
who came to comfort me.
As a patient, I discovered you are
at a complete disadvantage.
Dressed in hospital garb, and stuck
in a bed, you're no longer on equal
tenns with your pals. Without their
realizing it, the entire relatiolishlp
has changed.
From being a friend on equal
footing with the Parkers, I suddenly
found myself being treated like the
senile uncle when they appeared at
the hospital room door.
"You look great," Yvonne Parker
said. "Doesn't~lookgreat,Biil?" '
"You certainly do," Bill agreed .
"I've never seen you looking bet·

ter."
"I feel great. I'm sore, but I feel
just great."
"You have good color in your
face," Yvonne said.

Onoe more - on the oceuion of
the celebration of this llltiCII'I
freeOOrna; a government of, by and
for the peopl...U •that - a note to
our elect¢ officlala 011 their reaponsiblllty and accountaWity to tholle
who placed them In office. (Thia Is
just In case some .of you mi&amp;ht have
forgotten)
The Ohio "SWI8hlne Law'' took ef.
feet In November, 1!!'75. PreviOUsly,
Ohio had an "open ~" law
that probiblted the tWng of official
·action at an executive aesaion of a
public body.
The intent of the SWI8hlne Law IS
that not only are declaloos to be
made public, but deliberations
leading up to the deci.slons must be
made public as well
The definition.of "public body" Jn.
eludes any board, commisaion or
declalon mailing body of a state,
county . municipal or lo'!mshlp
authority. The law defines
"meeting" as any. rre&amp;ITBDged
discussi&lt;?D of pubtic business by a
majority of the meinbers of the
public bOdy. This coUld·even include
social gatherings or telephone conference calls.
_..

The "notice" ~ Ill the
law repraenta a majardlatfle from
the ~ law. Eadl pabllc body .
is fl'Ciulred Ill adopt rulel by ,wblcll
the public ~ be llllllfled of replar
~: Special~ lllUR be
preceded by 2t advance nqtlce Ill the
newB media. In addltioa; the law ,
allows ," any pe~·· to receive ld·
vance notices by priiYiding.. aelf:.addressed. envelGpeS for the pur-,
pose,
Executive sessions (read, MCret
aesaions) of. a public body are permitted only for apeCUic areas of
discussion: ·ilmployment, dlsmlasaJ
or compe~~~~ation matters; tlie pur~ ol real estate or ln'risbuents;
meetlnp with Ita attomeya; labor
negotlatloils; natters conftdenUal
by state or federJ!law (e.g., wdfare
cases l ; apeclallzed stcurlty
arrangements.
But, each exception also is
qualified:
-The employee may request that
the hearing be public. An4, If the
person to be disciplined is an elected
official, the~ must be open If
the conduct relates to official duties
or [lOIIBible removal from office.

-Only

t!lose

investment

"Thanks," I replied. "Woa't you
sit down?"
"We can't stay too long," Bill said

nervously, as he sat down. Then he
got up. "Would you like a drink of

water?"
"I don't think so, right now. But If
I do I can pour one from this pitcher
next to my bed.''
"Isn't that great, Yvonne? He can
pour his own water." ,
"I think it's just wonderful. Can I
help you with your pillow?"
"No, thank you. I'm very comfortable."
. "You look comfortable. I wouJcin•t ·
even !mow you had been sick,"
Yvonne said.
. "Whatdoesyourdoctoriay?" .
"He says I'm cioJ!II·I!IIt fine: He
c~oesp•t thlnt ru tiavt to. slay the
week."
'• '' .
"U
be aa·y' s ·aoI he sbdUld ,UIUWt
'-- "
I
Bill said.
•
~.
·
"fW"·~·t I« yOia 10 home
~ you ,ere better " Yvonne
' . ·~·· ·'·
.
'
said. . .
"~t~• .....t l ~,'; I .llld.
,......~~~~;;.,

posing .the hunting Of mourning other game birds combined.
doves that have appeared in many AlthoUgh uie mourning dove has
Ohlonewapapers.
been recognized as. came bird by
Ali a fourth tenn legislator, I am the . federal government for sixty
fully aware that some types of years, it is estimated that nationlegislation; which are guaranteed to wide there are 5GO million of them.
provoke an enonnous emotional In Ohio, there are about seven
response in pe~~ple wll!l generally do rnilUon mourning doves, and If we
riot involve themselves in legislative are ever able to_establish a bunting
issues, ought to be avoided If the . season for this game bird, we
political .and personal wellbeing of estimate .that hllnters will take about
the legislator is to .be maintained. halh million of them each year. The
Obviously, in Ohio, any attempt at OHio Department ·of Natural
legislation to allow for the hunting of Resources' Division o1 Wildllfe
mourning doves falls lrito that would regulate the hunting of mow-category. It has been my misfortune ning doves using methods of scien·
twice this Sl!SSion (and once before tific game management with at·
in a previow session) to run up tention to the f:Jreedlng and neStilliJ
~gains\ the extraordinary opposition habits of the species. In Ohio, as in
of people who apparently believe other states, the mourning dove
that the hunting of mourning doves Wlluld be bunted only for a short
is on the level of the rnOilt hideous length of time each year, only in•
fonns of animal abuse. Certainly, I open fields, and only with specific
have J:eceiVed far more than a bag limits. The esperience of other
reasonable share of extremely states is that the well regulated hunhateful telephone calls and letters ling of mourning doves has caused
from citizens who r:efer to the "Jn. no decline in the nwnbers of the
nocent dove of peace and love," species. .
which my sinister accomplices and I
It makes sense that well regulated
wish to klll brutall)' for no purpose · hunting by men is not going to be
other than the joy we will receive responsible for the extinctlm of a
from -crueUy e:denninating this ex· species. Threats to species are more
ceptional gift of Mother Nature. likely to be those that interfere with
Nothing could be further from the the envrionment, such as the e.,;
truth.
Crollchment of man in the fonn of
The hunting of mourning doves is subdiviSions, patking lots, and ail"' ·
an issue that has not lent Itself to fields, or the harshness of nature 'in .
reasonable di.scourse, and I have no the,fonn of cold, rain, hail, dill"lll!e,
illusions that this, my latest attempt alld natural predators. Hunters are
to set forward the facts, will win any knowledgeable about and interested
converts to my side. •However, I in the management and the p~
have no choice but to try again.
tioh of game 8s a continuing species.
The mourning dove is not the same Witb ~ fees, hunters supply the
anlmalasibt:whitedove,orthetur- revenues that make the
Ue dove, that sYmbolizes peace. The management of game possible in a
mOurrilng d~e species is _a m~be~ ~te like Ohio. The Qclb white quail
of the · pigeon family lli8t is . IS an example. It was not hunters,
recognized as a gl!llle bird in over but two successively enreme.ty cold
thirty states. Already in the ~nited winters that thinned the bob white

After reading your edllf.ial on.the When is the strike going to end? Soon
baseball strike I jwt hliil to write I hope. With no all star game 1nd
and let you know that to us bueball inaybe no world series (Heaven forfans the strike Is a BIG DEAL.
bid) the rest of the swnmet would
I realize thit everyone is nat a not be complete.
baseball fan (al~ It b,hard to
As for Pete Roae, he will be In the
believe l but to w millions of: fans the •Bilseb811 HaU of Fame for sure and I
rest .of the ltullllll!!' without baseball~ ..ve 8een very few If any newspaper
Is llkea day without~. .
writers In a hall of fame. I bet yOU
I have followejJ bue,llall and 11I,E are a football fan!
BE~ for~and everywhere I go
Louise Gilmore
It Is Hilw are the REDS cloq? ~
Union Ave.
Pomeroy
wuthe IlCOn' of ~lleptne JUt~?.

.public body
removal from of'
flee If be lmowingly violates a court
rule or action taken.
order obtained Under the law. It is
member Of the also
that an officeholder

dilcuuloal are cloeed If premature
dilclolure WOUld provide an unfair
competitive · or bargaining advantage. ,

·

-Many public bodies have closed ·
n\eetlnga to dlscuss "legal mat·
lefs." The law clearly states that an ·
a:ecutl,ve session is closed when the
body meets with its own attorney
and only where such dlscuasions Jn.
volve either pending or inunlnent
court action.
-Decision-making by the public
body mlllt be carried out In public.

Only deliberatioos on the matters
,excepted by the statute may be

I

that will provide the revenues for the
restocking of quail that the Ohio
Division of Wildllfe is undertaking.
Most opponents of mourning dove
hunting express their belief that the
mourning dove is unfit for hunting
because it is too small to be eaten.
According to this theory, the mourning dove is just target practice for
heartless bunters. I find this flctiUous argwnent to be particularly
insulting.
It Is a violation of state and federal law to shoot a migratory game bird
only as a target, and it is the ethical
obligation of the hunter to harvest
and to eat what he kills. Vandals who
hunt the mourning dove only as a
target are breaking the law, and obviously the passage of legislation is
UMeces81iry for those who would
disregllrd the law. Those in Ohio who
wait to hunt the mourning dove
legally will hunt it only in open
fields, in the proper season, witb
respect to bag limits, and with the
intention to harvest and to eat what
is killed. This is basically what the
Continued on A-4

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NOW THRU LABOR DAY.
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save$250 ...

BETZ HONDA SALES
Kanauga, Ohio

Upper Rt 7

"Safe
Savings

Since

1886"
"Becauael
orrer life,
health and
Clr Insurance,
I get to
I!Mwmy
poHcyholdn
and lllelr nettds.

•

.

.

RICK PERDUE

Spring \(alley Plaza
Phone 446-4396

NOW PAYifG

Ulre a gOod neighbor,.
Stale Farm ia there.

STATE FAIM
Cell,.nln
Hollttlltlcu:
lllllllllltll.......
IOillnOCI

"""

....

A

llfl.,lil.CI

We at the

Gallipolis Savinp &amp; Loan CQ.
are pteiSed to announce that we are now paying 6%

Annual
Yield

interest on aU PISsbook Savings Accounts. We Invite you to
compare our Passbook Savings to other financial institutions' 5.25~
to 5.751 interest.
All our Savings Accounts quality for t.R .S.
$400 for married COUpleS.

_.; r

' ',

•

448-3832

__

... . . ...

~

---

e~emption.

if $200 for indivHiual and
I

.

::
I am sure the voters of this district could have forgiven the first attempt
:; .as the action of a young legislator seeklngJo make a name for himself in the
: :; iegislative circles of the stale. The second attempt seems to be an act of
:-: desperation. I had purposely QOstponed writing this article until.the last
,iitnute to knoW what action the House Agricultui'al and Natural Resources
' •, Committee ..irould take on the bill. With the mails being what they are, by the
time you read this, the bill may be as dead as a dodo bird or oo making its
way through the House and Senate.
·
·
Either WilY the legislation goes, I am afraid that James will be the lOser.
A' Democr,at, filMing in a Republican distrjet, caMot affor;d the lll will of
na-.lCJYen, who&amp;!! ~ankS are greater than YOI! would ex~. When Jame8
Js a CIQIIIdlte for reelection, don't be siii'J)I'lsed.on election even If ~lje mour· . I!~~~~~~
ni!IIJ dove It cooing what may be his swan song. -· .• • c _
__
L

viola~
may
subject himllelf to criminal penalties
Wider the statute covering "dereliction of duty _"

'H·O NDA'S
ROAD BIKE

sea-et. All final actions must be
pullllc.
Penalties under the Sunshine Law
are severe and ought to discourage
sea-et deliberations not anticipated
by the statute. Any person may enforce the penalty provision of the
law · and It covers not. only actions
'taken, but "threatened violations"
of tl)e law. The proper fonun is the
common pleas court. The penalty for
the publlc body either taking action
In secret or deliberating on a matter

This letter is written as ~ response States, more mournillll doYes are quail population in Ohio, and it is
to J'nany lette!l and editorials op- - killed by hunters each year than all bunters' fees, the only hunters' fees,

The attack on our
Jack Anderson
most basic freedom.~=========

PAT WHITEHF:IID
Assistant Publisher-Cunln •I I•·•

.,.

. Letter to the ~ditor.~:===Ja=m=es=o=n=do=v=es=

hazc-trduus wr~stes, air pollutants .
c hlo rofluo roca rbons in aerosol,
Lliesel e missi ons e:~nd m edical
deVICeS.
After prodigious labors. our

""sert liberlanan would deny lh&lt;•

••f Tht' A .~.~tl&lt;'iah'tll'n·~~. In land !Jail~· Prt·!&gt;~ A~ ~tN"i &lt;tliun and lht• Amt•ru ·&lt;tn

politic ian

.

guidelines m(:ly be justified under
!he power vested in Congress tu
reguli:lte eonunerce amung Ute
sevl·ral states. Only the rnnst ob-

ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
Publisher

ct

flags and fireworks and patriotic
tween a stun and a sofa'
Our forefathers. fed up with a rallies on the green. As new swanns
remote and faceless government, of officers continue to harass our
went to war to regain their liberty. people and eat out their substance,
They waged the American penn it me a thought for the day:
Revolution, and we celebrate their Another revolution, bloodless but ef·
gloripliS success this weekend with fective, might be an excellent move.

with the noise of garbage trucks .

~15

When

-

wisdom and benefit of federal
decrees that significantly protect
the public health and safety_ But
cupcakes' Garbage trucks? Do we
need a rule requiring the manufacturer of a wood stove to instruct his
cllStorners in the_proper distance be-

regulators brought forth upon this

tl!m:sJ

i.~., O I'' · 11111

'

dardx for refrigerators, freezers.
clothes dryers, water heaters, air
conditioners. ranf.{es and ovens.

Are

,, 1\lf-JVI Ht;R

•P.a ~.,.:;;~.,.,.

nitrites in bacun. They were up tn

necessary' All of them' Surely
many uf the slandartls and rules and

"&gt;&gt;t·"~ P.IIIJt' r Publbhrrs Assn&lt;:iali.,n .

k'

their ears in energy-efficiency stan-

ADivision of

HOBART WilSON JR.
Execullve Editor

'

Our masters were working in 1980

continent a new notion having to do

82Hhird Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio
t614144S-2342

~

on the use of natural gas in electric
power plants. They were studyin~

iunba:tr 'm'imes- ~entinel
,.,~

'

. ]ames ]. Kilpatrick

At the last

The Civil Aenmautics Buard

... .

. lui.II..Ll\6....

.

Shades of
Old King Geor
WASHINGTON - Given a little
prompting, almost any school child
could recite the opening lines of the
Declaration of Independence :
''When in the course of human even, , Is," and so forth . But not many persons remember Jefferson's bill of
particulars, setti ng forth the reasons
that impelled that declaration.
This was one of the charges against King George: "He has erected a

sunday Tlmes·S.._.ttnel

\'

�•
''

JulyS, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleas•nt, W.Va.

)

July·

s.' 1981

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point .P leasant.

. , (-

.

·.ilOeflic"h ~ _·Beat
of the Bend
,,

July 4th death
toll ·climbihg

'

INSTALLED-New officers were Installed when the
Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary Club met Friday
eweniDg at Heath United Methodist Chunh ln Middleport. Pictured from left to right are C. E. Blakeslee,
lnslslllng officer; James Sheets, president; Hank
Cleland, outgoing president; Roger Luckeydoo, dlrector; Lee McComas, treasurer, and Vernon Weber,
secretary. Not present were Pat O'Briea, director, and
Dr. R. R. Pickens, wlce president. Blakeslee J1Bid

COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) -"" Stale
lawmakers passed a biU Jut week
tightening the sale of lbew01kti In
Ohio, but the action ~ too late to
affect this year's Independence Day
celebratloo.
Although the bill went to Gov.
James A. Rhodes on Th~y for
signing before Sal\lrday'a bollday, it
had not been signed by Friday.
Meanwhlle, fireworks vendors
aCI'OilS the sillte ·continued to sell
their wares to Oh!OiliiS who ptatined
a blvJg -uP July 4th.
The bill, which completed
legislative action Thursday when
the House passed it 86.0, closes a
loophole thst has allowed fireworks
wholesalers to sell retail to the
generalpulillc.
To escape conviction under
current law, meant to limit
fireworks sales to wholesale .pur·

special tributes to .JobD Wemer, QU!goiDg secretary,
and WIIMlr Theobald, outgotq treasurer, for their
many yean of outstaodiag service ill their posiUoDS.
BUI Knight, Point Pleasant, was a visiting Rotarian.
Cleland reeeived a past presidenl's pill from Blakeslee
and the new president received the Bob Coats pin
whicb Is worn by the Incumbent president and passed
on to the new president each year.

Rutland parade said 'great'

Racine parade draws large crowd
RACINE - A large crowd was on

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The Kingdom,'The Ch,rch, and Heaven
By William B. Kughn

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he.wen" (MH . 7 : 11) .

Letter-Legal &amp; 11 x17

While You Wait
The French City Press
423 Second Avenue
Gall1pot.s. Oh1o

SIX' MOIIJ)IS .

Minimum DetiNJUIO,DOO

QUEEN MATTRESS
&amp; ~NDATION

5.25%

T..-e.uury

2~ YEAiq

' ~· !fNI$lfu-. ''.J .

' i
M 1n
mum Depos., 1500
Tilt rate shown below tor this
Cerliflute Is apptlcabla this
period and Is ralated to the'
average ~ 1h year yield of
treuury securltln. lnttfftt 11

campounded ~Uy lnd IS Plld

sam I·'

11.7.5% 12.65'

Annu.IR t•

·-'

lin AuctiM. Federal
prMibit COlin; .... ,J
intenst, A•fHaattuny ,....... ...
•t m•hlrlfY' It ttM ......ltfttt
. rate.
The o11ChNI rtfunt t. "~'-"
Mt
1
TruMotrY"• ~lltalttlitMf:
~u latletls

5.46%

_monthl'f , quarterly,
annu~lty, orannuallv .

SALE

.SALE

This MoM-,. Mutlet C.,-tHIUI .. r•t•
is elltc11n tM Uy """ Nctl

day on your total savings account
balarM:e. Write Checks as vou
need ro . Savings account interest
- c~king account convenii!OCe~
ASk for " Earnit! "

. Ann .. l'rlt'N

MhiiiiiUIII Di:llil

For"-"i~=- 1
kJniwtlml...
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11.751 ·,·,lt&amp;SI

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THRU~ •• ..IULYj J;_
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IHRUMON .. JVlY6

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'""'•st must rwmain Oft ..,..,, 1 fYfl .,.... .,. . . . ._.... ,... , . , . .. 1
suiKtantial penalty' for IN'MIItuN wl....,awal ef ~ ...._

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o,ttittSAMforMontltly lnterHt.

C()Rf&gt;I·N &amp; SNYVfR
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EACH DEPOSITOR INSURID UP TOIJot....' IY·THI ,DIC: ANM.NCY 0,

l

THE FEDERAL Gf1VERNMENT.

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1. The posjtive approach: "But,he·that doeth the Will Of mY FaiJ&gt;er

whi ch is in heaven.'' Doeth de'notes ~ction and signifies o~di~nce . For

one'io'gain entrance into the el\urch. he must obey the will of God; the ..
. Father. Upon his Qbedience to. the will, he is· united wilh '·God and.
Ch&lt;ist. He'qlntinues this uniOn witH God.py.maklf!Y ~hrl•t his Lord Ol'
Maister. Ch~ist .beinO .h'is 'mdfe•, he r~l)'ects ·ll.i.f authority and law,
and he shows his res~tlby Olleying tne will of GOd as long n he lives.
J. Unity in family relotlonship: " For whosoever snail do the will ot
my Fltther which is iJ'I heaven, the Same .is my .brother,-,pnd sister, and
mother" I'MII . 12 :51. Brother. sister. ~nd mother descrille the unity
'that prevails within a family relationship. To eniov this unity in the

famllyOIGod , wemustdothewllloflheFalh&lt;ir. '
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'4, £hrlst as Lol'll: "And whY ~all ye '1!1•: J,:ord, lord, and ifo not th•
things Which 1 say?" (L~ . 6 : 46) . Lord is used to describe the unity that
'prevails between lhe Lord and his subjects. The subject or citizen
. 'l'esl'!!cls tlw! Lord by doing the things the Lord says..antt the ones who
i can rightfUllY call Christ Lord isth~ Ont! who obl!ys l'lls will .
'
s. Receive the blessing : " But whoso IOOketh into the perfect law o1
liberty, and·conlinueih there;~. he being not. forgetful h~arer, but a
. doer of lhe work. this man shall~ blessed In his deed" (Jms. 1: 25)
,be re~lplents Ol '!he ,blessinos in' Chr.lst and to ~t~nd pleasing in
sight, you must be a doer of ttoe work , continuing In the,perfect law
liberty .

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The person who salutes Christ as
or by word
mouth
and ighores
1;1is will
not obto.Yitio~~:l~~~~~J;/~~:~~~
the
klnlidom,
.tne church,
norbyheaven.
God and obevsll.will Gain entyrance Into the
;nto lw!aven. ~re you a sAiul'r II) IJIOU\!l only, are you a""'" ••.,.,.
. 'I( ill? Vour ,eteroal dest~atlon. rests uPOI!.you• a~s-rl : ·•!
.
(F ~Fne .!bfeCorl'flll'l"dei'tce Courstwr).f~., ..

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M ' ~;c..e1.
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tM. • .di'IMi iANd•P.O.

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.....
Xl.GIIIIma Mu Chapter Of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority wW stage its an·
nual open, tennis tournament from
,July 9 tlirough
July 12 at til!!
SyraCIJie courta.
'lbe tourniment
went well last
y~ ~ With ' COli·
slde'ralihl ' par·,
tlcipation. Sorori·
ty membets are ·
''

,
ByTbeA..oelatedPraa
HaH a milllon people were ex·
· The nation's 'Independence Day peeled to be In Waslllngton, which
weekend traffic death toll cUmbed would be the largest crowd in the

'

,

iaking the Uberty or forwarding uto

past ·130 Saturdsy, with more thsn

an officer of the alumni association.
•

half the holiday period yet to come.

Pomeroy retired postmaster, Pat
Lochary, isn't exactlY a Yankee •.
Doodle Dandy, but 'almost. Pat ob·
served his 87th birthday Friday,
July3.

·Linda Ferrell, chairperson, ex·
lends tha!1ks to the Syracuse community which conlfll;luted $115.05 to
the Mental Health ·Association of
Ohio, Inc., during a · recent fund
drive. The bellrlnger worker in the'
conununity was JleulahWard.

hopirq! thllt It Win . '
grow this year. beadllne for entry Is
July .8 a~ reside~ wishing to sign
up miiY con~ct s~ Baer, 992·7214
or Lyiul Shuler, !182·735t. Fee Is ta

RobertS. ~b. D.

Dr. Daniel Whitely ·

~

Whiteley, ·Jenkins
ll'lli tY . join college hoard

per cates!JI'Y. Included-In the line up
are· meJi!s and women's doubles,
women's. singles, men's advanced ·
singles, · men's illtennediate and
begin!Jer ~gles arid mixed.

Getting past the Fourth of July, we
do want to announce that the actlve

Long Bottom Comm
Association will hold an 'bla'• I
fashioned Ice cream social begin·
ning at 4 p.m. on Saturday,. July il,
ai ·Red CriSpin's corner- now that ·
Is between the Methodist Church and
the post office. There will be five
flavors .of ice cream, square dahcillg, baked goods and other food
items to eat on the spot. 'Ole
assoclatloo will appreciate your sup·
port.

mo

GRANDE - Daniel H. ·
Whitely M. D. and Robert S.
Jenkins, Ph. D., were elected to the
Rio Grande College Board of
Truatees during the recent annual
meeting.
Dr. Whiteley is a surgeon at
Holzer · Medical Clinic. He
specializes In general, thoracic, and
· If you haven't been saturated, I vascular surgery. Dr. Jenkins is
feel sure thsl at least you have ob· senior vice president and 1118118ging
served 'the television "I love New partner of Eastman &amp; Beaudine,
York" commercial promoting Inc. of New York.
Or. Whiteley attended Princeton
tourism in New York.
·
University
where he majored in
You might also have noted In the
news over the past few days, stories Englisll and completed the premed
relating to a young vagrant who was curriculum. He received his medical
stripped of his clothing and chased degree from the Medical School of
by a gang -' · in Times Square yet. State University of New York at
The vagrant.died and it was at first · Syracuse. His internship and
believed that he had come Into con· residency was completed at the
tact w'ith the third rail of a subway. University of Cinclrmati.
'
LateW however, it was determined
He Is a Fellow of The American
that lie had no burn marks and had College of Surgery, a Southeastern
apparenUy been frightened to death Ohio ·Medical Trustee of The
by the experience.
American Cancer Society, a mem·
You know wbat? We had better ber of the executive conunittee of
stay right here in Meigs County the medical staff of The HOlzer
where we can safely keep smiling.
Medical Center, a member of the
executive col!Uilittee of The Holzer
Clinic LTD., a member of the Gallia

Btuee and Joan May have retur·
ned io tljelr Rutland home from a
wonderful vaCation In Lafayette,
La., .where they visited with their
soo, · ~e. a petrolelllll engineer
with the Tenaco Oil Co.
Mike had a baU showing his folks
~. Ufayette, but the big ex·
c~on !~ Into the GUlf of Mexico
to'll!ii!d aome time on the oil drilling
~:=·r toThe
mays flew · by
.
and from the site and
re8lly bad a blast with the whole ex·
perience.

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The Meigs Fair Board has its
premiUm bouk being distributed and
will meet at p;m. Monday In the of.
flee of the secretary on the Rock
Fairgrounds to begin nailing
down fmal plans. Incredible: The
lair iS only a month away.

a

Sprmp

And again. Letters to the editor
must be signed or they will not be
published. To the.writer of the letter
Pertaining to an alumni reunion.
Yout points are well taken. Although
your letter cannot he published I am

Five die on Ohio highways
. .
By Tbe •···.·•· ted.....
....._ • •..,...
Five people, lnctuaing a
pedestrian, have been killed on
Ohio's highways 90 far during the

struck on a Mansfield city street.
HT
THURSDAYNIG
DELAWARE- Bllly R. Berry, 26,
of Westerville, ina two-car accident

County, Ohio State, and the
American Medical Associations, and
chairman of the medical advisory
board of Gallia County Emergency
MedicalService.
Mter being elected to the board of
trustees, Dr. Whiteley accepted

July Fourth holiday weekend, ac·
cording to the·state Highway Patrol.
.The patroi COUllts:fatalities from 6
p.m. Thursclay-tomidnlghfSUnday.

on a Delaware County toad.

membership to the executive com-

R epresentab•ve h ere this week
.

mittee and the planning and
development conunittee of the Rio
Grande College Board of Trustees.
Dr. Jenkins received a' tw~year
liberal arta degree from Rio Grande
College In 1943. He then attended
Dennison University and Ohio Slate
where he concentrated In economic
theory, money and . banking,
statistics, public finance and
· tuation, and economic history.
He has worked for such
organizations as Ford Motor Company, Trans World Airlines and
Peace Corps.
In addition to serving on the board
of trustees of Rio Grande College,
Dr. Jenkins Is a member of the
Noroton Presbyterian Olunh where
he ts on the board of elders, the Wee
Burn Country Club, the University
Club of New York City, the board
· room and the Landmark Club of
Stamford. He Is a former member of
the American
Economic
Association, the Plymouth
(Michigan) Board of Education, the
PersoMel Advisory Board of the
New York Ughthouse Association
for the Blind, and past president ol
the Plymouth Symphony Society.

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nation's capital since 1976. A parade
was planned up Constitution Avenue
while the original Declaration of In·
dependence was on display at the
National Archives.
The National Symphony, COO·
ducted by Mstislav Rostropovitch, ·
and featuring Pearl Bailey, was to
give a televised concert tonight from
the grounds In !root of the Capitol.
A less traditional concert was
planned by the Beach Boys, who
were to play at the Washington
Monument today before heading to
Long Beach, Calif., for a per·
fonnance Sunday before fans and
television cameras on the Queen
xmary parking lot.
At Independence Hall in
Philadelphia, Polish union leader
~h Walesa was to receive the
city's Freedom Medal in absentia,
and actress Cicely Tyson was to
read portions of the Declaration of
Independence.
The USS Constitution was loaded
to fire a 21-gun salute In Boston Har·
bor, but the Bay Stale's properly
tax-cutting inltislive wiped out
celebrations in Pittsfield, Chicopee,
Winthrop and Attleboro.
Chicago shot off its fireworks
Friday night to punctuate lakefront
perfonnances ol " 1812 Overture"
and "Stars and Stripes Forever" by
the Grant Park Symphony Or·
chestra.
And In Indianapolis, the Benjamin
Harrison Memorial Home was open
for an ice cream $cia!.

The National Safety Council
estimated prior to the holiday's sillrt
· that 4iO to 550 people might be killed
, betw'een 6 p.m. Thursday and mid·
' night Sunday.
Council statisticians said 470
deaths could be expected during 8
similar non-holiday period at this
time of the year.
Last year, 461 people died during
the three-day weekend marking In·
de~ence Day.
The worst three-day Fourth or
July weekend on record was in 1971
when'638 motorists were killed.
Meanwhile, John Adams was
prophetic when he predicted 20S
years ago that America's birthday
would be celebrated " with pomp and
parade, with shows, games, sports,
guns, bells, . bonfires and
illuminations.''
But the second president couldn't
have known that there would be por·
cuplne raees in Council, Idaho, a
Basque Festival In Elko, Nev., a
tomahawk tossing contest in
Ferrum, Va., and a contractor from
Somerset, Ky., set on dropping a
thousand $1 bills on Blanchester,
· Ohio.
Nor could he have ilnagined an in·
ternational convention of Hell's
Angels at Henderson, N.C.
These and other, more traditional
events were oo lap today as
Americans commemorated their in·
dependence on the Fourth of July.
Thousands of travelers took to the r...,----~~
roads to mark the three-day holiday
weekend.

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r-;:::==========:;1
THE GAHS CtfEERLEADE RS
Will Sponsor A Mini
CHEER LEADING CLINIC
July6·10
For girls from grades 1through 8.
:;~:o~~c~~~~~~very day. Price is

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

POMEI«)Y - On July 6, a
POIJleroy.
FRIDAY
If anyone has any questions con1epnuntative from Congressman
XENIA- David p, Hanunons, 33, Clarence E. Miller's ofttce wlll ~. cerning the Federal Government,
of Plaiii CitY, In a one car crash on duCt an Open Door session from 10 a.
please stop by ~o discuss. them with
U.S.421nGreeneCounty.
m. to 12 nooo In the
In the representative.
XENIA - Keith A. McManes, 16, r--;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:~;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;~~
of Xenia, in a one-car crash north of
U.S. 351n Greene County.
USBoN - Vivian 'earlln, 24, of
East Uverpool, 1n a two~ar ac·
cident on County Road 425 In Colum ·
blana Cow)ly. .
.
MANSFIElD - Winnie V. Sch·
wa"', 93, of Mansfield; a pedestrian

courthouse

NEW MEMORIAL DESIGN

GIGANTIC in IUY e.lrS)
GARAGE &amp;YARD SALE
t ~ccond Y Md
,,l ie

St~rts Mond~y ~t 12 Noon
continuing Tues ., Wed. &amp;
fhurs. til darl•.

1 h,lir, ~lnfictuc ~ot r., cott cc r.1hlc,
l'nd t.l bles, p.l lio 111rn ., lov e c, c.lt,
.wro11ght iron plu s hundred &lt;&gt; at
qoodics.
.
A f J HE HUDSONS
Sill 1 hird Av e .
c .1llipoli s, Oh•o

Burt Reynolds
Roger MoiNe
Farrah Fawcett

~

Marriage licenses
Write or Call for Booklets Showing Memorials in Full Color with Sizes
~nd Price slated.

GAWPOLIS - The follol'ring
people Jlled for llllll'riage licenses
this •
...- In· GaWa County.
Proba•·
r.-..
.... ..._..

Tire ;Co, employee, . and Karen
FredBrll!llOD.JII,
G!lilipolls,
Willis
Brown;
20, Galllpolls,
nursillg
•iw'"ent. .
Rl~ E. Holley, 22, Gallipolis,
~.and MaJ!w K. Swillher,
IS, 0..nJpclll.i,·~ dresser. ·

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POMEROY, OH.
Leo L. Vaughan, ••
~gr.

VINTON, OH ..
James 0. Ph.
Bush,
Mgr .
lii·U03

~;~~P~h~; H~2·2~511~.;:~=========~;;~~~

captala D'~·

SHtender
. . "bite-size"shriliiP

Cleatance
Sale
'

.Sale Starts Wedriesthly, July 1
j

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ALl COST~ ME JEWELRY...... 50~75% OFF

·hiobv 'fi.,n,',1tntinrl
"~ ·UIPS_. .
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lOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

Kennetb Ani&amp;"".;,
. U ' Gallipolis,
.r. -..,~'/
ll!ec!w, and Mary J. Wyatt, 51,
Waabingtoil-' C;H,,.. , ~liildry at~
.
Paid M.
. *!;{;!llilpolll, f81'
_., lnd
A. Fadely, ·18,

oampolil,

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~~':~,""=:;,;".; Tblnl
· WATCHES.~ .............;.............
Av....,, bj lhe Qbio ·ValleY l'llbllll!li&gt;l
cm.&gt;ony-MIII~!Do.o-c;lul '
. •r '
.
-poldaiG!IIIJplila, Ohio, 4113i.l
Entot&lt;du '""""'ciuo '"'UINI l1lll!lr
' .tl'OrneroY,OhfO.~Oftk'e.
, 11' on :UII.,•
"''
·

50-60% OFF

' WATCH IAND$ .... ,.................... 50%·
OFF
,

~" 111e ~k.lao:;·~~~J!

"-r.::•..
~~":.::,~A1'1;~=

DIUiy

Prell

~··

Alillela

_. ,__
Pvlol-rt.

·, Nlrit Milo Rood. Soqle .... l:iOiroll,

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C:HINA,SrtS .......... ;.... :........;......60% Q~F
.,. .. '•·

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W..,V.A~· ~~ASSWAftE
.., ........ :......40_% .OFF
"
·
., .

• tender, golden fried, "bite- size" shrii'!'P
• 2 hush puppies
• fr8$h creomy co1e1*1w
. . .
• ~rlsp, hqf french fries ·
•fhe captain's special c~cktall sauc~

s·

301 ~ t~
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f.·U I&lt;NITURf CO•

&lt;L ·' · .SuecoiliAve. 446-1171
,~~r~ ---

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There stands between us and heaven the kingdom , the church ~ If
we expect to be united with God in heaven eternally. we must be united
with Chr ist in the church on earth . Jesus is laying down a ver y strong
principle co('cerning the entrance into the kingdom. the church. and
hea ven. l-Ie approaches it in a negattve a ~,d positive manner .
1. The negative approach~ "Not everyone that saith unto me,
Lard, Lord, shall enter th~ kingdom of heaven." rn the Greek , it reads,
··not every one saving unto me. LOrd , Lord .'' saying donates ' ' to S{Jtute
any one as Lord." The individual who formally professes with ·the
mouth his love for the Lord, how he loves to teach in His name,
speakes of the miraculous work·s he is capable of doing and all tbe
other good works he does in the name ot The Lord , is all mouth, and his
speech 'dece.i ves .him . Why? Because real union with Christ is not'
established on one' s savings that are spoken so as to salute Christ, as

Lord.

·S orority sponsors
.
~eiJD!s
tournament
'"···

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•·Not everv one- thilt s.1ith unto me, tord ,e~_L ord, Shall enter into the
I· ingdom ol heavl!n; but he that doeth the wil~ of my F~ther which is in

FULL MAmESS · &amp; FOUNDATION

.

RC COlA.,.·:,.
RC lOOJ,.
RITe,..
COLA :,..

BANKRUPTCY/CHAPTER 1'3

Mismatch Cover
Savings

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TRijiSTATE BEAUTY COLLEGE

T~World's Greatest Sleeping Pill!®

.

:

PRESTON

Makers of the Bemco Posture'"" family of fine mattresses.

' •

.SPECIAL

...........,. *********'*'

Earnie·s check ino·savlngs pt,ln
earns you 5'1•% interest everv

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Gallipolis Ice Co.

ONE DAY .

'· t ""'

THIS WEEK

•l

What's
Your
Choice?
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In answer to, "Is this merchandise
bought for resale?" the reporter was
told to write, " no." In response to,
"U you are going to use this mer·
chandlse yourseH, state for what ~-----------

8

legislation allowing for the hunting
of mourning doves would do, and I
shudder every time I think that
nearly every opponent I hear from is
obviously totally ignorant of these
facts . Opposition is always expressed about consequences of the
bill that are merely the fantasi es of
those who see unethical hunters
cruelly abusing mourning doves. 1
am fed up with the refusal of
emotional opponents to accept the
fa cts about the legal, regulated hunting of the mourning dove.
There are also institutions that the
new bill I am sponsoring, House Bill
585, &gt;S some kind of clever trick per'
petrated by me upon the Ohio
General Assembly in order to allow
the hunting of mourning doves when
members have already expressed
theor opposition to the proposal. The
new bill was completely within the
rules of the Ohio House and the Constitution of Ohio. It deals with no
particular species and simply states
that the Ohio hunter may hunt what
the federal government says he may
hunt. The bill would allow Ohioans to
hunt nationally recognized game
and would remove \he conflict bel·
ween state and federal government
on this issue. Most importantly,
House Bill 585 takes wildlife species
out of the political arena, where, unfortunately, there can be no guaran·
tee of a fair hearing, and instead
allows the professional wildlife
managers to make the decisions on
species, seasons, and bag limits. It is
true that the experts !those who
know what they are talking about)
would allow the hunting of mourning
doves (our most abundant game
bird and untapped resource. l It is
also true that the Ohio General
Assembly has hardly spoken out
soundly against the hunting of mourning doves . In the 112th General
Assembly in 1978, the Ohio House
voted 61 to 28 in favor of hunting, but
the bill, House Bill 1034, failed to
reach the floor of the Ohio Senate,
where it may very well have become
law. This session, Senate Bill 34,
which also allowed for a mourning

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Ohio."

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lame." on doves

.

~r

visited Eagle Fireworks Inc., a for·
mer gaso!lne station just off In.
lei'Btale 18 In Quaker City, to buy
fil eworks. The reporter was told by
an attendant to fill out a one-page
statelnent, which began by saying
the company was "controlled by the
Jaws of Ohio for sales within this
stale. All sales are for direct ship·
ment out of stale."
In answer .to the question, "What
is the destination of this mer·
chandise?"the reporter said he was
told,Os' just put down any stale but

Fred WeliB, operator of the c:om·
pany, said he is not violating the
spirit or the Jaw.
· "'lbere isn't any loophol~ ill the
Jaw, we sell for direct shipment out
of state, .. he said.
Wells said he knows some
custcnDera lie on'tbe forms.
" I 'can assure you we have done
everything we c:an to ensure c:om·
pllance with the U!w," he said
"There Is 8 small amount of fallacy
II!' every profession. It's super hard
for us to keep track ofthefonns."
Next year, however, it probably
won 'I he so easy for Ohioans to buy
fireworks. Under the legislation sit·
ting on the governor's desk, no one
could sell fireworks wholesale or
relail to anyone other than lho6e
with secured written permission, as
prescribed by existing law, from a
fire department chief or county
sheriff.

Highway ·... ; :*

y

"

easily under this~A Columbus Dispatch

fireworks display.

First, secon&lt;l and third place
part in the presentation which was hand Saturday morning to review an
respectively in the theme division
led by police and the Rutland outstanding parade sponsored by the were United Faith Church, Racine
American Legion Post.
Racine Volunteer Fire Department.
First Baptist and Racine PTO.
~•***************}
There were not only numerous
There were attractive floats,
First, second and third place
floats , but clowns were sprinkled queens, members of ball teams, respectively . In the non-theme
among the parade participants to members of Racine Legion Post602 division were Racine United
(Continued from Page Al)
add to the July 4th activity. There and the " hardly able crew" from the Wesleyan Church, Bethany United
district,
which Includes Gallia and
were excellent antique cars, out· Racine Methodist Church.
Methodist Church and Reorganized Meigs counties, will receive $13.68
standing equestrian units, marching
There were some excellent Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
million In funds for road resurfacing
groups, ·school children, youth equestrian units including the Meigs Saints.
and
maintenance.
·
groups plus fire and emergency County
Sheriff ' s
Posse,
In the bicycle division first and
This
is
8
percent
of
the
state's
units, units from REACf, TOPS and cheerleaders and vehicles represen · second respectively in the agelOand
.
highway
maintenance
funds.
the U.S. Army.
ling various businesses.
up were Donila Manuel and Melanie Southeastern Ohio is one of the highAll in all, it was a great endeavor
Scott Wolfe , chairman of the VanMeter; age six to 10, Amy way department's 12 districts in the
and the crowd loved it.
event, announced the following win · • Wagner and Mayla Yoachim; age
state.
ners.
two to six, Julie Hill and Joshua
The Department of TranCasto.
·
sportation said it considers four fac(Continued from page A3)
Accepts new member tors in determining how much main·
16 oz.
tenance and resurfacing funds each
GALUPOUS - The Gallia·
Bottles
region got.
dove hunting season, passed the hunt mourning doves.
Jackson,Meigs Mental Health Board
In order of Importance they are:
Plus tax
I will agree that my opponents and
Ohio Senate by a vote of 'n to 6, and I may simply have different values was notified last week that Pat vehicle miles traveled in · each
&amp; dep.
was defeated in the Ohio House by a when it comes to this issue, but iri Houck, Board Public Information district, current condition of highICE COLD BEER
vote of 49 to 45 and again by a vote of am absolutely certam in my own Special~!. has been acceple!l as a
way pavements, number of lane
46 to 47, both tilnes failing to receive mind that the passage of legislation member of the National Association
miles in each district and an equal
WINE &amp; POP
the required constitutional majority to allow for a well regulated mour· of Mental Health Officers share of funds for each county.
(NAMHO).
of 50, but hoth times also receiving ning dove hunting season will not enWeir said most of the slate's highHOURS
Founded in 1963, as the National
more yes votes than no votes on the danger the species and will not bring
way program will be funded by the
Mon.· Thur. 8 till!
floor . Little wonder than that sup- ahout the unethical killing of mour- Association of State Psychiatric In· 3.3 cent gasoline tax increase which
Fri.-Sat. 8 til12
ronnation
Specialists,
NAMHO
porters continue to pursue some sort
began being levied Wednesday. •
members
are
full·lime
employees
of
of legislation that would allow a hunThis increase will allow the state
ning doves simply for sport but that federal , stale, regional or com- to spend 45 percent more on road
ting season.
I would hope that anyone reading it will allow for the hunting of a munity agencies providing mental resurfacing and maintenance next
DRIVE THRU
this lengthy letter might at some nationally recognized, abundant health, mental retardation, develop· summer than it did this Slll!llller,
CARRYOUT
point say to himseH, " Well, that Ron resource, then I can say in all mental disabilities, alcohol abuse Weir said.
709 First Ave.
It
James isn't the horrible monster I honesty that I can see no good and/or drug abuse services. Ms.
;-.~
thought he was," but frankly, I have reason why this bill should not Houck is a 1974 graduate of Rio
little hope for my rehabilitation become law. I would not impose my Grande College and has completed
among the opponents of dove hun· values on others (how could I force all course I}'Ork at Ohio University
ling legislation. How could I expect someone to hunt mourning doves? ) towlrds a Masters Degree In In·
but I resent - and I am very tired of terpersonal Communications.
Following attendance at the
reason from opponents who have - those who would ilnpose their an·
Public
Relations Society of
tihunting values on me. .
written that they long to see me
America's
convention, Ms. Houck,
609 Third Ave.
RON JAMES
''pecked to death by crows and eaten
Chesapeake, Ohio
State Representative Gallipolis and community mental
up by coyotes''" What kind of sick in92nd House District health received national mention in
dividual would wish hann to another
-Under New Ownershipthe PR Reporter. ·
hwnan being under the guise of
• 1 rain for careers in Cosmetolo.gy
benev.olence toward all livi ng
•Student
Financial Aid Available
things• Less violent opponents
•
'
ontinuous
t . nrollment - · Sign Up
merely wish to slander and ridicule
Today!!!
·
me and to attempt to ruin my
•D.ly
~nd
Night
r
1.1sses lor your convenienc e
political career, since it is obvious to
(Wage Earner Plan)
•
Beauty
services
performed
by students
them that I cannot possibly be an
under
supervision
of
licensed
instructors
able legislator on important state
No
fee
for
lnfonnatlon:
tromB
:
JOa.m
.
to7:30p.m.
issues such as the state budget,
•Free parking on and off street
education, taxation, welfare, public
lit and Jim Rigsby, Owners
1-221-5379
utilities, retirement, health, labor,
Phone 867-8512
or commerce if I would disagree
Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N . Maggied
with them on whether we should
Attorneys·A t- Law
88 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH. 43215
AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLL •.

RUTLAND - An outstanding
parade was staged in Rutland Satur·
day morning as a part of the annual
July 4th celebration sponsored by
the Rutland Fire Department.
The parade had "something for
everybody" , to say the least. The
number of entries was not only im·
pressive but the parade demon·
strated that much originality,
creativity and work had gone into it.
A wide range of floats were in the
parade line up with religion and the
patriotic theme carried out for the
most part. Young and old alike took

'

chases, vendors have asked buyers
to Sign sta~eJJ¥~~18 identifying them·
aeiVes as whole8alers and saying
they're buying the fireworks for use
out ofstale.
Anyone has been •ble to buy them

pu,rpose," the.·reporter was told to
indicate he planned to conduct 8

1·age-A ·S- The Sunday fimes ·Sentinel

-

'

Fireworks legisliJ,Wn · too late this year

w. va .

•

.~.1•1sa ,.allu"m
.iJPPDRIIU- .

�Page--A -6-The SUili' ·'Y rimes-sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- P o·int Pleasant,

July 5, 1981

w. va .

Pleasanf,

Public sch9ol .spending :UP in ·'Bl
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP)- &lt;llio's
pub)Jc sehools spent 1U pertert
more to educate studenta til 111'1Ml
than they did the previous year, according to a report by the Oblo
Public~dltureCoWidl.

OPEC says city, exempted vWage
and local school districts spent an
average of $1,815 per pupU In the
19'J9.81 school .year. Vocational
schoolsspentanaverageoffl,ll22.
Costs per pupil rangedfrvm •1,120
In the Georgetown dlstrl~ In Brown
County to a high of f1 ,2521n the tiny
KeUeys Island dlsttict. 'l'be seeond

NEW CLINIC- The exterior of tbe new Hillcrest
Surgical CliDic Is made of brick, glass aDd wood. The
facility operated by Dr. Edward Berklcb, general

surgeon, and Dr. Malcolm Lena, orthopedic and
general surgeon, opened June 1 at 563 Jackson Pike.

•

highest school
was $5,252
In the. CUyahoga
Heights
district.
The council warned against ~
paring costs between Individual
districts. "Differences in average
daily memberships, taxable wealth,
nwnbers of disadvantaged children,
methods of providing vocational
education ... and other factors have
an important bearing on costs per
pupil," tbe report said.
The council got the figures from
theOhioDepartmentofEducatlon.
This was the sixth straight year
that the increase In costs exceeded
$100 per pupU and the first time for
an increase in operating costs ~

over.-apupll.'
In the South-Western dlstrlct iO
Tbe .ac:bOOl dlltrlcta, excluding ~.488 In DaY*on. Cincinnati spent
joint vocational. IIChool dlltricta, ~,347 per . pupil; foUowecl · by .
spend •u blllloo fir current ex· ~ YOIIIlg!lown, ~.112+; Parma, $2,2H;
penae Jllll'IIOIIe8 clur!n« the 1979-80 Cleveland, ~,231; CollllllbuJ, $2,01M;
scboolyear.
ToledO, $2,081; Akron, $2,0211, and
1bat Will an 1ncreue of f2 billion Canton, ,1,995.
- or 125 percent - over exeumnt expense, capital outlay
pendlturea10yearsago.
and debt serviee In the school
OPEC says 73 dlstrtclll exceeded distficta, plus the state educatiOII
the statewide average and 31f feU department, amounted tofU bllllllll
below.Sixty-Gne~lntbeaverage
during the 197HO school year. Tbla
l'llllge of $1,815 to $2,000.
Will an Increase of $368.7 mllllon, or
Costs JI!M' pupU In Ohio's 10 largest 9.8 percent, over total expenditures
school dllltricta ranged from Sl,710 . for 1973-79.

r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

CHECK INSTRUMENTS - Janet Wickline, C.O.R.P., standing,
checks instruments prior to a patient examination at tbe county's newest
medical facility, tbe Hillcrest Surgical CliDic, 563 Jackson ~Ike. The
clinic operated by Doctors Edward Berklcb and Malcolm Lena opened
June I.

Gen. Hartinger
•
receives award
•

MIDDLEPORT - Lt. General
James V. Hartinger, commander-inchief of the North American Defense
Corrunand, a native Ohioan, was
among the 20 citizens of Ohio to be
presented the Executive Order of
the Ohio Corrunodore by Gov. James
A. Rhodes.
General Hartinger is formerly
from Middleport and is the son of
Mrs. Violet Hartinger, Beech St.,
Middleport.
The Executive Order of Ohio Commodore is an honorary award given
for outstanding service to Ohio and
named after Commander Oliver
Hazard Perry by virtue of his naval
victory over the British at Put-InBay in 1813.
Gen. Hartinger has had a long
military career beginmng in 1943
which included U. S. Military
Academy at West Point, Randolph

Davis' car was slighUy damaged,
while Setterfield's car received
moderate damage.
Davis was cited for failure to use
caution while backing.
Cora H. Borden, fJ/ , Gallipolis,
backed into a parked car owned by
George Morrow, Gallipolis, in the
A&amp;P parking lot off of Se5Pnd
Avenue Friday afternoon.
Both cars sustained slight
damage.
Police cited seven other persons
Friday:
Donald G. McBride, 36, Bidwell,
failure to appear; Gregory D.
Holcomb, 20, Alice Ridge Road, and
JohnS . Burke, 34, Chillicothe Road,
DWI ; and Curtis A. Fulks, 19 ,
Gallipolis, disorderly conduct.
Three persons were cited for open
containers:

Gary A. Pope, Vinton; Kevin E.
Errett, 24, Leon, W. Ya .; and Dennis
R. Taylor, 25, Pl. Pleasant, W. Va.

. .Cit
...

WOMEN'S SHOES

,...
Cit

1

Ill
Ill

&lt;

Ill

·-

:Ia

PRICE

GROUP WOMEN'S SHOES $500

COSHOCTON, Ohio (AP) -A for ·
mer Coshocton policeman will have
immunity from prosecution if he
testifies against two other fonner
· ALL SPRING &amp; SUMMER SHOES SAlE PRICED!
policemen in an assault case.
DanielL. Moody Jr. is due in court
July 23 as a witness in the criminal
e
trials of Willis Young and Steve
Akins, charged with beating Edward
.
Krasky, 21, of Coshocton, on Nov. 5,
1980. Krasky had been arrested on a
charge of disturbmg the peace.
·
In a $1 million police brutality suit,
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
Krasky alleged he was beaten by 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Young and Akins while Moody and f
another officer, Unn McKay, wat·
ched.

her1tage house·
Of SHOES

m!'l

Physician joins PVH staff

. .............. ............--~·

Ill

lARGE SEL£CTION ·

INVENTORY REDUCTION

·sALE!·
THOM MeAN
Cinnamon Urethane

~

UERGY· ~YEit

SWITCH

THOM MeAN Ultra Sole
Black or Brown leather

SLIP ON $2
.
Reg. 139.99

CHIN() GABARDINE.

~ .·

'

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

~Rei '24.99 $1]99
!'

'

• Uses just 89 kw hours per month• with energysaver switch in normal position 1111 Efficient foam
insulation • 19.0 Cu. ft. no-frost refrigerf!tor•
freezer • 13.8 Cu. ft. fresh food capacity. • 5.2
Cu. ft . freezer section • Reversible cloors • Rug_ged Trilon II door and cabinet liner • See-thru
meat keeper.
Model CTF19GB

POMEROY,

oHIO

992-2181 .

1

•

CLOSEOUT. STEEl TOE
WORK. .SHOES;..50% OFF

DELUXE NEW 19 CU.
ENERGY-SAVING REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER!

POMEROY IANQMARK

'

'

Contem J1Dr11Y Fashion

.t.DJ~TMI.(

llol poi..nt

.

199

THOM MeAN

·

~ ·

®

Q
Q

FREEl

ssooo OFF

21 booked
after riot

-

Ill

OF EQUAL VALUE OR LESS

Air Force Base, Texas, and William
Air Force Base in Arizona. He flew r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
his first combat mission in the F-84
Thunderjet in Korea .
Mter returning from Korea he
trained and served at air force bases
around the country and during the
Vietnam conflict flew more than 100
aerial combat missions. In I!M!S he
asswned command of the famed
Flying Tigers organization and later
became deputy chief of staff for
plans at the NORAD Command in
Colorado.
Hartinger's decorations and awards include the Distinguished Service
Medal with one oak leaf cluster,
Legion of Merit with one oak leaf
cluster, Distinguished Flying Cross,
Air Medal with eight oak leaf
dusters, Air Force Commendation
IOUIPf'£0 f~
OPTIOIIAl
Medal and Combat Readiness
IUTOlUliC IClMUEI
Medal.

POINT PLEASANT - Peter J . July 20. Appointments can be made
(Jim) Navalkowsky, M.D., will be by calling 675-6143.
opening his practice in Internal
Dr. Navalkowsky has been gran·
Medicine in the Professional ted privileges to practice Internal
Building at 2513 Jackson Avenue in Medicine at Pleasant Valley
Point Pleasant, W.Va. on July 22.
Hospital in J?olnt Pleasant.
Dr. Navalkowsky is a native of Ed ·
monton, Alberta, Canada. He is a
graduate of the University of Alber·
ta Medical School and completed his
rotating internship in Toronto, On·
tario, Canada in 1975·76. He did two
years Internal Medicine Residency
at McGill University, Montreal,
LONDON (AP) White
Quebec, Canada from l!m to 1979,
and two years Internal Medicine "skinheads" b8ttled Asians outside
Residency at the University of a tavem pop concert Friday night
Alberta in Edmonton from 1979 to and~r went up In flames during
a Wild melee Involving gasoline
19111.
He is a member of the · Alberta bombs and riot pollee, offictais
Medical Asaoclation, a Provincial reported.
Branch of the Canadian Medical
Scotland Yard said pollee In the
Aasoclation. He is also Board cer· Southall district, an Asian section of
tined In Ipternal Medicine by the West London, were lsaued riot
American · Board of )nternal shields becaue ~. loo, came un·
der attack Clurln&amp; the flve:bour fight.
Medldoe.r ~He' and bla wile, Lorraine, and GasoUne boglbll were thrown · and :•
their, eon ·MICiiael, age two, will cars, a ~e IIIII the tavei'll were
•relldl ·It Rt. 1, prandview Heights, set ablaze, olficlals said. ·
Fire englries were attacked aa
Pollll~'
. Dr~ Nadonky's office hours they approeebed the scene; the Fire
bdrom 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Brigade uld. Dlvillonal ' fire chief
jlwcJIIIb Friday, 8lld he will begin Roy Belchrln llild twO .flreflglttm
~~~.:~~~ ··,~·~~~ppo~~ln'tllJen~ __M~~· were lnjlll'ed.

~

SECOND PAIR

Cop gets immunity

.

'

.

a

a

BUY ONE PAIR AT
REGUlAR PRICE AND GET

ID

'

that TrUrnailhad said be wanted
man with "guts" for the price czar's

The short, pudgy DISaUe opened
his suit coat over his ample girth,
- patted his tununy, and assured the
newsmen that Trwnan got what he
was looking for. · ·.
When one Washington writer later
published a column filled with
DiSaUe's sallies, Truman clipped a
copy and sent it to DISaUe with a
note saying there were so many stuf.. fed shirts in government he
: sometimes wished he· could use a
surgicallnstrwnent on them. "Keep
sti~ tbem," the president's note
concluded.
That framed note is among the
. mementos and photographs
covering the walls of DiSalle's comfortably fumished sixth-floor office.
· 1 DiSaUe, 73, fvlir now tl)lnning
white, moves a litUe slower and has
lost 'much 'of the weight be used to
carry. The eyes have mellowed, but
• the1sly, impl8h look of old is still
. there as he scans the aqay of pic. lures from the past.
: · There .a re pictures of DISalle with ·
Harry T~; DiSalle with Lyndon
: Jolmson and Jolm F. Kennedy,
DISalle with Dwight Eisenhower at a
national governor's vconrerence in
.: Gettysburg, Pa.
• One of his favorites, he says, Is a
: poster-size enlargement , of a
• photograpll showing Franklin
: Delano Roosevelt standing at the
: back of a campaign train in Toledo
· in 1938. 'l'hl!t Wlis the year ~:::::; I
: got Into pQiitics:·serlously, ·w
: election as a state representative.
: There are stories to go with all
: pictures. Uke the picture of DISalle
· and Abe Rl!licoff, then gov~mor It
: Connecticut, In 19110, 'esci&gt;rtlng Ken- ·
·. nedy to the podium at the·
· Democratic National Convention
· Loll Angeles.
: "He (Kennedy) told Ribicoff and
: rnt;Ji!! ha~ been looking all oyer Los
· Allli!ll!ll for us to escort him to make

,'

LB.

Sandwich Spread
FRENCH. CITY
.
oz.
·. W1eners..............~K:~.
12

CRISPY SERVE

.. .

$ Sg
Roast ....... ~B··· ·
.
$ ·gg

Bacon ................... :~·.

CHOICE BONELESS

1
Ch.uck
... .. ..
Stew Beef•••••••••••••••
LB.

•

•

BUCKEt

Gube St..

"'!:

.

$ 29

...........

,

LB.

'

: hiS · a~nce
speech,"
1

: said.
: DISaJie~ then governor, was one of
' Kinnedy's early supporters, beating
: Ray T. Ml)ler, fonner mayor It
Cleveland, .to the punch in Ohio.
"He (Miller) was very upset when
: Kennedy picked me as his man In
Ohio. He had a fit.
_ . "As ·a matter ·of fact, he was in
Washington trying to break down the
doors to Kennedy's office when ·I
·declared for Kennedy in Ohio,"
' DiSalle recall~•.
"Jefferson scl!ool'IIBd to take me
because It was a public scbool, but it
. was a long way from where we lived:
"I used to get l)eat up every day by
IJOiliebody'"he Said.
Why? At least In part because he
couldn't understaJid what they were

talkiJW abciU'l: . "

·; "WJien we
, house,'

~

/

PARKAY

Margarine ........~!~

.

,.e.;e· no

ligld,ll, ' no
t1JiJeta, • no nothing," ·

no
~:~:=~·

water,

Bananas ...........~;.4 f$

got &amp;o tbla ao-ca,Ued
c

GRADeJA

"My motlier cr!ed

DISIIie

&lt;beca~u::~::~~~::~!1
' wllat tile
yoUngsters
; ..u,litdol

. \··

'

'

.

.

When l&amp;ca- tlnie to~ schoOl,
St. Patrieb' caUIOUc llcl!ooll'l!fwted
to talle Dll•lle bec:lllile
he couldn't
'

~

~~~In

•

Med. EaR..............ooz..

'Eng1isl) and

~

.· ...· tU
..
'

:iiSf~";

i''

HOMEMADE

job.

didn't liam to "

'• ·.

298 SECOND ST.
POMUQY, O.
PRICES GOOD lHROUGH SAT., JULY 11, 1981

H01111e; PiSaUe was grilled by
neWSJN!I~nnen who reinlnded him

CLOGS

Ill

.

JIOillteii•.On IUs way out of the White .

'

Ill

occupies

·-

.'

. ' wit ..etreahing.
•. 1~. itarted the day lie Willi ap-

WOMEN'S LEATHER

.u-..
....,
0
-

Jlai·done ~well for himself.
Dl8alle, 11011_qtltaUan ~
who becaine mayor of To~ 'and

O!Jio, ·JI9W

ne :.unaa

Sundlf 10 am-10 pm

from the' Whi~ Howle, where he oncew&amp;~~ a regull!rviSltor. I
It was under . President Harry
Truman that . DiSalle
:~: national attention as price conltOI
boss in the early 11100s.
. ·;f
He l1ao 'won the affection of .
.. w~ newsmen, who found IJls

50 PAIRS

0

WASHINGTON (AP) .:_ For a kid ·.
who got beat up every day on the
way to school In Toledo, J&gt;hio,
Michael V. ~e learned a lot and·

·~ g~erllOC · ,of

t

. SIOR£ HOURS: . '
Mon.-Sat. 8 1111·10 pm

•

STARTS MONDAY, JULY 6th

z

.

IIOIIIfO?Wble taw office a iew blockS

JULY CLEARANCE

Lawmen probe thefts
GAIJJPOLIS - Local law en·
forcement officials are investigating
several thefts and attempted
breaking and enterings that OC ·
curred Friday and Saturday.
Gallipolis City Police report a
theft at the residence of Joyce Bur·
ner and Susan Imbert on Fifth
Avenue sometime Friday night.
A television, video tape machine,
check book and calculator were
reported missing.
Entry may have been gained with
a key, police said.
Leona Harshbarger, Scottown,
told the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department someone broke into her
cellar either Friday night or Saturday morning.
She said a car battery and $33 wor·
tb of food are missing.
Sheriff's deputies are also in·
vestigating attempted breaking and
enterings at the residences of Donna
Fooce, Upper River Road, and
Joann Conkle, Cheshire.
Both attempted breaking and enterings occurred Friday.
A vehicle fire Friday night
resulted in $2,000 damage to a !975
Jeep Cherokee.
The jeep, owned by Walter Saun·
ders, Gallipolis, was on SR 141 when
an engine backfire ignited, ac·
col'fing to the Gallipolis Fire Depar·
tment.
Upholstery, the dashboard and
wiring in the jeep were damaged,
reports said.
Police report two minor collisions
Friday. ,
Phillip. Davis, 41, Gallipolis was
pulling into a parking lot off of Third
Avenue Friday afternoon when he
backed into a parked car owned by
Charles Setterfield, Franklin.

D·iSalle
has done
very._ well

. va.

met.inNewY~ .... ~···

· ' ~~~ afftitaerYIIjlta~ ,_
ta. a. faUIIIr, IAatllan.J, a metal

~

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,
••

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•
•
•
I

1·• NORTHERN'
, . '

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.

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'

Joilef TiSsutt.~.J~.
.

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~ •' ~~DE~'S E~IE . '

HALF

$}29

.' Ice Cream ........G!~~ .••

••
"

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'PoJIIMr, .........Jilurled.

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lim the
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flldlrh;Y ....,... DB '
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Times, Senlinel

·''!.'.

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

"
'•"

..

Tearful
reunzon

,,

Open Daily 10,9
Sunday 1·6

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e

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Seven
families who had intended to gather
in Alabama for a rewllllil were
brought together instead lor an
1!motionally charged. fWJeral for
eight relatives killed in a fiery bus
crash one week ago.
The service was held Friday at the
Praises of Zion Baptist Church for
the victims, including !willa
Wiseman, 72, who was to have been
honored at the reunion by her
relatives.
They were killed JWJe 26 along
with two other people when the
private bus converted into a mobile
home burst into flames on a highway
north of San Bernardino. Seventeen
. others were injured.
The dead included one of Mrs .
· Wiseman 's daughters, Pauline
Robinson , 36, a granddaughter,
Lorrie Robinson, 18, a grandson,
Clent T. Robertson Jr., 21 , and four
children of the family : Lakey Dante
Hill, 10 months ; Jackwilin Terrie
Jackson, 5; Kundido Lee Jackson, 7,
and Akila Jackson, 8.
•
Services for the other victims,
Socrates Dredd. 40, were held Thur·
sday and for Scottie Undsay, of
Palos Verdes, at Christ Temple
Friday afternoon.
At the family funeral, a young boy
and girl had to be carried from the
church after they were overcome
with grief. Other relatives - in ·
eluding at least one woman still
heavily bandaged from the fire sat crying at the front of the church
as the Rev. Joe Hardwick and the
Rev . Lorel Johnson sought to com·
fort them.
Among the congregation were
Mrs. Wiseman's daughter , Ruth
Battle, and son -in -law Willie Battle ,
who was driving the bus.

Kodacolor n·· • Focal"
Color Print Flms
Up to
12·Exp.
Up to

3

•

2.09
3.12
3.63 '
5.16

20·Exp.

4.87
3· 3~~~-

Up to

2··Exp. 1
Up to

•od7" Trash can Liners

36·Exp. 1

.
s mtl Ftt
50 plo sttc liners. 1. sav e!
20-30 gal. c ons .

,.

(202)

97~

" CQ~C~ ANb~VINGS BANK- Mn. Donald Crance cb08e
'Doughboy In the Park' and 'Winter Storm Over Acklnson's Hill'. ,

"C-&lt;111 "ttiCCSI R.MJOI&amp;r
C-21 &amp;ICI-""'&lt;fOOII.Ctll.r ~

Limit 2

Slide • MoYle P!oceulng
Proceu 2o-tap. lllde or

(7.03)

2. 17

1.24 •o•

2.08

20 Quart Potting Soil

Our Reg. 2.27

1.87~,

lloll

Inquire About OUr
On·ttme Service

Rich·, ready to use
odorless, sterile. won ' t
burn .

1-lb. • Bag M&amp;M's• Candy
Mouthwatering M&amp;M's". plain or
with peanuts. , Save now I
"Net wt.

FLAYOR

(204)

¥fT WI ""'.~~

1 47

Gallipolis man
charged with DWI

(201)

GALUPOUS - A Gallipolis man
was cited for DWI after a one-car ac·
cident on Mt. Zion Road Saturday
morning, the Gallia·Meigs Post of
the Highway Patrol reports.
John Johnston, 29, was northbound
when he left the side of the road and
struck a ditch, according to reports.
His car was slightly damaged.
He had minor injuries, but was not
treated.
A two-car collision on SR 7 at CR 5
in Meigs County Friday evening
resulted in minor damages to both

M(nes' Sizes

ev.-n

ss~

•
?~;Reg
32-oz .• Iced Tea Mix
Iee e tea mix .
lemon flo
wtth nmu ro l
'Net wt.
vor. sugar Odded t

(205)
.Our 1.47

'

97CI:

Pepsi Cola

6·pr. Pkg.

or Nylon

2 Liter
Bottl e. Stoc k

Knee·Hl's

Slretch nylo n.
in Sunta ns o r
Mist - tone .

up ana Sa ve.

1.49

·summer Magic', 'Cba.:nben Bridge-Delaware Co.',
and'Auluina DeUgbt'.

Our
26·qt. Styrene·foom Chest
17x12X131J'' chest with molded
end grips for carrying . Save.

cars.
The Highway Patrol said Eric Did ·
die, 21 , Middleport, was westbound
on CR 5 when he struck a vehicle
driven by Billy Garnes, 20, Dexter.
Diddle was cited for failing to
yield.

Limit

..

$~1~
97
o

·'

Price
3 steel wool soap Pads
Long -lasting pads . c ut
grease. shine a1um1rum.

File applications
MARIETIA - Area Six Health .
Systems Agency (ASHSA) recentlY
received an application for Certificate of Need (CON) review from
Mid-Atlantic Nephrology, Ltd. of
Washington, D. C. for a renal
dialysis facility in Athens, Ohio.
The proposed facility will consist
of eight outpatient chronic maintenance dialysill stations and one
home training station. The facility
will treat patients suffering from
End Stage Renal Disease ( ESRD I
who reside in Athens, Hocking,
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, and Vinton
counties. A copy of the application is
available at the ASHSA office.
Doctors Hospital of Nelsonville
has submitted a Letter of Intent to
file a CON application for a renal
dialysis facility in Nelsonville. This
proposed facility will serve a similar
service area.
ASHSA review staff has not yet
determined the date of public review
for the application. For further in·
fonnation , contact the ASHSA of·
fice.

2 Pkgs.

(207)

(208)

Our94¢ Pkg.

$6

2Pkgs$1

Our Re_g. 8.67
!'den's Golf Shirts
Cotton / polyester. with
placket col lar. Save!

"Big Drink" Cups
16-oz. clear p la stic
cups Package of 18.

(211)

9·oz. • Colgate•
Toothpaste

.9 97
.

•

1.50

MENTAL HEALTH
Cboosiug an anttUed
mixed media work for the GaJUa.
Jackson-Meigs Mental Health Board
was Mulae Plummer.

"Netwt.

Our
1.96

l.Jb. Ruffles

Ladies' Tube Tops

Great lasting
Potato chips .

Vinyl Reed Cafe Curtains

·

.

·lb)n.up Blinds

"

(IN STOCK)

11707 1 pc. crappie rod;
#400 Adjustable spincast
reel.

New Corporations

Doctors face charges
1.00 ANGELES (AP) -

Six
Southern caJifornia doctors are free
pending a hearing on charges that
they cheated Medi-Cal of $5.5 million
Iii one of the largest such fraud cases
ooflle.
; or, Edward RQbin, 50; GleiUI
dcild, . 52i Jerry Milliken, 42;
Nidd" Weelli, 'S1; Alan Dublin,
Dele IrWin, 49, have pleaded
to 21.~te felimy counts d

eommlt

theft

I. ntallfrontciecDfCike
~and llringlon r.ar

2. ReufaoeCIR.IN and tNe
1
.

. """"

I

., ''
!

our Reg. 2.78

P.uto
oept.

1.57-~mlt
K ma~ Air Fntert
Quality built. Sizes for
foreign cars.
many U·S..

KM78 • "Our Besr 4-ply Polyeiter
Corel, llackwall Ylrei
Our Reg . 34.88

20.97

ON SALE
SUN SA f

A78X13
Plus F .E. T.
1.39 Each ·"';·'

All nres Plus F.E.T. Each

'
~

,,.

Mounting Included • N.o Trade·ln Req11lred
SHOP
HOURS

0AILY9· 7
TUES. I SAT . 9·6

CLOSED '
. SUNDAYs ',

I

'

'

•

Morfi''Pictures on page 8-8.

Rod and Reel Combo

secretary of State Anthony J .
Celebrezze, Jr. reports articles of in·
corporation have been filed with his
office in Colwnbus by Satellite
Reception Systems, Inc. of Langs·
ville. Incorporator is Walter J .
Everett, Rt. I, Langsville.
Others filing were Whi~htsel En ·
terprises, Inc. of Pomeroy. Thomas
A. Crisp is the incorporator while
Steven L. Story, Pomeroy, is the
agent, and Magnwn Petrolewn,
Inc., Pomeroy, with Thomas A.
Crisp, Pomeroy, incorporator.

' '"

' .. ' ~'
' '(I·
1;. . '
~ .;

and

Fluoride toothpaste with MFl
Save at Kmart.

Our
12.94

the Gallipolis Savings and Loan Company purchased Gallipolis artist Earl Tpll's
Old Red Bridge, a watercolor. Hugh Graham
made the selection.. Mrs. Harold Wiseman
and son, Tom Wiseman, selected the outstanding watercolor Old Todd House by
Ashland, Kentucky artist Polly Trwnbore for
the Harold Wiseman Memorial through
Wisenuin Insurance. Another well-known
area artist, Marilyn Mauck, who recently. had
her work exhibited at Riverby, had her
graphic Orbit Projection selected by Mrs.
Raymond Willis for the Willis Tire C&lt;&gt;mpany
in Gallip&lt;Jl.iS. ·
Sandy N. Stephens from Raceland, Ken-

BOARD -

25% Off

1.07

Llmlt2

GAUJPOUS Fourteen purchase
awards were made from the Annual River
Recreation Festival Art Exhibit, sponsored
by the French Art C&lt;&gt;lony in Gallipolis. The 47
works available for purchase awards were
selected by the three judges who reviewed the
224 entries in this year's River Recreation
Festival Exhibit that was seen in its entirely
on July 4th. Those included some of the top
awards in both the professional and amateur
categries, as judged by Jean and Craig McDaniel, the co-directors of the Southern Ohio
Museum and Cultural Center In Portsmouth,
and Richard Stevens, Director of Public Occasion at Ohio University in Athens.
Three paintings by Margo Adams of
Russell, Kentucky were purchased. Her
watercolor Winter Solitude received first
place in professional watercolors and was
selected by Jim Williams for the Central
Trust Company, N.A., Southern Ohio
Division. Her Midswruner Magic was ~hosen
for Holzer Clinic, Ltd., by Jim Blevins and
Hilda Janey. A third of her paintings,
Tidewater Boats, was selected by Marianne
Campbell for the Magnussen Memorial
Collection at the Holzer Medical Center.

G·J·M

(209)

MAGNU~EN MEMORIAL - Maria1111e Campbell of Holzer Medlclil
Ceotercbose 'TidewalerBoats' for Magnussen Memorial.

Announce Pttrchase awards

' " " Movie Film For

Our Reg .

Procell 36-exp.lllde Film

NATUIIAL
LEMON

GALi.u&gt;oLIS,S.WINGSMID LOAN- Hap Gndlam chose tb1s paiDIlag, 'Old Red Bridge', for lbe Gallipolis Savlug&amp; 111111 Loaa.

J.

lucky, had two of her entries purchased as
awards. Wendell Thomas at the Ohio Valley
Bank selected Pel's Fishing Owl, a gouache,
for his Bank, while Mrs. Donald Crance chose
Stephen's mixed media, Winter Storm Over
Ackinson's Hill for the Commercial and
Savings Bank. Mrs. Crance also selected an
ink sketch by Andrew Plymale of Gallipolis,
Doughboy in the Park, for the C &amp; S Bank. The
Plymale work came from the Amateur High
School entries and was a first prize in his
category.
The first place winner in pastels and
drawings, William Missar from Chicago, Ill. ,
had his entry William selected as the Exhibit
Chainnan's Award, purchased by Jan Thaler,
who chaired this year's River Recreation
Festival Exhibit for the French Art Colony.
Lorraine Lowther of Gallipolis entered her
oil, And Bread To The Full; it was awarded
first place in amateur oils and was chosen by
Mrs. Richard J . Miller for Richard J. Miller,
C.P.A.
For the Gallia-JackSon Meigs Mental
Health Board, Maxine Plummer selected one
of Patricia Reed's mixed media , Untitled .
Ms. Reed, who received a first place award
for another of her entries, is from LeSage,
West Virginia.
Two other purchases were made by
Holzer Clinic, Ltd. They were Hilda Feaster's
Chambers Bridge · Delawar.e CoWJty, a
watercolor by the Marietta, Ohio artist. Jim
Blevins and Hilda janey also chose Wilma
Mount's photographic entry, Autumn Delight,
which has been given honorable mention by
tho! judges. Ms. Mount is from Bidwell, Ohio.
All of the Purchase Awards will be in·
eluded in the July exhibit at River by, home of
the French Art Colony in Gallip(&gt;lis, with the
exhibit opening July 7. Following the July
exhibit, all will then be placed in the individual or business private collection.

"
~

...

..

�...

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

"'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis •.Ohio-Point PLeasant, 'IJ . v a.

•

Weddingpla.ns mad~H··&lt;_,:.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, .Ohio-:polot Pleasant, W. va .

July$, 1981

GALLIPOIJS - Mr. .Dd Mra. ' 'l'be l.'ei'IIIJI(ID) Will beiiD ~ 4 p jQ' ~
Frank Shoemak'!l', Rt. 1, Galllpotia, Satutdl7. Jul)-11, at tile~
are prOud to announce the atllt'a" a.dl by tbe HeY•.,..._
engagement and fortbcomln&amp; . OobunL Tile CGIII'tel1 Cll lila
marriage of~ dlupter, anai."'- clalrdlwllll"obo!llred. . · ,., '• :
to !obn Fnlller, - Cll lmaia 'l'l*eWillbeaf«q'!l""'f •lnllli
Bert on, Rt.1, Galllpolla, - ~ at tbt ebun:b fel1owlbip bill.
·
Frazilll'. DaytoD•

McGrew., .Ferrell wed.

Evening ceremony
unite area couple

.,_i

.Celebrate anniversary-· Mar-:
r
Karol Carpenter

Tamara Searles
.

Darlene 'Shortridge,

Lena Phalin

Henry Ferrell

attended the event, along wfjli
GAI.Lp'OIJS - Mr. and Mr!l. ty Jones.
· · .:. ·
Basi! Evans celebrated their IIIIth Both are active In ~...~dltea
wedding annlv~rsary , with a dinner MethodistCburcltinCedarMUi. ·
at Bob Evans Steak House, beld by
·
their children, Tony': Evlm8 and
Keshi Ann Lewis. Twenty-one granNOTICE!
dchildren and great-grandchlldren

·Odd Couple
performed today

McNablt Ceram ics New
classe!i
now
forming
limited number accepttd.
special beginners clas$
beginning Julv 6th. Class
limited TO 8. Call NOW ~
1786 Sharon McNabb. Cer·
tified Duncan 1ns1ructor.

GALLIPOIJS- The Odd Couple

wiii be perfonned tbl8 afternoon

(3

p.m.) oo the French Art Colony,
patio at f4.50 for.non·F AC members.
Rain site is the Senior Citizens Cen·
ter.

Traci Hundley

june Elkessor

POMEROY M. L. Hundley of Par·
GALUPOUS - Daryl Ellcessor
tsmouth, Va. is announcing the and . Mrs: Florence Ellcessor,
engagement of his daughter, Traci ~~lilpolis, announce the
Lee, to J. ~chael Hendricks, son of eng~eme~t of their daughter, June
Doris Miller of Racine and the late Ellen, to TIITJothy Gene Atr.a, son of
Floyd Hendricks.
Hundley is Joel Atha and Mrs. Wilma Saunders,
also the daughter of the late Loretta Gallipolis.
Hundley.
Miss Ellcessor IS a graduate of
Ms. Hundley is a graduate of Gallia Academy High School; she i.s
William Monroe High School, Stan· presently enrolled in the legal
dards, Va. and Kees Business assistmg program at Marshall
College. She is employed as a com- University where she will graduatll.
puler operator by the Children's m December of 1981. Her fiance is a
Hospital of the King's Daughters graduate of Southwestern High
Nortolk, Va.
' School. He is presently employed at
Her fiance is a graduate of Federal Mogul.
' Southern High School. He served in
The ceremony will be held on
the U. S. Army for five years and i.s Saturday, September 26, at 7:30p.m.
now employed by the Sharp Well at G~a~ United Methodist Church in
Drilling Co. of Odessa, Texas.
Galbpol!S.
An August wedding i.s planned.
It will be an open wedding and a
reception will be held at the church
immediately following the

Ms:

ceremony .

Searles-8 lowers

Carpenter-Wells

DELAWARE - Mr. and Mrs.
James Mitchell of Delaware an·
nounce the engagement of their
daughter, Tamara Ann Searles, to
Stephen Charles Blowers, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond H. Blowers, Jr.
The bride-t!lect i.s a 1976 graduate
of North Union High School. She is
presently a marketing major at Ohio
State University and is employed as
reservations manager at Stouffer's
University Inn.
Blowers attended Gallipolis grade
school and one year of high school
and graduated from Portsmouth
High School m 1969. He attended
Bowling Green State University and
graduated frum the Ohio State
School of Mechanical Engineering in
1975. He was a member of the Ohio
· State University golf team his final
: two years in school.
He is a certified public accountant
with Ernst and Whimmy in the
Columbus office.
An open church wedding will be
held on August 15 at the Old Stone
Presbyterian Church, Delaware.

CIRCLEVIllE - Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Carpenter, Circleville,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Karol Ann, to Ronald L.
Wells. Wells is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Wells of Hamden.
Karol ill a 1973 graduate of Circleville High School and a 1977
graduate of Rlo Grande College. She
is presently a teacber of the men-

tally retarded at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center.
Wells i.s a 1969 graduate of Vinton
County High School and holds a B.S.
and M.A. degree In Educational Administration from Ohio University.
He is also employed at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center as a Unit
Manager.
A private wedding ill being planned for the fall.

Carol Moms

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Manuel
Gheen of Racine are announcing the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Rebecca Lynn, to Barry Allen, Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Allen, Route 2,
Racine.
·
The open church wedding will be
at 4 p.m. on July 18 at the Racine
First Baptist Church. The Rev. Don
Walker wjll officiate. A reception
will follow in the church social room.
Continued on B-8

Jim Anderson

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Morris of 35210 Blake Hill
Road, Pomeroy, are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Carol
Elaine, to James Anderson, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Anderson,
Rutland.
The bride-t!lect is a 1981 graduate
of Meigs High School and is em·
ployed as an Avon representative. r-------------1
Her fiance graduated from Meigs
High School in 1976 and is employed
by Jaymar Coal Co.
The open church wedding will be
on Aug. 29 at 2:30 p.m. at the new
Bradford Church of Christ.

JUtY SALE

ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS

ShortridRe- Ferre/1
TIIURMAN- - Mr. and Mr!l.
Harold Shortridge of Thurman are
announcing the engagement and fortbcomlng marriage of their
daughter, Darlene, to Henry Keith
Ferrell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Ferrell, Rt. 2, Vinton.
Miss Shortridge is a student at
Gallia Academy High School.
Ferrell is a 1981 graduate of Southwestern and Buckeye Hills Career
Center. He bas joined the U. S. Army. He will begin active duty July
14. He will be stationed at Bliss
Texas for basic training.
'
Wedding plans are incomplete.

•

t . n .O ctm.r.11 ctc humrdih c r c.111
m .1r c vor1r h.l&lt;.e ment or other
d.1mp .lrf'. l mnr c rorntor1 .1hle hv
t. l l t OCJ thr (; ) ( (''-' mOI 'i tur.t 01 1t nt
the .1 rr 11 h" lp &lt;.. p r mcct t11rnrtr •r e
,\ flcl

I'II OOc1 1V O r l

•

•

.

Cramer, Shriver
recite vows

Mr. and Mrs. David Ferrell

Becky Gheen

t rom

!Il L•

Cl .l m.1q111q 1•tt• •r h
n t (O n ., t.lnf
Jt .l mpnt' ""
rt re t .lrct &lt;. mildew.
mold , mw, h Oc10 r &lt;; oliHl rli &lt;, l - ·
1 r vt' '- v n1 •r ll n nH• mor p lr v mq

18,' 23, 37 PT. CAP.

BAKER FURNITURE
MiddlePOrt, Ohio

Som~thing Special
WE AT DAN THOMAS &amp; SON KNOW THAT THE
WORKING MEN AND WOMEN DON1 ALWAYS
HAVE nME TO SHOP, SO ON

r---_.._-.. . - -.. . I. . . __,__. .,. ._ I--,

L_J~!.. L!nd_l~~!!___J
We are going to INt open
at 8:00 In the morning,
so you can shop our
.

.

Special Sale
Until 9:30 Each Moming
rsHoEi"sPeciAU.v iiicm roR 1H~Is
I

"-----

SALE

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

·-·- ·- ~

"We will be serving early morning coffee"

...

dan thomas &amp;son
324 Second

GALLIPOLIS
Miss Ruthie rings on a white heart-shaped pillow.
David Euton r1 Portsmouth,
Virginia McGrew, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Squire A. McGrew rL brother-in-law of the groom, Derved
Gallipolis and David Lee Ferrell, . as best man while Donald Pritchard
POMEROY - Emanuel Lutheran
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ferrell, of Portsll)outh and Matthew
Church
of Marion was the site of the
McGrew,
brother
of
the
bride,
of
Gallipolis, were united in 'tnilrriage
double-ring
' ceremony uniting
Gahanna,
Ohio,
ushered
guests
to
onSaturday,June6,at2:30p.m.
·Jacqueline
Sue
Cramer and Michael
• Miss , MeG~ was given in their seats.
Kent
Shriver
in
marriage on April
Mrs. McGrew, mother of the
: marriage · by her father at the
25.
: doublering ceremonies officiated by bride, wore a floor-length gown of
The bride is .the daughter of Mrs.
: Rev. Sam Calhoun at the Lighthouse aqua accented ·with ' a sheer floral
·
ruffle and belt and white ac- Jack Cramer, 1230 Inwood Dr.,
: Tabernacle Aaseffibly of God.
: Mrs. Anne Fischer, pianist, cessories. Mrs. F~ chose a floor- Marion, and the late Jack Cramer,
: presented a selection rL iradltional length gown of navy and white floral and the granddaughter of Mr. and
• wedding music. Mr!l. Betty Jo 'Ciark skirt with a navy bodice and long ac- Mrs. C. J. Struble, Pomeroy.
: sang "You Light Up My Life" and cessories. Each mother wore a car- · The groom is the son of Mr. and
: "Whither T)iou Goest." Mrs. Ann nation corsage of white with blue Mrs. Veron Shriver, Lexingt\lll, Ky.
Pastor James Rave of Marion of: Saunders sang "Sunrise, Sunset" ribbons~
ficiated
the ceremony. Allen Lust
A
reception
followed
the
: and "Thr Lord's Prayer.''
organii.st, and Mrs. Sandy
was
the
ceremonies
at
the
home of the
: The bride's gown, designed and
Lust
was
the vocalist.
: created by her mother, was a full bride's parents. A tiered wedding
Escorted
by her uncle, Joe
: floor-length of white bridal satin, cake decorated In white and blue
Struble,
Pomeroy,
the bride wore a
• enhanced with a long chapel train. baked by Mrs. Betty Carpenter cengown of white French chiffon en: The form fitted bodice was accented tered the buffet' table.
Miss Peggy Remy and Miss Sandy chanted with alencon lace. The gown
: with imported lace ruffled neckline.
: The long tapered sleeves formed Morrow were in charge of the guest featured a Queen Anne's neckline
and long, fitted sleeves. The empire
: chapel points, tailored of imported and gift book.
Out-of-town guests were Mrs. waistline topped a full skirt which
: lace. Miss McGrew's fingertip veil
: of imported illusion was attached to Ruih McCann, the bride's grand- fell into an attached train. The
• a crown hat of silk accented with mother; MiSs Jennifer Perri, bride's fingertip mantilla edged with mat: miliiature pearls. ·The bride carried' couson; Mr, and Mr!l. William Gib- ching lace, was secured with a lace
: a cascade of blue and white car- bons and Lisa, aunt and uncle of the headpiece.
: natioos and sweetheart roses and bride, all from Alliance; Mr. and
: baby's breath, with long white. and Mrs. Timothy Wittensoldner, aunt
: blue lace ribbons. The only jewelry and uncle of bride, Hartville, Ohio; · She carrie&lt;i a formal cascade of
: worn by the ~ride was a single John Vag, of Mingo Junction; pink silk roses, apple blossoms and
• strand of pearls which was a gift Donald Ferrell, the groom's brother, pink forget-me-nots, accented ·with
and his.guest, Miss Shelly Rogers of natural foliage and Boston fern.
: from ber father.
Matching bouquets of pale pink
: Mrs. David (Beverly) Euton of Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Eddy
Monroe
of
Portsmouth.
roses,
stephanotis, dusty rose apple
: Portsmouth, sister rL the groom,
blossoms, burgundy freezia, and
-served as maid of honor, while Miss
white iris decorated the altar. Pew
Sarah Ann McGrew of Gallipolis
candelabra decorated with garlands
Both
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ferrell
are
assisted her sister as bridesmaid.
were used
aisle.
. .along the church
..
Both wore gowns, also created by students at Buckeye Hills Career
Mr.
Ferrell
is
employed
at
Center.
the bride's mother.
The bnae wore tne same pearl
Miss Lisa Marie Gibbons of Allian- Bob Evans Family Restaurant.
which her mother had worn
earrings
ce, Ohio, cousin of the bride; served Following a brief honeymoon, the on her wedding day, her grandas flower girl.. Ring bearer, Mark couple will reside at 1541 Eastern mother's diamond ring, and a pearl
McGrew rL GaiJipoiis carried the Ave.
·and diamond necklace which was a
gift from the groom. In his pocket
Mr. Shriver had the necktie, which
his
grandfather had worn when he
Exhibit throl!gb today, July 5, lllld Sunday, I p.m. until5 p.m.
was
married. During the ceremony
1981,1 p.mA) p.m.- A Dual Exhibit
July 5, 3 p.m. - Theatre 35's
the
couple
presented their mothers
"People and Place$" by Two Colum- production of the Neil Simon
roses.
with
silk
bus Artlsts.·Unda Vogley- Water· comedy, The Odd Couple, to be
Miss Sherry Kiczek of North Olmcolors, oUs •nd ~Is; Sherry 0. presented on the outdoor patio at
sted,
a friend of the bride, wa.s the
Becker ...:. Acrylic porlraiture and Rlverby. In case of rain, will be at
maid
of honor. Bridesmaids were
watercolor landscapes,
the Senior Citizen Center on Route 35
Exhibit through July, · starting West of Gallipolis. Tickets f4 for
July 7, 1981 "- ..J~ Selection members of the French Art Coh&gt;ny,
from the ~ver Recreation Festival U .50 for non-members.
Exhibit. · 80 . Piecea of . art, both cooperative effort of the French
professional and amateur, In aD · Colony and Theatre 35.
,media, including photography.
July 7, 2 p.m.- F.A.C. Trusties
· GalleryHOI!J'S: Tues&lt;laY.andTbur- Meeting at PJs in · downtown
sday, 10 a.m. qntil3 P;!IL; Saturday Gallipolis.
:
:
:
:
:
:

Gallpolis, .lit.

,----------1------------1--------r-----------------

.

F.rtm~h Art

Granges to meet
POMEROY-The Rock Springs
and Hemlock Grove Granges will
meet at 7:30 Tuesday evening at the
Rock Springs hall to practice for inspection.

OBSERVING 100 YEARS ON JULY 12th
SERVICES BEGINNING AT 9:30 A.M ..
AND LASTING THROUGH THE EVENING

Colony Calendar

MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH
LONG BOTI'OM, OHIO
•

JOHN A, WADEl M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL -HOSPITAL

Who wants
a fair-weather
•at~a ·d 'l
f'~~~·
·..
' J

.

~

Miss Jill Gurr of Kalamazoo,
Mich., was the guest book attendant.
A reception took place at Pleasant
Hill School with a buffet dinner. Entertairunent was provided by Dan
Rand and T. C. Productions.
The new Mrs. Shriver is a 1976
Pleasant High School graduate. She
attended Ohio State University and
graduated from Marion Technical
College with an associate's degree in
nursing. She is employed at Marion
General Hospital as a registered
nurse .

Mr. Shriver, a 1974 graduate of
Pleasant, attended Marion
Technical College. He is employed
at Grwnman Flexible in Delaware
asaN.D.T. engineer.
Following a ho,neymoon trip to St.
Petersburg, Fla ., the couple is at
home at 2822 Smeltzer Road.
Attending from here were Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Struble, Mr. and Mrs. c. J.
Struble, Pomeroy; and Mr. and Mrs .
Bill Williamson and family,
Rutland.

Gc#llpolls

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Ga'uipolls'

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She also carried a handkerchiet
belonging to her mother and a slip
borrowed from her sister-in-law,
Mrs. Charles Smith.
Mrs. Nancy Manley, Middleport,
was the matron of honor and worea
red velour dress. She carried a
single red carnation with baby's
breath.
Robert Manley, Middleport, was
best man, and the ushers were Joe
McCarty, Route I, Middleport, and '
Charlie Smith, Pomeroy. For her
daughter's wedding, Mrs. Smith
wore a street-length maroon floral
dress and a white corsage. The
groom's mother was in a streetlength orange dress and also wore a
corsage of white flowers.
The couple had a two-tiered wedding cake at their home reception.
Mrs. Debbie Davidson, sister of the
bride, registered the guests, and
Kelly and Tina Smith, also sisters of
the bride. and Donna Robbu;s, niece
of the groom, distributed the rice
hags.
The couple resides at Village
Manor Apartments. Both the bride
and groom attended Meigs High
School. .He is employed at Ellis
Sohio, Middleport.

Remember Calendar

Second
Av&amp;.
Loloy&amp;tte
. Mo.ll

r : •

MIDDLEPORT - Cindy Renee
Smith and Mic.hael Glenn Smith
weremarriedonFeb.J6at6:30p.m.
at the Middleport Independent
Holiness Church.
The bride i.s the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold E. Smith, Route I,
Middleport. The bridegroom is the
son of Mrs. Ruth Smith, Route 2,
Pomeroy, and the late Lewis J :
Smith. The Rev . Odell Manley, uncle
of the groom, pertonned the
ceremony. Mrs. Betty Manley
provided music.
Pots of red and white tulips and
red and white carnations decorated
the church. Given in marriage by
her parents, the bride was escorted·
by her father. She wore a gown of
all-over chantiUy lace with long lace
sleeves and a sweetheart neckline
with bow trim. The full skirt
featured two lace tiers extending into a full chapel train and the bride's
headpiece was a chantiUy trirruned
band witlt fingertip veil and
blusher.
The bride wore a pearl necklace,
and carried a white Bible given to
her by the groom's mother, topped
with assorted red and white silk
flowers with red satin streamers.

Miss Linda Shriver and Miss LOri
Shriver, sisters of the groom,
Marion and Lexington, Ky., respectively; Mrs. Julie Haldeman of SUNDAY
Wellington, and Miss Jane Weigler ROSCOE Thorn ·will speak at Junior REV. David Saunders will speak
Okey Chapel Church, 7 p.m. All
of Marion.
McGuire's Church, (one mile past welcome.
WJEHJ , 7:30p.m. All welcome.
ODD COUPLE , at French Art
JACOB AND MAGGIE Davis annual
The attendants wore gowns of reunion, at Clay Local School, with Colony, 3 p.m. on patio; rain site is
dusty rose qiana which featured potluck at noon.
Sentor Citizens Center.
blouson bodices, split flounGed
sleeves and sunburst pleated skirts. , - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Brad Taylor of Marion, Tim Burge
STORI HOURS:
of Wausaw, Wis. , Tom Danner of
Marion, Dan Seller of Depere, Wis.,
Mon.·Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm .
and Dave Hypes, Columbus, shared
Fri.·Sat. 9 am til 10 pm
the best man's duties. Ushers were
Dan Cramer, brother of the bride,
CLOSED SUNDAYS
and Steve, Mark and Jeff Shriver
all brothers of the groom, all oi
marion. The men wore silver
tuxedoes and white wing-tipped shirts with silver ascots. Christopher
Shriver of Marion, the groom's
nephew, was the ringbearer.

WORSHIP SERVICE.

DINNER ON THE GROUNDS AT NOON

Page- B·3- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.• 446·26.91

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�July 5, 1981

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

JulyS,

Va .

OHIO VALlEY BANK - Wendell Thomas chose ' P el's Fishing Owl'
!or the Ohio Valley Bank.

WILLIS TIRE- For Willis Tire. Mary Margaret Willis chose " Orbit
Projection.'

ASTROGRAPH
Two

July S, 1981
maior a reas will

be

ta rg e ts for y our greatest em - ph as is a nd eff o rts thi s coming
. yea r : A rti sti c endeavor and

-r om ance.

In both , yOur ardor

· could assure success.

:

CANCER (Jun e nJuly 221 The

· pla ns

you · re

pr ese ntl y

tor -

- mul a tin g ar e g ood ones, but yo u
: may doubt th ei r w orth . When you
. d isc uss your id ea s with oth er s,

· they ' ll endorse t he 'w'alue of vour
: thoughts.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1 Wa ys

· can be foun d tod ay to ad va nce a
· new pr o jec t in w hi ch vou a r e in -

: t er es ted . A fri end m ay offer some
· suggestion s t h at are q u i te he l p ·
· f u I.
: V IRGO (Aug . 23 -Se pt . 22 )
• Yo u ' re not l ik el y to wait fo r
· thin gs to ha ppen today in or der to
: get what you w ant . Thr oug h yo ur
own effor ts, goa ls you es ta bli sh
· wil l be reac hed

.

LIBRA ISepl , 23-0ct. 231

In

: situa tion s w here you put th e
needs of oth er s be for e your own
· tod a y , yo u r ch a nces for success
; ar e excel lent . By helping th em
- your own ca use is adv anced .
- SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) Th e
=oppor tunit y you've been look ing
. for to sho r e up an important
- re lationshi p shoul d present itse lf
tod a y . Y ou' ll do t h e right thin g t o
, strength en bonds.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -Dec .
· 21) Y our g r ea tes t asse t today is
you r a b ility to get other s t o
. coo pe r a te, i n order to ach ieve
· your goals. Th ey' I! benef i1, too .
. CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan . 19)
: In a matter th a t 's person a lly im ·
• portan t, you m a y be ab le to
· ach ieve success today by usi n g
: the ·sam e m ethods whi ch w ork ed
. in the pas t. Sti c k with pro ve n ta c. t ics

.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb.

19)

~ Sometime s it's nec essary to take

a ca lcu lated r is k in order to gai n
· our en ds . Toda y you migh t have
: to ga mble a bit if the Odds ar e in
• your favor .
k

·

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

: where you an d your mate ar e in
~ harmony
on
major issu es,
• decisions you make today wi l l
• have far -reaching , favorabl e ef ·
: fects. Togetherness is essentia 1.

. ARIES (March 21 ·April

19)

Rather than telling others how to
: do things or c riticizing them
• today, you ' ll first set the proper
• example. Y our m e thods are con ·
: struct ive, not offensive.
. TAURUS (April lO·May 20)
.. You have good organizational
~ abilities
today, especially in
: situation s relating to your work
e or finances. What you map ou t
• now wit ! later prove profitable .

: GEMINI tMay 21 -June 20)
. Much can be accomplished today
• regarding things you feel

are

:·beneficial for yoursell and vour

.. famjfy . You know What needs
- doing, so get moving early .

.

July6 , 1981
M uch ca n be lea rn ed of a pr ac
Hea l n atur e whi ch y ou w i ll be
ab le to put to use pro f itnb l y thi s
co mi ng yea r Don ' t m1 ss an y op
por t u nif ies to add
to y our
stor ehouse ol knowled ge
C ANCE~ (Jun e 21 -Jul y 21 ) As
lon g as every thi ng is r u nn ing
smoothl y tod ay you ' ll co nd uct
yourse lf ver y wt-11
Howeve r
should me unexpec ted occ u r, 1i
may ca use yo u to beco m e q ui te
tempera m ent a l
l E O (Jul y 23 -· Aug. 12 ) You' ll
treat oth er s ge ner ousl y today ,
pr ov ided the idea ori g inates w1 th
vou . In situat ions wher e de m ands
a r e m ade, you· re a pt to do an
rt bo ut lace
V IRGO (Aug . 2J· Sept . 2J l
You ' ll be opt i m is ti c regard1 ng
tha t w h1 ch yo u wa nt to do todrty ,
but th er e·s a possi b ility y ou co ul d
w ilt u nder chall enge. Be po si ti v e.
LIBRA ( Sept. 23 -·0ct. 22) Oon ·t
ma k e w i nning or be in g f i r st t oo
1mporta nt tod ay . I n situat ions
w her e yo ur ego ga ins Th e uppe r
ha nd . you c oul d ac t in w rt ys yo u' ll
la ter reg r et
SC ORPIO (O c t . 74 -Nov . 22 ) Be
ve r y car ef ul tod ay , especia l ly in
bu stn ess or m oney ma tt ers, tha t
yo u don' t ta ke fool ish r isks aga m
sr your be tt er judgmen T. 1f's not a
day to bu ck the odd s.
SA G ITTARIU S (Nov . 23- D ec
21 l Joi nt ve ntu r es hold prom i s~
tor yo u toda y, but there a re a lso
poten f i&lt;tl prob lem s, pa rt iCU larly
1f the 1dea ls of a ll •nvo l ve d a r e no t
1n ha r mony .
CAPRICORN !Dec. 21 ·J ill1 . IY)
Y o ur IUdgm ent i s good t od ay, bu t
you could be too eas il y i nfl uence d
by the opin ions at assoc ia tes and
r ev ise dec isions in orde r to
p laca te th em . Stand f irm .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb . 19)
Th er e is much th a t need s doing
tod a y . Y our spir i t is willin g, bu t
the fl esh co uld be w eak The
desi r e to do fun t hings ma y ca use
yo u to qu i t too ear l y
PI SC ES (F eb. 20-Mar c h 20 )
U nf or tunat e ly , not eve ry one
yo u ' l l be dea l ing with today will
be o perat ing on y ou r e th ica l
level Don' t le t oth ers dr aw you
•nto pe tty i ntri gues.
ARIES (March 21- April 19)
Thoug h you will be ind us trious
and eager to do what need s doing
tod ay , co work er s could, un
lortunately , lack y our pur pose
and slow· down production .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don ' t move too impu lsive l y on
your ideas t od a y . They mi g ht not
be a,s sound as you think and
could prove costly , either to yo ur
se lf or another . .
GEMINI (May 2' · Jun e 20)
There 's l ittl e dou bt you 'll ge t
wha t vou want today , but th er e's
also a chance your m ethod s could
irri t ate other s. Don' t be too self ·
se rving

Maid of honor was Tammy Hem·
sworth . Bride~rnaids were Vicki
Lloyd. Libby Tope. Beth Abels . a ll of
Gallipolis; Gwy nn Caldwell, cousin
of the bride, a nd Diann Mullen. both
of Colum bus. The attendants wore
ptnk form a l gowns with V-neck
spaghetti stra ps a nd pleated skirt;
double-bel led a t the waist The
jackets were of pink sheer chiffon
with lace trim at neck and ca pped
sleeves. They wor e silk flowe rs in
their ha ir fash ioned of pink
rosebuds. violets , and rose car-•
nati ons . Their bouquets were S surved style a rrangeme nt of pink roses,
rose colored ca rna tioru; acce nted
wt lh purpl e violets and violet
streamers.
The gr oom wore a while long
tailed tuxedo With a white rufOed
s hirt and boutonniere of white r ose
baby's br eath and s tephanotis . Best
man was Colin Saunders . He wore a
silver grey tuxedo with ruffled shirt
and boutonniere of pink rose and
baby's breath _ The ushers wore the
silver gr ey tuxedoes and had pink
rose boutonnieres. Ushers were Win·
stun Saunders, brother of the groom,
Dave Thomas , Steve Thomas, both
brothe rs of the bride, Ernie Irwin,
a ll of Ga llipolis; and Randy Barrett
of Hurr ica ne, W. Va , Father of the
bride a nd father of the groom both
wore the s ilver grey tuxedoes and
their boutonnieres were white rose
and baby 's breath ,

decorated with garlands of pink
roses and kissing angels. Topping
the cake which was baked by'
marguerite Walker, was
sllve~
engr,ved bowl cdhtaining miniature
carnations, sweetheart roses, baby's
breath, and stephanotis. Streamers
from the cake were in pink, rose,
and violet. The table was draped
with garlands of greenery with pink
and white ribboris. Hostesses for the
reception were Ann Sickles of
Colwnbus ; Jane Noe of Huntington ,
W. Va.; Barbara Waters and Beth
Fanta , cousins of the bride, both
from Parkersburg, W., Va.; and Jill
Walters of Colwnbus. •

'

a

For her daughter 's wedding, Mrs.
Thomas wore a mauve floor-lengtth
gown with pleated s!Qrt, lace bodice
and matching jacket. Mrs. Saunders
wore a noor·length gown of floral
chiffon carrying out the wedding
colors of pink, rose, and violet. The
mothers' corsages were of light pjllk
roses, rose carnations viol&amp;
stephanotis and baby's b;..,th. Th~
grandmothers' corsages ;.ere of
pink and white carnations with
baby~ breath .

During the recessional, the bride
and groom presented each of the
mothers with a rose ,
Regis tering guests was Deborah
Fortman of Westerville, Ohio. ·Hazel
Halle r of Beaver Creek, Ohio,
presented scrolls to the wedding
guests.
llin, Pomeroy.
to be made on or before Tuesday·· Following the ceremony a recep. :Mrs. EpUng, wife of John A. with Sarah Winters, 4*-7444; Gloria
~Ung. has been active In Aglow for Jolwon, 742-2442; · Jaclde Zirkle, tion honoring the couple "as held In
the church dining room, A bil(fet din......... ,,. . . . . arid ' will
...
, be oha
~-U'I!i
992-61159; Joyce Hoback, ~2325; or ner was served to the bridal Jlllrty
· 'ilth ot1w lll8lllbei's IW&gt;r experiences· BIUle J. DaW10J1,7'13-9123.
, and their guestS by the church
· lit-~ mi;er~ealnd turmOil
The doors 'lrlll open at 6 p.m., diJl..
W\l!Tlen with the Martha unit In
tllroucliobedleace to Qu1it.
ner will be .erved at 7 p.m. and Mrs. charlie. The bride's lljble featured a
Mrs, Epling. j currenUy com- Epling ,JU speak at 8 p.m.

Aglow
.

ftft

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Super Bonus Buy Coupon~
y

The groom entertained at a
rehearsal dinner the night before the
wedding. It was held at Oscar's
Res~ranl lor the entire wedding
party ~
.
.

SUPER BONUS BUY COUPON
AT

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PENNYFARE WITH TillS

COUPON. Llllll ONl VWO THRU SAT,
JUlY II. 1911.

WITH THIS COUPON &amp; '10.00 PURCHASE

THOROFARE•LARGE

White EllS

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Mr. and Mrs. Eric

Head to Head

REDEEM BOTH COUPONS WITH THE SAME s10.00 PURCHASE

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Cat Litter . •

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pletlng work for her Ph. D. at Ohio
speaker set
State University, She will return to
: POMEROY-Christine EPung of full-time teaching at Rio Grande
Gallipolis will be the speaker at the ·College In the fl!ll. She has also
Thursday meeting of the Pomeroy taught partlme a!Marshall UniverC,Jiapter, · Women's Aglow SitY. . .
J1UOWBhlp, to be held at the Meigs
Resei'Vations fOr the meeting are

;

All t is week
you ·. ,enJOY " .
. Penn are's ~

five-tiered cake, the base compoS'ld
of four heart-shaped · cake~.

Followmg the reception tne couple
left for their wedding trip. They
s pent a week on Hilton Head Island,
and also spent a few days in the
Great Smoky Mountains on their
way home .
Mr. and Mrs. Saunde rs now reside
on Eureka Sta r Route in Gallipolis.

Times-Sentinel · _

'

Thomas-Saunders wed in late May ceremony
GALLIPOLIS
Grace United
Methodist Church was the setting for
the May 30 wedding of Karl Lynn
Thomas and Eric L. Saunders. The
candlelight double-riot ceremony
ws performed by Pastor James
Frazier.
Adorning the altar were two seven
branch candelabras decorated with
center a rrangements of pink and
white carnations and baby's breath,
A large fireside basket arrangement
was directly behind the altar with
white mwns, roses, a nd carnatiorn
in shades of pink , rose and violet
The double kneeling bench was
deco rated with -greenery and
flowers. The pews were marked with
procession aisle candelabras adorned with s pirals of ·white and pink
carnations and white satin bows .
Stands of ferns completed the set·
ling . The ceremony included the
lighting of the unity candle a nd the
r itua l of holy communion.
Kari is the da ug hter of Mr . and
Mrs, Keith Thomas and the grandda ughter of Mrs. T. A. Thomas. Eric
is the son of Mr. a nd Mrs. Harold
Sa unders a nd the grandson of Mrs .
Ruby Sa unders.
A half·hour of mus ic precede d the
ceremony with Edie Ross, orga nist
Soloists were Stefli Purcell and
Cha rlie E cke r. Sleffi sang " Theme
fr om Icc Castles" a nd "With You, "
whtle Charlie sa ng "They Were
You" a nd " Sometimes" which was
ded icated to the pa rents. They sang
together " One Ha nd , One Heart "
a nd "Sunrise, Sunset" During the
wedding ceremony " The Lo.r d's
Prayer" was s un g by Charlie E cker
a nd Steffi P urcell sang " The Wed·
ding Song."
Gi ven in ma rriage by her parents
a nd escorted to t he all&lt;lr by her
lather. the bride wore a lonna! g own
of while organza and French c han·
li lly lace. The atta ched full c hapel
tra in was accented with crys tal
pleating. The fitte d lace bodice
fea tured a n empire waist and Quee n
Anne neckline. Tiny pearls tnmmed
the bodice a nd the long, fitted lace
slee ves. Her waltz-length ve il of
French illusion was edged with
chantilly lace and was held in place
by a Juliet cap of c ha ntilly lace adorned with pearls. Her jewelry con·
sisled of a neckla ce of pearls, gift of
tthe groom. She carried a crocheted
lace brida l handkerchief made for
her by Mrs . Ida Tha ler. The bride's
bouquet was a n a ll white cascade of
white ros es , baby' s breath,
stephanottis centered with a white
corsage of the same flowers and long
loops of white strea m ers.

Pa

·9$

Mustard

•

• • • •

34-oz.
Jar

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·Cut Green Beans

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16-oz.
Can

Bacon Bits

7-oz.

• •

I

Bot.

,,

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Macaroni &amp;Cheese 7·~~~z. 2L.Lr:.~

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bowt~M·aoaron i
,

58$

• •

32·0Z.
Jar

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22·0Z,
Jar

L.'

Pork &amp; Beans
Raisin Bran

•

15-oz.

• Can

~z.Box

�Ju'l

p

Pn ge-B-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

_wffis post

1¥81

'

Buy Times'"Sentinel classifieds

July 5, 1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-.-C·

c·.
_. 1

doctoral
·,
WASHINGTON-A

·~~~~:~ '

Multi. Burgaf1ciY
or Natural

dloceBIIIl priest, the Rey'
John F. Wippel. Pomttyy native,
has become the first American In
two decades and only the third
American ever to win a prestigious

post-doctoral degree from the
Catholic University of Louvaln In
Belglwn.
Following the sua:esaful defenae
of his book, 'lbe Metaphysical.
lbou8hl of Godfrey off'ontalnes, the
past month, Father W~ a _Jqem- '
ber of the Catholic University of
America faculty since 1983, also.awarded the Belgian university's
Cardinal Mercier prize, given each
two years
an outstanding book in
phllosphy.

ror

Mr. and Mrs. I R. McClintock

Mayes-McClintock
unite in wedlock
1-'atracia Gayle Mayes and John
Robert McClintock were united in
marriage in a double ring , candlelight ceremony at The Gospel
Lighthouse Church on Saturday,
April 25, 3 p.m.
The bride is the daughter of the
Rev . and Mrs. Lloyd H. Mayes Jr .,
Sandhill Road, Pt. Pleasant and the
groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
George B. McClintock Jr., 107 Van
Sickle Court, Pt. Pleasant.
Officiating the ceremony were
Rev. William Banks and the Rev .
Lloyd Mayes Jr., the bride's father .
Wedding music was provided by
Miss Reeca Allbright, Pt. Pleasant ,
and includ ed "The J:{ose 11 , ' 'We 1 ve

Only Just Begun",
"Keep on
Loving You", and the "' Traditional
Wedding March" .
The altar was decorated with
baskets of silk floral arrangements
of blue, pink, yellow , and white
carnations, greenery , and baby's
breath . Two candelabras which
were entwined with greenery and
white wedding bells , stood on each
side of the church. Sever&gt; candles
adorned the top of each candelabra .
Pews were accented with white
bows having silk nowers, and
baby's breath in the center.

bishop sleeves which accented the
gown, were lace with wide cuffs at
the wrist. Her matching veil was a
chapel-length headpiece of lace
with pearl trim. Little white bows
accented the train of the veil.
Her only jewelry was a pearl
necklace, something borrowed ,
from the groom's mother . .
The bride carried a cascade
bouquet of blue, pink, yellow, and
white silk roses, highlighted with
greenery and P/lby's breath with
white lace streamers falling down
into lover's knots.
Miss Tami Mayes, Pt. Pleasant,
sister of the bride, served as Maid
of Honor.
The bridesmaids were Miss Darla
Mayes, Pt. Pleasant, sister of the
bride,and Miss Sarah McClintock,

Pt. Pleasant, sister of the groom.
Jamie McClanahan, Pt. Pleasant,
served as best man. The ushers
were Pa ul Jones Jr., Pt. Pleasant
and Joe Dennis, Pt. Pleasant.

Presiding at the reception tables
were Mrs. Phyllis Roach, Mrs.
Shari Cochran, both of Pt. Pleasant,
and Mrs. Blanche Sidera, Galllpolls
The bride, given in marriage by Ferry, WV, all friends of the bride.
Miss Lisa Lee, Henderson, wv,
her parents and escorted down the
registered
the guests.
aisle by her father, wore a forma l
chapel-length gown of cotton lace ,
sheer nylon and cotton organza with
Fo llowin g the wedding
a
lace applique accents. Beaded trim
reception
was
held
at
the
Krodel
adorned the Queen Anne neckline
and slightly raised waistline. The Park Clubhouse.

Eads, Carter marry

Father Wippel joins the company
of the late Archbishop Fulton J .
Sheen and Jesuit Father Wllllam.
Richardson Or Fordham University
in being awarded the MaltreAgrege, a distinctively Europoian
acknowledgement of scholarly
achievement of which tllere is no
equivalent in the United States.
"In order to receive this 'super'
degree," said a spokesperson from
Catholic University, "one must have
defended his doctorate of philosophy
at Louvain summa cwn laude,
followed with the publication of a
major contribution of philosophical
research.
The defense of this
published work, along with 50
theses, is public."
Wippel's hook was written as a
result of about 15 years of study of
Godfrey of Fontaines, who was one
of the foremost philosphertheologians at the University of
Paris in the late 13th century. Wippel's 50 theses have ranged widely
over various areas of philosphy.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wippel, Star Route, Pomeroy, members
of Sacred Heart Parish in Pomeroy,
Father Wippel studied at St. John
Vianney seminary, Bloomingdale
for six years and at Catholic Univer·
sity for seven years before his ordination May 29, 1960, in the
Pomeroy Sacred Heart Church. He
was immediately assigned to teach
for one year, after which lime he
moved on to Louvain where he
received the doctorate of philosophy
in 1963.
Of Godfrey, who followed Thomas
Aquinas by only a few years on the
faculty of the University of Paris,
Father Wippel says that his thought
is a "highly sug- gestive source" for
various debates concerning topics of
interest to modern as well .as
medieval thought, especially those
concerning actuality, potentiality,
possibility, human action and the
structure of finite being.
The Steubenville priest's new book
was recently published by the
Catholic University of America
press. These theses were public at
Louvain .
Regarded as one of the most
distinguished scholars in medieval
philosphy in North America, Father
Wippel holds the rank of ordinary
lie" has published
professor,
scholarly articles in at least 10 journals. A 25-page contribution by him
is slated to appear in the Cambridge
History of Later Medieval
Philosphy, being published by Cam·
bridge University Press. He is also
editorial consultant for a number of
professional journals.
'&gt;Following his defense for the
Agrere, he pcesented a paper at an
international Colloquium on
and
Medieva I Philosophical
Theological Sources held at
Loaivain-la-Neuve in late May.

GALLiPOLiS - - Mrs. Darlene friend of the bride, was in charge.
The new Mrs. Carter is a 1975
Eads of Gallipolis and the late
Charles W. Eads, and Mr. and Mrs. graduate of GaUia Academy High
Ellis L. Carter of Gallipolis are School and is presently employed a.
proud to announce the recent a nurse's assistant at the Pinecrest
marriage of their children, Debbie Nursing Home.
The groom is a 1978 graduate of
L. Eads and L. Joseph Carter. The
event took place on June 6 at 2 p.m. GaUia Academy High School and
at the Cheshire Baptist Church. The Buckeye Hills Career Center and is
Rev . William Uber performed the presently employed by the Gallia
private double-ring ceremony. Fif· County Emergency Medical Service
teen minutes of pre-nuptial music as an advanced emergency medical
was provided by the groom's sister, teclmician.
Mrs. Kathy Cox.
Mter a brief trip to Carter's Trustees to meet
A small reception followed the
POMEROY- The Bedford Townceremony in the church's fellowship Caves, Ky., the couple now resides
at
536
Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis.
ship Trustees will meet Saturday at
room. Miss Carol Carpenter, a
6 p.m. at the home of Helen Swartz,

Engagements
Continued from B-2

Pha/in-Bowen
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Phalin of Route I, Vincent, formerly
of Pomeroy, are announced the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their dsughter, Lena
Sue, to David L. Bowen, son of Cyrus
and Juanita Bowen, Route 2, Mariet-

ta.
The wedding will take place at
I :30 p.m. on Sept. 5 at St. Ambrose
Church. The Rev. Fr. Charles Moran
will perfonn the ceremony.
The bride-elect is a 1!1111 graduate
of Warren High School. Her fiance is
alao a graduate of Warren Local
High School and Ia employed with
the Bowen Construction Co.
Natalie Sims of Vincent Wtll be the
maid of honor, and the bridesmaids
will be Tina Butcher, UtUe Hocking,
and Kellta Wilson, also of LitUe
Hocldll8- Flower girls will be Tera
Phalln and Brandy Eva~)~, .both of

ROute 2, Marietta. ·

. _., tlons to meet
POMEROY-The Pomeroy·Middl.eport lii- Club will hold 1 meeting
at noan Wadnelday at the Meigs Inn.
AD UGils are urged to attend.

clerk.

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Fau.e.- John .,... wtpPcl

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W8l lakeil shortly after he retur. aed from ~Belglliql. wlicrc he

HUNDREDS -of
ar-ea
youptera. participated lD lddl' '
day ~ in tile G8UJpolll ' I

l'lleeived the "super ilegret" of
maltre-agrege ·from the Catholic ·
Uolvenlty of Louvaln. The 47·
)'ftl"!!kk Pomeroy"native is one of
oaly tbree .\mericaos to receive
tile bGaor In the school's

~

fri!laY

~ ud .af· ·

: ~ It was aD part of tbe JJh ,

Gai)IP.,IIa . ~lver .~ecreatlon
FeiUYIL ID tbll· Bi:enda Wlllon
plloto, youaisten etiCOiliBge
lhelr terraJitlas on to fiDisb Hoe.
~ race' was IJIOIIIIOred by the
GdlpollllJGDB Club.
\

EVERYDAY

LOW
PRICES
AT JOHNSON'S

Ohio runner captures .Peachtree Road Race in Atlanta
ATLANTA (AP) - Craig Virgin,
of Lebanon, Ohio, bolted ahead of
25,000 M!llllers at the 4'&gt;2 mile mark
and went on to win his third straight
IO,OOO·meler Peachtree ~;Wad Race
Saturday In record time.
Virgin, who won the last two
Peachtree races abnost without
challenge, . took the lead from
Ireland's Adrian Leek after 4'h
miles and went on to win in 28:03,
breaking his old recol'll of 28:30.5 set
in 1979. Virgin predicted before the

RIVERVIEW
MARGARIN E

4 STIC!&lt;
POUND

39· ~

race he would win, possibly in
record time.
· A spokesman for tbe Atlanta
Track Club said Virgin's time was
an unofficial U.S. record (or the
distance.
Rod Dixon of New Zealand
finished BeCond in 28: II, and Leek
finished third in 28:24.
Allison Roe of New Zealand, the
!981 Boston Marathon winner, was
the first woman across the finish line
in 32 :38, breaking the women's

•

record of 32 :48.54sel by Patti Lyons·
Catalano last year. Mrs. Lyons·
Catalano was racing in Europe and
did not participate In this year's
Peachtree race.
Ann Audain was the second
woman to finish in 33: 18 and Sue
King was third in 33:38.
Having 25,1100 other racers behind
him at the8 a.m. start "is a hell of an
incentive," Virgin said before the
race, "because you don't want to fall
down in front of 25,000 people."

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GALUPOUS - A rotten sneaker
contest, sack races and a turt.le race
were higlights of kids activities at
the River Recreation Festival
Friday.
The sack races winners were :
Gwen Elliot, girls 9 and under;
Richard Mason, boys 9 and under ;
Bobbi Miller, girls 11H2; James
Davis , boys 10-12; Laura Amsbary
and Kim Janey , tied in girls 13-15;
and Chuck McDonald, boys 13-15.
The following won prizes in the

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'1 19

OIJON , France ( AP) - With half
the 1981 world championship season
completed, a familiar factor has
returned to the sport at the French
Grand Prix. Tire competition is
back.
The French Michelin . company
equipped virtually all the cars, in·
eluding aU the top competitors, since

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rotten snea ker contest:
Jen Gibson , worst overall
sneaker; Bobby Mabery , most rot·
ten lounge; Johnna Preston, most
rotten sole; David Diddle, most rotten laces; Kelvin Reynolds, largest
rotten sneaker; and Kyle Thompson,
smallest rotten sneaker.
Rachel Danner had the fastestlur·
tie in the girls division and Brad
Copley's turtle was the fastest in the
boys division .

Tire competition back

7-21 ~----.,

7·8
. GAll. WHITE SOX

.,:m:sr

-·

" I ha ve come back to Peachtree
because of my loyalty to those
people in Atlanta I have mel in the
past," Virgin said. " I have come
back because of them, not because
of anything the race conunittee
does."

CHESTER 7·8
NElSONVIllE

• ·• .• r

That comment has brought
critical responses , from most top
runners , some local racers and even
Virgin himself.

Announce winners
of kids contests

'

-

HANNAN TRACE

Virgin, 24, predicted in 1979 he
The reason so few top men are en ·
would win the Peachtree and did, in tered in the race is that Peachtree
a record time of 28:30.5, a full 24 officials will not pay "appearance
seconds ahead of runnerup Mike fees" for the racers. All they pay is
Roche, the defending champion.
expenses.
Last year, he also predicted vic· '· "We'll gel our 25,000 I the
maximum number of entries
tory and finished in 28:39.1, with No.
2 finisher George Malley 40 seconds allowed) whether those guys show
behind.
up or now," race director Royce
"If the weather stays cool, you'll Hodge has said repeatedly . "We're
see a new record," Virgin said running this race for the 25,000, not
Friday, "and I am definitely the one for the big guns."
to beat."

SYRACUSE LL TOURNEY
JULY 7 THRU JULY 22 , ,,,.

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'· ,'J
7:30

Goodyear pulled out last December
when it became disgusted with the
sport's internal warfare.
With strictly equal tires , the
Williams' team led the cham .
pionship, and all eyes were on the
rise of the turbocharged engines led
by Ferrari, winner of the past two ,
races.

�1
-~ .--

·-

·-·-·

- --·- ---------·

----- -' . --

t

JIIIV S, 1981

Page-C -3- The Sundav Times-Sentinel

.(

.

\· Mandlikova ~ no

c~~I&gt;

match ·for
Ll~yd ~ ·F riday's finals
"'.
. .
ByGEOn'REY MD J.J:R

Uoy'a, dri~· (roin the baaellne

.

WIMiit.EooN, Enpnd (AP) -

Ouia Evert Uoyd wm the battle qt
Celllre Court 'nerve&amp; Friday, Souncny
defeating Hana Maodllkova of
Czechoslovakia 1&gt;-2, 1&gt;-2 and taking

lead 2-1, but Mandlikova broke back

lead bef~ MandllkOV.Il'"!!l another

game.
,
In the sec!Ond set; Uoyd broke to

(orehand pass - on one of the rare ·
occasions when the American went
to the net.
Continued on C-3

the Wimblfl(lon tennis crown for the
third time.
The 2&amp;-year-old Ameridn, after
three slr!tight years u nuuJeJ'ollp, ·
became the first woman iR 14 yean
1o win the title without losing a set.
She dropped B total of 26 games in
S.ven matches.
The last player 1o accomplish the
feat was Billie Jean King In 1967. But
she lost 28 games In five matches.
She had one bye and one walkover.
The final did not live up to expectations. Mandlikova, the !~year­
old star of the advancing young
squad of Czechoslovakians, showed
only glimpses of the exciting tenniS
that ha$ made her the Australian
and French Open champion in the
last year.
Both players agreed .that nerves
determined ' the final, and
ceremonies are part of the occasion.
The players walked on court past
an honor guard of ball boys, turned
and curtsied to royalty, received
•
bouquets from the All-England Club
and were surrounded by television
cameras and a packed crowd of
14,000.
Uoyd had been through it on finals
day six times before. She won in 1974
and 1976, and lost in 1973, 197&amp;, 1979
and 19M. Mandlikova faced the ordeal for the first time.
"I dido 't realize how difficult it
would be," she said. "Maybe the
way I played was the effect of being
in my first Wimbledon final."
lloyd said it's not easy playing in
a Wimbledon final for the first time.
"If Hana wasn't nervous, she
wouldn't be human," lloyd said. "I
remember In my first final I lost the
first set to Billie Jean 6-0.
"Hana must learn that talent
alone is not enough. She didn't use
her head at all. She made errors and
played sloppily."
Yet, at first the match promised to
THE CHAMP! - Chris Evert Lloyd of the United of Cz.,hoslovakia in the final of the ladles SiDgles toorbe
a good contest. Mandlikova held
States holds her trophy aloft in victory on Wimbledon's oament. Evert Lloyd defeated Maodllkova 11-2, 1&gt;-2, to
service in the first game and had two
Centre Court Friday, after defeating Haoa Mandlikova win the trophy for the third lime in her career. 1AP
break points in the next. But she was
'
Wirephoto1 .
too eager, netted two volleys and lost
the game.
LOSES FIRST FINAL- Hana Mandllkova of Czechoslovakia swings J
Nerves then struck at the young
roood 1o connect with • shot from Cbrill Evert Uoyd of the United Slates,
right-hander. In the third game, she
durillg the Ladles Singles Final, on Wimbledon's Cenb'e Coort Friday In J
LONGMONT. Colo. IAP I - For- National Football League season tlement.
double-faulted three times. Two, of
· England. Mandllkova, 19, playing In her first-ever Wlo!bledon final, 10111
mer Denver Bronco free safety Dale opener.
:lli; :za•. to Chris Evert Lloyd, who took the ~or the third time In her
Hackbart's suit contended that the doubles came after deuce as she
Hackbart has made an out-of -court
Hackbart, in a copyrighted story Clark broke Hackbart's n""k with a tossed her service away.
career. lAP Wirephoto).
/
settlement with the Cincinnati in Saturday editions of the block after Hackbart had covered ,-------------------------~.:_--~---­
Bengals and Bengals fullback Longmont Times Call, said he had the Bengal fullback on a pass pat·
'' Booby" Clark in connection with an agreed with Bengals officials not to tern.
injury he received in their 1973 disclose the amount of the set·

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that.' '

Her husband, standing in the
wings, blushed and smiled.
Asked what the Duchess of Kent
had said 1o her In tlie presentation
ceremonies after tlie final match,
lloyd said : "I talked with her two
days ago. Today she told me I never
looked better. And she said lnstiilcl
had told her this was my year."
lloyd said that she was extremely
nervous before the final and very
determined to.win after losing three
straight yean in the finals - twice
to Merlina _Navratilova and last
year to EvonneGoolagong.
"When I am ·determined,'' she
said, "I am still the best. I think I
proved that In the U.S. Open last
year."
'
Uoyd, wbo had lost at Wimbledon
and curtailed her schedule, had been
pictured as on the decline. Her U.S.
open victory was her fifth.

.

.

.

.

25 COURT ST. ·DOWNTOWN

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Y•! Effective Mo.fda,, July 6th, we n happy to announce that your Complete Service Bank will proudly
take the lead by offering·its present custometS and ·all futlite customers more time for banking business. That's
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hours! All of this .fnln the bank·that's been sening Gallia County with peiSOIIalized banking service for almCBt

Ohio to

three quatM of a century. We are proud to continue to say that at the C. &amp; S. Bank Of Gallipolis, we are

fonn boxing.

"Always On Your·Side!"

'

• •
COIDIDISSIOD

Member: F.D.I.C.

• COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - From
horse racing, Ohio
tBwrnallers have shown that the
process of, 11!8klng laws · can
sometlm~ be the sporting thing to

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with ceiling beams, deluxe furniture pkg ., birch paneling.

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duatry. ); . ' '

'

1

c~on
of her
only two
tJiiS',
year,· one.
handing
the American
defll!itiin·l90 matches on clay, also
.•BJlid:
,."She didn't beat me, I beat
myself."
'"That was very gracious," Chris
said laconically.
Newsmen explained that Mandlikova hadn't meant · it in an
arrogant context and had later
called lloyd "a mosrtough person,
very nice; physically and mentally
she should be the best player ever In
the world."
lloyd dispelled any notion that she
was contemplating retirement or
that she couldn't, in this .age of
burgeoning teen-age stars, hnld her
own.
Someone reminded her of repOI'Il!
that she might be planning 1o devot,e
herself to family life. She is married
to British Davis Cup star, .John
lloyd.
"I know what you are
suggesting,'' she said. " Right now I
am not pregnant. I can't go beyond

1981 SHANNON
14 X 70
With 7x24 Expando

1980MID-AMERICAN
14 X 70

':

could be her last Wimbledon.
·· .:J)e Czecheslovakian, who beat
Uoyiffn(lie.FrenChOpensemlfinals

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window, utility room, deiUlce carpet, furnished .
Was 517,495
~ REDUCED TO

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"".· 'to
.. \erview that Chris was
&lt;letefmlned to win because this

Rich Gloss

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SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl
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dlliiOYa'~ suggestion ln' her post-

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1981 BAYVIEW

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REDUCEDTO

Y~,ery year I ~ here, I get
~r-1111 grass. I am more. com-

• Super Adhesion
• Full,

o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=::;;

~!lVI on·Centre·Court.

-\

From 2-2, however, l-loyd same year. The fourth major tour·
streaked away. Mandlikova again nament Is the U.S. Open.
The four players wbo hal(e won the
doubl~faulted on game point in the
fifth game.
Grand Slam in the put - Don
lloyd went to 4-2 with service win- Budge in 1938, Rod Laver in 1962 and
ners and &amp;.brilliant backhand acrosa 1969, Maureen "Little Mo" .Yonnolly
the court, and she played a similar . in 19531ind Margaret Court In 1970 shot on her way ·lo breaking service all began with the Australian and
again in the next game.
finished with the U.S. t!Ue.
In the final game, Uoyd served to
Now, however, the Australian
4-0. Mandlikova Skved one match
is considered the last major
point before missing the line with a tournament of the year.
backhand. The match was finished
Meanwhile, a record attendance
injustoveranhour.
for tbe Wimbledon tournament
British Davis Cup player John became certain. A total of 338,467
lloyd, Chris's hllsband, watched the had seen the rna tchaa up to Friday.
final with Dennis Ralston, fanner With a crowd of 14,000 assured for
U.S. Davis Cup captain who helped Saturday's men's final between
her prepare for Wimbledon.
Bjom Borg of Sweden and John
Mandlikova's parents traveled McEnroe of the United States, the
from Prague, hoping to see her win total was certain to pass the record
the title. Herfather, Vilem Mandlik, figure of343,091 in 1979.
a former Olympic sprinter, stood applaudlng wannly as Uoyd r""eived 1
the trophy from the Duchess of Kent,
wifeofQueenElizabeth'scousln.
•
Mandlikova's defeat settled a
dispute about her chances of cornpleting the Grand Slam. Philippe
DON'T MISS THE BIG
Chatrier, International Tennis
SHOE SALE AT THE
Federation president, said she was · HEJ?ITAGE HOUSE OF
f · f
· · th
SHOES!
on course or 1t a ter wmmng e
Australian and French Opens.
Others argued that the Australian
championships have been moved
AOVESnSlMENT
from January to Decerribef; &amp;f1d that
the Grand Slam should mean winON PAGE A-6

Open

ByWILLGRIMSIEY
· ;AP$peelaleerT•19 i.deot
•~IEDON, l!)tglimd (AP) ~ Eyert Uoytl tlirilw down the
gawjtlet to the tennis wwld Friday .
atter
thir!lShe's
Wimbledon
singleswin!Wtg
title. ather
age.,.:·
not an
""
old. lady anc1 sh!l's nOt retiring· 1m- ·
mediately from the game.:
"I think I'm Btill YOIIJII', not old,"
~d the gracious empress Of the
courts; an easy 1&gt;-2, 6-2 winiler·over
~ovakla's sensltional Hana

•

Hackbart settles injury issue out of court

J;:==:==:==-.1.;.98.:.:2~'silARE HEREI

'stin·· .·
young'

.

withshmrdj~~upa5-l . with backhand retums and a final

·AP_...Wrler

Mandlikova •••;.....'-~eo=ntln:::lll!d:::.f:.:.::r•::;mc-~z~___..

,:00 " 4:00

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·SAVINGS BANK. OF .GAlLIPOLIS
•

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Julys, 19al

f'o.m eroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page-C -S- The Sunday 'rimes-Sentinel

Reds top draft choice
gets rid of bad habit
I pick in the 1978 winter draft, was
promoted tQ Waterbury while
Dunlop was at Cedar Rapids.
"He has a very gOOd arm. He goes
alter the hitters. You can't help but
like him," Dunlop said.
Ron Robinson, a 6--4, 20&amp;pound
starter who was the Reds' top pick in
the June draft last year, pitched two
nine-iMing shutouts while Dunlop
watched.

year but still managed to hit 30 home
runs at Waterbury .
" In the lower minor leagues , you
can get away with it. You can hit
enough mistakes \bad pitches) to
look like you're a helluva hitler.
run.
The baseball strike allowed Cin- Dowr there, you might see one good
cinnati Reds Coach Ted Kluszewski pitcher out of four ," Kluszewski
to help the No. 1 Reds' draft pick at said.
" Then as you progress to the
Indianapolis, and Esasky's average
higher
leagues, you see two out of
has grown to .257. He also has slamfour, then three out of four and then
med 11 home runs in 33 games.
. "I've tried to get him to hit the ball four out of four ."
Of the other Reds coaches, Harry
in front of the plate and not pwl off.
All they did was throw him curve Dunlop spent 10 days at the Reds '
balls and oft-speed stuff, and he was Class A farm club in Cedar f\apids,
in trouble. He needed to get rid of a Iowa . Ron Plaza has helped the
bad habit by forming a new one," Tampa, Fla., farm team, Russ'
Nixon has been at Class AA Water·
Kluszewski said.
Kluszewski spends a half-year bury, and pitching Coach Bill
with minor leaguers every year and Fischer has corrunuted from Cinis one of several Reds coaches cinnati to Indianapolis and Waterhelping the minor leaguers during ' bury.
Dunlop said he has been imthe major league stoppage.
He said the 24-year--old Esasky pressed by two right-handed pit·
had the same hittilll( problem last chers . Br&amp;d Lesley, Cincinnati's No.

CINCINNATI (APJ - Two weeks
before the major league baseball
strike began , Nick Esasky was
struggling in the minor leagues with
a .176 batting average and one home

AN0'111ER STRIKE? - AI CnreUeUo, New
York Yaokees' minor league seoul watches youog
hopefuls tryout at Yaakee Stadium In New York las!
Tuesday as the baseball strike contloued. The prospec-

'

}If! !#(

Powers Western Open
leader at halfway-mark
.

pace the Bears to the 8-3 Americao Association victory over Omaha. Tbe
crowd braved occaslooal rain to watcb the Bears' aonoal Flreworb
night, surpassed the old minor league attendaoce mark of 58,9110. lAP
Laserphoto) .

RECORD. CROWD- A record minor league crowd of 59,691 watched
the Denver Bears win over the Omaha Royals Thursday night at Mile
High Stadium. Brad Mills slammed two homers and drove in five runs to

Owners may have proposal in works
NEW YORK ( AP) - The two sides
in the major league players strike
met separately Friday amid reports
that the club owners were preparing
a major push to.end the walkout that
has brought a Fourth of July without
big league baseball .
The strike, over the issue of freeagent compensatiOn , entered its
fourth week Friday. It has wiped out
274 games so far, including 13
Friday night, as well as canceling
the holiday wee kend slates
generally considered to be some of
baseball 's best drawing cards .
Federal mediator Kenneth Moffett
called both sides back to the

bargaining table Saturday, and
there were indications that a new
proposal by the owners was in the
works.
The New York Times quoted
unidentified management sources
Friday as saying that pressure was
bUilding on the Player Relations
Committee, the owrers' bargaining
arm, to end the strike quickly .
The owners, the Times said , want
to try to end the first midseason
strike in professional sports history
in America in time to save the AllStar Game scheduled for Cleveland
July 14 and to make a National
Labor Relations Board hearing on

an unfair-labor practice charge, set
to begin Monday, unnecessary.
According to the Times' sources, ·
the owners are not so much concerned about the outcome of the
hearing as about the testimony that
might come from some of their
brethren on the witness stand.
Threats of lines up to $500,000 have
kept most of the owrers quiet about
the negotiations, but the selfimposed gag rule could not apply to
testimony under oath, the Times
said.
At the Player Relations Committee, Hal Middlesworth, a
spokesman for director Ray Grebey,

declined to corrunent on the report.
"Ray is talking with his
negotiating team" of presidents
Chub Feeney of the National League
and Lee MacPhail of the American
League, and counsel Barry Rona,
Middlesworth said.
Asked if Grehey had talked with
any owners about a new proposal,
Middlesworth said: "He's in col'lstanl touch with others in
management."
The reports of possible movement
by the owners followed a ~minute
negotiating session Thursday, which
had ended abruptly when Grebey
asked Moffett for a recess.
Donald Fehr, counsel to the Major
League Players Association, said
Friday that be had seen seen no
signs at the previous day's session
that management was ready to
change its position on professional
compensation

Is of a regular-seasoa slrlke In the Natlooal Football
league now seem probable. The Issues are similar,
professlooal players of both sports want freedom of
movement and the chance to look at the ledgers. lAP
Laset'JI\oto).

'i,y

•

WATCHING TilE PROSPECI'S - Cinclooatl Reds maoager Jobo
McNamara, left, and Cleveland Indians maaager Dave Garcia chart the
Columbus-Pawtucket loleroational League pme from the stands rereolly In Columbus. 1be managers 'were looklog for proopects for future
trades. Both mea have been travelling In the mloors because of the strike
by major league players. (AP Laserphoto).

ByGEORGES'n!ODE
AP Sports Wliter
OAK BROOK, ID. (APJ - Greg
Powers assembled six birdies on the
back side, solved famed Butler
National for a :i'under-par 67 and
swept into the midway lead Friday
in the 78th Western Open.
The 3&amp;-year'-old' New Yorker, bidding for his. first victory in seven
tour seasons,.surged -by first-round
leader Don Pooley for a 3&amp;-hole total
of 136, tying the course record set by
Bob Dickson in 1976.
He stood at 8 ·under par against
Butler National Golf Club's troublefilled 7,fliT yards.
Meanwhile, Butler National
wasn 'I so gentle on Tom Watson, Lee
Trevino and Jack Nicklaus, whose
presences have led to record-setting

WATCH PARK ACTIVITIES - Wayne Love and
Chris Cannan (with the big hal8 and hallooos) wakh

SALE ON
ARMSTRONG
CEILING TILE

luo games In park during Galllpolls River Recreation
Festival activities Friday aflernoon.

258 Grenoble
• textured
• . WIShable

Chatnam
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·- $6804
• --hldlnD
·a~

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~2-

ON ALL

FARM GATES

with ...

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from

@mstrong

Pooley pulled off his second
straight sensational finish, a 35-foot
birdie putt on the final hole, for a 2under-par 70 that put him at 138. The
~yeaMid Arizonan bad holed a 00foot bunker shot for another birdie ·
on his cllilllng hole for the opelilnground lead. .
.
.
-·
Tied for third at 140 were Jooe Inman, Tom Kile and Jim Simons.
Kite shot 67, while Inman a~
Simons posted 7ls.
Powers' 31 oo the back side also
eqUaled the 9-hole course record
shared previously by Ed Sneed and
Larry Ziegler:
The improbable performance by
the one-time club professional came
on a course that has produced the
highest winning score on the
Professional Golfers Association
Tour four of the last seven years.
The long-hitting Powers is doing it
iii a unlque way. He mostly drives
with a I·Iron, a club most of his
rivals do not even carry. He hit the
iron nine times off the tee Friday,
one Jess than he did on opening .day.
And he pions to stick it with it over
the last 36 holeS.
"It's a 'good Club on this course. I
can hit it 240. to 250 yards and
WI11f WH~ . HE IS WEU. PLEASED - Greg Powers, of
straight," he said.
Tallahassee, Fla., 'prepared to throw haU to crowd on 18th green during
When he started his birdie binge Friday's s'eeood roond of Jhe Western Open. Powers shot a siz!llng 5Friday, POWllr.s trailed Pooley by 3 WJder.par61 Friday. (AP Laserpboto).
shots. His birds at 10,1112,15,16 and
17 shot him into the lead.
r.----:-~---------------------1
Pooley's wild finishes typified his
W~ play. He has 10 par saves, , 1
14 1-putts and just 54 putts in two
days over the sUck, reseedtid greens.
"~ is the best I've putted all .

Agri·
t

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Galpolis
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J uly 9'7- 9 p.m .·Open Recreation
J uiy 10 7-9 p.m . ·Operi Recr eation
J uly 11 C losed
J uly 1'21 · 4 p.m ·Open Re creation

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Detroit
Tigers manager Sparky Anderson
and general manager Jim Campbell
were in town Friday to watch the
Tigers' top farm club, the Evansville Triplets, battle the Indianapolis Indians.
The Triplets lead the American
Association and the Indians , affiliated with the Cincinnati Reds are
in second place, six games out. '
"If the strike isn't settled ... I'll go
on to Iowa (Tuesday) with them,"
Anderson said. "II it still isn't settled after that series, I'll go with the
Evansville club when they go back
home.
"And if nothing is settled after
that, then I'll go on to Birmlligham "
.
'
'
he SBJd:
The Alabama team is the Tigers'
AA minor league affiliate in the
Southern League .
Anderson, who said he is optimistic about a settlement of the
strike, said pitching coach Roger
Craig also plans visits to the farm
teams.

].
And offer you

"I want
to help you
save money on
homeowners
insurance.''

the outstanding
service
State Farm
Is famous for.

CAROLL SNOWDEN

417 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 444 -4290

_....

Hom-e Phone 446-4S1B

r.,-.,-,-,-.,-M' sr.-n FARM
FH IN tuuttr t.Mp~nr

A

lllltltl"'lllfl. lltHn

ut•• IJCIOCf ,_lgllbor, St•te F•rm Ia riHtrtt .

IHSUIAHCI

•

IT'S II
BAG
wnen uou Plan uour

-naeds w11 us

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COme in and ·listen 10 die Craig Road-Rated~ Receivers.

The fliSt car stereos buUt for the hazards of the road. With ·
their specially \:;alaWd ~. ti)e Ro!!d-RatOd ~ivers
fight fum, fa~ ~ otj:ler int:elference• Coql.e ~ hear
them in our-shawrtxxn. Arid expcict ,the same clean, clear
sound out em the rOad. .
··
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••l...,.inf • P"l Paint •
'Furn. • CHemical
• Sol!lr Coven ·•

&lt;
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·
~tor~ Hours; M_ond~Jf!'~ 8 ,a.m~ lo ~ 41-!11·· SiturdJj aa.m. To 12

·",,.

i.pground . and abo.~;e ·
ground pool · kits bf any

Ppot lase • f!llter .-Silncl •

''IVIIY'FHINO :ro .UII.I» AN~'' :. •: ; '" )'ll•ttt! ·
Strlll t . , f.- . 671-1160 :
l
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'Nit-ftT6t

Sciol4l Dowu

COLUMBUS, Ohio I APJ ~ Ra cy Lacy, with
jockey Joe Adamsky up, took the ninth feature
race Friday night at Scioto Downs by a length
andaquarter.
The horse paid 18.60, $4.20 and $2.40.The
second place horse , MoorJight Fancy, paid $10.60
and $3.80. In third place was Bye Bye Megan ,
paying f2.80.
The first trifecta com binat ion 8·7·3 paid
$2,31&amp;_10
Some 7.294 bettors wagered s:;!i1 ,943.

3·5 p .m . Open Swim
7·9 p . m ... Qpen Swim
3·5 p .m .·Open Swim
7-9 p.m . Open Swim
3·5 p.m . Open Swim
7 9 pm Open Swim
:J 5 p .m . Open Swim
7·9 p .m Open Swim
Clos.ed
I 4 p .m . Open Swim

.

AUiortlltic Pool SWHPI •
vacvull'l ,MoH • CINnlng

: SUI!PiiY - :COft'p•· ~~y .;~~~,;;~r
.; ~
1

$i1ili

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.t.itlltl • f'oOI Gamn &lt;!

'd

1·.4 p .m . Open Swim

SWIMMING POOLS ·
. ~LESALE - RETAIL

fV ROHI •- Pool LJIIden •

.475
3
•

'

The wmner returned 14.20, 13.20 and $2.40.
Dreamer 0 . 3ee00d, paid $6 and $3.40 wtlile
Whllt A ~ngc f~nished third and returned $3.40.
In the final tnfecta , the combinatioo of 1·7.a
paid$84g.60.
The c r~·d of 5,656 wagered f14.1,363.

.'

Motors ilnd Pumps • S!llfe-

CAROLINA
· LUMBER ~;·,:~.
' . .
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312

'

r

Tom Brown Is trying to Install a
tile ceiling the old wav. so he ·
needs clumsy furr.lng strips,
staples, a stapl~ guo, an~. messy
glue. Joe Smith Is gOing tti In- ·
stall his ceiling the new EAS'{UP
way. He 'II Just nail up the pre·
measured tracks, ll0$1Uon the · ·
tiles, and sn~p
lntQ placEt
lt's-tnat simple. ·· . $'
EASY UP Olv.es. you ,
,.
me confidence to
. · .·
Install vour own tile . t
ceJUnQI
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A.

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VIGORO LAWN CARE PRODUCTS·

I
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The do-lt-yourself .
lnstallaUon kit that .
reallY letS yo~
do It yourself.

them

Pictured: "Steel Jewel" 5 Panel Gate
48 in. high. Available in widths from
4' to 16'.
"

:

D'Amico rode Daring Reb lo victory ·in the
on

Anderson scouts
Indians contest

crowds.

so Is 'Joe Smith

lbilltledowa

3 5 p m. Open Swim
79 p m. Open Swim

July B 7·9 p.m .· Open Recreati on

'

'

NO~TH RANDALL, Ohio (AP l - JU('kev Tony

..
J uly 7 7 9 P.m .-Open Recreation

"'

TOm Brown
Is going to
install a new
tile ceiling.

118.

f~tured A~uwance_ race at Thistledown
Fnday, ~OU:IJ18 the su furlongs in 1: lll.S.

July 5 1·5 p.m .-Open Recreation
J uly 6 7·9 p.m .-Open Recreation

Masters champion Tom Watson, 4
under after the first 6 holes, double
bogeyed the final hole in the partly
cloudy, pleasant weather for a 70, a
148 total aild a 12-sl\ot deficit.

nervous." ·

Rfverl&gt;owu
CINCINNATI l APJ - Co Veps, ridden by
CUft.on Schwing, won the t5,500-added "RJver
Queen Prep" by a nose at RJver Dowl'll before
the largelt Friday crowd of the meeting, 7,935.
The winner paid t? .OO, S4 and $3.20. E .J .'s
Pride wu a close secmd, retllming $6.60 and
$3.&amp;0, and the show horse, Hazel Grey, paidl3.40.
In the daily double. Miradc Bill and 70·1
longshot &lt;llllrt Ho~ . comi:Jined 4·7 for $424.60.
The mutuel pool totaledfl,93S.
Favored In today's 125 000-odded "Rainbow
Handicap" were Western 'Re5ervc and Current
DBt.H, cu rrying l19 pounds, and Royals Potion

LYNE CENTT E R SCHEDULE
Week of July 5, 1981
DATE- GYMNASIUM
POOL

.

year," said Pooley. "I didn' t sleep
very well last night," said the 1980
B.C. Open winner. "I couldn't relax
but I'll get over it. It's not bad to ~

Racing results

'

'

We know that when agriculture prospers ... everybody benefits. As a fanner if new equipment helps you
to make a profit, or more land, or making improvements,
cir any other reason ... we want to help with financing.
Our . local loan servic~ is fast, and our terms can
be geared to your particular needs. Get all the facts!
.
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c-~ommerctal
lr-s Bank c.t'
Jan~ '~

The

6 Savings

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: 'ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court
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Silver Bridge PIIA
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M1111ber 'FDIC

Spring VIIley

�f

·

Page-C-6-T he Sunday Times· Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohicr-Point Plea$ant,
0

w. Va.

July 5, 19.81
July 5,"1981

Nine digit zip is coming
By HOWARD BENEDICf
Allaoclaled Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite
congressional howls of a " nwnerical
nightmare," the hyphenated, ninedigit ZIP code is on its way, but the
Postal Service expects only mailers
who drop half a million letters into
the box at a time to use it.
Affixing the longer code is strictly
voluntary, and it is unlikely that any
mail you get will be bearing the extra numbers for some time to come.
Regulations published in the
Federal Register on Monday will put
the so-called " ZIP-plus-4" into effect
July 29 by amending existing Postal
Service regulations. It is intended
primarily fgr business, and officials
·contend the resulting automation
will save $450 million a year when it
is fully&lt;!pera tionalm 1987.
· Starting late in July, about IS
l!)illion businesses and government
age"ncies that 11enerate and get large
QUIIntities of mail will be notified of

their own unique Jline.di~it ZIP
codes so they can start putting them
on their return addresses.
Businesses with mass mailin~
will be able to borrow 'Without
charge for 60 days the Postal Service's national computer tapes,
which contain the ZIP-plus-4s for
every address in the nation.
" While use of the ZIP-plus-4 code
is completely voluntary, the Postal
Service hopea that mailers will adjust their address practices on a
schedule appropriate to their needs
and begin to use it over the next
several. years," said spokesman Bob
Becker.
The service has proposed to the
Postal Rate Commission that
volume mailers be given a one-half
cent discoWJt on mailings of 500 or
more first-class letters or cards. Until that proposal is approved, Becker
said, he did not expect many firms to
make the conversion.
The Reagan adminstration

Offers benefits
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Energy
Credit program, which provides
winter heating benefits to senior ,.
citizens and disabled persons, is now
accepting benefits for the 19BH2
winter program.
A person must meet the following
three requirements to be eligible :
- Be a head of a household or
spouse.
- Be 65 years old or older during
!981 or be totally and permanently
disabled .
- Have total mcome for 1980 of no
more than $9,000. lithe 1980 income
exceeded $9,000, the 1981 income
may be used provided it shall not exceed $9,000 and the income from
Jan . I, 1981 , through June 30, 1981
does not exceed $4,500.

Benefits provide a 30 percent
discount on utility bills for the billing
· months of Decef(leber through April
to those persons who purchase their
heating energy from a metered
utility company (gas, electric,
propane by pipeline) and who have
an income between $0 and $5,000.
Applicants who have a total income between $5,000 and $9,000 will
receive a 25 percent discount on
their metered utility bills.
For those who purchase their
energy from a retail fuel dealer (fuel
oil, propane, wood, coal), the
program provides a one-lime
payment of $125 to the applicant,
provided at least that amount has
beenspenlfortheheatingperiod.

Co~t analysi~
DENVER lAP) - The cost fo r oil and"gas drilling
la nd m the U.S. has skyrocketed . One example is the
Ovetthrust Belt, a very active exploration area in Monwna, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. '
' ' In 1975, you would pay maybe one dollar an acre for
good acreage in the Overthrust Belt " says Bill
Coleman, land manager for Aminoil USA,in the Rocky
M11untatn Dtstnct. "Now, it would be more like $200
per acre.··

..'

cleared the way for the nine-digit
ZIP last week by approving a
regulatory analysis which sald the
project ccmplies with guidelines
requiring new regulations to be cost;effective.
There remains opposition to the
system in Congress, which could still
vote to overturn it.
Sen. Dave Durenberger, R-Minn.,
said last week be has 58 e&lt;&gt;-sponsors
for a bill to block the expanded ZIP
code. But that bill is opposed by Sen.
Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska, who is
assistant GOP leader in the Senate
and chairman of the subconunittee
that has jurisdiction over the Postal
Service.
During an earlier congressional
hearing, Durenberger called the
plan a " numerical nightmare," and
another opponent, Sen. Roger Jepsen, R-lowa, predicted it would be
"the 1981 version of the Susan B. Anthony dollar," a coin that has failed
to win public acceptance.

Tiuulks business
GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
Fire Department and River
Recreation Festival Committee said
they wish to thank the following
organizations and businesses for
their financial assistance in raising
money for the fireworks display .
The businesses are:
The Gallipolis Retail Merchants,
Motor Parts Co ., Marc hi
Distributing, G&amp;.J Auto Parts,
Holzer Clinic Ltd., Empire Furniture Co., Ohio Valley Bank, Central Trust Co., Drs. Robert and
William Thomas, Dr. Donald L.
Hannon, the Warehime Clinic, Dr.
Arnold Sattler, Timothy and Kenneth Kyger, D.D.S., Dr. Gene Abels
. and Philip M. Roberts.
Money to purchase the annual fi re
works is primarily funded from
receipts at the fire department 's fair
booth.

Lottery winner
CLEVELAND I API - The win·
ning number drawn Friday in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The
Number" was 033.

MAtL 'cAMPAIGN - Employees at the mailing
brancb of Colonial Penn Group ID!Iurance Co. ID Devon,
Pa., sort Information packet&amp; before malllDg to reUred

persoDB througholit America. The advertlslq campalgn 18 aimed at reUred persons whose health lnsuranee 18 soon to expire. IAP Laserp!loto).

Interest rates still high
BySTEVENP. ROSENFELD
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP ) - Despite increasing signs thaI the economy is
weakening and inflation is subsiding , interest rates remain high.
Concern over the continuing lofty
level of interest rates has sent the
dollar soa ring to )()-year highs, while
prices of stocks, bonds and precious
metals :wve plummeted.
The prime lending rate at major
banks, which has hovered around
the 20 percent level since mid-May,
was raised to 20.5 percent on Thursday by Chase Manhattan Bank, the
nation's third-largest commercial
bank, and by No. 9 First National
Ba nk of Chicago.
But while the prime lingered for
an unusual period near its all-time
high of 21.5 percent, many other
economic indicators have been
providing signals that would usually
encourage a downturn in rates.

Economist Alan Murray at
Citibank says the nation's money
markets appear to be "dominated
by a psychology that seems
irrational." Murray says the credit
markets, which determine
borrowing costs for business and
government, have been nervous and
have been focusing on any economic
signal pointing to higher interest
rates, even if it means ignoring con·
flicting indicators.
What has kept rates high is a
Federal Reserve Board policy to
limit the availability of reserves to
the banking system, driving up the
cost of borrowing. Murray says the
high interest rates resulting from
Fed policy should eventUIIIJy slow
the economy to a point 'where
borrowing demand . diminishes ,
resulting in lower interest rates.
Financial markets have been
reacting strongly to interest-rate
pressures.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks fell more than 47
points over the past seven straight
sessions. Bond prices slipped about
$70 for each $1,000 in face value in
the last half of June.
High interest rates have made
dollar-denominated investments at·
tractive, while raising the cost of
financing stock and conunodity purchases.
In other business all!l economic
developments this past week:
- The Commerce Department
reported that its index of leading indicators, a barometer of further
economic activity, fell1.8 percent in
May, its sharpest decline since May
1980.
- The Agriculture Department
said prices that farmers get for raw
products. dropped 0.7 percent in
June , but still averaged 11 percent
higher than a year ago.

Man's home

m~rethana
castle today _

BUY HAY EQUIPMENT
NOW.
PAY NO FINANCE
CHAR(;ES UNTIL
JANUARY 1, 1982

By LOUISE COOK
A man's home is more than a
castle these days. It's often a paper
fortune.
Consider just.a couple examples:
- A ~year-old, two-bedroom
home in Dallas that sold for $25,000
in 19'12·went for$'15,000 last year.
-A Fairfield County, Conn., house
that cost S66,000 in 19'15 was sold in

• ShortTer111
• $2,500 Minimum
• No Penalties or Fees

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ow's the time to buy the new or
used haying eC~uipment you need.
Rectangular or round balers,
mower/conditioners, windrowers and
forage harvesters are all included in
this money-saving program. Buy the
equipment now and put it to work in
your fields . Or lease now and take
advantage of discounted lease
payments. Stop in soon and make
your deal. This special offer ends .
August 31, 1981 .

Sl Rl 7, Gallipolis, Oh.

4460475

CLEVELAND (AP) A
charitable organization that sup·
plies food to seores of other nonprofit
groups is bracing for a rWJ on its
supplies in light of welfare cuts in·
eluded in PreSident Reagan's fiscal
program.
The .Greater Cleveland Com·
· munlty Foodbank, founded in March
1980, distributes food to 142
organizations that in turn help feed
the poor in northeastern Ohio.
The Foodbank has increased the
nwnber of agencies it serves by 10
percent in the past few months.
Director Edmond V. Worley said he
expects govenunent
continued stops
growth
as the
federal
picking
up
the tab for many programs alrned at
feeding the needy.
The agency, which operates from
a warehouse on Cleveland's east
side, has distributed more than 1.3
million pounds of food in its 13·
month history. But at least three
times that amount is needed to meet
anticipated ·demanda, said Rolland
F. Smith, a retired executive who
helped found the Foodbank.
"There are going to be a lot more
hungry people, and it will be up to
the private sector to do more to feed
them," Smith said.
To help increase its resources,
Foodbank hired Frank Gole to seek
out more donations from food
distributors, canneries, farmers and
packagers. Smith blmself works as a

'fhlit means people's wealth - on
pa~, a~. Iea8t :... was ~ f~t

Read)'·Aeeeaa l'llad from. Dlam.oad
SaYIDI•· We're leading the way for savers and
investors to get more for their money. Stop In
today. We'll help you earn more. tool

than their inCOme.would lildlcate.
For PeoPle whO tiought liQuses
before the current price spl!'lll. the
rise In real e.tate Vlltlea ... nia!le it
easter to ''trade. up," . ileWng an
.e:rlstlnilll!!* ~ Uilng the profit
as a down paJIII!!IIt on 8 ' •neW and

aa•

ao&amp;IIJ' A.ooooa,_.l8_taM......&amp;eaa. .tor . .,..lt . .lll8
aot .........,. QM l'ollual . ...._.
a:... laa111'aaoo
Corporatloa...............ta-eat for t.U ..talla.

have been possible in the past.
Gallla County 4-H members who
are 8, 9 and 10 years old still have the
opportunity to participate in the
Gallia- Meigs Beginners Camp, JUly
14-July 17.
These youth will also have the opportunity to participate in many ex-

citing activities thai older 4-H members have at the two previous camps.
Reservations can still be turned in
for Beginners C!llllp and interested
4-H members or parents should contact the Gallia CoWJty Extension
Service at 446-7007.

fundraiser for the organization.
Donors generally give excess or
damaged but edible food, and in
return may take a federal tax deduction for the cost of the food plus 50
percent of the profit they would have
made had they sold the goods at nor·
mal prices.
Worley said northeastern Ohio
supermarkets have helped stock the
warehouse, including donating large
freezers and equipment. The
warehouse contains 10,000 cubic feet
of freezer space.
The agency supplies the food to
other charitable organizations at 6

cents a pound, whether it is steak or
lettuce, with the resulting revenues
helping to pay operating costs. Food· ,bank employs a director and fiv\ .
staff members, with other office
working without pay.
Smith is grateful for the assistan- ,
ce the agency already has received,
but is unsure if the welfare cuts will
cause the Foodbank much of a
problem.
"The food industry is a traditional
kind of industry," he said, " and it
takes time to let them know that we
can do good for them and for the
poor."

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

STORY &amp; STORY
A nORNEYS AT LAW

Steven L. Story
Karen H. Story
236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.CFormerly Meigs Gen . Hospital&gt;

OFFICE PH. 992-6624

HOME PH. 992-3523

OFFICE HOURS: MON;-FRI. 8:30 TO 4:30
SAT. 8:30 TO 12:00 NOON
Evenings By Appointment

moreGjli!niiYe~;
.' ..
Mark and Mal')' Sullivail ~!ought

Ono Owner . Justover 4000 m; les .
2995
1981 ESCORT••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••···v
L OW miles. qood transportation .
EAC H Sl:.295
put 10 ~tthe.
dolm
toolt
out 8 ti
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~tor
Ntand
at 91
percent,
·~
~·up )lrith a monthly pa~t
4 ooo
' R
Low m;lcs Good le m dy
$4895
r· FOR.JtPRING
AID SfiFClJON,
of$340.' ' ·
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.
.• In 19'1i, the SUII4vana sold thei,r
' - In Brlllllepot1 for ~.ooo and
. SERVICE OR CONSULTATION .
1977 GRANADA·2
DOOR ••••••••••••••••••••• _
••••••••••• ;&gt;;~~':~e:.,$2795
.Dovecl to ; vernea,, Conn. ' :n.y
.
boUiht 8 new lioua!l ~ tiii,OOO, put
t)~r owner $2695
., BASED ON ·32 • YfMS
EXPERIENCE
. . r
' one-4lilrd down and toolt • 8D 11
197&amp;, 'fOR. DMU~AUG
Wlftl1 · ••••••••••~••••··~~•••••••••••••••••••••••••
pii tall ~=:.:lor the rl!n'laln... AND/OR FOR R&amp;ERRAL 10 APPQRIATE .
'r ~. 'l'llelr.
·1978 MERcuRY MARQUiS 2 DooR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s3995
M0- I noticeable
·1979 COIJRI£1 PICKUP••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Aulomat; c, one owner
$
tolalllftD; • • maugn~-·
.
IEDit.t.
SPECIALIStS.
CAll
4995
. Rlllllil 1181 'Ml rate~. tuauva.
CHEVROLET
'
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One owner. w;lhtopper '2695
are·JMMack hlrdetfor,__to
1915
7Z

their ftrSt · house ·

· Toda,y's rate:

In 19'15 in

Bri~ePoft, C9M. '11!ey paidf39,000,

' /0
12. ·.s-•'

Sbort term. Your agreement matures In only
89 days . $500 minimum withdrawals may be
made anytime after 14 days. provided a $2,500
balance Is maintained.

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Swisher Implement
539 Uppei River Rd.

No penaltiea or feea. Cancellation of the agreement may be made anytime after 14 days with
total interest earned to date and no penalties.
And you don't pay a brokero.ge fee to purchase ·
the Ready-Access Fund.

and fun activities, including swimming, nature, canoeing, crafts,
recreation, table games and many,
manymore.
.
One of the highlights of camp this
year was the new $470,000 diningrecreation lodge which provided
many activities which would not

Charitable agency braces for rush

Frorlr 19'12 lii 1980, the Consumer
Prtce IJide:r just about doubled. The
sale price of that .house In Dallas
tripled. From 19'15 to 1981, the CPI
increased about one and a-half
times. But the Falrlield County
· house brought four times as much
this year as it did six years ago.
The Dallas and Falrlield County
stories are not IIDUSUaf.
"Real estate is very simple," said
Eugene Kelly, vice president of
William Pitt Inc., a real estate agency inFalrlield County. "It's a supply
and demand situation. As long as
you have COfPOratioD!I corning into
the area, there'll be new employees
who must buy houses. That demand
keeps prices rising.",
A joint report froin the Depart·
ment of Housing and Urban
Develo'pment and the Census
Bureau shows that the value of
single-family homes increased m"'''!
sharply in the last decade. than the
Incomes of the men and women who
owned thoae hoJiles.
.
Between 19'13 and 19'19 alone, the
median value 11 sll!gle-farnily,
oWIIer-occupied homes went up 95
percent. The inedian Income of \he
homeowners !l'ent up 59 percent.

• High Interest Rate

lligb iotere•t rate. Interest rates are deter•
mined daily by market conditions. But, unlike
money market funds, the Interest rate Is fixed at
the date of purchase for the term of the agreement. You may reinvest at maturity at the
prevailing Interest rate. Or we'll transfer your
funds directly Into a Diamond Pay-by-Phone
/NOW or other savings account.

Gallla County 4-H youth have participated in the two 4-H campa beld
at Canter's cave 4-H camp this summer.
These camps, the Gallla-Meigs

Junior Camp aDd the Southern Obio
Teen camp were COIISidered very
succeuful act!vltles for the youth In
Gallla County. Held at 4-H camp,
these youth had the opportunity to
enjoy many different educational

1!1111 for,f176,000.

READY-ACCESS

Here's a unique opportunit)'Jor.you to earn high
interest on as little as $2,500 in just 89 days.
Our Ready-Access Fund is a repurchase
agreement between you and Diamond Savings.
Quite simply, we transfer to you an Interest In a
U.S. government (or government agency)
security. After 89 days , we repurchase your
agreement for what you originally paid plus
interest.

GALLIPOLis - More than 250

Alla~M:Iated Prell Writer

\'lt'n on tht· moon
HOUSTON I API - A scoreboard in mid-April of the
world's leading spacefaring nations showed the U.S.
had sent 48 men into space, with the U.S.S.R. having
se nt 5ti men and one woman, according to NASA data.
The U.S. leads with "men on the moon, " having 12,
compared with zero for the Russians.

Gallia County 4-H members take part in camp

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l974' F250 sUPER CAB•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••.s1495
Automatic, one owner ., '

••••••••••••••••

�f'age-C -8-The Sunday Times-Sen.tinel

classified
.

Agriculture and
•
\our community

.

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Julys, 1981
The sunday'Times-Sentinei-Page-

•

.Schenectady:

By BRYSON R. IBUDI CARTER
Gallia County Extension Agent

By Bryson R. Carter
Co. Ext. Agent
Agrt.&amp;CNRD

GAUJPOUS Charlie Carmichael has alerted me to the
District 6 Holstein Show &amp;ming up
at the Jackson County Fairgrounds
on Thursday, July 16. This show is
for registered Holstein cattle only
and is open to any interested
dairymen in Ohio and West Virginia.
The event is being held in conjunction with the Jackson County
Fair and cattle may be brought in to
the Fairgrounds at Wellston between 8:00p.m. on Wednesday, July
15, until 10:00 a. m. on Thursday,
July 16. The show will be held at 6:0
p.m., Thursday evening, July 16.
Cattle will be released on Saturday
morning, July 18.
It's my understanding that all entries must be registered to particiapte in the District Show and advance entries are not required. If
you have an animal under six months of age that doesn't have
registration papers but IS eligible for
registering then it is also eligible to
show.
There will be premium, money,
trophies and rosettes awarded and
these are all listed in the Jackson
County Fair Book. If you would like
more infonnation I'm sure you can
contact Charles Carmichael or
Loralee Carmichael and you're
welcome to call our office.
Speaking of Fairs, don't forget our
own 32nd Annual Gallia County
Junior Fair is coming up on August 3
and running through August 8. Our
office is quite busy this time of year
and getting ready for the fair and
arranging for all the judging activities. It's a great time for youth
and adults in Gallia County, so plan
now to attend one or more days if at
all possible.
We have received numerous
telephone calls this spring about
diseases affecting pine trees. Here is
some Information just received this
week concerning this disease and
some of the frustration associated
with it.
PINE WILT DISEASE
SWEEPS THE COUNTRY
Small but mighty - WHo would
believe that minute nematodes no
longer than the period at the end of
this sentence could kill large pine
trees. The pine wood nematode, a
small, round, unsegmented worm
has recently been found to be killing
pines throughout much of the United
States.
Where did it come from - At the
present time it is not know whether
the nematode is native to the United
States or came from Japan. For the
past 30 years, this nematode has
been killing large numbers of pines
in Japan. It is destroying the beauty
of many pine-filled landscapes
associated with shrines there. It was
not found in the United States until
1979, when a visiting Japanese
professor suggested to plant
pathologists at the University of
Missouri that they look for
nematodes as a possible cause of
pines dying. Up to that time, most

causes of death are attributed to environmental problems such as salt
injury, soli compaction or root
disturbance. The size of the
nematodes and their being Inside the
tree no doubt played a part in their
lack of discovery.
Where is it found- CurrenUy this
disease has been found killing pines
in 32 states. The nematode has been
found in most states east of the
Rocky Mountains.
.
What happens in the tree? Once
the nematodes get inside, things
begin to happen. Within 24 hours the
production of resin or pitch in the
pine stops. Every five days a whole
new generation of nematodes is
produced, so there is a decided
population explosion. Generally,
within three months after the infection is noticed, the tree may be
dead.
What symptoms should I look for?
Infected pines can generally he
noticed from mid to late summer,
and it is their rapid dying that should
make one suspect the pine wilt
disease. Although in Japan the
whole tree turns tan or brown at once, here in the United States there
are also many cases where only a
branch becomes brown, and in no
case has an infected tree ever
recovered. Check for a reduction in
resin flow by making a small puncture wound on the truck with a
pocket knife. under normal circumstances resin will flow from the
wound. If infected with the
nematode, the tissues will feel dry,
not sticky. Look at the needles. Are
they browning from their base
toward the tip, as generally found
with this disease, or from the tip
down, more associated with other
environmental problems-?
How should I submit a samle for
diagnosis• As soon as infection is
noticed in the pines, cut off one or
two branches having the brown
needles, and send in si.xinch sections
from the area closest to the trunk.
Another way, provided the tree is
beyond hope, would be to cut several
one--inch cubes out of the trunk. Put
these in a plastic bag and bring them
to our office. In either case, keep
these from getting over 90 • F.,
which may kill the nematodes inside.
can the disease be controlled' The
current reconunendation is to
remove and burn the Infected trees.
Fertilizer plus watering wiD help
keep the pines vigorous and less
likely to become Infected by the
nematodes. It has not yet been
tested, but several insecticidal applications of lindane applied at monthly intervals may prevent the
beetles from feeding and starting
the infection cycle. Make the first
applications in May .
What is the outlook? Because this
is a new disease to this country,
there are more questions than answers. A considerable amo11nt of
research at both the federal and
state level is currently underway
and hopefully will help us know
which of the ·pine species are most
likely to become infected and just
what can be done in the future to
protect the pines.

.the city behind
the joke survives
GALLIA 4-H MEMBERS PARTICIPATE IN GALLIA COUNTY
HORSE CLINIC - Four-H members participated In the Gallla ColiDty
Horse Cllolc recently. Jodi Jenkins was crowned 1981 Gallla County Horse Princess. Jodi, daughter of Bill and Anne Jeuklos, of Gallipolis, wu
selected from a group of seven contestants vying for the tlUe. Others participating 'were : Julie Mills, daughter of Jim and Pat Mills, Lower River
Road; Dusty Beam, daughter of Dan and Karen Beam, Rt Z, Galllpolls;
Tammy McGuire, daughter of Sherman and Jane McGuire, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis; Wendy Simms, daughter of Jay and Lois Simms, 628 Fourth
Ave., Gallipolis; Debbie Whiteley, .daughter of Dan and E.dua Whiteley,

Rt 4, Gallipolis; Lisa Saunders, daughter of Dan and and Karen Beam,
Rt. 2, Ga.lllpolls. The 1981 Hone Princess was presented flowen, trophy
and a crown by the Saddle ami Sirloin Riding Club. Sbe will represent lbe
Horse Program lo Gallla County at the Gallla County Junior Fair and
other activities lo Gallla County during the coming year. Other eveuts liteluded a horse clinic, conducted by Marty Hayes. Ms. Hayes esplaiDed
what she expecled from honemen In preparing for and showlug their horses for lhls year's show. Shown above, lefl to right are: Tlllluny
McGuire, oUsty Beam, Debbie Whiteley, Jodi Jenkins (Princess), Wendy
Simms, Lisa Saunders, and Julie Mills.

NomJNG TO .JOKE ABOUT~ Local bistorlan
Larry Hart Is shown here IDaide Sebeaectady's·P rortor
Theater, wbicib once featured George Bul'llll ou Its
be spelled
stage. Schenectady, which Hart says

.

CONTEST WINNERS NAMED - The winner of this year's Sheep
Princess Contest was Deanna Caldwell, daughter of Mr. and Mn. Earl
Caldwell of GaUipoUs. Deanna was chosen from a group of eight contestants. The other eight were: Tina Barcus, Teresa Hoffelt Cbrlsty Curfman, Dianna Forgey, Amy Roush, Angela Smith and Heather Swain.
The event began wllh the judging of the conteslants In the falrboard office. Tom Brown, the 1981 Gallla County Junior Fair Sheep Judge, tben
gave a Fitting and Showing Demonstration. He gave the kids tips on the

proper technique for prearlng and showing their sheep at the fair. Lyuo
Smith Introduced each contestant and had them answer their quesdouil.
She then revealed the new Sheep Princess for 1981. Judges were Mike
Banbury, Mr. and Mn. Rodney Wall brown, and Gene Huffman. Pictured
above, first row, left to right, are Teresa haHell, DeaDDB Caldwell, and
Dianna Forgey. Second row - Heather Swain, Christy Curiman, Amy
Roush and Angle Smith.

Mud hog
To phase out

prnduclline

PHILADELPHIA lAP) - TRW
Inc. has announced plans to phase
out a product line at its Resistive
Products Division plant in
Philadelphia :
The phase-out will affect about 200
employees by year-&lt;!nd, about 40
percent of the total workforce at the
location .
The product being phas,ed out is
the carbon composition resistor, first produced 56 years ago and one of
the earliest electronic components.
"The decision to phase out the carbon composition line was not an easy
one," said John Levesque, manager
of Philadelphia operations .
"Historically, these resistors were
used in consumer electronics such
as radio and TV. But then ... foreionproduced resistors started flooding

the U.S. in the mid-1970s."
TRW , h e adquartered 111
Cleveland, is a diversified manufacturer which serves the car and

truck, e lectronics and space
systems, and industrial and energy
markets. The company had sales of
about $fi billion in 1980.

I'll he danged

•'•

1-Model 5660, 12 HP, 2 wheel
Tractor w/40" rotary mower
!-Model 5240, 8 H P, 2 wheel
Tractor /30" rotary mower
!-Gravely Rotary Plow &amp; Rotary
. Culvlvator C:ombinafion (wilt
fit either of the a~ove tractors

LIST

SUPREME "19"
SALE

$2200

$2122

$1600

MOWERS

5616

$450

AT

••

,.OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT SALES
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Jet. Rts. 7 &amp; 35
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PUSH '

$2988

Ph, 446·3670

•
WASHINGTON ( AP) - The government should not
try to develop a satellite-to-Earth energy system for at
least decade because itli projected costs are too high, .
a National Academy of Sciences study says.
.The proposed system of giant solar satellites
beaming power back to Earth would be so large and
· costly that it may not be fe;!Sible, says a report
released Thursday by the academy's National Resear. ch Couneil. 1
·The J&gt;rojected system would involve 80 satellites haH
the size . of Manhal!an' lslaild and, . ~iiding
fe9!i~(gricjs on earth each measuril)g aix miles by
nlrie llitles. Beams of microwave· radiation would tranSmit }l!lia'r-rgy captured by the satelliteS to Earth. · ·
.Thi!' stUdy :saJa bilildinli the
·
·WoUld •

a

require spaceships with 13 times the cargo capacity of
the present space shuttle. One of these ships·carrying
400 tons of cargo would have to take off each day for 30
years just to supply building materials, it continued.
The repOrt said a cautiously favorable Energ·y
Department study of the scheme last year greatly underestimated the costs of such a project.
Tbat estimate of $1:3.triUion is "two and a haU times
too low, even in the most optimistic view," the research council said.
Because of costs and technical problems that must
be overCome with the.satellite system, the new study
. recommended against spending any research and
development money on it in the next decade.

iGi\iiT:ION ... BUT NO LIFI'OFF This 1/l&amp;lbaeale Center Is meant to sit tight for oollie measuremen~.
model of the Space Sbuttle·at Marsbali.Space Flight Hydrogen-oxygen torches Imitate lbe main englues •

~~~~~=-=======~==========~========

In jet age, small planes
_remain popular

BOWUNG GREEN, Ohio {Aj') - As a youth, Carl

Model

The tough-2-cycle

DEMONSTRATOR SALE
NEW WARRANTY

~==·=========~~~==============~~=============

Study advises againft
s.atellite energy system

.' . .

UTTLE ROCK, Ark. lAP )- Why r-------------------~---1
does a television news anchorman
here or in Atlanta or Boston sound
the same as counterparts in other
U.S. cities ' Because re~ional accents hinder careers and broadcasters want to he as universal as
possible. with the ability to move
anywhere in the country, reported a
network executive .

~GRAVELY

.'

BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (APl - A "mud hog"
works, but it doesn't eat.
When drilling an oil well , the " mud hog" is the pwnp
which circulates lubricating mud throughout the well.
Mud is used to reduce friction and cool the drill bit.
Mud must circulate to carry rock fragments to the
surface to eliminate any build-up on the well bore, said
Richard L. Clampitt, of Drilling Specialities, a supplier
of mud additives.
' 'Without lubricating mud, the drill bit would burn itself out before reaching oil," he said.

can

different ways, has been a favorite ol
comedians for years, but residents SollY It's a great city.
(AP Laserphoto,.

SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) - It's been more than
Duci recalls addressing a Kiwanis meeting in Alaska
haH a century since comedian George Bums played once. No one could spell Schenectady, he said, but
Proctor's Theatre here as a young vaudevillian. Burns everyone had heard of GE. If there is a single element
is still around. So is Proctor's Theater. And so are the tliat ties Schenectady to a place in history, it is General
jokes about Schenectady.
Electric - "the plant," or "the shop" - to the nearly
Schenectadians are used to the jokes. They have a 23,000 who work there. It made Schenectady the heart
well-developed sense of seD-deprecation from more of an industry that changed the nation's way of living.
than 300 years of living in a city that has written itseU a
It was here along the Erie Canal in 1886 that Thomas
place in history, and then listed it under a name no one Edison bought a pair of abandoned buildings in which
can spell and few can pronounce.
to build the generators that were to power his recently
In one of his half-dozen books on Schenectady, local invented light bulb and scores of other appliances.
historian Larry Hart claims at least 78 different
Schenectady quickly got over its initial resentment
spellings for the city's name dating to 1661, when Arent of Edison's "intrusion." New York City business
Van Curler, a Dutch fur trader, brought a group of tycoons were not so welcoming.
families to settle a wilderness outpost along the
In 1892, when financier J .P. Morgan engineered the
Mohawk River.
merger of the Ediison General Electric Co. with a comThe derivation of the word "Schenectady" is as dif- peting Massachusetts firm, Edison's name was conficult to pin down as the speUing. Choose between the spicuously absent from the new corporate name - the
Dutch · phrase "Schoonachtendeel," meaning a General Electric Co.
beautiful and valuable piece of land, and the Indian
GE pioneered the idea of corporate research, putting
"Schaghnecthatie," referring to the land beyond the scientists on the payroll to do nothing but experiment
pine plains. There are countless other variations.
and create. Such an environment attracted the hunSome comedians insist that the name is an Indian chbacked mathematical genius, Charles Steinmetz,
phrase meaning "end of the trail." Mayor Frank Duci and brought other GE scientists Nobel prizes in 1940
disagrees.
and 1973.
"I think they just make fWI of us because it's so hard
Few Schenectadians today could explain exactly
to spell the name," said Duci, who treats Schenectady what Steinmetz did to earn the admiration of the
jokes like ethnic jokes- he tolerates them but doesn't world's scientific conununity, aside fran his extell them.
periments in manmade lightning and alternating
In 1!117, Duci chided President Jimniy Carter in a let- current. But Steinmetz had 195 scientific patents to his
ter for Carter's joking reference to Schenectady as the credit and was eulogized by Edison when he died in
city tbat was burned in the film "Gone With The 1923.
Wind," which had just been shown on network
Some people say Schenectady's best years are
television.
behind it, that the city's "Golden Age," begun in the
Carter's effort to have a laugh on Northerners- and heady days of Edison, peaked in the 1930s when the
put Schenectady rather than Atlanta in flames- is un- population swelled to nearly 100,000.
derstandable. He was stationed here as a young naval · Much of the city 's growth came during the adofficer in the 19li0s, learning nuclear engineering. He ministration of Socialist Mayor George Lunn, who seronce told a reporter that he'd never seen so much snow ved three terms in the second decade of this century.
in his life.
Before he broke with the Socialists in 1916, Lunn
For the record, Schenectady hasn't been burnlld to initiated a number of "radical" projects that remain in
the groWld since 1690, when a raiding party of French one form or another today- a vast parks system, city
soldiers and Indians made their · way down from garbage collection and free medical and dental care
Canada to avenge a British foray on Montreal. They for children.
were bound for Albany, but the weather was so bitterly
Although Duci talks of the city's future - parcold that they stopped at Schenectady and burned it in- ticularly the rebirth of its long-eroded downtown
stead.
business district - the past is never far frilin his mind.
Several U.S. presidents other than Carter have
"We're working on a sesquicentennial cele'&gt;ration
known Schenectady. George Washington slept here;
for August," he said, showing off a button with a pic-j
Chester Arthur was raised and educated here; Ronald ture of an ancient train . This is the I50th anniversary&lt;&gt;!'}
Reagan legitimized his nickname -"Dutch" hete when the "P.Witt Clinton,'' the nation's first stea91
he was made a Patroon - an honorary. Schenectadian locomotive in regular service. It ran from Alba'ly, the
- during an appearance as a spokesrii'an for General state capital, to Schenectady.
Electric Co.

7700
6600
'

--'-

,,

~100

Hall admired the Ercoupe airPlane. He was drawn to
i~ bubble canopy, twin tails and modem look. His hair
Is graying naw, but he.finally owns an Ercoupe,
"When I decided to go buy a plane about'four years
ago, I thought abOut~ one. I'd always Ilk~ the loolts
of this ~ I was a kld," said Hall, an industrial
design professor at Bowling Green State University.
tbe tiny Ercoupe, a two-seat plane first produced In
1938,, e~: . Ab9111 6,000 were built •by four . co~
panies frllm 1938 until11168. Between 3,000 and 3,500 still
~lten!d, HaU said.
··
weekend, 12$ . planes and 300 people · are
·at the Wood COunty Airport for the seventh
Ercollpe en~ta. tbey will bilkn.nona" ~ about their planes, swap Ups on
and talk ;flth the man who

.
'
far ahead of its time. Rememuer, it first went into
production in 1938 and is as modern as anything flying
today.
"When they sat down and started thinking about it in
1!133-34, they talked about designing a nice, safe airplane: The whole engineering concept was way ahead
of its time. It was designed for safety and low-time
pilots. It is easy to fly. People soloed in them in about
haU or Jess of the normal amount of time."
That ease of flight caused the lltUe plane a few

problems. .
"Some pilots thoughtit was just, well, too easy to fly.

There wasn't enough challenge in it," he said. "In-

structors didn't like it because people lelirned so
quickly, they spent less time getting licenses and spent
Jess money.
'
· "But that's really one of its beauties. It's a low and
slow and not-in-any-hurry airplane. It's fun.."
·
Hall's pale yellow Ercoupe today will bring twice the
. $3,000-hepaldfor It; The aircraft Is so popular, resale is
easy. The little planes dot airports across the coun. tryside.
. .
. "Stop at almost any li~e field in the country," he

said. "You'll find one or twO~"
~rcoupe pil!)ts, In addl~oil~

.m still find you'ng!ten

~llppr1!8ches with wllle eyesand~ons,

,
''It'a been out of pi'uductlun for a Jmg time, b¥t
jJeople still wut to .!mow 'WIIa\ It Is,'~ Hall said, IOOklnJ
at hia own plane and pattl!'g
·'
. . ill wlilg:.

�I '

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh1o-Point ~leasa nt,

Page-D -2- The sunday Times-Sentinel

w. va.

JulyS, 1911-~

~~~:===~============~====~~====~~==~==~~==~====~~=,

Juvenile crime mystifies police, JUdges
Ohio's senous crimes for 1977 and
1976 were attnbuted to juveniles, according to the office of criminal
JUStice services m the Ohio Depart·
meht of Economic and Commuruty
Development.
Natwnally, almost five of every
I ,000 seriOus crunes m 1979 were
cornrrutted by juvemles, accordmg
to the National Center for Juvemle
Jusbce In Pittsburgh. Tbat f1gure
jumped from just over four per 1,000
m 1978, satd Howard Snyder, semor
soc1a l researcher for the center
"Sornellmes, the only thmg you
can do ts walt until these ktds are 18
or 19 and they develop some sense of
responstbtltty that they can't hurt
themselves or hurt others wtthout
takmg the responstblltty for tl ," sa td
John Howley, a probatwn off1cer m
the Cuyahoga County Juvemle Court
for the last 10 years
R1chard Isralowitz, direct or of the
human services destgn labura tory a t
Case Western Reserve UmversJty,

ClEVELAND (AP) - Police who
arrest them, J4118es who sentence
them and probation officers who
counsel them are mystified by the
mcreasmg number of ser1ous
juvemle offenders - even as the
nation's youth populatwn declmes.
This IS not the runaway , prankster
or school-skipper Th1s 1s the k1d who
robs a 92-year-old woman on a
walker of her grocery mane), shoots
h1s younger siSter over what to eat
for lunch or ktlls hts best fnend and
stuffs the body down a sewer to get
nd of evtdence
In OhJO, sta tJstJcs based on arrest
rahos between ad ults and JUVemles
show that In 1979, 13 6 percent of all
the ;'late's hom1c1des, forcible
rapes, aggravated rob ben es and
assa ul ts were conllmtted by youths
between 12 and 19
In 1976, the same cornpanson
sh01•ed 14 2 percent of se n ous cnme
\\as attnbuted to yout h And 13 percent and 13 2 percent respecll\ely of

JulyS, 1981.

..

'

' cNJd,

kids

)t

Dusty repori offers feelings of nostalgia
WASHINGTON (API - A dusty try as well as for di.strtbullon under
cop) of a government report tssued vanous reh e f and nutntton
4() yea rs ago may offer some feelings
programs m the Umted States," the
of nostalgia for those who remember reportsa1d
whattt was like on the Independence
As the Umted States' defense m
Day pnor t o Amenca 's entry mto dustnes rolled mto gear, the h1gher
Wor\!1 War II
wages pulled thousands and later
Th~ report was tss ued by the
rmlhons of workers from farms and
ElU'!"eau of Agncultural Econo011cs, small towns The effect was begm
an agency of the Agnculture Depart
mng to be felt m the summer of 1941
ment It was a 24·page leaflet of sor- but had not yet reached a cntteal
ts, pnnted on blue paper
stage
Much of the world had been at war
The department's Agncultural
smce the autwllll of 1939, and the Marketmg Serv1ce, the report satd,
Umted States was sendmg atd to noted that " m the past, farmers
Bntam, mcludmg mountams of food have found 11 poss1b!e, m the face of
commodittes
reductiOns m the supply of farm
" Increased employment anstng labor and mcreasmg wage rates, to
largely from the defense and atd to
cut productwn costs by workmg
Br1tam efforts and wtdespread In - longer hours and by calling upon ad·
creases m wage rates have resulted ditwnal members of thetr famlltes"
m a substantia l r1se m conswner to take over work prevwusly done by
htred labor
buymg power," the report satd
Thts mcrease Will likely be
'Apparently , the curtatlment m
mamfested most m purchases of the labor supply this season has not
non-durable goods such as food and made tt necessary to w1thdraw an
clothing smce the produclton of unusual number of children from
durable c ons umer goods ts bemg school to asstst wtth the sprmg plan·
lumted by the needs for natwnal tmg," 1! sa1d
defense"
Pnces of commodtbes at the farm
One example, 11 noted The had rtsen an average 25 percent sm
automobile mdustry agreed to ce the war began m Europe and m
produce 20 percent fewer 1942 011d 1941 were up much more than
models tha n 1941 models
producbon costs . Those went up
"The de partme nt has been buymg abuut 5 percent smce the war began,
large quant1hes of food products of the report satd
the ktnd needed by Grea t Bntam,
'Cash farm m come ts expected
presumably for export to tha t coun
dunng the next few months to con·

.

'

'

Classifieds
Announcements

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...
Get lil a Co Area Code

614

Me1gs Co. Area Code

614
992- Middleport

&lt;146- Galllpohs
367- Cheshtre
388- VInton
24S- Rio Grande
379- Wa I nut D1st
2S6- Guyan D1st
643- Arabta Dtst

Turn your llvtng room 1nto
a greenhouse, poss1ble to
encrease all plant produc
han 91% Free report Box
83, Gall1polts Ferry,WVA

25515
July 1tth, 7 30, teatunng
'The Re storat1ons'
Cleland Greenhouse IS now
Vegetable plants,
open
tomato plants, beddmg
plants, pots and hangmg
bas kets
Geraldine
Cleland , Rac1ne, Ohro
PAY

h1ghest prtces
po,;sib,le for gold and Sliver
1ewelry, etc

I cnnt·;;r, E Burkett Barber
ATTENTION LADIES!'!
Help pay oft those un

In Me•gs County

wanted
btlls worktng
eventngs from 7 30 to 10 30
p m as a fashton styhst

992-2156

Earn $8 00 to $10 00 per

In Mason County

hour prof1t
Ideal for
homemaker w1th tamtly

675-1333
__ __,P
c.-ubhC NOtiCe
that on Satu rday July lllh

at

19!:1 1

10 00

a m a publiC

sale will be held at 105
Un10n A ven ue Pomeroy
Oh •O to se ll tor cash the
tolt ow 1n g co ll ateral to w1t
( I I 1979 Harley Oav1d
son, Sertal No 6ES4759H9
(11 1977 Plymouth -Sena l No HH29C7B 171318
(31 1976 Ford Gra nada Sena l No 6EBIF172223
The Farmers Bank and
Sav tn gs
Company
Pomerof. Oh1o, reserves
t he rtgh to b1 d at fh1 s sale
and to w•thdraw the above
vehtcles prror to sa le Fur
t her Tne Farmers Bank
and Sav1 ng s Company
reserves the rtght to ret ect
any or all b1ds subm 1tted
Further,
veh ICI€'5 are
sold tn the condttt on th ey
are 10 w1 th no expressed or
1mplted warrantres g rven
t/1;,'1,10 J TC

-"
•

'1

'

1 I I

'

LONELY

mv

1n memory of
be loved
son Dale Mohler on h1s bir

thday July 5th
Gone but not forgotten
Sadly m1ssed by Mother
and brothers and s1sters
In memory of Donald ( Son
ny) Folmer July -4, he
would have been 46 As he
gets older , so do we Dad
and Mom

• • •

" ' •

• I

Card of Thanks

.t wish to thank Dr. Sub·
'" '111ah, Dr Berklch, and Dr.
• ..:-.; : voctlawski for e successful

• ""!'

.surgery and the wonderful
care the nursing staff at
Holzer Medlcol Center
,gave me. Also to friends
·and neighbOrs who called
'Or MlJt cards. Herman Will
! :.1111 Georgia and Harley
• .Smith.

• '

ChriStian

Smgles
"h&gt;et Chnshan
stngles 1nyour area. Write
Southern Christian Stngles

Club, PO Box 1823, Sum
merv111e. SC 29483 or calli
803 871 98SO, 2• hours
PIANO Lessons Lucy Jane
Bulme r Hartford , WV 882
2395
Turn your liv.ng room mto

a greenhouse, possible to
Increase all plant produc-

Announcements

3

SWEEPER

and

sewmg

tiOn 91 per cent. Free
report Box 83, Gallipolis
Ferry, WV

machtne repair , parts, and

supplies.

P1ck up and

dellverv .

Dav•s Vacuum

Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd Call
ol-46 0294
NEW GARAGE OPENING

.................... .. . .
•

Call992 3941 from 9 6

l._____:l.::
n Memonam

PVBltC NOfi CE
Not. ce 1S hereby Q 1Ven

Automattc transmissions

and all sorts of mechonlcal
repair

and

major

and

minor auto bodY repair
See James Smith or Tom
Masters or call ~- 7757 .
City Cab, office 39 State St.
Gallipolis. open 5 30 1111
11· JOPM 7 days. ~-0.&amp;51 .
Karen's Beauty Saloon Is
open Located on
Gallla St., Crown City, OH.
Call for appointment 256·
1642
now

ANY PERSON who has
anythtng to gtve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad tn th1S
column There will be no
charge to the advert1ser

lflt\t~m'fl ~THATSCR•MBLEDWOADGAE

~

1..9 ~~ ®

byHenriAmoldanfBoblee

UnscramDie these tour Jumbles,

one tener to each SQuare \o form
foo r 01d1nary words

KIMPS

tJ I

5 tong hatred ktttens to
good home see Potty after

CASH
gold . anything marked
1110K, 14K, IlK (class
rmgs, dental), silver
co.ns or sterling Bring
to Tope Furn. Ask tor
Tom. Top prices everyday! Or see MTS Coins,
6:3D-8: 30Thurs. Eve.

2 Pet rabb1ts 1 whtte, 1
stamese. 2 8 week old

KIND OFA
Tl ME PI D "THE 8\JL.L.

K1ttens one grey &amp; wh1te
female, on tiger male to

HAVE IN THE
CHII-JA IS-HOP'!'

gOOd home Callol-46 9831
lr.sh Sef1er, one 1/2 lnsh
Setter !black). Call ol-46
7154

tiMLYRGj

] rr

COLLIE and Coonhound
Pupp1es '1'12 2770
Ten week old red male k1l·
ten, long ha.r 8 year old
female beagle, runs rabbits
gOOd, 675 6145 after 4 30
675·44-1•.
5 K1ttens. Phone 304 882
2'107

Now arrange the Qrcled lelerl 10

form lhe SIJf'Pt'be ,_.. u IIUO'
gested by the llbowt cartoon

Print answer here
Ye&gt;~e•O•y s

KI I I I I I I

(~Motldly)

I JumOJos ABOUT
-

)I

RODEO HAWIWI TANIWI
Vou should be lhlo lypelt,...- to
become t geotogiii- I)()WIH0£AHTH

t-;::::;:~:;:;;~;;::=1[:==:;:;:::::;;::;::::=~
6

Lost and Found

7

Yo rei Slle

LOST . PTO shaftfor baler,

FAMILY Yard Sale, July
1h mile west of Harrison10, Riverside Dr .,
Pupp1es part beagle, 6 VIlle at Cemetery. Call 742 Cheshire.
Anllques,
weeks old 675 3637
30.&amp;5
clothing, toys, gas stove,
B R suite, bike, lots of misc .
Free to nice home, 4 babv LOST·young female dog, Follow signs
k 1ttens, e weeks old, sec- port Collie, part Shepherd.
tional couch Phone 675 Phone304·6751761.
2.7•.
Cocker sponlel, red and
Part German shepherd, white, no collar, lost
pert sheepdog, 9 weeks old, probably in Point Pleasant
border collie. 882 2416
to Hickory Chopel, Call 675
2267.
5
Happy Ads
Found male beagle d&lt;!ll
Picking up eesy·play organ
Salt Creek . Pnone 67$
in your area Low down
pll'fment, low monthly
payment Credit manager
collect, 614 59:1·5122.
7
YardSole

AliCI10N SERVICE
,kennetllt Swain, Auct.

c...,... Tlllrd &amp; Olive

"" interesting slam

•u

NORTH

.AJ 8S
tKQ7U
• A 10

WEST

.

•Ju 1 s

.A.UCTION
JULY 9, 1981
10:00 A.M.

son.ll property , toco1ted on ~t ..,, S54, two ,1 nd one
h.l ll m11e~ tram c l'lesh~rc , Ohro
•DrnettP se t wtth t1 chatr s automat1c washer antique
dr0sscr WIT h marble rnlao; , 'l l1v1nq room ch a 1r s,
pi&lt;Utorrn r ocke r s, fl owcr st ands, kerosene t c:~ mp s,
SPvrral odd chcurs wood burntng stove. dtshes and
cook•no utensils book s carpet and rvos clectr ,c
-bl&lt;lnkcts drop tea t tabl e, toy s, 011 llty cab 1nc t u t ll tty
~ t ilnd ~ p c llv1 nq room su tte cane ba ck rocker p1 c
tur cs 'l step t~ bl cs . 'I po le lamps, hand tool s. tu c t 011
.;; to ve several c locks maple bookcase b ed 1q ueen
S•leJ drapes other bcdd1ng cedar o un rack II ower
pots Many other art1cles not II Sff'cl
r 1n ,ltle.., 1 rtlut u wner
I I 11 ( h O..,('r;t('d
1 crrn \ 1 .1.-, h
rot .. f",pom.thlc tor ,t.rr1dent~;

Pass

HOMEMAKERS!! Earn
extra cash I Work your own
hours MERRI -MAC needs
several dealers In your
area to offer our line of
toys, gilts and home decor
on the party No
plan.
commissions
in•e1&lt;tn10n1t, delivering, or
collecting, Car and phone
needed Cetltotlfree 1-800553 91117, or write :MERRI·

':======~==~========::~
:l~t•ef~m~s
-

AUCTION

Yard Sale

Four family yard sale . July
8·9·10 . Riverside Dr.,
Cheshire. Antiques. gas
stove, bedroom suite,
bicycle, clothing, toys,
mise items . Follow signs.

Yard Sale Mon. thru
Friday .9:30 to $:00, 102
Garfield; Gallipolis. Air
cond, baby clothes.
dlshes,and jeans

•
:
·
:

Garage Sale Lots of girl's
.
clothes. saturday only
Rain or shine. 2918 An·
;
nlston Drive, end of 30th St.
,
Sponsored by Junior
:
Women's Club softball
.
- - ' - --_.:..
'
team
Yard Sale Frt., Sat., arid •
s Family Rummage Sale Mon . Rain or shine, 10 tilt :
rain or sh1ne. 5 miles below ?? Halley residence, Mer· •
Eureka, next Tues.• Wed., cervllta. Mens, Mlinena, '
and Thurs. Baby turn, chlldrens clothing, toya,
dolls, clothes, and tonka books, &amp; etc.
toys.
9
wanted to_Buy
2 Family Yard Sale At t~e
home of Doris Harder, CASH for your dlamCIIICIS,
Ewington Ohio. July 8 9·10. gold and sll...,r, cia.. r!IIIS, :
9 :00·4 00.
wedding bane!~, 111,... IIICI,•
gold coin•, tawney ·
Yard sale, 810 South Jewelers, A22 Second Ave.,:•
Second, Middleport. July 2· Gallipolis, Ohlll. ·
D11 Bed, china cabinet,
uncen
Phyfe table,
Cheirs; ClOthing, bedding,

------·

linens, toys,
dishes,knives,
sllver.stone,
Avon,
tools,

Pass

I NT
&gt;NT

7f

Pass Pus

Pass

Openmg lead tQ

By Oswal4 Jacoby
11114 Alaa Sotlllg
Here is a really mterest-

mg slam hand from the

Cavendish mvitation When

Sooth opened one diamond,
two North players blasted
1nto seven ln spite of f1ndmg
that South would only prOd..,. one ktng When South
passed orlgmally, North
became declarer at s11:
diamonlls
The play at seven - was

Rt 7, South end of Pomeroy, Ohto on Rt. 7.

Wooden Ice Boxes, Wood Ice Chester, 12 pane China
'Cabinet, Old Silver Coins, also Dollars. 2 Pie Sales,
Pr.mltlve Cupboards, 7ft. Walnut Organ, ex. n1ce;
Old Wash Starlds, oak; Old Pocket Watches, 6'12 It
Hall Tree. lid type, l&lt;ltchen Cabinets, oak, Oak
Dressers, HJ·Beds, oak; Set 6 wood Press-back

18

Wanted to Do

Old Stoves, Wtcker Baskets, Unusual W1cker,

Boy. Blades sharpened.
Call ol-46 .U25 alter 5 p.m.
GRJ LL C::OOK wanted Ap· Pick up and delivery
ply In person. CroW's Steak available

insured, phone 245-9234
Clean1ng by the week, mon
thor contractual

House, Pomeroy

FOR all your photography

St.,

JANITOR WORK Light
jan1tor work. Phone 446·
3595 or call ol-46·1278, call at·
ter 5

21
reasonable. 992·6022.

equipment sales &amp; serv1ce.

Owner wishes to retJre'
Inquire at Outdoor Equip·
ment Sales, Jet Rts 7 &amp; 35,
AUTOMOBILE
IN Gallipolis,
or phone ~ SURANCE been can · 3670for appointment
celled?
Lost
your
operotor's License? Phone
For sale Water Well
992·2143
Drilling BuSiness $20,000.
Insurance

13

01~

TelephOne Boxes and parts, Broad Ax, much , muc;h
more
Auctioneer: Bill James Auctloneertng
Pennsvtlle, ,Qtu~o
Phone: 1-614-557-3411

15

Lunch avallalile by Burger Chef
Owner: JIM Fl ELDS and Others
1·304·182-2711

For complete lnformaton

Schools Instruction

McNabb
classes

Call

675 6493

Must

sacrifice-Serious

Inquires

Ceramics New
now formlno only.

limited to 8. Call Now ~
1786 Sharon McNabb, Cer
tified Duncan 1nstructor.

time.

Couples

or

yours.Call wanda "Peck
304 675-6130

&amp; CBRe~lr

RON'S TV SERVICE
Specializing In Zenith

Money to Loan
22
FHA· VA Convent~al Home
Loans,

Columbus

First

Mortgage Co , 463 Second
Motorola Quazar Call I· Ave., GallipoliS, Dh, ~ 304·576 2398 or ol-46·2.&amp;54.
7172
House Calls Now servicing

auto. washer, small

electnc heater,

• dresser. range. 1 lot cherry wood boards, I lot
"' warnu1 boards, 1 lot cedar boards, new stove door, 5
bar tables, several dtfferent sizes storm windows &amp;
screens, several good car tires, new beer lights of
all kends, small fish aquarium, large concrete

want to do sewing &amp;
alterations. Call2ol5·9561.

flower pot
"
ANTIQUES
• ApplebUtter kettle, set of wooden planes, old wicker

Will do babysitting In my
home In Syracuse Good

7 rocker, old glass showcase, old pump organ, any

. type beer hghts. wooden washing mach1ne, wooden
buggy 1ack, copper kettle, se•eral old kerosene lan·

references, very reliable.

Phone '1'12-3110 or 949·2791.

terns. oval picture frame, old iron pots &amp; Skillets,

several old 1ugs, horse collar mJrror, app. 7- 10 gal
" mtlk cans, old rocking chair, old set of scales com·
plete, small and large wooden barr.els. 1- 19 gal.
· Iron kettles, lots of stone jugs, lots of old bottles tor
bottle collectors, buck saw, some old chairs, 2 nice
old kitchen cupboards with flower bins, seve•al
• railroad Insulators, set of brass hames, many,
many more It.ems too many to I1st

· TERMS : Cash or Positlvei.D.
Auettoneer Note : This ts a collectton of every type
of item Mr. Carter has collected through his
' bum ness in Gallipolis in the past several years.
.
• AUCTIONEER
Dan Sm1th
App. Lonnie E. Neal
949·2033
367-7101
Not responsible tor accidents or loss of property.

23

wanted to Do

18

Will do custom sawing.
North of Racine on Carmel
Rd . James R Parsons.
1

HAUL gravel, limestone,
coal, etc Dencll Dunlap
Phone675·5215.

'

Phone 304·576·2010

lieal estate

INCOME TAX AND AC
COUNTING SERVICE
Call 4•6·7068 for ap
pointment anytime

N 1ce 3 or 4 bedroom home
acre owner wtll help
With downpayment. Pr iced
reasonable at $29.000 or
$20,000 &amp; assume loan Of
$8,000 at only 81f~ pet m

'I•

POOl

PriVIleges,

$75,000

firm

Kyger Creek School

DISt rict. Shown by appt
only 367 7835

545,000

Call~

Gold

range &amp;
refrigerator.
Natural gas furnace, wood·

burner

Extra

G1veaw~y

kittens 8 weeks old, Call
.W..3074.

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

·,

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.
used

mobile homes and travel

trailers . TRISTATE
MOBILE HOMES CALL
446 7572

(Jim ElhottJ
Rl 93 North
Jackson, Oh1o

286·3752

Stnce 1959

dlst, LR , lg k1lchen, bath,
ut11ity room, attached
garage, Rodney V1llage,

No 2 Call ~ · 1358
For sale 3 bdr bnck I 1/ 2

--------------4oe
4 or 5 bdr

home tn ni ce

neighborhood, assumable
mortgage 8%, 3,000 sq It ,

Split level stone hom e on
acre lot, 4 m1les west of
Holzers, 11 rooms, 2 112
baths, fireplace , wood
burner, 2 car garage,
pr~ced

1n the 90's Call 256

1971

Schultz

Homestead

1981 14' W1de

12x60, wash &amp; dryer , new
carpet, com turn, set on
lot 6 in Qua t I Creek m Rod

ney, OH $8,750 00 245 5420
or 388 8349
1973 12x70, 3 Bdrm mob 1le
home $6,500 446 7697
Mobtle home for sate 62
model Greatlake Call AA6

1036
1973 Crown Haven, 14x65,
three bedroom, new car
pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x64,
two bedroom, new carpet

1972 Champ1on, 12x60, two

bedroom, new carpet 1976
Cameron,
12X60,
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/2, new

carpet 1970 PMC . 12x60,
two bedroom , new carpet,

B &amp; S Sales, Inc, 2nd and
Viand Street, Pt Pleasant
WV Phone 675 «24
1973

MANCHIN

12x65

mob1le home , set up 304

458 1812

room, newly remodeled kit
chen built tn Including dish
washer, basement w1th
work shop, 2 car garage
with work shop, large gar
den, 2 porches 548 Grant
St, Middleport $59,500
want1ng qu,cK sate to settle

Real Estate

call At Your
Le•sure
FmancJng avatlable
year protection pia
Large mventory

JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOMES
INC.
2110 Eastern Ave .
Phone 446· 3547
General

Auct•oneer
LIFE

Bro~er

INSURANCE

estate Call 614·384 3809 for
appointment. !Alter I PMI

428 Second Ave
Call 446·0552 Anyt1m e

famJIY room , I bath, k1t
chen
with
stove,
refrigerator,
tots
of
cabtnets, attached 2 car
garage w1th automat1c
door opener Large barn, 8
)( 12 ut11tty burld1ng Tup·

large

storage
or
business
bu1ld 1ng Chain link fence

Roy (Frank) R1ffle at 985

PrJced In low 30's 985·3560

4395 or 949·2801

Sale by owner. Remodeled
3 bedroom farm house Ap·

Mod1f 1ed

prox1mately
4 acres
Beauttful vtew of Oh10
Rtver, Long Bottom area

A-frame, three

bedrooms, two baths, car·

pet Spiral staJrs, mcular
stone fireplace. 8 acres

'1'12·7741

$34,900 Owner will help
fmance 985 4141

Piano tun1ng and repair,
Real Estate - General

Housing Headquarters

'

General

EAFOR
V I RG I L B. S R .• ~ A' 1 o•
216 E. Second Street

..

OFFICE
41416' 701!
•

PRICE REDUCED-- Very well kept ceoar ranch
home in one of Galli a County 's fmest subdivisions 3
bedrooms, 2 , full bathS, 2109 square fee\ of living
'lll:tace. fireplace,' free pool and clubhouse.
$69,500

Phone 1·(614)-992-3325

Bu y th1 s d uplex tor
a
1
on l y $2,500 00 down Owner f•nanCing at 12a.o Aslung
pnce $17,500 Current r ent at $140 per un1 f
BMR 389 - Owner t ransferred and has found a
home In hts new area, and now must sell th1s f1ne
four BR home Two fl.l !l baths, f1ne kitchen Carpet
throughout , heat pump, new patnt 1ns1de and out
See th1s one soon C1tv schools, Green Elementary .
BMR 396- New I1St1ng, L shaped f rame and brick
ranch Three BRs, 15x21 fam1ly room with bnck
ftreplace, butlt tn k1 tc hen, llxU d1ntng room There
1S much more to be sa1d for th1s fine home G1ve us a
ca ll for a pnvate show1ng Gallipolis schools, Green

Elementary. S60s
BMR 139 -- Two story horT).e m Gall1po11s pnced to
sell at only $29,900 Call for deta11s
BMR 390 - Owner says sell! Owner 1S wtlltng to
help any qualtf 1ed buyer with a low 1nterest land
contract so that they can buy 1hiS nice clean home
s1tuated on 13 acres of land Just nght for a radtng
horse or two. also enouqh room tor ratsing next
w 1nter's beet. Call now C1ty schools

. .

PRICE REDUCED -- New brlc~ and fudor 3 BR
ran~h has family room with fireplace. 1'14 baths, 2
car
garage. A real bargain
S55,000
•
&lt;
NICE TO COME HOME TO - Nice brlc'k &amp; frame
ranch With 3 bedrooms, family room with fireplace,
1 1495
beautiful carpe!, 2 car garage.

.

for Sale
PRICE S REDUCED

3 BDRM house, c 1tv school

pers Plains and Chester

Harvest

Mobtle Homes

32

03!10

water, w1th softener Home
heated by L P gas, or coal
and woodburner ac
comodat1on . Property is
five years old Other nice
features not menttoned.

new

c lose 1n 675 .f892

New 3 bdr house wtth
garage and full basement

peted laundry room, large
livtng room , kitchen w1th

Love your neighbor tune
your Plano Bill Ward ,
Wards Keyboard ol-46 4372 ,
GallipoliS.

REALTY

'

Estates, Club House and

teres! 2 baths, fully car
like

Modern 2 bedroom house,

House for sale by owner
Beauttful country home, 1
1;_. acres 3 bedrooms. large
livmg room With fireplace,

Homes for Sale

31

RD &amp; FULLER

ANTIQUE AUCTION
:t

Servtces

COMMERCIAL and m
dustrlal
photography
Phone ol-46 2909 or 446 7226
after4 p.m.

Real Estate

'

~. ·uruRDAY;~JULY' 'rl ..:. .10 A.M.:

Professional

kitchen, lg family rm , 2'12
baths, located In Tara

sed and bonded 1n Oh10, 6066
and West WV . Bud McGhee
Auction and Real Estate Large 2 story stone home,
Co Call for terms 446 0552 we111nsullated, w1th 3 large
or 446 0818
428 Second bedrooms, one full bath, 2
Ave, GalliPOliS, OH, 45631. 112 baths, formal d1n1ng

STARKS Tree Trtmming &amp;
ShrUb serv1ce. Insured

NOTICE

BY OWNER 4 Bdr spl1t
level, living room/ d1ntng
room comb1nat1on, eat-m

photos, wedd1ngs, and com

1n

dtV1dua1. Good Income,
bonus car and travel can be

Call Immediately

out of town on 160, $.U,500
Call 446·0494

In 1 day Call Ray Beagle
304 895 3841

lot, excellent con·

12 per cent Possible rental

424 2nd Ave .• Gallipolis,
Oh1o Passports, 1am1ly

WELL drilling, both rotary
&amp; cable tools, usually wells

lar~

with commltt to purchase
No tees. Write Bob Mur
phy , 433 South Firestone
Blv • Akron, Dh 44301

needs go to Tawney Stud1o,

Be a success in your spare

Radio TV

16

Charles Carter.
I( en more

Business

Opportunity
LAWN &amp; Garden power

one and half story oome on

New 1981.14' Wide

ce ntral air, full size
basement, double garage,
gas heat. Located 1 m1le

Complete Auct1on Serv1ce
stock redu ct•on close outs
estates farm equ1pment h
vestock real estate Licen·

House for sale, New Haven,

1971 Darlan 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
Haven, U x 65 with 8 • 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1912 Invader 1A x 70, 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B If• S
Seles, "lnc 2nd end Vlarld
SIS. PI Pleasanl, WV ..

dillon. F lve large rooms,
Immediate possession! 5 bath , basement and
bdr farm home on 8 rolling garage
Ful1y Insulated,
acres, large white house Inexpensive to heat or cool
with log cabin and 3 out S1tuated within one block
bUildings at Hillcrest, I from center of town
m i le south of VInton on Pr~ced $5,000 below ap·
Stole Rt 160 Old McGhee praised value See or ca ll
homestead . Land Contract Ged. Hester, 312 Seventh
25 per cent down 8 per cent St New Haven , W Va
interest or 10 per cent down Phone 882·21«

446 6325

merc.al photography.

1 1naneca1

petedp,2 barns, 379·2258 or
379·2343, alter 6PM

baths, 2 car garage, patiO
like new, c1ty school Phone

Free Est1mates, bonded,

Jackson

W1ll care for elderly 1n my
home .
Good
meals ,

Brass Pump, Old Brass Tire Gauge, 1 lot Old

Profess tonal
Services

vlced Specialtl1ng in Lawn

801

Situations Wanted
12
want someone to live in
with 2 elderly people Call
388·11490.

refinished; Low Boys, Oak Stands, H1gh Boys, mce
oak, Secretary , nice, bll Lamps, P1cture Frames.
Over 60 pieces Old Wedgewood China, 4 Oak Clocks,
Pocket K~ves , Old Pr.m1t1ve Boxes , cow Bells , Old
D1shes, d Rockers, Wellesley Chma, Oval Glass
Chma Ca lnet, 2 Sets Cha.rs, 6 T back also. Set of 6
Press back Chairs, Stone Jars and Jugs w1th
wnt.ng (Pomeroy, 0, Pennsylvania , Shinnston , W
va .. Parkersburg ; GallipoliS, Oh10 plus others),

Jac:&lt;Jby's

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

23

Chairs, refinished, MucH Advertisements, Latge

very pnmitive pi~ces, Oak Hoosier BtscuitCab1net .

made tile play

partner (one of tile great
players of that. or any day)
held back the kin&amp;· It only
gave M.A. a small !!lam, but
the lOp score belpecl him ODd
Met Appleyard, his partDer,
wtn the event

GALLIA Cleaning and
Rent A Ma1d serv1ce Inc ..

NEED someone to Install
carpet. Must have own
tools Call675·1371

Tool Boxes, primlt1ve, Iron Beds and others, Iron
Pots, Bean; 5'1&gt;X6'1&gt; It Wall Mirror, Set Old Stools,
Old Dough Mixer Box, Old Dough RaiSing Cabonet,

clubs mipt weD elect to
duck
It feU on dell eon u
recants bis partner, bat we,
or at least the older of us,
remember two .,.,.. wben
tbat particular swiadle
succeeded ODe time wu m
one of tile early Spiacolds
wheo Margaret Wacar of
Atlanta leil a queen ODd
broupt In tile grand slam
wheo LHO failed to cover
On tile otber 0CCU10!1 11
was the finals of a Muter's
pairS 1n the 1940's 1'lle late
M.A LilfltmaD of Mempllis

1-----------.. .-----------1

Dubuque, Iowa 52001

92 VINE ST., GALLIPOLIS
The tollowrng will be sold at Pubhc Auctton Owner,

Yard Sale

z•

Sf

As tile 1111f~t.e Sooth
esplalllod later. loe llacl that
pillS the cbaace that
West WJtll K u: z c.- K n of

D.J 's LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Neigh
borhood Rd, all makes ser·

MAC,

Antiques from 3 Estates. Plus much more.
• 10 1~0 A.M. SATURDAY, JULY 11,1981

Eul S..llt
Pass It
Pass 3+
Pass 4•
Pass ~•
PaSJ 6•

Nonl

Pus

Pau
Pasa

Opportunity Is yours just
tor the asking Ask your
Beeline stylist and she will
be happy to help you join
the Beeline world of
fashion and success. Phone
'1'12·3941 between the hours
of9 6.

' l h h V" Ill• ld' f 0 .. 0 t lll 'll H
r 1 r .ldtorct, f'o nrflonccr

.

W"l

GET VALUABLE training
as • young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier Phone
us right away and get on
the ellglblhty list at 992·
2156 or '1'12·2157

H.wmg !&gt;O ld my home . 1 w111 se ll the toltowmg per

PU~~IC
'

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: East

required . A P·
Circle Sales, P 0 .
Box 224-D, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418.

TH~RSDAY,

claDUIIy'l oce-10. nts play
...
come 1o - . . 11 £Ut
bold tile liilcJetoa jed:.

"' .QB542

eK

'sale, 3 or ,. bdrs., fully car-

..,. oilier clecluer leclllil
qaeeo . of clot. IAiword

SOVTH
.K7

• ~·~
tAJ862

ro $500 weekly doing
No

.,
.K

••oe1&amp;2

.KQ•
+IU

lbort
andHe- limply
for drew
cledarer
lranqJo and pla;,eclcloJIIJmJ's
ace of el..._ Tile tliJc
~ ..... loe llome.
AI be expl•lnel, be ooaJd
flad tile Pilll"om
ellber ....... .. loe llld poor c:lulac:a, ~
Juslooe.

ttac

EAST
•lot HI!

.QH

wanted Educational Sales
Representative for GA!IIa
County and surrounding
Sales experience
salary plus com·
Phone .W..&lt;4367 ask
1 for Mr. Tyler.
work

7-4-81

31
Ho~H for S•l•
31
Homes for Sole
5 ROOM house,. 64 OR RENT a!mostnew1•x
Chillicothe Rd , only $3,500 70, 3 bedroom, 1 'h baths,
Callol-46·-4038 or~ 1615.
slning on nice lot. ready to
move Into P~one 304-576·
NEW CABIN or small 2711
home, completely fur·
nlshe&lt;1, $3900. Call ~-03!10 . 5 ROOM house for sale
Call anytime 304·773 552A
House with acreage for

BMR 391 -

Just tn time for boating season, we are

offering a 2 bedroom 50x10 mobile home with river
frontage, located etthe edge ottown $12,900.

.

BMR 336 - With some TLC this one could be a
showplace. 2100 sq. It living space on nearly six
acres City schools

IN :roww ~ Lovely frame horne. garage, fenced In
lot, inclUdes furniture, gOOd rental propeoty , 1
LOCated' at 21119 Chestllut St. '
$28,000

BMR 339-F - You be the judge on the value Of this

•

older home and 30 acres near R10 Grande OWner

baths.

birch

bedrooms,

kitchen.

convection heat.

garages, full basement with faml
large landscaped lot overlookmg
7 Ask ing
$75,000.
.
PLAN YOUR FUTURE - 30 acres SUitable for sub
division T. P water by land and ni ce noce •taylng
well drained Excellent for a, builder, planner on
trailer park . Les than $2,000 00 per lot
ENORMOUS - - 9 rm brick home , central air and
heal, new sh1ng1e roof1 l'I:J ,b aths, garage with
storate over. Nice '\orner lot near schools and
shoj)s
r;
1.66 ACRES Building on tra11er lot West on Rt.
12• Drilled wella~d septic tank Wont only $6,500
BRAWD NEW Furnished 3 bedroom hOme at Five
Points. Eq~lpped kitchen, carpetmg and large lot.
Wan~ just $35,000
,&gt;53 ACRES OLIVE TWP. - Bottom land and lOIS Of
WOOdS tor hunjlng• 7 room house and several out·
buildings All minerals included Only $27,500
BUYING -ANO SELLING IS OUR SPECIAl fY .
OTHER SERVICES AVAILABLE .. SUCH AS
P~ANTING,
DIVIDING, CONSULTATION ,
FINANCING AND APPRAISING.

YARD SALE, clothing,
6
Lostand Found
quilts, antiques, depression
LOST mans gold bracelet glass, and misc. Items.
Juty 2 &amp; 3. Gallle, Oh, At.
in Gallipolis ar&amp;a. Villi pay ,23J,
~S:i:=:=::=:=::~
gold value for return. Call .
f
Wr3388.
ROGERS
Lost from Lincoln Heights:
PAWN &amp; COIN SHOP
full grown male black Irish
601 Main St .
Setter With White under
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va., Old
heck LISt ..., around
Meigs MIMI 1 and 2. If
state liquor store.
- n or f~nd, please call
'192·7063. Family pet.

j

$WAIN

BRIDGE

WANTeD · Lease men, to
leasae oil and gas properties, GAIIIa arid surroun·
ding counties. Inquire to
Great Bend Oil tnc. 269
Lower
River
Rd .,
Gallipolis. Ca!I.W.-&lt;1285.

Hit

SATURDAY, JQLY 11, 1981 - 11 A.M.

__

r

rJ

yellow kittens, 1 one 112 yr
old cahco cat Call388 8253

7

PullllcSa ..
.&amp; Auction
Neal!l Auction Hogsett,
WliA. Rt. 2. Every Set. 7:00
PM . (Consignments
taken), !will buy furniture)
Lonnie Neal367·7101 .

enythlnl for
anpllodJ ot our AOICtioll
lam or In your - For
lntormetlon end pickup
sorvlce call 25!;~947,
'
Sill Ewry Nfllnlay
Nftht at I p.m.
Wo

PUBLIC AUCTION

Yard Sale Mon., Tues.,
July 6&amp;7. Opposite road
side rest. upper Rt. 7 beside
Blue Willow Motel. It&gt;-?
Water ski, boating Items.
ceramics, clothilli&lt;..,!!IIIC.
Rain cancels ttll7111-om.

6, 62 L1ncoln St, Gallipolis

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

446-2342

Gtveaway

Songfest old Kyger Church,

Pomeroy
985-Chester
343- Portland
247-Letart Falls
949- Rac1ne
742- Rurtand
Mason Co. w. va .
Area Code 304
67s-Pt Pleasant
4S8-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
895- Leta r t
937- Buftalo

tn Calha Coun t y

4

I

HelpWinted
Overseas-Big money
120.000 to s.so.ooo plus
year. Call 1-716-$42·
Ext. 1483.

beginners
class
limited number
accepted.
beginning July 6th. Class
~~~~=~~=~==E=========~ Special

Junb~ 'limes- Jeutbrtl
3

W•ntecttoluy ,
SCA$HI
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE '
OR HOU$E FULL
COME TO
, 420LIVE&amp;SECOND
OR CALL
.u6·4n5
OPEN9T05

Wli8t

are honest with ourselves," Harris a kid who killed his best friend 81111 alllllbro!r away lhe ker.'
we
sa1d.
stuffed the body down the eewet aild Jahould -k to do Is sal. . ,the
" We've given youth the im- . ~cllerrybombsaftetlt. ,
Only II I last 1'11011, ~
pression that they will not be held
"Yeah, 1!!111 li.a pJeaqnt job all
Juvenile court,,:. Ms.
.,,,.._
' '
accountable for their acts," he said.
riglit," Howtey said.• .
.
.........
•
J
" We've told children their rights,
He said aloqg with the higher nwrl- ·
Her pG8ltlon, which she lju ·
but we haven't stressed the responlier of violent crimes by Y!)Uth, the OliWneil in several preaentatkins ,
, . sopliiilticatlon, of the crtminal 18 In- ai'ound l,he country, calb for llMl'Jy
stbiltties tbat go along "(ith them,"
For 16 years, Judge John F. cereasmg. ,
warning systems and counseling fer_·
Corrigan has been known as one of
"Wheri YO\I get them In a detention kids headed for trouble. She ealcla. ..
the tougher sentencers in Cuyahoga
home, they're s'o ~ted that
minimum 50 percent of all juftftue ••
County juvenile court. " We're get- they know ~w to llllini)l!llate you ... crilne could be erased with ~ "
ling more and more bind-overs now they talk for hours without laying social programs for jumliles 111,·
(to the adult court)," Corr~gan satd
anything or just smile the whole
trouble.
_
"I don't think crime among time. They're taught by their peers
Isralowill, who has studied ci'I!Jle-.
juveniles bas gone up, but there ts a
not to create an outburst for 'the
in schools extensively, fourM1 five •
greater percent of more vwlent man,"' he said.
llteas he feels w1IJ drastlcally Rduce ·
crunes.''
Betty WUiis Ruben is the newest serious juvenile ct'lme:
In the probation department, member of Cuyahoga County
-Prevention ratljer than criBis
Howley backs Corrigan's assertiOn Juvenile Court. She marvels at what management.
on OhiO's la rgest county.
she hears.
- Coordinate efforts between
' Rtght now, I'm dealin g WJth
"I went to one of the early orien- youth counseling and Juvenile bencases of a k1d who shot his father, a tation sessions and found that the ch.
k1d who beat the hell out of hts county detention home is used by
-Increase emotional support for
mother, a ktd who robbed a 92-year- some of the punps to recruit new the family of the troubled cblld.
old woman who was on a walker and girls. They want their girls sent '
- Improve record-keeping to aid
th e re
pertod1cally.
It ' s
in knowing the troubled child lietter.
stekenmg,"she said.
- Better monitoring of early warMs Ruben sa1d she doesn't agree mng signals, such as status offer18ell.
w1th what she sees as an effort by
Probation officer Howley is skepthe Reagan administration to instill tical of qwck solutions.
a conservative direction' all the way
"There's no one single answer,"
Hay, $7.98a ton and $69 .80
tinue substantially higher than m the
down to the juvenile justice system
he said. "Anyone who teUs you that
Oats, 34 cents a bushel and $2 01
like penod of 194()," tt satd
" The pendulum has swung back to they know how to deal with this is
Beef catUe, $8 52 per 100 pounds the position of ' let's put 'em in jaO
" Another winter wheat crop ts
etther a fool or an Idiot."
and$59.10.
bemg harvested - a crop that has
Hogs, $8 19 per 100 pounds and
been estunated at 698 mlllton
bushels (the 1981 wmter wheat $47.20.
Eggs, 20 1 cents and dozen and 57 1
estimate IS 2 01 btllion bushels) , the
fifth largest on record," the report cents.
sa1d
WAS!fiNGTON (AP)
The
Countmg wheat carried over from Agrtculture Department says tt
previOus harvests, the report noted plans to mcrease the federal m.
that the total U.S. supply was a demmty rates patd to swme
record of almost 1 3 billion bushels producers for destructton of their
for the 1941-42 marketing year. The animals to control the spread of
department's current estimate puts brucellosiS .
the US wheat supply for 1981-82 at
Paul Beeton, director of the
more than 3.6 billion bushels
naltonal brucellosts eradicalton ef·
Wtth pnces of farm conunoditles fort for the department's Animal
advancmg faster than productiOn and Plant Health Inspection Servtce
expenses, the agncultural panty sa1d the proposal would boost the
ratio m the summer of 1941 was maximum mdemnity to $50 from $25
around 90 percent, the highest m for regiStered, inbred or hybrtd
many years AI 100 percent, the m- breeding swme, a· j to $25 from $10
dicator would theore!tcally gtve far - for all other breea.ng swme
mers the same buymg power they
"The mcrease is needed to offer
had m 1910·14, pr1orto World War I
more eqmtable compensabon to
Comparaltvely, farm prtce s owners of affected swine and to enoverall last month averaged 62 per - courage owners to promptly
cent of panty
eliminate mfected breeding swme
Here are some of the pnces for and thereby reduce the spread of the
May 1941 as listed m the report com- disease~" hesa1d
pared to the latest compiled by the
Brucellosts IS a contagiOus, mdepartment :
fectious disease that afFects animals
Cotton, 11 .68 cents a pound m 1941 and humans. A cooperative state.
and 72.9 cents last month.
federal program to eradicate the
BATrLING JUVENILE CRIME- J1eUy WlllllltaiiN, e6i o1 '111e
Corn, 65.9 cents a bushel and $3.16
newest judges on CuyUop · CoUty'1 Juvealle bellcll, eoal .., IIlii
disease from cattle and swine is
Wheat, 79.4 cents a bushel and bemg caiTJed OJlt m each of the
society should try to 18lwage the eblld lint 111111 oaJy u a lui mort llaGidd
$3 67
states
they be sent to juvenile court.
sa1d violence in youth crimes can be
traced to alcohol use but more to the
school system. "Dellr!ll..~ency reflects social forces. The'kliOOrs~tem is
party to this. It promotes n9gative
expenences With regard tO attention
given for dehnquent ac ts,"
Isra!OWitz saul.
/
He said, ho""-v.cP( that deflmng
crimes tssubject torev1ew.
"For 1nstance, violence m the
school doesn't seem to be on the rtse
when you ftgure that yellmg m the
classroom ts constdered violent acllVlty m Georgta .. the same as
carrymg a gun m the classroom m
Cleveland is constdered vtolent,"
Isralowitz satd
Dtsc tphne
IS the
lackmg
mg redtent to solvmg most JUVemle
cnme, status and felony offenses,
says Cuyahoga County Juvemle
Judge Leodis Harr1s
" This is all me rely a reflectwn of
uur adult soc1ety It w1ll do us no
good to l~ ment our youth until we

r1 mes-Sentinel

Va.

Housing Heildquarters

must sell .
BMR S71 -- Rtl trlcted building lot In city SChOOl
diStrict. 0 64 of an acre. Cell now.
I
BMR JIO· F - Excellent farm or commercial property 100 acres more or less. Located near Rodney.
owner will cons1dert!nanclng for qualified buyer.
BMR 316 - Quiet country home on II:J acre !Of. Includes 20x20 barn with loft and partial basement
You will enjoy this one. $29,900.
BMR 392 -- Now IS ~our chance to live In town. for
Jess than $40,0QO. three bedroom
G.A.H..S.
·il · 1 -~ ., • •

�Pa

T1mes-sent1nel

JOHNSON'S

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS Real n1ce camPSite
on Raccoon Creek, all
tJtilittes available, $300.
down, owner wdl finance, 11""-call after 3 p.m, 256 - ~13

Mobile Home Brokers
Ph. 288-1144
Jackson, Ohio

Ph. 446·3547
Gallipolis,

1975 CAMERON 12x60
2 bedroom, was her &amp; dryer hookup, unfurniShed,
blocks, underp •nn.ng &amp; steps Exce l lent cond •t•on 1

42

44

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

8436.

new pam t '"and out, dryer hooKup, fue l 011 furna ce,
brand new breaker bo:x N 1ce beg1nner home •

JQ79 HO MMETTE 14' )(5t. ' ONLYS879S

REDUCED
'1 bedroom, front k1t chen w/ bay w1ndow. all gas. ha~
washer and dr yer hookup l1ke new . extra shaq:
home•

All UTIUTIES
BY owner, 3 apar tm ent
house on approx 1 acre.
L1ve 1n one, rent others to
make your payment Can
be converted sm g le home
(tty water , Will COnSider
land contract 675 1883 9 5
pm

145 ACRES 412 378 1804
100 X 110 Iof 304 882 2954 or
882 3162
36

Real Estate
Wanted

VACANT
LAND
WANTED - up lo 500
acres, must be under
SlOO per acre . STROUT
REALTY - 446·0008

'1 bedroom, from I•Vmg room w ; oay w 1ndow, total
elec tnc 19 ooo BTU -soLD 11oner. new 52 gal lon
water t ank, new carp_, .nroughout home Set up on
40 x:80 lot Can buy will! or w1thout lot Musl see to
apprec •ate•

'

1980 COMfv'l'lnr..r"": $ 11 ,400
L1ke new , 3 bedroom , SOLD ub, w1ndow a• r con
d •f•oner par t •ally furn.shed

1980 KINGSLEY 70 ' :.:14' ONLY S13,995
3 Bedroom roral e1ectr1c m•crowave, garden tub . 2
baths, 'l bay w.ndows . c•rcle k1tchen unfurn1shed does have k.dchen app!1anc es, carpet throughout
1977 ATLANTIC 60 x 12' ONLY SS995

2 bedroom washer and dry er hookup un t urn1shed
""' 'n clow rue hn s applldnu:'s new carpe Tt hrou ghou t
Ex ce ll ent

Looking to buy a Mobile Home or
sell your present one?
CALL 446-3547 NOW
LIST WITH US .

33

Real Estate -

General

f .4 1k.
nbOUI low pr •lf'S chec k
Th1 s one oul 16 acres
m 1 ott Un10n Aven ue .n
Po.ncroy ~ I H 000 Ap
prux•rnatcly
.l ~co
11111b le a : rC' S Land has
b e 4•n dorm~nr t or 50
y { ~rs
Al l
m•nc r al
r 1qt11s t.rnbf'r and coal
qo
wiTh
p r o pe rty
Avr ri! Qf' l a r m tand 111
OH t ~c c o r d • n Q 10 the
Rt"'.-l lt or s New s• sold tor
f\Cj.' t .A( t

Farm s lor Sale

55 acres, n1ne room house,
bar n. m•nerals, sec luded.
good nunttng Morn•ng Star
area $65.000 Add1t1onal
101 acres ava il ab le 949
2630
Must sell Leav 1ng sta te
Seven room , bath, all e lec
tr•c home Approx •mafel y
eleven acres Has a garage
and small pond $25,000 00
Ca l l 615 JIB&lt; or 615 1682 af
ter 3 00 p m
Rea l Estate - General

~ I

I ) I

per

~1(

rp

Where

w l\ f' r nn you buy 1,1 ncl ill
lr&gt;&lt;:.,&lt;&gt; Th,ln ~/00 pe r ~ c • c?
For more .nt or ma lton
c.-111 Jo hn Omln s Aoen
f Y lcllleSVII If' O H •1)4
u,/~1 or al lf'r '! 00 p m
clncl we ekend s C&lt;l l! Lf'C
\ll... 1nrf' 11)/..tW-,10

992 -2259
NEW LISTING
Rac •ne area farm - Ap
prox 80 acresland w•th
older home House has 4
bedrooms approx
50
acrf's t1llabl e land and
30
a c re s
t•mber
$41 000 00
NEW LISTING
38
acrC's pl us a newly
remod eled farm home
The 38 acres are all f en
ce d
H ou se has
4
bedrooms ll v 1ng d111 1ng
room , k •tchcn
ba th
storag e room 7 por
ches Large barn , po le
she d , pump house
Sec luded pr•vate and
peaceful ~45.000 00

Real Estate

'

Ii

·I
'I

i t m·2259
2
•

•

~

......

t

....

0

'
. '

,. AU

'

Ntce 2bdr unfurn house
Bu1lt · tn range , large back
yard, close to Bidwell
School Call256-1785

Real Estate

Ontu~

·

rrr~r

J1f2t

J1m owen &amp; Co. Inc_
REALTOR
906A East State St
Athens, Oh .
Ph. 594-3 543
A 1 Pomeroy 18 Ac m / 1
10 lawn, c •t y wa ter a nd
sPwP r Terrns ava •!able

A 2 Pomer oy 3 I ots on
Sl Rl 3Ja nd R t 7 Good
s i! e t or
bus•n es s
Property
ha s sm all
build•nq on .t now be•ng
rented
A 3 Me1gs
Co
In
Pomeroy II lots con
s1sl.ng of approx 3' -:~
acres Poss•ble owner
ilnanc 111g
A 14 149 Acre !arm •n
Me1gs Co 1 room hom e
and barns Lor ge ga r
den area pas tu re , t• m
b cr
and
wood e d
acreage $70s
Hob &amp; K 1tfy l andrum
696 1082
'"'alph or V tck1 e coe
797 ~ 09 6
t'&lt;l UI Perry- 7'1 7 2180
lc tl.l Ploghoft- 593 5244
\ ii~ l' Y NobiTC k- 797 -2157

3 BDRM HOME , 2 full size
balhs, lotal elec . W1lh wOOd
burner, 3 m1. south of city
$300, $ISO dep . You pay ulil
256 1456
For r ent two bed room
house'" city Carpeted, full
basement, adults, no pets.
Phone 446 0958

2 bdr

house, basement,
garage
Rose
Hill,
Pomeroy . Depos1t, lease,
required No pets $225 per
mo 614 678-2513.

One bedroom mobile home.
Apl
$195,
Air conditioned, all utilities Furnished
furnished. Outsl&lt;lrls Hen· utilitieS pd., adulls, 1 bdr.
derson S230 month Phone Call446-4416 after 3PM.
675·6730,
Furnished apt $160, 3 bdr .,
Trailer 2 bedroom, com· water paid, children OK
pletely furnished. Washer, 446 4416 after 3PM.
dryer and air condition,
p~rvate lot, ypper Mason.
Senior C1t1zens 1 bdr apt .,
References '
Required . rental
assistan ce
Phone 773·9123
ava•lable, dep. S200 Call
446·2745
3 bedroom tratler, Referen·
ces requ1red plus deposit, ApartmenTs for renl Call ·
Galllpglis ·Ferry
Phone 446·1578

SMALL furnished aparTment, no pets, references
required, 304·675·1365.

Real Estale

Pt. Pleasant, WV
675-6679

-·~--·

IF YOU HAVE BEEN LOOK IN&lt;; for a
comb1nat1on home and btJsmess op·
portunity, we have it I Located in down
town GallipoliS and zoned commercial,
but with residential use too NICe , neat
1,424 sq. ft . home w1th bUSiness btJ1Id1ng
•n rear. Owner will help fman ce, or
ftnance ent1re1y w1th 30% down
pavment This ts a qual tty ptece of real
estate. Let tJS $how 1t to you today•!
1 ACRE LOT located along Kemper
HoiiO'N Rd RtJral water available

$4,000 00
MOBILE HOME IN VINTON , has en
trance lot. 2 bedrooms, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths, with carport and covered porch
A II for $25.000.00

General

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCHER plus 78 ACRES of land in
Chesh.re TownshiP offers lots of good
hv1ng for your grow10g family Home 1S
1ust ltke new w1th 1438 SQ ft of livmg
area plus an attached garage. 2
spac•ous BR ' s, 2 baths, B•27 LR, 10x24
kttchen w1th refng , disp , DW, double
oven &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays tn
laundry Land •s mostly rolling pasture
land With approx 25 acres wooded Call
for appo1ntment

LETART, OH . - Bnck home, l'h bath, 3 BR's, har
dwood f loors, f1rep1ac e, clean, neat and ready for
you to move into Many ex tra s 10% Mort ca n be
assumed Ask 1ng $35,900
NEW HOME - Rt 554 Gall!a Co, spill entr:v,
spac.ous LR, a rc hway 1nto formal DR Kttchen
equ 1pped 3 BR and 2 baths ca rpeted throughout,
fu l l basement Cou ld have extra BR 's or f amily
room, ready tor Jrd bath •f {leeded Garage and
storage area Ca l l for appt S62,000
20 ACRES - On ta nd contract 10% down, owner to
he lp flnnnce Ask 1ng $13,000

RACINE - Lg 2 BR mob1l e hom e II BR 14&gt;161,
large ea t 1n k1tchen, many cupboards, covered front
pal•o. ca r-port. outbuild1ng Yours for only $22.000
39 ACRES - 3 BR hom e 3 miles off Rt 7 on Texas
Rd All m1neral rtghts Ask•ng$37,000
ACREAGE - ldx70 mobil e home Th1 s locat 1on has
shade tr ees, pond &amp; garage ASk1ng $16,000
CHESTER - 3 n•ce acres w1th shade &amp; tru•t tr ees
In sul at ed 3 B R home. garage, small barn Lots of'"
door l1 \11 ng space as welt as outdoor Asktng $58,900
3 ACRES -

In Ra c1 ne Surveyed Ask •ng$16,000

130 ACRES - (Old Durst Farm) close to Raven
swood Bndge All m 1neral rtghts Plenty of pasture
and woods
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Assoc. ate
PH 843-2075
V•rg•ma Hayman - As soc1ate
~H 985-4197
___ -- ~eal Estate

General

CANADAY

PRICE REDUCED TO ,59,500.00!! 10%
f1nancmg ava1lable L ·shaped ra nch, 3
BRs, 11h baths, LR wtth f•replace , tor
mal d1ning. equ.pped k1tchen , gas hea t,
corner lot
NEAR OAK HILL - 62 5 acre m/ 1,
located on co Rd 48, approx 1h tillable
and 1h woods, pond , spnngs $25,000,
ask.ng $1 ,000 down, 10% mt , 10 vrs. lo
pay
L·O-C-A-T-1-0-N - 620 4th Ave, 4 BR,
2lf2 baths, l~rge LR , formal dtnmg rm ,
complete k 1tchen Wtth dtSP, OW , com
pactor, refrigerator and range, 6
f•replaces. garage, new alummum
s1d1ng and storm w1ndows Shown by
appo•ntment only

REALTY

ROOM TO ROAM - ThiS lovely bnck
ranch offers tots of good liv.ng for yotJr
growtng tam11y 3 BR 's , 21/2 baths, large
kitchen &amp; LR, formal dinmg rm , 2
fireplaces, wood burning stove, cent
a•r, garage, full ba sement w1th famtly
rm , bar &amp; laundry Loc ated on approx
2 acres on State Route 554 between Por
ter &amp; Eno Pri ce d to sel l at $59,500

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCHER 78 ACRES of land in Cheshire
Townshtp offers lots of good living for
your growtng tam11y. Home 1S lUSt ltke
new with 1438 sQ. ft . of llvtng ,erea plus
an allached garage. 2 spaciOUS BR's, 2
baths. 18&gt;27 LR, 10x24 kitchen w1th
refng , disp , OW, double oven &amp; range,
washer &amp; dryer stays In laundry Land
ts mostly rolling pastureland with ap·
pro&gt; . 25 acres wooded Call for ap
po1ntment

lD

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
:.R EALTOR~ Susan Gilliam, Assoc. 245-5208
25 LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

JOHNS CREEK ROAD - Near Mer
cerv111e &amp; crown Cttv Mtnes, 1973 Duke
Crown Royal mobile home. 14'x65', 2
BR , wood burn•ng stove, flat lot with
well, bargain pnced . Call about thts
one.
IN THE CITY - Shellered by frees, flowers
shrubbery Den adn kitchen are full of sun from sun·
bu rs t w•ndow Cathedral ce11lng wth paddle cetltng
fa n Open statrs, f1replace 1n liv•ng room 3 BR, 2
ba ths, full basement
BeatJtlfully restored
throughout . an almost literary Quality ebout the
home The lot has nver frontage . $62,000
our IN rHE COUNrRv- Stock ed pond , horse
ba rn and corral , 16 acres of lovely land Bn ck r an
ch , 4 6 bedrooms, den . stone f•replac e, multipl e
woodbu rn er s Enttre!y t•n •shed basement has an ex
tr a k1tchen. recrea t1on room , bedroom, bath and
pnvare pal!o Qu•et decorat•ng, lush pat• o and deck
s 130.000

AN ABSOLU rt JOY ro SHOW' Sparklmg J;
bedrooms, 'l full baths, den, format dmtng Gourmet
k•t chcn Eye pleas1ng decor throtJghotJt Th e ex
ter •or •s a pretty ye llow surrounded by 1" acre
ve lvet green lawn Garden space, frutt trees Pat1o
2 ca r garage Cttv schools $49,900

D E LICH rFUL CAPE COD - Open s ta~Fway
graces front ent ra nce Formal dmmg , large LR, 3
BR s. 2 baths , f ull basement w1th firep lace, new
roof , alummum Sid ing, nat ura l gas f urnace On cor
ner lot •n c tt y $&lt;13,000 Ftrst ad
"HOME OF fHE WEEK " - Owner has gl'ven thtS
home tender lov •ng ca re and 1t shows 3 BR r anch
ha s large famtly room, fireplace, but It 1n book case
Eat 1n k1 tc hen wtth range and refrig Fenced back
yard Wtth bea ut•ful flowers, shrubbery and garden
Few m1les from Ctfy 543,500 FIRST AD'

BRAND NEW KING SIZE RANCH 1600 sq ft
11 v1 ng area plus full basement 3 BR. 2 full bath s,
kttch en has range, dishwasher, lg , enough for
fam•IY d1n1ng . Family room Deck You can choose
your favortte c4\"pet colors Assumable mortgage
$65,000.
0

RIVER VIEW S39,900 - Beaut1fulview of the OhtO
and only a f ew miles from ctty lmmactJiate br.ck
ranch. tully carpeted, large eat m k•t chen wtth
do,uble oven range, n• ce front porch and pat.o,
blacktop drtve, storage bUilding c.ty schools
101 ACREs - sao,ooo - Just minutes from the c.ty
M Odern ran ch home, hardwood floors, famtly room,
tull basem ent Cent aircond . Beautiful garden
area, tg strawberrv patch Goods barn, shed Horse
rtng (tty SChOOlS

lSI ACRES - 5109,900 - Cattle farm, approx 90
ac r es pasture, fenced Good barn, other out
bu•d.ngs, Tobacco base. Comtorlable 2 story farm
home 4 bedrooms, 2 full balhs, 6 rlliles from ·
Gallipolis C1ty Schools, 600' road frontage orr
blacklop road
,
0 . J. WHITE ROAO - $55,900 - Brick, colonial
ranch 3 BR , 2 full balhs. Fully equipped kitchen: tots
of cabinets, d1n1ng area Beautiful plush carpel . ~
Drapes, f~re place, 2 \ar garage. Pleas~nt country
surroundtngs

a.

~~~~e: :hC:;~~~a::Po~~~t:~1on u.s.
AR.EA - , Rio CenCherrv Ridge) iiPRrox . 75

~

~~~~:~~:~~~ OWneronmay
2 rds
•• county
help
flnao·
sellat$.400peracre. ,.

'

••

Secluded private trailer lot
In wooded area. Ideal for
that summer outdoors.
Contact Brown' s Trailer
Park, 992·33U.

51
TRAILER spaces for renl.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.
TRAILER space 3 miles
from town !unction 2 &amp; 62 a!
old Y, 675-3248

Equtpment for Rent

PRICE REDUCED on lh 1S 3 bedroom
home and 1 acre of land situated 11f7
mtles north of Gallipolis on Rt 160
Small barn 1n rear contains workshop
and garage, ideal location for fam11y .
Price reduced lo $59,500 00.

1819.

FOR LEASE
COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY
Mtddleporl, OH
Air Conditioned
2300 Sq_ Ft.
Office &amp; Sales Area
6,000 Sq. Fl. Slorage
Fenced In Yard Storage
Contact: Jim Thomas
992-6611

A REAL BUY IN VINTON 2·
bed room home Stluated along Rt 60,
F A furnace, SO'x249' lot, tdeal begtn·
ner home or ret1rement home for
115,000 00
LOOKING FOR A SMALL COTTAGE
between Gallipolis and Huntington? We
have a mce cottage located 1ust 3 m11es
below Eureka for only $18,500.00

COMMERCIAL BUILDING 1n down·
town Galltpolls, 3,795 sq ft . of floor
space, rear entrance from serv•ce
alley, also side door entrance. Rented
apartment on 2r1d floor. Jrd story
storage Call for more informat1on

LOOKING FOR A HOUSE TO RENT? GIVE US A CALL

WOO·D REALTY, INC.
32 Locust St.

For Lease

For lease- unfurn large 3
bdr apl. 2nd floor, $250 per
mo. Call 446-4425 or 446-

3-BEDROOM, I _ year old modern
home , situated along Upper River Rd .•
Kyger
Creek
SchOol
D•slr~cl,
overlookmg the beaut1ful Oh10 R1ver
and pnced for only 545,000 00.

BUSINESS PROPERTY along Vine St,
also "as 2 bedroom apartment and a 1bedroom home '" rear All thee r entals
for only $38,500 00

S4
Misc. Merchandise
Brand new 10 spd . bike 1
monlh old, gd . cond , girls.
26 inch Call992-3&lt;30.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275
SOfas and chairs priced
from S27S to $695 Tables,
$38 and VP to $109. Hlde-abeds,$340., queen size, $390.
Recliners, $165., $295.,
Lamps from SIB. to $65 5
pc . di netles from $79., to
$365 7 pc , $189 and up
WOOd fable and 4 chairs,
S350 up to $495 Hulches,
$300. and $375. , maple or
pine finish Bedroom suites
Basselt Oak , S649' ,
Bassell Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete Wtth mattresses, S2SO. and up to
$350. Captain's beds, $275
complele. Baby beds, $89
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, $55. , firm, S65 .
and $75. Queen sets, Sl85 5
dr. chests, $49. 4 dr. chesls,
S42. Bed frames. $20.and
$25., 10 gun · Gun cablnels,
SJSO.. dinette chairs $20.
and $25 Tappan gas or
eleclric ranges, $295.
USED
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd
Open 9am 1o 7pm, Mon
thru Fri ,9am to5pm, Sat
«6·0322

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

51

Household Goods

Household Goods

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers ,
dryers,
refrigerators ,
ranges.
Skaggs
Ap ·
pllances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., 446·7398.
Bedroom suite, white and
gold, three cha~rs, slereo
with oul speakers, Phone
675·4335 or 675·5322.

one bunk bed $2S. No mal ·
lress. Phone 882-312~
Eleclrlc Stove. Phone 675
2474.

Light ms1d e
door «6·1216

Special Sale• Satell•te An·
tenna, BUY dtrect from
manfacturer,
180
TV
slallons Cal1602 ·622·2290

SWIMMING
POO LS,
PRE SEASON
SALE
$99900 INSTALLEO'!!
Above ground pool COM
PLETELY INSTALLEO
starting at S999.00. Pnce 1n
eludes pool, deck , fence,
ftlter, lmer, and in ·
stallation under normal
ground cond1t1on. Free
shop at home serv1ce Call
1 800·624·8511
Insulated storage building
Bx10 w1th 7ft ceiling Ideal
work shop $799 See these
at Kingsbury Home parts
store

8 ft pool table in good con
d1l1on. $150 992·5986
40 gat. cold water storage
tank 8400 BTU ai r con
dilioner 742 2524

ALL types of granite, mar
ble, and bronze memor•als
D1splay lot on Main St Pt
Pleasanl Gran1te Com
pany Phone675·5548

26' TROUTWOOD travel
tra1ter and camp s1te on
Roccon Creek Close Ia
OhiQ Rtver
SSOO down
Ownerwillflnance 614 256
1216

Misc. Merchandise

Portable TV Motorola 19'
B&amp;W, gOOd cond. «6·0~94.

INDUSTRIAL aluminum
door, 3ft 7 aluminum win·
dows 4x6 . 200 gal. gas lank
ca 11 388-8349 .
MOWERS,

S40 00 off I 1st on all push
mowers In stock. $60 00 off
on
all
self-propelled
mowers . One 8 HP rider for
$950. Outdoor EquipmenT
Sales Jet. Rts 7 &amp; 35,
Gallipolis, Ph. ~-3670 .

EASY credit avatlable now
to purchase ftJrniture,
televtsions. or appl1ances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave , 675· 1773.
Quasar video tape recorder
wilh camera and 5 tapes,
like new. Asking $800 Call
446 1805

12%wlllllnla 10 nance this charming
an lnground pool. J bedrooms,
bath, eat· •n kitchen, garage and full
basement. Not far from ctty limits '
Priced in theS40's.
1806

ranch.
kitchen, nalural gas
q~~:rage. Flat lot. Route 35.
Pilon poulbllltle5.

LOW DOWN PAYMENT -10% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - Planlz Subdlv., 3 or~
BR '~· 14X30 LR, 12M30 family • rm &amp;
much more. I mmedlate pGssesslon •
Call tor app(&gt;inlment.
·

EE MOM ' S EYES SHINE when she
sees the inside of this modern, clean 2
or J BR house Money saving well built
!~replace
II also has full basement
Welllnsutated 1 10 ac of land Garden
$35,000 It's yours.
~ 801

"''
RESI DENTIAl

LOCATED "IN CHESH,IAE ~ Own~r
tinan~lng, older 2 story home. Home •n
goOd cond•lon . 3 bedrboms, living room,
dlnlng .room . kitchen. balh, u!IIIIY and
' car~rt. Call fbrcompleledetails. ~p1

'

.

'

FARMS

EVANS Hf?IGHTS - ,Assume 9112%
Loan - NIce
story hoflle Oilers 5
rms., bath, basement, carport &amp; nat.
gas heat. Be the first to see this one.

w,

0

'

;360

LOOK AND SEE
What J miles from Rt 7 nea r Kyge r Creek P lant has
to offer you, 2 acre s more or les, 3 4 bedroom house
w1fh tam•IY room or F londa room bu11t •n cabtnets.
stove, refngerator. ga rbage d•sposal, freezer and
stove •n basement, washer &amp; dryer all Qoes More
furn •ture ava tl able at add1f1onal cost Low 50's ~ SOO
BRICK RANCH
Thr ee bedroom bn ck ranch w 1thtn walk1ng d1stance
to Hannan Trace schools Th 1s home has a large
ba ck yard, some frutt trees, builhn k1tchen and din·
lng room, carport, front and back porch and 1S
reasonably pnce d
~432
DON'T FENCE ME IN
G1ve me land, lots of land, 49 acres more or less w1th
clean 12'x70' mob1le home, large barn. with 20 A
1111able, approx 3500 lbs tobacco base and pond,
Bonus! Older 7 room house could be remodeled goes
w•th the property Li ve m one whtle you remodel the
other •f you w1sh Low 30s
11487
BACRES
W1th1n 10 mm dnve to downtown Gallipolis, Ctty
School System Has hookup for m obile home, Galli a
Rurat Water, electriC and sept1c t ank, n•fe fight on
pole, 200ft frontage on Graham Sc hool Rd T•mber
Bulld.ng Sites CALL NOW
N477
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Va can t l ots, n1ce s•ze bu1ld1ng lots wtth all utilities
ther e Lot s•z e 101 8 by 171 2 B etter get ' urn now
1454
CITY SCHOOLS
J bedroom ranch style home, large eat •n kttchen
•plus dtnmg area Spacious llvtng room Owner must
sell Pnced drasttcally low Low JOs
11482

.

WOW!

Look what you ca n ge t on a land contract at 9% tn
terest Own er redu ced the pnce $7,900 and 1s
anxtous to sell Th• s three bedroom spotless , a1r
cond•t•oned home has '1 bath s, liv •ng room , eat in
kttchen , laundry room and sew1ng room Metal
storage bu!idtng , hea ted garage, al l furn.ture in
eluded E very th•ng you need •n one purchase In
otv school d•stnct
f 407

2l0 rs l&gt;REEN ACRES
L ot #2 l, Stdewatk, 75 x l48
L ot 1123, Vacant68' fr ontage bv 148' depth Pnced to
se ll
1334·~:133
A HOME TO BE ENVIED
(About one m11e from Gallipolis
on Lower R1ver Road)
Charm and splendor are yours tn th•s spic and span
all bnck, three bedroom , two and one half bath
home w1th large l!v.ng room overlooking the Ohio
Rtver, famt ly room wtth beam cetllr\0 and a
fireplace, Flor•da room, two car heated garage with
electriC dnveway de •cer Many more extras. Call
for details
#41t
JUST WAITING FOR YOU
Lovely 3 bedroom bnck home 1n a very d~ir&amp;ble
location - close to Holzer Hospital This home has
formal entrance, a large l!vtng rpom, a nice larp
kitchen with formal dmino area and garage. This
home IS sllualed on a large well landscaped lot, with
chain link fenced 1n back yard Also nal gas heat
andcentralalr.
1418
ONLY $1 ,700.00
W~ed lot. almost an acre, 200' of road fronta,ge ,
SU1Iable for d~velopm enf or camping lot on D~vld
Road. Call for details
1438
DUTCH COLONIAL
Sl)ole, beauly, charm, comforl - all describes !hiS
hom.e, 4 BR , 2'1' batfls, equ,pped eal-ln kilchen,
!am,ly room wllh flrepJace, formal living and dintog room. YOu won'.t believe this home unless you
set! tl !or yoursel(. Make your appotntment ~ay ~'
walk tnlo the entrance of one of the most lovefY
hOmes in the area
~:

a

0

'

CABIN
30R4ROOMS
F•sh•ng, vacatton. or 2
bed room cabin located
ta c1ng Raccoon Creek
and Blue Lake N 1ce
large wooded lot Make
your l1fe a year around
vacat•on Call us now

REMODELED!
REMODELED!
Th•s
3
bedroom
alumtnum s•dmg hou se
and barn stttmg on a 2
acre more or less, ts
located m Oh 1o Town
sh,p Pnced $18,900 See
by appomtment only •
t 473

CHARMING TRI -LEVEL
1800 SQ . FT. PLUS
Large l 1v1ng room w1th fireplace , d•n•ng room with
sl!dmg doors to a concrete pat10 , mOdern eat· 1n k1f
chen , large recreat1on room on f1rst level Utility
room, 3 bedrooms W1th plenty of c loset space, 2'/r
baths, a•r cond•ttoned. storm doors and windows, 2
car f•mshed garage, level lot 100 x300', lots more.
Call for mfo
146S
BUY THIS HOME
FROM OWNER WITH $2,500 DOWN
And low .nterest rate on balance wtth owner, 2
bedroom cottage w11t11n 5 m 1nutes of S•lver Brtdoe
Shopping Plaza
N260
SPACIOUS OLDER HOME - $38,900
Large country st y le k•tchen w1th lots of cab.nets.
Three bedrooms, bath and large ltvtng room , level
yard on state route , ru ra l water and 3 well s Call for
your appo•ntment
1 484

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE20% down - Campsites In !he Wayne
Nat1onal Forest. 5 to B acre tracts
wooded land, good hunllng. Prices sta rr
al$3,500.

JACKSON COUNTY FA'RM -106 ac!es'
~L. ·approx. 30 A . 'tillable; • balance
pastu~e &amp; woods, nice ~ ,story 7 rm.
home, new 40xll0 meral barn, s;everal
oth,er blllldlngs, must sell Soon. Calf to•otlierdelalls.
• •
•,

PH. OFFia 446-769CJ

22 Colt atJto with .ngravmg
tor sale. Caii466-0.ot94

ATTENTION .
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches, and
coin collections. Call 614
167 3167 or 557 · ~11

SNAPPER

•
T , Leadingham, Realtor, Ph . HomeWi-9!13
• Phyllis Loveday, Phone 446-2230
• Eunice Niehm, Phone 446-1897
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446-3294
*Nor-ma Lea k.annott. Pbnro A u uu.-.

outs1de

Antiques

53

S4

or

LOG CABIN - Very unique, old hand
hewn log beams, sleeping loU, large
stone fireplace, modern barn, U acres
wOOds, located In !he Wayne Nalinal
Forest, 20% down.

0

Stove with mi crow•ve
oven. Ca II 367 7824

Space for Renl

49

YOU HAVE MADE $1,000.00 by wailing
for this (like new) mobile home
situated on 100'x200' lol near Tycoon
Lake Ideal weekender, permanent or
summer home . . pice redtJced to
$6,500 00 Better see this one today!!

1971 GMC 1500 series pick
up, fair cond . 1,200 lb
lobacco b'se Call388-8351.

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeep! ng apt.,
Park Central Holel.

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted
building lot. 1.22 acre, nice wooded set
ling, city schools $5,900.

OHIORIVERVIEW - Appro• Bacres
wooded land, n1ce building site, county
water, located on route 7 approx S mi
soulh of !own. $6,500

LOCATION PLUS QUALI'fY should
describe this lovely 3 BR br'Ja~ ranch.
Special features are a lange LR
dmmg rm., equipped kltchen; l'/2 baths,
laundry, quality c~r~t •.cenJ air &amp; an

PERFECT LOCATION for small
business or remodel and move •nto.
Located on the ma•n corner 1n
Ewmgton, lot ~ize . appro)( . 56'x 170'
Buy lh!S properly now for $20,000 00

START RAISING &amp; CRAlJNG, 132
acre pasture farm , mosttv rolling &amp;
h111y grassland wllh appro•. 10 A.
wooded, tots of spring~ llh story home
has 5 rms . &amp; balh, larJie barn, tobacco
base, fronh on 3 r011dsln Walnul Town·
Sh!O
CLAY TOWNSHIP - Raccoon Creel&lt;
fronTage, l'h slory home, 4 rms . &amp; bath
down, upslalrs unfinished, gOOd barn,
garage, shed, near Blue Lake, cily
schools, asking $42,500

TWO MILES OUT STATE R!JUTE 588
- Remodeled home mcludes 6 rms. and
bath, carport, stave, refrig , d•sh·
Washer, almost 2 acres of land and
pr1ced for quick sale

MORGAN TOWNSHIP Small but
nice, '2 BR home is only 2 yrs . old &amp;
clean as a pin . Perfect for a small
family, weekend retreat or hunting ·
lodge. Silualed on 36 acres of Morgan
Lane Rd.

2 BE DR ODM HOME IOCaled on Chesl·
nut St Level lot. near playground , ctty
services. Pnce Sl2,000.00.

FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION ThiS
lovely L·shaped ranch offers lots of
good liv10g tor your grow1ng famtly
Some of the finer features are a large
LR wtth WB fireplace, formal dmlng,
ntce modern kitchen wtth a range, 2
ovens and OW, den w•th WB fireplace, 3
BR , Ph batns, gas heat, part basement,
pat10, carport, and a large corner lot
CHESHIRE - ROUSH LANE - Lovely
3 BR ranch , 1'12 baths, 16x2.. LR wtth
WB f1repla ce, completely equipped kit
chen, lovely carpet throughout, full
basement (partly finished). nat gas
heat. cent atr, garage and pat10 .

INCOME PROPERTY - Rio Grande, 4
mobile homes, presently rented, water,
gas &amp; sewer avp11lable

FOR RENT - 2 bedroom apartment
ad1acent to golf course Refrig &amp; range
turntshed, adults only, no pels.

OWNER SAYS " SELL" thiS lovely 3
BR ranch Special fealures are 3 baths,
completely equ•pped kitchen. large
dm.ng rm , 44 ft. family rm w•th WB
f treplace, 2 car garage, rec rm , laun
dry, lots of landscaped, over 1 acre of
land in th e Crouse Beck Rd area
Green Grade School &amp; Gall1a Academy
H 1gh School Shown by appointment

COUNTRY SETTING ONLY 2 MILES
OUT - 2 BR 's, balh, LR , kitchen, full
basement &lt;partly ftn•shed w1th
f•replaceL carport, covered patto,
unattached garage w•th ce llar, lots of
trees and mature landsca pmg, large
garden 1.2 acres

INGALS ROAD - Approx 73 acres, 25
A . Raccoon Creek bottom land, balance
pasture &amp; woods Old house &amp; build•ngs

SLEEPING ROOMS for
rent, Gallla Holel446-9715.

Scaffold. Phone 675 61150.

General

For Sale : 1000 gallon
P LAST I C septic tanks
Slale approved . Phone 2865930. Jackson, Ohio.

' HAY FEVER' HOME
remedy, tradition for cen·
turles. II works. For com
plete Info and receipt send
today self addressed slam·
ped envelope plus Sl.OO to
S R A. Co., P 0 . Box 284,
GallipoliS, OH 45631.

Furnished Rooms

48

Equal Houseng
Opportunil)o

STROUT REAL TV

Hartford, 6 rooms and
bath, large garden spot
773-5312 after 4 PM .

45

Mobile
Home
Lots,
married couples only .
Phone 675-1076.

200 Second St.

675~

CENTRAL REALTY

- - - - ---,o--;

General --

MIDDLEPORT
Remodeled J bedroom
house Cl ose to shopp.ng
area
Very
n•ce 1
$18,500 00

CLOSE TO PARK AND
SCHOOLS - 2 bedroom
home with f1rep1a ce, l'h
baths,
level
lot
$24,900 .00.
REALTORS
: Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
•
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Rbger Turner 992· 5692
Dollie Turner 992·5692
• Jean·truuelt 949·2660

For rent new small 5 rm
bnck, ca rpet, ra nge, lg
front porc h over look1ng 0
R•ver, lawn mo . free You
pay S9 00 water. electric
mo Unfurntshed 15 min
from Gal l1pOI 1S, lower Rt
7 W ant m1ddle age couple
or lady , no children , $200
permo Call256 1198

3 BDRM , large familY
room, 446 4754 In Northup

TWIN RIVERS
TOWER
APARTMENTS
FOR THE ELDERLY
(tOW RENTifiG

General

SYRACUSE - Modern
ranch WT fh 3 bedrooms
half ba sement. l •v•ng,
kdchen. half
d •n mg
ba se m ent
At t ached
gar age $4.:1 ,000 00

REEDSVILLE - Move
1nto thiS n•ce 4 bedroom
ouse, 2 baths, fam• IY
and T v room , 1 acre
lot
Garage
a nd
work s hop
•n
full
basement $45,000 00

Furnished efficiency apt.
all utilities paid. Deposll
required . Phone 895-3450.

Office 4'46- 1066
Russell D. Wood-Realtor-Broker
Evenings 446-4618
Ken Morgan-Realtor-Broker
Evenings 446-0971
Mose Canterbury-Associate
Evenings 446-3408

42
Mob1le Homes
Houses for Rent
41
for Rent
house
for
One
or
two
Small
S•x room house $100 a
month , great for large working persons. deposit, Mob•le home, unfurnished
references Reply P 0 Box married
fa mol y 675 5104 or 675·5386
couple only
10, Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Phone 304 675·1016

Real Esta te -

pQMEROY,O .

3 bdr house $275 Very
n' ce. Rodney VIllage II
«6 4416 after 3PM

Re Listing 3 bdr , 1 1/ 2
bath , fully ca rpeted, wilh
garage, over looking Ohio
R•ver, on Rl 7. Call 367
7270 tn Kyger Creek School
d1 stn c t

1974 ELCONA 14'x 70 '

576

Unfurnished

2 bedtoom apartment &lt;;all
675-6020, 9:30 to s_

WOOD REALTY, INC.

INQ.UDfD

1972 CO NCORD 12 '&gt; 65 ONLY 17100
J bedroom. front l1vmg room w / npw car pet ga~
hea t, central a •r, f'lectr•c range and re fr1 gera tor
washer and dryer. Sk1rt 1ng and st eps. T•e downs 111
el uded Really n1 ce home 1

USED Mob1le Home
27 11

Apartment tor rent. Call
992·5908.

1 Maple baby bed &amp; mat
tress I high ctlolr, l ike
new. Call 446-2360.

APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES 675-4130. · FURNISHED APT. Centra t'a lr,l)eat and parking, 1
or 2adulll onfy. 446-0338.
Apertments. 675-5548.

Real Estale- General

1975 MEADOWBROOK 12 )(65' ONLY S6S95

2 bed room front d •n•ng room and k1tchen com
b•ned, newer carpet clea n ntee home Su per
shape 1

or 882-2566.

2bedroomfurnlshedapart·
ment for renl, $150 per
month plus utilities. $50
deposlf. No pel$. Located In
Racine . 949 2875 . Available
July a_

2 bedroom
Living room;
1 bedrOOfl'f apts. available
room, kilchen has
al R lverslde Apts. Equal t ..lna,P.. In Pomeroy CarOpportunity Housing. Call
Deposll required.
992-7721 .
. PIUs utilities. 992-6678.

4 rent unfurn. apt. all ar peled, $250 mo. SIOO ep,
ulilitles paid, no children,
no pels. Call ~-3&lt;137

1976 NEW MOON 14'x 65' S8100

2 bedroom front l1 111ng room . new gas furnace ( 1 yr
warranty) new e lectr•c water heater ( yr warran
ty). new front storm door and •ns •de door, new ca r
pe t 1n ba th and rear bedroom new commode new
re fngerator (l yr warranty \ new 11 v 1ng room
drapenes new sc r eens a ll water l1nes guaranteed,
turn1 shed (new l• v• ng room furn.tureJ or will sel l
unfurn•shed Super c lenn home, you've got to see t c
appr ec•ate

591~

-------~-r

0

2 bedroom , gas heat, NEW hot water t ank , fully ca r
pted, dryer hookup , Sk 1rt•ng and steps Rea l ly been
ca r ed for Ex tr a c lean H ave to see to be l1eve 1

1961 BUDDY 12'x 60' ONLY '5995

a.

1
2 bedroom furniShed
apartments. 992-5&lt;134 or 992·

1 bdr. apt In Rio Grande.
Call446·0157

2 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd
close to Rl 160, $4,000
Phone 446 0390

2 bedroom fully carpted I1V1ng room and bedrooms,

REGENCY APT . INC 2
bedroom,
kll chenfurnlshed, carpeted,
bil ls pertlally paid. $200
mo.
Ekcellent neigh ·
bOrhood, 675-6722 cir 675·
51114.

JACKSON ESTATES APT$. has 1 bdr. apl$. renl
slarltng at $152 per mo.
Call446·2745.

2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown 's Trailer Park . 992- 2 bdr. mobile home near
332~ .
Capt. D. Adults only, no
pets, sec. dep.,.and ret . Call
Two bedroom house trailer 446·2491 .
on Ashlon-Upland Road.
$150 plus utllllles and 2 bdr . mob1le home Call
damage deposit 3 miles 446·01611 .
from Rl. 2. 675-4088 .

Beaul1ful &amp; level lois, Fair · li'Oo..,.,_
field Church Rd , approved
stJb division, c1ty school,
rtJral water, 3 3/ 4 acres,
$10,000 1 1/ 4 acre $4,500
OWner w111 finance, 10
down 379-2196

1963 LIBERTY 10'x50'

1981

Apartment
lor Rent
bdr
.
.
apartment
I g. LR
3 bdr. trailer, S200mo. $100 2
2 bdr . mobile home at dep. furnished Phone 367- and Kitchen. Across from
Honda Shop no pets. Call
Evergreen . Cat I ~· 7032 .
0271 .
~·3937 or 367·0560.
60•20 mobile home for rent
Beaulllul mobile home
toone person. Call367 ·77&lt;13. with gar age on 1 acre 101. Second floor finished ef·
118 mile from North Gaflla flclency apl. Furnished,
For rent, HI• so 2 bedroom Hlgl\ School on Rt. 160. adults only' no pets 729 2nd
mobile home. Racine area. Completely furn ., Including Ave Gallipolis. Call ~·
992·5858.
washer and dryer . Call 388- 0957.
Mobile Homtl
for Rent

42

JS

July

w. va.

Pom e

RESI DENTIAl
K

I

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS 8EST
'
14 Acres More or Less (FrM Not Gas)
Slep into one of the cleanesT farms In ~n Ideal loca·
I&lt; on. Three gOOd sized bedrooms, large living room
sunny eal· In kitchen and blllh . TObacco bas&amp;, ga$
...,,...,,se and free gas all goes wllh 11. Large bam,
,m&lt;)re ehou•xfl•a"'.s.a~d chicken house. Call today for mJI'
l
2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
.. n
0

r:~~~~~~:~:~~t,~

.ctii!Me;

homo w1111
larlltt,...
lhade t111e.S;
Po/Ch,
lots nice
of fruit
and peach) . Grape arbOr, r•l!lberry
garden land, an lev~l . 1~ Green T~ ·
2 car garage, fuel on F.' A. IUtnll~!'
approx. 16'x2A'. Priced In the

*-

'

""'

0 0

i"
"'

�'

1981

D-6 Th!! Sunday Times:sentinel
54

MIK. I

56

mo.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
KENNEL, AKC
TERY
Chow Chow dogs, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Seal &amp; cream
point Hlmllayan &amp; White
Persian kittens. Call 446·
38« after 4 p.m .

we Accepl Food Slamps

WHILES LIPPL Y LASTS

R. C. COLA
Btl.

15

COLD

ATERMELONS

C

lndoor·outdoor

PEACHES

JACK FROST

4nd

SUGAR

TOMATOES
6-1.8.
BOX

\!

j

!

=:'ll f
ll:'..t!

!

S: ;;;;;;;;;L
3

II

-.#?

Cream

and

~

facilities.

sil ver

1976 Ponllac Grand Prix,
Exc:. c:ond., low mileage,
loaded with extras. Phone
444·7736.
67 Pontiac Fireblrd. Call
446· 1387 .

with

p

1973 Audl 4 cyl, new tires,

AKC

Culver t $2.35
ft ., up. Bridge,etc. Steel, 10
cents lb . up. Phone 925-0884.

and

Call 245·5050.

grooming.

Gordon

.i

setters,

English Cocker Spaniels.

Call4-46·4191 .

1976 Monte Carlo Landau.
Average miles, air , loaded.

$3,195. 247·2411, aflifr 4 p.m,

10 year POA Pony 55 1., in. ~~::::;;;::;~~~~~~~~~~:;~~~;::~~1
pleasure Huntseat contest I
44 7 yr. $600. 91f2 ft. Coach- 61
Farm Equipment
64
Hay &amp; Graii'l
man truck camper , air con- John Deere 24T baler with Straw, $1.25 bale on wagon,
d itioner. self contained. bale
kicker,
Massey fn barn Sl.SO . Butler
Very gOOd . $.4,500, 742-3019.
Ferguson hay rack, 3 point Hereford Farm , Lower
post hole digger 9 in ., all in River Rd ., Gallipolis. 2.56·
Three 2 year old colts, 1 good cond. Call 1-614·286· 1113 .
cart pony, cart, harness; 1 2394 or see Tom Jones near
6 year old mare. See Anc il Thurman, OH .
or Dan Burbridge, Route 2.
1

WEIGHT bench, like new,

Azaleas
Upright Yews
Maple Trees
Magnolia Trees
Many Others

614·446·9375 or 304·675·2930.
Ko ehler wh eat lights ,
leather dog collars. solid
brass name plates, leather
leads, breaking scents,
training scents, misc. dog
suppl ies. phone J0.4·67S-

2098 .

Albany , OH , 698·6372.
55

Bu ilding materials, bloc k,
brick , sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .

COMPLETE
CLOSEOUT.

586-9581.
57

Musical
Instruments

Call 245·5121.

BUY NOWI

Will sacrifice practically
new Lowery Piano . Pianist
moved. Phone 446-0541 .

Molding , interior - &amp; exterior doors. Odds &amp; Ends

~POMEROY

, •... LANDMARK

Shop, Rl.
992-61 73.

Middl e port

Gibson

ES

twin,

Pets for Sale

56
NEED severa l items of fur·
niture,
app l iances ,
televisions. Big discounts
f or quanity pur chase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675-1773 .

1,

Four 15,00 gallon tanks

AKC Bassett hounds pup·
pies, 2 males and two
.females. $150. each . 304·

Building Supplies

Crown

325, Fender
300, Guild

Echo box . Call 992·6137

AKC Reg istered Chow ·
Chow puppies. black . red
and be ige $400 . E xc ellent
ped igree . Phone 576-2511 or

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

58

762 ·2035.

7_1

Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each . Phone1 ·304·422·2781.

1981 Buick Regal LTO.,
black, 2dr .• red velour in·

One John Deere self
propelled combine 45 wiTh
10 and half ft . grain head.

Call245·5405.

Autos for Sale

terior, loaded, 8,000 miles.

Good condition $1500. 576·
2971 or 576·2186.
Wetmore 758
grinder
mixer, like new SJ700. 1200
bushel 2 guage wire corn
bin with 40 ft . moveable

SllOO .

track .

Call

1977 MGB red convertible,
gd . cond . Call 446·3939,
Galli pol is.

77 Trans Am near loan

value $3800. Call 4-46·1136
9AMioBPM.

12 YR . OLD, 1,000 lb. work.

horse, gentle, works single

or double . $550. Call 256·
6040 .

TR·6 1975 CLASSIC CON ·
VERTIBLE Low milage
body &amp; mechanics, in ex cellent condition . 245-9118,

BIG discounts for cash and
carry at Village F urniture

TWO dogs· Bloodhounds, l
male. l fema le, 304-882·

675·1874.

2605 Jackson Alienue. 675·
1773.

3311&gt;.

egg s, will deliver
down Rt . 2 to Poi nt
Pleasant 85 cents doz. once

Five Holstein heifers, 3
ready to freshen , two in
three week s. average about

a week. 895·3395.

1200 lbs or beller . Call Vin ·
ton 388 9329 .

0705.

Laying hens . Phone 304·

1977 Olds Slarfire hatch
back, AC , PS, PB, new

A K C Boxer puppies. 304

AIR

571&gt;·291 9.

CONDITIONERS

sale priced , all sizes 1n
st ock , expert installation
available . Villag e Fur ·
niture, 2605 Jack son A ve.,

304-675· 1773 .
LowesT prices on Bemco
bedding in the area . Call
for prices. Village Fur ·
nifure , 2605 Jac kson Ave.

675·1773.

$3 ,875.

e·rown

For Sale or Trade

THE FIS H TAN K and Pel

S9

Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave .

For Sal e of T'r ad e for 1&gt;75· 1926.
livestock 1969 Inter . 1600
series truck . Call 367-7533 .
Golden and Gigi pheasants,
Bantam chickens al so
female racoon. 304-895·

675·2063, Pl . Pleasanl . Out·
ch dwarf r~bits $10 .99,
Cana ry and Cockatiels.
Open 11 ·4.

AKC

3972.

Da c hshund.

Pomer anian

an

Poodle

pups 895 3958 .

Utility t r ailer, fa ctor y
bu ilt, 4 X 8ft bed. 1500 1b s,
like new . Phone 675·5280

Regi stered Blue Tic k pups.
Best blood line money can
buy Phone 458· 1503 .

POLLED Hereford
$350 . 304·895·3997.

Farm Equipment

61

New Holland, 451 Mower,
exc. cond., 2 yrs. old . CAll

446·6566 or 446· 4036.

bull

One 9 year Old trail horse.

Phone 303·675·2098.

1975 Ford L TO for sale,
Engine

new

overhauled,

paint iOb, 4 new tires. First
class shape. Will sell
reasonably . Phone 992·
5612.
1978 Ford Fairmont
stationwagon . P.S, P.B .•
air, AM· FM·8 track, 13,000.
985·4175.
Volkswagen ,

BodY

fair, runs good, extra stud-

1f6:1 Uft. GLASPAR 11\i
boat with 75 HP motor and
trailer, all accessories ex·
cept skis. S1500. Phone 31)4·
895·3472 after 6 p.m.

For · sale or trade, 1971
SUPttr' Beetle convertible,
1500 miles on motor S1700.
576-2720.

17' BOAT, 120 HP Inboard·
outbOard with trailer and
llfe. lackets. $1600 . 304·576·
2911 . Nice pleasure boat.

1974 Pontiac LeMans. ·675·
2519.

Boat, 1978 Bayllner 17 ft.
130 HP Inboard, excellent
condition . $1,000 . ac ·
cessorles, everything goes
$5,000. Phone 675·52BII.

Trucks for Sale
'69 Chevy pickup, 2 new
II res, gOOd cond, best offer . Cali379·2609.
72 INTERNATIONAL
Ton Pickup. 245·9241 ,

15 ft. Creslllner, new seats
and
carpel,
60
H.P .Evenrude and trailer
$1100. Firm, parts tor so
H.P. Mercury out ·
boord.B82·3664.

112

'71 Ford LTD, runs good,
good shape, $300. Call 446·

paint job, new battery, new
radial tires . Priced to sell
quic k. Call446· 1052 afler 5.

69 NOVA, 307 ci., rally
wheels, good condition,
$500.00. Phone 446·8061 , 446·
4648, 444·3549.

1973 CHEVY Impala, 4
door, $475 or best oiler. 446·
3948.

78 Ford 6 cy I. pickup, good
cond., $3500. 245·5148 alter
5:30.
77 CHEVY truck, 305
automatic, · 51,000 miles,
$2400. Will accept trade in,
JO.M75·3044.

76
Auto Parts
_ _,.;&amp;
::.::A::c=ce::;s:::•::o;c
rl:.::e::.s_ _
CHARLIE' S SALVAGE ·
Auto part!., auto repair,

wrecker . service,
batteries. 446-7717.

1965 C·JS Jeep, cloth top
and metal top, SJ.200,
Phone 675· 1564.
1968 Jeep one half lon
pickup. 6 cyl, standard 3
speed. 4 wheel drlve.675·
4874.
74

buy

automobiles, radiators and

Vans&amp;4W.D.

Motorcycles

1980 Suzuki GS 550, limited
edition, 1,342 miles. Call
256·9367 after 5:30PM .

ded lires. 5400. 992·3057 .

446 ·4002,

304·525·

Livestock

1974 Chevrolet .Suburban.
New tires. $600_ Phone 992·
2881.

1972
78 Camero balck, T·lop,
air_ cond ., AM· FM stero 8Gallipolis.

63

Half runner beans S6 .00 a
bushel, pic k your ~ own .
Gallipolis F erry . Phone

~

located above ground at

con11eyor
Bll28.

For sale 13 tt. John boat,
a luminum. Call446·fWU.

1976 GRANADA, priced to
sell due to heallll corKIItlon.
real nice, 304·.675, 1«12.

not runniono, reasonable.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
B.oardino

78 Dodge AsPttn 4 sPd.. 6
cyl. . 46,000 mU79·2S33.
wheels, good cond., $500.00.
Phone 444·8061 , -446--.
446·3549.

""1£. ~

- Boats and
MolontorSole

AuhllforSale

73 VW$1GI. 304·937-233.4.

--------69 Nova 31)1 cl, Rally

-~L

I~;;J~
..

black mus k . $50.00. 446·
9289.

Galvanized

ll

Autos for Sale

Ford Fiesta. lm·
maculate cond., sun·roof,
ANI·FM, &lt;10 MPG, Sharp
256-6753.

.,

REGISTER ED
female
German Shepherd puppy .

5Las.•1 oo

71

f

Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Call 446· 7795 .

With s I 0. 0() Purcha se

FINAL ·
CLOSEOUT

,------Jij
by l..ury Wright

•

\

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean

f110and up

.

1971 Ford dump truck,
Good cond . F600. $3,500.
985·-4395.
1976 Ponllac Sunblrd. 6
cyl., 5·speed. Good con·
d illon. $2,300, 742·2249,.
1978 CUTLASS Salon . 675·
2722 or 675·5571 .
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, wv. Phone 675·
1574 or 675·2881 .
1977 MUSTANG II GHIA ·
Exc. cond ., 31,000 miles,
304·675·2205 after 5.
1964 Rambler American 4
door, automatic, 6 cylln·

der, $500.00. 304·882·2767.
1973 Camero,lype LTD,
goodcond . Phone675· 1424.
72

Volkeswagen,
good

for

body
dune

buggy or parts. $225. 675·
3833.
1974 Pontiac LeMans. 304·
675·2519.

mileage, ex . cond., extras.

Call 446·2714.

1978 Ford Fiberglass top·
l)ltr, all sliding glass doors.
Phone 446· 1077 before
7:00PM.
Insullated truck topl)ltr for
short bed Ford $100. Call
444·9472, Gallipolis.
72 Ford plck· up ullllty bed,
$500 or best oHer, ldaco

Number 10 Drilling Rig,
gOOd cond. C&amp;ll4-46·8508.

14 foot aluminum fishing
boat and trailer with pad·
ded

seats,

oars,

New Mol)ltd . $450.00 Phone
675·1076.
1972 350 Honda Scrambler,
low mileage. 675·4874.

Four Cragar rl111s for
Plymouth.Phone 675·4874.
Topper for Luv or other

mini truck 6ft. bed. Phone
675·52BII.

75 Bullaco 360 Porsang, 75
Bullaco 2tlO Alplna, both
need som work S250. Phone
675 3833.

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr. wrecker
1980 TT 500 Yamaha dirt service, "Big or small" we
tow them alii 2332 Eastern
bike. $1300. 31)4·675·3938.
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
·
446·2445 or Night · 446·
Class KDX 400 Motorcycle, 4792
.
130 miles. call 304-675· 1490
or 304-675·4860 after 7.
E &amp; V WELDING Point &amp;
Body Shop, Georges Creek
15
Boats. nil
Rd. Gallipolis, 446·9304, for·
Motors for Sale
mally with Gallipolis
21 ft. Sklffcrafl wood boat Motors, 3 ye~rs.
wilh cuddy cabin, complete
covered top, table, ice bax, Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
sink. 120 H P inboard· $175, any color.iree pickup
outboard
Merccrusler &amp; delivery In Gallipolis
motor and trailer $4,000. area, Hammond Body
Ca11446·4042, Gallipolis.
Shop, 221 Mill Sl. 379·2782.

-=======---·-_·_-_··-_-_·_-~_-_-_-_-~;R~e~a;I~E;,;,;a;le~~G;e;n;e;r;a'l~========-~~~====~' ------------~R~e~a~I'E~s~ta~l~e--.G~e=n=e~ra~l~---------- -----------~~--~~~~~~~~~UIII!IIHIIUIIHIIU
..IIIII..Iillli. .lillli~R~e~a~'~E~s~l~a;'e~~G~en~e~r~•;lllllllllltllllltlllllll.t
..
.

1~--------------------------------

"SPECIAL SALE ON HOMES"

II
II
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I

·~idlft9

' .
•Wemodelin9
•f ree tostim.1tes
• 20 vrs . ct. pcricnc c

H.L

J&amp;C

~:....··
,;

'-7-SttC '

1

Call tll9-2710
· 6-1·1 mo.

1 block from

tLLMAKES
ew..Mrs
• Drytrs

•Auves

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Exl)ltrience

•Dispouls
• Dilhwashers

H .M .C. Nestled on a large lot with excellent view.
This attrac tive 3 or 4 bedroom home inc ludes 2
baths, 2 fireplaces, large family room , den, has had
excellent care &amp; maintenance &amp; in one of the best
neighborhoods .

ASSUMPTION
Owner has
moved , will give immediate possession .
Attractive 3 bedroom home in Jackson
Pike area . Family room, 2 baths,
fir~pla c e , equipped kitchen , 2 car
garage, nat . gas &amp; cent. air . Only

S51 ,90Q.
81 4% ASSUMPTION -

REBATE Seller offe ring 2 w ays to bea t high in
terest cost on thi s 4 bedr oom br ic k r an·
ch Ha s 2 lovely fi r epla ces, l arg e f am il y
room &amp; kit chen, 21h baths, nat _ gas.
cent . air . 2 car gar age &amp; 41' t acres
w/ creek fr ont . Only $69,900.

S4 ,000 DOWN -

LOW

INTEREST Owner
w i ll fin ance th is r oomy ot
bed room hom e on lower
r iver rd . F ull basement,
H.W . floor s &amp; ca rpe1,
gar age &amp; fire pl ace.
owner must sell now .
1
10 1% VA ASSUMPTION - You don't Immedia te possess1on.
need to be a veteran to t ak e adva ntage $34,900
of the low interes t on thi s near ly ne •N J
bedroom hom e. Ph baths, large kit
chen, Anderson windows &amp; well in OWNEI&gt; WILL HELP
sulated. 3.8 acr es with some woods. FINANCE - Large 2
40's.
stor y 4 bedroom home
on Rt. 160 . Large living
LAND CONTRACT - Owner s anxious room . dining &amp; kitchen.
to sell and will finance at low interes t Elec t. heat. .B acre
rates. 3 bedrQOm ranch witn full yard . Owner am&lt;ious to
basement. Low heating bills . ( F .A seii.S29,900
wood furnac e &amp; oil furna ce). garage,
new barn &amp; 10 acres, 9 miles t rom town

$39,900.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE to qualified buyers. 4 bedroom sto·ne
ranch overlooking river . O"Ver 2,000 sq .
ft. including famlly room , dining rm .,
fireplace, 3 baths , nat. gas, cent. air &amp;
detached 2 car garage . Priced to se 11 at

OWNER FINANCING
AVAILABLE - Cozy 2
b e droom home in
village of Rio Grande .
Has extra insulation,
nat . gas heat, built·in
cabinets in kitchen, uti I.
r oom &amp; large lot. 20' s.

$65,900.
PRICE REDUCED -

New 3 bedroom

cedar home on 2lf2 acre lot. Has m aster

bedroom

left,

WOOd burner ,

dining

room, plus a beautiful pine treed setting

w/vleY!. SJ2,600.

WHAT A HOUSE! Has everything you
need and more . 4

bedrooms , 21h

fam i ly

130,1100-1''•% ASSUMPTION - Cozy 2 burner,
bedroom

starter

home

located

on

Klnel&gt;l'l Dr. in town . Nat. gas, large kit·
chen · &amp; ,garage. Small (low main·
ienfni::el vard.

room ,

balhs,

wood· ·

beautiful

chen,

formal

10.36

in·ground

kit·

dining,
pool,

deck &amp; J4 acre fenced

yard . 60' s.

J:.o.
DOWN .:._ LOW INTEREST OWMr will' f nance this roomy 4
lledooom ttome· on lower river rd . Full

OWNER WILL FINAN·

llltileftWiit, H.W, floors&amp; carj)et, garage CE - Atlracl1ve (:al)lt

6 t(repl~. ~r must sell now. '1m·

Cod home in ·an e•·
iWH!ate pOIIIMion. $34,900,
elusive · nelgi\bOrhOOd,
wi,:L , FINAI\II;E - Tran· Has · 3 ' bedrooms, · 1'12
~ ~ Florida. Family wants to bath, base~ent, fa(lllly
titlow. 3 llellrODm maint, free ranch room, fireplace, nice·
~ ~- •Fai\'IIIY room, wOOdbilrner, large s c r - porch,
gn IIHt !,low budget) ., c~nt. air &amp; ne.w nat, . gas · furnace,
t'IJTIIIilnt: Priced at $47,500, Need new rOPI .!,.·aarage. In
, .
'· town. ss.,...,,

Owiil* ,

.i ,

.

'

.

7%

YOU MUST UNDERSiAND
WHAfS HAPPENING IN
THE REAL: ESTATE MARKET.
Prices have dropped because of the high interest
rates. In o.r~er to sell, many owners have cut prices
and are wtlhng to help finance. Don't be fooled into
waiting for interest rates to c:ome down, because '
when they do, prices will go sky high. Now is the best
tirne to buy because when interest comes down, your
lender should drop your rate as it declines.
·
YOU CAN OWN A HOME rignt now. We.haye
many sellers that will let you assume. their low i~
terest loans and others that will finance you at low
rates. We have Sellers that must Sell!
· :

. ASSUMPTION

Unbelieveable house
with a problem . This

3,000 sq , ft. home can be
bought al a redlculous
low price . .4 bedrooms,

2V&gt; baths, huge family
room, fireplace, Call for

• Hot W•t•r ::fUk s

SMillt NElSoN

ttn

MOTORS INC.

...cain

Pomeroy, OH.
997-2174

,; Rernai.PrQJtrties
... Apt. House Ownen

v. c.

Ph.

H ·«c

..- MobUitl

TRANSFERRED lm:
mediate possessiori on this Ph yr . old

maint. free home near beautiful R~c­

coon Ck . waterfalls. 3 bedroom, family

room, woodburner, nice kitchen ~ flat

yard, City schools . 40's.

Will TAKE TRADE - Owners willing
lo lake in mObile home for trade on this
3 bedropiT' home In Kyger Creek

KAUFF'S
PWMBING
.AND
HEAnNG
12 Park st.
Middleport, 011-.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

Assume FHA mtg . $33.900.

J&amp;F ,

CONTRACTING
eBacknoe
• Excavating

.:,

• Septic Systems ·

• Water, Sewer &amp;
• Trencher

Licensed &amp;Jlon9e&lt;1

PH. 992·7201 ·

9' &gt;% A-SSUMt'-rtON- IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION Owner moved to
California, must sell no\". Executive

over 600' ~
f~mlly

'

OWNER SAYS SELL NOW - 'Get Me
An Offer' Is a lillie owner Is telling us. A
lovely ,!;olonlal rllnch with 3 bedrooms, .
112 bath~ family room, wooqburner, tor·
mal dll\fnll• 2 car garage &amp; fented yard ·
In Porterl!rooke Subdlv. Much more . . '

:
IMMEDIATE POSSES.
SION - Malnt. free. 3
bedroom home In Con·
tenary . Has equipped
kitchen, new nat. gas
furnace,

new . carpet,

carport plus .nice flat .
yard. A well constructed·
· home. :CO's,
·

\

'

OWNER Will HELP FINANCE
Reasonable terms to qualified buyer. 3 ·
bedroom. Spring Valley brick,
fireplace, ' full. basement, 2 baths,
sceened patiO, 2 car garage &amp; beautiful
yare!. Reduced to$69,900. Must sell fast,

has

.

~

1·

t• ·;,.ASSUMPTION- 4 bedroom brick :
In a V,.y. Q&lt;lOd IN!IghJ&gt;orllood off Rl. ."35,
Fali)liy r~. flteplace, 2'12 tlaiiiS; 2 c,r
garage :am pool. I ReduceCI. sto,llOo 10 .
S69,~ .

· .I

'

•

' '

•.i2 1 ~% . MTG, ·•ASSUMPTION - ..
9% ASSUMPTION
' venlent &amp; private locallorl at edge l)f
• Owners moved , out eli
tOWI1, ~ Wdrooms, 3. f~ll baths, nice
'toWn. Must sell to buy • large family r~, fireplace fdr!llal
another , Rustle 3 , dining, ~t.
&amp; tltjti a!r; IarOe tan·
' bedroOm ~orne situated . dsca~ yard. Owners jnustsell.
•
on 1 acre of pines. Has
' .
'
'
. .,.,
large ~ulpl)til kitchen,
9% ASSUMPTION - Owner has fliOVed .
,t, flr~p.llce,
deck • i.
ou~ elf state. Raomy 3 bedroom brick &amp;
oar·~· .tO's.• '
.
frame r811Ch wlltl fUll baserMnt 2
'
flroplataJ, 2 ilfltliJ family room, riat.
Olli'lllf, b.trn &amp; 18 llilldQed ac~ on
Rt. SM. Make uunC!fttr. ,
·

oat

,

oas.

,

,, .

r

r eplacement
windows
Storm window s &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio co ver s
Howme1 s(reen room s
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum util ity
bUildings
691 Miller Drive

lmlft'ttvements

NtiiJt•rlml&lt;t Replacemenl
itorm Win-

DtlaD. Patio

rs,

Cal"ports.

le ' Home
il~s . ':"_

II

Ac ·
Fr e e

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING COL
''Beautiful, Custom
Built Gai-ages' ' ··;

Call for free siding ·
esllmales, t49-2I01 or
949·2840.
No Sunday Calls
3· 1Hfc

ALL STEEL

Water Line Hook-ups

Septic Tanks
Roush Lane

Cheshire, Oh.

Ph. 367-7560
1· 7-1 lie

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CONSTRUCTION .

u.S . l&gt;t. 50 F.ast .
C·uvsville, OH ..

New Homes • ex• ·
tensive remodel·
in g.
'·
• Electrital work
• Roofing work ·
13·Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 9!12· 7583

Phone 614·662-JUl
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm F. quipment De~1ler
FA~M [QUII'~WNI '
f' At"'I'~ I .S E RVICf .
1

1-

~1

H'Mf.N I
No. 8600 Diesel r-ord

I rrlCtOr

W I ( olb

1- /'.'lode I '1'15 Die sel r 1. r .
1- ft.'\odel479 H.1y Hird

6·3·1 mo.

'

Utility Buildings
Sites I rom 4x6 to l2x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine. Oh·,

Ph. 614·843·2591
6·15-lfc

6+lmo,

BOGGS

RACINE-SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS '· ·

SMALL

992-2478
or
Blain Milhoan
985·3965

Cer~ified

l

Don't wait. ContaCt Ohio ·

Valley Plumbing for
sewer line ,connections,
and any in house .

changes that have to be ·
made. · Back · hoe and
dozer servic'e availabte.

992·2036
5·20· 1 mo.

N.H.

7-J·

~=~~~~[==l
TRUCK
TOPPER,
fiberglas, with sliding win·
doW for 6 112 ft. GMC · or
Chevy truck, 1325: Call 388·
9334 after 6 p.m .

ROGER
HYSEll'S
.
. GARAGE
'

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.· Fri.
9 a.m . -~ : 30 p.m :·.

f.A~H Jar )tour dii'lmonds, gold and silver. class
rings, wedding bands,
silver dnd gold coins .
1 .1wney Jewelers, 421
Second ~ve,, C·.lllipolis,
Ohio .

Sizes

"From 30x30"

PUUINS
EXcAVATING

Water~Sewer·Eiedric
Gas Line~Ditches

County

Farm Buildinp

Farm. Ponds ·Land ·
Clearing· Roads.
Call: .

TRENCHING
SERVICE

5·21 ·1fc

992·5~82.

room, fireplace, 2 car gare. Priced uh·

offer. Nice 3 bedroom
home near town. Has·
1v, bath, nat. gas he~t.
equipped kilche'n, pallo• .
garage &amp; 'h •ac . Fenced
yard. $o43,50Q.
'

12l 1 1 Pine

REESE~

6· 15·1 mo.

schools . Over 1h acre yard off R1. 554.

11 4% ASSUMf;"TiliN '"&gt;·~~· .der mkt. value, 80's .
owners anxious for an

Bill'S

446-264 2

81

Home
Improvements

2096.

-.IllitE-c-.,)
aJII IIEPAII -FAST SPVIU .

J&amp;t

t··aTION
· UU
INsu

. t'nyl &amp; .
V
Aluminum Si~lng
'Insulation ·.
• Stornj Doors
• Stoi'JII Windows
• Repb1cement
Windows :

~.

Free'Estimate
· Jam·e~· Keesep

:f'h. 99~·2772 ,

Spring Sale!
West Virginia's
"Greatest Nursery"

In

conCrete

driveways,

sidewalks,
patio ,
basement garage floors
and etc• Free estimates. 11
years exPttrlence . Call 367·
7891 .

Beautiful

Canadian·

Hemlocks,

Scarlet

Maples, Sugar Maples.
Pin Oaks, Japanese and

·Chinese Crabs, Green
Asb,

Purple

Plums;

Pink DogwOOd, Brad·
ford Pur, Upright &amp;
vice. C~rpet,
vinyl
Ashworth
Installment
Ser·,
cerainlc tile, floor tile, for·
mica counter tops; all work
guaranteed. Caii446·BII19.
Hoover Sweel)ltrs repaired
at Empire Furniture. 842
Second Ave, Gallipolis, OH.

.

.

'

.

Spreading Evergreens.

All nursery stock is pric·
ed to sell. 25% off Rainy
Day Purchases.

'All sizes ol flowering
trees

.

repairing,

guaranteed

to

bloom litiS Spring
Designing &amp; Planlln!l
Services,
Free
Estimates. Nursery Is

localed ) mile out
Charley's ·Creek Road
on the left between
Wesleyan ·
Camp
Ground. Only 13 miles
from New Htgn. Mall.
Trailer load deliveries..
Scotts Bluegrass sod
available.
L
743·9996

STANLEY STEEMER
Carl)ltt Cleaning
446·4208
PAINTING · Resldenllal
and commerciaL Interior
and exterior, mObile home
roots.
Free
estimates.
,17
yni, exp.
with
reler@nces
call ;J6H784 or 367·7160:
JIM MARCUM Roofing ·
spo(itlng and siding, 30
years experience. Free
eatlmotes. Remodeling.
Call 388·9857.

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential. automotive.
Emergency service, Call
882·2079.
CONTINIOUS no leak out·
terlng, c.ustom made lor
your home. For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR , 614·698·8205.
HARPER Halstead, lawn
mower repair and shar·
Pttnlng service, 10 a.m, ·6
p ."m. 675-5868.
RON'S Television Service,
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola,. Qulizar, and
house calls. Phbne 576·2398
or 444·245-4.
COOK'S Television
vice, Heriderson,
PhOIIe675·2250,

Sitr·
WV

miShap
23 Oestre

94 Three-toed

25 Develop
27 Sponsor
28 Toss

96 - . ott ...
97 Easy cour se

105 Sheet ot
glass
109 Thatland,
formerly

kind

49 Portico
51 Wants
52 seeds and

Dltcher work. Charles ~.
Halileld, Halileld Backhoe.

cells
53

Gas, elec.t ric, end water.

European

54 Mlndu

142·2903 .
'

58 Using
59 Abnormaley
60 European

capllal
61 The sweet·
sop
83 Debate
65 SCheme
87 Man·a nick -

14

name
69 COnJuncllon
70 1ntegrlly

Fuller Eiectrtc co. complete re:wlrlngl commercial
of residential, ' and elec·

trlcal malntalnance. atso ·
on call. Ph, 446·2171,
Geillpolls.

72 Mal&lt;o
amends
74 Between n

andq
{6 Near

17 Eats

79 Siamese
SEWING MI'Chlne repairs.
service. AulhOrlzed Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
·Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air

1 12 Surlolt

113 Uninspiring
114 Group of
seven
1 16 Spanlsn pot

118 A continent
120 Competition
121 Pasteboard ...
122 Most
precise
123 Safecrack -

er: Sl .

garment

BACkHOE Service. Larry
Sldenstrlcker. 675·5580.
Electrical
&amp; Refrlgerallon .

pl.

36 Paradise
38 Merkel ol a
oiO Equal
41 Declare
&lt;JHalt

Excavallng

Compass

102 Shout

46 Traps
47 Gem stone

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
DOzer Service. Specializing
In septic tank. 675·1234.

100

33 Narrale '

45 Visions

13

sloth

31 E"

Homo

'
FOR BEST In Carl)ltl
Cleaning · Call ·s meltzer's
Steamway, Call 614·-446-

' QIIPflllll 5lwls

SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
ewater
eGi!s
• Electric • Sewer
Lines Installed.
Ph~ 367·7560

BING'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · Sl)ltCiallzlng

24 ft. self-contained 1973 Gene's · Carl)ltt Cleaning,
travel trailer. Very good deep stream 'e~tro~llon.
condition, 992·32.42.
·Free esllm·ates, reasonable
I
rat~s. scothguard. 992·6309,
1969 18 fl. dmper. S1800.
31)4-773·5134 after 5 pm.
RINGLE'S
SERVICE :
complete
building,

11

REESE TRENCHING

PAINTING · interior and~=========~
exterior. plumbing .
roofing, some remodeling.
iO yrs. exp. Call388-9652.
Culloden Nursery
'

large or small lobi done ef·
flclently. Phone 675·2088 or
675·4560:

Kitchen cabinets. llath

lake fronl. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,

or _ 4 4 6~ 3080

Nu~Pr i m e

· - Piumliint and
electl'ica I work
(Free Estimates)

remodeling, roo1tng1 &amp;
gutter, siding &amp; ,plunlbing &amp; ·elecftoical, cOncrete, storm windows,
woodburners installed.

home situated on 2 acres with

Ca ll 446-3896

?"

oi46·118J

1mproYiments

OWNERS

info.

JS Court St.
Ga llipolis, Ohio

CALl.IETWEEll' ·
8 A.M.'&amp; 5 P. M~ ' ..
. • •1142
..

.
-concrete work

M&amp;S BUILDJ~ ·

- REBATES

914%

DELiVERED:.~
. . .
-:

blower.
Gallipqlis BIO(k Co .

PARTS ANDSER\IIICE

'

OUTSTANDING BRICK RANCH -

Stripping
and Refinishing

stoves by U.S.
wood ' &amp; · coal

;===:z.::I:6:·7=·1=m=o·~~~~;;::;;;;;;;~~
A ttr ac t ive r edwood home on Woodl a nd
Dr . 3 bedr oom, 22' ru sti c f a mily • oom
wl stone fireplace , 26' living room , for ·
m al dini ng, nat. gas, cenf. air &amp; •12 acr e.
Low inter es t assumption .

Furn~ure.

GOOD SOIL

H1.· «c '

From the Smallest
Heater Core tv the
Largest Radiator

. CALL:
Paul Sigman-992·298 4
Pft Mitchell"'7742·2561

OWNER S MOVING TO WISCONSIN -

.... ~-('o,

!!'~IMPROV E MENTS

-

8% MTG . ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE Quality cedar ra nch in a su per loc ati on
in Rio Gr ande . Beautifu l l y decora ted J
bedroom hOme w ith 21·1 bath , f ormal
din ing, full ba sem ent, la rge fam ily
room , f1r eplace. 2 car ga r age pl us a
lovel y pine t ree studded fl ' 1 ac r e va r d

446·3458

- .
4-,-'

trash -Pickup In
.Th't VIllage of
.Middlepol't, oii. · '
Ph. 992·~016 '"
· or992·7505 .. •·

Free Estimates

l' h , 94~'· V6U

$Efl¥Q
' .' '"
.
.

E~ECTRICAL-

c'o mplete Home Wir j ng,
Resictential &amp; Commercial.
Li cen sed El ectric ians
Guaranteed Work

~

-~ "

Reisonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2162
fllt-2161

TOM HOsKINS

- D&amp;F

SAJtnliloft
.
.

A!l ty~es of roof wor~.
new or repatr ·;guHen
and downspout$, guller
cl~anlng aild ~lilting.
All work guarant'".

remodeling,

.

LOW INTEREST LOAN ASSUMPTIONS - LAND CONTRACTS

.... o~t ~ng ot cltl h~;~e s

Gas Lines
eDumpTruck

Auto Repair

71

.md Hom.e M11 inten rmce

foot

operaled trolling motor, 3
SPd, carl)ltt. Phone 367 ·
0397 after 5:00PM.

76 HONDA, CB 500T, ex.
cond. Ph. 444·3345 after 5.

oHIO VAIUY
RQ()fiNG

Free Estimates

1979 Honda CB 750K, low

totaled,

'I

Julys,, J,98 ll

1979

OPEN DAYLIGHT TILL DARK

12 MI. NORTH OF POM E ROY ON U.S. 33

16oz.

KIT 'N' f'ARI. YlE"'

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·

BURSON•s MARI(R
,

w. va.

· r-utnj .,,

money
83 Hole

85 Retinues
86Atm bonO

125
126
127
129
131

Hit nard
Track

Arrow

Buenos Roman

oHicials
132 Desires
133 U\).\.9r·
gr ......md
excava ~

lion
134 Heads the

casI

136 Mideast
consortkJm:
lnll.
138 Cubic meter
140 A Kelly
1-41 Appear
142 Titles In

India
144 District ln

Germany

87 Baby's bod
88 Yours and
mlno

147 Bishopric

90Fondwlsh

t 51 Prefix with

91~1e81

comO&lt;

89 Mr _Pacino

compound
92 PredeCI88or

of CIA

113 Pure

t48 Pronoun
149 Nahoor

•hMI&gt;

cycle
153 Scale note
155 OSlo coin:

Abb&lt;.

•

�Pomer6y-Middl~port:-Gallipolis,

Page-D-8-T he Sunday Times-Sentinel

§

he thinks Is thla CGUilb'Y's secret
weapon: putting people fint.
.

Ry J . Samuel Peeps

Porter, and there were four girls,
one of them J ewe!.

CHARLES McKEAN. the s on of
Ursabeous , was born lll Clay Twp .
Sept. 19. !875. and he married
Lenora Porter. Charles dJed in
Harrison Twp. and is buried in
Mound Hill Cellletery . The f1 rst
name of one of his nine chil dren wa s

.

.

ne11rby Mou nt Vernon, Va. The first . together. " We're Iooklng · to ~
future with new hope and~
lrujy's birthday is Monday.
Aftemard, the group will return to - and we know we can malt!!'
the Whit•• H•&gt;use to watch fireworks Mterica g'reat again by Jll4tlnll the~
destiny of this m~tion back in tileou the l..lwfl.
.
. :
The l!t•ar~~ns 8pent a quiet Friday hands of the jleople.
"And
why
shoUldn't
we?"
he~
at the Wht~c House while their aides
took lh;e rlay off. They made no asked. " Because, after all; we
pubiJc appearance s a nd a Americans.''
Reagan received a congrat1ilatoij:
spokt.~wunum said she dtdn 't know
telegram
FridaY from Soviet
hllV. thov wer&lt; &amp;pending the da·y.
President·
Leonid
Brezbnev. '~be­
Nor \\c.Li t lwn~ any word on
wire
released
by
the Soviet
em:
whe1.he1 !1l•agHJl ,,nticed the latest
I
.
'
bassy,
asked
Reagan
to
"please
~
o
anl'sb Hlt jIll' monlh-long series of
vey
to
the
American
·
~
pepp\~·
.demuustt"atiun~ against U.S. i.nvnlvcnwn! tn El Salvador and his congratulations and wiBhe8 of·peace·
of the occasion of the . national
bud~~~l~ u!s
holiday of the United Slates ot
fn h.;:- l nu. n· llf .Ju ly me!Ssage,
America."
){fdi ~ &lt;m ..,,, ! tne n:-ttion is pUlliNg

" It's the way we've k~ the spirit
of our revolutiOIIII alive t: a spirit
that drives us to dream and dare and
take great risks flir a greater good,"
Reagan said ln the IndepeDdence
Day message, released Fr,iday.
"It's the spirttolFultiln and Ford,
the Wright brothers and Llpdbergh
and of all our astronauts," he said.
" It's the spirit of Joe Louis, Babe
Ruth and a millioo of others who
may have been born poor, but who
would not be denied their day in the

are;

JEWEL McKEAN, the daughter
of Charles McKean, was horn in
Clay Twp. and is only three months
younger than ol' J . Samuel Peeps, a
relative. She married Elmer Caldwell Aug. 7, 1926, and they've had
live children: Dana - pronounce it
Danny. Jimmie ·D ean, Richard Alan,
Elmer Julian, and Elizabeth Lee.

sun.''

TEX HARRISON, Gallipolis, has
been named Gallia County's latest
Kentucky Colonel.

Acc~!H£allipof!~~[~a~~~~~:l' t~ln~.~.: ~~!~~fir T~~~s~!~a!,es~f?! i

'

CARROL WAUGH, you may
remember from the June 21 Peeps
column, was showing off Gillingham
Drug's copy of the No. 1 issue of
Guinness magazine, and we took up
a couple of inches to tell how the
magazine treated Bevo Francis'
THOMAS McKEAN signed the super-100 scoring records for the Rio
Declaration of Independence , com- Grande College Redmen.
manded a regiment of colonial
Now, we don't have a date for this,
troops, was governor of Pen~ but it came in an anonymous ennsylva nia 1799-!807, served as chief velope , and no handwritten
justice of Pennsylvania, was a mem- signature - a Xeroxed copy of
ber of the Pennsylvania Assembly Frank Klein's sports colwnn with
for 17 years - all of this commg afthe headline, " Bevo Saved His .
ter he was admitted to the bar at age College." Handwritten across the
20. Thomas' loyalty to the colon ies top: " This article was in the Tampa
caused him to be hounded by the
paper - Florida."
British. and he moved from place to
There's this paragraph with an
place to avoid them, lor, had they
error in it:
captured him, they certa inly would
" This was !952-54, the time when
have put him to death. Onetime Bevo did his thing for part of two
wealthy. Thomas McKean lost his seasons for Rio Grande (you
entire fortune during th e pronounce that Ry-o, not Ree-o, as in
Revolutionary War .
the river) . It was a twe&gt;-year
school.' '
ROBERT McKEAN was the son of
The error is that last sentence. It
Thomas. Robert was born m Pen- was and is a four-year school,
nsy lva nia in 1781, became a fanner though there was a period of nine
a nd owned 2,000 acres of Green Twp . year!; up to 1940 when Rio gave no
land . Robert died in Galli a County,
bachelor degrees. Another error is
and is buried at Centenary .
the total omission of the name of the
coach, Newt Oliver, 198I Clark CounJOHN McKEAN was the son of
ty Commissioner.
Rob&lt;&gt;rt, hav ing been born in 1800 in
Anyway, we would like to know the
Pennsylvania, Asenth Spencer hts
date
this Klein column appeared in
m olher. As in the case of his father,
the
Tampa
Times ; if it was after
he died in Ga llia County and is
21
the
Times-Sentinel beat
June
buried at Centenary. J ohn's son has
them to it.
the weirdest name !
URSABEOUS McKEAN was the
sun of John McKean. and he's the first of the clan both to be born and die
in Gallia County . His birth dale was
June 11 , 1636. when Papa John was
33, a nd his wifl''s maiden name was
Ellza Long. Ursabeous McKean ls
buri ed '" Providence Cemetery . He
Jived in Clay Twp., was et farmer .
and had St•ven children, two of them
gH·is.

.

Reagan said the Ameri~n
revolution was unique because "it
changed pte very concept of govern ·
ment. Here was a .new nation telling
the world that it was conceived in
libertY; !Jl.at aU men are created
equal with Goa·glven rights and lhal
power ultimately resides in 'we the
people.'
" We sometimes forget thi s great
tnith and we ·never should," the
president said. "Because puttin g
people first has always been
America's ~ret weapon."
Reagan an~ his wife, Nancy , plan·
ned to celebrate the Fourth of July
holiday and Mrs. Reagan's :&gt;8tll IJJr
thday with a party today for 78
people at Woodlawn Plantation 1n

WASHINGTON (AP) -In a Fourth ol July QIM'Age to the American
people, President lleapn says what

Jt t tpS'...

HIS FOURTH generation grandson and namesake, William, left
Ireland in 1725 and came to
Alnerica , where Thomas McKean
was burn in Chester County, Pennsylvania , March 19, 1734, to
Wtlliam and Lclilia McKean .

.

.

P~e~ident wa~.ts ·to ·put people firs~.·,·~. -:

~allipolis .

GALUPOUS - Elmer E. Caldwell's sons and their sister are begorra! - direct descendants from
the Irish of northern Ireland, or
Ulster, where all the fighting's going
on now. That's tn the early years of
the sixteenth certury, going back
throug h their mother , Jewel
McKean Caldwell, to the McKean
clan headed by William, the chief of
the clan of Argylshire. William
McKear migrated to Londonderry,
Irela nd, in 1674, with a goal uf lendmg his assistance to the Protestants to rule Ireland.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. ViJ.

AUCE MARGARET Mossman at
the June 21 meeting of the Gallia
County Historical Society inquired
of Peeps about that final little
paragraph quoting the Rev. Frank
Hayes. It was a case of ripping
something out of context.
It would have been better to have a
little more length, and quote the
preacher as emphasizing that
sometimes we are embarrassed to
say thank you or I love you.
Therefore , we keep the feelings hottied up in our hearts, asswning
that the other person knows they are
there. Today, pull the plug off your
heart and let your feelings overflow
into the presence of those near to
you.

Pollsters blame Reagan, congress

GALLIPOLIS - Tbe Welsh im·
migrationtoGalliaCountybeganln
1818 when six families
from Cilcennan
Parish in Car·
diganshire, South
Wales . The~e
were 34 persons m
this group led by
these patriarchs:
John ('l'irbach)
Jones,
John
(Penlanlas) Evans, Evan (Tymawr) Evans, Lewis
(Rhiwlas) Davis, William (Pant·
vallen ) Wllliams and Thomas
Evans.
The group's destination was Pad·
dy's Run in Butler County, Ohio,
where a Welsh colony had already
been formed. Mter one month's
delay in Liverpool, England, the
group set sail for America about
May 6, 1818. They were 55 days in
crossing the Atlantic, encountering
two fierce storms. One stonn
brought the entire group to their
knees in prayer. On several oc·
casions they were consoled by ship's
Captain Sands who urged them :
" Be of great courage, the tempest
will soon be over."
DURING THE VOYAGE the
young daughter of John and Mary
Evans dled. It was a memorable
sight to watch Captain Sands ad~
the plank, attach heavy wetghts to tt
and give the signal to slide the ·
remains of little Mary over the side
ofthevesselandintothesea.
The ship landed at Baltimore on
July 1, 1818. Here the 33 left bought
wagons to take them across the

downtheOhioRiver.
AFI'ERSEVERAL days ' jou rn&lt;l
tbe weary pOgrtms landed at
GalUpolls to repair their boat and t«
take OD supplies. That night a Sl'\'rrr
stormbrokelbecablesthatattachl'd
tile Dalhoat to tbe Gallipolis wh arf .
pushing the boat downstre:un
Somewhat later historians false!)
accused the citizens of Gallipoli s of
. purposely cutting the ropes to fnrr•'
theWelshtostaylnGalliaCounty.
Wbeotheflatboatwasrerov.· n·d il
wa~ found to be in a badlv bea tl'll
condition. Wllh the prospect of
several days' wait lor repa1rs.
several of the women urged thr mr u
to cooslder remaining in Gal lia
County.
DIE MEN AGRF.F.O to "' least
give a look at Gallia land as "'''I :·s
investigating another new s&lt;'l
tlement near Radnor, bliiu. JuhH
Jones was chosen to walk to Radno r
asweUastolookat Gallia so il .
In the meantime the men h1 red
themselves out as road work ers u11
the new state road that was bcirl!'
built from Gallipolis to Jackson . The
road had been built to Rodney . rt
was sometime later that the rr•'"
pushed on to where Centerville m&gt;~&lt;
is.
TillS AREA REM INDED the set·
tiers of Cardiganshire. And when
John Jones returned with the m·w:,
that Radnor was fl at, the dcciotcn
was made to stay in Gallia and buy
several· acres at $1. 25 per an".
William Williams a nrl Thllm:t.s
Evans had their own land: whJi e tilt·
other four families lived for a shnr1
time in the same dwelling.

~

lou; f:H•lll'·

n If

ll ',.,. f.Jlldli&lt;'S had been

"''"'''" w1th the in· • '"''.• ,•nc 1n Wnle·s as the
· ' • "" • "et e ternbly

''"

wuu: reltgious
H·"" for thetr first

-'H

.,,. · ,[,•

.,

)e.t'.' 1l ,.

"''' I l·•oJJJSt E riscopal

'"'"'it. :

,,.:t · .:

Evans and

11

,., ''· · 'liandinstar·

\"!11.

'"'g ,

' '

···!&lt;.'

'"'"'
\I'd! c-

:

• ',, ,. ·
· ..
"

1

house the
' hurch. fn later
\\.I'L(~h-sounding

rutd Jackson
'. "rd and Tyn
i'~ t ,;~I

the second

'·
'r·,.,q·. • ·,; di,_liti.Shire. These
'" r · ".l •·· " ,,,.,,1,· hnsl of people
.,,,,,.,, . , ·
"''·· '·" d to settle at
:\ :,, " ' ·"
::·

L

'1

f ·i

, , , ,,

1: ",.
1,

rI

;!

1

.,,

1'1!1·. lu:·l.{t·:-.t impetus
1l '111•·!,{ 111 JHckson ·and
i.·
!..!1\' cn by the
'"'"" d Jones, who

I ~ '-'

.·

: ,·.:s

~

.e~ 1'1'0

• f'
1
1

~~

1

I '·

\.

' r!

~

&amp; BOSTIR CO.,
L.P.A.' .
.~.

I•
!

hook that claimed the Gallia and
Jackson setUement was the place
lor the wise Welshman. By 11150 liver·
3,000 of the Welsh had inunlgrated tO
the two counties.
One story of those early Welsh
may point out why they prospered in
their new home. It seems as thougli
one of the Welsh had tlrought with
him some red top boots which he
wore on special occasions
·
AT A BARN DANCE held neal'
Cen terville, a young Virginia
migrant was fascinated by those
boots. He HAD to have them and so
the two set about bargaining. In the
end the Virginian got one pair ol
boots. The Welshman ended up with .
two cows, a sow and her litter, and
sev~n lambs.
No doubt but what the Virginia.
saw " red" for some months after he
reali!ed what he had done. With
s uch busin~ss acwnen, it is little
wonder the .Welsh ended up owning
much of both Gallia and Jackson
Counties. ·
Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115 is
·the address of James Sands.

Listing For.July 5 - July 11

'

' '.:..:f
.)
'

.... ~

.~.

•

1
, ;·

'

ship police detecti ve, said ht woul d
" confiscate
th e
fir ewor ks
tomorrow " if the court allowed 1l

.&gt;n,•tl. dueperhaps

· • li1·. .tlmg Eva ns and

• :·
., . rtt .....
., '" •t·
1, ,"'', • , '"
,., · ·' . ·
!..otlJt·'•''

;~::;:~:~0:: ;:~"~~:· I
CINCINNATI (AP) - Fireworks
have become a problem which police
can't do anything about, a Clennont
County detective says.
Robert Evans, a sheriff's depart·
ment detective, stood in the middle
of Ohio 125 in Pierce Township and
watched Thursday night as a
fireworks explosion injured three
people and caused an estimated
$400,000 damage to a loaded
fireworks trailer, roads and nearby
homes.
A Clennont Common Pleas Court
restraining order issued June 22
prevents county officials from doing
anything more. Fireworks dealers in
the county sought the restraining or·
der last month after county officials
threatened fines and jail sentences if
de;liers··· did not meet Ohio building
regulations.
"We're handcuffed more or less,"
Evans said. "I wasn't allowed on the
property. This is the first time I've
ever had a restraining order which
prevented me from doing my job."
Lucian Colangelo, a Pierce Town·

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RNEYS AT .LAW
F. )ouglas M. Cowles
Jolynn Boster

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fHE OPENING OF TllEIR~ lAW OFFICES AT
l'Hice Phone ~46.{)644
1 ffite Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30

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~~~~~~--~:~~:~·~·~~"~'~~~~~

DENVER IAP 1 - A majonty of as it was 50 years ago and the chan ·
NAACP members polled by a ces are small that a minority will be
newspaper believe the status of able to achieve equality. Fifty-six
blacks and other minorities has percent disagreed.
The poll was conducted lor Carl
deteriorated in the past year. and
they blame President Reagan a nd Rowan. a Chicago Sun -Times writer
Congress.
whose column appears in The Post.
However, only 17 percent, or 409 of Rowan designed the questions and
the nearly 2.500 delegates who 'Helped analyze the results, which
received mailed questionnaires, were published in Saturday's
responded to The Denver Post poll, editions.
which was taken in conjunction with r-----------------_::..__:____--1
the weeklong NAACP convention
that ended here Fnday.
About two -thirds of those who
responded, 67 percent, said the
status of American blacks
deteriorated in the past year; 5 per·
~are
cent said it improved , and 28 percent
said it remained the same.
1
Of those who said they thought
minorities were worse off today, 66
percent blamed Reagan as part of
the problem , 50 percent blamed
Congress, 38 percent cited right·
wing groups such as the Moral
Majority, 20 percent listed black
leaders and 17 percent cited
newspapers and television.
Describin g ways in which
minorities were worse off, 45 per·
cent cited unemployment, 31 percent
gave miscellaneous reasons and 20
percent cited cuts in socal
programs .
Education,
ad·
ministration and housing were listed
by 12 percent.
To improve their status, 58 per·
cent favored peaceful protest, 48
percent advocated filing more
the great square diamond cluster
lawsuits, 14 percent suggested
•
showing faith in the president and 5
Strikingly distinctive geometri~s.
pe1 cent supported use of violence.
A circular cluster or dazzling diamonds in·
Seventy-nine percent disagreed
the magnificent c,ounterpoint of a square·with the administration's con·
shaped setting . · '
~onslhat Its economic programs
An ill)pressive look, available in a range o!
·'
wiD help all Americans, including
sizes,
at truly affordable prices.
"
,blacka, while 17 percent were not
11111't1 and 4 pel'C)Int agreed.
Forty-nln.e pet:cent agreed the Ku
Khiit.~ and similar grOUps are
the n.t, while 51 percent disagreed.
AmOng the respondents, 44 per·
cent said Aliterica is as rac'lst today

Sat. 9:00-12:00 Noon
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