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                  <text>10,1981

Frida

List .results of mtJyor's c(}_urts'.
manner; Debra Maiden, Mid·
Two ddendants were fined and slx &lt;'intolleation.
. . dJeport, .,100 and CIJ8Is, .-ull;
other forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomery Mayor Clarence Andre111S
Eiglt defendants . were fined Randy R. Martin, OlarlestOn, W·
Tuesday
night in the cowt of Mld- . Va., $225 and COIIts and three days in
Tuesday night.
·Jr.
Fined were Michael Marcwn, dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman and )all, drlvtng whUe Intoxicated;
Mlddleport, .~ and costs, open two otherS forfeited bonds.
Cllarles $prouse, .!'t1iddleport, ~
Fined
were
Jmies
R.
Peck,
Mid·
and costs, disqrderly manner, and
liMit, and Richard Hennen, Mid·
dleport,
$50
and
costs,
littering;
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Carolyn Triplett; · ~dilleport, $50
dleport, ~ .and costs, failure to
regis(er a motor vehicle.
and COlts, setting off fireworks ; •100 and colts, disordetly rn&amp;Mer.
Forfeiting bonds were. Danny .L.
Forfeiting bonds were Carl HaD, and cosl8, driving while under
suspension,
and
$225
and
costs
and
Jenkins,
Hebron, $150, driving while
Jr., Pomeroy, ~. left of center;
three
days
in
jaU,
driving
wile
in·
under
.
suspension,
and Robert
Keith Phalin, Pomeroy, $28 ;
toxlcated;
Clarence
Bing,
•Jr.,
·
F~;.'.romeroy,
~.
disorderly
Michael Grate, Middleport, $30, and
Calista Searles, Middleport, $26, au Pomeroy, $225 and costs and three rnanper.
pOsted on speeding charges; Bruce days in jail, driving whUe in- r,;=::====;~~=~
Conde, Coolville,~. open flask, and toxicated; Kelly Hawkins, Mld·
Donald Hood, near Pomeroy, $100, dleport, $50 and costs, ~rderly

Judge ends 12 cases
NEW PATROLMEN -1\vo recent graduates of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol Academy have been
assigned to the Gallla-Meigs Post of the patrol. Kelly

Hospital news

Area·deaths
Bert Duke Karr
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Bert fOuke) Ka rr. 65, formerly of
Minersville , Fatrlawn, :'-/. J ., died
Thunday at Fairlawn.
He was a son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Karr, Minersville. He
was also preceded in death by two
brothers, Richa rd and James Karr.

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Surviving are his wife. Rose; two

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daughters, Ca thy and Carol , and a
sister, Mrs. Tom 1Mary I Bowen of
Pomer oy.
Graveside rites will be held Satur·
day at Fa irlaw n

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Paul F. Andrews
Paul F. Andrews, 75, Lung Bottom
Road, died Friday morntng at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was a son of the late Francis

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and Mary Butler Andrews. He was
also preceded in death by two
brothers, Cha rl es and John, and two
sisters. Ella and Elizabeth .
Surviving are his wife . Mary Cur·

tis Andrews; sons, Paul Joseph,
Westerville. and John Mtchael.
Columbus ; two daughters. Hose
Mary Milliron , Columbus, and Ba r·

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Ernest S. Ward
Ernest S. !Junior ) Ward, 58 , Rt. I,
Rutland, died unexpectedly at his
home Thursday evening following a
brief tllness.
Mr. Ward wa s born May 16, 1923 at
Langsville, a son of the late Selmer
A. and Mary Alice Williams Ward.
On Aug. 16, 1946, he married the
former Annabell Johnson who sur·
vives a long with a son, Donald,
Westerville; four daughters, Mrs.
Jirrunie I Evelyn 1 Hobbs, Dexter;
Mrs . James 1Ruth 1 Priddy. Route I,
Rutland; Ernestine Kay Hale and
Rarrunie J . Ward, both at home.
Also surviving are five grand ·
children. seven step ·grandchildren;
a sister. Mrs. Clarence I Agnes I
.'Jtevens, Route I, Langsville ; an
aunt, Mrs . Florence Chalfan ,
Athens; an uncl e, William Williams,
Wellston . Besides h1s parents he
was preceded in death by a brother,
a sister and a daughter.
Mr . Ward was a veteran of World
War II havmg served in the U.S. Ar ·
my. He was a member of the
Dtsa bled American Veterans and
the railroaders union .

He was a

bara Andrews, Athens; grandsons,

retired railroad worker and had also
worked in limber for a number of

Mark and Jerry Milliron and
Chnstopher Andrews : a brother.

year s .

Services will be held at 2 p.m. Sun ·
Francis Andrews, Long Rottom , etn d day at the Walker Funeral Horne in
a sister. Ma ry Wippel , Pomeroy.
Rutland wtth Mr. Gene Musser of.
Mr . Andrews was a member of the ficialing. Bunal will be in Wright
Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy . Cemetery. Friends may call at the
He was a retired Me1gs County Htgh· funeral home at anytime after 2 p.m.
wa y Department worker and had Saturday unttl time of services. The
served as an Oli ve Precinct fami ly will receive friends from 2 to
Republican central committeeman 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday
for several years.
Plan DA V mt;ding
Services will be held at II a.m.
Monday at the Sacred Heart Church
A meeting of Meigs Chapter 53,
with the Rev. Father Paul Welton of· Dtsa bled American Veterans, has
ficiatm g. Burial will be in the Lady been set for6 :30 p.m. Tuesday at the
of Loretto Cemetery . Rosary ser· chapter home , Butternut Ave.,
vi ces will be held at 7·30 p.m. Sun· Pomeroy.
day at the Ewmg Funeral Home
where fnends may call from 7 to 9 Will ('lmw highway
p.m. Saturday and from 2 to 4 a nd 7
Route Iilli will be closed Monday
to 9 p.m. Sunday . In lieu of fl owers. from 9 a.m . to about 3 p.m. while
contributions may be made to the pipe is insta lled at the locatiOn , the
Amen can Ca ncer Society .
intersection of Routes 33 and 681 at
Darwin.

Nicely, 30, was treated for smoke
mhalation around 5 a.m.
The fire burned white ·hot at the
center of the brick building and was
punctuated by the explosions, some
of which pitched sparks and naming
embers into the air, firefighters
said .
Hundreds of onlookers gathered
near the building until several ex.
plosions and dense smoke forced
police to order the area evacuated.
Police said there was some danger
from toxic fumes .
Clyde Marlin , )"hO lives next to the
plant, said a man knocked on his
door about I : 30 a.m. and said he saw
smoke coming from the chemical
plant. Martin said firemen arrived

Twelve defendants were fined in
the weekly court of Meigs County
Court Judge Patrick O'Brien.
They include David Mooney,
Coyahoga Falls, $21 and costs,
speeding; DanieUe Smith, Porland,
$10 and costs, failure to yield wben
being passed; Melvin Taylor ,
Gallipolis, $10 and costs, parked in a
prohibited area; Stephen Thomas,
Gallipolis, $50 and costs, reckless
operation;
Randell Sea·rles,
Rutland, $10 and costs, failure to
display valid registration; Max

Cites driver

Kilpatrick on sin and sex on TV, A-2
Anderson addres·s es Justice, A-2

Food Co-op, B-1

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Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

News briefs.

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TRUE VALUE

By JEFF GRABMEIER
Times-Sentinel staff writer
The Gallipolis City Health Department, loc$led in the city building on
2nd Avenue, provides health services for residents of the city.
It hires nurses, hold clinics and
educates the public about health
concerns.
Located only one block away on
2nd Avenue is the Gallia County
General Health District, which
provides many of the same servtces
for residents of the county.
In these times of financial trouble
for goverrunent, it may seem that a
consolidation of the two similar
health departments may be an
economical move, providing better
health services for residents of both
the city and the county.
In fact, many Ohio cities and counties have successfully consolidated
their health depariJllents.
But political pressures and
questions of what services to provide
have prevented a consolidation ct

AND

SHAKES

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs . John Goheen, son,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Laddie
Siders, daughter, Henderson; Mr .
and MRs. Jeff Williams, daughter.
Beaver .

JULYl
BIRTHS
Mr . and Mrs. Arnold Childers,
daughter . Coalton; Mr. and Mrs.
John McGowan, daughter , Oak Hill ;
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Perry,
daughter, Point Pleasant.

Within three minutes after they were
called, but 10 minutes later names
broke out.
Deputy Chief Donald Carper said
the arson squad was investigating
the cause of the blaze.
Winkle said firemen had problems
with water pressure when they first
arrived. He attributed it to old, six·
inch water lines in the neighborhood .
Firefighters eventually were forced
to f1ICl hoses 3t blocks to get the
water they needed for aerial and
pwnper trucks.
Winkle said the plant was owned
by Robert Dennison of Bedford
Township, Mich. He said firemen
had not been able to contact Den ·
nison.

Admitted ..Noell Beth Dawson,
New Haven ; Michael Reynolds,
Middleport; Pauline Taylor, Mid·
dleport ; Ray Roush,.Mason.
Discharged··Donald Weaver,
David Carsey.

Emergency calls
Two calls were answered Thur sday by local units, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services repor·
ts. At 12:40 p.m·.. the Middleport
Unit took Pauline Taylor from S.
Third Ave ., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 7:23 p.m., the Rutland
Unit took Steven Patterson from
Meigs Mine I to O'Bieness Hospital
in Athens.

To end marriages
Charging gross neglect of duty,
Pamela Sue Adrian, New Lima
Road, has filed suit for divorce
against Roger Lewis Adrian in the
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
The plaintiff is seeking custody of
two minor children.
Ralston Douglas Hemsley and ·
Helen Lou Hemsley, both of Route 2,
Pomeroy, have filed action for the
dissolution of their marriage.

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COSTUME JEWELRY

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PRICE

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Elberfelds In Bonlet0Y''
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BIG JULY CLEARANCE SALE
NOW GOING ON·
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SAVE 25 • 35 • EVEN 50$." 0N·.SUMMER
CI;OTHING
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FOil gERYONE· 1~. YOU~-: FAMI'LY~ ·, · .·
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SHOP fARLY FOR.BEST
SElECTION.:
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.QUANTmE$ .E ,lJI~JED. ' '
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FIRST DA YLIGIIT:... Trapped •In an libltndoaed water weD %10 feet
below the ground fer·over two hours, Jared Artho, 4, cries as be Is helped
by rescue workers to safety, Friday. The well, whirh was to be filled In
later that day because It was Inactive, was uncovered ooly hours before
Jared .fell !D. At transmission time, the boy was apparently unhaimed.
( AP Laserphoto),

Shale testing in Gallia County
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Engineers at Ohio State University are
refining underground recovery techniques for use in eastern gas shale
deposits to supplement natural gas supplies.
Sunder H. Advani, chairman of engineering mechanics at Ohio
State, said shale gas recovery already is undergoing field testing in
Lorai~, Galiia and Trumbull counties.
The project, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy's Energy
Technology Center in Morgantown, W.Va., also involves study of
stress and fracture systems in formations of the Appalachian Plateau
area, primarily s.outheaslern Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia.

Ohio corn production down
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - The stale's com production forecast as of
July I was 323 million bushels, down 27 percent from 1980 and the
lowest figure since 1975, the Ohio Crop Reporting Service says.
B&lt;!sed on a survey of Ohio farmers in late June, corn was planted on
4.1 million acres across the state, the agency said. More land had been
eannarked for the crop, but extremely wet conditions in May and June
delayed field work, making it too late for many farmers to plant their
intended corn acreage, the service said.
Nationwide, 7 percent more corn is to be harVested this year,compared t&lt;) 1980, based on current conditions.
..
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Soybean planted acreage in Ohi,o as of July I was estimated at 3.55
million acres, down 7 percent.from a year ago. The state's winter .
wheat production was estimated at a record 80 million bushels.

Wesleyan receives Gannett award
DELAWARE, Ohio (AJi') - Ohio Wesleyan University is the
srr:uauest college in the nstion re~resented on a list of journalism awards this year by the Gannett Folindatlon.
·
.Janet Fillmore of Somerset, N.~ .• a jwilor journalism tnajor; won a
$1,500 scholltrshijjforber,senior year, More than 400 applicantS sought
.
the 16 a warda ollereil lor the first time this year; 1
·
Ohio Wesleyan has ·an ' en.-ollment ·of 2,200 ~tlidents. The median
enrollment Of sehoois' "l''th 1\iinning student&amp; Is,more !hail ~.ooo.
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Gallia's and Gallipolts ' health
departments in the past and make it
unlikely to occur in the near future .
'·The city and county health
departments are sitting a couple of

County
Dept.
·" 412 Second Avenue

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes-sentiDel staff writer
GALLIPOLIS - In case of a
national emergency, one of the first
things to return to the local scene
will be the draft bOard.
.
But the board seen then will be
somewhat different from the one
which decided who would or
wouidn 't be inducted that went out
with the original draft in 1975.
According to Mike Hagovsky, acting stale director for the Selective
Service System in Dublin, Ohio, the
new board will act more as a court of
appeals.
The power of the local draft board
to induct was eliminated by the
present random national lottery.
The new board, effective only in ·
time of war or emergency, would
handle requests for deferrments,

66

P ~19es

H Ce nf s

blocks apart doing about the same
thing,·· says Gallipolis City Manager
Chris Morris.
" One holds an eye clinic, the other
holds an eye cline, and so on. It

City Health Dept.

518 Second Avenue

seems logtcal they would want to
merge," he says.
Gallia County Hea lth Commissioner Dr. Gerald Vallee sa ys he
agrees in principle with Morris , but
he has some reservations
" If done properly I can see some
advantages to consolidation . If it is
improperly don e, it could be a real
detriment," he says.
"Some duplication of services
would be avoided 10 a consolidation," Va llee says. " I might
support it if it is ideally done . But
there are a lot of ifs ...
One of the biggest ifs in the mmd
of Vallee and members of the county' s board of hea lth is the question of
home health care.
Home health care 1s a program
whereby nurses and doctors give
trea tment to the infirm 10 their
homes.
Gallipolis ' hea lth department of.
fcrs the service. while the county's
does not.
I Continued on A-4 1

and exercises a great deal of power
in that capacity.
If a person wanted exemption
from military service, for conscience, hardship or religious
reasons , he or she would have to submit a request to the board and
present evidence why he or she
should be exempted The board
would make a final judgment on the
matter.
Conscientious objection to fighting
in a war would probably be the main
reason presented, Hagovsky said.
In the 1960s, the draft allowed
deferrments for married peopl e and
college students. Now marrieds are
no longer exempt and college
students can only get a deferrment
until the end of the quarter or
semester.
In order to join one of the boards,

an mterested person must apply to
the state selective service office.
The office will comptle a list of candidates from each county, which is
then forwarded to the governor. The

of eacil county , l1e explained .
Ha govsky said the serv1ce 1s
renewing the boards as part of an
overall revitilzation of the servoce ,
"a n emerge ncy preparedne ss

governor, in turn , submits the list to

issue," as a service release said .

lhe President, who makes the final
appointments .
Peopl e between the a ges of 18 and
60 are being sought to serve, Hagov·
sky said.
"We're encouraging women to
join, and there may be a traimng
program of about16 hours for members, but that's a little way down the
road," he said.
Those who can't serve on the
board a re active, retired or reserve
military men. However, veterans
may apply .
The boards are also designed to
carry the racial and ethnic makeup

Despite talk a permanent draft 1s
soon in the offing, Hagovsky said the
official word he's heard from
Washington at this stage is that
there will be no peacetime draft.
Male citizens and aliens residing

in the U.S. except those on active
duty with the armed forces must
register with the service wtthin 30
days of their 18th birthdays. Men
born in 1960, 1961 and 1962 should
already have registered, the service
says, but "a ny who may not have
are encouraged to do so as soon as
possible."

Toxic chemical pollutes wildlife
refuge in Mason Co.; ponds closed
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) State officials plan to ask the U.S .
Defense Department to help develop
a plait to neutralize a toxic chemical
that has contaminated part of a
wildlife refuge in Mason County.
Natural Resources Director David
c~ Callaghan said the federal agency
will first be asked to .help analyze the
extent of the contamination, which
he said' apparently comes from an
ab8ndcined World War II explosives
.pbint that was located at what is now
the McClintic WUdlifeStation.
Gov. Jay Rockefeller is "going to
discuss this with . them early next
~." C.U.ghan said Friday after ·
'he BIUI~ the clos!nl! .of the COIItamiNitecf Hrts of thil re(ljge. · ,
Tlie ' Depa,m,ll'lent - of NaturaJ ·
~- ·!iri!ered ·the c;loslllg of
tlinie JIO.IlCia ·~ 0, teflll!e.• The J10!1c1s
·lili not, ha\lel~. but are
be,r edilli.'!ltlld 11. t ~J, ,/ ,:

~.,~. -~~ testa 'b)!~ ~ate
'"Iter.~ DIVialon ~. a
dlaltrotoilleiie.·liM

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"This substance is listed as a
priority pollutant by the Envirorunental Protection Agency and
was produced at McClintic during
the TNT manufacturing process,"
he said.
The area was the site of a government }NT manufacturing operation
for .about three years during World
War II, according to Callaghan. He
said it was deeded over to the state
in the late 1940s once the explosives
plant was closed.
Officials believe the chemical is
seeping into pond 13 from metal condull pipes left in the gi'01,llld when the
Defetise Department closed the TNT
operatiim, be said.
callaghan said the pond has been
used for public~hing, but that his
department does not know if eating
fish from it posed a djlllfler. He said
Jl0!1ds 12 ~ I7 were .being closed as
a prtc&amp;uti'illlary nleasunl.
file lrildllfe llfll8 contains about40 ,
such ponds, he &gt;ilald, but ofllclals
)lave not tested
He said'they

them.

Wil ~·. ~~~to PGIIIIJJ. 'He' li!ld feP18In open to tile1 J)l!blic.

..... .,. ~· foJlowlhl
14lftl~t·~---e
· Wllllllleid Iii the water.
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/l Mul t tmcdt il In c. Newspaper

Focus of new draft board changes;
induction only in emergency cases

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Sunday, July 12 , 1981

Forces oppose consolidation
·of city, county health depts.

FRESH PEACH
SUNDAES

Vt'terans Memorial

tnfint

Vol. IS No . 24

Copyrighted 1981

BAUM

60 explosions rip plastics firm
TOLEDO, Ohio I API - Three
firemen were injured as at least 60
explosions, accompanied by JOQ.foot
names. ripped through a Wes t
Toledo plastics company early
today .
Fire Chief William Winkle sa id
chemi cals inside th e Denbro
Plastics Co. building fed the blaze.
However, Winkle said he wasn't im ·
mediately certain what chemicals
were involved.
Two firemen , James Day, 43, and
Harold Lavrar, 32, were treated at
Toledo Hospital after being blown
out of the building through a door·
way when the first explosion oc ·
curred.
The third firefighter, Patrick

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British riots, D-1

Stewart, Mansfield, $30 and costs,
speeding; Beltty Harris, Reedsville,
$10 and costs, failure to yield; Cyn·
lhla Ord, Pomeroy, $10 and. costs,
stop sign violation; Eric Diddle,
Middleport, $10 and costs, failure to
yield right of way; Charles Stevens,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Colwnbus, $25 and coSts, set and use
DISCHARGES JULY 9
of trotline in Forked Run 'Lake;
Mary Bennett, Candace Brothers,
Rickey Layne, Cheshire, $35 and
Brtan Campbell, Cl'"'rles Cochran,
costs, iQegal parking; Michael
Cyril Coleman, Dorothy Cook,
Haller, Chillicothe, $100 and costs,
Michael Deem, Eleanor Donley,
$~0
suspended, six months
Elizabeth Edler, Luther Endicott,
probation, disorderly conduct.
Mrs. Dennis Franks and daughter,
David Arix, Pomeroy, charged
Katherine Hudson , Bernice Uoyd,
with attempted theft, was placed on
Jeff Moles, Delores Mullins, Mrs .
six months probation, given a 10 day
Raymond Norton and daughter, Ber·
jail sentence, five of which were
A driver was cited in a two-car ac · suspended, and was assessed costs.
nard Osborne, Catherine Ousley,
Geneva Rupe, Danny Short, Andrew cident near Rio Grande Thursday,
Forfeiting bonds in the court were
Toler. Roy Williams. Mrs. Thomas according to the Gallia·Meigs Post Cecil A. Ankron, Harrisville, W.Va.,
of the state highway patrol.
Wesson and daughter.
$40.50, speeding; Paul E. Green,
The patrol said Grace R. Thomas, Albany, $40.50, overheight; John H.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs . Randall Blaine, 79, Inverness, Fla., was eastbound Stockwell, Vienna, W. Va., $40.50,
Gallipolis Ferry, son; Mr. and Mrs . on U.S. 35 at 10 :05 a.m. when she speeding; Thomas L. Vilatoe, Ham·
Brian Guthrie, Jackson, daughter; reportedly failed to slow for a den, $350, overload, and Sharon C.
Mr. and Mrs . Lusty Kuhn, Oak HilL slowing vehicle driven by Michael Reiber, Rt. I, Long Bottom, $40.50,
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Edwards, 17, Rutland.
985-3301 CHESTER, OH.
speeding.
Thomas' vehicle the struck the left
Pennington, Gallipolis, daughter;
Mr. and Mrs . John Sanders, rear of the Edwards auto, causir.~ , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - Gallipolis, son; Mr. and Mrs . moderate damage to both. Thomas
was cited for assured clear distance .
Charles Williams, Gallipolis, son.
Troopers said there was no injury
10 a car-bicycle accident in Rutland
Thursday afternoon.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
The report said a car driven by
DISCHARGES JULY 8
Virginia
Kennedy, 38, Rutland,
Floyd Belcher, Mrs. Michael Cam·
on Alley Street at 2:
southbound
pbell and daughter, Tammy Daniel,
p.m.
when
a
bicycle ridden by Lula
Rosa lee DeLille, Rainelle Duff, Ger ·
Nease,
6,
Rutland,
came out from a
!rude Ervin, Sevilla Hammond,
yard
and
struck
the
side of Ken ·
Mrs. Harold Harrison and son, Mrs.
nedy's
car.
Ephriam Herdman and son, Terry
The car was slightly damaged and
Lloyd , James Lunsford, Caroline
no
citAtion was issued.
Melvin, Judith Munro, Wanda
Neigler, Mrs. Andrew Polcyn and
daughter, Shannon Reaper, Johnny Speaker named
Russell , Kimberly Salyers, Brenda
Chris Longgrear of Marietta will
Saunders, Mary Sparks, Janet
speak
Sunday at the Jubile Christian
Stanley Mrs. Allan Swindell and
Center.
POMEROY
510 W. MAIN
992-2556
son , Angela Watkins .

WonlaU, rl, Zanesville, (left) and Pat ~eDonald, ZZ,
Jackson, graduated from the a cademy July 2.

Food co-op--buying more for less, B-1

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. ca..._

said a report prepared ·
by the QNR's haUrdous·waste Section will ' be released next week.

Asked about its contentS, he said,
"you'll see that when we give it to
you."
He declined to discuss the potential effects of dinitrotoluene other
than to say it is "toxic to fish ."

WEATIIER '
for . Sumtdav
Colorado,
Sl1owers al'l' al8ct
chlng from Teus

'

DNR s pokeswoman Claudi a
DelGuidice said Friday that the
wildlife station is a popular area for
fishing in the Point Pleasant area.
" Lots of people up there use it,"
she said.

'

- Tbe Natllloal Weather Servlee forecast
sb~~etl'l ill pordoaa of l~bo, ,Mo~oa, !Jtah,
Sollth,Dali:otlt, Mlnn~otlt and W~onsln.
of.New En&amp;lllnd and I~ a Une stret·
Ll~rpboto) .

�Commentary and perspective

sunday :nmes·Sentinel
July 12, 1981

-Ed

Times-Sentiriel

·' .

Page-A_::l

.

And a cast (unwanted)
Of thOUSand
Larry Ewing

••
..

IS

]ames ]. Kilpatrick
Sin and sex
on televisionb=:======~========~'= = =
The Procter &amp; Gamble people.
WASHINGTON - The dictionary
defines "crusade" as a remedial en · who spend almost $500 million a year
terprise undertaken with zeal. )n TV advertising, quickly got the
People who act with zeal perforce point. Said board chairman Owen
are zealots, and zealots are first Butler to the networks: "I can
cousins of fanatics , and all this is assure you that we are listemng very
why the Rev. Donald Wildman and carefully to what they say." Mr.
his followers give me the blue Buller thought the reverend's
Nationa I Federation for Decency
willies.
was
expressing "some very im·
The Rev . Mr Wildman, as you
portant
and broadly held views
may have read , i::; t'II.gaged in a
crusade against sex and sin on
television . He rounded up 4,000 like ·

minded volunteers across the coun·

try , and for three months these ob ·
servers solemnly annotated every

shot, every kiss, every damn or hell
and every j1ggle on the tube . When
they were donp , the reverend ran the
results through a computer Then he

put some heavy pressure on the
sponsors of the progra!Tl5 deemed
most objectiOnable.

about gratuitous sex, violence and

profanity."
For a while there was talk of a
boycott a gains the products of the of·
fending sponsors, but that talk hs
subsided. The writers and producers
of such burruners as " The Dukes of
Hazzard" have stopped muttering
about! censorship and artisttic
freedom . For the time being the con ·
troversy has blown over, but my
blue willies remain. Two of the best

;iun1kau.., 'limes- ~entinel

!J

l
I

,\ Divisiun nf

'

~:!5

111 Cnurt St., Pt•nwnl~-. Ohio

Third AH., Gallipolis, Ohiu
16!1 I Hfi-!:142

I6111 !192·2156

Edi t Ill"

A:-;sistotnt

terprises and amusements to pass
tthe time . What do Mr. Wildman's
five million families do when they
are being offended by "Three's
Company"? Maybe they could just
sit around !be kitchen table and talk.

PAT WHITFill·: It'
Pubhshcr ·l ·nntr• ·ll· '

' ' "- •Pill" ' r l'uhll\ho · r ~ ,\ ''' '' IJ II• 111

1.1· rn· It'll~ • 11'1\,111'\ ~HI · llo · lo · &lt;~fllt • il Tho·1 ,huu ld lw In ' lhilll 'IIMI 14un\ ~ Inn ~: ,\II
kll•T• ..r• · , uhjt ••·t In o·thiiii K ;mtl mu -.t h· · q~n··d 1ulh n:tmo ·_ ;ultlrn' ami li'lt' jlhnnt·
11111 nt" ·r ...,, un• tl!nnl k th"r• ... dl lw puhh,ho·d I ..tlo ·r• , 1-...ultllw 111 ""'"' t;.~,lt '. ;ullln· .... ml!

It's a wholesome thought.

One of these days, these essentially trivial exercises in censorship
will be trampled underfoot by
technology. Before this century en·
ds, all of us will have access to 1V
entertainment across the whole
spectrum from good works to go-go
girls. Come the millennium, these
crusaders will be out of work - and
not a day too soon.

Can it be true ?-====Wi=rll=ia=m=F=.B=uc=kl=e=y

\
•

0

-~
' /\~~'itS, W~IPSN~D'E, M~ W

- MY l&lt;ET\RtMEN1'· ~~~I TORS ARt ~lr'.G A~Fl.E
UGLY. MAY 1 Wl!Bl£ Y0J fOR f\ ~MAl.!. DEISJ'wCiJN$QI..IDATIQ\l LOAN.,?'

against crime.
H~re is his plan, as pieced
together by my associate Bill

WASHINGITON- William Fren·
ch Smith, the nation's top law en·
forcement official, had never dealt
with the criminal side of the law UD ·
til he became attorney general. That
helps to explain the Jaw profile he
has n'laintained since he took office:
He has been boning up on the
criminal side of the Justice Depart ·

Sense, cents and nonsense

Bribery,
conspiracy, politics

Gruver :

In Smith's judgment, the f1ve
major crime areas that must be ad ·
dressed by the Justice Department
and its thief investigative ann, the
FBI, are violent crime, the drug
traffic, organized crime, white·
collar crime and official corruption.
It's no accident that he lists violent
cr ime first. Smith is detennined to
1nake street crime the No. I priority
of federal law enforcement. He wan .
ts to produce a climate in which the
American people need "no longer be
fearful of walking their own
streets," he has told associates.
To achieve this, Smith intends to
develop a closer closer working
relationship between federal and
local police forces, and to stan·
dardize crime prevention and detcc ·
lion methods. He has appointed a
Task Force on Violent Crime, macle
up of experienced law ·enforcem~nt
officials and headed by former At ·
turney General Griffin Bell and
Illinois Gov . .James Thompson.
Smith intends to bring his federal

ment

By Lowell Wingett
If President! Reagan had told me he was mvitmg Roy Lee Willia!Tl5 to
the White House. I could have quoted some of the pithy platitudes Grandma
used on me when she didn't want me to play with the bad boy~.
Gra nclma was fond of reminding me that a bad qpple would spoil the
whole barrel or if you touch pitch you will be defiled . Reagan was certainly
inViting a bad apple to the Oval offi ce when he included the newly elected
president of the Teamsters' Union among a group of union leaders to listen to
his sales pitch for his peculiar bra nd of economics_ The next day after his
White H u us~ visit Williams was araigned before a federal judge on federal

charges of bribery · conspiracy.
Williams and four other men were indicted May 22 for conspirm~ to
bribe U.S. Sen. Howa rd W. Cannon. D·Nev .. then chairman of the Senate
C\munerce Committee, in hopes he would delay or defeat trucking
·deregulation uppost!d by the union . All five men entered innocent pleas and
:were relea sed on $5,000 recognizance bonds I no cash required I in spite of the
fa ct that one of the defendants had previously been convicted of accepting a
kick-hack on a Teamster Pension Fund loan . I mention this only to show the
leniency of federal judge for five well dressed and obviously well-to-do men,
one of whom had been a guest of the President the preced ing day. I have seen
a young burg!ar get a higher bond for stealing a handful ohmitalion jewelry .
Just as Grandma said it would , some of the p1tch on Williams must have
rubbed off on the President because within a month he was on the 'phone
promising some 30 Southern Congressmen pie in the sky if they would sup·
port his budget cuts. Three of those congressmen Jive right here in Florida,
and I have no idea in what form their thirty p1 eces of silver was paid. I have

Like his longtime personal friend
and fonner client, Ronald Reagan,
Smith is a quick study. And like the
president. he has a sure polittllcal
instinct that adds hardheaded
pragmatism to basically con·
serva tive outlook.
Perhaps most Important of all.
Smith can get the president's ear
whenever he needs to. He has direct
access to Reagan that is second only
Ed Meese. This means that when
Smith charts the Justice Depart·
ment's course for the next four

years, he can count on the full sup·
port of the man in tthe oval office.
Although his legal background has
been almost exclusively in the ar·
cane intricacies of corporate and
estate Jaw, Smith has quietly char·
led the federal government's fight

The last

prosec utors down to gritty reality .
Too often, he believes, U.S . at ·
torneys and other officials have
taken "a n elitist approach" to their
jobs. They have had a tendency to
leave the mundane, less glamorous
cases to local prosecutors, who are
greatly overburdened, Smith feels .
The a ttorne)I;Jleneral also plans to
strengthen local law enforcement of·
ficials by providing them with the
resources they cannot afford them .
selves.
As for his second priority - the
multibillion-dollar traffic in illicit
drugs - Smith is most concerned
with the dope pushers' impact on
young peQple. To combat this, Smith
plans a broad program to inform
and educate students in the nation's
high schools and colleges about the
perils of drug addiction.
There. are nearly 7,000 schools
across the country, Smith notes, that
are seriously affected by crime,
much of it drug ·related. In typical
month , more than 250,000 students
and 5,000 teachers are the victims of
assault. This, Smith has said, is
"unacceptable and intolerable."
The atttorney general has a sur-

prise for those who have been
predicting the breakup of the Drug
Enforcement Administration and
the turnover of its functions to the
FBI, the Customs Service and the
Irrunigration and Naturalization
Service. The report of DEA's com·
plete demise, he says, has been
greatly exaggerated.
To tbe contrary, Smith wants to
expand the drug agency's duties.
While he professes to have no
quarrel with DEA's past per·
formance, he wants to make the
agency leaner and meaner. The at·
torney general will be proposing
legislation to Congress designed to
give DEA more authority than it
now has - even though such a move
would be contrary to advice he has
received from narcotics experts.
News reports that Smith wants
tu get rid of the Freedom of In·
fonnation Act are "totally false ."
What the attorney general wants is
some revisions that will bring it un ·
der better control. He has noted that
when the act was being passed,
Congress was told its administration
would cost about $100,000; instead, it
has cost more than $10 million

tabo'-!:::=========A=rt=B=uc=hwa=l=d

There are TV talk shows and there
are TV ta\k shows. The celebrity
heard the Cong resmen from Louisiana were promised sugar subsidies while talk show deals with such heavy
ihose from Texas were to receive breaks on natural gas regulations .
topics as what type of pajamas an
Williams had promised Ca nnon exclusive rights to buy 5.8 acres of actress sleeps in at night, and what
Nevada land. Reagan promised the legislators such things as would enhance it' s like to make a movie with Mel
their popularity back home and thus let them keep their well paying jobs. Brooks.
Just where does bribery in one case become shrewd political horse trading in
And then there is the other talk
show which deals with such taboo
another?
Since the Dollar Sign has replaced the Bald Eagle as the national sym· subjects as wife-beating, child
bol, WiHiams should feel right at home at the White House. He is now paid abusf. incest, homosexuality, and
$225,000 per year as head honcho of the Teamsters. That is 25 grand mort nymphomania. ·' '
than Reagan makes and this President is one who loves the rich. He has
The second c~tegory, popularized
proven that with his projected tax cut. lie even has a rich cabinet. Secretary by Phil Donahue, who I must say
of Treasury Regan left a job on Wall St. with Merrill Lynch which paid him does it very well, has brought on a
$954,986 in 1980 and State Secretary Alexander Haig was paid $738,750 by string of imitators. The problem is
llnited Technologies the same year. The other members were not exactly in that there are just so many subjects
the soup line when tapped for administration posts.
that can be discussed openly on TV,
I predict Williams will not suffer any undue punishment from either the
five times a week, and then you run
government or from his union. The Teamsters have tong since been ac · out of taboos.
" Hello, everyone, this is Hal Dorf·
customed to teh malfeasance and misfeasance of their leaders. Dave Beck.
. president fo the union for many years, was sent to jail for playing fast and man and today we're going t9 take
loose with Teamsters' money . His successor, Jimmy Hoffa, was long ac·
up the subject of one of the last
~used by the Justice Department of playing footsie with the Mafia. financing
taboos in the country - gypsy-moth ·
JAs Vegas gambling resorts with Teamster pension funds and other odds
beatting. With us today is Roderick
ahd ends of criminal behavior. He ventually went to jail, served his tenn and Crawford, who has just writtten a
~as consigned to some,unknown junk pile when his partners in crime caught
book titled, "Coofessions of a Gypsy
up with him after his release. Frank Fitzsinunons, who succeeded Hoffa in
Moth Sickle."
the presidency, managed to die in bed but as a longtime member of the up·
"First, Mr. Crawford, why bave
per echelons of Teamster affairs, it's wonder he did.
Williams, too, is a longtime depository of Teamster secrets. One of the
/IJCI('ff PIHAr
men indicted with him is a known Mafia associate. I don't believe I would ·
GRANDPA? A SllllPRJ5e'
want to be in Williams' shoes even with hill handsome salary ancl his
HI, IT'S
/11/AfS IP,
lllelcome at the White House. In spite of his indicbnent he as elected by an
/&gt;16, RICX!
BOY?
overwhelming majority of the delegates at the Teamster Convention in
Vegas. Reagan was also elected by an overwhelming majority by the
\ - ""!
delegates to the Electoral College. .
•
· The conspiracy indicbnent was btought because Williams had help fn.it
Jour others in ~attempting the Cannon seduction. Reagan also had ple11ty tf
!Jelp in seducing the 30 Democrattic Congressmen. David Stockman, Budl(et
birector, and his henchmen from the White House, spent feverish days
cajoling, promising and bartering before they had enough votes to carry the
. measure through the House. As or\e Democratic House member described It,
••The Oemocrattic cloakroom looked like a tobacco aiiCiion. '' Apln, wheit
is the thin line between conspiracy ancl shrewd politics?
'
As Grandma would have said, "One man's meat is another U~BR 's poison."
J
11

you come out of the closet at this
·time and decided to admit you were
a gypsy-moth killer?"
"'Because I believe there are more
moth killers in this country than
anyone will admit. No one talks
about it, and I felt I could help other
people who had the same problem."
"In your book, Mr. Crawford, you
say you are responsible for killing
over 10,000 gypsy moth cat·
terpillars."
"That is correct. Once I killed one,
I couldn't stop myself and just kept
going. Everytime I saw a caterpillar
I had this urge to squash it before it
became a moth."
"Did anyone in your family know
about your compulsion?"
" My wife did, but she couldn't stop
me. No one could stop me."
"When did you tealize you needed
psychi~lric help?''
"When I quit my job and decided
to devote my entire time to killing
catterpillars and gypsy moths. I
couldn't keep my mind on anything
else. I was full of hate for the UWe
buuers, and alii could thtink about!

day and night was smashing them to
pieces."

" And when you went into therapy,
whaldid you find out?"
"It all went back to my childhood.
I once saw a bunch of gypsy moths
destroy a whole woods behind rny
house, and I had developed a hatred
for them. I never was able to over·
come."

"Was it then that you discoverJ:(I
that there were many people like
yourself who couldn't stand gypsy

" Mr. Crawford, when your wife
saw you killing caterpillars, why
didn't she leave you?"
"She threatened to several times,
but I lhipk she was afraid to. I was in
such a state that I told her if she left
I would do to her what I was doing to
the caterpillars."
"This lady over here."
''My husband has the same phobia
about gypsy motths, but he won't go
for help. How do I get him to a doc.
tor?"

moths?' '

"Yes, I foundout I was not alone.
My doctor told me he personally
knew of many people wo had the
same terrible secret, and cater·
pillar·squashing was much more
prevalent in this oountry than
anyone would dare .to-admit. It was
only recently that enough people
were willing to talk about it, so that
what had been considered an
isolated case was really a national
social problem that had been

"You can't drag him if he doesn't
want treatment. He has to realize
tha.t no matter how many cater·
pillars and gypsy moths he kiUs, he
caMot prevent the blight. .Ol)ce he
ackno:.vledges he is ·only hurting
himself and his loved ones he will
then seek professional advice."
"One more questiQI\ .from this lady
up here:"
. "What do you do now when you see
a gypsy moth on your property?"
ignored."
·
"I pretend it's a butterfly and say
"Let's take some questions from ) to myself 'God loves all creatureS
the audience. This lady here."
greatand small.' "
'

'

I wish to pass along, and then to
evaluate, a run;or.
It is that President Carter and the
European leaders never had any in·
tention of deploying the Pershing
and Cruise Missiles. Carter's motive
I according to this thesis) was aU
along to bluff the Russians, in order
to induce them to enter seriously in·

Now the West, if we speak of our
allies and the United Statets as a
single entity, already has a theater
capability o!a retaliative kind. If the
decision is to deter the Soviet Union
our submarines, floating in
European waters, are ready right
now to go. They are not ready to take
out Russian ICBMs, and probably

to negotiations
to withdraw their
own
theater missiles.
At this point, pause for a little
technical glossary. The Pershing II

not ready to cope with the theater
SS-20s.
The insttallation of the theater
weapons in Europe would paten·

extremely accurate. It Is proposed
that in 1982 the work conunence to
make their deployment possible by
te end of 1983 - 108 Pershings. The
Cruise Missiles are intermediate
range ground launched missiles
fGLCMsl. They are slower than the
Persings, but also highly effective.
It is proposed that we deploy 454 of
these. Both weapons, in the jargon of
the trade, are known as long-range
theater nuclear force fLRTNF') .
Now the trouble with deploying
these missiles, whose installation
would radically alter the strategic
balance for the benefit of the West, is
that fthe report advises) the Soviet
leaders have said quite plainly that
they will not "penni!" it. Needless
to say, they do no~ specify exactly
how they propose to prevent its hap·
pening, but fthe report goes on l, the
Soviets have apparently used
language
sufficientlty
which is to say
threatening,forceful,
to con·
vince the Europeans that they mean
business.
We have here an interesting
analogy to the missile crisis in Cuba
in 1962, when we advised the Soviet
Union that we would not "permit"
the use of Cuba for strategic in ·
tennediate missiles. (The legend is
that we succeeded.) The question,
then, is whether Ronald Reagan will
ease himself into Mr. Carter's
strategum and collude with the
European chiefs of state to come up
with a ·face-saving reason not to
deploy.
Let us assume the report to be ac·
curate. Now the existence of such
missiles as are contemplated in
Europe has the effect of giving to
Europeans theater weapons with
counterforce capability. Arguably,
in possession of such an arsenal,
European leaders could preempt a
Sovlet trike - and ptpevt!nt a Soviet
massiave armed advance into
Europe.

make an invasion of Europe all but
inconceivable. As things now stand
the Europeans suspept what is cer·
tainly true, namely,·that the United
States is not going to blow up the
Soviet Union and bring lin the ex·
tennination of America in order to
keep the Berlin Wall from marching
westward. In other words, the
nuclear wnbrella has gone. Eiher
the Europeans will save themselves
through the use of conventional
NATO stength ·or - not at all: the
single excepti,on beign -the deterrent
potential of f'rance's force de frap ·
pe.
If Europe were armed, and
disposed to defend itself as con·
vincingly as the Soviets were
disposed to move westward, then in·
deed the SOviets would be checked.
We could stay out of an Europe·
Russian· enoounter,- and Europe

- The idiot who-believing himself cleaver that way) . "Shut up" - no
possessed of clairvoyance·· matter how forcefully issued-w111l't .
continually attempts to predict what work either. Ca lling the thea1r~
will happen next. (" Watch now , I' ll manager will have a momentary Im·
bet he's really going to get It ... "
pact; but, II subsides almost irh·
- The idiot who-having seen the mediately upon his or her return to
film previously--insi sts on the lobby.
previewing it, scene by scene, for
Exac~y how these morons can
everyone within range of his possibly&gt;beii eve that anyone would
melodious, if slightly slurred, voice. be interested in listening to anythmg
("Watch now, he 's really going to they would have to say, even under
get it.. )
ordinary circ umstances, is a
The most thoroughly disgusting question that ranks right up !her•
thing about these morons is that with the Mystery of the Sphinx.
there is no way I I've tried them alii Writing as one who takes film
of effectively dealing with them
seriously, it can be asserted tbat
A polite request for silence won 't there are those of ·us who go to the
help-if manners meant anything to theatre in order to see-and hear- the
these characters, they wouldn 't be fiim. Granted, it's not a very com·
talking in the first place. A 'shush' is plicated point; but. one some ap·
usally answered by a giggle (they're parently can't comprehend .

script.

American encounter.
If, however, it is true that
European leaders do not intend to
depl'oy, then it is true that tilt Soviet
Union has achieved what it
necessarily must have as the
preliminary to the Findlindization of
Europe, namely a veto power over
European military defense policy.

-The loud-mouthed fool who-in
order to impress the fool he's with
1sfle'd have to be to hang out with
this idiot)-issues forth with really
"eate" comments about the film . ..,...
-The couple that carries on a contiJIItillg conversation throughout the
C1Jinie of the film . (Usually on some
really important, deep philosophical
subject like "How cheerleading has
cllall8ed my li(e")

"About this ·trickle-down theory' _ how far
down do you suppose the trickle might get?'·

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;~~;;~~~~~~;;;r-:========~==-=-~-------------:·

~M~~~a:~ e~=~~ f~~:S~~~ ~::~rft~~~ow:.,~:;:';~ ::i!~c~~

~

)llstic~====~=======================J.=a=ck==A=nd=e=n=o=n

, ,,Ill '' - ll"lll •'r "'ll~lilll' 'o

If I ever commit murder it wiU be
in ~jlbeatre. There is, you-. a par·
tietl.lrly low form of life that occ~lly frequents such places.
You've no doubt heard them-they're
thole people who insist on talking
white the films playing. Those
~erbal types who-by every loud
al'l!l . generally offensive means
poaihle-ilestroy everyone else's
vlftlng by adding their voices to
what's happening on screen.
1'be great advantage to that little
inllovation in film introduced a few
yeti-s back by the Warner brothers
is that with the "talkies" you can
now actually hear the dialogue as
well as watch the action-neat idea,
~·t you think.
There is, however, a cadre of indiVIduals out there who seem con·
viriced that the reason other people
pay from $3 to $5 a shot to attend a
m~n~ie is to listen to them. They
come in a nwnber of varieties-all of
them foul and obnoxious.
-The ever present nurd who
thiilb he's capable of rewriting the

"I can see myself!"

preswnption that everyone of them
1s capable of manipulating the little
switch . All they have to do in order
to avoid offense is to turn the switch
to "Off."
Corrunerci~l television, Jet us
remember. is just that - a com·
mercia! enterprise. The folks at
Procter &amp; Gamble are not spon ·
sonn~ particular progra!Tl5 out of

l )uhl1~ h l' r

i':Xl'( ' U (I\T

productive existence that we watch
television by day and by night.
There are books to be read, and let·
ters to be written, and pickles to be
pickled, and a thousand other en·

American citizens. It is a reasonable

!{(lllF HT I . WINCiF.TT
ll!l!l ,\ HT Wll.'iO:"i .JH.

altruistic motives. They are not con·
cerned with promoting art, but with
selling soap. Once a program fails to
attract sufficient! viewers to sell suf ·
ficient soap, the program will be
dropped. This is how the market·
place works.
But the manipulation of the little
switch, it seems to me, ought to be
by individual decision and not by
mass persuasion. Uve and let live'
It is not essential to a contented and

rules for happy human relations are
" Live and let live," and "Mind your
own durned business." Why don't we
observe them?
These issues ought to be decided in
the marketplace . That is one of the
things a free society is all about. lm ·
plicit in the intolera1lce of the Wild ·
mon crusaders is the prospect that if
they don 'I like a particular program,
nobody else should be able to see it
either. That is zealotry in action, and
it is an ugly business.
The Mississippi reverend says his
crusade is supported by five million
families in all 50 states. Meybe yes.
maybe no . That leaves roughly 54
mil11on other families unaccounted
for . NiAety ,eight percent of all these
families have televison sets, and
there is this interesting charac·
teristic about those TV sets.
Everyone of them has a little switch
that is lettered 1n this fashion : " On"
and "Off ."
Nothing in this world - no taw , no
regulatiton, no economic presure .
nothing at all - compels the
reverend and his fnends to watch
" Dallas" or the "Dukes" or
"Flamingo Road." His 4,000 ob·
servers and the members of his five
million families are freeborn

.•

·

""*

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

C..

-- -- - - -SIOR£ HOURS

'"~
'tJ

j

Mon.-Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm \
Fri.-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

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sn'lL p• rii'I'VI OF
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VALUES L[fl
UW I

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,..like ,_a

Only at partlcipoti"'' Coptoin o·s.

Letter to
the editor
'

.On' Social
.. .
Sec •
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~

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DOONESBURY

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-------····-·-

GOOd only at

aarr's Exp. 1-lf· 61

�. '
Page-A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport

July 12, 1981

July 12, 1981•

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

PQmeroy

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va .

Page

A-S The Sunday Times· Sentinel

Forces oppose~----..:..:.(Co=-ntln--ued_from_A_-n____.:. .___

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

. fY/

AUG U-S-\T 3·4
5· •
-,-----r. .- I• ----~---

NS

OFFERS INCENTIVES - Youthful exhibitors at this year's Gatlia
County Junior Fair will receive cash incentives as prizes for their
exhibits. Tbe awards are being budgeted by Central Trust Co. Discussing
the program are !from left), George E. Woodward Jr., Central Trust
marketing director; James R. Williams, Central Trust president ;
Thelma Elliott, fair board president; Fred Dee!, 4-H extension agent; and
Tim Massie, fair board treasurer.

Central Trust offers
fair incentive awards

,.
l

GAI.IJPOLIS - Th1s year at the 1,500 youth with1n the county who
Gallia County JuniOr Fa1r. the youth a re mvolved 10 the Ga lha County
who ent er the1r proj ec ts in Junior Fair projects. "Never before
designated categones - including have we had a bus1ness make awaritems exhibited in the Activities ds on this broad a scale to our Gallia
Building and small amma ls - will County youth for non-salable 1tems
and small animals," Dee! added .
receive cash incentive awards.
Ell iott expressed her pleasure in
Making thi s new prog ram
possible, in add1hon to the regu lar seeing an organiZation such as the
premium mon~y and ribbons, is the Centra l Trust Company actively
Central Trust Company. NA. in part1c1paling in recognizing the hunGallipolis, according to a joint an- dreds of young people who spend so
noun cement made by J . R. many months in developing their
Wil liams, President of the Central project' 10 lime for exhibit at the
Trust Company , Soutthern Ohio 32nd Annual Gatlia County Junior
Divis iOn , and The lma Ell1 ott. Fair. which opens August 3, 1981 at
Preside nt of lhe Gallia County Fa ir the Fairgrounds on U. S. Route 35
JUS! West of Gallipolis.
Board.
Williams sai d that the local Bank
In each de sign ated pro ject
grouping. the Central Trust Com- has budgeted approximately $3 ,000
pany wi ll provide special premiums. for this youth awards program. The
The first premiw11 award in each exact total will depend upon the
category will be a check for $15. the nwnber of projects 10 which the
second will be $10 and the th ird, a $5 county youth participate and the
deciSiOns of the judges in the various
award.
Fred Deel, Gallia County 4-H Ex- categories, which are estimated to
tension Agent, sa id there are 75 4-H be near 100, with 300 possible awarClubs, multiple Girl Scout troops, dees.
The delails of the presentation of
five FFA chapters, fi ve FHA shapters, plus other youth orga nizations these cash awards to be made by the
acceptable for participation in the Central Trust Company will be anFair. bringmg the total to nearly· nounced m advance of the Fai r' s

On strike

For a merger to take place, the Wedemeyer says, is what would hapcity insists the consolidated health pen to the county's health departdepartment would have to offer mentlevy.
The COWlty's board of health,
home health care. The county says it
which Is different from the advisory
does not want to get involved.
"The city is committed to home couneil, is against consolidation al'health care," Morris says. "That's cording to Lee Rose, president of the
85 percent of what our health depart- board.
"To tell you the truth, I don 't think
ment does."
much of it (consolidation) ," Rose
·'The home health care issue must
says.
be discussed," he says.
"The board's not for it, the people
However, Vallee says the county
don't want it and I don't think the
health board does not support such a
county would 1M! satisfied," he says.
program.
Rose says "The county will end up
" The county does not have the
paying the bills," in a consolidated
facilities or the finances for home
health department.
health care," he says. " As of now
Morris says only the advisory
the city is losing money with it. It 's
council's
approval is necessary by
just a losing proposition."
law,
but
the
health board would have
The county board may agree to a
to
agree
for
consolidation to be sueconsolidation if a home health care
.
cessful.
program is not included, Vallee
With this strong opposition to consays.
solidation
from · county officials,
If the county says it does not want
Morris
says
the chances of conhome health care, Morris says "they
solidation
in
the near future are
are really saying they don't want a
slim.
merger.
"The chances are not very good,"
" If they really want to merge,
Morris says. "€ounty officials have
there isn't any obstacle we can't
shown little or no interest in conovercome." he says. "Everybody is
solidation. It has not passed the talk
saying they're for a merger, but
stage.
when it gets right down to it they
"There is an element to this that
throw up roadblocks."
really . bothers me," Morris says.
By state law, for a consolida tion to
"There seems to be a mistrust of me
take place, a maJOrity in both the
c1ty commiss ion and the count y
· among
some
county
Morris
says
hisofficials''
consoli&lt;\iition
health department's advisory counplans have frightened many county
cil would have to agree to accept a
officials who are afraid of " losing
merger.
their autonomy" in a consolidation.
Morris says the city corrunission
He says "it's something we
would support a consolidation, as
haven't
been able to overcome."
long as the interests of the city are
Some county officials rpay oppose
protected.
consolidation because they are
However, Marlin Wedemeyer,
afraid of losing their jobs, he noted .
president of the county advisory
An official in Jackson County,
council, is not sure he would support
which
has had a combined cityII.
county
health
district since 1953, ex.. , ca n't say eithe r way,"
plains
this
is
"the
major problem"
Wedemeyer says. "Chris Morris or
the city commissi on has never met
with me about it."
" I have no problem sitting down
and talking about it," he says, "but
there are questions to be answe red ."
question,
One important

'*''*''*'*'*'*'*''*'*

Zt«~~
Lette r-Lega l &amp; 11 x17

National Gua rd troops were under

JosephCouncil
Bonavita,
rector
of the
striking
93 ofdithe
Amencan
Federation of State, County and
Muncipal Employees, said the "vast
majority" of the 18,000 union members in the Mental Health Depart·

l imn• -

Wrnlinrl

1\ Mulllllll1hit Nt•l'l spalll' r
Pu llll shl•d t•ad t S untl a~. S"2~ Tl unl
,\n ·mw . IJ!o: lh1.• 0 111" Vodh•1 Pu!Jhslung
t 'o•ttlp;un- Mul ltllll"llta . l r11 · Sl"U 'IIII t·l a .s.~
po~t; t f.!t' lliml a ! (;alhplllr:- . Oh l'f. ~5fi:ll
1-: ltll'l"l'tl a.~ s.t't"fllttl d a.~~ ntatl t n~ ltla\lt•r
it\ Punll'fll~. Oluu . I'"' ' Offtn· .
Mt•utllol•r · Tlw A ~.~·~ · t ;ll t ~l Pn· ~~ lnl a ll•l
]);1111 Prt·.~~ A s~ ·~ · l.tl lo• t l arrtl llh•
Atlll: l"ll"illl .\t· ~· .·qmpn· Publ t:s lwr.s
,\ s~ •·ri;J!trfll .
Natrunal ,, ,J n•r lt s ui l!
Ht'p!"l' ~t'llll tii i"L' . Rranll;r nl. Ii ll i West

!' llh' Mtlt· Ruml. Sin\•• 2fl4. fklnnt .
Multti!illl . -UW'ii ~
~,. C11rrit-r ur Mttlur Rnuk
Om• IU'I'k
$1.00
Olw Mnn!11
. . . $-1.40
Ollt' Y•'ll l"
. $52.80
S I ~C. I . f: C"OPY

rttU"J-:

:rat · ~·n l .'
fl,;p .~ uiJs.· n pll• ' n ~

U.\

been satisfactorily worked out. accordmg to Elliott.

today.
It was not clear whether lhe
writers would return to work Monday or whether they would wait until
the union's board of directors and
the guild 's membership could vote
on the contract.

COMMANDER COMES ASHORE - Cout Guard Lleuleaant
Beverly Kelley, sbowu ID a 1m file photo, became lbe first woman to
commaact aU. S. Coast Guard vessel at sea wben sbe look commaad of
the 95-foot cutter Cape Newagen al Maul, Hawaii, ID Aprll1979. Allier 27
months as skipper of the patrol boat, Ketley steps ashore for land duty.
The 2!1-year-old native of Bonita Springs, Fla., is headed for the Coast
Guard Academy io New London, Coon., but she bopes to go back to sea.
"My ambition is to skipper ooe of those beautiful wbite-ships a 378-foot
'
cutter, ". she says. CAP Laserphotol.

I

DILES
Hearing Aid Center

EPA will name

444 W. Union St.- Athens, 0.
For Hearing Aid
Selection, Servict•.
or Consultation,
Based On 32 Years" ExperienceAnd/Or Referral To Appropriate
Medical Specialists:

Phone

~6141

waste committee
('()1,0, \ ' .
..

Now
We Serve Meigs . Ga//ia and Mason
Counties On A Regular Basis

Ju~ 23

(Wage Earner Plan)

fllfl\"[

RIVERVIEW
MARGARINE

Robert Redford

QUALITY MIATS
-··

__, FOR YOUR ·COOKOUTSI

1981
PERSONALLY ESCORTED
AIR TOURS

MOTORCOACH TOURS

LB .

Directors and officers of the Ohio
Valley Bank are folks with a
whole ~ hearted interest in the
prosperity and well-being of the area
we serve. They have a real stake in its
future. They know its conditions and
needs intimately. It is their home.

BOHEME
COUNTY
CRUISE
Se I . 12-19
BOHEME
OKTOBERFEST
Oct. 24-31

NEW ENGLAND
NOVA SCOTIA
Aug . 10-2S

NIAGARA
FALLS
Aug . 12· t6
ST. LOUIS
Sept. 9-13

For A Dream Vacation Or Anniversary
Se~ our Vacation Specialists!

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CAN

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CAKE MIX

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Gallon

DEL MONTE LITE
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16 Oz.

PEACHES

Can

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Half

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You.do business with the
officers of a
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GalliPQlis independent bank. We'reright here ta advise and serve you.
There'.s no problem of decisions
made ,from a "home office" somewhere else.

8

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QU~L!Ji' MI.A R ' iOR

~=S~&amp;IMM=II~.;;
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TO.ILET TISSUE

6 Roll
Pak

DEL MONTE LITE

Whether you deposit or borrow or '·
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• services, you benef\t by dealing ·With ; ·
~9 ~ hometovm, ho~e "owned bani&lt;'. ', · •

.FRUIT .COCKTAIL

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GALLIPOLIS

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$}89

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A good portion of our depositors'
funds are invested-in the communities we serve- in sound loans
to the individualS and businesses of
our banking area.

Gallon
Plastic

e

BEEF WIENERS

l

CANADIAN
M.A RITIMES
Sept. 15-18

· MAXWELL HOUSE
· MASTER BLEND COFFEE

•.199

RED $MOKIES ,

1-221-5379

),

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SMOKED
SAUSAGE

No fee for information:

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;C~o;l~u;m;b~u~s~,~O~H~.~43~2~1~5~~~~~~~~rl

3------9··

HILLSHIRE FARMS

LB.

l ee C. Mittman
Pam e la N. Maggied
Attorney s- At-law
88 E · Broad SI.

4 STI~K
POUNp

"liRUBAlEJl" ,

Independent banking is a vital and
. essential part of the American enterprise system.

BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13

' .

JOHNSON'S PRISINTS

alld Wnt VlrJChda

/

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BROUGHTON'S

Rates OUtsld«&gt; Ohln

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Six nwnth : ..... .'..
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Thrl'emooths ..... . . . .
510.50

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Ot.lo aDd Wt•st Vlr~~:lnla
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IJHIJ!t ,

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Important Reasons Why
You Expect More
From Ohio Valley BankYour Hometown,
Home-owned Bank

REWARD

\ PW il~ 1.\lll'rt' I~ IIIH ' t";ll"l" il 'T" Sl'r\"it "t ' IS

Surltla~· &lt;&gt;r;lba·liYiad"S.:.~d~)." ... s~ . oo

LOGAN MONUME.NT CO., INC.

'

446 -1752
or 446-0404

·-

Wrtte or Call lor Bookle ts Showtng M e morial s in Full Color wi1 h Stzes
ancl Price Stated .

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LOST
Older dog , part
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needs m ed1cation.
Please Call

IAL DESIGN

.... __ _

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"MAILSt.:RSCRIPTIONS

NEW

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Ga llrpo tr s . Oh 10

lllilll t~t • rnnttcd 111

Tilt• Stmility lf'lll w~·St• llllllt' l \l"ill nut bt•
. n..&lt;:~pt tn~i~t· for ;trlr alln• rm ~·mt•tlls mudr
f II t'a ITit'r.l .

LOS ANGELES (API - The
Writers Guild of America reached a
·tentative contract settlement with
producers early today in the movie
and television writers' 13-week-old
strike, a llftion spokeswoman said.
Details of the contract were to be
announced at a news conference

423 Seco nd Aven ue

ment were staying away from work .

USPS.l~

resourcefulness and devotion to duty in the face of extreme adversity .''

The French City Press

opening, as soon as a ll logistics have

He predicted the strike could spread
to other agencies by Monday .
~un~!ll_l

a problem maintaining services," he
explains.
An official with the Ohio Department of Health agrees.
"We think consolidated health
departments are more cost-effective
in small counties," says Jeni Martin, coordinator li Community
Health Services at the agency.
According to Martin, consolidated
health services are usually able to
" buy more eQuipment and serve
more people" than separate health
departments can.
She says the majority of Ci?Wlties
in Ohio have consolidated their
health departments with their cities.
Has it been successful in other
counties?
''I don't know of any.counties that
have merged and then said 'let's go
back to the way we were,' " she
says.

Reach agreement

While You Wait

BOSTON 1API - More than 100
orders to cross picket lines at seven
mental hospitals and take over the
duties of striking state employees ,
who are off the JOb for the second
straight day .
Thousands of Massachusetts'
public servants were expected to
continue the strike today in protest
over the state's failure to pay them.
The state cannot issue paychecks
until it passes a budget.

in a consolidation attempt
"The problem comes in when
people are afraid of losing power,"
says Fred Weaver, chief administrator for the Jackson County
Combined Health District.
"A p~ strUCture of the board
of health can eliminste many of
these problems,'' Weaver says.
He says a proportionate number of
members from the city and from the
county are needed to satisfy
everyone there is a proper balance
of power.
The consolidation in Jackson has
been "very successful," according
to Weaver.
" We've been able to provide many
more services than when we had
separate departments, that's for
sure," he said.
" When there are two or three
small (health) departments there is

16 Oz.

Can

�•
July 12, 1911

~J=u=l=V~==·~=====================::P~omerov-Middleport
1 2 19 8 1

Church spo,nsors Family Mission
.

'

GAWPOI.JS - A Family Mission
wiD be conducted at St. Louis
Catholic Church, 91 State Street,
Gallipolis beginning Sunday, J'!ly
19, and conttinulng through Friday,
July 24. The Missioo will be conduetted by a Franciscan pries~
Father Thomas Krupski O.F .M., of
Indianapolis, Ind. Theme of the
mission is, "The Image of Jesus."
Father Krupski will begin the
mission on July 19 with a

tuciUria,t lc

O.ay

of

P rayer.
~ are Invited to visit the
cltlirdl throughout the da)'· for the
purpc11e of adoratlton of ~ blessed
SICI'IIIIellt.
Solen\n closing and benedlctiton
will take place at 5 p.m. foUowed by
a covered dish dinner in the church

hall.

A IqleCial session for the youth of
the parish wW be held on Tuesday,
July 21, frwn 2 p.m. to 5 p .m. Each
day · Mass will be celebrated at 8
a.m. alld 7 p.m. Father Krupski will
dellver the same talk both morning
and evening. This will be done for
Emergency runs
the convenience of the people and
POMEROY-Five calls were an- encourage greater attendance.
swered Friday by local emergency
The mission is for the- entire
units, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports.
The Pomeroy Unit at 3:42 p.m.
took Enna Wilson from Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at 5:02p.m.,
treated but did not transport Sue
Bissell, Five Points. Syracuse at
8: 28 p.m . took Douglas Hemsley
from the Syracuse Ball Park to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 7:28
a.m. the Rutland Unit took Pearl Little from Rutland to Veterans
Memorial and at 7: 'n p.m . took
Samuel Wamsley to Holzer Medical
Center .

family and all are encouraged to attend each daily session. The tlleme
rl. Anointing ol .the sick and JeaWI as
Healer will be featured oo Wednesday, July 22.
.
On Thursday' July 23, the parish
co uncil members , lectors,
eucharistic ministers, teachers and
others who serve the parish are invited to attend a special session in
the evening at 8 p.m. The mission
will close on Friday with Mus at 7
p.m. A mission is a family~riented
program of Christian Renewal.
Thou~h the mission is conducted
for the catholic community of Gallia
County in Particular, all noi}Catholics interested In attending any
of the sessions are most welcome.

r - - - - - - - - - -----:=---------

ROYALTY - These are the candidates for Meigs Carolyn Bowen, Carla Rife, Peony Miller, Sherry
County Junior Fa ir king and queen who will be selected Myers and Kathy Parker; back, I to r , Dean Colwell,
in August. All candidates enept one are 4-H Club Robert J effers , Bill Dye• and David Lawson, who Is a
mrmbe.s. The candida tes pictured, arc front , I tor , Southern F .F.A. member . Queen ca ndidate not present
for the picture is Beth Ritchie.

What's Your Choice?

Wait irks Ohio congressional rep
WASHINGTON
cungres~ mcw

1

AP 1 - When a

asks to testify at a

congressiona l hearing. the re presen·
tat1ve conducting the heari ng
ro uti nely gives his or her colleague
prion ty on the witness list.
It's one of the little courtes ies
L'O ngrcssmen extend to each other.
That's why Rep. Mary Rose
Oakar. D-Oht o, was &lt;rked Friday
when Sen. Wtlham L. Armstrong, RColo., kept her wmting in the wings
nearly two hours before letting her
testify agamst proposed Social
Security c utbacks.
· I guess he was hopmg you would
«II go away." Ms. Oaka r told a
reporte r du ri ng a recess as she
wai ted in the wi tn ess room .

Ms. Oakar sa &lt;d s he mtssed two
House votes wh1lc cooling her heels
tn the Senate hear ing room .
Arms trong recessed the hea ring to

to the Senate floor for a vote .
Testifyi ng a t the lim e was a panel
headed by Lowel l M. .Iones of Akron ,
dtrector of employee benefits at
F ires ton e Tire &amp; Rubber Co. When
returning. Armstrong told Jones'
pa ne l to wa tt a nd le t the
gu

congresswoman testify . apologizi ng
for making them wait.

Ms. Oa kar. who chairs the Task
Fore(• on Soe&lt;al Sccu nty of the
House Ag mg Committee. repeated
ea rlier charges that SociC:tl Sec urity
trustees pre.sen ted a distorted picture in ct r£~cent report predicting
tho! the sys tem faces bankruptcy .
Ht·c·t·iw

school funds

POMEROY - The J une Sta te
School foundati on subsidy payment
of $7l583.361. 57 tu 600 Ohio city.
exempted
village
andnt yloca
l school
di.stncts and
87 eou
boards
of

educatiOn was re ported by State
Aud itor Thomas E Ferguson . Metgs
County· s three school distn cts.
followin g ded uc tions for stat e
retirement, received a total uf
$284,307 .11 Of !his ftgure, $75,328.79
wen t to the Eastern District! :
$141,422.02 to Me igs Local, and
$67,536.30 to Southern Loca l. In addilL On, the Meigs Cou nty Board of
Education received a direct a ll otmen! of $16,755.81.

One part of the system - the Old
Age a nd Survivors Trust Fund - is
in lmancia l trouble, she said. The
over-all system is hea lthy and
headed for a large s ur plus in a lew
yea rs, s he said .
The congresswoman said David
Stockman. director of the Office of
Management and Budget . is counting on using $1110 billion from the
Socia l Security program to bala nce
the federal budget. " We must
remove the 1Social Security 1 trust
funds from the unified 1federa l!
budget." she sa id
Inclusion of Socia l Secur ity !D the
unifi ed budget, a practice that started in 1969. "exposes the .. program
to blatant manipulation by persons
who would usc the funds for a ·q ui ck
fix' to ba lance th e federal budget,"
she sai d.
Sen. Patnck Moyniha n, D-N . Y..
said the administration distorted the
statisti cs in an effort to show that a
crisis ex isted .
But Armstrong, who has cla shed
several limes with Moynihan over
the question of whether there is a
true crisis, sa id he thought the
description was appropnate. "There
is a prospect that the worst ca n
corne uponus," Armstrongsatd .
J ones, tesllfymg in behalf of the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce. sa id
the Soc tal Security trust fund levels
have been reduced " to the point
that . unless effective action is ta ken
by Congress this year, the Old Age
and Survivors fund will be out off
moncylatein1982
"T he
impending
fin anc ial
dis tastercanbeavertedwithoutincreasing taxes or res ortmg to
general fund financing."

J ones' reco mmendation~ for
saving the system included bringing
government employees ~ who now
have thei r own retirement systems
- under Soc"'! Security a nd enacting a dministration proposals such
as in creasi ng the minimum
retirement age to 68.

r--------------1

~*****************~

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above
ground pool kits of any
type .
Filters • Chlorinators •
Motors and Pumps • Safety Ropes • Pool Ladders •
Lights • Pool Games •
Pool Base • Filter Sand •
Automatic Pool Sweeps •
Vacuum Hose • Cleaning
Equipment • Pool Paint •
Poolside Furn . • Chemical
Healers • Solar Covers •
Winter Covers • Skimmers
• Diving Boards • Slides •
Liners.
Buy all your needs from
local warehouse and save.

regulation ~ pro~tiDit compoundint of

to. S.,v.ngs account interest

mteresl. Automatically renewable
&lt;IT mAtunt'f ill the prev.ailing rate.
lhe actu.11 return tQ tOV"es lon on

ctleckin9 i!Ccount con11eni ence

5.25%

·

r rc .Hu ry 's B•lh is higtn~ r .

5.46%

14.300%

AnnuAl Yield......

.. Annu•l Rift

•.....:..:::..:.:.:.:....._.:.:.:.;:::.;.;.;~·

• ....__ I HW U MON., J U l '( l l

2% YEARS

__J

Minimum DePOsit SSOG

The rate shown below tor thl'&gt;

Cerriticate is applicable this
l)(&gt;r•od and is r elated to the
average , 11;, year yield Of
tr&amp;asury "·securities . lntrrrst is
compound~ daily and ts ~id
monthly,
quarterly ,
semi
Annua l ly, orannua!lv .

For fhow investors who preter a
longer term this cerffftcate &amp;arns
the sam&amp; rate and is Issued under
the "'me regulations IS the 2•; ,
vear certificate. '"'"'"' Is com
pounded daily and paid monthly
quarterly, semi ·aMuatly. or an'
nuallv ,
- -

11.75% 12.65%

A~!;,~~~ON J~:~~~~~j

.AMu•• Rat&amp;

Annual Yield

T H~U M ON

J\JL Y 10 _

........

o~-..
FQ..I.A

Interest .must rem••n bn deposit a tutt yur to earn •nnual woiel•. Tttere is 1
su•sta_n llal penilty tor prem.rure wittMiuwaf ol Certilic•te fuMs . Minimum

Hours
10 til s Weekdays
10 til2 Saturday

De post I IS,OOO for Mcmthl't Interest .

EACH DE POSt lOR INSURED UP TOSlOO,OOO BV · TI-4E FDIC, AN AGENCY OF
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT .

868 CAMDEN RD.
HUNTINGTON, W. 11.
' 429-4788

-----@hf'..

.,..IO.
''

~'J"'Jem
y·Bank----W'G

~-.~~~··M,,.,....,,.,

*~r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

;

~

FEATURE''

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

with purei'IIH of . ,
ACA VldeoOisc Ptlyer

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

Office Hours Dy Apf)ointment Only
FORRE N f
H ·II· rro:.,l ( j , n1 C h,1 S ',UI I f'

tor

'-.IJ IT ,ll11f '

!IOC !or

pr QII ''.'&gt; IOn &lt;ll Olti Ct'

H 6 0(){ I

(l f

CALL (6·1 4)-992-2104

or
(&lt;1 11

.t.!O .lY 1'1

or

.l

EnJoy "'• wtt In moriM, - r l l •nd
mont . .. on rwcorda ... on your own TVI

(304~75-1244

Bring the magic home lor only

ADVANCED

~~

(.j

ANNOUNCING OUR FANTASTIC MID-SUMMER SPECIAL
All carpet· and uphol stery cleaned or
estimated during that w eek will rec eiv e
FREE lM Scotchguard fabric protector np·
piiOO by on e of our licensed applicators . Th is
re pr ese nts a ~o a •o overall sa vtngs!!!!

Scot c hguard fabr1c protector w111 help keep
::'.~--- those ex p e nstv e P• ec es of furnitur e or your
carpel lookmg new longer wh•le 1t prote&lt;ts
dgain st spill s and d.rt .
Ve lv e t? ? -

Our Sp ec1a 1ty!! !!!

Wea r e the prof ess ion&lt;~ Is m th e cl eaning field .

NOT E : Remember. even if you do no1 have it
cle&lt;tned th is week, this special applies if w e
es t• mate now and clean tat er .

ASK ABOUT OUFI FREE
FRIENDL. Y ESTIMATES

ASK-FOR GARY OR' ROY
DON'T PUT IT OFF TILL TOMORROW

AND

mo~ic s trom whic h to

'

record pleyer' thlt br•rtO• you not ;yst MUnd

&lt;
Ill

·'fl.

tlut pjCturet too. II .:onnee,l tiO 'fOU' TV Nl 10
vou an witCh yowr faVOf'ilrt mowitt the way
tile,- ...,.. INIAl t0 l)e Mll'l . Cof?tptlti I"Cf '
un•nterrupted . AI your OWfH;on..ftltftce. WUtl
1 therp, vil't(l Dldu,. 10'1 I\IYt' to' ... to
bel•e'tt .

·

And il'• easier to oper••

!Mn.·• ,._,.

lfMI snow. CCfl_.n~tltttufW't
11\Cir.tfe: Vllull
·~

...,.,Ot

·

..... '

.

blckwtrd teiMintll tl titMt notfMI

· IP"d1....., Aoollt tOr even tntet 'ltOIN
locatiOn w11 digital rtld-out: 1ncl .._. for
intttnt. inlilri'I'Huklm to...,..... lht iM'OI'II
' Of lhl dOOtMtl

solocl .

(

' .~

'

RCA Vlde.oDioo ,..,.,

vou··o~r A'· FRt;E
t

•

•r

r ,

'

'

'

· . ~.QPC9RN .roPP.ER
~lhi~l! goe• Deller wlih, a .
movte tHan popcorn! So. tn
.. oddillqlL lo the free movie"·

' you olso ·genhia West
Bena.a.iner-Mitlc Corn
Poppe~L..o regulor

vatue-rr.,: " ~ .·

'•

FOR APPOINTMENTS.

Dr. Navalkowsky Office Is

POMEROY-Three accidents in
Pomeroy Friday were reported by

Located

the Pomeroy Police Department.
At 4:50 p.m., a car driven by
Joseph Donahoe, Middleport, struck

In The Professional Building
Point Pleasant, W _ Va .

r~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilj

GRAND OPENING
.
Vinton Quality Carpets
MONDAY, JULY 13 thru SATURDAY, JULY 18
1 WEEK ONLY

r;:::==~===::::::::;:;;;;;;:::;::;;::::;::;::;::;:;:;;~""'""';:;:=il
1,

HEAVY

$ TRAVEL .SHOW
Tuesday, July 14 - 7:30 P.M.
t§&gt; .Office - 360 Second Avenue

CUT-N·LOOPS

Niagara Falls and New England by Bus
· Canadian East Coast by Air
GALLIPOLIS

PH. 446-0699
OTA0134

$1Q95
INSTALLED WITH
PADDING

448·3915

,fODAY!

MINIMUM
INSTAUAnON FEE
OF s25.00
FOR ORDERS
UNDER
13 SQ. YDS.

'· '

•

INSTALLED WITH
PADDING

KITCHEN
PRINTS

installation in your

I .

$795

home or business

IN ST ALLED

fullest extent.

•29."

.

ALSO
PLENTY OF

COMMERCIAL
TYPE
INDOOR.OUlDOOR

ASTROTURF

$1 9~nd

REMNANTS' TO

Up

'

CASH &amp; CARRY

'$599

CHOOSE FRO"' . Installation Add $2 per yd

INSTALL!:D

FREE ESTIMATES

OWNER: DICK METHANEY

VI:NTON.
'

.

Q~ALtr·Y c~· ~PETS
13 Miles North of HQizer Mi!d)cal iei!l~r on SR 160
In' Vinton, At thl! Junctionot
Rt. 1~ '- 325
.

;,
'(

$}}95

workmanship and

.

- J

HEAVY
SAXONYS

Quality of our

CUT-N-LOOPS .
FOAM BACK

'

IF NO ANS CALL

At

2513 .Jackson Ave.

INSTALLED

··~,..,..
~· ·
wltll ltWcllaao of. on
'

ptaver . Jull tcNIG me elite . flip 1 1wtltfUnd ,

entov

Call 675-6143

A*P141rie, Rocl!ey, PtM l&gt;ltllrller

er'lllrllll"'ment since tellhl&amp;ion
IIMII - RCA Satect.Vision Vld.o()iiC . fhe

,.
0"'

Office Hours Will Be
9 a.m. · 5 p.m. Monday · Friday
Starting Wednesday, July 22.

is guaranteed to the

and many others . Ycu1 cho• co ot 40 hi!

OtlcoYer the moat
e111c:•t•ng new lorm of

en

SPECIALIZING IN INTERNAL MEDICINE
IS NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS.

Take home you~ choice ot twp 11"10V~ lillt!!.
absolutely tree! Select trom hit mo~ies l1ke

11'1 maglcl

MONDAY, JULY 13 - FRIDAY, JULY 17

Dr. P. James Navalkowsky

Police probe .
three wrecks

a car driven by Mrs. Virginia Edwards, Pomeroy, as Mrs. Edwards
attempted a turn into a driveway on
Mulberry Ave. Damages were light.
Friday morning, a parked ca•
owned by Walter Grueser, Pomeroy,

manufacture and sale of illega l
drugs. The jury found him innocent
of five other drug charges.
Managan's 33-year-old former
wife, Unda, with whom he still lived,
was convicted by a jury in the same
trial of one count of conspiracy and
two counts of using a telephone to
promote manufacture and sale of
illega l drugs.

black eye on the de partment. "
" It' s a shame, " said Dayton Fire
Chief Frank Krug, who is retiring
Aug. 3. " This man had potential. He
had a gOod head on his shoulders,
but he just didn 't have his priorities
in the right place."
Ma nagan was convicted of one
count of conspiracy and 10 counts of
using a telephone to promote

IICA Ylllelll*c Plover

YOU GET 2 FREE MOVIES

lt'110 ea1y
to operate ·
you'll think

The Ohio Department of Liquor
Control t&lt;anslerred $121.9 million in
net profit to the Ohio general
revenue fund for the fiscal year of
1931. Now that must add up to a lot of
boOze. -Well-cheers-and do keep
smiling.

with an undercover agent involved a
$400 sale of a drug which Managan
represented to be methamphetamine to Richard Stewart of the
U.S. Drug EnfoDCement A~ ­
ministration in a Dayton tavern on
Jan.5.
In his defense, Managan said he
was the victim of entrapment by a
paid inlonnant for the DEA .
Acting Dayton Fire Chief Daniel
Hogan said Managan would be terminated from the department as
soon as Dayton officials received official notice of his conviction.
" I'm sorry to see this whole thing
happen," Hogan said. "It's kind of a

$995

#1
wtaiiiW...._. ot •

vsr CLEANING SERVICE

0

'

$499

You'll have to get Marilyn Wolfe of
Racine to tell you about the encounter between her dog and a
skunk. Incidentally, if you ever have
a similar p&lt;oblem-that of getting
rid of the odor-Marilyn swears by
tomato juice.

ticularly
money was
PoweU's
parking lot
would {lOtfor
bechildren,
a barriersotothat
admission
by astruck
truck on
driven
by Christopher
to the fair . Persons wishing to ride Sword, Xenia . There were mediwn
will purchase ride tickets or stamps damages tothtfGrueser vehicle.
from the ride office a !the fair.
The third accident occurred when
Both the regular gate admission .. a car driven by Nancy Hubbard,
and \he se~on pass will_allow fair- Syracuse, backed into a car driven
goers to VIew the exhibits and see by Janet M. Ambrose, Pomeroy,
the entertainment on the main stage near the drive-in facility of the Farandthelrackarea .
mers Bank. There were only mmor
Passes and memberships will be damages.
separate this year. In order to vote
; "r-.,.-1
in the annual election you must pur•
ha
. be hi fo $! from a Vt~terans Memorial
cseamemrspr
fairboard member or at the fair ofAdmitted-Pearl Utile, Rutland;
lice during the fair. Memberships do Bonnie Smith, Middleport ; Erma
not entitle you to admission to the· Wilson, Pomeroy; Albert Hemsley,
fairgrounds. They only entitle the Syracuse.
person to vote.
Discharged-Uncia Powell, Ronald
Questions concerning admission Russell, Eva Conkle, Mae Lightfoot,
should be directed to fair board Ora Rice, James Wamsley, Jr.,
members.
Pauline Taylor, Betty Bates.

GALUPOUS - Five cases were
tenninated Friday in Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
Robert H. Taylor, 43, Bidwell,
charged with DWI, fined $300, sentenced to four days in jail, driver's
license suspended for six months
and placed on six months probati~n .
Forfeiting bond ftx' speeding
were:
Jim G. Theodore, 22,-Colwnbus,
. $28;
M. Payne, 65, Colwnbus,
$26;
1·, Riffle, 19, Point
~ .M. Waugh, 35;

GENERAL ALLERGIST

The Bend 0' the River Arts Council, which is relatively new , got off to
a flying start with an excellent
exhibit at the Meigs Musewn during
Big Bend Regatta Weekend .
Officers of the group vow that they
will be planning a lot of shows and
activities in order to emphasize the
talent that is in the county and,
hopefully, to instiU in others the
desire to create works of art. Look
for the art show of the annual Meigs
County Fair to be much improved in
August due to the council's efforts.

CINCINNATI ( AP) - Dayton
Assistant Fire Chief Richard M.
Managan has been ordered by a
federal judge to undergo three months of psychiatric tests following his
conviction of 13 drug-related
cbarges.
Managan, 35, suspended since
March 20, was convicted by a jury in
U.S. District Court in Cincinnati on
Friday. Jurors deliberated about 10
hours over two days.
Managan was accused in connection wlth the manufacture and
distribution of methamphetamine,
methaqualone , mescaline and a
drug known e.s MDA .
U.S. District Judge Carl B. Rubin
plans to decide on a sentence
following the psychiatric tests.
Daniel P . O' Neal of Colwnbus.
manager of Buckeye Scientific Co.,
was among the chief witnesses
against Managan. O'Neal said he
was a paid infonnant and sold
Managan chemicals used to
manufacture the drugs.
Officials•said the only transaction

pass~ all OW the h OIder a dmiss'
, IOn to

~d P~cJoo:fe~sf: ~e 196 ; f~~~~~;

David Persons, 19, Chester, appeared to answer a charge of theft in
connection with a motorcycle taken
from the J &amp; · R Sport Shop on East
Main Street in Pomeroy on Tuesday ,
July 7.
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien foun d
there was sufficient evidence to bind
Persons over to the common pleas
court.
Grand theft is a felon y of the fourth degree and the county court can
only conduct a pre1uninary hearing
on the matter. The case will now
p&lt;oceed in the common pleas court.

jured parties.
Richard Van Meter, Reedsville
appeared for sentencing upon a
prior plea of guilty to receiving
stolen p&lt;operty. Van Meter was
charged in connection with property
taken from the Church of Christ in
Tuppers Plains in Janua ry of this
year.
Judge Bacon ordered V;m Meter
placed on p&lt;obation for a period of
one year and resttitution to any in·
jured parties.
Meanwhile, in Meigs county court,

conviet assistant
• fire ch Ief on d rug count s

adrmss1on would have nsen to $4 per
person this year. The Fair Board felt
that the pubhc would
ser. .be better
.
v.ed by a lower admission prtce, par-

the fairg.rounds for the entire week
of the fair, _AugusU-8. The pnce of
18
thbee paldss this yeati{ $7. P~sse:;'~
so now un noon on ug
•
~~here have been ·several imrta t lia
. dmiss'
.

the Meigs County jail on other
charges .
Ricky David Smith, 20, Coolville ,
appeared for sentencing upon a
prior plea of gullty to four counts rl.
breaking and entering. Smith was
charged with B &amp; E's at Forked Run
State Park, Riggs Used Cars, the
Chester fire department and at tbe
Robert Elberfeld farm. He was
represented by Charles Knight.
Judge Bacon ordered Smith
placed on probation for a period of
two years and restitution to any in-

0

The Meigs County REAcr team
will _never again use " Unit 4" in its
operations.
This is in tribute to tbe late Robert
J . Hawk of Pomeroy who had been
assigned that nwnber. Although the
late Mr. Hawk was only a member of
the local REACI' unit for a short
time, other members feel that his
contributions were so notable that
they have retired "Unit 4" in his
memory.

GAWPOI.JS _ Seas
1 f .
passes for the Gallia eow:'t;aJun~~~
·
t n 1 Frt'day at a.~F a1rwenosae
banks and businesses. The seasonal

j ud~t' t•nds cast's

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

four ·years, he has ~n serving in foUO'!ring appearances before Meigs
Kansas City, Mo., atGraceandHoly . County Common Pleas Court Judge
Trinity Cathedral and at St. Peters.
John C. Bacon Friday.
Father and Mrs. Elberfeld and
Terry Lee Brewer, Racine, intheir son, Mark, will reside in Boon- dieted July 2 by the Meigs County
ville.
grand jury in an arsoo charge, enThe newly assigned priest is a tered a plea of not guilty and was
grandson of the late Alfred Elberfeld released on his own recognizance.
of Pomeroy and a nephew of Mr. and
Roy Jack Neff, 20, Middleport, in·
Mrs. George Morris, Pomeroy. His dieted July 2 on two counts of
father IS also lonnerly of Pomeroy receiving stolen property, entered a
and was here recently to attend the plea of not guilty. Bond was set at
annual Pomeroy Htgh School Alum- $1 000. Neff is currently being held in
mBanquet.
'

passes now. on sale

. 1
t the gate this year
1
nuss on pr ces a
will be $2 for adults and $1 for
children one through mne years.
nus represents a decrease in ad. .
.
f
the
.
rrussion prices rom
previOus
.
. .
two years.
In 1979 and l!NIO date admissiOn
was $3 for all pe~ons regardless of
age. However this $3 charge Ineluded ~ charge for ndes. This year
ndes will not be. mcluded. Donald
Andrew Cox, chan-man of the Membership
Committee
explained
that
the
cost of
including free
rides witth

~

I

Village is materializing thanks to
the Southern Ohio Coal Co. and the
Meigs Division of the Unitetl'Mine
Workers.
Cooperatively, the two parties are
responsible for the installation of 2fl
large lights which are in the process
of being placed at the Middleport
Community Park . Representatives
of the Middleport Youth League
have joined in helping set the poles
and wire them in. The Ben-Tom
Corp. has provided equipment for
setting the poles.
The lights will not only make night
games possible but, it seems, will be
beneficial for staging other night activities at the popular park. Value of
the lighting is somewhere over

The Rev. Richard B. Elberfeld,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Elberfeld, Hamilton, has been called
as rector of Episcopal Christ Church
in Boonville, Mo., and as vicar of St.
Mary's Church, Fayette, Mo.
Father Elberfeld who is .a first
lieutenant (chaplain) in the Air For·11 !so serve as
ce Reserve WI a
·
t
K
M'l'ta School
cha PIam a emper t t ry
in Boonville. He is a graduate of
Sewanee University and the Virginia
F th
1
Th 1 · 1 Se ·
eo ogtca
Rllnary. or e pas

3% YEARS

Minimum Deposi1 SSOO

was at the helm HOEFUCH .
appmntlygotgreatcooperation.
A nice contribution to Middleport

Two banks, the Fanners Bank and
Savings Co. of Pomeroy and the Vinton County Bank bave contributed
an electric scoreboard for the park
Improvement. This is the first time
there has been a scoreboard of any
kind, I'm told.

Minimum Deposit $10,000

earns vou SL•' intere$1 everr

The Rutland community Is certainly Wbe conunended for its July
4th par!ide. .
·
Notonlydldtheparatlehaveasurprislng nun;mer rl. entries but the
creativity, originahty · and .work
shown by those
entries was lll)o
pressive.
I feel sure the
successful parade
was nlit· ac ~
cidental. Wlioolver
.

Page- A-7- The Sund ay Times -Se ntinel

Two arraigned, two sentenced in court

Commends R .u tland arr~:~:d tw~~s':~te:::

$20,000.

:

aDRIVE
lpo IS ce .. !
THRU
~
CARRYOUT
!~
! 709 First Ave .
ll- .
'******* *********'*'
~

HOLIDAY POOLS

HoeDich's Betit of the_Bend

Gallipolis , Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

�Page-A -8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Open Dilily
~undily

10 · ~

'

1· 6

t

.

r.,~

July ll, 1981
.The sunday Times-Sentinei....:.Page:-

B·
·I

Floyd M. Bentz.
POMEROY - Floyd Michael Ben75, of 176 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, died Friday night at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was a retired Marion city employee and member of the Enterprise United Methodist Church.
Surviving are two brothers,
Thomas and Willis , both of
Pomeroy; two sisters, Lena Lowen
and Marjorie Bowen, both of
Pomeroy; a sister-in-law, Della
Frost of Marion ; and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
parents. Michael and Esther Bradshaw Bentz; his wife, Alta Mabel
Fo• Bentz; two brothers, Leo and
Norman ; and a sister, Mae.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Tuesday mEwing Chapel, with
\ the Rev . Richard Rothemich officiating . Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
:;.t the chapel after 7 tonight.
tz,

Lorena Reynolds

Buying more for less.
SUMMER
CLEARANCE
$8 • $12

Cinnamon
Crisp

Ladies r&gt;ants, Jeans
or Skirts. Sizes 8·18.

$4 •

$(}

Our Reg . 5 96 12.96
Ladies T-shir ts or
Blouses.

SPICIAL
SAVINGS

Sizes S, M . L .
(400)

89~

( 401 )

EAC H

1.48

(403)

The goal of the orga nization - comprised of
more than 200 persons - is to "provide
·. wholesome food without lois of preserva tives
and additives." The food is healthy, natural
and, according to members, cheaper.
The C&lt;&gt;-Op provides members with a monthly newsletter, containing information con. cerning shipments, recipes and an order
form. There is no minimum order per
customer. The only requirement is that each
person must contribute one hour of his time in
exchange for every $25 ordered and must not
go more than three months between orders.
To order. one simply has to attend a meeting
- held once monthly - at the Chapel Hill
Church of Christ, off Bulaville Road. Orders
are picked up at the Jaycee building on the
Route 35 bypass.
"We're in the process of expanding," says
Mrs. Juanita Wood, Rio Grande, a champion
of the C&lt;&gt;-op. "We've just recently elected a
Board of Directors, the results of which will

be offered in the upcoming newsletter."
The organization offers not only staples breads, pasta, rice, flour , etc. ·- but other
necessary items - detergent i dish and
clothing), pet foods, spices, herbs, teas, snack
foods, paper prOducts, shampoo, juices,
cereals - once the group even offered 'Mary
Jane shoes.
"One of our biggest savings is on cheeses,"
observes .Mrs. Wood. " We have a large
variety and can offer it at considerable
savings." The types of cheese available include cheddar, bleu, brick. colby, gouda,
Monterey J ack, muenster , mozzarella,
provolone, romano , swiss (baby raw milk ,
mild raw milk), farmer's cheese, edam,
cream cheese.... everything - or more - offered in your local market.
The C(H)p prides itself on offering healthy ,
natural foods . Snacks offered include carob
brownies, carob malted milk mjx , roasted unCalled soy halves, whole wheat pretzels,
roasted corn nuts, peanut butter crunch .
Among bread offerings was ' 'triticle" bread;
triticle is a combination of rye and wheat.
The Co-op gets its gupplies from all over .
The juices come from California, the honey
from beekeepers near Columbus . The
muschroorns have thus far been supplied by
growers in Jackson, Ohio.
The enterprise is a non-profit organization,
a member of the Federation of Ohio River C&lt;&gt;operatives fFORC) and is democratically
governed by members. Anyone may join for a
$1 membership fee, which may be refunded at
any time. For more information, call Omedia
Spreigel, 441H1545 . For a complimentary
newsletter, call Martha Berne at 245-5392.

Rev/on• FfeJt • Sh
Fo r normal
ampoo
·
ho
I
: O J1Y and dr y
·" ~~ 6-oz ba ttle Save

II

SAY CHEEEEEEEZE Cheeses are always a large part
of each c&lt;&gt;-op order. Members
can choose from bleu, cheddar,
colby; Monterey Jack, muenster,
mota.rello, provolone, swiss and
more.

(406)

Limit 2
Rolls

Limit 2
Your
Choice ( 405 &gt;
.
.
Vlastc • Fresh Pack Pickles
Choose Polish dills o r Kosher
dills 1n a 46-oz. ne t wt . ] Or. Save

1.19

Limit 2

K mart'" Disposable Coffee Filters
Package of 100 Des1gned to t1t
many automa t1 c d rip unrts.

38

Sale Price
24 Plastic Drinking Cups
9-az.-size c ups in a selection
of color s. Big savings. Save.

(407)

3. 33~e8~
0ur

COLOR

30x37" trash Can Liners
15 rn1l F1t
50 pl asti C liners
S
'
20 -30 gal cons
a ve

deputies an unknown ca r forced her
off the road into a ditch at 7:19

PRINTS

( 408)

5.97

night.
She was not mjured , according to
reports.
Two Ga llipolis self-serve gas
stations told police persons left their
stations without pay tng for their gas.
A woman left the Rich Oil station
Friday afternoon without paytng for
$10 of unl eaded gasoline. according
to police reports.
The manager smd she was driving
a yellow Plymouth Champ With West

• Travel Alarm Clock

CUTTER

virginia license plates.

97

(412)

Sale Price
Trigger Spray Fantaslik•
A ll -purpo se household
c leaner
32-oz · boltl e

Our (410)
For
1.97 Ea.
22x42" Bath Towel
Polyes ter 1 co t ion.

5 For85e
Standard
Size
Reprints
,._.~,,"' About Our
m.nm,., Service

Color Prlnl Film
Choose Focal" 126112
or 110 112. ASA 100
u\C iuded

Our Reg. 2.66

Our Reg. 2.97

1.97

2. 3

DIVIDING WHOLESALE QUANTITIES'- U&gt;-op
volunteers begin dividing the large quaolies of produc-

ts as soon as they are delivered so pick-ups can De com·
pleted the same day.

Sample order form ; not

for use .

Story by Saliyanne Holtz

2 $1

Our (411)
For
62C Ea .
12x12" Washcloth
Polye st e r I co tt on

Pbotos by Ellen Christy

.

Cream
?spray
Your Choice Of Cutter"' Insect Repellent
1-oz .· concentrated crea m formula or 6-oz ··
easy-on spray Protec t s against mosquitoes and
othe r bit1ng 1nsects. Regular ·o r evergreen

I!SICT RIPILLIN I

~

$3

From Yaur Color
Print NegaHves
Our Reg. 8.97

F r~day

his driver license and sa id he would

Stock up now
and Save.

Sale Price

thefts

pay later that day . The man has not
returned. the manager told police.
Mrs. Stan Geremesz told police a
$49 Delco battery was stolen from
her Chevrolet dump truck sometime
Friday.
The truck was parked a t Smith 's
GMC Trucks Inc. on Pine Street
when it occurred. she sa id.
Several employees at Bob Evans
Steak House on Eastern Avenue
reported money was stolen from
their purses sometijne Friday.
A total of $60 ts missing, along with
one employee's wallet, according to
reports.

2 Liter bottle

Metal Shelving Unit
4-shelf units are 60x36x12"
Sturdy . w1th o gray fin1 sh. Save

wrecks,

At the Concord Oil station a man
tried to pay for $20 of gasolme with a
check.
When the manager told him he
rould not accept checks, the man left

PEPSI

UNLOADING- Two CIHIP members belp tile driver ds the llems on the invoices. One hour.ofv~lunteer time
unload lbe delivery truc_k as Barbie Epllnl! !left• recnf. Is required for every $25 purchase. ·

probe

the car.
Ca ron E. Petrie. 38, Vinton told

(402)

10.97

14 oz . Cinhamon Criso.
12'1' oz. Delu xe Graham s
or, 11 112 Fudge Stripes.

Lawmen

that resul ted in severe damage to

Unassembled
In Carton

Sale Price

Keebler Cookies

1967.

GALLIPOLIS - The Ga llia County Sheriff's Department Investigated a one-car accident on
Bidwell-Woodsnull Road Friday

GALLJPOLJS- With the average family of
four in today's America spending ~$80 a
week on groceries, bills at the supennarket
can amount to staggering swns. And, after
paying these high sums, the breadwinners of
the family may also be staggering - from
shock!
Well, some persons in Gallia County got fed
up iahem; pun intended) with the constant
battle with exorbitant costs connected with
feeding a family a nd started - in February of
1979 - a Food C&lt;HJperative locally . The name
they chose for the endeavor is "River Valley
FI\Od Ce&gt;-Op." So far the effort has met with
resounding success.

our Reg . 10 .96· 17 .96

WORTHI NGTON
Lo rena
Reynolds . 92, formerly of Cheshire,
died at 11 :30 p.m. Friday 10 Norworth Convalescent Center, Worthington.
Born Aug. 8, 1888, 10 Cheshire, she
was the daughter of the late Clement
a nd Thula Coughnour Hooper and attended the Cheshire Baptist Church .
She married Leith John Rey nolds
on Dec. 4. 1907. in Rutland, and he
preceded her in death on Jan . 22,
Survivi ng arc three daughters,
Mrs. Alberta King, Mrs. Dorothy
Brown and Jean Reynolds. all of
Colum bus.
She was also preceded in death by
two sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m . Tuesday in the Waugh-HalleyWoud Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Ralph Zundel officiating. Bunal will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2·
4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday.

:_ ;_w··

' '

1.97

' fiOl

''Netwl

. f l 01

36 .97

6li ~hOnile (up io ~ qto.

44 .97

K mqrt'·.IOW40motor·

Oil)

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The following
people filed for marriage licenses
this past week in Gallia County
Probate Court.
Allen D. Jividen, 24, Gallipolis,
boilermaker. and Joyce A. Casto, 27,
Gallipolis, hospital aide.
John L. Frazier, 23, Gallipolis,
laborer, and Cindy L. Shoemaker,
21, Gallipolis, account clerk.
Roger D. Carter, 32, Bidwell, accountant, and Barbara A. Braden,
30, Gallipolis, art teacher.
Deryl G. Jones, 21, Thunnan, Ohio
Valley Electric employee, and
Karen D. Allen, 19, Rio Grande,
secretary.
J

our Reg. 988

5.96

Quality Wooden cree_
p er
Mechanics' quality . Sw lv~l
casters. podded heodres .

45 .97

1.61

43.97

UJ

,.

1

·'·

2. Install t K mQrl*.brand
o6l filter .)
. ,
3. CliOo~siUOflciitlorr(lttc

· ttngs extra)

;I

·~~e' Price ·
$

~

,.

r

•

_,

' • l j.i

�Page-8 · 2-The Sunday Times-Sentin e l
12, 1981

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Bing-Medley

--·

50TH ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mooroe of RL Z, Pabiot,
wiD celebrate their 50th wedding aoolversary July 19. They were married
July 18, 1931. The couple will celebrate by bavlug aa open bouse at their
home from 2-4 p.m. Sunday, July 19. AU friends and relallves are Invited
to attend.

Mr. and .1\il rs. j o!Jn Thomas

Kennedy, Thomas wed
in_ afternoon ceremony
POMEROY - Cheryl Lynn Kennedy and .John Randall Thomas ex·

breath wilh peach ribbon .

changed wedding vows in a double
ring cer em o ny at Trin ity Churc h.

ved a s best man f or his brother, and

Pomeroy, on Aug 26 at2 :30 p.m.
The Rev . Wilbur Perrin performed the ceremony before- an
altar decor ated wi th two nint.."'-

branch

ca nd elabra.

a

lar ge

Pomeroy, wa s the ringbearer. The
~.:room and his attendan ts as well as

the [alhers

and baby 's breath na nkcd by two

wo re ivory tu xedos and peach rose
boutunnier f's.

• th e ramily pews.
. ~ The bride b tht• daughter of Mr .
a nd Mrs. Edward Ke nn edy .
Pomeroy P ike, a nd the gr oom JS tht•
sun of Mr. and Mrs . J cuncs B.

'

th e ushers were Mark Atkeson,

Gallipolis. COUSi n or the groom ,
Chuck Follrod. Pomeroy , John S.
THomas. Ru tland . Ja rod Hil l.

a rrangement of gli:ld iuli , dai sil'S.
ivury candles. White bows rrutrk Pd

•

J a mes B. Th om as of Synu:use ser·

u[

the bride and groom

For her daughter' s weddmg , Mrs .
Kl'llHL'tly wort' em ivory s treeHength
dress of polyest er with a cap sleeve
lact• coat. Her cor sage was of peach
da is ies and whit e roses with ivory

T homas, Linc oln Hill, Pomeroy.
Kevm Kang , orga nis t. presented a
program of mus tc tncl udin g

ri bbon . Mrs. Thomas wore a light
blue pleated stre et-length dress or
polyester w1th a blue chirron Jacket.

·Evergreen ." "The Rose... " One

and a cor sage of peach tin ted daisies
&lt;:~nd white r uses with i\'Ory ribbon .
A reception honuri ng the couple
wC:~s held in the ch ur ch s ocial room.

llt'art. One Heart." and "Stairway

to Heaven.··
G ive n in marriage by he r parents

and escorted to the altar by her
fttl her . the bride was a tti red in a fur·
m a l gown of ivory pu lye.ster
f&lt;tshinned with ct Queen Anne's

neck line, [itted bodice trirruncd 111
chcmtilly lace and pearls, cmd lung

rrtted sleeves w1th lace acce nt. The
A·line skirt w ith lace adornment was

dt•signed with a pleated [runt and
f\uwcd int o a c hapel trt~ in .

The bn de's fing erti p vcll was bu r·

dl' n·d m lace and fel l from a Jul1 et
Cap t r inu n etl wit h la cl' j;jlli.J pertrl s
Silt· carried a bo uquet 11f pe ach ~md
white r uses: li ght and dark pea rh
tinted dcu s ics and baby's bn.!c:1th. and
wurt' i.l riia m ond nt•cki:Jct• an ti
dimnond ea rring s, gift of the grou1n

Denise

MarshCJ il of Hemlock
(~nwe wa s the brtde 's rna1d of honor
ond "'·urea fulllenJ.!th gow n u( shl'e r

The three-tr ered wedding cake
[eatu rcd pi lla rs between the tiers
a nd

pce~ch

Guests were registered by Mrs.

Bever ly Bay lor. Ga ll ipolis. The Ha tr
py Harvesters hcmdlcd the recept ion

ror llw Kermcdy fa m il y·.
The co upl e oow reside at 1681 Lin~
cul n Heig hts . Pomeroy . The new
Mrs. Th urnas 1s a 1977 gradui:l te uf
Ml'igs High School and is em pl oyed

I .ufll ber and Supply

nt•cklint• cmd A·lint• skirt ttnll had a
rnatchinl.! capt• . Th e britle.s rn a 1ds

ding

wn •

fith ,

Nc lsunvilll' .

Beverly Will. Pumeroy, Debbie Ken·
nt~Uy.

Pomeroy. sister of thl' bnd t•.

Cn_

in

r;allipolis: Mr . and Mrs. Flovd Grir:
Galluwct ,l.-":

Ki:lren . Beam ,

Ga llipolis: Helen Atkeson . Man·
sfi l'ld : Helen Gross, Cuye~ hug a

All three wore matching [u ll len gth

Fa lb : Mr. a nd Mrs. Richa rd Cross

gowns nf peach polyester cr t•pt• wi th

and Sara h. Cuya hoga Fa lls. Mr. and

A-line skirts and rounded neckli nes

Mrs . .J ohn Hicks. Ma nsr1 cld : Ed)

with peac h lace capes.

Dutsl'll. Gall ipolis : Ca th y Ruggieri ,
Cm cin na ti ; Da le Saunder s and Lm~
da McCom as, Gallipolis; Jim Lanni ng, Xe~ii:l : Mr. a nd Mrs. Jim An-

Ashlte Saunders. GallipOliS , was
thl· flo wer girl and wore Cl floor·
length dre.ss of shet'r beige g&lt;iuZt'
with pt."ach and brown flu rctl print
und brown ribbo n trim . All uf the nt ·
tendants wore peach ti nted dais ies

and baby 's brt•ath in their hair . The
nower girl CC'lfri ed a wh ite wicker
basket trimm ed with peach ribbon.

BY LARRY EWING
Tlmes·SentiDel Staff
ATHENS- 30 YEARS ~the first
production of the Ohio Valley Swnmer Theatre' s 1981 season-is a completely enjoyable romp through
three decades of musical theatre .
It is. as billed, .. A dazzling Broad-

ca tegory , Matthew Gri[fin, or
Gallipolis, gives a strong, mature
perionnance in the "LaMancha"
medley. This segment or the produ ction breaks away [rom the revue rormat and enters into very legitimate
musical drama .
Griffin, who appears as the male
way musical revue."
lead, is nothing short of superb-both
30 YEARS 30. which kicks oH OV· musically and dramatically. He
ST's 30th a nniversary season, literally creates the Quixote characskillfully traces the music and dance ter befdre the eyes of the audience
or Broadway musicals from the SO's and proceeds to enliven that characthrough the 60's and into the 70's.
ter with great force and dignity.
The first segment of the produc·
30 YEARS 30 will be presented
lion includes medleys from from July 15 through 20; and, July 22
KISMET, GYPSY, CAMELOT and through 25 at the Ohio University Inn
MY FAIR LADY. Broadway music in Athens. A diMer theatre produc·
or the 60's is presented with selec· tion, dinner seating is from 6 p.m. to
lions [rom A FUNNY THING HAP- 7 p.m., with curtain at 8 p.m. Ticket
PENED ON THE WAY TO THE infonnatlon may be obtained by
FORUM, FUNNY GIRL and MAN calling 594-SOiO.
OF LAMANCHA in part two of the
The revue is the first or rive
revue. The closing segment in· productions slated for the 1981
corporales medleys from JESUS season. Coming this sununer rrom
CHRIST SUPERSTAR, CHORUS OVST are: CELEBRATION IN
UNE and PIPPIN to trace musical MOTION, LITTLE MARY SUNtheatre ofthe 70's.
SillNE, INHERIT TilE WIND and
In the " l~al boy does good " VERONICA'S ROOM .

drews. Athe ns: Ka thy Moore,
Newark: Peggy Harris. Mt. Alto. W.
Va .: Mrs. M ar vin C. Ro us h, New
Ha ven. W. Va .. and Mr . and Mrs.
Mtke Atk Pson. Mansfield .

Kathy Yoho

.

't~- ,1
, , . _ ,} ,:,~'
'1.\0c,:!B

Crystal jacobs,
Leonard Dailey
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Jacobs, Route I, Minersville,
are aMouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Crystal, to Leonard E
Dailey, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs:
Leonard E. Dailey, Reedsville.
The bride-elect will be a senior at
Eastern High School this faU . Her
fiance graduated from Eastern in
1978 and is employed at Pioneer
Casting Co. in Belpre.
The wedding will be an event of
Aug. I, 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ. · The gracious
custol!l or open church wiU be ob·
served. A reception will follow the
wedding.

Reunion today
POMEROY - Descendants of
Benjamin Sayre and Eupbamia
Stover Sayre will hold their annual
reunion today at the Lion Park at
Buckeye Lake. All relatives and
friends are invited.

STATE FARM '

16!Kl MUk Sh ake

Candies'
~-~
~­
Creams
~ ~. ~ --~.. ---.::,.~
--......_

.

C•••mr •oHleatn" o" ~~--

makes •thong moro cleliCIOU&amp; I

Tan and burgundy .

..

.

= = ,;:q

-----:::- - -:;::::-:-:~..,-,
.
;..,_ . : - - - _ • ------ -

The Shoe ·

®

-

....

soft padded bollom . ln col.ors
good enough lo eiltl Candle "s

INSURANCE

.

336 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

RUTLAND - Plaru; have been
completed [or the open church wed ·
ding of An gela Kennedy, Rutland,
and Troy Griffith, Pomeroy, on July
19, at 2:30p.m. at the Rutland Chur·
ch of the Nazarene. The Rev . Lloyd
Grimm will officiate.
Music at 2 p.m. will be presented
by Billy Hall, organist, and Debbie
Gilmore, soloist. Kelly Brown will be
the · maid or honor and the
bridesmaids will be Kellee Gri[fith,
Greta Kennedy , and Gina Griffith.
Bobby Schneider, Tom Roush, Chris
Taylor and Jack Hwnphreys will be
the ushers. Tony Grate wil be the
ring bearer, and Autwnn Griffith,
the nower girL Sandy Hysell will
serve as the receptionist, and
distributing rice bags will be Paige

•

By William B. Kughn
portant, and I would like to share a few of these with you :

OFF

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

SUMMER WEAR
INVENTORY REDUCTION SPECIAL
Mon .· Tues. -Wed . Only

OSHKOSH ·

40% • 50% • 60% OFF

Bib Overalls &amp;

MANY STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

Painter Pants
SIZES

6·16

And Savel

I. Christ commanded : "Go ye ther efore , and teach all natio ns,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and at t he
Holy Gost · Teach ing them to observe all th ings whatsoever 1 have
commanded you ; and, Ia. I am with you a lway s, even unto the end of
the world . Amen ." tMtt . 28 : 18·201 .
2. It is essential to sa lvation : " H e that beli eveth and is ba pti zed
shall be saved ; but he that believeth not shall be damned'' (M rk .
16 : 16) . '' ThEfiike figure whereunto even baptism doth at so now save us
tnot the putting away of the tilth of the flesh . bu t th e answer o f a
good conscienc e toward Godl by t he resurrection of Jes us Chri st" ( 1

Nobody

Under Sells
New Haven
furniture

Pet. 3: 21).

l . It is for the remission of sins: " Then Peter sa id unto th em ,
Repent, and be baptized every one of you in t he name of Jesus Chr ist
tor the remission of si ns, and ye shall receive the g ift of the Holy
Ghost ." (Acts 2: 381
4 , It is to wash away sins : " And now why tarri est thou? ari se, a nd
be baptized , and wash' awa y thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord"
!Acts 22 : 161
S. It is essential, to th e spiritual birth : " Jesus answer ed, Veril y ,
v er ily, I say unto th ee, Except a man be born ot water and the Spirit,
he cannot enter into the kingdom of God ." ( J no. 3 · 5) .
6. In baptism, we obey th e form ot doctrin e, th e death, buria l, and
resurrection ot the Lord : " For I delivered unto you f ir st of all th at
which I also recei ved, how that Chri st died for our sin s according to
the scriptures" (I Cor . 15 : 3-4} . " Know ve not . th at so m any of us as
were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?
Ther ef or e we are bur ied w i t h h im by bapf 1sm into death : that l ike as
Christ was raised from th e dead by the glory of the F ather, even so we
atso walk in newness of life . F or if we have been planted together in
the likeness of his death , we shall be also in th e likeness of his
r esurrection" ( Rm . 6 :3·5) .
7. tt brings us in contact with Christ 's blood : Hi s biOOQ.f'l'aS shed in
His death, " But when they came to Jesus, and saw that
wa s dead
al rea dy , they brake not hi s legs · But one of t he soldiers with a spear
pi er ced his side, and forthw ith came ther e out blood and wa ter " Uno
19 :33·34) . By baptism we are baptized into Hi s death wher e His blood
was shed, "Know ye not, that so m any of us as wer e baptized in to
Jesus Christ wer e baptized into his death? '' cRm _6 . 3) .
8. It puts us into Christ where salvation i-s provictect : '' For as m any
of you as have been ba ptized into Christ have pu t on Chris t " (Ga l.
3: 27) . " Therefore I endure all thing s lor th e elect 's sa k es, that they
may also obtain me salvat ion which is in Christ Jesus w i th eternal
gto,-y " (Tim . 2, 10)

Drive A Little
And Save

A Loti
BRAND NAMES

LIKE
•Broyhill
•Burlington House
•W aters
•American
•La-z-boy
•Serto
•Bern co
•Regent
•Singer

m

SUnday Mor ning ·
Bibl e Siudy, : lO
Wonl'ltp 10 : 10

oj'

SPECIAL HOURS DURING SALE.
Open Monday,, Tuesday &amp; Wednesday

July 13th, 14th, &amp; 15th

Wecl n e~ d ay

worsnip 6·oo

E vening

9 a.m. To 8 p.m.

Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday
July 16th, 17th, &amp; 18th

!&gt;unda y E lfeniog

9 a.m. To 5 p.m.

'"
Rad10

··Message trom
th e 8ibt e"

51118 flf m ln \IJf iRCI Comp4RII! :i

20-50
.
'•

SPRING &amp; SUMMER SHOES REDUCED

Stop In

The Scriptures reveal many reasons as to why bapti s m is so im·

Like a good neighbor.
State Farm is there.

SAVE

Summer Merchandise

O•ily·WJEH

"The Church with the Message"

11 BAM

.

'

lf2 .·Price

'

'

'.

1

'

All SUMMERWEAR.
..
...

'·

-

HOTPOINT APPLIANCE SALE!
I I I
* REFRIGERATORS
All On Sale
- Huge. Discounts / -/

I
''

'

*AIR CON.DITIONE·RS

/I

Jr . 3-13 ·
Missy 6·2q .,
. If 12 I. 2-' ·•.
Ha
..
·
To ~-"

22''&gt;:.~ .'

~------ ' We Service What We Sell

J
If

.

I

Yo~'re

Going To Buy
This,
Year
•
Buy Now and

.

Save Money! !

.... ,..

-

I 1 \ \ \ ' ' \ ""-\
*WASHERS &amp; DRYERS
*DISHWASHERS
'

*GE ·TELEVISIONS
'!

MEN'S DEPT.

Carr.
. A ·reception will be held im·
mediately following the wedding in
pw social room of the Rutland
United Methodist Church.

WHY BAPTISM IS IMPORTANT

DOL.I.AR STRETCHER DEALS

on all

HUNDREDS OF PAIRS

Save On Living Rooms, Dining
Rooms, Bedroom Suites;
Bedding &amp; Accessories.

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLt .•

OFF

SHOP AND SAVE

covered dish and their own table ser·
vice. Drinks will be provided.
A donation or $2 per family is
payable at time or registration to '
help on expenses.
All alumni and former teachers
are invited to attend.

Semi-Annual

30% • 50%

Y2

, RIO GRANDE - The annual Rio
Grande High School reunion wiU be
held Saturday, July 18, at the old
high school building. Registration
and social hour is.! I a.m. with lunch
att noon and program all p.m .
Each family is asked to bring a

r------------------------1

Phone 446·4396

Hom• Olf1r.es 131oonu~~1 on , llhJIOI'

B·l - The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Plan reunion Saturday
4

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

300 Second
Lafayette Mall .
Gallipolis, OH.

1
/3TO

Pa

Butaville Road • P.O Box 308

GHERKE'S '8~"14~

July Clearance

BIPWELL- Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Roberts, of Bidwell, are aMotincing
the roming marriage of Uieir
daughter, Cynthia Ann, to William
Blain Lookado, of Porter.
Cynthia is a three-year graduate
or North Gallia High School and is
now attending Rio Grande College.
She is a junior and is majoring in
Elementary Education. She is
presentlty employed at the

rrl/raft~l .1{;// 'film1rlt

bouqueL' o[ silk li ght and dark

Couple to wed

POMEROY - "Happy Day Express" is the theme for a daily
vacation Bible school to be held
Monday through Friday, July 17,
from 6. to 8 p.m. at the Danville
Wesleyan Church.

delicatessan in Kroger's.
The custOm of open church will be
observed A!lgust 1~. at 7:30p.m. in
the Bidwell Unitted Methodist Chur ·
ch. Tbe reception will be held in the
fellowship room, following the
ceremony.
The ceremoni~ will be led by the
Rev . Steve Silvey, pastor of the Nor ·
.tth Gailia Charge. Music will begin
at7:10.

( For Free Bible Correspondence Course write ....

a nd the t&gt;ther attendants ca rri ed

J:colored peach da isies and baby's

VBS begins

Spring Viltlev Plaza

Mid.

Ou t·uf· cou nt y ,L!Ul'S l c.; at lhl· wL&gt;frmrlur1ed &amp;·vl' rl v Bav lor

GALLIPOLIS - - Mary Jane
Yoho and Allen F. Yoho of GaUipolis
wish to announce the engagement ..
and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Kathy P. to Jay P. Drum·
mond, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe P.
Dnunmond of Addison.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and is
currenttly employed by Holzer· ·
Medical Center. The groom-elect is
a graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and employed by Krodel, Inc.
The open church wedding will be
an event of August I, 6 p.m. at the
Addison Methodist Church. A recep·
lion wiU be held at the Tara Club
House following the ceremony.

30 Years 30

Mr _ T homa s graduated fr om Meigs
Ill 197&gt; and attended Oh10 State
Un1 \·ers1ty . Hl' 1s cmpl uved at Vallcv
dl vpllrt

Carr .

TWO LOVERS - Matthew GrlffiD aDd Doona Seelhorst croon in a
number from 30 YEARS, 30!, a Broadway musical revue being presented
by the Ohio Valley Summer Theater. Perlormances are July 15-II, and
22-2S in dinner theater at the Ohio Unlvel'l!ity Inn In Athens.

C:JI Cla rk 's Jewel r y Store, Pomeroy.

beige ga uze w1th pectrh fl uwc rcU
pr int. It was fc:1.shiuned with rt r ound

Teresa

ruse r1 ecorations. It was

tnpped wit h the traditional
mrniature bnde and groom. A bu[[et
and dance was he ld that even ing at
tht• mult i-p urpose building on
Mu lberT) He1ght.s.

Yoho, Drummond
to wed August 1

-

t

, .. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bing of Route
I, Long Bottom, are aMounclng the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, JC!yce
Marlene, to D. Patrick Medley, son
of Mrs. Sarah Medley and the late
David F. Medley, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
.
·
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Eastern High School and is curren ·
tly empl«!yed with the Kroger Co.,
Pomeroy, Her fiance gra!luated
from Parkersburg High School and
served four years in the U. S.
Marines. He is employed with Cor·
ning Glass of Parkersburg.
The open church wedding will be
an event of July 17 at 6:30p.m. at the
Eagle Ridge Community Church. A
reception will follow at the home of
the bride's parents.

w. va.

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FIRST FLOOR

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Mr. and Mrs. Robert McCktskey
Mr. and Mrs. james Stephens

April vows unite two
tn Wellston ceremony

POMEROY ~

The Mt. Union Bap ·
list Church at Carpenter was the set ling for the May 23 wedding of Susan
Jeanette Kennedy, Colwnbus, and
James Edward Stephens, Dublin .
The bride is the daugher of Car l
and Jean Kennedy, Rutla nd, and the
groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Guy D. Stephens. Belpre.
The double ring ceremony as per formed by the Rev. Cecil Cox at I •30
p.m . following a program of music
by Susan McClain , Charleston, W.
Va .. pianist. and Patricia Barrett,
soloist, whose selections included
"The Lord 's Prayer," " Wedding
Song" and " I Pledge My Love."
Two seven branch candelabra
with bouquets of ye llow tipped ca r ·
natro ns and a unity candle
arrangement decorated the altar.
Escorted to the a ltar by her
father, the bride was atll red in a for mal gown of white organza with a
high neckline and frtted bodice ador ned wrth re-embrordered chantilly
lace, and full shadow sleeves with
lace cuff and trim. The nared skit
nowed into a c hapel length train and
was encrrcled w1th a wide edge of re·
embroidered chanti lly lace. She
wore a fingertip veil of bridal
illusion .
Her bouquet was of yellow
.sweetheart roses. white ca rnations,
yellow a nd white daisies and baby's

•

WELlSTON ~ The sanctuary of
F irs t Presbytenan Church in
Wellston wsa the setting for the candlelight ceremony uniting Linda
Colley and Robert McClaskey in
marriage April 17 at 6:30 p.m. The
dou ble- r ing

•

'

ce re mony

was

per-

formed by the Rev. John M. Taylor.
The bride, escorted down the a isle
by her father, is the daughter of
Ralph and Jean Colley of Wellston .
The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Pea rl McClaskey of Ewington .
The sanctuary was decorated wrth
wrcker baskets of silk dogwood . blue
delphinium, white da isies a nd phlox,
accented with blue and peach gypsophila, angel 's lace and lily of the
valley . Palms and Easter lilies added to the setti ng. The silk nowers
were made by the srster of the bride
as a gift to the couple.
The candlelight servrces were.
complimented by twm seven-branch
ca ndelabras adorned with whi te
candles and large ice blue bows. The
wmdows held white ca ndles and the ·
candles a long wrth tthe fam rl y pews
we re marked with ice blue bows .

A ha lf-hour of prenupti al music
was presented by Jacqueline Fam.
The selections were "A Trme For
Us," "Theme from 'Ice Castles'."
'Str ll ," " And I Love You So,"
" Longer," " The Twelfth of Never,"
"Today ,.. "One Hand. One Heart ...
"The Lord's Prayer " and the
traditiona l wedding march.
The bride chose for her wedding a
white lace gown featuring an empi re
waist. sca ll oped neckline a nd
sleeves. Her chapel length train fell
from the empire waistline which
was adorned wrth seed pearls and
mother of pearl sequins. She wore a
shoulrler length brida l illusion \erl
with adorned witht stephanotis
blossoms.

Kpuce Viti toe, srster of the brrde,
served as matron of honor. She wore
anise blue sleeveless chiffon gown
with a nounce , wrth lace bodice and
O\'er lay edged in white lace.

The groom was attired in a navy
blue three-prece suit wrth a contrasting ice blue shi rt Ue wore a
boutonniere of white button carnations accented with angel's lace.
Serving as best man was a brother
. of the groom, Mark.McClaskey.
Ushers were Vernon George, a
friend of the groom , and Gary McClaskey, brother of the groom .
The bn de's mother wore a li ght
peach two-piece linen suit wi lh a
ma tching brown blouse CJnd be ige

accessones.
The groom 's mother wore a blue
polyester dress with a mat ching lace
jacket and white accessories. Their
co rsa~es

were white gardenias aceented with blue and peach gypsophila. angel's lace and match ing

r ibbons.

The fl owe r girl wa&gt; Beth McClaskey, daughter of the groom
Jamie Vrtrttoe. nephew of the
br ide , served as ring bearer .
Ste ph a nie Ross , niece of the bride,
attended the guest register. Trisha
Vititoe and Lucy Walton. meces of
the bnde . performerl the duties of
candlelighters for the ceremony.
A recep ti on fo llowin g the
ceremony in the church's fellowshrp
hall. Serv mg at the reception ta bl e
was Lila Ousley and Teresa Littlejohn, e&lt;&gt;usins of the bride , and
Jean Litttlejohn, aunt of the bride.
The three-lrer weddrng cake was
made by the a unt of the bride as a
weddrng g1ft to the bride and groom.
Becky Walton, mece of the brrde.
passed out nee bags as the couple
left for a bnef hone.vmonn

......_,~
PAUL NORTHUP
MADGE NORTHUP

boat Room of the Diamond Savings
and Loan Co. in Pomeroy. The
bride's table featured a three tiered
cake with yellow roses. Gracie
Wilson, Connie Black and Marlene
Barrett were hostesses at the reception.
For a wedding trip to the Pocono
Mountains Resort in Pennsylvania,
the bride changed into a powder blue
linen sundress wit:r matching shortsleeved jacket.
•
They now reside at 6225 Michael
Kenny Lane in Dublin.
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
High School, class of 1978, and the
Hocking Technical College, 1980. She
is employed as a computer program .
mer at Colwnbia Gas System Ser .
vice Corp., Colwnbus.
Mr. Stephens graduated from
Belpre High School in 1978 and the
Hocking Technical College in 1980
and is employed as a computer
programmer with Liebert Corp.,
Worthington.
Out-of-county guests at the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Smith, Mrs. Ruby Pardi, Cincinnati ;
Mrs. Catherine Long, Clara Wood,
Point Pleasant!, W. Va. ; Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Withrow, Nitro, W
Va.; Mark Eaton, David Hollad ,
Mike Pittman, Jeff Grayam, Chris
Dressel, Mr . and Mrs. Scott Sleek
Columbus ; Mrs . Nancy Fortney and

PORTLAND - Jonah, his "great .
fish" and II other Biblical characters, will be portrayed Sunday af·
ternoon in a " walk through the
Bible' • program near Portland.
Also on display will be Bibles and
Bible-related bOOks.
The Carmel, Bethany, Sutton and
Portland United Methodist Churches
are staging the public evept on State
Route 124, three miles southwest of
Portland. Signs wiU be placed to
direct the public to the location.

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992 -5320

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JULY 18,1981

W11111"tlhe riQiit tollmk quont~ill on oil Homalo thlt td. MDIII 10111 to dttlm. Not rtlpotltlblt lor tiPotirll'lllctl or plclorolerron.

Joshua, Mrs . Bonnie Schaad, April
and Lori, Mrs. Macel Garvin, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Parker, Denise
Jacobson, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Forth, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Forth a nd Cindy, Huntington, W.
Va.; Norma Del Duchetto, Niles ;
Maureen Foley, Tom Studer, Lan·
caster; Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Bar-'
!ley, Sandy and Ann, and Matthew
Carpenter, Ashland:
Mr. and Mrs. Stephens, parents of ·
the groom, hosted a re hearsal din.'
ner for the bridal party on the
Friday preceding the wedding at the
Meigs Inn .

5

Times-Sentinel

A I this week

today

breath with yellow and white rib· , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - bons tied in lover's knots.
Attendants for the bride were
Darlene ,Pilliam. Reynoldsburg,
matron Of honor, and Karen Carpenter, Ashland, and Ann Car"THANKS CONWAY DIET INSTITUTE"
twrightt, Winfield, bridesmaids.
LINDA BRANDT 15 a bub b ly,
They wore yellow shrrnmer satin
iun-lov 1n g_person. now thJI shC'
gowns fas hion ed with high waists
ha s l os t 102 pound 5 in t"ig ht
and gathered bodices into shoulder
m o nths.
straps, wi th pullover pastel print
" I wa s so miserable and I co uld
capes. Each carried a single yellow
hardly breathe. I felt ... ohe lple., ..
The b igge ~t th in g in my lifl' berose "'ith a•1gel lace tied wilh
lore I got onto thf&gt; Conway Di et
eggshell ribbon .
Program was how many potat o &lt;' ~
The n ower girls were Stephanie
Forth, Huntington. W. Va. , and
:;~~~~~;;~~:~1~ ~ ,12-;n ch sk; llel •.
Lelani Fortney, Vincent, and the
Co nway Dic tl nstitut f' offf'r::. J
•
ring bearer was Stephen Furth, Hun wcrght reduction prog ram which fraturh th r ldea llOOO
tington, W. Va . The nower girls were
Ca lorie D iet combined with wf'f'kly I nsig ht Srmi nar"a.
10 short yellow rufned party dresses
Linda ha ~ gone from a \iLf' 24VJ fire .,~ t o a size 9 _ She is
a nd carried brown wicker baskets
pro ud of her 5 U CC('~S J'i dlf' ilf' r hu ~ balld 1\ob and h e r
with yellow ribbons and petals.
two ch ildrPn
Guy Ste phens, Warrensville
"T h rs rliPt yor • jmt can not sufff'r on il'' says tt1 e smilin g linda
Heights, was the best man and the
ushers were J erry Carpenter,
Ashland, and Barr y Chambers,
Co lumbu s.
Vi c ki
Kennedy
WITH THIS COUPON
registered the guests.
Bring th i'&gt; co upon wi th yo u to any meeting listed and
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
you wi ll sav~ S5 .00 of! the lnil ral Regist ration Fee of
Kennedy wore a pale turquoise
Sb. lS an d Wf'f:'kly Sem inar f ee of S 1.7 5. Pay on ly
crepe polyester street length dress
S 5.00 IOS (('Jd Of S 10.00 .
with a pleated skirt and long sieves.
A FRIEND SAVES $5 .00
If vou hrrng d hrt'nd wrlh you wh t•n you jOHl. thl'n rhP
Mrs. Stephens was in an emera ld
1
r:o upon wr tl hf' worth S 1000, S'i .OO 101 vou dnd SS.OO lo •
green dress and both mothers-had
your lrrPnd
•
yellow rosebud corsages.
Ol l f'r f'xpu t'&gt; frrd ay. )lily 24. 1'IBl
I
A reception was held in the River-

REGISTRATION.
,-~,-~

P:on•--B -5- The

W , Va.

Stephens. wed in May vows Program

\

""

July 12, 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~t-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Page-B-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

32-oz. CANISTER

2-LITER BOT.

26·oz. BOX Large

4:Roll PK~.
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7-oz. BOT.

•

14-oz. BOT.

•

�'•

USf YOUII
VISA. Oil

July 12 , 1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-C·

'

Door· usters ,·

~niiCAfl

SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY
JULY 12th 13th
14th
USE OUR CONVENIENT LAY-AWAY
A 10% DepoUt I'IUI I 1110 Service .
Charae Opeoq Your Lly·AWIJ Account

Sunday

Mr. and Mrs. Menifee Blevins

silk flowers.
The three-tiered wedding cake
was white, decorated with spring
flowers and white chocolate mint
leaves, separated with white colwnns and topped with two doves
carrying wedding bells in their
beaks.
Punch, mixed nuts and white
chocolate mints shaped like cupids,
wedding bells, doves and green mint
leaves were served with cake.
Presiding at the table was Kim
Stewart, sister-in-law of the bride;
Betty Geerhart, cousm of the bride,
and Freda Chapman, a friend of the
bride.
Mrs. Thelma Ward, a friend of the
family, made the mints and also
made and decorated the wedding
cake. Assisting at the table and
flower arrangements were made by
Mrs. Ellen Stewart, sister-in-law of
the bride.
The new Mrs. Blevins and
bridegroom attended Meigs High
School.
The couple new reside in Lake
Wales, Fla .
Out-of-town guests were Helen
Trout of Cheshire, Richard and Kim
Stewart of Dayton, Bill Brach,
Jackie Ratliff of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Guy and RoseUa Stewart of
West Colwnbua, W. Va.; David
Paul, Harry and Lester Stewart of
Middleport, Rick Stewart of Salem
Center, Rusty Meadows of Rutland
and Ina Gene Blevins, Pomeroy.
The bride's grandmother, Mirl
Ratliff of Cheshire was unable to attend because of illness.

30,
8

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Clothing
20% OFF

Stewart, Blevins wed
GALLIPOLIS - Miss Gina
Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl R. Stewart, Gallipolis, and
Menifee Blevins, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Blevins, Pomeroy, were
united in marriage on April 3 at
12:15 p.m. in the home of the bride's
parents.
The couple were united by the
Rev. Miles Trout, a friend of the
family.
The bride was attired in a noor
length gown. Her bridal bouquet was
of silk, pink lavender, white daisies
with burgundy rosebuds. Greenery
and baby's breath with satin
streamers tied in lovers knots fell
from the bouquet. From the groom,
he placed in her bouquet a daisie
from his boutonniere. The necklace
and earrings were of green cultured
pearls, a gift from her sister-in-law ,
Mrs. Ellen Stewart.
The maid of honor was Miss Carla
Chapman, Cheshire, a friend of the
bride. She wore a floor length gown
of blue organza and carried a spring
bouquet.
The best man for the bridegroom
was Carl Stewart, brother of the
bride.
Miss Cindy Musser registered the
guests. Each mother was presented
a bouquet from the bride, of yeUow ,
burgundy rosebuds, satin ribbons
and baby's breath.
After the wedding, a reception was
held at the bride's parents' home.
The reception table was covered
with white linen, featuring a wedding bell and doves for the centerpiece with yellow, pink and blue

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West Chester
"Mountaineer"

Mr. and Mrs . Thomas Young

Golf Set

Ceremony unites couple
GALJ.!POLIS - Lou Ann Naske)
and Thomas Edward Ynung wen•
unilt-&gt;d in a double ring c:cmdlelight

ceremony at the St. Louis Catholic
Church on May 23 at 7:30p.m with
Father Wrlliam Myers offrcialing
The bnde IS the daughter uf Mr.
and Mrs Frank Naskey. Gallipolis.
and tht' groom is the son of Mr. and
M" . Russell Young, also of
Gallipolis
Music [or the ceremony was
pn!Vided by Teresa Ford, organist,
and Bill Scopis, soloist.
Arrangemenl!; of white gladioli
and ruse carnations decorated the

Sunday

Golf Bag

lllCitrun of honor . Bridesmaids wen.•

REG. 1139.99

Streich

REG. 129.99

REG. 15.44

SPORTING GOODS

laee and pearl buttons. She earned a
hand-sewn basket uf pmk n1se
petals.
Jeff Roach and Juiln Edelman served as altar boys and Miss Debbie

., '

•2••

~ GolfGicMt
~.

lht• bride. served as flowt·;. girl. Her
(~unneysax dre.s.s nf ecru cmd rose
fl'alur~d lunJ..( sleeves aL'Ct_llllcd with

Seotl re~istcred lhl' wedding guests.
altar. The pews were marked with
Th gronm wore £1 light gray
hurri&lt;•ane lamps with garlands and
cutawr~y tuxedu and a ruse colnrcd
J,!reencry and accented with lung
rosebud boutonniere . Bill Schopis
tapered candles and while beaus .
W&lt;JS best map and ushers were Ed
Given in marriage by her parents
Junes. Bidwell: Guy MacDonald.
and escorted by h.r father. !he bride
RHvenSW\Hid, W. Va.; Dow Saunwure a furm&lt;Jl guwn of while silk
tlt•rs. Gallipolis: Charles Richarcrepe w1th a high, split neckline,
l.isun, nephew of the groom, and Art
long sleeves. tapered cuffs and emdcl.amerens, Gallipolis, Alex
pire wa1stlmc. The A-hne skirt Was
Richardson, nephew of the gruom.
attached to a chapel train and the fit served- as ringbearer. Each wore
ted bodice was highlighted with a
li~l1t gray tuxedos and boutonnieres
yoke of English sheer net. The
of rose carnations.
neckline. sleeves, bodice and
The mother of the bride was in a
hemline were accented with immauve quiana gown and the mother
ported re-embroidered Alincon lace ·
of the groom wore a ntlOr length
and seed pearls. The leghorn hat
turquoise chiffon gown.
, was made of English sheer net and ·
A reception honoring the couple
matching re-embroidered Alincon
was held at the Jaycee's Building in
lace. A srnall bouquet of rose and
Kanauga. The bride's table featured
white silk flo:.Vers was fitted under
a
three tiered cake with rose ac- ,
the wide brjm. Achapel length hand- .
cents. ' Mrs. Betty Carpenter made
""', , rolled' hem ~reamer of English
the cake and Miss Fred Calvert
!!beer net. The bride also wore short
provided the mints. Serving were
gloves' of white, net and carried a
Miss Meg Thomas and Miss Shari
bouqUet of nrse and white roses,
wllite lace~ baby's breath, greenery Graham, both of Gallipolis.
The couple now resides on Second ·
and,white streamers.
Avenue in Gallipplis.
Mrs. Brid_eet Haffelt served as

Golf Glove

.•

M". Catll\ .JonPs. Bidwell: Miss
Knn Cool' r. Huntington. W. Va :
Miss June E!Jcessnr. Ga!lipulis, and

Mrs. Kim Canaday and Mrs. Beck)
Ho!ilgL'b. sister of the bride .
M1,; Amy Beth CanadaY. mece &lt;&gt;f

10''
.flayball
89~

NBW YORK rAP)- Ray Grebey
director of management's Playe;
Relations Corrunittee, said Saturday
that the major league owners had
rejected a proposal made by a
federal mediator in an effort to set- ,
tle the 30-day-old baseball strike.
Negotiators, for both sides broke
for lunch after meeting for about two
hours, with no progress reported to a
poSsible ' settlement in the walkout
which has cancelled 3n games since
Junel2,
The Players Association had accepted mediator Kenneth Moffett's
proposal Friday despite a series of
reservations expressed by executive
director Marvin Miller.
"Despite all the problems with the
mediator's proposal, our conunittee
accepted it en toto," Miller said.
"We accepted it bones, stubble and
all."
But Miller said that management
formally rejected Moffett's proposal
at Saturday's early session.
."In addition, they had no counterproposals- none," Miller said.
The union chief added that Grebey

compensation on 10 free agents d
year is closely related to the Impact
on 70 or 80 potential free agents, and
even has a bearing on those eligible
for '!3lary arbitration. It Is sophistry
to say it affects only 10 players. It is
absolute nonsense. It's a ·whole row
of dominoes."
Earlier Saturday, after an arduous afternoon-night doubleheader
of negotiating sessions Friday, third
baseman Doug DeCinces of the
Baltimore Orioles, the American
League player representative, had
said that the ball was in the owners'
park.
•
In addition to the regularly
scheduled games that have been
canceled because of the stroke, the
All-Star Game, scheduled Tuesday
nigh~ at Cleveland, has been postponed indefinitely.
The negotiators met for three
hours in the afternoon Friday and
then after a five-hour break, sal
down at the bargaining table for
roughly four more Friday night.
"We just spent all day and night
discussing C~e proposal," said Moffett. "That's all we've been doing all

had not only rejected Moffett's idea
but offered no substitution.
Grebey said that management had
problems with the compensation
details suggested by the mediator.
"There are many aspects (of Moffett's proposal) that are not objectionable and are open to
negotiation," addedGrebey.
Management is also troubled by
cash payments of either $150,000 or
$200,000, which Moffett included as
part of any compensation plan. No
mention of money was included in an
amended plan which owners presented late Friday night.
Miller dismissed the owners'
proposal.
Grebey said that management's
latest compensation suggestion
would affect only 10 premier free
agents in any given year.
Miller, however, saw the ilnphcations of management's direct
compensation plan as going much
farther.
"The whole impact cannot be
measured in terms of numbers affected negatively ," he said. "Direct

day."

Moffett said he his proposal was
"not normally done by a federal
mediator .. . but I thought it would
help to get things going."
Specifically, Moffett's proposal
defined premier players - those
requiring additional compensation
- to be in the top 20 per cent at each
position, using statistics based on
twD-year averages. Excluded from
the category would be players who
were previously free agents, players
with more than 12 years of credited
service and players over 35 years of
age.
Under the plan, there would be no
re-entry draft for premier players
and such players would be free to
negotiate with any number of dubs.
The re-entry draft for other free
agents would continue as it has since
1976.
The proposal then divided the 26
major league clubs into three groups
based on season winning percentage
- the top ~ine, middle eight and bottom nine - and allowed varying forms of compensation for each in the
event of the loss of a free agent.

Jay Haas has lead at halfway point
MILWAUKEE lAP) - Jay Haas
couldn't anticipate, much less explain, the dazzling string of birdies
he used to surge into a 2-stroke lead
at the halfway point of the Greater
Milwaukee Open golf tournament.
Haas, who had missed cuts the
previous two weeks, birdied five of
six holes on a first-nine tear Friday,
en route to a &amp;-under-par round of 66
at Tuckaway Country Club. That
gave him a !~under-par total of 134
for 36 holes.
Two strokes back at 136 were Lee
Elder, Tom Storey and tour rookies
Rod Nuckolls and Thomas Gray.

that," he said. "It just happens. You
don't say, 'I'm going to birdie the
next four holes and get back in it.' I
guess it's momentum. Of the five
birdies in six holes, I only had one
tough putt, a 15-footer on 13."
Haas three-putted from 30 feet for
a bogey 6 bn his lith hole, but
recovered on the next green by
sinking a :ID-foot putt for another birdie.
"I missed a twD-foot putt for the
bogey," he said. "That was a big
mistake. You can usually birdie the
par-{; holes here. I was down after
playing so well on the back nine, but
making the :!~footer on the next hole
got me going again."
Haas, 27. has only one championship - the 1978 San Diego Open

national collegiate champion while
at Wake Forest University.
"I haven't been playing well," he
sa1d. "My iron play had been bad. I
had been having myself too many :IDand 4()-foot putts. When you only
have to putt from 15 feet on in, it's a
lot easier to score. I opened my stance a little this week, and I'm hitting
a lot more solid."
Haas began his run of birdies on
the par-5 12th hole when he chipped
to within three feet and tapped in for
a 4. Then he birdied Nos. 13, 15, 16
and 17, all on his first nine.
"You don't foresee something like

Elder, who defeated Lee Trevino in
an eight-hole playoff for the 1978
GMO championship, had Friday's
best round with a 65.
Dave Stockton, first-round leader
with a 65, slipped to 72 Friday and
was at 137, along with veteran Chi
Chi Rodriguez and Mike Smith,
Rodriguez birdied his last five holes
for a second-round 69.
A total of 71 golfers survived the
cutoff point of 143, which is 1-underpar, in this $250,000 tournament. The
championship is worth $45,000.
"I wasn't expecting too much
when I came here," said Haas. 1975

All star game postponed
CLEVELAND (API - The in- has a lot of things to celebrate,"
definite postponement llf the 1981 Voinvoich said.
baseball All-Star Game has not
"Because of the continuing strike
seriously dampened the spirits of the by the Players Association, it is no
mayor of the host city.
longer practical to play the game as
A series of downtown outdoor scheduled," Kuhn said in a
events wiU go on as scheduled statement issued from his New York
despite the announcement by office.
baseball Conunissioner Bowie Kuhn
Kuhn beads the 11-member
on Friday that the 52nd renewal of executive council which reached the
the annual classic would not take decision.
place on Tuesday as scheduled,
"This is a tremendous disapMayor George Voinovich said.
pointment for all of us in baseball, as
"We're going ahead with our plans I am sure it is for fans everywhere,"
because game or no game, this city he said.

- in five years on the tour, even

though he is one of the more consistent players. He earned $114,102
last year, 35th best on the tour, and
currently ranks 36th with $66.316 this

The contest may take place at an
unspecified later date, if the strike,
which began June 12, is settled,
Kuhn indicated.
"I want to expreSs ... my 'great
sadness that events have made this
necessary," he said. "It is an additional disappoiniment because of
the terrific fan support from the
Cleveland area and because of the
superb planning by the Indians,
their special committee of civic
leaders and the city government for
three days of activities to showcase
Cleveland to thousands of baseball

year.

"We hope that when our player
problems are settled we can
reschedule the game, although it is
impossible at this time to set a
specific date."
Baseball officials have previously
indicated that July 30 would be a
likely date to reschedule the game, if
the strike is settled in time.
The 78,000 tickets sold for
Tuesday's scheduled game will be
honored whenever the game is
played, he said. If it is ultimately
canceled, a refund policy will be announced.
Voinovich, meanwhile. said
Cleveland's Ali.Star Days events
will proceed, including a 1940s
musical review on Sunday, a fourday "all nations" ethnic festival
beginning Monday, an outdoor party
Monday evening and other activities.

Browns sign top choice

-

CLEVELAND 1API - The
Cleveland Browns have signed cornerback Hanford Dixon, their top
draft choice from the 1981 college
draft.
Dixon signed a series of one-year
contracts with the National Football
League team Friday, terms of which
were not disclosed .
Dixon, the 22nd player taken in the
draft, is a 5-foot-11, 182-pound cornerback from the University of
Southern Mississippi .
"Dixon was the only pure corn~rback taken in this year's draft,"
Coach Sam Rutigliano said. "He'll
have his chance to compete immediately. He'll challenge Lawrence Johnson for the starting right cor··
ner spot.

"What impressed us most about
Dixon is his ability to pass cover the
fast wide receivers. Hanford has
every physical ability you would
want in an NFL cornerback,"
Rutigliano said.
Dixon, who has been timed a 4.45
seconds in the 4().yard dash, was a
four-year starter at Southern
Mississippi. His collegiate statistics
show 188 tackles and nine interceptions.
The signing of Dixon leaves two
Browns' draft choices without contracts - fourth round pick Mike
Robinson and lith round selection
Larry Fri&lt;l•-' Both are expected to
be signed before the start of the
team's training camp July 17 at
Kent State, the Browns said.

t

f

. Edison

\

REG. 11.29

.,.7

141fz" Play Ball

20"
Beath Ball

62e

REG. '2.39

SUN IN MUDVILLE?- Baltimore Orioles infielder Doug MeCinees
answers questions from the press in New.· York Friday, after he had

distributed copies of federal media lor Kenneth Moffel's proposal to end
the 29-day-old strike. After meeting for lhree hours, the principals in the
baseball talks recessed; the talks to be resumed later Friday night. "The
owners will come back and give us lheir problems with this proposal."
OeCinces said," ... We feel it has some possibilities. Something may rome

from it." 1AP Laserphotol.

Tournament set----------------A class C tournamenl will be held
in Syracuse and a class D softball
tournament in Middleport. July 18
and 19.
Entry fee for the 1981 U.S.S.S.A.
district qualifier is two softballs and
$70. Deadline for entry and rose is
July 15 and enlries are to be made

BIG CONTRIBUTION - Quite
a contribution to the Middleport
Community Park Is being made
by the Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
United Mine Workers and tbe
Southern Oblo Coal Co. Volun- ·
teen from the Meigs Division of
the United Mine Workers and the
Middleport Youth League were
busy Friday setting poles · of
Ughts at tbe park so that night
games can be staged on aU tlu'ee
ball diamonds. Tbe Ben-Tom
Corp. has donated equipment for
setting the 26 large lights. ShoWn
are some rl the volunteers
preparlng,_ to set one of the poles
Friday afternooa. , Cost of the
Ugbts, poles and wiring, yet to be
done, Is estimated at about
$18,000. There will be no cost to
!be villace. Ia addition, for the
lint time, a 5d6 foot comPis,terlzed · scoreboard will be a
feature at ball games In the MlcJ.
"'eport Cemml!lii!Y Part. Dave
Baker, Geae OUer aDd Max
WbltJatch, ~lgJil, tbree of I Dumber of volUDfeer worken from
both !be Middleport Youth
IMCllt aDd tile Melp DfvisiOil of
tbi Ullited Mbie Wortet's, are
sboWII ~rlli( tile stalld for the

\
Badminton'
"Set

-1

Qwners.rejec~ latest offer to end strike

visitors.

'·~

c

I

REG. '8.99
: . ·

REG. 89'

(. •e'!f'IIOanl !II tile F'Frlday qf.

te.._, Tbe ic:el'dioanl valued
at'allotlttz,4oe Ill dl~G~ated by The

•· .
li'lrmen ilailk 111111 Sa\~ co. o1 ·· ,. .·,,......

.,

, ' , femkoy alld the VIDtoii.Coailiy

.

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

i

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,,

..

w1th C V. Hannahs, Route 124,43116,
M111ersville. Ohio 45763 The top two
teams in each class will advance to

the state tournament w1th entry fee
paid Also two sponsor trophies wiU
be ctwarded in each class.
Those wishing more inrormation
may call6l4-992·3119 alter 4:30p.m.

�Page-C-2- The Sundav Times -Sentinel
.

66 all stars report for workouts
NORTI'H CANTON - The 66 high
school all stars who report Monday
for workouts will discover there's a
lot of fun plaMed too while they're
getting ready for the Ohio NorthSouth Football Game.
Besides lwo-a-day practices,
which begin Tuesday at Walsh
College in North Canton, there will
be a whole variety of other activities
preceding the 26th annual Ohio Allst;lr Game to be played Friday
night, July 24, at the Akron Rubber
Bowl.
Among those taking part in the
busy schedule will be Matt Queen of
North Gallia.
Many of the festivities will be centered in Massillon where the game

was to have been played until an iron
workers delayed stadium repairs
and forced the game to be moved.
On the fun agenda is a visit to the
Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, a picnic, swimming party, and a
Monte Carlo Night. The players will
bear a talk by former Ohio State
football coach Woody Hayes at a
Republic Steel AU.Sttar Banquet
and take part in an Ahnost Anything
Goes FWI Night during the week
before the game.
Among coaches taking part in the
clinic July 22-24 at the Sheraton
Belden Inn in Canton are Woody
Hayes, Don NeWen of West Virginia
University, Lou "The Toe" Groza of
the Cleveland Browns and Bill
Mallory of Northern Illinois.

~

For virtually all of the players, the
game will precede their reporting to
college football training camps to
prepare for their first year of
collegiate competition.
A number of them are headed for
Ohio State, Michigan, Notre Dame
and other top national powers.
Most games in the past have been
hard-fought affairs as the players
try to impress coaches and scouts on
hand for the contest. Last year's
game was won by tthe North Team
which has a !9-13 lead in the series.
Three games have ended in ties.
Pete Moore of Fremont Ross will
coach the North squad and Dale
Robertson of Hamilton High School
will guide the South team.

•',,
l.f;'

will return to Massillon's Paul
Brown Tiger Stadium. A crowd of
more than 15,000 is expected.
In addition to the game, spectacular pregame and halftime shows
are planned featuring the nationally·
known Massillon High Marching
Band.
A number of fans are planning to
attend the game. Tickets are
available through North Gallia High
Football Coach John Blake or the
high school atWetic office.
In additiOn to the game, sponsored
by the coaches association. there are
meetings and clinics for the Ohio
coaches. Proceeds from the game
are used to provide academic
scholarhsips for deserving Ohio high
school students.

-

MAITQUEEN

and a wild unusual second game

highhghted the fourth night of first
round action in the annual Syracuse
Little League Tournament here
Friday evening. Rutland's Reds,
Murray City, a nd Mason scor ed impressive wins, while adva ncing to

second round play .
In the first of three games. the
Rutland Reds blanked the Gallipolis
Ti gers 1~. behind a perfect n&lt;&gt;-hit
pitching performance by young
Michael Bartrum. Bartrum went the
distance to pick up the win and
stnke oul II of tthe 12 batters he
faced. The game was called after
four innmgs due to the 10 run rule .
C. Jackson was the Gallipolis
hurler who suflered the loss. He fa nned one and walked four .
· Rutland plated 10 runs on nine hits
and committed one error. For the
wmncrs Kev in Oiler had a home run .
Tony Shoemaker a tnple , Marty
Hurt a tripl e and single. Joey Snyder
a single and double, and Michael
Bartrum a single.
· 1n a very exc iting, but unusual
second game, Murray City nipped
Gallipolis 11-il, despite getting just

one hit. Gallipolis out hit the winner!
7 to 1, but Murray City took advantage of its opportunity and the 10
free passes.
Garza posted the victory with six
strikeouts for Murray City , while
Brown suffered the loss. Brown fanned 10. but also walked 10.

ATTENTIONI

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Lady Golf Winners _ _ _~.r-------: POMEROY - Norma Custer had
low gross and low putt, and Joan
Childs and Penny Compton tied low
net at last week's play at the Jayma r
Go lf Course by the La dies
Association. The previous week,
Jane Brown had all three.

l o·.oltt hll'l l "l li''
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Wt'dnt·~d ay.J uly 1.19111
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Others golfing with the group
Tuesday were Grace Eich,
Elizabeth Lohse, Garren Snyder,
Sandy Koenig, Margaret Follrod,
Kathy Guard. Liz Cutler, Betty
Fultz, Velma Rue, Roberta O'Brien,
Maxine Gaskill, Pat Mills and Barbara Shuler.

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20

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TeHl1l 2 Ph1lht•s

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Team 2 P ~lliiii"S

-

10 14
lfl 14
B 16

Donnie Van Meter pitched for
Mason, and despite suffering the
defea t. had a good outing for his
team. He fanned nine and walked
seven in going the distance. Fifth inning errors, however, hurt Mason''\
chances and it dropped the 7-3 -

8 16
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Sara h M(-Gra i'I . J.:amc l t i ,

f l'arn 3 - Ke11 Witllanc. J:&lt;tlllt' 93_ su tcs 278
Ti: &lt;~rn 4 Wl't' Thrt•t• - Kt-&gt;ll y Aru•.-mml!. ~amt•
1~ : Valene Barnard. SNie s 420
Team 5 - Urett Hem&lt;~ rd . g:mw 101 st•rt t&gt;s 218

Team 6 MGM' s ~ Jun Morro~ . game 108 .
scr1c:; 2.11
Tcarn 7 - Kelli Hill. ..:amc 57. St'rtl'S m
Tl'ctlll II - Tun Clcndcnm . team 75. scru•s 174
F:NOOF FIRSTT HALF
TUESDA \'AFTERNOON I.EAG UF:

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1600. Jt!fr s Carry Ou ll 605 Pruff1tt' s Gr.. 1518
TEAM HIGH GAME - · J dfs C~ rry Out 0J
Ft' ll y Trt'CSc rvtce ~J . J eff' s C.trrJ Out540

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WOMEN HIGH SERI ES - Cindv Mav ll' 4!1 1

T111a Coll ta s~. Jamt·l' F'ctl~· 4M _ ·

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WOMF:N HIGH GAMF: - 'rina Cull1n.s lBfl . Cm
dy Maylt• 176. J&lt;t OK't' Fetty 172.

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• Tcitm 1 Buckcyl' H il ls

INDIANAPOIJS (AP) - Cathy
Reynolds manied Dana Derouaux
last December, and she gained an
experienced Cllddy in the process.
Reynolds, who began learning golf
at the age of 6 from her father, says
the marriage has "turned her life
around." She is now one of the
leading money-winners on the
Ladles Professional Golf
Association tour.
Derouaux has "taught me to think
better out there," Reynolds said,
" and to just be a lot more positive,
even when the going gets tough. He's
reallyhelpedmealotthatway." ·
Reynolds, who struggled to earn
only $9,Wl in her third year on the
tour last year, shot a career-best&amp;under-par 66 in Friday's second
round of the $150,000 Mayflower
Classic. That left her within one
stroke of lhe lead held by Debbie
Austin, who was 7-under-par at 137
after 36 holes.
Austin followed the founder 611 that
gave her the opening-round lead
with a 69, scoring five birdies.
"I didn't hit the ball any\vhere as
well as I hit it yesterday afld had to
get it up and down quite a few times.
But, I didn't miss a putt," Austin
said. " I putted terrific."
The gap between the ieaders and
the rest of the field at the 6,101-yard,

ALL PARTS AND SERVICE WORK
NOW THROUGH JULY 31, 1981

scrlt's:l19.

Phillips got the lone Murray City
hit which was a Single. For
Ga llipolis, Rusk tripled, doubled,
and singled , Harrison added two
smgles, and Rage I added a triple
In the finale, Mason's Rangen1
blanked the Gallipolis Athletics 9-0,
behind the tournament's third n&lt;&gt;hitter. Decker was the man who
fired an outstanding game, posting
the n&lt;&gt;-hit shut out win and fanning !3
batters along the way . Robertson
suffered the defeat.
Hawkins had a home run for th e
winners, Sullivan tripled, doubled,
and hit a home run, while Tucker
doubled and singled.
Action resumes Monday evening
when the Middleport Indians play
the Gallipolis Padres in the first
game. Glouster Burr Oak plays
Jackson, and Glouster A. L. plays

,..

decision.
Bradley led Mason with two
singles, while Van Meter and Collins
each singled.

t

~

Call Now For An Appointment

t

446·9800

195 Upper R'IVer Roa d

Gallipolis, 0.

I ~~~~~:_:~~:_:~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~:_::~~~:__:~~

par-72 Counlry Club of Indianapolis
course was a big one. Beth Daniel,
last year's leading money-winner,
was four strokes behind Austin at
141. There was a three-way tie bet·
ween Louise Parlls., Myra Van Hoose
and Jan Stephenson at 142 going into
today's third round.
Reynolds had seven birdies and
one bogey after starting the round at
even par.
" I really hit the ball extremely
welt on the front side," she said. "I
drove it really good and hit the hall
really close to the hole."
Reynolds' only bogey came on the
~yard, par-4 No.8 hole when she
misjudged a gust of wind. But she
said the key to her rotind, which included birdies on each of her first
three holes, came after she made the
turn.
" I started to get a little excited. I
got a little tense," Reynolds said, adding that was when her husband
became very helpful.
" He realizes I get a little excited,"
said the 23-year-old former Tulsa
University golfer. " Dana just emphasized that I should keep it down
the middle and get it on the green."
In May, Reynolds recorded her first pro victory and she came here as
. the No.l5 golfer in earnfugs with
$52,907. However, she says having a

VINTON - North Galtia football
physicals will be Saturday, July 25.
A bus will take players to town at
7:15 a .m. Players are to meet at
North Gallia High School Gym.
There will also be a football
meeting July 30 at 11:30 a.m. Practice schedule, shoes, ins, physicals
will be discussed at that time .

NEW HAVEN- The New Haven
AII.Star Little League team is
currently competing in an AII.Star
tournament in Jackson, Ohio.
In the first game of the tourney
New Haven defeated the South
Webster AU-stars by a score of 8-3 .
Collecting hits for New Haven in
the game were Donf)ie Beckner, a
double and three singles: J.T.
Lloyd, a double and a single: Doug
Johnson and Tim Cassell, each with
two singles; Paul Briles, a threerun homer; Mike Wolfe, a double:
Brad Smith, a double and Paul
Hesson, a single.
The local ·team was defeated in
their second game by a· narrow 11·9
margin.
Getting hits In the losing cause for
Ne.w Haven were J .T. Lloyd, threerun homer; Brad Smith, Mike
Wolfe, Paul Briles, Doug Johnson,
Tlni Cassell and Dale Smith, each
with one single.
New H8ven avoided. elimination
by -boiBicing back in · their third
PJ!Ie as they out-seorec! Eastern of

loc k s

Both have a•r , g ood tran sporlation .

G ood fam i ly cars .

'1 door, low m11es , one owner.

•
••

.•
'•

Reach; ·· .·An lnteresfPaying
Ch~c~ing Account

NOW

.

Scott Griffith, owner-operator of
Carousel Dinner Theater in Ravenna and Canal Fulton Dinner Theater
in Canal Fulton, thinks the baseball
strike may have helped his theaters.
"There was a huge increase in attendance at 'Big Bad Burlesque,'
which just dosed at Canal Fulton,"
he said. "That's more the kind of
show that baseball fans would like.
" We've bad a great many lastminute reservations at both
theaters, which may be traced to the
strike. At Carousel, for example, we
could he 70 percent sold out in the

COWLES &amp; BOSTER CO.,

L.P.A.

Tansactions

A nORNEYS AT LAW

By Thr "....._.. P11S11
BASKEI'IALL

Douglas M. Cowles
Jolynn Boster

Jtlallooll BltblbiJI AIIOciatiOD
CIDC.OO BULLS - AMOIIIIced that they
would 'Mt esercise their right of first refusal.

allowinc Bobby Wilkerson, fDJ"Ward,to jotn the
Cleveland Cavaliers.
FOOTIULL
N1doul Foect.U League
Cl!IC1DO DEARS - Slgne&lt;fTodd Bell , defensiOJe blt"l; and Scott Zlettek, defensive- end.
CIE\'IILAND BROWNS - Signed Hanford
Dixo_l!_'\1..._
cornerbeck .
I DENVER BRONOOS - Slt~:ntd DenniJ Smith,
~enslq· bltck, arld John Hankerd, linekraclt:er

ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF THEIR LAW OFFICES AT
Office Phone 446-0644
Office Hou~: Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30
Sat. 9:00-12:00 Noon

MIAM: DOLPtuNS- Named Charley Wil'lner
p o
.
~co uting
director .

PITrSm!RGH STEEI..ERS - Signed Ridt

Do~.cenler .

1 •• , Hnt

r· ·

I ppn mtnw n t

Thotledown results
NORnf RANDALL, Ohio (APl Ellie .l t. ridden by Heriberto Rivera
Jr., Willi the featured allowance at
~wn by running the six
furloliill in I: 11.
E1llt !C. paid S6 to win, $3.to to
pla~:.llld $2.40 to show. P8S8ion
Scelltjmd $2.80 to place and $2.20 to
show Iiiii Arctic Herb paid $2.10 to
show: ·
Tile last trifecta of 4-11-9 paid
$148. . :
A i:tlday crowd f1f 4,103 wafered
$558,1h.

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

And offer you
the outstanding
service
State_ Farm
is famous for.

Takes
early lead
..
,,

INbrANAPOlJS lAP) - Debbie
Austlli lhot a 3-under par 69 to retain
the lad after two rounds of the 72hole, '150,000 Ladies Professional
Golf Association Mayflower Classic.
Austin has a 3&amp;-hole 7-under 137
and a one-shot lead .over Cathy
Re)'IIClids, who shot a career-~1 6underpar66.

CAROLL S NOWD E N
417 Scc:on d Ave .
c;allipoli s . Oh .
Phon e 446 -aJ90
Hom oe Phone 446&gt;· 4518
~---.,
Ulloll ' AIM

STATE FARM
fHI 1n~ tn~aiiY Ctii'I PI"'

KfiM Olla
I H$UIANCI

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OHIO'S NEWEST•••
PRIMITIVE CAMPING AREA
"Within boundaries of Wa7ne National Forest"

NEW HAVEN - Pat Williamson
of New Haven recorded a hole-in-one
on the seventh hole at the Riverside
Golf Course in Mason. Williamson's
shot, using a eight-iron, was wit·
nessed by Dale Tudor and Scott
McKinley.
Bill Winebrenner _of Syracuse,
OWo, also .recorded a hole-In-ane on
the same hole as Williamson.
Winebrenner used a wedge. which
was wltneWd' by Tolij McNeely
and Dana Wlnebrenn~r.

·WATCH&gt;RF;pAJR' .
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MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW

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At last! Checking that gives
Y?U the, benefits of a savings ac~?~nt. · . all)ngw'th all the flex•b•ht~ of a checking.:account.
.- That s NOW ... ge~ the facts!

EXTRA SPECIAL OF THE WEEK--;.,
· •:;....
lOcks.

said.

Records hole in one

.

1977 FORD GRANADA ..~~~-~~::..~~~-'-~~~----'2595
1977 FORD LTD 4 DOOR -~~:~:·.~~?.1~.':':~~ ~~~:.'2995
1976 FORD MAVERICK 4 DOOR~~:?:':~: ~c. ... '1995
1976 FORD MUSTAND ....~~~.~-;~::.............. '2695
1974 VOLKSWAGEN BUG .......................'1495 .
1979 fORD COURIER PICKUP. t:o;;;;~:~c ..... '4895
1978 DODGE PICKUP lh TON ......~ .......... '4795
1979 FORD 4x4 PICKUP ~ TON:~~.':'! 1.e.': .. '2395
1975 FORD PICKUP f250 ...................... '2295·
1974 FORD PICKUP F250 .. ~~!':.'.~~~: ...........'1595
.

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Slar of
Monaga was !~weighted It 124
pounds and Anniedla , 122, in e 13horse field lor today's J20.~
" River Queen Handicap" over; 7~,t
furlongs on the turf at River Downs.
Rapid Sport led all the way lo a
five-length victory Friday in the
$4,1100 featured eighth, and paid
$7 .40, $4.20 and $3.40. Lt. Gold was
second for $6 and $5.80, and Ojavan
was third for $3.40.
Swoon Glo combined f&gt;.3 in the
double with True Enchanbnent for
$17.80. The crowd of 3,880 bet
$453,390.

Pike by a 23 to 20 margin.
Hitters for lliew Haven were
Donnie Beckner, a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer,
a double and two singles; Mike
Wolfe, a double and two singles;
Tim Cassell, three singles; Paul
Br.lles and Brad Smith, each with
two singles; Matt Fisher and Paul
Hesson, each with a single.
The New Haven All-Stars
returned to the Jackson tourney
today in hopes of returning home
with a trophy.

Lt. Blue . Air, V -8 e ngine.

.....

River Downs result8

morning and completely sold out by
that night," Griffith said. "That
many last-minute reservations havo .
made it extremely difficult for th~
chefs in our kltchens to plan."
Herb Brown, Loew's Theaters
division manager, said that trying to ·
estimate the effect of the basebaq
strike on movie theaters is too close .
to call.
'The strike has probably helped us ·
weekends," he said. " If the Indians
had been playing to crowds of 60,000 .
and 70,000 on weekends, that
wouldn't have helped us.
"On the other hand, you can have
the finest movie in the world, a
beautiful theater and ideal weathe~
and still sometimes the people won't
come for unfathomable reasons, "
Brown said.

When former professional football
quarter 'lack Joe Namath appeared
in " Picnic" in his theaters in !979,
there was no noticeable influx of
football fans at the box office, he

alive in Jackson tournament

Physical examinations

!!L~e~Rha~~m!IT, WAGON ... --.. --... -... -.. '6895
1980 FORD THUNDERBIRD ... _.................'6795
AM! FM/ Ster eo, air , cruise, PW. Power Door
(2) 1980 FORD FAIRMONTS :........... ~~;.~'5295
(2) 1979 FORD tTDs .............................l4995
4-dr .
1979 FORD MUSTANG-~:~::~~;~;~~:?~~;;_&lt;__ ..... '4595
1978 MERCURY MARQUIS .....................'3995
1978
FORD FIESTA 3 DOOR ................... '3195
Good gas mil eage. Needs a new hom e.
1978 FORD THUNDERBIRD .................... '4095

Z·28

husband as ~ part of her team on the
course has not been just sweetlless
and fun .
" lt's'not easy," she said about her
relationship with the :!&gt;year-old
Derouaux, who has caddied on the
women's tour for seven years .
"We've had our ups and downs, but
we do enjoy it."
Last year Derouaux caddied for
DoMa Caponi. He and Reynolds met
when Caponi took a week off the tour
and he carried his future wife's bags
in a tournament.

- ',

New Haven all stars still

I

JULY SPECIALS

One 2 d r .• on e

for Saturday's Can-Am. Gove was takeu to a hospllal bl
Elmira, N. Y. with a compound fracture of the left lq.
( AP L'l•erpboto) .

Hu.sband provides influence

MASON - Racine claimed an ex- , - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - citing 7-:l triumph over llt..son recen- - - - - - - - - - - ..,._....- • ..._ .
tltyinMeig-MasonPonyLeagueac- it
tion. After trailing :HI, the Racine
team came to life and scored
another come-from-behind victory.
After scoring one run in the fourth
frame on two walks and a Jay
Bostick single which was Racine's
first hit, the visitors came to life.
A
In the fifth inning, Racine erupted
for six runs on three errors, a walk ,
and singles by Steve Fisher, Wade
Connally, and Tony Riffle. Other
Racine hitters were Tony Deem and
Depnis Teaford with singles.
~
TonyRifflecameoninthethirdinning in relief of Steve Fisher and pit-

Local bowling
11, I il wrl _,
j , ,,,,, lud • .: ••' '"

were, row 1, left to right, D. J. SaaDders, Cluis Pattenon. Row 2, Earl Howell, Jack Plclleas, Rick Welsh,
Brad HalfhlU, John Edwarda, Jimmy Barden. Row 3,
Richard Hurt, Todd Holstela, Randy Jackson, Bazz
Edwarda, Shane Glassburn, Doyle Callihaa, Michael
Jackson. Row 4, Coacb.Keith Saunders, Michael Clay,
Coach Chester Johnson, Coach Doyle Saullders.

Racine claims 7-3 victory

[ ,, ., ~ t Tl li T ~- U . ,it lj

By Scott WoUe
• SYRACUSE - Two n&lt;&gt;-hittters

•

GOVE Pi.JU.ED AWAY- A track worker puilo
Gary Gove of Tacoma, Wash. away from hls Can-Am
car Friday after Gove hila waD of tires during practice

t

No hitters highlight
Syracusetournannent

)·

.,

.J, .f j ", ! '; ofl" l ( )UI

This year'.s game, the 36th ctnnual ,

(U:VILAND (AP) :_ If the month-old \llaeball players' strike has
any pld effects, one Is that ather
entertainment medluma have
flour1111id whlle bueball stadiums
rernaill dark.
"lt'l··qllite possl.!lle that with no
games being played that a number
of w rn have persuaded their
husballlll to go to the theater,
espetWlly if the latter have already
drun1c their quota of beer for the
week," Aid John Kenley, Ohio's
most IUccessful swruner theater
operator with operations in Akron,
Daytolland Columbus.
" It's hard to tell the effect of the
strike on my theaters one way or
another," he said. " Baseball falls
generally aren't theater buffs.
However, when the Cincinnati Reds
were hot, it hurt my hox office in
DaytGQ."
Keliley said that having a sports
figure appear in a production does
not gtlll'alltee a turnout of fans.

.,.....
f'li·!!...
.,,

''

LEAGUE CHAMPS- Bidwell behilld an 111 viclory over Green las I week reigns as the Ohio valley Lit·
Ue League champion. The win gave Bidwell an 11-0 slate
while Rio Grande finished s""ood with a 7·1 r""ord.
Bidwell also look the league tournamenl with wins over
Green and Rio Grande. The team plays Monday In the
Syracuse Little League Tournament. Team members

Times-sentinel

Strike aids other mediums

Queen will play
•
In all star tilt
MASSILLON - - Matt Queen, for ·
mer star gridder at North Gal!ia
High School, will play one more
game before startmg football prac ·
lice at Glenville State College this
fall .
He has been chosen to participa te
in the Ohio High School Football
Coaches Association All .Star Game
Friday , J uly 24 in Massillon.
Queen, a standout tackle .
linebacker, will be one of 33 mem ·
bers of the South Squad, picked from
among the best players in that hall
of the state.
The game will climax two weeks
of practice plus a rcries of special
activities and fun eve nts in
Massillon, a town where high school
football is king .

The sunda

Pa

Julv 12; 1981 .

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

j,

••~

'

.81G·.

c :·a, ·s·. Bank: · a.;·
The
.

Cornmer~lal • s;~·~~gs_ ~:~~ .' "

. ' fALWoiWS 'O'N

'a&amp; Court Sb:tet '

YOUR 510E"
1

I '

Sil:W B~ PI~ '

Membef' ,.;.u.··

LOtATIOI MAP
••

'

�·'

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

July 12, 1981

w. va .

Clippers p~st .victory;.· Ch-a rlies lo~~e
By Tbe Associated Press
Brian Ryder pitched his first complete game of the season as the
Colwnbus Clippers defeated the
Syracuse Chiefs 6-1 in International
League baseball.
In other lL action Friday night,
Rictunond rolled ove r Tidewater~.
Pawtucket wiped out Toledo 4-3 in 10
innings and Rochester outlasted
Charleston :i-2 in 12 innings.
Ryder, 8-2, scattered eight hits in
his first route-going perlormance in
19 starts this season . He had a
shutout going into the ninth inning
when the Cltiefs pushed across their

only run of the game.
"I'd be lylne if 1said the completlt
game didn't mean anything to me,"
Ryder said. " Last year, I had 10
(complete games In 28 starts), and
you would think you would have a
couple of good games where you
coul!j get by for nine innings.••
Colwnbus scored twice in the first
inning off Larry McCall, J,I. Tucker
Ashford reached first pase oo a walk
and Steve Balboni followed with his
18th home run of lbe season.
RICHMOND 3, TIDEWATER 0
Ken Smith hit a solo homer in the
fi rst inning and Ken Dayley gave up

w. va.

hio-Point Plea

Page- C-5- The

USSR surprises Americans

six bits as Richmond shut out In the winnillll run as Pawtucket
Tidewater. It wu the ninth viJh'Y edged Toledo.
The winning run was scored by
of the seuon far Dayley, who struck
Jim
Wilsoo, who singled to start the
out five Tides batters in going the
inning,
was sacrificed to second and
tliBtance.
advanced
to third on a ground out.
Richmond got another run in the
third inning when Randy Johnson Koza's hit was off Terry Felton, the
singled and scored on a Larry last of three Toledo pitchers.
Whisenton single after Tidewater
Rick Williams started for Toledo
center fielder Gil Flores kicked the
and was relieved by Mike Kinball accidentally.
nwnen, H . who took the loss.
Terry Leach, 1-2, took tbe loss for
Toledo got all three of its runs on
!beTides.
home runs off Bobby Ojeda, 12-5,
PAWTllCKET4, TOLED03
who gave up six hits in going the
Dave Koza smacked a long single
distance,
off the wall with tWo outs and drove

I

lENINGRAD, U.S.S.Ri (AP) The powerful Soviet team overwhelmed Its American rivals Saturday and scored a 204-178 victory in
the first U.S.-sovlet dual track and
field meet in three years.
Soviet women wor,. seven of nine
secon&lt;klay events and the Soviet
men took five of nine to break open
what had been a close meet after the
first day. The Soviets led 97-93 after
Friday's events.
The American men won their part
of the meet for the 12th Ume in 17
meetings, IUHOO. But the Soviet
women crushed their American
counterparts 99-60 to record their
16th triumph In the dual competition.
The victory was the Soviets' 13th
in 17 meets since the s·~rles began in

J

19511. The Americans have won three
times and one meet ended in a tie.
Tatyana Anisimova set the pace
by winning two women's races on
the final day - the 100-meter high
hurdles in 12.79 seconds and the 200meter dash in 22.94.
The strong Russian women's
squad scored 1-2 finishes in the 200
meters, the 1,500-meter run, the 400meter intennediate hurdles, the
long jump and the 3,000-meter run,
and won the 1,600-meter relay.
Jeff Phillips of Whitehall, Ohio,
completed a sprint double by winning the men's 200 in 20.50 seconds .
He took the 100 Friday in 10.21.
David McKenzie, 32, of Fairfield,
Calif.• set an American record in the .
hanuner throw with a heave of 237
feet, 2'h inches (72.30 meters I, but it

was only good enough for third place
behind two Soviets.
Two-time Olympic gold medalist
Yuri Sedykh won the hanuner with a
throw of 253-3lh (77.20 meters),
cheered by a crowd of 20,000 at Lenin
Stadiwn.
Cliff Wiley of Baltimore paced the
U.S. relay team to an exciting victory in the 1,600-meter event. Wiley,
who won the 400-meter run Friday.
took the baton on the anchor leg less
than one meter ahead of Olympic
400-meter gold medalist Viktor
Markin and rocketed to a five-mete r
victory.
The U.S . time of 3:01.07 was the
best in the world this year .
Other

terfina l se ries .
Connors, making tus first Davis

Cu p appea rance smce 1976, ba iled
out the U.S. squad by bea tmg Tomas
Smid &amp;-3 , &amp;- I, &amp;-2 in Friday 's second
match to even the series at l-1.
: " Knowing John had lost the fi rst
r:natch made me more eager , more

up, " said Connors . " l;iidn 'l want to
end the day with us behind 2-o especiaHy

not

on

Arthur's

bir-

thday ."
Arthur Ashe, the non-playu1g captain of the U.S. team who was
&lt;;elebrating hi s 38th birthday, sa id
he sensed Connors would come ou t

like a tiger.
· "Jirruny loves to play m ;~lew
York," sa id Ashe . " He loves the
New York crowds and he feels that
cynter court belongs to h1m ...
: It certainly did Friday. Smid was
no

match

fur

the

aggressive,

tenacious Connors. who scored nine
service breaks and was m complete
control throughout. In one stretch of

Bf'st &lt;;ell mq b• as ply pol ye-sIN tire, w 1th s• x rtb
Iread tor qrca l road qr ip and smoo th , thu mp trpe

Connors, a satisfied smite on his

r1dc

face .
Veterans Stan Smith a nd Bob
Lutz. who are t2-1 in Davis Cup competition since 1968, were to represent
the Umted States in today 's doubles
match aga inst Lend! and Smid. The
concl uding singles matches Sunday
will pit McE nroe against Srnid and

WHITEWALL
&amp;BLACKWALL

FREE

Connors aga ins t l.endl.

" With Jimmy on the team, I don' t
think it really matters what I do
here." sa1d McE nroe, who won Wimbl edon a week ago to end Bjorn
Borg's fi ve-yea r reign and replace
the Swede in the No .I spot m the

MOUNTING

Blac kwnll
s,ze
A78 13
B78 13
(78 14
E78 14
F78 14
G78 14
H78 14
560 15
F78 15
G78 15
H78 15

Reg .
3485
37 80
41 60
44 .00
46.25
47 80
50 05
42 .20
47 80
49 25
5150

Sale
27.00
30.15
33.15
35.05
36.75
38.10
39.95
33.70
37 ,90
39.25
41.15

Whilewa ll
Size
A76 13
B76 13
G7 8 14
E78 14
F78 14
G76 14
H78 14
560 15
F78 15
G78 IS
H78 15
L78 15
P lu ~ F . E . T .

Reg .

36 .55
39 .70
43 .70
46.20
48 .60
50 .15
52.50
44 .35
50 .15
51.75
54.10
57 .10

$52.25
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158.50
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any team ."

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568.85
572.80
572.00
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S? 13I? 49
11 46
12 s;
$1 19

Sale
29 .25
31.70
34 .90
36.85
38.75
40 .05
H-90
35.40
39 .90
41 .30
45.55
45.55

1so lo 1.84 per lire

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plu!&gt;'; l 5 1 FET anti
Old IIH'
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• For cars w•lh lront or rear whee l
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otn l!f£&gt;

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nde
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contact

tlR1l!x 13 Wh•lew.lll
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• Wei-weather dependability.
~:-::;:::::~t-..;;.;':':-+-.;;,.~ shOulder-to shoulder lrac hon
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Balanced wheels
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156 8 p .m Ca m p Crescendo

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2 5 p.m. Open Swi m
7 9 p.m . Open Swi m
Closed
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,

...------·· - -

•

WINS DISCUS- John Powell of Sao Jose, Calif., tosses his discus to
a winDing distance of %1:1-feet, 6 inches during lbe dual U.S.-U.S.S.R.
track meet at Lenin Stadium In Leningrad, Friday. The meet is the first
major athletic clash between lbe two superpowers since lbe U.S.-Ied
boycott of lbe l!!Se Moscow Summer Olympics. (AP Laserphoto) .

C8D

.

I

·~-

.nOt learn.fr9m atestbo«*,"lhe said.
1 PJayetil have . lnlvtiled ·.from
Anltrllll, CaRidi, :l'alwan. El
Salva-or,. Guatemala, The
lNeCilerlanda; ltll)', ltarw, Snden.
VIii .-a and l!ltt Unltetllltatel. AD

,_•'"'...
.....,..,,'l ... ~··
bJthe

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a' I llhwllllleflllld
Mew• ~
.~Ill tile Btlbe RadhlMpe•.

OWIUafutloi prl'l 7'

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wltllcNII aa.····,

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Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)

n•·-w. 2nd.~ Pomeroy, Oh. (
·OFFICE .PH. M2~2( .. :
I

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Phone
446-4464

87
Olive

Gallipolis,

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OFF

·Reg; '80 ........... NOW,'5210
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OPEN MONDAY TIL 8 P.M.

&amp;·· STOR.Y

I

4. Install

Cuyahoga County Corrunon Pleas
Court and transferred to Columbus
because it was against a state agency .
Britt said thoroughbred tra cks in
Ohio weren't able to fill their racing
schedules under the rule .
" Apparently there were a lot of
racehorse owners who wouldn 't
bring their horses into Ohio unl ess
they could medicate them ," he said.
The judge said his ruling stemmed
" more, though. on the technical
. ..
baSIS.
"The (horsemen 's) association
had really not been granted a full
hearing," he said. "Actually, they
were not notified there would be a
bearing until the hearing got started" earlier this year.
It's possible his decision will be
appealed into a higher court or that
the commission will reschedule
another hearing, he said.

h

s·y· ()R¥~

- =j1

On Your ex ist ing cabinets
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
Franklin County Common Pleas
Judge has ruled that the Ohio State
Racing Commission's no-medication
rule for race horses is invalid.
Judge James Britt announced his
decision Friday on the rule, which,
since March I, had forbidden giving
medication to racehorses 24 hours
before the animal competes.
David Arnold, an attorney for the
Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association, based in Beachwood, had appealed the rule last
spring. The group said the rule was
adopted Improperly and abused the
racing commission's authority.
The case originally was filed in the

;·

the)'

3. Iron

Rule said invalid

. ·tlie
bltheholltfariil!Y'~IIfOlllli!d,t
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\'ialtors li~ to COIIIIIiies _
In I
10

Your new Glamourlop coun ter to siZ e

•.&gt;

an '

'certain neighborhoods

2. Cut

,

NEWARK, Qhio (API ..:.! Players mwii'ca~,'' said John Nelson, public cultures of players .melt along the
in the World , Friendship Sel:ies, i'el8ti011Sdirector ofthe.federation.
baselines. OnlY wheri youths talk of
representing a dbzeit teams from 11
'~yers have found In practiCe league structure ba_ck ~lome does difcountries, are · sta-yfug with area how slrnilat' the garile ,1$ regardless · ferences show·ujl:,Baseball for teenfamilies during , the nine-day ofw~l~toplay.
agers ·ln ·Korea 'is similar to that
bufball event.
"It ortclnated from the states," ptayed.ln th!= United States. Most of
,The double-elimination tour- 9aid Samuel Kim, a member of the it is structured in high schools.
ri8ment, whichopenedFriclay, .i sfor .Korean delega-tion . . "They
In the Netherlands, baseball is
~D1S , of ~ . pJilyersl6 to ,I~ .. :(Koreans) used -to always use played through athletic clubs and
rs old. It~ -~ first to be hel' by · ~gUsh rt~ther , than Kqrean players pay to join. "We don't have a
-~~ ~ederatlon,
:(language), but I rlOW : iiOt •many SChoOl' &lt; tl!am Or league," said
. .brella lfOilil for aD amateur l&lt;~ns (are) wiell to speaking Alswipn Kieboom, a 16-year-old cal;
baseball in the ~til*t·
' English; · 10 they translated the cber-ouUielder for the Dutch team.·
'l;wo a~ t!Jree. .&amp;~riles are - American Into Korean::·
"You ,pay ' a contribution a~d you
~ulediilclld,ayl ·.
i
. ~ watcbjng pra~ce soOn beloog, to that .club and you play
:Jay BlnkcMtz of Newark, dlrect.Qr realiR different tbacklltounds and' · baseball for them. .

=~~:r~=

242 West Main

' I

f.

.
'Mllll ho8t familletl blvt .at .... line·
.•-pillyerwlio~~~~~~~~f.ilclliiL
"TheintereiR_.,.... . ._ ,. , .

POOL

I 4 p_m Open Sw im
2 4 p.m Open Swi m
4 5 p m _ Camp Crescendo
6 8 p.m Open Swi m
A 10 p m . Camp Cr E-scendo
I J p .m
Camp Sw im
J 5 p m Camp Crescendo
6 8 p.m . Open Swim
H 10 p .m Camp Crescendo
'I 4 p.m . Open Swi m
4 .S p m Camp Crescendo
6 8 p.m . Open Sw i m
8 IOp.m . Camp Crescendo
'I 5 p.m . Open Swi m
7 9 p.m .-Open S.wim

and 0,1 cnange
• tnc1ue1e~ ligh-t trucks

- ~~=
=

1. Measure

To qualify under Unlimited
Racing Cornmis&amp;ion guidelines, the
thunderboats. must top 95 mph on
two-mile courses.
Four other boats - Alias Van
Lines, Kentucklana Paving, Miss
Madison and the Spirit of the Air
Force - did not attempt to qualify
on Friday. Kentuckians Paving,
driven by Ron Snyder. and Miss
Madison,. piloted by Milner Irvin,
arrived in Evansville too late to enter the river Friday. Bill.Muncey's
Alias Van Lines has been kept under
wraps under a company warehouse
while crew members rebuild the
craft engines,
The Spirit of the ~ir Force experienced engine cooling troubles,
and owner-driver AI Letcher was uncertain whether the problem will be
resolved in Ume to make a
qualification attempt today. Letcher
planned to make his hydropla~
driving debutj t Evansville.
Howard, who was the slowest
qualifier among eight at last
weekend's Madison Regatta, said
his crew is "more ready this week."
The 40-year-old rookie, who has
yet to make the final heat in any
race this season, said his task
becomes easier each Ume he takes
to the water.
"We're doing a lot of things now by
reaction rather than thinking a bout
it. Before, 1- had ~q think a lot. But
it's getting a lot easier. I feel real
confident 011 this course."
He said the 'veteran drivers "are
teasing me now, butl'm gettJrlg used
to it. I'm leamillg. I figure .we'll get
a new boat next season. Then I'll be
teasing them."

-~,

.llllire eaally find

Week of July 1'1, IYtl l

JWt v It I 4 p .m . Open Recrea tion

, • Chass•s ltJbnca!lon

• ptease call tor appo•nlment

LYN ECE NT ERSC HE DULE
DATE - GYMNAS IUM

J~ly

even treadwear

---

•
underway
serzes
World frien~hip

u.S.

Reduced
smooth your ride.

EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP )
Driver Dean Chenoweth planned to
try again Sunday after a choppy
Ohio River kept his Miss Budweiser
lihlinlited hydroplane from possibly
reaching a record speed during
Friday's qualifications for the third
annual Thunder on the Ohio.
Miss Budweiser recorded the top .
speeds among six giant thunderboats which took to the tw~mile
course, turning in laps of 129.264
mph and 128.801 mph. But it fell .
short of the national record of 131.267
mph set by Steve Reynolds in Miss
Circus Circus at Evansville last
year.
" You really can't anticipate a
record-setting attempt, because
everything has to be just right," said
Chenoweth. "But alii need is a little
calmer water, lllte it was Thursday.
and I'll take a shot at it."
Miss Budweiser crew chief Dave
Culley said the craft would take
three laps today, using two engines.
" We want to do some te&gt;ting and
make sure we have everything
ready for Sunday's race," Culley
said. "Race day is more important
than anything else."
The Rolls Royce-Griffon powered
·boat is undefeated on this year's
unlimited tour, with three race and
nine heat victories to its credit.
.
· John Walters' Pay 'N Pak, the
only turbine-powered craft on the
unlimited circuit, turned in Friday's
second-best effort with a 125 mph
clocking. Chip Hanauer's . Sq\lire
Shop reached 122.241, Scott Pierce's
Miss Great Scot was at 107.623,
Terry Turner's Gilmore Speciaf was
at 104.2'19, and Bobbie Hoivard's
Captran Resorts was a\100.279.

.e

$399 .,
"'PER WHEE L

.
DEJECTED McENROE - Wimbledon champion John McEnroe, a
- member of lbe American Davis Cup team, displays his disgust over
: losing a point during the third set of his match In New York Fridliy wilb
: :Ivan Lend! of the Czechoslovakia team. McEnroe lost lbe match 6-4, 1412, 7·5. (AP Laserphoto) .

~~·J· · ~
·"- ~
You r old k1tchen countertop

CUSHION BELT
POLYGLAS

;)Ius l l B0 F[ l .-111d

~

Choppy waters
present problem _

wor ld computer ra nkings. " Jimmy

should win his two matches, and we
should also win the doubles."
The 28-year-old Connors, curren·
tly ranked thJrd in the world behind
McEnroe and Borg and one notch
ahead of Lend! , sal out Davis Cup
competitiOn in recent years because
of differences with former captain
Tony Trabert. But Ashe replaced
Trabert as the non-playing team
captain this yea r, and in January
Connors agreed to be available for
the series against delendmg champion Czechoslovakia.
" I didn't ask Jirruny why he'd
changed his mind, l just said, 'Sign
here ," ' said Ashe. " He 's an asset to

4 EASY STEPS TO
A BEAUTIFUL
NEW
COUNTERTOP

RUN FOR TilE FINISH- Jim Spivey, left, of Wood Dale, DL, and
Craig Masback of While Plains, N. Y ., take control of lbe bell tap to finish
lint and aeco"d respectively In the 1,50&amp;-meler race during the duallnlclt
meet between the U.S. and lbe Soviet Union at LeolD Stadium, Friday.
The meet Is the lint major athletic clash between the two superpowen
since the 1t80 Moscow·S1lDIDler OlymJI!cs. (AP Laserpboto).

POWER STREAK 78

the third set he reeled off 16 con·
secutive points.
" It was pretty inspired tennis."

-

in-

Sunday sports

McEnroe's glad
Connors playing
~i d

winners

cluded :
steeplechaser
John
Gregorek of Northport, N.Y.: Karin

ON E SERVE, COMING UP - Jimmy Connors of the American ,
Davis Cup rears back to deliver a serve to Tomas Smid of Czechoslovakia
in New York Friday. Connors won the match; 6-3 , 6-1, 602. I AP Laserphoto! .

NEW YORK 1.~ P 1 - How unportant is it to have Jirruny Connors
back on the U.S. Davis Cup team'
Nobody knows better than teammate John McEnroe.
" It's good to have a guy like Jimmy around . especia lly after you lose
a match," sa id McE nroe. who did
just that in his first court appearance stnce winmng Wunbledon.
bowing to Czechoslova kia's h•an
Lendl 6-4, IH2. 7-o Fnday in the
opener of the best-of-five quar-

American

Smith of Venice. Calif ., in the
women's javelin, a!Xt Louise Ritter
of Denton, Texas, in the women's
hi~hjwnp .
•
Ritter, 23, set a meet record I&gt;Y
clearing 6-4t (1.94 meters ) on her
second attempt.
'
•
A smaller crowd than Friday turned out fo r the second day of lhe
meet, filling only about tw&lt;&gt;-thir~ of
the 30,()()().seat stadium. A group;of
about 50 American exchange studll,D·
ts, some carrying signs backing :the
team, provided a noisy support -fi&gt;r
the U.S. squad.
::
The late afternoon meet wes
staged under near-perfect weattier
conditions, with the temperatl{l"e
about 77 degrees and a gentle brf""e
blowing under a sunny sky.
'

~

'

,#

10
Reg.190 ... ~ ••••••• NOw'59
&lt;
Reg. '105 ••,. ·• ••·•aNOW '6910
10
Rq. '110
••••••••••
~NOW.
'72
'
.

COMPLETE SlOCK

MEN'S

SUITS
Reg.
'110
Reg.
'140
Re&amp;.
'150 . NOW 111200

Rel-

'190 NOW 114210
R~&amp;. '

'250 NOW 118710

�Page- C-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

titrust cases , a nd William Baxter,

the assistant attorney general in
charge of antitrust enforcement,
said that " there is a more favorabl e
e~ tmospher e

for mergers."

The Justice Department has not
dec1ded whether to challenge the Du
Pont-Conoco deal, but its actions

as a clear signal that the antitrust
cops had put away their nightsticks.
Texaco Inc., the No. 3 oil company, began negotiations with a
group of banks to arrange a $5.5
billion line of credit, the largest such
banking deal ever, according to
banking industry sources. Despite
its size, Texaco's proven reserves of
oil and gas have been declining, and
1ts management apparently is considering trying to take over another
oil company that~s been more successful in finding new reserves.
Conoco raised its own li ne of cred1t
from $1 billion to $3 billion, stirring
speculatiOn it was building a de£ense
fund in case an unwanted su1tor out·
btds Du Pont.
II Texaco does go arter an oil company. the leading candidates seem
to be Conoco and Gilles Service Co.
The first deal would move Texaco
from No. 4 to No. 2 on the Fortune
500 list of mdustrial compames.
while the second would leave it
third The top three now are Exxon,
Mobli and General Motors.

were taken by oli company officia ls

Opens new practice
POI NT PLEASANT - Peter J .
r.hrnl :'-lavalkowsky, MD. will be

Medical Association .

C:t

provinCial

branch of the Canadian Medica l

practice in inte rna l

Association . He is also board cer-

nwdi c in e in the Prof essi onal
l3uJldln}..! a t ~5IJ Jackson Ave . on
July 22

tified in internal medicine by the

Dr . ~&lt;Jvalkowsky is£! na t t\'t' of Ed-

He and his wi fe. Lorraine . and
their son, Michael , age two, will
reside at Rt. l, Grandview Heights .

openmg

hts

rn opton , Albe rt&lt;-1. Ca na dC~ . Ht' IS a
graduate 11f the Umversi ty of Alberta Mcd1eal School a nd c ompl et~d Ins

Rota ting Internship m Toronto, Ontan u. Canada 10 1975-76.
Hr dH-i tw o yea rs inter nal
medtrtne rt· s idency al McGill
Univers it y. Montreal, Quebec.
Ca nad a m 1977-79. and two years tnternal med1 c ine res idenc y ot the

Ln1vers1ty uf Alberta in Edmonton
frnrn 1979-81.

J-f p is a member of the Alberta

Am erican
Mcdlcme .

Board

July 12, 1981

Release Gallco report

Oil mergers seen
NEW YORK &lt;API- The Reagan
administration gave its go-ahead,
and merger fever swept the oil industry.
The swirl of rumors that have
been sweeping Wall Street was launc~ed by Du Pont Co.'s mammoth
$6.9 billion bid for Conoco Inc. That
would be the biggest acquisition in
CO'l'Ora te history .
It also would create the seventn"
largest industrial company in the
United States In the Carter administration, it is doubtful that such
a deal would even have been considered. since 1t would almost ceriainly have faced an antitrust
challenge.
But the Reagan adrrumstration
thiS pa st week dismJssed two an-

July 12, 1911

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

t

of

Internal

Po1nt Pl easa nt startmg Ill July .
Dr Navalkowsky's office hours
will ()., fro m 9 a. rn .-5 p.rn. Monday
through Friday. and he will begin
accepting appointments Monday.
July 20. Appp01nlrnents can be made
by cal11ng 675-6143 . Dr .
1\avalkowsky has been granted
privileges to practive internal
medictnl' a t Pt. Pleasant Vall t?y

Hospita l.

- ~·

Corn yield
will exceed
1980 output

aliRIHmE ·-

some 188,520 triuwnisslon gears.
All work is subcontl'Bcted with
the WGrbhllp foe mentally retarded area industries, the superintendent
adultlln Oleshire, wu released by sald.
"These Gallco employees are
Supt- Loren Phelps of the Gal)ia
becoming
more ·productive, selfCounty 1t9 Board of Mental Retar- '
sufficient and earning wages based
dation.
.The finn's revenue was $22,435 upon their own abilities," Phelps adwhlie client wages were $12,857. N~t ded.
The shop's goal for 19111 is to
loss for the past year was placed at
$1,112 and the finn has a net worth of double production and to further
diversify subcontracts enabling
$597.
higher client productivity.
Phelps said. the 70 handicapped
" The Gallipolis area benefits by
employees repaired 757 wooden
keeping more industrial dollars in
pallets, sorted 79,192 pounds of
our coinmunity and serves all taxplastic resin, processed over 82,792
payers by enabling those citizens to
pounds of tobacco, salvaged copper
and metal components from 14,520 be productive and more selfsufficient," Phelps noted.
motors and deburred and inspected
A summary of the
r~ ·condltloo ol Gallco, Inc .•

-

f

JOINS STAFF - Otarleoe Benthall !left} and Tina Saber have ...,.,.,.,_
lly joined the stat£ of Headquarters by Juanlta, 43 Stale St., Gallipolis.
Both are graduates of Buckeye Hills Career Center, aod Tloa also completed her education at Linda Veonri 's Coiffure Creation Academy, Pittsburgh, Pa.
.

long distance to s ummon emergency

se rvices no longer will be charged a
toll. General Telephone Co. of Ohio
has announced.
An experimental plan, instituted
last wee k, eliminated toll charges on
ca lls to fire, police and ambulances
se rv1ces . Chi efl y affected are
residt?nts m rural areas.
Allen W. .-lughes of Marion, vice
president-general manager. sa1d the
30-month plan was a uthomed by the
Publ ic Utilities Commission of Ohio
last February
By Dec. 31, 191l3. the PUCO will
decide if the plan is to be made per·
manent. Every six months. Genera l
of OhiO Will report to the PUCO its
expenence with the plan.
Hughes sa id the company has
progranuned its computers to
recognize emergency phone num·

hers . Phone users then will not be
billed.
Emergency ca lls from pay phones
il re not included in the plan, he said.
Charges for pay phone calls norma lly are not processed by compuler.

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

_)

Calls from other phones, however,
will apply whether dialed direct or
handled by an operator.
General of Ohio's existing calling
areas atrect about 11,200 customers
on ambulance calls; 17,000 on fire
calls and 52,000 on police calls. Some
customers are involved in more than
one category .
The company serves about 570,1100
clistomers in 80 of Ohio's 88 counties.
"The emergency call situation has
always been a concern or our company. the PUCO and the customers
involved," said Hughes. " We believe
this new plan will alleviate the
problem."
In cooperation with the PUCO, a
special committee of the Ohio
Telephone Association mapped the
plan. General of Ohio and five other
telephone companies were represenp
ted on the committee. The plan was
launched July I by most Ohio
telephone companies, he noted.
Hughes said any customer inadvertently billed for an emergency
call after July I should call the company's business office. The charge
will he removed.

ll~ IUIJn·d S t '\.tTrtl

key

r nan a g ~.· m e nt

l'liangL'S 111 tire &lt;'olnpany's sau sa~t·
a nd resta urant d ivts tons .
Hdu·mg af kr ~5 ~u1rs 1s .Jim Mrd-

However, Block said the
"magnitude of change would mean
practically nothing to conswners" in
the way of higher food prices.
Officials said the estimates were
based on surveys made July I and
cautioned thl the figures will be subject to revisions as the crop season
progresses.
A year ago, for example, the
department's initial com crop
estimate was 7.28 billion bushels.
But hot, dry weather reduced
production sharply, and the crop
totaled less than 6.65 billion bushels.
Corn is the largest and most
valuable fann crop grown in the
United States and, as livestock feed,
is a vital element in the production·
of meat, poultry and dairy products
for American conswners.
Along with wheat, soybeans and
several other major crops, corn also
is a top conunodity in U.S. exports to
scores or foreign markets, including
Japan, the Soviet Union and Common Markel countries.
The department's first estimates .
of 1981 soybean and cotton production will be issued Aug. 12, along
with revised estimates for com,
wheat and some other crops.
Some grain prices at the farm are
generally higher than they were a
year ago. As of mid-June, for example, com was reported by the
Agriculture Department at an
average of $3.16 a bushel, compared
to$2.49 a year earlier.
But wheat prices averaged $3.67 a
bushel at the !ann nationally in midJune, comJI&amp;red to $3.69 a year
earlier, llccording to department"
£igures,
The production report said 1981
com yields are expected to average
95.9 bi!Shels an acre, compared to
91.0 Ialit year and the record of 109.7

diL·Ion. \\-ho ha s IW L'Il thn-.;i un sa lt·~
r rr ~rrr&lt;ll--! l' l" fur· !lit• Cu!urnbus .l.ia USa.L!t'

.'i torrtt•d with
Huh . 1--\H ilS Fa nus HS a ro ult'
sall'Sill&lt;-Hl 111 Jf}S(i in lht.; Cinnnn&lt;Jti Da\ tun an• a .
dt\.hH IIl ,&lt;.; IIH't ' J!)(j~ - ~fl&gt;

Tnmsferr ing

tu tilL·

2:1 Rob E\'HilS Fat·rr ls Bt·stuuranl s 111

Pt• nnsylva nia . W. Vet .. sr1 ullwa~ krn
&lt;llltlnort ht&gt;astt•rn Ohict.
Ht 1th llll'fl willflt• based inllll' ('tlltl pa n~· ·s
Culurnbu;.; ct, rpor a l L'
ht•tulquartt•r....
B1 1b f:\·ans

c urrl•ntl~·

Fanns

distribufl&gt;s sausagt• in all or part uf
l.j stale!:i and the f&gt;i s lrid of ('ulump
IJJil
whik orcraling 6~ fcunily
reslrtu ra nts ill SP\' l'll mi!IWl'stern
slal t• s.

Colu1 nbus

sales nranrrgt•r roslliun rs
Corl&gt;in. furnll'rl: sail's
lll iHli:l)..!l'r
for t ht• c umpan~ ·s
f' hlladl'!phw dl\'l.'ilun .
.John Brev.·e r . Crcst wuud, K y., h&lt;-is

·,

dt\'ISlilll

Clr;nli t•

APPO
.
- Donald McKenzi e of Lynchburg, Ohio.
has been appomted to the Northrup King Dealer Advisory Council for ser"kr to his feed customers. Making the presentation to McKenzie is
Darrel MrKcnzic of the Northrup headuqarters otriee in Newark.

l&gt;l't'Jl prull lt11l'd (u i'.Uil l' 1ll&lt;1 1li:lgt• r fn r
111\ ' n• s t aur:.~n t di\'i siun and will be
rr:-&gt;p(lll S! bll' fur u\'l'fall upt•rat iuns at

THE TRUCKER'S
CH
E

HONDA'S
ROAD BIKE
REBATE

•

-

.

.. ~,

'

'

't '

.t (

\,

The Cobra 29GTL has a reputllioh lor being the
trucker's radio. It's a reputaltOn that hai ~pilift over
the years an innovative !fealgtl, supetti engineering.
and technical superiorl)y. The renowned quality and
perfoimance of the 28QTL ~been ~en in
thousands of f'(lObfle lnstallailona.
·.

HONDA81
fOLU 1\\' Till . LL·\Ill.lt

Wheat yields, including all types,
were estimated at a record of 34.8
bushels per harvested acre, compared ,to 33.4 last year and the
previous high or 34.2 in 1979. .
.
Winter wheal production, which
makes up about .three-£ourths of the
U.S. output, was estimated at a
recorct'qf 2.09 billion bushels, 11 percent 1110re !ban last year's harvest of
1.89 · tilllion bushels. Yields were
estimated at 35.7 bushels an acre,
cornpjlred to 36.1last year.
.
Dtm!m wheat, a favorite (or
rna~ pasta, · was forecast
191,1b,ooo t ' bJJs,h els · · agajnst
l~.~i&lt;!OO in ltll'l.. :rtle yield was put
at 33.9' bushels per acre, compared
to 22.4 last y_epr.
. .
sPI'!PI wllU( ·oilier than duiW!l
was indicated af ~211,217 .009 bushels,
~ to 310.~,0110 last year.
The )rield was estimated at 31.9
buslleli' acre, compired to •the
19110aftnigeor2U. , • . ·~

'

Phone 446-2240

Upper ·Rt. .7
'

'

I ·

GOOD THROUGH SAT., JULY 18, 1981

FRENCH CITY
•

~'si'atn ~ mcludect: •.

'~,:

~ rw.

·J

1

~ '

~

.rtf,

'•

.

.

:1:..,

BOB'S ELECTRONICS
Upper It~ 7

r. ~

,

•'
• •

I

•

•

t• .....

~afllpolls, 0--101.,
· · Actoll ,;o.,. tt,e Sllv•r lrl. .. Plaza,
~ .. .
j

A_

•

•

•

oz.

CRISPY SERVE

EICIC:()Il ......•........... ~~
HOMEMADE

Se~ndwic:h

LB.

Spread

$Jl9

USDA CHOICE

Ch uc:k RCJast ....... ~a~ ..
USDA.CHOICE BONELESS

$ 79

BUCKET

$

Chuck Roast.. ..... !~.. l
Cube Steak .........~8

29

••

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

10 111_

PCJtatCJes ........... ~A.G

$}69

••••

CORONET

JuMao5

Pe~per TCJwe Is... !~L~.
$.

AMERICAN

heese Si~i.les:~~t.

29

KRAFT

$
129

DARI FRESH •

$J&amp;g

Miracle WhiP... :!~~ •.

. •,

~

.. 2% MIlk ............G!; ••• ----

,

... , :; ....
544,0110
. .,:; . I ......
.
~'Mila
. . . '·'I , ;. . ;.

12

W1eners ............. :!~·.

-0.._, .~2i.IJI.OOO bUP~ ,nd ~· ·

./..:...a 'r! i fll;4:rl,Jat;tuh• and

.
Kanauga, Ohi!l

POMEROY, 0.

ai'i

yield Of 54.1 balhels an acre, compared
to ..7;111111,000• and 53.0 last • .
.
•J •
~. i
. .. .
.

BETZ HONDA SALES

298 SECOND ST.

in 1979.

GET UP TO $250 BACK ON
HONDA STREET MOTORCYCLES
NOW THRU LABOR DAY.
Yes, that's right folks, up to
$250 back on our e veryday
low prices - This is a direct
factory rebate and Honda
will send your chec k diectly
to you . Now's your c hance to
save $250 ...

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

modities. ~~

Notes changes
CO LU MBUS - Ocm E\·cu1s, chair1110111 uf tire buard ~111d c h1d cxecutin·
uff1n· r ~·f Bc 1b F.\'i rsn Farms lnc. a n-

STORE HOURS:

WASHINGTON (AP) - This
year's corn crop will exceed last
year's drought-shriveled harvest
but it won't be as large as had bee~
expected because soggy fields
delayed planting in some areas of
the Com Belt.
As a result, Agriculture Secretary
John. R. Block said, feed grain prices
may creep higher in the monllil
ahead.
Block ' s comments Friday
followed release of the Agriculture
Department's crop report, which
said fanners are expected to harvest 7.12 billion bushels of com this
£ali, 7 percent more than in 1980.
If the crop materializes as the
initial estimate indicates, it would
be the third largest harvest on
record, exceeded only by the yield of
7.94 billion bushels in 1979 and 7.'!1
billion in 1978.
The wheat harvest, currently in
progress, was estimated at a record
2.81 billion bushels, up from about
2.37 billion last year, the previous
high, the department's Crop Reporting Board said. ·
Block called the com estimate a
" bullish report" that could signal
some increase in the prices of feed
grains.
" Nationally, with a couple or three
exceptions, · we're going to have a
respectable crop," Block told The
Associated Press. "I don't want
anyone to think we're going to have
a disaster. It's good. It's just not as
good as we thought before. As far as
pricing goes, it could boost the
prices of some or these com-

Ends emergency tolls
MARION - People who must ca ll

Times-sentinel

'

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,$2~9

Per C11stomer
Jt,Powe!l's
July 11, 1981

I

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FlAVORITE

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otter EKpires •J uly, 18, 1981

5LB.

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�Ju

Page-C -8-The Sunday Times -Sentinel

12. 1981

classified

Meigs SWCD sponsors
hay show at fair
This year's Ohio Beef Day and
summer roundup of the Ohio Caltlemen's Association will be held at
the Eastern Ohio Resource Develorr
rnent Center IEORDCI 10 Noble
CoWlty Saturday, July 25. The 1981
version of the specialized field day
will feature updated reports on
Ohio's beef research, tours of four
local beef operations, a look at the
Ohio Bull Testing Station, meetings
of the Ohio Cattlemen's Association
and Ohio Buckeye CowBelles, a
ladies' program and selection of a
new Queen of Beef.
Four area cattlemen will welcome

v1s1tors to their feedlots or cow-calf
operatiOns starting at 7:30a.m. for a
pre-field day tour arranged by Lorin
Sanford. Area Agent, Ammal Industry , Belle Valley Area E&lt;lension
Center . There is no set schedule for
the ea rly mommg feedlot tour.
Visitors may tour farms of Jlln
and J udy Dennis and Urbane Hurst
and Sons located near Belle Valley
and the EORDC. Other"!anns on the
morning tour are the Dennis Crock
feedlot south of Ca ldwell and the
Richa rd and Judy Minyo farm north
of Belle Vall ey near the v1 llagc of
Ava . Signs will be posted on State
Route 621 near the I-n Be1le Valley
eXIt and SR 78 and 52 at the Caldwell
l-77 exit to help vis1tors locate the
fanns .
Beef Day a cliv1ties will begin at
9:30a.m. at the EO ROC , the largest
outlymg research unit of the OhiO
Agricultural Research and Develorr
mentt Center. It 's located near Bell e
Valley just off SR 215.
Major topics which wil l be covered
during morning tours include cow
herd health; treatment procedures
for the Buckeye F'eedlot Conditioning Program;

w ea nin ~

ca lves

as a preconditioning procedure;
replacement heifer se lection;
evaluation of Angus bull calves by
s1re groups Iusing the EO ROC
herd) ; the Ohio Bull Test
Pprogram; and the effect of ammonia treatment of hay bales on
protein and energy levels. A
discussion of the development of a
cow herd will include 10 or 12 of the
highest indexing cows in the EORDC
herd (with calves) .
Ladies attending Beef Day have
an option. They may atttend the
research tours at the EORDC or partiCipate in a special program and
Queen of Beef finals at the Belle
Valley Extension Center (located
just a cross SR 215 from the EO ROC
main entranCe I.
The Japanese beetle IS not only a
part in the larval stage, but as an
adult it feeds on over 300 different
kinds of trees. shrubs. and flowers.
Sevin is most effective against the
adults as a foliar spray, but its short
residua l means it must be applied
every four to seven days . Repeated
use of Sevm often causes a mite
uuild-up.
MalathiOn and methoxychl or arc
also labeled but are less effecti ve
There is also a fl oral lure tha t attracls Japanese beetle adults to 11.
but now we have a double-action
dev1ce. The Baker trap combines the

you're like ly to put a few more items

in vour grocery basket.
This type of noor plan also encourages you to spend more time in
the sto're - a nd that may help sales.
This was a· point made by a recent
survey condu cted by the Pomt-oiPurchase Advertising Institute and
DuPont Corporation . The survey

PITCHED BA TILE - California National Guardsmen toss bags of
!ruit into a truck as the batttle against the Medfly coottinues in Santa
Clara county. The Guard was called out to belp dispose of fruit stripped
by members of the California Conservation Corps. I AP Laserphoto ).

protecti on against the grubs and will
self perpetuate.

claims that shoppers spend an
average of 90 cents for every minute
they browse in the store aisles' This
would seem another good reason for
not going to the grocery store too often.
How stores stock the1r shelves
may also be a sales tactic . It's easier
for the shopper to reach items at eye
level. So expe nsive foods may be
placed at easy reach while the less
expens ive items may be on higher nr
lower shelvt!s . A simllar practice is

to use "tie-ins.'' For insta nce,
placing salad dressings next to the
lettuce may stimulate sales.
So what can you do to help you
stay within your food budget a nd
still get the best buys? Anning yourself with a shopping list and then
sticking to 11 1s still the best defense.
A shoppmg list made up from the
menus you've planned for the week
will help curtail impulse buying.
However, don't be so strict with your
list that you pass up a n unadvertised
speciaL If that food fs one your
family enjoys and can be worked mto the week's menu or substituted for
a more co,t lv food - take adva ntage
of the speuo 1

0.

'

By .John C. Rice
Exte nsion Agent

Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - Recently, we condueled a field day at the Charles
Carr F'ann. During that field day we
demonstrated a different type of fence. The term commonly used with
this type of fence is high tensi le It is
a smooth wire and you usually use at
least eight strands to fence cattle .
What is different with this fence? It
does not stretch !become loose I as
other wife does. You stretch each
strand to 250 pounds of tension . You
do not dnve the fence staples tight.
You penni! the wire to slide on the
post. The wire is fastened on each
end and stretched or tightened in the
middle. You can stretch at least onehalf rmleat a time.
On a level, posls can be up to 60
feet apart. Spacers arc used between posts. You may wa nt to drop
by and see this fence sometime.
Did you ever wonder why ? Why
does a bird ny into a wmdow. or a
woodpecker hammer on a gutter ?
It's not a matter of stupidity - it's
JUSt normal behavior.
Thomas M. Stockdale, Extension
wildlife spec~alist. The Ohio State
University , says he gets plenty! of
unusual telephone calls about
am mals th1s time of year. Most conce rn what people think is odd
behavior.
Birds prompt the most phone ca lls
10 the spring. People with large windows in their home oft en see birds
fly into the glass. Stockdale explains. "This is nonnal behavior for
the bird. Once a nesting territory is
established. he defends 11 against intruders of the same species.'' If a
bird sees its reflection in a window.

coordinator so you would never be
without something to write about.

you who have cooperatted w1th the
Meigs County Humane Society,
those who are members, those who
support our efforts and who applaud
our achievements.
We have done much to enhance the
life of the " helpless" in the county
and are most proud of our endeavors. For those of you whom we
have apparenttly "picked on" there has been good reason because there is no excuse for the
apathy shown by some concerning
the very life of some of God's
creatures . They a re no less important to HIM than we are.

. CONFISCATED FRUIT - Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. Is the center of allenttoo as he leans on a box
of confiscated fruit as a MedUy checkpoint on Route
101 south of 'San Jose Thursday. California Highway

SAN JOSE, Calif. I API - The U.S. Department of
Agriculture has refused to rule out a nationwide em.
bargo .of California produce even though Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. has complied with its order to battle the
state's fruit fly infestation with chemicaLS sprayed
from the air.
Brown. under USDA Secretary John Block's threat
of a national quarantine, backed down Friday and or dered aerial spraying to begin here in northern Califor . nia on Tuesday .
The governor said residents needed time to leave the
area if they wished, but Block said the spraying may
come too late to stop the bug and he still may qua ran·
tine some 200 crops that the Mediterranean fruit Uy
maggots feed upon.
California, the No. I farm state , accounts for half the
produce grown in the United States and a quarantine
would raise food prices nationwide.
An angry Brown said the e!!orts to eradicate the fly
by using ground sprays and destroying fruit in thousan ds of backyards had been sabotaged by Block's
ultimatum.
Helicopters loaded with the pesticide malathion will
Patrol and agriculture inspectors have set up road enter the skies early Tuesday over Palo Alto, Mountain
blocks around a 660-square-mil e quarantine area in an
View. Los Altos. Los Altos Hills. Sunnyva le. Cupertino ,
effort to rid the county or the Mediterranean lrult fly. Saratoga, San Jose and Portola Valley.
f AP Laserphoto).
The area covers 630 square m iles of Santa Clara. San

··Jast assignmt!nt" ... in the area of

11 will try to drive the "intruder"
away . Robi ns and cardinals a re

species reported mos t often,
probably because they nest close t~
homes.
The so lution ? Eliminate the
refl ection by closing curtains.
shades or drapes. or cover the inside
of the window with newspaper for a
few da ys.

Fort McClellan near the cities of Anniston and Jacksonville. Ala .
We have sold our beloved Athena
Acres on Hysell Run where every
tree and every blade of grass has
special meaning to us. We have purchased another nice place that we
know will eventually mean almost
as much to us.
I would like to take this orr
portunity to thank sincerely those of

English riots spread from
The Homelitefll 360 g ives high cuttmg efhc1ency with less operator
fati g ue. using a 3 .5 c u. in . 2-cyc !e

engine witn Hemi -Head design .
and ·· fail sate·· vibration isolati on

using captive mounts. Optional
Hand Guard to prevent posSible
JOfu r y Model 360 SL has Safety-Lock
cha1 n brake to stop chain rotalion il
kickbacll: occurs . Pa cked wit h l ea-

lures. the 360 we ighs only 13.2 lbs
~dr y weight)
• Tr1- A.11131 VIbratiOn ISOlatiOn su bdues vibralion between the engine
and the handl es tor less fatigue
better control

"'"'· ' ...

•

...

•."

CONSTRUcriON UNDERWAY- Construction began recenUy on a
pond at the J. M. Gaulfarm In Chester Township. The pond will be used as
a water supply lor ll.estock watering in a pasture area. Mr. aDd Mrs .
Gaul look on as dozer operator Blain Milhoan cuts in a core trench for the
pond. I SCS Photo).

On Display Now.

London to 10 other cities

A profeulon•l ch81n NW
for pulp ond light production cultl"'ll

• Loop sc avenged engine has ram
1n!ake porting lor more horse·
power with greate r fuel economy
• High vo ltage capacitor d ischarge
JgnJ tlon and throttle mtertoc k
ass ures last easy sta rting .
• Automatic oiling gives smoot her
c utting with less chain wear.
• Cha1n tens ioning screw allows
co nvenient cha in adjustment.
• Dual chamber Soltone .. muffler
keeps noise levels low

RIDE.NOUR
SUPPLY

LONDON IAPI - Gangs ran wild through urban
streets early today. lobbing gas oli~e bombs, burnin~
cars and buildings and hurling rocks at police as an
eight-night rioting spree spread from London to 10
other cities.
Wesl Indian, Asian and white rioters fought with
thousands .of police and among themselves, ignoring
pleas by authorities for calm ." London merchants shut. tered their "shops in hundreds of streets Friday as fear
of looting spread.
.
"The veneer of civilization is very thin. It has to be
cherished if it is to continue," Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher said Friday night as ·rioting raged
The capital was hardest hit as violence spread to 12
shabby -working-class districts. authorities said.
For the first time, rioting erupted in the northern in dustrial cities of Binningharn. Ellesmere Port. Hull.
Newcastle, Chester, Smethwick, Woverharnpton , Not tingham and Pres ton. Violence also flared in Liver pool, where last weekend youths rampa~ed in
England 's worst rioting in 200 years .
Police reported 100 arrests in those cities. Hi~h
unemployment among youngsters. boredom and ~reed
were blamed by politicians and social workers for the
rioting and looling.
In Manchester, more than 150 youths were jailed af ·
ter a third night of attacks on police in the city's Moss
side. Four officers were injured. including one stabbed
twice, police said.
Horne Secretary William Whitelaw banned street

demonstrations in London for a month and suggested
troops, water cannons and rubber bull ets might be
used to quell violence that has reduced several urban
districts to smoldering ruins.
A spokesman said the order, effective today, was
aimed at stopping attacks by white supremacists on
non-whites, as well as quelling fi ghts between ex·
tremists of the left and right.
Scotland Yard reported 382 arrests and 43 officers in ·
jured, some knocked sensel ess by hurled objects.
Firemen said their trucks were attacked as they tried
to squelch street blazes.
"I'll accept the risk of firefighting and I'll put my life
on the line to save anybody ' s life." said London
firefighter John Kay. "But to be attacked because
you're doing your job is just not on as far as I'm co~·
cerned ."
Police said several hundred Asian youths in London 's Southall district, where rioting first erupted last
weekend. torched and looted stores in the main shopping center Friday night.
Mrs. Thatcher met with Southall corrununitYlcadcrs
a nd condemned " fascist organizations. because it is
they who cause a lot of trouble ." Leaders of the area's
Indian and Pakistani conmnunities said her response
pleased them .

··we expressed

our fears about extreme fascist

RIOT VJcrJM - A policeman wearing the ne.wly
issued riot helmet bandages an injured colleague
caught in the renewed rioting in Brixton, South London. Friday night. Gangs of youths had taken to the

urganizations coming into the area and she listened
very carefully to us.' " said Tarsem Toor. secretary of
the Indian Workers Association.

. -.

U. S. jet hijacked to Cuba
..

Milk Replacer

and get a

Boso
Third &amp;

'

;;

'.

•·'.:

FlU

MIAMI lAP) - The
says it will look at ways to
beef up airpor( security following the hijacking of a
:U.S. jet to Cuba by two men who lit firebombs made of
baby bottles·aboard.the plane.
Two Cubans on an Eastern Airlines flight from
Chicago to Miami and San Juan, Puerto Rico were
arrested in Havana on Friday, hours after producing
the bottles filled with a nalTlJilllble liquid, the FBI said .
"They carried three Molotov cocktails and each of
them was lighted with a low flame for the duration of
the flight ," said FBI agent Jim Freeman.
.
Two women and four girls . apparently relatrves of
tbe hijackers, stayed with the men when they ~ot off
•i·the lplane, U.S. authoritte~ said. Tbe remaining 174
1passengers and 12 crew: .aboard the Lockheed L·!Oll
· ljwilbo jet, including two Jamaican cabinet ministers.
returned to-Miami on the same plane.
' Noonewa5 Hurt, the FBI said.
It was the ftm hijacking of an American flight to
Cuba ~ii)Ce ~pt. 17. • ' .
l ''Beini!' frig~telltld to~ death is ·no fun," passenger
, Dorotlly .¥'!' said ·upon ,the 'flight's arrival here. "It
seenied like a lifetime."
: Accon!lng Jo Rreeman, one of the pair barged into
tiM: .cockpit•p[ Flight 71 with the baby bottle bomb,
while ilre -other, carrying the other two, stayed In the
first-class section. About 40 "minutes later, the jet ian·
ded uf~ly at Havana's.Jose Marti AirJI'lrt.
1 · Thef agent ~id it _.wotild hav~ been inip.lssibh! to

i

Combine oil the. convenience of a station wagon •
a pauenger car, a vacation cainpe,, a vehicle for
weekend shopping, a par~y taxi, a hunting or fishing.
. ''
lodge and what do yau .g-.t?. '
.,

on a bag of
Calf . Starter.

~~

'

i-Cent_
er
·Ga Ill polls, OH.

'

streets looting shops and o•erturning cars in the area
which was the scene of serious street violence last
April. lAP Wirephoto).

• •

Buy a bag of

DISCOUNT

County agricultura l ~ommissioner . " I think we have a
good possibility of getting rid of' the fli es! thi s year . I
am lookin g lor era dicatwn by September or October,''
Huwe sa id .

't

•

so~

Each application by air will cover 15 square miles
with a minimum of six drops, each seven to 10 days
apart. Workers will leave notices of the time and day of
the applications at each home.
The battle by air and land, however, could take mon ths to end the infestation. said Chet Howe. Santa Clara

I do regret not being able to con- r-;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:=======~•
tinue with this service to you, the
humanitarians of the county, but
Big power
Joyce Miller and I, as military
and low vibration ..
retirees, must leave the state and
settle where there are at least a few
o( our " benefits" left.
Then. too, · we seek out a state
where most of the retired fanner
members of tthe Women's Army
Corps have chosen to spend their

1981 Rockwood Vans

,
Special Offer!

Mateo and Alameda counties.
The fly hasn't been foWld in corrunercial farm fields,
but agriculture officials fear the backyard infestation
could spread to 2.4 million acres throughout the state
where some 200 ·' host " crops worth $4.1 billion are
grown. It is believed the flies were brought here on
lruit from Hawaii.
Brown said use of malathion from the air was
preferable to the poisons used during a fumigation that
would follow a quarantine .
Ground spraying by volunteers and some 1,000
National Guard troops and the inspection of fruit at
highway pa trol checkpoints was to continue.
Homeowners were under threat of a $500 fine and six
months in jail for fa ilure to have their trees stripped by
Monday .

Homelite's
380 Chain Saw

Meigs County
agent's _corner

it r ight, it will give you indefinite

lliie

llumt· Ennwmi1·.'i

gimmicks are obvious - like weekly
· spec ials" that entice people to
come to the s tore.
But other appeals are more subtle.
F'or instance, the floor plan of many
grocery stores is arranged so the
essential items, like bread. milk a nd
meat are on the outer perimeter ol
the store. So, you must walk through
the entire store to ge t those
necessities. And along the way

/

s tory from our answering service or

you've never done before, and for

F" tt· n~ iun t\J.!l' lll.

strategies to make consumers want
lo spend more money . Some of t hese

. /

every one 10 the bag. that's one less
to chomp on your plants.
Milky spore disease has been
around for a long time, too. If you

II) I\E11H : 1"1 .AIU\

they use many kinds of marketing

Human~.Soctety

I'm afraid this week will be my
iast week with this article and I'm
onlY · sorry •because there will be
animals that will suffer as a result ...
some will die. So, if there is someone
who would like' to continue tellir.g
Meigs Countians what is going on
"with and to" animals - do call the
president.of the society any evening
at 992-!&gt;127.
You ca n get all the fa cts for any

n orC:I l lure and a sex pheromone .

ft·aturillJ..:
,\uni t· ,\n~h11C\ ~

make a profit to stay in business. So

By Marion G. Crawford
Meigs County

D

Niitionwide embargo
of California produce
·remains a possibility

Secretary Meigs CoWlty Fair
Board, P. Box 'JZI, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
AU exhibitors must purchase a
membership ticket to the Meigs
County Fair to be eligible to exhibit.
All exhibits must be in place by 12
noon Monday, August 17, and must
remain in place Wltil 4 p.m. Saturday, August 22.
If you have any questions, feel free
to contact the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District Office at 9926647 or stop in the of-fice at 2lll West
Second Street in Pomeroy, second
floor of the Fanners Bank building.

Hoofs and Paws

You can bag those bu gs up like

Homemakers'
Circle
With the Food
Shopping Game
Getting the most for your food
dollar 1s no small task these days.
But just compari ng food prices for
the best bu y isn't enough defense to
make these dollars rea lly stretch .
Supermarkets and groceries mus t

The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District wW sponsor a hay
show again this year at the Meigs
CoWlty Fair.
Classes for the hay show are 7~
percent or more Allaifa, 75 percent
or more Clover, All grasses, 49 percent or less legumes and fescue .
Each exhibit shall consist of one
bale of hay weighing appr&lt;litimately
40pounds as it comes !rom the baler.
Rosettes will be presented to the
first place winners in each class as
well as ribbons to the first, second
and third place winners.
Entries must be in by 4 p.m.
August 14 to Mrs . Wallace Bradford.

July 12, 1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

·A TERRIFIC ·ROCKwooo'v ANI

,. '

f

.'' .

detect the ba~y bottles with standard metal-detectin~
equipment. but added security measures would be
examined .
Last year, six jets were divertL'tl to Cuba 111 ci~ht
days and three were hijacked in a single day . One
method employed to step up security included
examination of containers holding liquids.
The hijackers' identities were not i1runediatcly
detenoined, but Freemen described them as being in
their late 20s or early 30s. Ms. Ash said they made their
demands in English, but later spoke Spanish and
needed an interpreter.
Passengers were allowed to shop for souveni rs at the
Havana airport's duty -free shop before the refueled jet
took off For Miami. officials said .
Vera Chatz, feature writer for the Chicago Sun·
Times. satd Cuban officials asked her to write Jlood
things about her treatment.
"Why couldn 't '!hey have been hijacked to Bimini in·
stead of Cuba?" asked Margaret Whelan of Miami. ·
who was wailing at the airport here for two Friends on
board the jet.
.
Ms. Ash said tbe hijackers shook hands with the
Cuban . authoritles who met them on the runway. Other
passengers said the hijackers waved and smiled before ·
they were apprehended.
The hijackers may have been disaffecled refugees
who
to the United States during the 1980 Cuban
· boatlift, Sfild Easterri spcik~.n Jim Ashlock.
·

a

came

~·

•

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..

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Ohio-Point P

12, lf81

D~spite

·d ecline in -prices;
gasoline costs still high

•

INJURED INMATE- Helmeted Westchester CounN.Y. correction officer leads an injured inmate into
the Westrhester County jail early Saturday after pollee
ty,

peacefully regained control of all but the thlrd floor o
the prison in Valhalla. The inmate was treated for
minor injuries sustained when the Jail was taken over.
lAP LaserpholoJ.

Inmates riot in New York jail
throug h the cellblock
Shortly before 5 30 a.m .. the rest

VALHALLA. NY . 1API - The
Westches ter Count y J ail was
secured ea rly today after nearly 300
tnmates

rampa ~ed

t hro ugh

of the mmales went bac k to the1r

cell s volunta nly as talks about
probl ems at the JRI I contmued bel·

a

Jlk:IXJmum secur1ty area. tea n ng

ween mmale representatives and

down partitiOns and s ma s hm ~ fi x·
lures. uffa:tals sa td

state and county offtcta ls.
No hostages wet e taken uurmg the
tncJdent and mmates made no Im -

Three tnmates. tncludtng two who
acl'ldenlally mOJcted mJunes un
themselves. \'.ere hurt tn the tncident. wh1 c h bega n Frtda:

med ia te

de mand s
However, one mmate sa1d pnsoners

af-

spec ifi c

had complamts about ba tl. other

ternoon as teinperatures tn the overcrowded Ja tl rose past !JO sa td
authonttes
Before mJdntghl Fnda y. 182 of the

court pohc1es and prac tices and

abo ut condtttons at the 51-year-old
Ja il,

wh1ch does not have aJr-

condt tiOmng

fal' thly's pnsoners had returned to
thetr cells' whtle 11!1 thtrd-fl oor
pnsoners conttnued to roam fr rt:'

Dunng the upnsmg, about 500
steel-helmeted sta te and c tt~ pollee

and correction officers, armed wtth
shotguns and baseball bats, surrounded the factllty whtle police helicop:
ters hovered above. The area was
lighted by huge floodlights brought
m by the fire department.
Nter most of the violence was
quelled, two inmates !rom each of
the mne cellblocks were invtted to
discuss grievances with county and
state e•ecutives.
The takeover came one day alter
County E•ecutive Allred DelBello
appomted a task force to look into
overcrowding at the jail, which has a
capacity ol 263. Prtson offictals
oshmate there now are 440 inmates
tn the lactllty

Shortage delays jail opening
PORT Cf.INTON, Ohtu I API Work ts nea rly completed on Ottawa
County's new $2.6 rrullt on Jail , but olft ctals aren't sure when the factlt t)
wtll open because ol a lack of mane)
for a large enough stall.
·· J can open 1t when the com-

J ames Barbee of the bureau sa td
sla te ofh cmls M rkcd I'Jth the county m plonnJOg the new Jail m an effort to mmtmJze the number of
people needed to run the factltly
" \'ie cert.atnly tned to let them

mJssioner s say I can h1re murf'

)3 11

1

people," sa1d Ottawa County Shenff
John Crosse r · All I need are the
people. But I've got to ha ve 10 1more
eorrect10ns) officers ''

Crosser has four correctiOns ofFicers and a Jail admm1slrator But

he was forced to sq ueeze other pa rts
of hts depa rtment' s budget to pay
them.
Of!tctals of the OhiO Bureau of
Adult DetentiOn sa1d the county
must have 14 offtcers and an admmJstrator rnr the facJ ht) , whiCh
wtll hold about 40 pnsoners

the count vl kno" back when the

was b;mg planned tha t to meet
the obligatiOns. there would be an tn·

n L'ClSt:

w sla ff n:qu1red ." he sa1d .

Wtlh ruurt rulmgs a nd other fa ctor:-i entenng mto jail operatwns. " It
JUst makes th e old mom and pop
, stv le 1 Ja il obsolete and probably

un~onst1tutwna l . ·· Barbee sa1d.
Otta wa County commtssJOners
aren't sure what to do. It probably
w11lcost at least $120,000 annually to
pay for the addtttonal staff. accordt ng to the shenff
· 1 don t kno"' what opttons the

county has at th1s tune," satd James
Mazur, chairman of the Ottawa

MONROE, Mich. 1AP 1 _ Ricky
Glascoe, 24 , an Elyna , OhiO, nattve
and professiOnal pollee informant
who disappeared before testilymg
against more than :;o drug case
defendants last month, has been
found, police said Friday
Officers said Glascoe faces an
auto theft charge m connection wtlh
a ear taken from Monroe to Toledo
the mght 56 people were rounded up
Barbee said state o!ftctats sought on drug charges.
building code variances and other
Glascoe was arrested lht s week tn
changes whtch helped keep the staff MuncJe, Ind., m the course of a
requirements lower than otherwise.
. · routine background check made af" Perhaps they got the tmpressJon ler he app1ied 1or asststancc at a
twe
were hejust
live
or stx
people,"
said.talking
" Butthe
reality
IS, weIfare ofl tee l here.
they're getting off a lot easier than
lhey might have ."

lime the town d1d sornethmg per·

manenl to remember the Wng ht
Brothers. "'ho took lhetr ft rsl fli ght
78 years ago
There IS no Wnght Br others
musewn m lht&gt;rr southwes te rn Oh10
hometown . So next week, a comrmttee plans to unveil the "Av1at10n

Tra1J " to enable vJsttors to seek out
the stles around the commumty con·

nected wtth the famous brothers a nd
the town that launched av1alton
"There are some people who
travel mtles to go to the Atr Fo1ce
Museum " at Wnght-Patterson Atr
Force Base. sa1d Jerry Sharkey, a
Montgomery County human serVIces planner. He ongmally
proposed the avtalion tra il.

And when they' re ftniShed there.
the~ II say, ·wow. tha t "as great.
Could you tell me how to get to the
Wnghl Brothers M•Jseum ·'· When
the~ !t nd out there ISn't a Wn ght
Brothers Museum . they re slt ll
Wlllmg to dnve out and look at a
plaque Umt shows where the
Wrtg hts btcyc le shop used to be 1
ra il them avtatwn craztes.
·rf you want to attract those
types. a ll you have to do IS tell them
where the s1ghts are and turn them
loose ...
The lour mcl udes the AvtatJOn
Ha ll of Fame downtown at the
Dayton Conventwn and EKhtbttton
Center: the Montgomery Count&gt;
H1Sloncal Soc1ety. cont.atning old
photographs and documents from
the Wnghl lanuly. Canllon Park,
fea turing a restored 1905 Wnght

nyer. the house where Orvtlle
Wnght lived unttl his death in 1948;
and Woodland Cemetery, where the
Wnght brothers are buned
Although it has been suggested,
there currently are no . plans lor a
Wright brothers museum 10 Dayton .
J .H. Meyer, a retired doctor and
member o! the Aviation Hall of
Fame board, satd the area's
htstortcal avtaltOn sites have not
been publictzed properly.

backward or m a c1rcular malton
wtth the touch of a control button on
the left armrest. It can travel up to
27 tmles on a charged battery and,
by law, can move at a speed ol 4.8
rrules per hour.
The chair retails lor about $3,500.
A spokesman for a medical supply
center satd wheelchairs sell lor
about $300 and up for a manual
model, while electric chairs retail
lor around $3,000 or more.
Invacare, a division of the Johnson
&amp; Johnson subsidiary Technicare
Corp. , began developing its first battery·powered chair 18 months ago.
Since the takeover, Mixon said Invacare has doubled its production ol
250 ehairs per day.
"Our main problem in the past

614

and
Meyer
"It's Wtlbur
been 78Wright,"
years stnce
the said.
ftrst
fi1ght. ' Man has) been to the moon
and back in the meantune, and
Dayton sltll hasn't done what it
should to commemorate the
Wrtghts."

was our lack of the powered
wheelchatr," Mixon said "The
domestic market lor wheelchairs is
about $80 million a year, and we
could not survive without a powered
model."
lnvacare has been· prOducing
wheelchairs since 1885. The company is the nation's second-largest
producer of the chairs with sales last
year of $25 minion. Some 500 persons
are employed at five plants, including facilities at Elyria and Lodi.
Other items manufactured by the
company include manual and electric beds, patient aids and oxygen
tberapy equipment. Invacare entered into a joint venture last April
in Ireland to produce health-i:are
pr,oducts, dlong with wheelchairs.

614

992-Middleport

6 collie puppies. For more

388-Vinton

98§-C hester
343-Porlland
247- Letart Falls

schnauzer-part

2•45- Rio Grande

256-Guvan Dist.

Area Code 304

ADVANTAGES TO THE READER
1.

.

Select.IOO"

see

alt

lot&gt; lleB m fh {' Tn

882~ New

2. Convenience: ci.1SS•f• ech
One Ol

3• Compar.ISOII"• lor

Our pa pers
yGuwant

Compar e •lem '" olher
J al t&gt;

job. Call675·39SO

Haven

992·2156

Stephen. S C 29479 803 567
EOE

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

Announcements

Card ol Thanks
The Family of Emma E.
,warden wishes to express

their thanks to all their

friends and neighbors who
sent flowers, fOOd, ancl .car-

ds . A special thanks to
Waugh-Halley-Woods for
their kindness, the
pallbearers. alld Pastor
Frazier for hts consctling
words. May !'i&gt;d bless each
one who helped in any way
Lewis Warden , Debby and

: Class ring . Class of
PER and sewing LOSTMeigs
High School
motchllr1e repair, paris, and 83.
Siver
with yellow
Glrls.
supplies.
Pick up and
Name of Barb on
delivery, Davis Vacuum stone.
ring. 9'12·3853.
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges creek Rd. Call
7
Yard Sale
..... · 029~ ..
2 Family Yard Sale July
9,10,11,13,&amp;14. 9·? Jackson
Rd . across from grade
WENOWOO
school in Vinton, OH .
TENNIS RACI&lt; ET
STRINGING
BILL'S
Large Garage Sale Fri.
SPORTING GOODS
July 10. Sat Ju ly 11, 13. &amp;
6th Street
14. 9·? 624 Deenie Dr 2
Po.nt Pleasant

Becky, Marjorie Gates and

miles from Holzer Hospital
across from Gallia Auto

Alma Wallace.

Sales.

Stanley Spires who passed
awav one year ago July

NOTICE
McNabb Ceram1cs
New classes now
forming
limited
number accepted.
Special beginners
class
beginning
July 20th. Class
limited to 8. Call
Now
446 - 1786,
Sharon McNabb,
Certified Duncan
Instructor.

children, grandchildren ,
and family .

No trespassing on R lchards
&amp; Son Inc property at

1 wish to thank Dr Sub·
btal'l, Dr. Berkich, and Dr .
Yodlawsk1 for a successfu l
surgerv and the wonderful
care the nursing staff at
Holzer Medical Center
gave me. Also to friends
and neighbors who called
or sent cards Herman Will
and Georg1a and Harley
Smith.
2~--~l·n~M~e~m~o~r~,a~m
~---

In Loving memory of our

father

&amp; grandfather

lOth

Sadly

missed

by

items, all sizes clothing.

Falls

or

App le

ends. Reasonable priced

Yard Sale July 9,10,&amp; 11 . 9·?
4 miles past HMC Rl 160 N
Evergreen ext.

Garage Sale July 17&amp; 18, 2
miles on Bul aville Rd
Clothing, diShes, pans,
stove, sink , and many other
items. Porch glider, 9 00

Yard sa le, Man and Tues.

Call for appointment 256-

singles inyour area Write
southern Christian Singles

Yard sale, Jul y 11 and 13, 3
miles out Jencho Road .
sign will be posted 9-S

1624

Farm Msrk~tOpening July
lOth. Stringless green
beans and new potatoes

Vegetable

plants,

plants.

PAY

1

Meet

Christian

Christian

bedding

highest prices

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

ATTENTION LADIES!!!
Help pay off those un
wanted

bills

working

eveningstrom7 : JOto10:JO

6:30-8:30Thurs. E•e.

11

3398, Cotlageville, WV .

Babys1tter tn our home for
22 month old Must have
own tra nspor tatton # and
reference Call 304 675 11 83
after .5

WANTED · Lease men, to
leasae 011 and gas proper·
ties, GAIIia and surroun·
ding count1es. Inquire. to
Great Bend 011 Inc 269
Low er
River
Rd

$18,000 00
RANCH HOM E IN THE
CO UN TRY Jus t 4
years old . wtth a large
kttchen, 3 bedroom!&gt;,
an at
ut tl 1l y roorn
tac hed garaq e rtnd a
deta ched garage, over
an acre th n t tS partly
tcn ccd and n1 cc lay1nq
land $39 900 00

a firepla cE' lront
por ch . and a reur porch

w1t~1

l&gt;IJ,OOO 00

BEA

RENT

T5

RECEIPT S
One lloor
plan h ome wtlh 7
bed ro oms. dtn ,ng room.
large u Ti lit y r oom , bat h .
tront porch , garage and
I J 1 acres
app rox

116100 DO
ST OP

SURGICAL TECHNICIAN

GallipoliS. Call446 4285.

Garage)

5PM 367-0692.

SE E

REAL TOR

H en r y E Cle l.lnd, Jr
992 -61 91

ASSOC IAT ES
Roge r &amp; Doftte Tur ner
992 5691

Contact :
T ere sa Colltn s, R N
V ete ril ns Memonal Hospttill
Pom eroy , Ohto llS f69
Phone 61 4-991· 2104
Equal Opportuntt y E mplo ycr

Babv sttter needed 1n Ad
dison area near Tara Apts
for shift wor k Call after

AND

OF OUR 80
DIFFERENT PROPE
R r1 E S

1m m edtate OpemngE xpertenc ed Su rg1c .1 1 Tcchntct .ln Full Ttm c E)C
cellen t Be neftt s such iiS penston pl.ln , l ong-ter m
dtsil btltty , and hospt1 altzohon Sa l.lry com m eseratr
wtth ClCpcn enc e

Auto Body repa~r man ex
per1enced only, contact
Harold Davis, a t Gallipolis
Motor
Co
{ Chevoret

IN

PICTURES

Je.1n rru sse ll 94 9· 2660
OFFICE 992· 1259

Wanted

anvth1ng to g1ve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
column. There wi ll be no
charge to the advertiser

6 week old puppies mother
reg. Oobermanand fater

litter

trained,

'

NEW LlSTtNG -

N1ce fenced yard

with ally entrance . 2 bedrooms, l arge
kitchen Closed 1n front porch In town.
Excellent beg1nner
or r etirem ent
home. priced to sell
N 814

..

~w.-:.-

5 puppies 8 wks. otd, 3
male. -2 -female, 112 Irish
Setter, 112 German Pollee

.

·,'!.

·~

&gt;

t

NEW LISTING - PRESTIGE AND
PR 1VAC Y - A heovenly selling for th 1S
dtsftnc ftve L shap ed brtck Otl crtnq 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, full basem ent 2
ca r garoge Central cur 3 Ac r es On l y
year old Close to Rr 35 area Ctt y
sc hools
11813

THR EE WI SH ES
If p er~cc. comfor t ,
and loca t ton arc 1mportan1, th en take a
took at th1 S 3 bedroom b• level '1 botlls
Cent rill &lt;'1 1r Garage An above Qround
pool Plus an assum&lt;'lb l c morl qc.q C'
$55,000

N 7Y3

BET YOU' LL LOVE IT TOO - Your

t1rst peek m the front door will convtnc e
vou there tS nothing better on the
market Liv tng room wtth ftreplace,
tam11v room , 3 BR, 21"2 baths, 2 car
garage , Mid SSO's.
/1791

1

COUNTRY

ATMOSPHERE

NEAR

CITY - Modern brick ranch wtfh fu ll
basemen t, J large BR , P I? baths , k 1t
chen, 2 ca r garage, fireplace. heat
pump. central air . Many more fea tur es
along w tth 25 acres of clean land
If 686

PRICED TO SE LL - In th e l ow 30' s IS
th 1s 2 bedroom home A ktt chen any
woman would be proud to ow n Garage
Basemen t Large lawn 4 mtles fr om

HMC

N812

'

NEW LI ST IN G -

PERFECT ,IN-

VESTMENT - Dupl ex w1t h nn tn t own
l oca tt on l Stdc featu r es 2 bedrooms , 11 1?
baths, format dtmng room, kttchen The
oth er stde 1 bedroom , ba th . ltvtng room
and k tt chen Pn ced tn Th e 30's
~ 809

,.,

..

KITTENS, Must lind
hom@! tor 3 kittens.- 2
tygers and one light gray .
Can be ....,n at 398 Grant
St .• Middleport or call 9'12·
2520 alter6p.m.

2300 Sq. Fl.

0.000 Sq.,Ft. Storage
Fenced In Yard Storage
contact : Jim Thomas

18 month otd German
Shepherd. Great guard
dog . New dog bO• &amp; chain.
call only II Interested.
OWner moving ouf of slate.
247·35114. .

NEW LISTING -

.

.
QUIET HIDE-A·

WAY - Enjoy the breeze that flows
through the trees surrOunding th is 1' 11
story home. 3 bedrooms, 11f2 baths, full
basement, al um siding 1.1 acres

Close to take . 535,000 .

Nk78S

'URSON'.$
t,AARI(ET
OPEN OAYLI'GHT TILL DAR
11

I&lt;

12 MI. NDI!TH OF POMEROY ON U.S . 33
we Accept F.,cl Stamps

-.
P..IITONI ·

.•

" '

PIACHIS

perware. dishe•. cooking utensils, plotures. recor
•

I

ANTlQUES &amp; COLLECTIBl-ES: Old violin in case,

For Eltin&amp;

t

r

··HPMI
t

·r oMATOU
· SWIET
•
. 'cc&gt;'N
.
.
CUCUM•n·;. GaliN IIAN~
. J
CA,IAOI
PoT~TOll

.

&lt;" !".

DON'T BYPASS THIS ONE! 5\9,000
w111 tei you be the proud owner of th1s 3
bedroom.• l bath , ranch. Alum . siding

OUtbuilding. 'N, ce tot . Close to Silver
Brldge, Shopping .Center. Owner tinan·
#712
clng.
KERR BETHEL ROAD - Appro•. l'h

acres of scenic wooded area . Deluxe 3
bedroom mobi I~ home. 1112 baths, wood ·

burner. This one has 11 all. Rural water.
Workshop, cellar, wood $hed. Option to
buy mor~ land. List ina or ice 526.000

'

'

BRIGHT AND SH INY and affordabl e is
thts 3 BR home Sttuated on I 71 acres
F eatunng living room w1th wood
burn1ng stove, eQuipped k1tchen and 2
baths . There 1S a lso a trailer ~ookup ,
rural water, garden space Prtced tn
Ihe $30' s.
N6 77

'

RESIDENTIAL

•

'

6505.

Middleport, OH.

.,

0

I

Kittens. For information
call Humane Society . 992·

FQR LEASE
COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY

•. J

"

'

Shepard pups. Kittens. One
fema le Beegle, grown Call
256·9305.

COLLIE and Coonhound
Pupp1es. 9'12·2770.

OF

llrkc.
l- r,-r- ' • •

Female Beegle , German

L - - - - - - - - " ' - 1 3. 6 weeks old pups, pl.
Beegle. Call4&lt;16·4019.

QUA LIT Y
lnvtll nQ 3
rrlO(h
21
halhS ,
lUll
basemenT wilh bcautilul t ,nn dy room.
plu s recreo 110n room Man.cured lawn
A tru ly lo vf' l y home 60 's C1 t y schools 11
MARK

bedrOOm

·~

dogs, black. Cali 256·1637.

SJOO per acre. STROUT
REALTY - 446-0008.

General

4
GiveawaY
ANY PERSON who has

white. yellow, and miMed.
Call &lt;146·1248.

Reill Estate

Rea l Estate -

Want to establish Gospel
Group. Lettie Davis, Phone
Jo.l-675·5166.

1 killen Bwks. old Call &lt;146·
4027.

•

EASTERN DISTRICT
13 ac res wtth a
vane ry of l and There 1S
a gor geous butldtng S1te,
bo tt om l and, ttmber
land wtth some oak l tm
ber , ond a sma ll str eam
Uttltttes
avatlab l e

239S .

hour profit
Ideal for
homemaker with family
Call'l'/2 3941 from 9·6.

VACANT
LAND
WANTED - up to SOO

HOUSEHOL,D GOODS : lflc ludes J pc bedroom

$42.000 00

PIANO Lessons. Lucy Jane
Bulmer. Hartford, WV 882·

3 kittens,

Public Sale

Makes tht s 3 bedroom
new home tu st a itttie
cooler on a h ot day It
h as
a
beautiful
ftr epl ace, car pet, and
new range tn kttchen
Many more featur es tn
clud tng
I 75
acres

H A ND YMA N 'S SPEC I
AL - Has a btg lot and a
7 room , 117 srory home ,

M;~le or Femole
Acc epltng opplic.Oftons fo r full
ttm c perm.lnent tcchnologt st MT (CitQtblc (A~CPI
MLT (HEW)
Sal ar y co mm cserate wtth ex
pc rt c nc e
Resu m e matt ed to
W S Lucas. Admtnl 5trillor
Veteran s M e mona I Hosp tt al
Mulberry Hetght s
Pomt?roy , Ohto 457()9
Phone 61 &lt;1 -Y9 2-'1 104
E qual Opportuntly E mploye r

Help Wanted

SURROUNDED
BY
SHADE TREES

~

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST
SUPERVISOR POSITION

merville, SC 29A83 or calll -

German Shepard Call &lt;146·
7783

Earn 58.00 to $10 oo per

good 8,000-' btu . w;ndow air conditioner, gardt:n ,·
weeder. misc . tools, etc .
.

.

NY 11418

803-871 ·9850, 24 nours.

p .m . as a fashion stylist

36

niture and AntiQues of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swam,
2.56·1967 in the evenings.

NEW LISTING - Ren
tal investment property
apartment house Wtth
three 2 bedroom apart
ments . each
with
separate uttht1es and
entrance Glazed block
butldtn g wtth ltf tle
matntenance E )(Cellent
condt t 1on !i2d,500 00

Club, PO BOM 1823. Sum·

Office &amp; Sales Area

TERMS : Casl\ortheekwllD -\1 '·'
• f
RAYCARMICHAEL,Qwner • 1
' ''
C, E. SHERtDAN, 'AUCT
.
4&lt;111· ~263
.

CASH
IOK, !41&lt;, 18K !class

LONELY

Galli a st, crown C1ty, OH. Singles.

Air conditioned

•

"""'3925

Karen's Beautv Saloon 1s
now open. Located on

possible tOr gold and silver
coins, r.ngs, jewel ry, etc

bldg 1A!hens Count~ l.
• .
MM . TRACTOR told but runs). pile ~easoned oa~
and maple dry lumber, Sears portable 85,000 btU '
healer, DOdge p1ckup truck bed, Ia~!!\' Q,as corp.
mercia! ceiling heater 200.000 btu. plast1c gas pipe . .

.,. \

Ol d furniture, stone jars,
copper kettles and other
types of antiques. Phone

nngs, dental), Sliver
co1ns or sterling. Brtng
to 'f ope F urn. Ask for
Tom Top pnces everyday! Or see MTS Co1ns,

Announcements

992-6611

&gt;:

aluminum, lead , stainless
steel.
batteries
and
radiators, gmseng, yellow
root, catnip and sassafras)
10 am to 6 pm daily . Also
Flea Market on Saturdays.

large s1ze women and mens
clothes. chair.

J

WANT TO BUY Ol d fu r·

Write: M.D. Miller , Rl 4, WANTED TO BUY
Pomeroy, Oh . Or'l'/2·7760.
GOLD ,
SILVER.
PLATINUM, STERLING·
CH : P WOOD. Poles max . COINS ,
RINGS,
d1ameter 14" on largest JEWELRY, MISC ITEMS.
end 512.50 per ton . Bundled ABSOLUTE
MARKET
stab . 510.50 per ton . PRICE GUARANTEED
Deiiverd to Ohio Pallet Co., ED BURKETT BARBER
Rock Springs Rd . . SHOP , MIDD LE PORT,
Pomeroy. 992 -2689 .
OH ID 9'12 3476

Grove, Ohio. Violators will
be prosecuted.

THURSDAY, JULY 16-S :JOP.M

~,

furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood ice bo:xes.
stone jars, antiQues, etc.,
Complete
households.

CAI1675·5868

TakeS . R. 33 N of Pomeroy and turn ;w'V onto Cl6 .
(Pleasanton Road 1 and go 11 ? m11cs to cement block

·r.

BEDS-IRON , BRASS, old

mailing work . No ex
pertence requtred
AP
PLY : Ctrcle Sales, P.O
Bo x 22 4-0 , Richm ond Htll .

Yard Sale 110 ChilliCOthe HARPER · HALSTEAD
Rd, Gallipolis. Monday, SALVAGE CO .. lffh and
Tues., &amp; Wed. Girts sum· Viand Sfreel, now buying
mer clothes 6 lo 8, Odds &amp; metals (copper, brass,

11117 ·00 PM.
Lefart

$185.00 fo SSOO weekly domg

gold : anythtng marked

Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

5:30P.M.

,

New Avon baby

Lyle Smith

Woman to stay w1th el der ly
lady m Cottagev tl le on
weekend
Phone 304·372

Ju ly 13 and 14, 241 1Monroe,

plants, pots and hanging
baskets
Geraldine

THURSDAY, JULY 16

items notliste:d .

Attn

3266

_

FOREMEN .

H ydro etectnc power plant
cons tru ction
Exp
requ1red i n plac tng all stz es
re bar Foremen m ust be
able to r ead bluepnnts and
do own layout. $10 .50/hr
Ca ll or wrtte Guy F Atkin·
son Co, Box 756,
St

1n Mason County

EVENING AUCTION

(·needs reglued). comp. doli, ,stereoscope S, .cacds,.•
lrunk . pitcher pump, some ol~ dishes !Shlf ley· T
pttcher, Dep. olass, etc ). colieclion of approx. 50 .
Ol.D AVON BOTTLFS In original bOxes, many

lOAM and lPM only 1·304·
295·4371
RE STEEL

446·2342

I~========~~~~=;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;=;;;;;:=~

wiche'r fernery, mtJsic stand w/l ron 'base, oak StanO'

program' we our htring in
the Ga llipoli s, Pt . Pleasant
area.
1 Sta rting salart $1,000 per
mo , based on performance
for tho se who qualify .
2 No layoffs or strikes.
3 Managem ent position
availbie
Htgh School educ.!! tion and
car requ1red . No prevtous
experience necessary For
tnter vtew call between

HappY Ads

In Meigs County

the

suite, 3 pc . maple living.room sulte1 various tables
and stlinds, FISher Stereo w/2 spkr~. cord organ,
sweeper, glider, mirror sliding dOor$ fOr closet, roll
a way bed, gas logs and heater, plant stand, child's
cha1rs, dehumidifier, Oormever rotisser ie, r:adios,
pressure canner, canni ng jars, bfass des~ lamp,
other tamps, hOI plate•, screens,, games, ,)oys, Tup

7

39~2.

In Callia County

counhe~

ds, many , many boxes yard sale items.

part walker.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

tomato

PUBLIC AUCTION

ijiV{'~

beneftts. You w111 atte d
training one weekend ea h
month and two weeks ea h
year Benefits Include IGW
cost life insu ra nce, e~ ­
cellent pay and ·a free pension pian . Plus, the Arnw
GtJard's valuable technical
schooling will prepare vou
for a we ll paying civ ili an

weeks old. Phone 304-675-

895--l.etart
937- Buffalo

open.

&amp; Auttion

Cuuntw

Puppies

675--Pt. Pleasant
4SI- Leon
S76- Apple Gro•e
773- Mason •

acres. must be under

8

part

terriers,

Mason Co. W.Va.

Cleland Greenhouse is now

~unbaJ~ 'limes- ientintl

puppies ,

can be seen a! 1308 Hogg
Street.

742- Rulland

156 Jackson Pike,
Gallfpolls . ..,..·4780.

probably arc finished. "We have no
expeetattons of having the warrants
reauthorized," Smith said.
But he said police officials planned
to discuss the situation with the city
prosecutor. " All we can do Is lay all ..
our cards on the table and see what
the prosecutor says," Smith added
Glascoe, who was being held in a
segregation cell at the county jail,
had been paid for helping officers in
the drug ·nvestt·gatt'on.
1
Pollee saJd that had he not fled and
the cases not been dismissed,
Glascoe would have been relocat-•
o:u
to another part of Mt'chigan and
gt·ven
sh polt·ce protectton, as well as

Four

949"T"'Racine

643- Arabia Dis I.

With the Army Nat1onat
Guard , you'll have a pap
lime job wilf1 lull·fia e

lnlormatlon colt 992·3923.

Pomeroy

379-Walnut D1st.

11
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
MER Position open lor nighlshlft DISPLAY
EX
duty . Apply in person. The CHAN Dl SiNG
Donuf House. 303 Upper PANDlNG MUST BE
River Rd ., Gallipolis,OH ABLE TO START IM·
MEDIATELY. Because of
No Phone Ca lls.
our unt,::wue expanston

AKC RegiStered Old
English Sheep dog, male,
will give away to good Iarm
home. 9'12·7733.

446--Gallipolis

367-Chesh.re

,...-------------~t~h~e-d~ru~g-c~a~se_s_h_e_he-lpe_d_s_o~Iv_e-~C~l!------------­

Classifieds

Meigs Co. Area c ..~ ...~~~

Ge~llia Co. Area Code

e - 0 -J-The Sunda T1mes·Sentinel

11

4

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

•

·Dayton. to my way of thinking , 1---- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --ll
has dtsgracefully ignored Orville
8

'Rolls IV' easier operation
ELYRIA, Ohio 1APl - The
developers or a battery-powered
· wheelchair hope the1r device will
. benefit handicapped persons lookmg
for comfort and ease ol operation .
T)le chair, named the Rolls IV,
was designed by the Elyna-based
Invacare Corp. at a cost of $500,000.
· If features more back support t~an
. previous electric models and a tight
. turning radius that makes it one ol
• the, most maneuverable cha~rs on
the market.
"We are a mobile society with an
aging population," said A, Malacht
Mifon, Invacare president. "Tbe in·
. dlvlduala who ~uire · wheelchatrs
; want them to be comfortable, por·
ubleancleasy to operate."
The chlllr can move forward ,

...
q

-Indiana: Raised tax by 2 cents a
gallon to 10.5 cents oo June I and
adopted a new floating system, to
take effect Jan. I, that could allow
the tax to rise as high as lC cents a
gallon.
- Minnesota : Raised tall from 11
cents to 13 cents a gallon 011 June I.
- Nevada: Raised gas tall from 6
cents to 10.5-cents a gallon on July I
and voted to rai!le tax to 12 cents a
gallon next July 1.
- New Hampshire :·Tax J'OS4! 3 cents to 14 cents a gallon on July 1.
- New Mexico: Tax rose one cent
a gallon to 9 cents, under a 1919 law
calling for aMual increases of one
cent unW it reaches 11 cents.
- New York: Imposed several
taxes as p!lrt of tax plan to support
mass transit package, including an
0.75 percent gross receipts tax on oil
companies and a tax on transportation of oil. The tax, approved
late last week, has not yet taken el·
feet.
-North Carolina: Tax rose 3 cents
to 12.25 cents per gallon July I.
-Ohio: Raised gas tax from 7 cen,
ts a gallon to 10.3 cents on Jllly I and
adopted a system to tie tax to Increases in highway and bridge main- ·;,
tenance costs, with a cap of 12 cents
a gallon.
- Pennsylvania: Adopted on June
23 a 3.5 percent franchise tax on
gasoline, diesPI and kerosene,
raismg gasoline prices by 3.8 cents
to 4 cents a gallon.
-Rhode Island · Changed tax . _
!rom 10 cents a gallon to 10 percent ·
of · wholesale prtce on June I, ,
boosting current Ia• to 12 cents a ·
gallon.
- South Dakota · Raised tax by one
cert to 13 cents a gallon April!.
- Tennessee: Tax was increased
from 8 cents to 10 cents a gallon and
ratsed dJesel fuel tax !rom 9 cents to
13 cents a gallon on June I.
- Utah: Raised gas tax from 9
cents to 11 cents a gallon on July I.
- Vermont: Ratsed tax from 9
cents to 11 cents a gallon on June I.
-Washington: Raised gas tax
from 12 cents to 13.5 cents a gallon
on July I and adopted a system that
could allow the tax to rtse as high as
16 cents, with no increase before
next January.

The Munc1e pollee department
computer s howed that Glascoe was
wanted in Monroe on the auto theft
charge and that Monroe police were
willmg to travel to wherever he was
found to bring him back . Glascoe
watved edradilton proeeedmgs.
Glascoe had worked with detecttves m Monroe, making most of
thetr undercover drug purchases
dunng a lengthy mvesltgation
8 u1 hi s d'1sappearance J une 18 forced Monroe authonttes to drop all
charges growing out o! the drug
bust
· squa d o11Jeer Mere
1 srm'th
Vtce
d
th
t
d
t
Gl
,
sat
a esp1 e ascoe s re t urn,

w . va .

...,

Police track down informant

County board ol corrurussioners
"We'd have to see what we could a!lord to meet those staffing standards. It's quite a surprise that that
amount ol stalling ts necessary .·'
The requtrements are based on
several !actors, including the total
nwnber or days each jatl employee
works in a year and the need for a
female ol!tcer on the mght shift.

Aviation trail to honor Wrights
DAYTON. Ohw 'APl - Av1at10n
enthusiasts have dcctdcd tt' s about

By AliSOCiated Presa
i981 compared to last year. " We just
Wholesale gasoline prices are don't think we can go much longer,"
declining, but a lot of Americans said state Rep. Mary Brown, who Is
aren't noticing. Prices al the pwnp pushing for a tax boost this fall.
are rising because many states are
A number of states, Including
raising gasoline taxes.
Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, InAnd the increase in taxes could diana and Ohio have adopted
reduce or eliminate the surge in systerruJ that will allow gasoline
sununer driving that oil companies taxes to rise with inflation. Most
have been wishing lor.
popular is one that sets the tax as a
Seventeen states have boosted percentage or the price, rather than
taxes this year, all but one of them in on a cents-per-gallon basis. Some
the last silt weeks. Legislatures in an sunply tax the gross receipts ol oil
additional eight states are thinking companies, which rise along with
about taking such steps this year, an prices - the companies pass those
Associated Press survey shows.
taxes along to customers.
For the states, the increases are
But proposals like that can run tn·
usually justified by the need to main- to opposition. Iowa Gov. Robert Ray
tain roads and bridges. But' such suggested a percentage tax, but it
proposals have aroused strong op- lost when opponents labelled it the
position and have been defeated this "ayatollah tax," a reference to the
year in 13 states
way gasoline prices rose alter the
Gasoline prices charged by the oil Iranian revolution led by Ayatollah
compames have been dropping since Ruhollah Khometni. They asked why
March, thanks to the world otl glut the "whim of OPEC" should force
and cutbacks by drivers stunned by Iowans to pay more taxes.
higher prices. Prices had risen to an
States where taxes have increased
average at retail of over $1.38 a since June I are Colorado, Idaho, Ingallon alter members or the dtana, Minnesota, Nevada, New
Organization of Petroleum Ex- Hampshtre, New Mexico, North
porttng Countries raised prices and Ca rolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania ,
President Reagan ended price con- Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah, Vertrols on domesttc crude oil.
mont and Washington. South Dakota
The oil companies hope the price raised taxes Aprt!l and New York's
cuts will reassure drtvers and gel legtslature imposed a gross receipts
them back on the road, and there 1s tax this past week that is expected to
some evtdence that drtvmg ts IO· raise gasoline prices by 2 or 3 cents a
creasmg. Gasoline inventones gallon
regtslered thetr largest drop of the
The largest of the mcreases was in
year in the last week or June, and Nevada, where the tax was raised
gasoline demand in that month was 4.5 cents a gallon , to 10.5 cents on
slightly ahead or the 1980 pace.
July 1. An addihonal 1.5 cents ts to
But the tax increases mean a lot ol be added in a year.
drivers are paytng more, not less
Wht!e drtvers 10 those states are
"There are more tax increases than paymg more, officials in others are
wholesale pnce cuts," says Dan warning of disaster
Lundberg, an analy st whose
Other states where efforts to raise
newsletter monitors gasoline pnces.
g asolin~related laKes failed were
A major reason lor the growmg Connecllcut, Florida , Georgia,
pressure to raise gasoline taxes is Hawaii, Kansas, Illinots, Maine,
that those taxes were set years ago Maryland, Mmnesota, Montana,
at a certain number ol cents per Texas and Wyoming.
gallon. As otl prices rose, Ia• recetpActiOn to boost such taxes ts still
ts stayed level or !ell as gasoline pending in Arizona, California,
consumpition dropped . But costs of Delaware, Iowa , Michigan, Oregon,
fiXmg roads soared, and gasoline South Carolina and Wisconsin:
taxes typically were supposed to
Increases, so far in 1981, mclude:
cover such costs.
-Colorado: Tax rose !rom 7 cents
Michigan's transportatton depart- to9 cents per gallon on July 2.
ment says tts revenues were down 23
- Idaho · Raised tax from 9 5 cents
percent '" the first three months or a gallon to 11.5 cents on July 1.

July 12, 1981

COMMERCIAL

VINTON COUNTY - S1tuated close to
Vinton and Gallia County l tne. 46 acres,
2 bedroom home with stone fireplace
and new turnac.e. l-4,.x65 mobile home
completely furnished 3 wells. Mtneral
r ights. Close to No. 3 mine
11 709

LOTS FOR SALE

hog houses, tobacco barn, tool shed ,
1920 lb tobacco base. 6.5 acres tillable
Rural water. owner w111 listen to any
reasonable offer
If 761

ESTABLISHED LOT - .46 of an acre
Located on State Route 160 Good
drilled well. 1nsuiated pump h?use,
pressure tank . Rural water avatlal e
Fenced in back Garden area, elec tn c,
septic tank Mak e us an offer today!

Older remOdeled 4 bedroom home J

I NEED HELP - With a lillie pa1nt and
·~touch ola do· it-yourself man . Older
~ story · nome. 3 bedrooms. ~f i replaces
and a beouflflll view- of the Ohio River

home. 1 car garage. 2 barns, approx . 90
acres . Some hillside witli timber, _some
river bottoms, tobacco base, mtneral
rights and beautifu l 'view of the rt'!'er .

from your b4Jck y . .d . 117.500.

1692

CARRVOUT BUSINESS - Only one tn
the area, does a good turn over
espec tallv m summer months. Sale 1n
eludes liquor li ce nse. stock and all tn
ventorv . Prt ced to sell fast. Cash or
owner wil help finance .
II 790

2'9 ACRES ...- Highly product1ve farm .

NEED A FARM? This might be whal'
you're. looking for . Nice 2 BR br.ck

I

N7S8

FARMS

UlO

.

NEW LISTING! A pretty vt'ew sur roun
ds th ts home wtth 31 acres Of nt cc land
Home has 2 bedroom s. k ttchen, dtnmg
room ta mtly room, bath , uttl tty room
and s't orage room Land l ays well w 1th
some ttmb er and stocked pond

noo

1 816

NFW LOTS _ You can afford close to
Hospital Rural water available L ot
size approx . 100 tt. x 11 5 ft . $-4,000 each ~

8

I

'J..-.TOP SEUatj~

THEIR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN -- Don ' l

'

mtSS th ts fa r m• Well kf'pt 'l stor y house ,
4 or 5 BRs, basement y,ny l Stdtnq, 11 4
acres, 30 acres flll ob lc. ba rn , stl o.
smoke hou se. machmcrv shed, pond.
S59,900
Will cons1dcr rrad tng tor
property tn K K school d•sl
"782

ACREAGE - 20 acres. more or less.
w1th barn, pond, scp tt c rank , ouT
butldtn g, tru•t trees and some ttmber
Located tn Vtn ton County Se ller mav
constder owner tinanc•no
N 670
AACR E AG E- 5 :tS r~crcs. ot n 1ce l and
Has rural water, acrobtc scp t1c tank ,
and barn Owner wil l sell on land
trac t with down pavmcnr
•

NEW LISTING - ACRf AGE -- 4.5 08
total, rolling, half woOded, h r. If pasture,
approx S.SOO an acre and loc a ted '17 mile
Off ROUte 141
I 746

21™.

'

I

''·.
''

'

ACREAGE
BEAT THIS BARG/IIN! 38 acres,
vaca nt l and, 4 ac r es QOOd ttl I ab le land
tobacco bn se fhe res t ts pa s tur e and
WOOdland, $10,000
II 789

'

,,

.,

�D-4 - The Sunday Ttm e s Sen
·11

Pomeroy - Mtdd

1-1- - - l nsurance

Help Wanted

OhiO- Pomt Pleasa

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N CARLYLE'"

AUTOMOBILE
IN
as a young bus• ness person SUR A N CE bee n ca n
Los t
yo u r
and earn good money plus c ell e d?
some great g1fts as a Sen operator s Ltcense7 Phone
t1nel route c arr te r Phone 992 2143
us nght away and get on

2l

GET VA L UABLE traon1ng

ll

Professional

Services

COMMERCIAL and
1n
dustr1al
photography
Phone «6 2909 or «6 7226
after .c p m

.. fhe eiiQ ib!l lfy I1Sf e~t 992

- 2156 or '1'12 21 57

16

Opportumty •s yours l USt
for th e ask 1ng Ask your
Beeline styh st and she Wi ll
be happy to he lp you 10 10
th e B eel1n e
worl d
of

RON S

TV

SE R VICE

Motorol a Quaza r

Galllpol •s

Wanted

t ()

B aby
sttte r
wan t e d
r ef er ence r eQu 1red Phon e
304 88 ? 20 10 N ew H aven
A r ea

elec tr ic gas. water In town
for sale or trade for a place
the

Fully
31

borhood R d a ll m a k es se r
v1 ced Spec al ztn g tn L awn
Bo y
Bl ades sha rpened
Call 446 4-425 alfer 5 p m
Pt ck
up and de l 1ver y
ava 1lab le

6117 3196

old house, lot

Ohio

R1ver

222

OR RENT almost new 14 x
70, 3 bedroom 1 1h baths,
sitttng on nu: e lot, readv to
move 1nto Phone 304 S76
2711

2 story frame house .

Homes tor Sale

House 2 years Old, Camp
Conley Assumable B and

one fourth

Three bedroom house w•th
btg lot and garden by
owner Phone 304 675 2529

carpeted,

bustness

General

23

Profes s.onal
Ser v tce s

$45,000 Ca II «6 0390

---

112

tr a dema r k

Qu a lif y

&amp;

Sa t, sfac tt o n
We
have
re ferences Phone 156 1560

R ea l Es t a t e -

EAFO

on

_Mon ey to L ~an

21

OFFI CE PER SON

F H A VA Conven t .al Home
Loa ns
Co umbus Ftrst
M ort gage Co 463 Se c ond
Ave
Ga ll •po tS Oh
446

E)( pc n cnc c Pre fe rr ed

A ppl y In Person
We d 'l P M -1 P M
K m a rt
ll5 Upper Rtv cr Rd
Galltpot1 s

7172
23

Sttuat1on s wanted
-Re tab le non dr1nk er w a n
t s tennant fa rm work
ava il a bl e •m medta t ely

Prof es s.ona l
Serv1ce s

11

Compl et e Auc t ton Se r v 1ce
st oc k redu c t on c lose outs
est at es f arm equ tp m enl It
vest oc k r ea l esta t e L 1ce n
sed an d bonded 1n Oh o
and Wes t w v Bud McG hee
A uc t1 on an d Re a l Es t a t e
Co Ca ll fo r ter m s 446 0557
or 446 08 18
428 Sec ond
Ave Gallt pOIIS QH J563 1

Ca ll446 7697
W il l c a re fo r e lde r ly •n m y
prtva te ho m e Good e xp
r easonab le ra t es M ale o r
fem a le 667 3402 or 667 6319
vacancy f or r oo m bo ar d
and ca r e tor el d erl y n m y
hom e 992 6022

W ELL dn l l ng bo t h ro t ary
&amp; cab le t ool s usua l ly we l ls
n l day Ca l l Ray Beag le
304 895 38J 1

w

11 do ger a tr 1c pat te nt
car e tn your home p a rt
t1m e
Have ex per en ce
Phon e 304 458 1552

ST A RK S T r ee T r mm tng &amp;.
Shrub ser v ce
Insu r ed
Ph one 304 576 20 10

Real Es tn t c -

Ce ncr 11

t

A 11

o•

~

General

Rd

Raccoon

~ assumable loan on
roomy, 3 bdr home weth
large fam1ly room, new
carpet, central a1r, and
pool w1th deck S•tuated on
acre lot •n good ne1gh
borhood Call «6 7535
Large 2 story stone home

well •nsullaled w1lh 3 large

446-4206

bedrooms, one full bath, 2
l/2 baths, formal d•n1ng
room newly remOdeled k1t
chen bU1It 1n •nctudtng d•sh
washer, basement w1th
work shop, 2 car garage
w•th work shop large oar
den 2 porches 548 Grant

St

N O PA Y ME NT S F O R O N E YEAR

Run

Creek Call 256 6472

General

Real Estale -

Bear

overlook•ng

CENTRAL REAL
HELP WA NTED

In

By owner new cedar &amp;
brtck home 1 m1 off Rt 7,

w Va 25550

L E T.l.\R f O H - Br 1c khome ll 2 bath 38 R s h ar
nwood floors hrf'Pic'l cr c l €'a n neal and r eady t o
move 1nro l0° o LOA n c an be assumed A sK1ng
S35 900
N EW HO ME - R l 55 t Ga I ta Co spl I entry
SPM1ous LR 1r chw ,w n t o f orm)l DR K t che n
oou ppcd J BR a ncl l bo t h~ c.arp ~.:t e d throughout
Cou ld h nve cx t n BR s or fa mily r oom .n ba se ment
P um bEd to r Jrd ba t n t NedHI G drage Ca ll for ap
pi 161 DOD
10 t. CR ES
Or 11ncl conh ac t Che sle r a r en l0°o
flown owner ro he lp hnance As k ng $ 13 000
RACIN E - Lo ~ BR mo b le hom e ( 1 BR 14x l 6l
large eat 1n k. rchen many cupboards c ove r ed front
pill to carport ou tbuilcl1ng Very ntce $22 000
39 .O CR E s ~ J BR home 3 m il es off Rl 7 on T ex as
Rd All m1n c r ~11 r tqh t s As k tng $37 000
ACRE AG E - 14:.:70 mob tl e o m e Th•s locat •on has
shade trpes pond ~) nd q araqc Ask1ng S 16 000
CH FS T E R ~ ] n1 u rl Cr lS w llh S~l dd P n no l r u tt
~ rC'f' S tn sulrl ted J BR home garagc sma l l ba rn
Lo t &lt;. ol 1ndoor 1tv1nQ s pr~cf' as we ll ns out door
A~ktnQ 'i&gt; 16 000
3 ACR ES - InRa c .nc Surveyed Ask1 ngS I6000
u o AC R ES - (O ld Durs t Fa r m) c lose to Rave n
swoOd B r dqc All m 1ncr(l l rtQ hts P lenty o f pas ture
lntl WOOd~
COUNT R Y HOM E 1cr c bac k of R ae ne Larqc
ourn s nc lurJ n q 3 IJLdroo m s hardwood lloors
A~k1nq "18 000
CALL U S TO BUY OR SELL
N ln Cy J 1S pCr S- A SS OCI&lt;lt('
PH 1!43 2075
V1 r9tnt.1 hayman- A ssonatc
PH91! 54197

fenced

«6 2003

Phone 1-(614)-992-3325
...

GAL LI A C leantng a nd
R ent A Ma •d Serv tce Inc
Free Esttmates bond ed
tn sured
ptlone 245 9234
C leanmg by the week mon
thor contra ctual

baths,

backyard
n1ce bar b q
area , and c1ty schools Call

Middleport

$59,500

Wantmg qu1ck sale to settle

INTEREST RATES are on the nse aga.n • You can
st 11 buy thr s mamtenance free hom e w1th a loan
assumptton On ly 9 1 2% lnt Rate - 3 bedroom br1 ck
10 ltp t op shape Shown by appo .ntm ent Pr1 ce d onl y
1n th e 50 s
A S fl ME GO E 5 ON you wtll be paymg m or e &amp; m or e
r en t Why no t bu y a hom e? Lo an assumplton
payme n ts on ly S387 00 ncl ud1nQ ta xes and 10
su ra nce I0 '1% 1nt erest 3 bedr oom ran ch lar ge
eitl n k iTche n la rge ea t rn k tfc hen 1tv 1ng r oom
H o m e com pl e fe ly ca r pe ted ve r y n1ce S•ng le ca r
ga r age N o rlh up are a Prt ce d tn th e 40 s
COLONIAL Bl U :V EL
4 be droom s f or ma l I v tng
r oorn w b I ~r e pl ace m odern k1 t chen and d ntng
area 'l. f u ll ba th s Spa c tau s t s mily room w b
fire pl ace
J b ath
u t il tty r oo m a nd 2 ca r ga r age
G a s hea t ce ntra a r Shown by nppt only Loan
ass umpfton

6 ACRES m or e or less at wood and L oca t ed south
of R1 oG r a nde on St Rt 3?5

DALLA S JIM

LOVE AS SOC - 446 2627

BONNIE STUfES REAL T OR - 446 4106

JAMES STUTES AS SOC - &lt;46 2885

estate Call 614 384 3809 for
appo1nlment (After 1PM)

NEW LISITNG - L1ke new ranch home overlook1ng
the Ohto Rtver from Ka.se r Alum 3 bedrooms 1112
bath s 30ft ltv ng rm equ1pped btrch k1tchen tvll
basem ent wtth l a m ly room not water heat co,Jper
plumbmg garage and 3 ac r es A skmg $65 000
PLAYTIME - F1 sh boat a nd swtm on t he Ohto
En1oy the Summe r pr•v a te lot and 3 bedroom 11 2
bath mobile home 1n ex ce ll ent cond •t• on for only

Mod1f1ed A frame three
bedrooms, two baths car
pet Sp.ral sta1rs c1rcular
stone fireplace 8 acres

992 7741

$13 500

New 3 bedroom home

&gt;I I 500
NICE MOBILE HOM E - On co rner r entable lot
1978 Hill c r es t 14 )(7 0 Has J bedroo m s P 2 baths

2

baths large llvmg room
dmtng room combmat.on,
bu11t tn k1tchen laundry

Only $57 000

HUNTING - Wild turk ey d ee r grouse f1Sht ng
boattng and sw•mm1ng nea r P ark your c amper and
en JOY the wtld Te rm s m a y be
FREE GAS - Save your heat money and pu t 1t on a
vaca tton L C w ai N
and small hou se Term s

i

$1 1 500
l l YR OLD RANCH In exce llent condlttOO 3
bedrooms 'l fu l l bath s central cttr and heat fam1ty
room garage w 1th Gcn1e and large lot 575 000

Housing Headquarters
Real Estale- General

1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedrooms, bath
1/2, new
carpet 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom, new carpet,
8
S Sales, Inc 2nd and
Viand Street, PI Pleasant,
WV Phone 675 4A24

a.

Shown

5062

8a m 1 p m

by

appomtment

WHI

USED MObile Home 576
2711

32

Mob1le Homes

lor Sale

1971 Danan 12 x 65 3
bedrooms
1972 Crown
Haven 14 x 65 wtth 8 x 10

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST, GALL IPOL IS RT
35 PHONE 446 3868 or 446
7274
1971

Schultz

Homestead

12x60, wash &amp; dryer new
carpet, com fvrn set on
lot 6 1n Quail Creek 1n Rod

Utop1a 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms
bedrooms 1972 Nashau 14
)( 60, 2 bedrooms B v.. S
Sal es, Inc 2nd and V1and

ltke

new

S16 SOO

NegOtiable Call256 6345

New 1981 14' Wtde

s9,295
Calllmmedoately

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.
(Jtm E lliO tt)

Rl 93 North
Jack ton. Oh1o

286 1752

TJlRA ES TATE S
Ced ar ra nc h w l h J BR 2 l u l l
ba ths ftr e pl oce 1 car garge t r ee pool nnd cl ub
house pr 1ce red uced
$69 &gt;OO

more Information call 773

5127
1973 NASHUA 14 X70 $7 000
304 675 6768
Traa ler, partly turn tshed
Gall
ipolis
Phone
304 675
1867 Ferry
Farms tor Sale

33

barn, m1nerals secluded
goOd huntmg Mornmg Star
101

$65,000

N1ce bu dd1nq lot 78x60

LOTS - 7 lo t s on Ar nold D r t vf' at Bt dwell
- $4 000 67 acre $4 500

s ACRES ~ N tce ro 111ng land on F loyd Clnr k Rd
Beaultful butl d1 ng s. te
51) 000
s ACRES - N• ce w ood ed l a nd exce llen t bu ild 1ng
s 1te 1n the countr y on ly 3 miles fr o m tow n
11 1010

ISO ACRE

t"

'.

FARM ~

ha s good ba rn tobacc o base
hmber . and l a rge pond good tocat ton
110021

Evenings Call
P~

Smnh,

~. 367~228

Danrin Bloomer, Realtor, 446-2599

John Fuller, Realtor 446--4327

256 6413

145ACRES412 378 1804

Green Beans P1ck your
own $6 00 bu
Ray nor
Peach Orchard 5 miles
below Ga ll •polts on Rt 7

Houses for Rent

S6,000, 38 Ne11 Ave , S•,ooo
Phone 388 8896 or 992 7042

3 room furn1shed c ottage
ut •llt•es furn 1shed, adults
no pets Phone 304 675 2812

or 304 675 1580

deposol
263 26119

1 614 263 8322

1 bedroom furntstled house
on Oh10 Rtver south of M•d
dleport 2 chtldren , no pets
References &amp;
depostt
requ 1red Must keep yard
matnta•ned $150 month

pm

$150depoSII 614 837 3614

Real Estate- General

Broker Auct1oneer
UFE

M~GHEE

INSURANC E
428 Second Ave
Call446 0552 Anyt1me

'f'...~

BMR 389 - Owner transferred and has found a
home tn h1S new area and now must sell th1 s f1ne
four BR home Two full baths ftne kttchen Carpet
throughout heat pump "'new patnl 1nS1de and out
See thts one soon C1ty school s Green E lementary

REASONABLY PRICED HOMES &amp;
FARMS ARE ALWAYS IN DEMAND IF
YOU NEED TO SELL, CALL US
TODAY WE HAVE PROSPECTS THAT
NEED TO BUY .
BMR 396 - New llsttng L shaped frame and bn ck
ranch Three BRs, 15x21 family room w•th brt ck
ftreplace bu11t '"kitchen 11x14 d1n 1ng room Th er e
IS much more to be sa td for thts line hom e G1ve us a
call tor a pr.va1e showtng Galhpotts schoo ls Green
Etementarv S60s
Two story home tn Galt tpotts priC ed t o

se ll at only $29,900 Call for details
BMR 390 - owner spys sell' Owner 1s wtlltng tu
help any qual•f•ed bvyer w1th a l ow tn terest land
contract so that they can buy th1s ntce clean hom e
s.tuated on 1) acres of land Just r1ght tor a r.d1ng
horse or two, also enouQh room for ra1s 1ng next
wmter s beef Ca ll now C1ty schools
BMR 391 - Just tn ftme for boat.ng season, we are
offermg a 2 bedroom 50x10 mob1le home w1th nver

frontage, located at the edge of town $12,900
BMR 316 -

With scme TLC thiS one could be a

showplace 2800 SQ
acres C1ty schools

n

Clean 5 rm
house tn
Eureka full s1ze basement
fuel ott furnan ce Call 256

ltv.ng space on nearly SIX

6547

mo Ca ll «6 6238
S1x room house $100 a
month
great for large
family 675 5104 or 675 5386
TWO bed room house 304

a heart to North s king
South cashed dummy s two
good spades and made his
nme trJcks South onlv need
ed four spaft tncks to matt
h1s game By oven.aking hiS

42

·~•::..""""""".JI ~'TF:ru'I!Jq. ~ "('

Houses for Rent

FOR SALE OF RENT 3
bdr

home
new v1ny l
s•dmg nat gas heat, c1ty
school dtstnct other extras

dtvts on S250 per mo

Smce 1959

1981 14' Wode

sgggs
call At Your
Letsure
Ftnanctng avatlabl
year protection
Large lhventory

JOHN~N'S

MOBILE.
HOMES
•
INC.
Ptlone 446-3547 •

c1ty school

BMR 380 F - Excellent tarm or commerc •al pro
perty 100 acres more or less Located near Rodney
owner w111 cons1der f1nanctn~ for qua1tf1ed buyer
BMR 316 - Quiet cou ntry home on 1/2 acre lot ln
eludes 2Qx20 barn w1tt1 toft and part•al basement

You will en tOY thiS one S29.900
BMR 392 - Now 1S your chance to •1ve tn town for
less than S-40,000 Three bedroom home near

GAHS
BMA 393 ~ ne house has recently been remodeled
1nslde and out, has basemenJ, heat pump for year

around comfort, five mob1le home pads, lots ot Iron
tage on Route 7 phis an equal amount on the Ohio
R lver 'rnts one could be a money maker Call now
BMR 394 - Just what the Dr oldere~ 7 acres of
land with an older m0b1le home Lots of wood for the
wooclbiJrner Let thiS ohe be your vacat1on spot

$9,500

~

It

coMPLete 'AucnoN se~v•cE
WE 51;!,.1.. IT ALl
REAL ESt"'i'E p&amp; (:HATliELS

eMR J7S - Price orearty reduced on thiS 3 8 R brick
ranch Situated on large flal lot Call
dela11s1 ,
I

2110 Eaitern Ave.

tn

ft

"•

''I'

I

BMA J91- ~Listing - Close io !own Jell ranc~
on 191 flat lot Includes detached 26ll26 garage plus
18x36 In ground pool OYm~~r transferred and
anKIOut to sell

3

miles from Gathpolts $250

675 1371 or 675 3812

spade honor declanr sUI!
had the 3 3 spade break
gotng for btm while adding
thP add1Uonal chance of the
IU or )ad. doubleton tn
East s hand

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

bdr tr a il er turn
g as
and w a ter tur n sns m o
$ 100 dep no pets Ca ll 446
47 45

F c1rm s for R enr

2 b(&gt;d r oo m
t r atler
on
pr. va Te 101 N o pe t s 5175
mo nth New H aven Ptl one

304 882 16l6
44

Apartment
tor Rent

'J bd r fr a t cr R oush La ne
Chesht re Oh Phon e 1 304

/!3 588,
1
4x65bamo
e hout1f
meu 1.l bdr
1/'l
th b il bea
r 1ver1
v 1ew n nd 'J. m ore 1St ot
Au g no c h il dren no pet s
Ca ll 446 664 '1
'} bed room Mobil e Home
bedroom apt u lllt lt es pa td
I c hild acce pt ed No pet s or
drunk s John Shee t s 3
mtl es south at M1ddleport
on Rt 7
f WO bedr oOm h OUSe l ril ii Pr
on As ht on Upl and R on d
SI SO plu s u t dd es nn rJ
da m e1qe depos1 t J m il e&gt;s
tr om Rt l 675 40!HI
Two

b ed r oom
hou se
t or rent tu r nt shed
I wtth cen tral n •r qood t or
wo r ktn g c oupl e or rou plr
w•th 1 child $ 150 per month
plu s depos tt 675 4088

House for rent 57 011ve St
1 bdr
unfurn1shed
no
pets you pay utt11ttes dep

992 7511

Real Estn l e -

apartm ent l g

PH. OFfiCE 446-7699

LR

and Kttchen Ac r oss t ram
Honda Shop no pe t s Call

446 3937 or 367 0560
Sec ond floor f1ntshed et
ftCt enc y apt
Furntshed
adults only no pet s 729 2nd
Ave 6all1polt s Cat! 446

0957
4 rent unfurn apt all car
peted S250 m o $ 100 dep
ut1ilt1eS patd no chtldren
no pets Call446 3437
For rent new 1 bdr

a pt

Call «6 0390
REGENCY APT

INC

2

bedroom
k tt
chen f urn 1shed
c arpeted,
b tlls part1ally pa1d $200
mo
E xce ll e nt
ne tgh
borhood 675 6722 or 675

5104
3 R &amp; Bath Ut furni Shed
$225 mo 2 R Bachlor apt
$125
5 R hou se un
furniSh ed S175 Dep &amp;
lease Call 4 to 10 PM 446
0952
2 bdr apartment ac ross
from park $175 mo par
t1atly furn
r ef &amp; dep
requ•red Call 446 3919

JA CKSON E STATE S A P
TS has 1 bdr apartm ents
rent s1art s at S152 m o
d epostf$200 Call446 2745
Furn1 shed efft c ten c y apt
$135 utilrt• es pd, share
bath su1table for one Call
446 4416 after 7PM

Gen ernl

STROUT REALTV
OWNER SAYS
SELL 1hi S lov el y J
BR ranc h Spec tal featur es ar e J bath s
co mpl et e ly equt pp ed kt t ch en
la r ge
d1n1ng rm 44 ft famt lY rm wtth WB
f.repl ace 2 car garage rec rm laun
dry tots of landscaped over 1 acre of
land tn the Crou se Beck Rd area
G r een Grade School &amp; Galll c1 A c ade m y
H•gh Sc hool Shown by appo1ntrnent
FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION Th s
lovely L shaped ran ch offer s tots of
good IIVtn g for your grow1ng fam ly
Some at the finer features ar e a large
LR w1th WB I r epla ce formal d•ntng
nt ce modern k1tchen w1th a ranqe 1
ovens and DW den w1th WB It replac e 3
BR 112 bat.hs g as hea t par t basem ent
pal10 carport and a large c orner lot

CHESHIRE - ROUSH LANE -

Lovely

J BR ran ch Jl ~ baths 16 x24 LR w tt tl
W B ftre plac e compl et ely equ1pped kd
c hen lo ve ly ca rpet throughout ful l
b ase ment (partly f1n1sh ed J nat gas
h eat ce nt a tr garag e and pa lto

LOVELY

BRICK

&amp; FRAME RAN
CHER 78 ACRE S of la nd 1n Ch es h~r e
T ownshtp offers tot s at good ltv1ng t or
your growmg family Hom e tS 1ust l tk e
n ew w1th 1438 sq ft of 11v1ng area plus
an a tt a ched garage 2 spac1ou s BR s 2
baths l8 x27 LR l0 x24 k1tc hen wtfh
relng d sp DW doub le oven &amp; r an ge
wa sher &amp; dryer s tays 1n laundry L an d
tS m os tl y rolltng p ~s tur e land w1th tlP
p rox 25 acres wooded Ca ll lor a p
potntm ent

START RAISING &amp;

GRAZING

132

ac r e pa sture fa rm m os tly rol l tng &amp;
h11ly grassland wtth a ppr o)( 10 A
w ooded lots ot spr1ng s I 1 st or y hom e
has 5 rm s &amp; bath l arq e bc'lrn tob acco
base front s on 3 roa ds tn Wa lnut Tow n
Sh iP

CLAY TOWNSHIP
R acc oon Cr eek
frontage 11 2 story home 4 rm s &amp; b ath
down upsta•rs unf1n1shed good barn
garage shed n ear Blu e L a ke c 1ty
schools ask.ng $42 500

CO U NTRY SETTING ONLY 2 MILES
OUT
2 BR s bath L R k1tchen fu l l
ba sement
( partl y l1n1 sh ed w 1th
f1repla ce J
carport
covered pat1 0
unattach ed gara ge Wtth ce ll n r lo ts. of
trees a nd matur e landSCc1 ptng ar ge
qa rde n 1 2 a cr es
PRICE REDUCED TOS59 SOO 00 1 t J0 0 0
f1nanc1ng avatlabl e L sh aped ran c h 3
BR s P 2 baths LR W1fh f r epla ce f or
mal d n1nq eQu tpped k1t chen g as he a l
corner lot
NEAR OAt&lt; HILL - 62 5 acre m / 1
locat ed on Co R d 48 a ppr ox 1 tJ II abl e
and 11 wood s pond sprtng s $2 5 000
as ktng S7 000 down, 10° o mt 10 yr s to

pay
L 0 C A T I 0 N - 620 4t h Ave

ROOM TO ROAM -

Tht S lo vel y br. c k
r anc h oftPrs lots of good t.v.ng for yo ur
grow•ng fam1 1y 3 BR s 21 J baths ar gc
kt1Chf' n &amp; L R f ormal d tntnq rm
2
ltrcpla ces wood burntng st ove cen t
n r garage full base m ent w•th t amtly
rm ba r &amp; laundry Loca ted on appr o)(
')acres on St.:Jtc Rout e 554 betw een P ar
tcr &amp; E no Pr ced t o se ll a l $59 500
TNG.ALS ROAD
Appro)( 73 acres 25
A Racc oon Cree k bO tT o m la nd ba lance
pas tu re &amp; w ood s O ld house &amp; bu dd tn gs

10% LOAN

Pl antz Subdtv

3 or 4

BR s, 14xJO LR, 12x30 1am11y rm

8o

much more lmmedtate posses ston
Call for appOintment

FAIRVIEW

SUBDIVISION

-

CONVENIENT

LOCATION

Mulberry Ave - Near schools shop
peng, etc , 1 story home offers 4 or 5

BRs 2112, bath~. Jlx25 LR, family rm
w1th WB stove. completely equ1pped
kllchel\and a large screened on porch
Fish In yQur own back yard Shown by
appo1n1111ent

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

KYGER CREE K SC HOOL OI STR IC T

Modern 3 B R r anch hom e ap pro)( -1 1""' yr s old Th er
mo pa ne w• ndows Slorm doo r s F A f urn ace w 1th
cen tr a atr k •tchcn ha s b u il t 1n ca b ne ts st a• n le5s
s t eel db ! s•nk and d n 1nq area Fu l l base m ent wtth
pat1 odoors Rural wel l er ~ ys r em ga r age Ca ll now
# 379
WHA r A BEAU riFUL BRI CK HOME
1n r tfy of Gill 1POI1 s ( lo se lo su perm ark t h
and bu s t ness sec t on 10 r oo m s 3 or 4 bedroo•ns
modf'rn ktt c hcn wilt1 lo t s 01 rrl btn c t s d s.hw as her
gMbag e di Spos al clcc1 r1 c t ab le top rE~ n g c F o r ma l
d1n 1ng roo m t am tly recrca 1 on r oom Just lot s ot
r oom Cen Tr a l a1r n :'! tur c1 1 qe~ s F A furn ace ce ntral
P A s ys tem f r cpli'lce Plc1n ter n hnm c Yo un g a p
pt e Cl nd peach rr cr~ ll owc r 5 a nd s 1rubs and a lo t
mor e MU Sf SE E TH I S CITY HOME:
,d J91
L o c c~t e d

C OUNfRY
R em ode led &lt;1 5 be d room home w 1th t1r eplace
toc nt ed on 53 Acres o f t •llabl e nnd pas •u r e la nd
pond bctrn l r1rg1 m el it I b udd tn g t obacco base A ll
tht S l or th e low low p rt r c 0 1 $J'} 9()0 Call fo r more
d(' lliiiS
# 479
IN VE S rM E Nr PRO PE R fY IN GALLI POll~
Br c k ,1n d f rame 4 apa rtm en t hou se on tower 2nd
Ave One .1 part mu 11 5 room s bd lh l be drooms T hree (]1 one bedr oom Ap artm en rs L •ve •n one let
ttl c o1hPr threP p(1y lor th ts. hom e Ca ll now
11486
PE AC E F UL A R EA
h All acre m or e or lc&lt;&gt; s w tlh l r u 1 tr ees plu s &lt;'!three
bedroom h ome I v no room k 1t cher w th bu It n
ca b tn el&gt; uttl l y r oom t ul ~ h'lsf'mf'n t il nd qa raqe
p l rf t'\ lly conver Ted n to 1 cJ0n An un l n 1shed room
w1 lll n hr i'l tO iii Or lt rr plclr P Ntrt ft m td n ya rd
C"l l l l orde f r'ld S
/14 91
A

C LO ~£

rOCA LLI P OLJ ~

4 lled ro om c, 1nd &lt;I t.l mtly room IO H!E lot
ntCC' b.lCk pn t10 clncl pOr Ch heal&lt;&gt; W lh na tu ra l qa s
C lly w&lt;1 1rr
71 1°o LO c1n now on proj)('r l y u t y
schools Only '!.J't YOU
11499

H

room~

61 ACRE S M O R L VACA NT LAND
wooded a nd pas tur e la nd off old R t 7 on Horse
Cr eek n O tlt o T ow n~ h• P Poss •ble coa vetn Af
fordab le tn ves t ment propN l y Ca l l f or more 1n
for mal•o n
!1468
26 A CRES VA CAN r LAND
Hu n ter s P arad •sc Lo t s o f butl d •n o s. 1tes al ong old
S!att Rt 7 fa c •n CJ lh C OhtO R 1v er Lots of 1tmber
L ot sot va lu e l or a lowpr cc
11446

FANTA S fi C BU Y •
REDU CE D FROM • 35 900 to 'i :J H YOO

OWN ER SAY S

SE LL NOW

HOM E - 'l ACR E~ IN fH E COUN fR Y
7 r oom hom e wt fh J or po ss1biL d bedrooms k •t chen
Wtlh built 1n ca b•nets s tor m w tn dows and door ~
L arqe c ht c k enhousc s tornq1 buil d 1nq l we l ls plu s
rur a l war er on n Stat e H 1ghway A ll th• s t or only
$36 500 00 Ca ll tor you r it pp otnlm e&gt; nt now
f1 JM

one
rwO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588

MORGAN TOWNSHIP Small bu t
n• ce 2 B R home tS only 2 yr s o l d &amp;
clean as a p1n P erfec t lor a sm al l
t amtly wee ken d retr ea t or hunt n g
lodge Sttuated on 36 acr es of Mor gan
L ane Rd

LOCATION PLUS QUALITY

should

desc rtbe thiS lovely 3 BR bn ck ran ch
Spe c tal features are a large LR &amp;
dtntng rm equtpped ktf chen 1' 11 baths
laundry quat 1ty carpet cent a~r &amp; a n
overst zed 2 car garage Locat ed on U S
35 w est &amp; shown by appotntment

ThiS

lovely L shaped .-anch offers lots of
good llvtng for your grow1ng tamily
some of the ftner features are a large
LR w1th WB firep lace, formal d1n1ng
mce modern k1tchen w1th range, 2
ovenS and OW, den w1th WB f 1repl ace 3
BR. 1'., baths, gas heat. part basement
patto, carport and a large corner lol

RIVERVIEWt;NO EX fR tJ. IN COM E '
Love l y 3 or 4 bed r oom home w 1h Q•c tu re wmdow
ta mtl y r oom bu il t 1n kil c hPn rt n cJ b ns.P m en1 H om e
1S s tu1 ted on a ppr ox.ma te l y J ac res and has m an y
tru 11 dnd nut trf'PS i'!nd a pcMh orrhnrd C &lt;~l l toda y
to sec how you can own ! h1S ltne home and have an
ext r a nco m e too 1
N4 90

JOHNS CREEK ROAD - Near M e r
cer v ille &amp; Crow n C 1fy M 1n es 1973 Duke
Crown Roy al mob1l e home 14 x 65 2
B R wo od burn1 ng st ove fl a t l ot w1th
well bar ga n prt ced Ca ll abou t tt11 s

OHIO RIVER VIEW - A pp rox 8 ac r es
wooded l and niCe butl d1ng s•te c ounty
wat er located on Route 7 approx 5 m1
south of t own S6 500

LOW DOWN PAYMENT -

AM E RI CA N O~ t::AM
11 s easy t o make n dr eam a r 0n1 1y by own1nq t h '&gt;
mmac ula tP rarf'l r f' ~l o lt wtth th r Pf' bedrooms ?
bcl l llS 1 )10 I 10S ('1 t n k tr ll c n ""l h bu ilt n oak
rn b nel s lct ne 1 \tn 1 roan nnd s tora qc bud d nQ
La atert n C1 Ty -s cr oo l D s tr ( t Tt11S one ou mu s T
sec to be l evf' As k1n :t. 44 400
II 453

INCOME PROPERTY
RtoGra nde 4
m obil e homes pr c!:!c ntl y ren ted w at er
gi'IS &amp; sewe r ava il abl e

LOG CABIN ~ Very un1que Old ha nd
hewn log beam s sleeptng 1011 large
s tone ftreplace mod ern barn 14 acr es
woods located tn th e wayne Natrna l
Forest, 20% down

ASSUMPTION -

AP PLE PIE
CONDITION
And spar kt 1n c lea n bes t
des cr• be Tht s tr• leve l
th ree
!l iCC
SIZ €
b!e droom!'. 'J bath home
Fam il y
room
wtth
h re p itCP dt n1n g r oom
modern k tt c hen w 1th
bu il t tns na t gas hea t
a nd
a• r
Two ca r
qarao e
Loca t ed .n
Spr1nq
Valley on a
bPauttlully lu ndscaped
tar q e lot M ~~ t h ts one
nnd y ou ve m •ssed a
uooc1 one
11 450

Moder n 8 room r &lt;1 11r ll n t he cou nlry La r ge 11v 1ng
room 16 )( 18 l amily room 17 x17 w tt h w ood burn mg
It re p lace R u r al wn lrr c en tral tl H.. App r ox ~ ~ ac re
of c lea n la n d Larqe con c re t e pa l tO ca rport SPe
tht S hom e now •
11 323

Remodeled hom e •n ctudes 6 rm s and
ba t h c arpor t
stove r cfr g
d 1Sh
w asher almost 2 acres of land and
priC ed for QUIC k sal e

at $3 500

~IMPLE PL E A SUR E
Nt ce 3 bedroom ranch
lull base m e nt w tth t f'C
r oo m lots at n ce built
n cab n et s W al l ove n
and count e r r ange co m
b tn e to m a k e a love ly
K1t c he n
lar gl
la n
dsca ped la w n garage
W1th conc r ete tlr ve
W 1t h1 n w alk1nQ dtS !anc c
of Gr~e n EIPment a1y on
St H wy 141 App r ox J
rn tl es !rom Ga flipoi1S
N tce netg hb or hOOd Tht S
ho me hits top car e
Owne r Wt ll he lp fi nance
P n ced 1n th e 40s
~ 4~8

4 BR

l 1 7 baths large LR f orm a l d tntng rm
com pl et e k tc he n w dh d•S P OW co m
pac t or
re fr~gera t or
an d r ang e
6
I r epl aces
qar age
new alum •n u m
s1cftng a nd storm w 1 ndo w~ Shown by
Cl PPOtntm ent only

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Res Tr tc t cd
bu tl dtng tot 1 22 a cr e n ce w ooded se t
ttng ctty schools S5 900

20% down - Campsttes 1n the W ay ne
Nat1onat Forest 5 to 8 acre tra c ts
wooded land good hunt1ng Pr •ces st art

*Joan Boggs, Phone 446 3294
• Norma Lee Kmnetl Phone 446 7 11 1

r eq $150 mo 446 7886 Af
ter 5 «6 4045

tr &lt;~ tl e r s

Unfurn1shed t1ou se
1n
Pomeroy $125 a month
plus utlltttes and depos1t

*
T Leadtngham, R:ealtor, Ph
* Eun1ce N•ehm Phone 446 1897

* Phyt11s Loveday, Phone446 2230

'l

plu s

S100 dep Ca1 1446 2851

43

2 bd r

J bdr house part ly furn

or

BY owner 3 apartment
house on approx 1 acre
L1ve tn one, rent others to
make your payment Can
be converted stngl e home
C1ty water, wil l cons 1der
land contract 675 1883 9 5

·~wt·

Call256 6474or446 4292

easy matter for declarer 10
force out Wests 10 of
spades After West returned

J brd house tn Plant Sub

21f2 bedrooms 1 a cre 6
miles
South
of
Pt
Pleasant Referen ces and

2 lots for sale 16 Neil Ave

BMR 139 -

er lhougbt about ways of
1mprovong bis line of play
F1oally 1t occurred to
declarer At lhe possible
npense of an overtnck
Soutb saw an additional line
of play At tnck two be
cashed the spade ace and
lhen he played tbe queen of
spades and calmly overtook
wtlh Nortb s king' Wben
East s Jack fell Jt was an

ter 7PM

$4,000
41

wookshop garage fuel Otl
furnance or wOOd burn er

For Rent 5 room house on
St Rt 7 accept on child

J bdr house $250 Reteren
ces
sec
dep
Rodney
Vtlllage II Ca l l 446 4416 at

Lots &amp; Acreage

close to Rt 160
Phone 446 0390

J bdr furn house large

won the opemng lead in his
hand Wltb the aee, preserv
mg dummy's 1mportaot
heart 011try A 3 3 spade

Call «6 3897

2630

BMR 371 - Restncted bu1tdang tot
dtstrlct 0 6A of an acre Call now

I

'

call after J p m

949

Brown s Tr ailer Par k 992

332 4

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE -

SS 600
53 acre

LOTS Real n1ce camps1te
on Raccoon Creek
all
uttllt1es available, SJOO
down owner w1ll fmance

BMR 339 F - You be the tudge on t he value of thiS

~

R tO GRANDE

Add1l1onal

acres avatlable

Furm shed apt $160, 2 bdr
w a ter pa1d, Children OK
Ca ll446 4416 after 3PM

992 5858

C1ty, 5 rms &amp; bath, $175
mo $275 sec depos1t Call
Huntington 525 0391 week
days after 5PM 522 1735

f1ve tncks m aces and kings
1n the otber swts Declarer

41

Lots &amp; Acreage

15

55 acres. n1ne room house

F or r en t lOx 50 'J b ed room
mobil e hom e Rac. ne area

Sen1or Clt•zens 1 bdr apt
r e ntal
as s tstan c e
ava tl able Ca ll446 2745

Ttmes SentiRel

'J. bedroom t rader tor ren t

r ef Call 256 6015

'-------------1""'-----------1
r

older home and 30 acres near R10 Grande Owner
mvst sell

CE NTENAR Y
Good l BR S1.1rfN homC' W1fh lu l l
base m en t on Rou te 141 Pr cc d to :&gt;e ll now
SJ 6 ooo

EUREI&lt;A
8 u ld nq lot w th septt c tnnk a nd
w a tor can be used tor m ob il e home
$6 900

North South had no trou
ble reachmg gam e on
today s hand North s three
heart btd 1s the Jacoby
transfer whtch shows at
least hve spades and forces
South to bid three spades
South dutifully btd three
s~des and North converted
to three no trump g1vmg
dL&gt;c: larer tile opt1on of euher

1980 doub le Wtde mobile

home, 3 bdr, 2 lull baths,

NOTICE

LAND CONTRACT - 1969 M onMch l ?x 65 mob il e
home 2 be d r ooms part1 a 11urn• shed 4 .:~ere c lose
to town
$9 &gt;Oo

aod Alan Sontag

)97 - Gr ea t 1nvestm en1 Buy th tS dup i(' X tor
on l y ':Jl 500 00 flown Ow ner ftn11nc .n q rll I '/ 0 o A.:.kt n(l
prt ce ~ II ) (lQ Cu rr c;-nl r ent ill S 110 per un t

a or cond , good cond Call
446 2651 or 446 0876

UPP E R ROU TE 7
Block bu ldtnQ and lot can be
userl lor e tth er r est d e nttr~l or comme r c1 tll pur pose

By Oswald Jacoby

~ MR

- - - - -- --

N E W LI STING
Love y J bedroom rnn ch t or ma l
d 1n10 g wtfP i'lppro vPd k lr he n l u l l basem !C n t 16x31
•ng r ou nd sw•mt ng pool N ei gh borhood Rd
11 1556

Openmg lead •Q

BMR 388 - Well cared for home close to town In
e ludes family room WJth f1repla ce J BR s ltv n g
rm and more On flat lot $39 900

73 Gra nville, 2 bdr awn 1ng,

ran ch wtth full
b ase ment 3 b edroom s care fr ee vt n {Is ct nq l&lt;'l r qc
lot of I 14 ac r es c nllt odc'I Y
R 1042

3+
Pass

1978 Fest1val mob home.
3 bdr 2
baths SlO 000 Ca ll 256
9309
turn, 14x70 ft

N ce

Pas.s
Pass

1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3

to relocatong Call «6 9303

OFFICE 446-7013

3•
l NT

Soatb
! NT

expando 3 bedrooms 1973

For

Mobile Homes
for Rent

House for rent 1n Crown

divtston occurs ooly about
one time 1n three so ~lar

Call 446 4807

For Sal e New 1981 Fa1r
mont Mob1le home 52xU,
al l electnc 2 bdr only 7
mas old Need to sale due

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

Pass
Pass
Pass

East

automatically

spades diVide 3 3, South
would eas~ly make his game
With five spade lrtcls and

Middleport

brook trailer Cal1446 0952

Gen era l

North

and those four aces (ISO
honors) qwckly passed three

opened the heart queen U

Vulnerable Netther
Dealer South

3915

course, With only two spades

West

• AK 7 S
.A 5 4

tn l1v1ng room, gas heat air
cond i tioner,
storage
bu1ldmg on one acre 247

1973 Hallmark 12x60

42

Houses tor Rent

center Advlts preferred,
no pets, deposit plus
referen ce, S250 per mo

no trump

• A8 43

For Sale 12x60 1972 Oak

R eal E stat e -

11

+AQ

1970 12X60 Hillcrest, IIPOUI

2 acres on Floyd Clark Rd

m

1 11

+9532
WEST
EAST
• 10 64 3
• J 2
"QJI09
" 6 s2
• Q93
• J 1062
+J 7
+ KQ 108
SOUTH

bedroom, new carpet 1976
Cameron ,
l2x60,
two

peted forced atr heahng &amp;
a1r condtt Jonmg
Corner

ney, OH $8,750 00 245 5420
or 388 8349

L '&gt; h,l ped nn c h hn s J BR s I 1 bcl fh s IM qC LR for
m .ll dtntng c q u tpped k lichen d en 1 wood bu rn1ng
ftr c plclc es pn r t b.Hcm cnt n,1t q,) S hc&lt;ll &amp; I H qc cor
n c r lot !.59 500 - 1S 0 o down - 10 °o on b1 l 1n ce Ftr st P•lY m c nt du e ONE YEA R !rom C I O~ tnq ( 111
R A NNY F\L AC KBURN i' t STROU T R EA L TY 440
OOOH

...

NORTH
+K987 S
"K7

three bedroom, new car

wv

e- D 5- Th e

CAll «6 7122

pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x6-4,

Sts
PI
Pleasant,
Phone 675 4424

W Va .

Nice home near shopping

Overtake your winner

1973 crown Ha~en. 14x6S.

3S

lot

41

game contract Declarer, of

room, 2 garages fully car

" ' 000

N E AR POMEROY - I 1 ac r es 3 bedroom ranch
home Carport porr h and seve r a l build1ngs Onl y •
$'}4 000
l 1 1 .C.CRE S - Cool r emode le d 1 bedroom st6ne
hom e Ha s F A gas furnace Cedar h1S and her
closets lots of burlt .n Cilb tnet s ut r y room wood
burn1ng t repl ace Look s ltk e new 1ns 1de Only

PRICES REDUCED used
mobile homes and travel
trailers
TRI STATE
MOBII,..E HOMES CALL
446 7572

area

SRICI&lt; RANCH - Ve ry n•c e 3 bedroom 1'11 bath 3
yrs ol d N ce se tftng 10 the country on 3 acres Cen
tr a l a 1r and heat eq u,pped k tt a nJ large garage

Pleasa

BRIDGE

Sate

a.

3 bdr home, ktt , d1n1ng
rm,
IIVIOQ rm
With
ftreplace,
large tam1ly
room w1th woodburner, 1

Housing Headquarters

----- -- -

Professtonal
Serv1ces

Tara

for

two bedroom, new carpet

poss•brht•es 7A2 2239

- General
- Real Estate
--- - -----

1n

New 3 bdr house W1fh
garage and fu l l basement

216 E. Second Street
RO B E RT S
CO N
STRUCTI ON CO In c Out

T V se r v .ce ca l s Cal l 992
677 6 or 992 2034 Also used
col or T V tor sa le

tor

VIR G 1L B. s R. k

23

Will d o cust om sav-. ng
N orth of R ac 1ne on Ca rm el
R d James R Par so ns

Bulldmgs

located

Estates, Club House and
POOl provoleges, $75,000
firm Kyger Creek School
DIStroct Shown by appt
only 367 7835

7 room house and acreage
Orlvmg d1stance to mines
or Athens on 51 Rt 143

school

4 Bdr spilt

kitchen, lg lamlly rm , 2'11

acreage for

from

Homes for Sale

baths,

sale, 3 or 4 bdrs , fully car
peted, 2 barns, 379 2258 or
379 2343, after 6PM

Acros s

31

Po me

level, living room/ d1n1ng
room combination, eat tn

$30,000 firm 992 3935

Real Estate -

614 245 55 15

92 41

NEW CABIN or small
home, completely fur
niShed S3900 Call -1-46 0390

House wtfh

12, 1981

BY OWNER

central

Do ze r wo r k done by ho u r or
tOb Fr ee es t•mates Phone

245

percent loan

Phone 304 675 611 15

446 9638

Ca l l

Homos for Sale

Phone 304 895 3540

heat &amp; a~r, full basement
w1th garageln basement
Approx •m ately 3112 acres
located at end of street, 927
Brownell Ave , Middleport

-- ----

shoe.ng

9

acre large garage -40x30

W a n t to ba by Sttl 1ng m my
home Day shtlt on l y Call

H or se

31

Homes for Sale

2 bedroom house for sale

Do

D J s LA WN MO WER
RE PA I R
On Ne gh

E xc be nefits Ca U A r ca dta
Nurstng Home Coolvtll e

B~ owner

Beec h St , Alberta Backus

Real Estate
18

Very nice 2 bedroom home
Wall to wall carpet, drapes,
large lot. 2 gardens, 3 car
garage, 4 young fruit trees,
grape arbor
Full sire
basement S35,000 Can be
seen anytime, 105 Maple
Place Pomeroy Oh•o

on

Ca ll 1

304 576 2398 or 446 245A

R N needed fo r w eekends

Want ed
E x pert en ce d
d a trym an
1nt er ested
tn
w o rktn g wlfh and mtlk•ng
H o lst e n ca tt le S•x day
w ork wee k Se nd r es ume t o
Box P 10 In C a r e of P omt
P leasa nt R egt s t er P 0
Box 23 7 Po •nt Pl easa nt

Rad•oTV
&amp; CB Repa1r

Sp ec •ai 1Z1ng m Zen .th
Hou se Ca l ls Now ser v1c ng

fash•on and success Phone
992 3941 between th e hours
of 9 6

Free re n t
Will fur n1sh
ho use on f arm tn M ason
County tn exc hange f or
ca rmg of elderl y lad y
Pref e r
r e ftre d co upl e
Pl ease send r esume a nd
r efe r ences to P 0 Box 619 3
Charl es t on W V a 25301

P1ano tunmg and repa1r,
Love your ne1ghbor tune
your Ptano 8111 Ward,
Wards Keyboard «6 4372,

11

Homes for Sale

Ju

RIO GRANDE AREA Rt o Cen
1erpo1nt Rd ( Cherry R 1d ge ) approx 75
acres wood land fronts on 2 rd s county
water available Owner may help f1nan
ce Pr1ced to sell at S400 per acre
EVANS HEIGHTS A ssume 91h%
Loan - N •ce 1112 story home off ers S
rm s bath, basemen t c arport &amp; nat
gas heat Be the ftrst to see th1 S one

JACKSON COUNTY FARM - 106 aces
M I L, appro)( 30 A tttlable, balanc e
past~.;~re &amp; woods, n1ce 2 story 7 rm
home new ..ox80 metal barn, several

other bu1ld1ngs, must sell soon Call for
other detaals

NO TRAFFIC N E tGHBORHOOD
Re m odel ed 3 BR older ho m e wt1h built n c~ b.ne ts ,
s ta1nl ess s t ee l double s1n k st ov!C r etr1q era tor ano
woodburn c r 25 xJO qarage cou ld b e use d as a
w o rk shop A llf h150n 54 acrf'ol lrlncl Ca ll now L ow
S30
If 496
9 J 0 o LOA N A S!:.UMP I O N
N oth nq f ancy
OOih tn g b1Q but rl r r&gt;n l CUIC' and
cozy t wo bed room o:. lart er home or n n1ce s zc h o 1m~-ll
l or r et trees 11 h a~ ,, fu el ad fu rnlcf' fireplace and
cil n nlso be hent rd b y wood onl y A ll th son n 57
r~cre lo t a ppro )( 21 1 m il es from G111 po t ts p r1 cf' d nt
on ly $28 900 Wh a l a bu y 1 L1 11 tod d y
11 478

A LO V ELY HO M E
3 bed room s m cd 1u m to ta rqe I bl th s modern a nd
bC.JUltfUIIy d ec orc led ktt c he n &amp; cl tntnCl roo m Prlf 10
doors from d1n1nq r oom t o concr• It pr1 11 0 1n rear of
home Carport st ora ge room
8f'rlU 1tfully l and
sca ped l ot 100 )(300 A very lovr ly home on State
Ht ghwtty Call tor deta Is
It 423

3 BEDROOMS - 3 ACI&lt;F' M OR l
lobtl e home let x70 1976 Fr( r clom 11 l baths
ndeqJlnntng, lots of b u tlt n c clbm '" ' " ra nge •
t r1gerat or dtnett e se t A ~r con d t11 0ner and other •
Jrn•ture Rural wat er n1ce land t or Qa rden A ll th 1s:
or only $22.500
N 425 •
39 ACRES MOR E 0 1-? L ESS
dlab le pastvreland som e t 1m bc r p~c ntyof spr1ng
,ater 111 mtle frontage on Prospc( t Church Road
for full det ails
11 497
2 ACRES - 4 ROOM HOME
Ltv e tn one, ren t the oth er R ent now comtnq IS
Sl75 00 a month 2 ac r es of wood ow ned water
.. .. . ... - ,... ~
• 'lace N1cc m od Pr n kt tc hen All
of t ht s for only S23 000 00
-494

WATCH YOUR INVES TMf N r GROW

,.
•

:
••

•

•

wnenyov purc hase th• s 12 x65 sp1 c f'! nd span 3 BR, ~
11 1 baths Richardson mobtl e ho me l c nced •n on 11
acres of part1a tly clear ed la nd w tth 56 acres
ttllable Two ovtbuld•ngs Con e an 'ld log house) •
can be bought wtth furn1tur e or Wit hout Assumable

Call lor more deta ils

NEW AD

1495

i

�,.
J
The sunda

Times- Sentonel

w. va .

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Ohio-Point Pleasa

•

July 12, 1981

rness·

,.

44

Apartment
for Rent

S4

2bdr. unfurn . apt., clean,
good location on Main St ,
Vinton , Oh, sec . dep. Ca II
2~ - 5818 .

1 :bedroom apts available
at Riverside Apts

Equal

Opportun ity Housing . Call
992·7721
2 bedroom furn•shed apart·
ment for rent, SISo per
month plu s ~tilitie:a. $50
deposit No pets . Located in
Rac1ne. 949· 2875. Available

JulyB
Apartment for rent

Call

992·5908
2 bedroom furn ts hed apart

ment in Middleport . $175
month . 992· 5545 between 1
a .m 3 p m . weekdays

APARTMENTS

Fur ·

nished or unfurnished . 675

1371

days ,

675 3812

even ings

APARTMENTS
A ND
MOBILE HOME S 675 4130
Apartments . 675 5542.

2 bedroom a part ment Call
675·6020, 9 · 30 to 5.
SMALL

t urn1sh ed

apart

ment, no pets, references
required , 304 675·1365
One bedroom turn1shed
apartment in Henderson
$150 per month 675 1972

aner 5 PM

one bedroom
apartment
1n
Po•nt
Pl easa n t , Extra n•ce,
Ad ults on ly No pets Phone
304 67 5 1386
Furntshed

ALL UTILITIES
INC.UDED
TWIN RIVERS
TOWER
APARTMENTS
FOR THE ELDERLY
NOW RENTING
200 Second St.
Pt . Pleasant, WV

675 -6679
Equal Hou s mg
Opportun.ty
Furnished Rooms

4S

SLEE P ING ROOM S and
I ight housekeeping apt ,
Park Central Hotel
Space for Rent

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Ca ll
'1'12 7479
TRAILER spaces lor rent
South e rn Valley Mobil e
Home ParK , Chesh1re, Oh
'1'12 3954

- - - - -TRAILER s pace 3 miles
from town 1un c t1 on 2 &amp; 62 at
OldY , 675 3248

LAYNE'S FURNITURE '
Sofa, chair, rocker. of ·
taman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa ,
Chair and loveseat, S275 .
Sofas and c hai rs pr iced
from $275. to $695 . Tables,
S38 and up to $109 . Hide· a ·
beds.$~ .. queen SIZe, SJBO.
Recliners. Sl65 .. S295 ..
Lam ps from SIB . to $65 . 5
pc . dinettes from $79 .. to
SJ65 . 7 pc ., S189. and up .
WOOd table and 4 c ha irs,
$350 up to $495. Hutches,
$300. and $375 .. maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak, S649 .,
Bassett Cherry. S765. Bunk
bed complete w ith mat·
tresses, $250 . a nd up to
$350. Captain's beds, S275
com plete . Ba by beds, $89
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, $55 , ftrm, $65 .
and $75 . Queen sets, S185 5
dr . chests, $49 . 4 dr c hes ts,
$42 . Sed frames , $20 and
$25 , 10 gun · Gu n ca b ine ts,
SJSO .. dineHe chairs S20.
and $25 . Tappan gas or
e lectn c ranges, $285
U SED
Ranges ,
refrigerators, a nd TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon
thru Fr 1 , 9am to 5pm , Sa t
4.46·0322
GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES · washers,
ref rigera t o r s,
d ry ers,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave , 446· 7398

54

M1sc . Merchandise

' HAY FEVER " HOME
re m edy , trad1t1on for ce n·
tunes. •t works For com·
p le te 1nfo a nd rece 1pt send
today se lf addressed s Ta m
ped e n velope plu s $1 00 to
S R A Co, P .O Box 284,
Ga llipolis, OH 45631
For Sale 5 HP rotor•ller
l1ke new, $250 Ca ll 446
3375
Tappen harvest gold e lec
range, S 100, also 1972 Oat·
su n Call 446 8548
SW IMM I NG
POOLS ·
PRE SEASO N SA LE .
$999 00 INST ALLE D ! '!
Above ground pool COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED
sta rt1ng at $999 00 Prt ce m ·
e tudes pool. deck, fe nce,
filt er,
ltner , and 1n
sta llat1 on un der normal
ground condit1on
Free
s hop at home serv tce Cal l
I BOO 624 8511
O'Br1en Slalom water sk1
68" E:w.c cond S75 992
6330
Halt runner beans . $ 10 .00
bushel
P1 ck your own,
bnng your own con ta •ne r
George HilL Racme , Ohio

Mise:. Merch~ndise

Lawn &amp; garden tractor
with belly mower 8. plow 8.
cultivator S300 1 l!intique
sew1ng machine SlO. 1 iron
mangle $10. 949·27'79.
Gas refrigerator .
or 992 2689

CAGIM
• •, - -

Stereo componet system .
Phone 304 675·6800

I

r

TINKTE

(J

Most anyth tng used .n
Restaurant and store
equipment RADCO 304·
523 1378, Hunt .ngton .

Print answer hera :

ARBOR DUSKY FACADE HELMET
Answer How the milking c ontest ended up jumbles

IN " UDDER " CHAOS

1-::;=:;:;::=:;:;:=;:::;:=:-r----~-----;
M1 sc Merchandise

54

1970 Chevy 1/2 T pickup 6
cy l , sta nd a rd
Call 446·

~SUMMR:R

CONVERTIBLE TRACTORS
LIST

SALE

1- 546010 hp Elec . S tart
40" MOWER
$2848 . 10
4-5240 8 hp H a nd Start,
30 " MOWER
52147.20
1- 5260 8 hp Elec. Start,
30" MOWER
$2350.70

$1715.95
$ 1868 . 55

RIDING TRACTOR
1- 82212 hp Etec . S tart,
$3671 00
SO" MOWER

$3000.00

RIDER
1- 830· E 8 hp Elec. S tart
30 " C ut
$ 1325. 00
1- 830 8 hp H a nd Start,
30" Cut
$1195.00
2-830 B hp H a nd Start 80 Mod e ls
30 " Cut

$1150.00
$1000.00

$900.00
1- 1130 E II hp E tec. S tart80Model
30 " Cut
$1100.00

THIS EQUIPMENT
AU NEW
NO DEMOS

we sell

(.'l it ol 46 4807

is ions,Furniture
or a pp 1i a nces.
vtel•IIevage
2605

1-812 w / 50 " Mower, 12 hp . Elec. Start
1978 Model Was $2500.00 Now $2100.00

TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

MANNING ROUSH -OWNER
PH . 992-2975
210 CONDOR ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

HILLCREST I( ENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. ca 11446. 7795
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters.
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call446· 4191

Jackson Ave., 675· 1773

BIG discounts for c as h and
carry at Village Furn1ture
2605 Ja ckson Avenue , 675
1773.
AIR CONDITIONERS
sale pr•ced , all sizes in
stock, expert installation
available . Village " Fur·
niture, 2605 Jackson Ave ,
304·675·1773

THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675·2063, Pt . Pleasant. Out·
ch dwarf .rabbits S10.99.
Canary and Cockatiels.
Open 11 ·4.

15ft c rest liner new seats
and car p eT,
60
HP
Evenrude trailer SllOO
P arts fo r 50 H P Mercury
outboard Phone 304 882·
3664

AKC
Da c hshund ,
Pomeran1an an POOdle
pups 895·3958.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Holt runner beans. $12 .00
bushel , free delivery over 5
bUshels. Call 256·1752, Nor·
thup, Oh.

Two pomerian
call 895 3966

~
....o ......

2~- 9183 .

614 ·9'11 -2181
F rcezers
Refngeri"tors
Wclshers Dryers
A1r CondlfiOnl•rs
Al SO
R C" po sscss ed

Pr1ces
fiNAL

SCV(' r,ll
at G OOD

CLOSEOUT

OF S HRUB~
M .1 k e An Offer

Real Estate -

0

51

Household Goods

WOOD REALTY, INC.

Two p1ece li v1ng room
su•te, turquo1 se good co n
d1t10n 675·4302

Ofloce 446 - 1066
Russ e ll D. Wo(\d- Reallor- Broker
Evenong s 446 -4618
K e n Morgan- Rea Itor - Brok e r
E venongs 446-0971
Mose Canterbury - A sso c oat e
Evenings ~46 - 3408

Used gas cook range 530 00,
one used gas water heate r
S25 00 Phone 304 675 1386
Sofa bed, used 6 months
SlSO. See at 11 5 EngliSh
Court

67 Ford pickup truck. Call
after 6 Us-9153 .

MORRISON 'S Auto sales
Hende rson, wv . Phone 675
1574 or 675·2881

Used R65 Ditch Witch tren ·
cher &amp; 1972 GMC 7500
series Tamden axel Diesel
Dump Truck . 1·614-694711o12.

17 Grand Pri x, 301 engine,

air, c ru1se, AM· FM a track .
Very good car. Phone 304 ·
675·5075.

f;:;:;:;:;:;;::::;:;:::;~,-::=;;;~~~~;;:;:;;~ 197-4

John Deere 24T baler with
bale
kicker ,
Massey
Ferguson hayrack, 3 point
post hole d1gger 9 in. , all 1n
good cond Call 1·614·286·
2394 or see Tom Jones near
Thurman. OH .

- Auto and Truck
, Repair
-Transmission
Repair .
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m .- 5:30p. m .

1975 Dodge Coronet 2 door,
runs good Phone 304·675 ·
6545.
1980 200SX Datsun, ex ·
ce lle nt condit1on , loaded,
$6,100.00 Call304-675·5090.
1970 MU STANG , in good
shape, 304 ·882·2195.

992·5682

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOFING

t969 Plymouth GTX G .C
213 Oak Street, New Haven,
Phone 304·882-2377

. 10(1

• I· I'WOdf•/IIHf
• F r Pf ' t''

Trucks lor Sale .

• JII,•r '

Real Estate

General

Jim owen &amp; Co. Inc.
REALTOR
906A East State St .
Athens, Oh .
Ph . 594-3543
A· I Approx 18 AC m / 1
in Pomeroy Located on
North Sl tUSt off L1n
coin Hill
Sewer and
water ava1lable Owner
financ ing pOSS ibl e
A· 2 Approx I Ac 1n
town . Great loca t1 on for
commercial usc on St
Rt . 33 and Rt
7
Possible owne r f•na n
c ing.
A·l Approx 3 1 1 Ac 1n
town conSISting of ll
lots, city water and
se-wer
available
possible owner finan

Cing.

Bob &amp; 1&lt; itty Landrum
•
696-1082
llalph or Vickie Coe
7f7-2096
Paul Perry-797-ZZBO
Zelia Pologholf'-593SZU
. llrlgitte·Lovsey-797·
ZUI

e

Experience
c;;reg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·3·1 mo.

LOOKING FOR A HOUSE TO RENn GIVE US A CALL
•

INC~
Gall

Sizes
"' From 30x30"
SMALL

Utility Buildings
.- '

Sizes lrom 4x6 to '12x40

1976 Jeep Renevade. CJ -5,
V·8 engine, 3 spd, trans,
$2800. Call446-4907 .
74 .

Motorcycles

1975 Honda 750 many extras, gd. cond. Call 446·0648
·after6PM
Must sell. 1975 Honda, low
mileage, exc. cond., ex·
tras. Caii446·27U.

CENTENARY - Three bedrooms, 110
bath ra nch . Cozy family roomw with f1 r ep lace
You'll love this fr1endly neig hborhood lUSt a few
m1nules fro m Galllpoi •S Near ly one hall ac r e leve l
la wn Shade tr ees C•ty sc hools

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636

Camper for sale. 'I• mile
from high school on 124,
Recine, Ohio. Call
anytime. 949-2244 .
1979 American Traveler .
27' . Self contained, bUilt in
stereo &amp; tape deck. Call
61H92-3304.

s

uoo

All types of roof work,

new or repatr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and patnhng;
All work guaranteed .
Free Est. mates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949 ' 2862
949·2160
2. 4· tfc

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446·4208

STUCCO • PLASTERING
te~tured
ceilings, com·
mercia! and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.
SANDERS
CON ·
TRACT I NG, Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446-2787 .
CAPTAIN
STEEMER
pet Cle~ing
featuredCar·
by
HeHelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call446-2107.
Cabinets.
WOODSHOP
picnic
table.s,
porch
swings, most wood products. 101 Court St., Gallipolis.
Call446-2572.

Motorcycle 2 Honda Trail
90S, 1 runs good, SJOO. both.
Phone 304-882-366-4.

PAl NTI NG · Interior and
exterior , plumbing,
roofing, -some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp . Call 388·9652.

1978 Odyssey, good · con·
dillon . Phone 304·675-5173.
1977 Kawasaki KZ 1000. ex·
cellent condition. Phone
675·6810 after 5 p .m .
450 Honda, 1975
$.425 . 675·3135.

model,

1978 Kawaski L TO 1,000.
$2,000. E.Ccellent condition.
6 7 ·5 - 5 0 7 9 .
p
t
72 TRIUM H 650 moor·
75

Baals and
Motors for Sale

BING' S CONCIIETE CON ·
STRUCTION · Specializing
in concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio ,
basemen1, garage floors
and etc . Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 31&gt;7·
7891.
Hoover Swlepers repaired
at Empire Furniture. 842
Second Ave, Gallipolis, OH .
Interior and Exterior pain·
tlng, trailor roots, and dry
wall SIB and up, 15 yrs. e•·
perlence . Free est. Call446l562.
Ashworth Installment Ser·
vl'ce .
Carpet, vinyl,
ceramic Ill~ floor tile, for·
mica counter tops, all work
guaranteeed. Caii446-B019 .
Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Fr.ee estimates, reasonable
rates. Scolhguard, 992-6309.

RINGLE ' S
SERVICE:
Complete
building,
remodeling, repairing,
1979 Starcralt fiberglass large or small jobs done ef·
boat, skis and accessories. flclently. Phone 675·2088 or
90. h.p. · used bary little. 675-4560.
$4,500. 9'12-6272 after 5.
LOCKSMITH
Service .
Resldeptial, automotive.
Emergency serYice . Call
882·2079.

Susan Gilliam, Assoc. 245·5208

CONTINIOUS no leak guttering, custom made for
your horrie. For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS -GUTTER
AND, DOQR. 614-698-8205.

T HREE NEW HOMES
DE S , , o ~EDWITH YOUR FAMILY
IN MIND!
•Green Acres Subdivision
•Three Bedrooms
•2 Full Baths

O.J . WHITE ROAD - US,!IOO -· B r1ck , co lon1 a l ran
Ch, 3 BR , 2 full baths . Fully equipped kitchen, lo ts ot
cabinets, dining a rea Bea u r1ful plus h carpet
Drapes, ftreplace , 2 ca r garage Picnsant cou ntry
surroundings .
DOWN BY THE OHIO . . Exce pt :onal home I 249
sq . ft . beautifully decora te-d hvtnq area pl~s 'tuH
b~s.e ment Only 4 years old. 3 bed roo m s. form a l
dmmg, k1tchen has rang e, refn ~erillor, sn~ck bar
b~tcher block coonter top . Fully ca rpe ted excep1
kttchen . Wood dec k. Over an ac re Wtth r 1ve r tron
tage. $39,900. FIRST AD!

•Heat Pump, Cen. Air
•Energy Saving Construction
•Equipped Kitchen
•Finished Garage
•Full Basement

NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD - $24 ooo
., BR 1
·
'
" lot r ame
W1th Vt n YI St' d 'mg tust
out si de c tty
La rge
th
oardenspace.
wt

•City Schools.
r'
•You Choose Carpet Colors

GALLIPOLIS - 520,000 - Buy this 3 BR 2 t
land contract wlth S2.:SOQ. down pa y me n't ~r: ~n
9·
lot. Goodcond. lmmedtate possession

•FHA/VA and Conventional Financing
•Priced From 556,000
Ot l i ( Hif'l 1l Ctli 't f00 Open s ra irw;fy
qracc~ Irani cntrr~nce Form~ll d1n 1nq , larqc LR, J
BRs . 'J bMhs, full bAsement with flrcp lt~cc neW
root , &lt;'l lum.num S1d1ng, natural qas furnace 0~ cor
nn !QI IIlC Jty S&lt;tJ ,OOU F 1r s tad
.

IN CITY - S26,000 - Home plu s income 3 BR
frame home plus 3 room and bath
·
Great wa Y t o oe t s 1arted with rental prope
• garty
ra geIV ap r
515 000
'r
B
1
eat· in kitc he'n, 1• :· ac~~s ~Y~~ ~
1ce C?un] ry .~ urroundmgs

I&lt; EAR BETHEl ROAD -

" HOMI OF IHt Wtfi&lt;" - Owne rhasqivc nthis
ho me te nd e r 1ov m9 G'l re and 11 shows 3 BR raf'lch
h~S lilrQc fam ily room, fireplace, buil1 in boOk ca~
l: ilt •n k1 tc hc n W1lh range and retriQ Fenced b~ck
Yi'lrd w.' th bcautlfu! I lowers, shrubbery and garden
Few mtll'S from ci ty S4J,500 . FIRST AOl
·
'

RIO GIIANDE - UO,OOO - Within walkltiQ distance
of Rio Gra nde College. GoOd Investment tor colleve
student,-IIUY' Insteed ~f paying rentl · Nlc~ 2,BR, 1'12
baths, formal &lt;!lnlng, Williamson fc!rced air ·furnace; Garage . Ga•del1space.

~ar~~ J~~rs-'Nn:'··
,

.... 1·
;

,,

•

,1

VAC!!'l':J.ON. HOME - 19?6' Lincoln Pa rk · 10x50~
·rilabole ~elm" an rented lot over look ong the Oh io and
Kanawha River. Fully lurnls~ed . S5,000. '

.

'

'

'

FA_IIM r-' 164.900 - Six lljll~s from R io Grande. Nice
• 3 Bll frame home has vonyl siding 2 ba_ths 1 11
basement, l car garage, «) acr., most'ly t· b~
2,02S lb. tObacco bose. Great family' home. , '": er.

·SEltTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
• Water
• Gas
• Electric • Sewer
Lines Installed.
Ph. 367-7560

~========::.=~
Frank RoseConst.Co.
Remodeling repair, new
construction, all types.
Free estimates. all work
fully
guaranteed .
Res1dentia 1, com mer ·
cial, industrial and min·
ing, electnc work.
MSHA Cert,

D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
Home Improvements,
room additions, Siding,
electrical &amp; air condi ·
tioning, and Insurance
claim reports .
Guaranteed work. Free
Estimate . 446-3407.

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding. 30
years experlent e. Free
estimates. Remodeling .
Call 388-9857 .

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, call675·1582.

1977 Handa CB SSOK, 4 cyl .,
7000 miles. Phone 304-675·
2832.

REESE TRENCHING

446·4627

197 360 Honda
m lie~,
excellent condition $795.
,Phone 304-675· 3995.

:=:::::;:;:;:;::::::~t:=========:i cycle, phone 30.-675·1751.

NEW LI STIN G - '1 or J bedroom cot
tage overtoo k•ng th e Oh10 R1ver Coo l
and com for tab le
16'x25' deta c hed
qaraqe All lor only $17,000 00

YOU HA VE MADE Sl.OOO 00 by wa1hnq
lor th• S l ldo.. e newt mob il e homC
SIIUM ted on I(XJ')(200 ' lot near Tycoon
L&lt;lkc Ide al wee ke nde r . permanent or
w mm er home
PICC r educed to
1 ACRE LOT toca ted along Kemper S6.SOOOO Bc n c r sceth lsone today••
Hollow Rd Rura l water availi!bl e
S4 ,000 00
] tU DROOM . 1
year old modern
home . Situated n tong Upper R •ver Rd,
CrC'c k
Sc hoo l
01Sir1 c t .
MOBILE HOM E IN VINrON , has en K yqcr
tr ancC' tot, l bedrooms, 'l bedrooms l ovC' rlook•nQ lhC' beau t•ful Oh•o R•vrr
bilths . w •th carpor t r~nd covered porch rtnd Pr •ccd for only S45.000 DO
All tor $25.000 00
' REAL BUY IN VINTON
2
FOR R E N r - 'l b&lt;'droom apa rt men t bccl roorn horne Situ a ted a long Rt 60,
ad tac e nt to QOif course Re fr• g 8. rr~nge FA turna cc SO' x249' lot, •deal beg 1n
lUI ru s hee! . adul ls on ly , no pets
ncr home or r e t• reme nf hom e for
515,000 00
2 BEDROOM HOME located on Chest LOOKIN G FOR A SMALL COrTAGE
nut St Leve l lot, near playground , ctlv betwee n Gall •pol •s and Huntington? We
sen11ces Pr1 ce S 17 ,000 00
have a n1 C&lt;' cottage loca ted 1us t 3 mil es
be low E ureka tor onl y Sl8.500 00
PERFECT LOCATION fo r sma ll
bus1ness or remode l a nd move 1nto BUSt NESS PROPERTY along V.ne St.,
Loca ted on t he main corner 1n a lso has 2 bedroom a partm en t a nd a 1
Ewington, lot s•ze , a pprox 56' xl70' bed room home •n rear All th ee re nt a ls
Buy th 1s proper ty now for 520,000 00
lor o nly S38,500 00
PRICE REDUCED on ThtS 3 bed room COMM ERC IAL BUILDING 1n down
home and l acre of land Situated 11, tow n Ga ll1pOI 1S, 3.795 sq . ft. of floor
m1 1es north of Galltpolis on Rt 160 space, rear e ntrance trom se rv1ce
Small barn .n rear contains workshop alley, a lso s ide door entrance Rented
and garage, idea l location tor tam 1IY
a partme nt on 2nd. floor, J rd story
P roce redu ced to $59,500 00
storage . Call tor more information .

Farm Buildings

l ' &gt;j) ~&gt; f"l l' llC "

tensive
remodeling.
• Electrical work
Rooting work ·
13 Years

25 LOCUST ST., GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

WOOD -REALTY,

hn1,1ft' '&gt;

ALL STEEL

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING ·

1980 VW truck diesel
engine, 40 MPG, .e:x cond .,
$5,800 lorm Call after 5 :30
PM 367-0694.

3 REGISTERED Nubian
goals. 1 Billy $80 .00, 2 nan
ny's $75 .00 each . Call 304
675· 2372 or 895·3952 .

Antiques

oF YOU HAVE BEEN LooK":'~N"G.Iolrln
co mb.nat.an horne ond bus •ness op
por 1u n. ry. we h ave •1 1 Loca ted •n down
town Ga lh pol• s n nd zo ned commerc1a l.
but w•th rc-s •de nt•al use Too N•ce neat
I 4?4 SQ II home W1 lh bU SI Ilf'SS bUIId 1ng
10 rertr Ow ne r will he lp l1nancc. or
!ln.=tncc cnt •re ly w•th 30°a dow n
paymen t Th•s 1S a q ual 1t y p1C'ce ot real
es taTe Let us s how •' to you todav • •

5 or 99l-731t_

TOM HOSKINS

REALTY

,R EALTOR ®

V. C. YOUNG II

V~ns&amp;4W.D.

73

1975 Ford F · IOO, PS , PB ,
AC, AM · FM 8 tra ck, tra•ler
bra kes, ca mper top, 57,000
m oles, $1950. Call446 3987

Real Estate- Ge nera l

L..J::! Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

;

ATTENTION
l iM
PORT ANT TO YOU) Woll
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec
tibles or entire estates
Nothtng too large Also,
guns, pocket watches, and
co1n collections Call 614·
767 3167 or 557 ·3411

'• ,llll1f'll,l llCf'
t vllf:''·

BOGGS

Sea r s washer a nd d r ye r
Phone 304 576 2638
53

f.

· ~ tdtnq

74 Ch evy 3/ 4 ton PU , auto ..
$600. Call446·4225

5 year old quarter geldtng,
2 years tratn.ng Meredith
Manor $1.000 . 1,100 lb
buckSkin mare $600. 949
2455.

HOml'

•t·' notmq ol .!I I

75 Corve t, excellent con ·
dit1on . Phone 304·675-4318

Livestock

- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and guller
work
·
- concrete work
- Plumbing and
elecrr.ca I work
(free Estimates)

~==============1~0~7~·~ff~c~~====~~~~O~h.~~~

1974 Super Beetle, exc.
co nd . $2,600 . Phone 304 675
2835

72

one ton chevy truck,
stake bed with steel floor,
new tires on front 48,000
miles. In good condition .
Phone 304-675·1386.

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

1973 Pinto Good condition .
PhOne 1· 30&lt; ·882 3664 .

CANADAY.

m

down Camper
&amp; port·a ·pot.

water-Sewer~
Gas Line'Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks .
County Cei'titied
Roush lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph .

1978 CUTLASS Salon 675·
2722 or 675·5571.

1!1\erebaerUse
Real E sta te- Ge ne ral

BIISSEll
SIDING CO.

•

Farm Equipment

Ge neral

REESE
lRENCHING
SERVICE
Electric

1967 Oldsmobile Cutlass.
742·2777 .

Gravely tractor w1th sulk1e
mower and grader blade
Phone 304 ·576 ·2720 .

AKC St Bernard Puppies 3
males, 2 females, well
marked Call 367 ·7594 After
6PM .

.

PH. 9~2-7201

· Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing ·
3S Court 51.
Gallipolis, Oh1o
Ca11446-3896
or.446-3080

f;::=======~·
INSULATION
Blown Celulose
lnsulatton
Estimates Free
GALLI A
REFRIGERATION CO .
PASQUALE ELEC.
446·4066 or 446· 2716

ROGERS
PAWN &amp; COIN SHOP
601 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., old
state liquor store.

675-4378

Excavating

DOZER WORK Compare
our RATES Phone 256
1560.
Dozer work . Small jobs a
specialty. 742· 2753.
Dltcher work . Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe
Gas, electric, and water
742-2903
EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank . 675 1234.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry Siden ·
stricker. 675·5580.
84

Electr.cal
&amp; Refrigeration

Fuller Electric Co. Com·
plete rewiring, commercial
or residential. and elec·
trical mainta lnance, also
on call. Ph . 446 2171.
Gallipolis.
Quaitly Cool i ng and
Heating Service Call 388·
9698
SEWING Machine repairs.
service . At.Jthorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992 ·2284.

WA oT ER
SERVICE .
JlNES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call• 367-7471 or
367-0.591 .
Mobile homes ' moved ,
lltenM(I, and bonded. 576·
2711 or 675'~- · , · 1'

'

'

AIJCTlOM SERVICE

kemeth Swain ~ Auct.
Corner Third &amp; Olive

C&amp;W
CbNTRACTORS
Speciahztng in Contrete
Roof1ng &amp; Remodeling
Home Improvements
EJCtenor &amp; Interior
Vinyl Siding and Soff1t
Res ide ntial and commerciat. Work insured.
367·0194 or 167-0417
or 446·6 1

Nu· Pnme replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Alumtnum &amp; VIRYI
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile hom e awnmgs
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Mill er Dnve
446· 2642

Free

SOLUTION

SUNDAY PUZZLER
I Bur~e s
7 Keen
12 Fall mto

d iSUSe
17 Impolite
2 1 DIVISIOn Of

year
22 Tounst

25 Conn 's
n eig hbor

26 Mhc

Harass
30 Armadtllos
32 Caesaf"s shl
33 Messy place
35 Epic poetry
3 7 lOok ft:.edty
39 Emerald ISle
40 Word on a
28

towel
41 8abyloman
Cl811y
43 Paradtse
45 Bog down

47 MIT deg
48 Stal10n
49 Sling
52 St rike
54 Slow ones

56 Briars
57 can.ng
59 Italian
money
61 Let It st and
62 S harpen
63 Spanish pot
64 ··- a clear
Clay"
66 Land parcel
67 Footllke

part

71 Beam
Poet

76 Rant

71 Soak up
78 Teutonic

deity
79 Hunting dog
81 Neither's

companion
82 At thiS place
63 Chorister's
goal

stopover
23 F\un away to
be mamed
24 H1ghest
potnt

72 Halt
74 AnguiSh·

Jones Boys Water Service.
Call367·7471. Of" 367-0591.

SWAIN

Culloden Nursery
Spring Sale!
West Virgini'a 's
" Greatest Nursery "
Beautiful
Canadian '
Hem locks,
Sea rlet
Maples, Sugar Maples,
Pm Oaks, Japanese and
Chmese Crabs , Green
As h, Purple Plums,
Pmk Dogwood, Brad·
ford Pear, Upright &amp;
Spread1ng evergreens.
All nursery stock is pric·
ed to sell. 25% off Rainy
Day Purchases.
All sizes of flowering
trees guaranteed to
bloom this Spring!
Destgn1ng &amp; Planting
Services,
Free
Est•mates. Nur sery ts
located 1 mile out
Charley's Creek Road
on the left between
Wesleyqn
Camp
Grou,~d. Only 13 miles
from New Htgn. Mall .
Trailer load del1veries.
Scotts Bluegras s sod
ava1lable.
l
743-9996

85

Light Havllng, tree work,
garage and basement
clearied out. Call anytime
245-92114. Ask for Roy, Thur·
m•n,OH.

We sell anything ftr
anybody et "'" Auction
lam or In your home. For
lnform1tlon and pickup
Nl"'llce call 254· 1"7.
Slit Every Slolunln
- . Nlghte17 11jm .

Ken Soles

68 Clumsy cratt
69 Steamship·
Abbr

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
~all tor estimates 367 ·7101

AUCriOII BARN

FREE ESTIMATES

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commercial, industnal.
Phone 882-2079.
General Hauling

446·2642

DENNY
CHAIN LINK FENCE

ACROSS

83

SWAIN .

•Le•nncox Heating &amp; Atr
ond iti on1ng .
All
ypes lnsulatton .
Electn cal Wir-ing .
Call 446·8SIS or 446·
4:30

- D&amp;F ELECTRICALComplete Home 'J 1inng,
Residential &amp; C-: nmerciaL
Licensed E 1e~o:rnc1ans
Guaranteed Work
446-3458

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery . Call 256·
9368 anytime.

•

81 LL'S
Home Improvements 1
Nu· Prime Replacement
Windows, Storm Wtn· ' •
dows and Doors. Patio
Covers,
Carports ,
Mobile
Home
Ac ·
cessories.
Free
Estimates .
691 Miller.':"""'- ----!

CAlL BETWEEN
tA.M. &amp;SP.M.
444-1142

1973 Plymouth . Good
runing cond Inquire a t
Rock St., Pome roy . S300.

puppt es.

Chow pupies, ex·
pedigree, black
llco•eam and red, male and
female Glenwood 304·762·
2035 .

Tras·h Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992·7505 .

76 Lincoln Town Coupe,
loaded, 32,500 actual miles
CA II 256-6029.

Furnished apt. S160, 3 bdr ,
water paid, children 01&lt; .
446 4416 alter 3PM .

63

aSeptic Systems
• Wa,ttr, Sewer &amp;
Gas Line~
·
eDumpTryck
• Trencher
Llcen5ed &amp; Bonded

LEO
MORRIS
•

69' Mercedes Bentz 220
diesel engine. Call446·4846.

Fruits
&amp;
Vegetables
Homegrown-sweet corn,
cabbage, mangos, etc .
Charles McKeon Farm .
Call446-9442.

Case farm tractor. Newly
overhauled motor
New
brakes &amp; clutch. Like new
i t ires all around . Will
sacrif •ce tor SSOO. 742·2502.

Reg1stered Beagle puppies .
Phone 304·458· 1552

HJ'50"- 2o-30 H: P.
HA 60"-25-&lt;50 H. P .
HE60"-4:HOH.P.
All IJiodels Avai" ble

1970 Ma libu 350, 300 horse
headers, slot wheels, new
tires, e ngine rebuilt (3,000
mi .). $850.00 form . Ca ll 367·
0672 alter SPM .

Green Beans for sale Call

sERviCE. .'

~Excavating

'

GOOD SOIL
DEUVERED

SANITATJON... , :

ea'ickhoe

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDI·NG

1981
Caprice
Classic
Diesel. Call379·2745.

Cub tractor for sale w1th
side
dres ser
a nd
c ultivators. Call446 1700 .

PUREBRED Austrailian
blue heeler puppi es, $75 .
304 675 3832 .

elnsYfalion
~ S!Orot! Doors
• Storm Windows
• Rtf11acement
· Wllldows
Free' Estimate ·
James Ke.e see
Ph •.?'12· 2772

74 Bonnaville, S750. Call
446-4580.

Looking for a house pet?
Poodles are the best . For Four 15,000 gallon tanks
Sale·four male, black AKC , located above ground at
,----------,1 Regostered $75 . Partially Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
~;r:;~roke Phone Ropley each. Phone 1 304 422 ·2781 .

BIG APPLIANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY

Al~tmimilm
, Siding

1972 Caprice Chev .. gOOd
cond. Call245-9492.

Puppies for adoption. Call
Humane Society . 992·6505

Lowes t pri ces on Bemco
bedding in the area Call
for pri ces. Village Fur·
mture, 2605 Ja c kson Ave
675 1773

Autos for Sale

For sale 1974 Ford Gala&gt;&lt;ie
500, 2 .dr .. hard lop Call
446·4410.

R1120 Luxmon receiver
with Bosse speaker JVS
turntable. Caii38B·B240.

61

.·•&amp;e
·. '\~
f

77 Trans Am , black with
many options. Compare at
$3,800. Caii446·11"JI&gt;.

s;=.:7; == ==cM
c;=
u s=.l=ca=:=
l ===
Instruments '

Times- Sentinel

. ,,,

• .a. • . ........... . ~ · -·

71

D-7-The Sunda

Seni.ces '(jflered

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

sso.

sa

Livestock

For Sale English saddle 4'
cutback . Call388-8270 .

AI&lt;C
Poodle , Apricot
temale, J.yrs. old, S75. Also
AI&lt;C German Shepard pup,
very nice,
Phone 4462310.

PICK your own halt runner
beans, sweet corn Happy
Hallow Fruit Farm, 304
AKC We im.uaners, 8 wks. 576·2026.
old, bred for hunting , out
standing 4 H obedience,
For Sale or Trade
blue eyed, silver beauties, 59
and parva 8. dhl shots. Call 72 Massey Freguson 135
George Woodward 614·379· tractor for trade for pickup
2597.
less than 900 actual hours,
$3900 Call367 0632 .
M inature Dachshund , AKC
reg .. female, Sl25 Call 446·
3548.

$2 300 . 00

UftAVI:LV
GREE N BEANS
P 1ck Your Own
t 6,00 bu
RAY NOR 'S
PEAC H ORCH ARD · -.
s m•lcs b e l ow Ga lhpoh s
on Rl 1

ll

EASY cred• t available now
to purc hase furniture,

NEED several itemsoffur ·
niture ,
applian ce s ,
televistons. Big discounts
for quanity purc hase
Village Furn iture 2605
Ja ckson Ave . 675· 1773.

~_f-~AV'INGS

what

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow
puppies . CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siame~ kittens. Call «63844 alter 4 p .m .

(Answers Monday)

" cs1erclay s

Pets tor Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 31&gt;7 ·
7220

AKI I I I I XX]

;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;J~91i61i98iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiii. .

We
serviCe

56

Now arrange the o rdecl letters to
lorm the surpnse answer as sug ·
g£sted by the abOve cartoon

I

!

63

Building Supplies

Mold ing, interior &amp; ex·
terior doon. Odds &amp; Ends
Shop, Rt. 1, Mddleport. 992·
6173 .

WHAi iHE 3ANKiruPT
&amp;OONIER'ANer
MANUFACTUR'ER'
WAS TRYINer FOR'.

[J [)

For Sa le
1000 gallon
PLASTIC sep ti c tanks .
State a pproved Phone 286·
5930 Jackson, Ohto

For Sa le 16 cu n ., s •de by
s•de refr •oerator, S175 Call
256 1427

A. •••

Pets tor Sale

56

Beautiful AI&lt;C Pekingese,
toy poodles c hampion
Building materials, block. bloodl ine, tiny , teacup
brick, sewer pipes, win- Pomeranians, shots, wor·
dows, lintels. etc. Claude med and Parvo. very
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . reasonable Phone 30-4-743·
Call2-15-5121.
8002.
55

~--

26' TROUTWOOD travel
tra 11er and ca mp s•te on
Raccon Creek Close to
Ohio River . , $500 down .
Owner will finance . 614 256
1216

Special Sa le! Satellite An
tenna , BUY direct from
mantacturer.
180
TV
s tations Ca ll602 622 2290

[J

0.... . I

Misc. Morch~ndlse

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER :
VICE, Complete sales, ser·
vice, supplies end In·
stallallon. 446-1324.

Unsc1amble th8se four Jumbtes,
one 1ener to each square. 10 form
tour ordmry words

992 - ~41

C•n n1n g tars, sew 1ng
ma c h1ne Ca ll 949 2241 a t ·
fer 5 p m
Sears Kenmore Porta b le
d1s hwas her Good cond .
992 3242

54

W .Va.

'

64 WUhered
85 Transgress
87 Extreme

69 Kind of bar
90Keep
92 Pastry tr•y
lOom

94 Identical
95 Clothing
96 Decorate
97 Worshtp
places
99 Number
100 Want
101 Party fOods

135 Maple
t36 Compass
pt.

137 Pilot
139 ObServes
141 Evelyn 's
nickname
142 Aald 1he
fridge

143 Opera

singer
t45 Chemical
compound

147 warbled

149 Vast age

152 Greek tener
153 Pressing
155 Flower part
157 61~

18-4 Ner\18
ne1w0ri&lt;s

vehicles
171 Lease
holder

DOWN
1 Doctrines

2 T1dy
3 Tantalum
symbOl
4Worm
5 Repltton

6 Merth blfd

118 Goddess or

7 Samarium

rtod
t23 Suspend
124 Oaf
126 Fugments
128 Baby
bringer?

130Respeo:l
132 Abound
13-4 ZOdloc eogn

body

money

38 Chck beetle
40 Fond WISh
42 Reg1on
(4 Metal
fastener

1 12 Dt sturbance
11 4 Make tl
1 16 Rabbit' S re!·

1 17

46 Falsehoods

811Ve
Tattered
c loth s

12 1 Btbhcal
weed

matters

story
12 t Exact
122 Remove

107 AVOid
108 Con secrate
110 Unlit
1 t 1 Lawmak1ng

49 Tally

169 Skid
t70 Winter

120TeU - a

29 Carries

3 t Article
34 Annually
36 Trade lor

50 Perta1mng
to the cheek
5 t Tellurtum

105 Platforms
107 Erbtum

healing -

104 Ship bottom
106 Goat

t62 Detested

168 Slaw

11 1 Scoff
113 Window
frame part
1 14 Everyone
1t5 Rupees.
Abbr.
116 Turbans
117 Legal

98 Pettl1on

10 2 Top of head

119 Regrets

186 Outcome

109 Devoured

t8
t9
20 L1ves
27 Stalfs

95 Corners
97 Chanty

48 Color

102 Entreaty
Diving bird

1tO Ob structs

tille
Abo ve
Invent

91 Redacts
93 Sm

159 Proceed
160 Extra

t 03

symbol

15 Extra tires
16 Weird
17 Ethiop1an

symbol
8 fiNpiiiCB
perf

9 The sweet·
sop

.....

tO Remains at
t 1 Folds

t2 Frerictl

sy mbOl
53 Urge on
55 USMA grad
56 European

58 De&lt;;oyed
60 ShOrt jacket

62 Massrve
65 Negat•ve
68 Male deer
69 Type of heat
70 F1ne pottery
72 European
ltnch

73 Pound1ng

instrument s
75 Grant of TV
76 Feels 1nd •g·
nan! at

77 Compact
79 Scorches

80 Lasso

122 Bard
123 That man
125 Bnt• sh nver

127 ExclamatiOn
128 Russ1an
plam
129 Spoors

130 Disclose
13 t Hmder s
133 Protein food
t36 l ongmg
sound s
138 Repulse

opposed

146 Evaluate
148 Mernment

150 Eye closely
t51 Memoran dum
153 Employ
154 M an ·s ntck -

84 Mine
exc:avauon
86 New Deal
agc:y
88 SmaM rug

156

name

Cover

158 Worm
tfi 1 World org
t63 C harles -

otllcle
13 Ga.'a neighbOr

89 Me1al

165

t4 Aelfgioua

90 Werning

167 Can. 's

-

'·'

t40 Tangle
143 AMA mem
t4 4 One

82 Domiciles
83 Surfeits

devoco

.'

Gaulle

- a rule

netghbor

··'
·, ~ '

.

~

�Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-P.o int.Pleasant,

Page-D-8- The Sunday Times -Sentinel

-

Valodin's tale, -~foverbiaJ· ~rags to . ri'che~' '·

i.liarp

@allipoliu

••
R~

.1 . Sa mut•l Pt.'4'Jl !tro

GALLIPOUS - Mary L. Bla zer,
Rt. I, Cheshire 45620, a few weeks
a go gave us a kind of vivid descr iption of how she felt the earthquake
which hit Gallia County. Then she
became ill , a nd we didn 't hear from
her for a long time,
On Dec. 9 s he sa t down and wrote
us some reminiscent things. and ol'
Peeps pr omptly mislaid th e
manuscript. The other day we found
it. The overall heading would be.
" Do you remember when ?" Then
came the a nswers like this: "A
shave and a ha ircut cost two bi ts ?"

DO YOU RE MEMBE R WHE N?
TilE STREET CAR ran down
Second Ave.? Speedy Kent ran
behind it yelling " pay-paa, pa ypaa !" Once their dog got a piece of
his trousers, and her mother had to
mend them .
Huge droves of turkeys herded up
the street to Warren Miller 's
produce house ? They were e1the r
dressed or sold on foot. Many were
crated and shipped to Pittsburgh.
Mary Blazer learned to wa ll&lt; by
imitating the ir "cow cow," " pee
pee, " and " gobble gobble."
WHEN THE Mc NEAI.YS, Ga rdners, Angeles, Browns, and Coulsons
with their big famili es were cra mmed into that first block of Second
Avenue? They were told to keep
away from the old foundry r Second
and Grape I but went anyway . Little
castings found in hug e piles of
moulding dust were used to play
Jacks or put on the trolley rails to
make ornaments.

'

~a .

asked if we knew where Willie Woo,
the Chinese laundryman, had his
shop. Tthis is in the nature of an interrupttion of Mary Blazer 's
thoughts drifting back into the far
past. We said no, but we knew where
we could find out, and we proceeded
to dial Frank Hill, Gallia County's
unofficial historian, who had the answer - of course ' It was the second
building on State St. back from the
alley which runs behind Price's
pharmacy. The first building was
Tim and Bob LeW!ses's tin shop, first building on the a lley whe re it runs
into State St. Frank Hill thinks Willi e
Woo left here in the mid 1920s, and
went to Columbus. Willie Woo liked
fancy silk s hirts, Frank says.
WHEN MR. EACHUS had a
" black-face" show on Mechanics
Da y ·~ Blacks shared m the fun , but
Mary Blazer says that down deep it
must have hurt. When the Wheeler
family came to town to run the
Op!' ra House? Mrs. Wheele r was different from the other m others ; she
was young a nd bea utiful and had
blue, blue eyes. When the band stand
in the Public Square was used ? Late
Sunda y a ftternoon Mary Blazer and
her fa mily put on their boest apparel
to go to the concert. When the river
pal'kets bl ew their steam whistles at
the wharf? Each had its o.wn distinctive sound. Mary's favorite was the

By James Sands
GAWPOI.JS - While mos~ the
" French 5011" dlii•d~~no~tx:~~:
financial lot at G
it was in France;
the story of Fran. cis Valodin is the
proverbial " rags
to riches" tale.
Valod in
was
born in France in
1765 and was
without either
prop e rty
or
Sands
education . His was a roving
disposition that had not brought him
much of anything in life. When he
heard of the plans of the Scioto Company to come to America he devised
a pla n whereby he would hide himself among the baggage of the
America-hound vessel.
However . Monsieur Valodin did
not reckon that it was that far to the
"New World " and his stomach could

out

hold

no

l~er-

·~~one•.1&lt;!'14~· 11b~.~inade ~need
_ hlit.ineand

He fuiuy (n.

a

troduced himself . to the . crew .
bj!ellne_lor the ,rretglibor's 1lcJule, .
whereupol• he became a ~r.of · 1be neighbor, whO wu out II\ Ilia
theship'sofficen.
:
· .. field, reckll!led IIY t!le ljpeed with
When the ship landed at AleXIIII' ''wbrch VaiOdin was ridbi( tbl!t tie
dria, Virginia, Valodin was then sold · was not on friendly terms, ~ ,
to a hotel k~ for one year so that the cradle and M&amp;ded for the bills. .
It was said on one· ~on th!lt
he could pay {~ his passage from
France. The !kQWing year, after when Valodin firSt went fishing, he
learning much ofi\merica'$ habits, caught the large caUish ~t aU of
Valodin IS fQJIIld a t Gallipolis. Not the residents of the Grant had been
much is known of his years at after. The caUish would not ·give In
Gallipolis, otherijlan t~ fact that he after it had jumped in the -pter for
was a diligent worker and that · several mi!Jutes. And seeing as~
unlike many of the "5011,'' he'di not the cat was too big to pu,!lin, y~Oillln
give up.
.
- '! ~
jum~ in the water anc!yeUt!CI-tollil
In due time he feU heir'~'r,tb the wife who had accompanied: him:
privileg~ of drawing a lot 'at the "Nancie! 0 Nancie! ·B ring here de
French Grant. His !ann was soon razor, de razor, Nancie, quick!''· i
improved by the planting of
Once w~n the state road .w~
nwnerousfruittrees. lnl812Valodin being laidl;OIJt, Valodin resisted ,t OW·
opened up one of the first dlstiUeries give easei'iientt even to the point
in southern Ohio and it was through sometiines of standing guard on Jiis
this trade that he made much of his land with that famous shotguri.
forlune . Soon Valodin had bought up When the ~d was completed and ·
many of the surrounding fanns that Valodin saw how much easier it was
belonged to some of the wealthier of . to get his whiskey to market, he soon

WHEN THE RE were SIX a utos in
to wn ? Mary Blazer's favorite was
Mr. Kaufman's, which steered with
a stick a nd sat high off the street.
When Vande n had a grocery at Third
a nd Vine? A penny would get a long
twist of lico rice. Everyone had a
garden, or a pig-pen, and some even
a n out-house.

DO YOU REMEMBER when Dr.
Parker made his morning rounds ?
He stopped at about every house
inquiring as to the state of health of
the residents. Grandma Henson.
who lived ac ros.'i tthe street £rom
Mary 's family, didn 't think much of
that ; her son was a doctor. When two
Chinamen had a ha nd laundry up
about Court Street ? Mary 's pare nts
would have punished her, she wrote,
if they had known the terrible way
she and her friends taunted the
China men .

ln~fltstplad: " •.}-&lt; · • • •
·. Vaiodiri met ,bia ~on ~QIIilst 8,
wheJ) after an eve!IIJ!g of card
DIAYinll and . drinkltig ih Ken~.
he fell Qff the top of the river bank.
He.wu taken tn the home"of lljle of
his friends. He urged 'the frienc!s tn
go and fetch his ~. but llllf~ the
son had arrjved Valbdi!l died, Many
Stmpected that Valoe!ilthad lddden

-t•.

his m~y and wtshed·'tii ~his son
where II\!) fort!Jile was hidden. If
there was such a fortune, it has

neverbeenff)Und.
,
Valodll&gt; had often said that he
would return to Fnince to show his
early detractol'!l how wealthy he 1Jad
become. In l'ddltlon it W!IS · his
desire tn die In France. And if he
could not die in France, he wished to
die on board a ship bact to France.
At ,any rate hi ob~ to the
thought of being tnm~'in the yeUow
barren soil of soutliern Ohio but it
was there that he was laid to·~.

Chris Gr eene.

theFrench.
·
Vaiodin tried to give his children ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;t
the education that he never had, sen-

MATI QUEEN. son of James
Queen and Mary Ward, received a
congra tulatory card upon his
gradua tion from North Gallia High
School. He sent President Reagan a
gra duation a nnouncement a nd
rece ived a card saying - " On the
occasiOn of your graduation , Nancy
and I send you our wannest
greetings and congratulations. We
hope your future plans meet with
eve ry success and we send you our
best wishes." It was s1gned Ronald
Reagan .
.

ding
them
to a fancy
French
school
in New
Madrid,
Missouri
(where
it
will be remembered some of the
original "500" had moved in 1794).
When one of Valodin 's children
returned home and came up with
some hair-brained idea taught to
him in school, Valodin remarked :
" Hem! Sacre Dieu! No use to send
children to school no more. They got
gal in de head ."
Vaiodin became quite a temperamental fellow and one time
when a neighbor had borrowed
Valodin's harvesting scythe without
permission, Valodin saddled up his

I

mountain men .

United States.
The crew will travel by car and
will visit Scott Air Force Base in
Belleville, lllinois; The Arts in St.
Louis, Misouri; the Air Force
Academy and Peterson Air Force
Base 1n Colorado Springs, Colorado ;
and McDonnell Air Force Base in
Wichita, Kansas on the trip to
Philmont and on tthe trip back to
Huntington .
Philmont is one of five high adventure bases operated by the Boy
Scouts of America offering a variety
of activities in different parts of the
country . Other bases are in Maine,
Minnesotta, Wisconsin, and Florida.

Philmont is a 137,493 acre ranch
located in the southern tip. or the
Rocky Mountains near Cimarron
tha t also offers training for Scoui
Leaders. has an active cattle ranch
and the largest buffalo herd in the

The bases
are used
each men
year and
by
older
Boy Scouts,
the young
women of Exploring and their
leaders, who attend from across the
United States, as well as from other
countries.

Also accompanying the local
group will be Levi Bias, Scoutmaster of Troop 63, Dillion Chapel
United Methodist Church, and Bill
Dawson, Muguyoh District Roundtable Commissioner, both .of Barhoursville ; and Micky Cameron,
Scouttrnaster of Troop 200, Group of
Businessmen, Gallipolis. The Scouts
of the trip are : Karl Epps, Aaron
George, Christopher Lansdale ,
David Tackett! Jr., and Don Meade
of Huntington, W. Va.; Philip
Haynie and Mike Haynie of Kenova,
W. Va. ·; Todd Townsend of Milton,
W. Va .; David Lemley of Proctorville; Marc Cameron and Gene

. .

WALTER PLANTZ, 13 Neil Ave.

~&gt;.j 1 ~1 ~

-:-"...

~

\I

' ;

~·

i \

l

1· • ' ••

_,J.isting For July 12
.

ELBERfELD$ IN PQ'MER'OY
__

..

.

.

.

.

.

.•

· .

·

DON'T BLOW ALL YOUR Cu,JL

WITH A QE ROOM AIR CONDITIONER

4,000 IITU

GE CARRY·COOL~

• 115 Valls, 7.5' Amps
• Euy lnllll11Uon
• 16-Positlon 1bermosllll
• 2 fln/2 Cooling
Speeds
• BuHt·in Hindle

ONlY
LARGEI MODELS IN STOCK

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE ·
MECHANIC ST., POMERO

r~O~'~R;o;ur;k;e;of;G;a;l;li~po~l~is~--~-;;;;;;:~::;;;;:;~~~~~~ij~~~~i:;iiil~~-

When you Deserve
· · th e .Dlei!III ••
We have it at Smith Buick!

Singer given 50-50 survival chance
MEMPHIS, Tenn. 1 APl - Country music star J erry Lee Lewis was
given a " 56-50 " chance of surv1val
early Saturday after undergoing

_'' WO!i.orlie ·

of the credit 1!111~ tlli! road

Scouts will travel to Mexico
HUNTINGTON - Older Scouts in
the Tri-State Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America, will travel this
summer to New Mexico for an experience 10 high a dventure .
The loca l conti ngent of 11 Scouts
and their lea ders will be headed by
Dick Smarr, Council High Adventure Chainnan . They will trave l
to Philmont Scout Ranch on July IR
for a 12 da y experience in the outdoors that will feature backpacking,
rock climbing a nd repelling, visiting
a gold mme and pannmg for gold, archaeological excavations, and learning the ways of the old West from

_

more than five hours of surgery to
treat complications !rom a previous
operation for a ruptured stomach,
a ccording to his ex-wife.

5"ALE

\Sears!

:;:;? N=al
"AGOOD r:;~
OLD 't:i.?NED ~~Appliance

1

Most Items II

reduc~ prices

19~1 BUICK ELECTRA PARK ·AVENOE

Kenmore · largecapacity washer

.
H ..l ~

2 ~ p eed ~. 5 cyc les. 4 wa ter

re ve t ~.

3 tempe renure comoma

Large-capacity
Fabric Master dryer
~

j J(J

_ FAC.TORY OFFICIAL'S -tAR .

.

1980 CHM
MONTE CARLD

~~~

1980 OLDS CU11ASS
· SUPREME 2 DR.

Air, V·6 engine, AM-FM·
Stereo, 60·40 seats, Rallye
wheels, tilt wheel. 18,206
miles. 100% Warranty .

C -Ml141

••

Sale Price

LIST PRICE $16,241

11om Whl[e

"·· '260 99

. _

D•e sel Eng1ne, a1r cond .• power seats, both sides, power door Jocks, rear
w1ndow defroster, astro root, AM - F~· Stereo with CB and much, much
more. Dnven only 7,427 miles.
·

Air,
A'M · FM,
Rallye
wheels, low miles. Several
to choose from.

.. .
AS LOW AS

.-

J;ront wheel drive, air
cond ., a.u tomatic, fold
down rear seat. Low
mile~. Nice .
WAS $6995.00

'6M5 .

NOW

..

1977
MOIDRHOME

-'

26 Ft. Dodge Chassis.
Loaded with equipment
. and tully self ·contaihed, air
cond ., c ruise, AM· FM

cle•ner

Mlcrow•v• own

Gas grill and shelf ·'"'"' ... , ·""" ""' '"

For ( (lfPt'luDnOISttry Pr o·
tt n • on ~ •- roo~ mg r t ~u rt ~

:.~1 . ~~

BIG BUY

H : s h C1 p e d bur n c r.

'339"

portClble base-

"'·'"' .., .,.. ,.. •.

L

Tape. Auxiliary generator.
Driven only 15,?Sl.miles.

R·41

''',H{'
l
. ',,Pt'c
urctl

~..,.;;.~

:1~: 4S

• Ask

CUT '40

Uprlgkr ', ....zer

Color TV

KeonmOI't 20 O·U•
rr Wh1tr

E•~rtr o n r &lt;

ft l rfr1

drt~q rnt ~

••••

~.~l"

uss.n

. ca1;1

count on

Air condltl-r

tur1ff . I'J -or l

p!Cturr

'391 41

"• -·2.

7.800 BTUH High effi·
C&amp;enc y modO! EER 8 7
U'f1 .l 'f

Sears

~Qft/!

lon not ln&lt;l\fdtcl In price-s ShOwn •

Prtce1 art c.1tatog pr1Cifs • Now on
.ale In our ··o ... "R" .and " \II" C.lt.l·
too wpplemenu

bch -ol these advertised
Items Is readily av•llable

for sale •• advertised.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
Gal6polis, Ohio .

U:Ain. ltOf:IUCKANDCO

PH. 446-2]]0 ,

.lbout Sun credit P'ttns • M•ny
Kenmor~ models .. nr av•t1.1ble In
,oro,. at an tJttr• cn•rgt • Kenmort
dryen and ra~s rcq&amp;.~lrt c~ ­

Most merc~S. M~llllbftl
tor plck·up wlttltn 1 lew dap

PH. 446-2770
(

two

.

NOW '"

, +~,!:'-~· E E ·r,o ,
,c

H,OQS,:;

WAS

SS49'5".

r:;l ROM'

.,rs,.s I ' '

Automatic', Long becl,'
special Bonanza · pkg.,
sliding rear glass;
'tone. Driven only . 16,927
miles. Sharp.
.

,
I .•

To

'61&amp;••

12.49-cu tt refnger~to r. 5.21 ·
cu. ft r ree z ~ r Aur o m ~ t1c 1c ~
maker. nook -up e ~ tra Whit~

R · lll~

-Mu.s t See

17.7-cu. ft.
refrigerator-freezer

r&gt;, " "'

, Air coM-•. AM· FM-st.,•·a"
power 1, wmdows,
i ver•·• ·
less than 25,000 miles.
,maculate cond .

;!o

·,

.. ', ....

......... ..·•....
... . .... '...·•...
' . .
'

'

'

!

0

I

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'

. ...
~

'

'

.

.. . . . . . . . . . ... . ·, ::.t
. '. . .-....·-. . . .
. .' ... .
'

'

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. '

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

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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