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                  <text>Page-lo-The Daily Sentinel

[

Area

Alvin R. Myers

R Dick ) M
8:i Reed
Alvin . (
yers, '
•
sville, died Thursday evening at the
Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville,
following an extended illness. ·
Mr. Myers was born in Meigs
County (Silver Ridge ) the son of the
)ate Silas and Callie Ridgley Myers.
He was also preceded in death by
one brother, Eldon, and two sisters,
Grace Rockhold and Elsie May
Myers.
H
be
e was a mem r or th e Sil ver
Ridge South Bethel Sunday School
had
. be r cutter
and
worked as a t un
the greater part of his life. He was a
veteran of World War I havino ser·
o
ved in the U. S. Army.
H ·
· ed b hi if Le
e IS survtv
y s w e , ona
Pooler Myers; one daughter, Mrs.
Cha I
M ) Pu h K · gt
r es 1 ary
g, enstn on,
Md.; four sons, Uoyd of Earie, Pa.;
Alvin, Jr., and Richard of Reedsville
and Bruce of Chester ; two foster
children , Mrs. Da ve Rittenhouse.
Zanesville, and Michael Wills, Bid·
II II
d hildr
h
we ;
gran C
en, t ree great
grandchildren four nieces and one

nephew.
Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville. with the Rev.
Walter A. Frost officiating. Burial
will be in Silver Ridge Cemetery .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~!~~.. ~~JA..~~~C:e!_~~~~i!_~~~~~g:~!:=~
homeafter 3 p.m. Saturday.

Theodore Saunders

present for the meetmg- Larry
Powell was absent-voted to hire the
two m en for the

po~ itions

na med in

the moti on
Snowden then urged the board to
consider the request made by Em·
rna Ashley who had asked for Iran·
sfer from a JOb as a Title I program
teacher to elementary- the position
at the Middleport Elementary
School given up by Mrs. Judy Crow
at last ni ght's meeting. Snowden
charged that Supt. Gleason would
not honor Ms. Ashley's reques t for
the transfer. but urged the board to
do so. The discusston brought out
that t~achers have a right lo bid on
the job left by Mrs. Crow. However.
the board voted to lure Ashl ey for
the position given up by Mrs. Crow
last night. Pierl'e ca st a disst!nting
vote.

Snowden then brought up a
requested change tn board pol ic)'.
He asked that the pohcy be changed
so the board president would handle
the agenda for board meetmgs and
that additi ons to the meetmg agen·
das by board members should be
placed at the tup uf discussion topics
at future meetings. Snowden's
motion lor the change went without
a second. The board will. however.
study the proposal further.
Supt. Gleason was instructed to in-

Theodore R. Saunders, 74, died
Thursday at his Sycamor&amp; Str&amp;et Fair.
In the listing below are the grand
residence in Middleport, following a
lirlgertng illness.
champion, reserve champion and
He was born March 2, 1907 in those receiving. honorable m.ention
Gallia County, a son of the late in the categones mcluded m the
· dgmg.
· .
Emory and Charlotte Wilcoxen ' JU
Saunders. He was also preceded in
photographY - Grond chornpioo . Kevin
Napier; reserve ctwnpion, Otinny l...eon..ard;
death by four sisters and two honorable menuon, OlriJ Spencer, Betty Arul
l.&lt;Jitis
brothers..
WoodworkiJII! _ Grand champion, R~ll
Surviving are his wife, Daisy M. Keller , reserve champion, David Rtce;
F razter
· Sa und ers; tw o da ug hters honorable
mention. Bryan
Durst.
Annual Flowen
_ Grand
champion, susan
and sons-in-law, Betty and Ray Bar- WoK: .....rvechampion, MissyCal.oway
ton, Berea·, Madona and Edward
SeK·Detenruned Stamps - Grand champion.
Robyn BameU.
.
Dudek, North Olmsted; a son and
c...tive Writing - Grand champton, Sherry
h · 1 Theod
J
d Arnold; reserve champion, Kristi Haynes. .
daug ter-m- aw,
ore, r ., an
Electricity _ Grand c~on. Don Hams:
Lorrie Saunders, Strongsville; a .,,.rvechampi,..,KevinNapter. .
B It·
Md
Genealogy - Grand champion, K11al Young :
brother. Terry, a unore,
.. reservechampion,DooiaCrane; honorablemenseven grandchildren and three uon , KalbyParker,ChrioDavi!,JoEUenCrane.
great-grandchildren.
first Aid - Grand champion, Shem Myers;
restrve champion , Melvin Van Meter.
Mr. Saunders was a retired crane
Hou..pl.on~- Grand champtoo, Betty Ann
operator for the Structural Steel Lofhs : reserve ctu.mpioo. Bedr Rile,.
Corp. , Cleveland, and he attended Pitzer; " " "' cOampion. Carrie Karr .
Bt&gt;dding - Plants
Grand ctwnp1on,
Robyn,
'ddl rtF trs
' t Bapt'ts t Churc h · reserve
Fishing
Grand-champion,
Danny Leonard
the M1 epo
champion , Roger Starcher, honor~ble
Services will be held at 2 p.m.SliDmention, Charlie &amp;mett , Jay Neutzhng,
day at the Rawlings- Coats-Blower
Funeral Home with the Rev . Mark
McClung officiating. Burial will be Divorces sought
in Danville Cemetery. Friends may
Four suits for divorce were filed in
call at the funeral home from 2 to 4
Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court.
and 7to 9 p.m. Saturday .
Filing for divorce were Helen
Marie Rood, Racine , against
Harrison Rood, Jr. , Rt. 2, Reed·
sville; Michael Meldau, Middleport,
form all head teachers that they against Loretta Joy Meldau ,
must be fully certified for their posts Harrisonville ; Sharon C. Haller. Rt.
by the !982-83 school year . Snowd en 4, Pomeroy, against Michael J .
objected to J ohn Arnott' s em- Haller, McArthur, and Claudia I.
ployment as a head teacher Owens, Syracuse, against Jerry D.
charging that he is not fully qualified Owens. Syracuse.
and should not be paid as a head
teacher. Snowden voted against the
board's direction to give head Lack of quorum
teachers until the start of the 1982.,'13
school year to meet qualifications.
Syracuse Village Council did not
At this point. Snowden attempted meet Thursday night due to a lack of
to address the media on his feeling s, quorum.
but Vaughan interrupted suggesting
Mayor Eber Pickens warned that
that Snowden address Ius remarks warrants would be issued against
on the matter to other members of persons who have outstanding fines .
the board. A discussion was held on
Council will meet Monday at 7:30
the replacement of the roof or a sec- p.m. at the Municipal Building.
tion of the roof al the Bradbury
Elementary School. It was agreed
that Supt. Gleason should secure Need replacements
bids on the repair or replacement
Persons attending the next
costs and bring them back to the American Red Cross Bloodmobile
board .
arl' asked to donate in the name of
Fra nk Casto addressed the board Jeff Thornton who is in need of 22
on the welding instructor's position replacements. The bloodmobile will
at the tugh school and Leda Mae be at the Meigs County Semor
Kraueter presented the board Citizens Center from 1:30 to 6 p.m.
material , presumably on the Wednesday .

Enwrl!t'ncy runs
Local

unit s

a ns we red

fiv e

emergency calls Thursday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
At 9 a.m. , the Middleport Untl took
Mary Rwnfield from former Route 7
to Veterans Memorial Hospita ; at
2:5a p.m.. the Pomeroy Unit took
Kathy Lutz from Route 124 to Holzer
Medical Centerandat5 :30p.m. took
Edson Hart from Route 33 to
Veterans Memorial. The Rutland
Unit at 2:42p.m. took Shetla Neece,
Route 124 to Veterans Memorial and
Racine at 8·38 p.m. took Jeff Grady
to Veterans Memonal

vocational home economics position

at the high school.
Money for the new roofs to be
placed on several buildings of the
district is being provided through
lhe one-million dollar, no cost bond
issue , approved by voters of the
district in June.

A carry-in dinner will be held at
the Rutland United Methodist Churchat 12 :30 p.m. Sunday to welcome
the Rev . Robert Rider, Jr ' new
The dinner
for all. members of
pastor,
and hisisfamily
the congregations and friends of the
church charge which includes,
Rutland , Salem Center. Pearl
Chapel and Snowville. Those attending are to take their own table
service. Beverages will be provided.

Marriage license
A marriage license was issued in

Probate Court to Patrick Allen
Owens. 20, Middleport, and Tina
Marie Smith. 19, Middleport.

USED TRACTOR
SALE
14 HORSE AMF
A uto, 3 pt. hitch, plow , mowe r, disc , cultiv ator
and b la de.

'1395
16 HORSE GILSON
A uto, mow er . blade and wh eel weights .

'1695

Will wt'lconw pastor

BA U M TRUE VALUE

Re-Entcy -

Grand

Tammy
Oa..V.- Grandchaml)ton, teresa Dorst.
TeenScene
Helplna At Home - Grand champion. Debbie

Brooks.reservechamplon,Ani)IRlldlle.
Teens Leem About Children - Grand ct.am.
pion,
Sheni Myen; ......,, champion, Mellaso
Scal"br'ouih.

aues To Manqement - Grand champion,

JohnBeaver.
.
YouantiYourMoney _- Grandchlmplort, Jobn
Riebel:....,rvedlampion,PattyPaner.
.

hom~s

each person attending

9~~sbe"instructed 1n correct beau·
w f cial, along with t~e latest
~:ch~iqUe In make· up art}stry .

Gra~

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aruf, ~afilij

Pom....,

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ELBERFELD$
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8
Brings you savings all over the store - Buy
boys and men's jeans and save 20%- Special
Sale Prices, too, on women's and children's
wear on the Second Floor- We'll gladly help
you with your selections.

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

National Bank Region Number 4

--...,-Cash and due from depository institutions .
. '. '' . '' $3,790,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . . ............ . ... . . . . ........ . . . . .
. ' . . ' . . ' . 3,999,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations .. .... .. ... . .. . . .. . .. ................ .. ...... 5,038,000.00
Obligations of States and political
subdivisions in the United States . . . ........ . ...... . .. .. . .. . . .. .. . .... .. . 3,937,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . .. . .. ... .. . ....... . 2,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock .. .. . . .......... . . . . .... . . ..... .. . 58,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ................. ....... . .. . ... ... ....... ... . 1,900,000.00
Loans, Totaliexcludingunearnedincome) ... .. ... .. . . . . .... 17,946,000.00
Less: Allowance ror possible loan losses . . ... ' ' .. . .. ' . ' .... ' . ' 268,000.00
Loans , Net . . . ............... . ..... .... .. . ... .. ... . ......... . .. .. .. . . 17,678,000.00
Lease financing receivables
206,000.00 •
Bank premises. furniture and fixtures, and
· other assets representing bank premises ....... . .............. ... ... . . .. . . 540,000.00
Other assets . .. . . .. . . .. .. . .. . .. . .. . . .. . .. . . .. .. . .. .. .. . .. ........... .. . . 578,000.00
- - r TOTAL ASSETS . . .... ...... ....... . ..... . ....... . ....... . .... . . . . . $37,71.6,000.00
Demand deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations .... . ... . . . ... ...... . ... . .... ... ... .. . . . $3,660,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
VI
Ill
partnerships, and corporations . .. . ....... . ... . . ... . .. . . .. . . . .. ... . . . .. 27,130,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ... ...... . . . .. . .. .... ..... . .......... . .. 2,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
.....
in the United States... .. . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . 2,672,000.00
ID
Certified and officers' checks . . ..
. .. . ..... . .... .. . . .. ... .... .. . .. 130,000.00
Total Deposits
33,594,000.00
.....
Total demand deposits
5,092,000.00
Totaltime and savings deposits . . . . . . .... . ... .. . . .... . ..... 28,502,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
Ullder agreements to repurchase ......... ... ..... . ................... ... .. 60,000.00
Other liabilities .. . .. . .. .. . . . .. .. . .. . .. . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . .. . . . .. .. .......... 789,000.00
- - - ; - TOTAL UABIUTIES 1excluding subordinated notes
and debentures I .... . .......... ·. . ............. .. ......... . .... .... $34 .443,000.00
Common stock :
No. shares authorized 16,000
No. shares outstanding 16,000
t par value I
$400,000.00
Surplus .. .. .. . . .. .. . . .. . .. . . . .. . . . . . ... .. . .. . .. .. . .. .... . .. ... .. . .. . . 1,520,000.00
Undivided profits ........... ...... .... .... ... ... ....... ...... .. . ... .. .. 1,353,000.00
Reserve for contingencies and
·
other capital reserves ...... ... ... . .. . ...... .. ... .... ... .'..... .. .. . . ..... 10,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ....... ... .... ... ... .... .. .. . .............. :!,283,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL . . .. .. .... . .. ... . . .. ...... $37,726 1000.00
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of $100,000 or ·more
1,828,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days ior calendar month! ending with Cash and due from
depository institutions
3,60!,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreement to resell
, 1,!!26,000.00
·! s
Totalloans
, 1 1~,57\@(lo;(Jl
Time certificates of deposits in denominations of $100,000 or more
I ,:W31000.00 '·' ·
Total deposits
33.327;000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase
,11:1,000.00
Total assets
$37,328,000.00

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We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of. this .s~tement or' r&amp;sour.ces ,Jill .

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liabllities. We declare that it has been examl!led by us, and td the best of our knowledge and
belief is trueand. correct. ..
PAUL A. BARNETT

EDISON HOBSTE'Ii'ER- DIRECTORS
PHilLIP W. KEU:.Y

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Orpnization.
·
John R. Hod&amp;et, preeident of the Columbus-Franklin County AFI.r
CIO, aaid Saturday thlit he plans to meet with other union leaders th1a

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week and reeommend that all union workers be lnatructed to honor

thea•

PATOO picket linelat Port Columbus International Airport.
Such a move

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to tlhut down conatructiO!I now underway on

Sunda

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FAIR'S GRAND CHAMPION STEER- Ohio Valley
Bank of GI!Wpolls purchased the graod champion steer
at Ute GaUl&amp; Couaty Junior Fair's livestock sale
Friday .lor $3.12 per pound. StaotllDg beblod lhe top
steer are (from leftl C. Leoo Saunders and Mlke

..me·ot

By KEVIN KELLY
· per pound for Gary Caldwell's prize
TlmerrSeattnel Writer
, st&amp;er. The bank paid the same
GAUJPOUS - One-hundred and amount l;lst year for Scott Elliott's
twenty-seven buyers paid $104,500 grand champion steer.
·
for 330 animals durtng the 1981
Major buyers were Ohio Valley
livestock sale Friday afternoon at Bank, 29 animals; Central Trust Co.,
theGallia County Junior Fair.
23 animals; Bob Evans Fanns, 16;
The figure was down slightly from Conunercial and Savings, 12; At·
the $104,846.68 paid for 283 animals torney David T. Evans, nlne; Harlan
Martin, former Gallia County
durtng the 1980 sale.
Fair officials .were apparently r&amp;sident and a founder of the Evans
pl&amp;ased Saturday, after tallying the . Packing Co. (now Landmark
Foods), seven.
sale results.
"With the considerable number of
Buying six each were Ohio VaUey
animals we had, this was a most sue- Foodland, Evans Eqterprises and
cessful sale," according to Fred Jackson Production Credit
Deel, Gallia 4-H extension agent.
Association of Gallipolis. Four
''It wasn't a record-breaking year, ·animals each were purchased by
but the prices the kids got were real Carter and Evans, McDonald's,
good," be added, "It helps enBaird and Fuller Realty, Century 21eotlrage ~e kills and helps aU the Southern HiUs Realty; Boso Agri·
youth clubs."
Center and Casey McKenzie.
Deel said the fair board and clubs
Five animals were bought by
expressed appreciation 10 the
Richard Miller, CPA.
buyers,, ~d · during , the sale the
Buying three animals each were
·audience ·was reminded to support
O'Dell True Value Lumber Co.,
thol!iellpslnessesb~:at~sal~. ,_ . Wiseman Agency, J .D. North
There were no surprtse.s in the Produce; Spring Valley Hl!rdware,
.amollnts ,· for the grand champion
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Empire
anlnia!S, and Ohio Valley Batik of
Furniture, Jinilnetti's Pizza, Kail
. G11llipolis !!Qualed its price of $3.12
Contin~ed on A-4

south.

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Asar&amp;sUltoft}]eaeeesstoad,.traf•
fie will be relieved on both Mulberry
Ave. and Union Ave. and a more
directaccesswillbeprovidedtothe
local hospital and several other
public facilities located on Mulberry .
Heights:
The 113 acres of county-owned •
land to be opened by the road
represents land once used for far. ming and cattle raising as a part of
the operations of the children's
home which was located on
Mulberry Heights. .
A schematic physical deveiDjr
men! plan for the use of the 113 acres
has b&amp;en prepared by James M. Jen·
nings Associates, Columbus. During
the past year the county commissioners, other local officials and
interested citizens having been
providing input for the development
plan.
Among the proposals are the con&amp;truction of congregate bousing
facility · near the multi-purpose
building, the funding for which is
being sought by the Meigs County
Council on Aging; a ·convenience
store, some low income public
housing, single family housing and a
county park with trails for hiking,
biking; horsel)ack riding, nature
studying and a picnic arelj.
The road construction will open
one of the largest exp8nsion areas
PomerQY
has had for many years.
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Cftpdit/4tes lac_k~ng- .in Meigs,
fl(int·d~dline· 11 ..dtfrs. off
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'POMEROY

·~

With

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uie , filing

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.'Where there is' ar

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f.

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~expired tenn·to

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. bers will, be

elect~ this year, there

,iWdJille only jl' 48ys away;· 110 far : $! fiJ!ell as. ~U as t~ full . term . is ohly one canclld!lte to date. He Is
Ule bas'~n qo, big f\111\ on \lie " PQetl~~r, t!nly~candillates '-WlllWnL,Buckl~y.
· ,
p~.fot:candldatea Wfile lor·@ellfll O!i . lu!ve Ri~. ',,Tiley are Jb!bfrt.. E. ' In thli Southern I.:Ocll) District with~
lbl
of eli\ICAtlon.!R ~Nil . F~. ,Midclleportr whO Is seekmg ihree full \i!nn posts to b\llilll!l! UWi
· County.
'',.if··
.~, '· eleCIICIItothe~red~nn~lng year, there is ,also only~ can-,
In l8ct; the Meip Oounty 841ard of • ftBed IIY ·~ unW J&amp;JI\Iary didate. He Is Gar}' Dennis Evans.
Eledmna.repor\a thlit there are J10t 11)1 Rabett 8artila ~ Pogwrqy, and , SoJ1!'; thflre are III!Veral races ln-

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bolroa

I Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the $ave-named bank do hereby declare that this ·
• of Condition is true and correcl to the best of my ......
~.;.... wl. edge andbelier.
1o1
r ~~ 'lltl:-,,
Report
Joan Wolfe
July 27, 1981

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$104
8. uy~rs ... . . . ' ' ..
: ·r ani·mal
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£.or·.· .3··s·· ·o· ' fru.

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99 MIU ST.

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By BOB HOEFLICH
Times-SeatiDel Staff
POMEROY - The final phase in
·the five year development plan of
the Meigs County Commissioners
will get underway this week when
ground is broken for the construction of an access road from
Union Ave. to Mulberry Heights.
The ~roject will not only open for
development 113 acres of county·
owned land in Pomeroy but other
acreage owned by the Titus Family,
Fred Crow and Frank W. Porter.
A contract for the two-lane access
road has been awarded to Shelly and
Sands, zanesville, at a cost of
$296,633.8:i and the beauty of it all is
that there is no costal all for Meigs
· County.
The final phase of the five year
plan is under a Housing and Urban
Development block grant awarded
in 1976. Meigs County Engineer
Philip Roberts will act as resident
inspector for the asphalt roadway
which will go from Mulberry
Heights across the parking lot between Veterans Memorial Hospital
and the Meigs Medical Building,
thereby providing a new surface for
the deeply pot-holed parking area.
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· EQUIPMENT _ Meigs· Cotp~ty Co~sloo ·
The rOadway ~i~ pass to~ right of_
·
a!Uda by
lbe beliVy equlpmeo• wblel! wt11
the. ~e~s · Seitior C;tw:ns Ce11~er
•Ja--IDtoadioo tbls week 111 the'0011Sinietlon of au aeeess road belweeo
parking adisr~ata, over ~he hiboulltto Ut~lon
~In p
......
r--"-av to...,
Ave., a
nee "' a
eeVDioatbe.llldMolberryHe
ome!'O)' ..... ael' """w · •;~t · """''" · rte
of 8' mile On Union
built by Sbelly .-I Suik, Zaaea e, wW opea for development we over
1:nu~there will be e~trance areas
lMaerea of aew lud for Pomeroy.
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for tra~eJers gpillg bollt north and

Statement of Resources and Liabilities

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

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OUR WEEKEND SALE

Charter number 1980

11_ _....._

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Ground·breaking this week
for new ~ounty access road

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1981 published in response to call
made by Comptroller ol the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.

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Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant ·

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, N.A.

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Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

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REPORT OF CON.D ITION OF

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.' By Tile Alleelated PNI
. Top labor offlct.all.aCI'OII Ohio are fiexlni their union muscle In support of lltrlJdnc memben of the Profeulonal Air Traffic Controllers

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Mlllord vonMottr

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.1o' 9. H
. . ·~~..,h St.' r'nome roy
H ,{. ,. h
Bob &amp; ..C.har/ene . OfMC

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Flower Shop

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THE PHOTO PLACE

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Admitted-Fred Miller, Pomeroy;
Mary Rwnfield, Pomeroy; Sandra
Ohlinger, Middleport; David
DonohO&amp;, Racine; John McDaniel,
Clifton, W. Va.
Discharged-Connie Grimm, Reba
Greene.

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--

Veterans Memorial

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·

Roofing contract. • •
(Continued from page I )

Friday. Aug. 7,1981

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u. lriclude111 Wlltar
Letart
IIIII )!Iii
Dell IIIII. 'l'llomll E.
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'I

1

�.I

Commentary anil' perSpective
.

When zeal
meets
WASHINGTON - Not to drop
names or anything, but one day last
week I lunched with James Watt and
found him an eminently rational
fellow. Then I came back to the of·
flee and found a great red-bound
notebook awaiting me from the
Wilderness Society. The society
think's he a bwn.
Mr. Watt, as the whole world must
know by now, is the secretary of the
interior. We have come to know

junhau

Jf

~imes- imtintl
A Division of

825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis , Ohio
16141446-2342

111 Court St. , P unwruy . Ohin
16141 !192·2156

ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
Publish&lt;•r
PATWHITf:Hfo:·ll'

HOBART WI I.SON JR.
A~sislcml

F.xecut1ve Editor
\ "'11-:MRI-:H nl Tht• 1\ssudatt•d Pn·~'.
\n,o ~p.;~pt·r Puhlbh..r~ lh~oot · ialiun .

l nla nd

Ha ih l' rt'!."

· • Au~. 9, 191r

Pu blisher-( 'unt '' •I I•

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:1 nd lh•· .\ mo·n• ·'"

I.FlTt:R .... nt· OPINI41!\0 art• ~•·kumt• d . Ttu•\ ~ h11uld hi· It· ~~ than 'lllll~o~"nt~ \llnJ! . All
1.-th-r:o. an· ~uh j \'l"l h1 t·ditina: ;md mu~ t hi· ~ il(iu-d "ith namt·. atlitn·~~ ami klt-phum·
11umtwr. "''lu UII!&lt;IK nt'd lt•lb'r~ 'A ill ht· puhh ~ h t• !l l .l'tlt 'r ' ' huuld l&gt;t· in ctond lil'k . acldrt·~l&lt;inl!
is.~U t '!&gt;o, nul fJ4'r~un;. llli&lt; ·~ -

Reagan"s
next target

and sighs. A massive petition is circulating, calling upon President
Reagan to give Mr. Watt what
President Carter gave Joe Callfano,
namely, the old heave-ho. Heaven
alone knows what time and money
went into this notebook from the
Wilderness folks. Their ocm·
pendiwn is verily a labor of loathing.
The secretary and his critics have
formed a mutual denigration society
based upon different perceptions
and different policies. Mr. Watt per·
ceives his foes as a bunch of im·
practical bird-watchers, indifferent
to the interesl'l of ordinary people,
whose purpose is to preserve federal
lands for the sole benefit of a back·
packing elite. The environmentalists
perceive the secretary as a monster
whose purpose is to ravish the
wilderness, pollute the rivers and
leave no redwood standing.
These are mistaken perceptions
on both sides, but the ' policy dif.
ferences are real. Mr. Watt, for
example, wanl'l to put a halt to the
acquisition of new national parks.
He thinks the available funds would
be spent more prudently on repair
and restoration of the park facilities
we have now. His opponenl.'l, by contrast, want to continue land
acquisitions. They contend that
delay will result 0in both the loss of
desirable park sites today and a
much heavier expense later on. Both
positions are plausible.
For a second example, Mr. Watt
wanl'l to open certain public lands
for the discovery of critical minerals
and the production of coal and oil.
He observes that the United States
now is compelled to import 22 of 36
minerals that are vital for both industry and defense . We remain
heavily dependent upon the Middle
East for oil. He argues that limited

exploration will not destroy the
beautiful West. · The secretary's
domain Includes two billion acres of
ocean bottom In the Outer Continental Shelf, of which only a
minute fraction would be leased to
the oil companies.
His opponents respond that some
of the strategic minerals already are ·
stockpiled to excess, that more
acres of federal land already are
available to oil companies than the
companies can use, and .that the risk
of oil spiUs form drilling plaUorms
presents a serious peril to California
and the Gulf states. Neither position

is irrational.
The problem, at bottom, is both
political and personal. Mr. Watt is
carrying out precisely the policies
outlined for him by his boss, the
president of the United States. The
petition lor Mr. Watt's removal is an
exercise In fuWity if there ever was
one. The secretary's position is for·
tilled not only by the president's
assurance but also by his own strong
sense of self-assurance. Mr. Watt is
an old h8nd at Interior. He knows
where all the bureaucratic bones are
buried. In recent years the environmentalisl'l have enjoyed a

'

series of sympathetic secretaries
who could be handled Uke ·teddy
bears. Mr. Watt Is as cuddly as a
porcupine.
·
Reading over "The Watt Book," I
see that the Wilderness Society
professes Its own dedication to
"balanced uses" of federal lands.
But one man's balance is another
man's bias. AI a time of severe constraints on federal spending, when
energy supplies remain uncertain, ·
my own feeling is that Jim Watt's
idea of balance is cl011er to the
national interest. If that opinion putS
me in the camp of the ogres, so be II:

' SIJ!II!"": . .

.

.

.

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tullldahi!!l"dto~hiablllthroughthelf-lu&amp;weet. . .. . ' . .
1'. . , Thatwuln_addltiOn~oHO.lOtaxcut. Sciillidi.lil!e,lhefet11llzer I use on my
lawn. Very •pplopliate too.

(

. ...

"'·

Jonathan Bingham, O.N.Y., a strong "whole villages in occupied Europe,
supporter of Israel.
·and the atrocities of the gas cham·
- Begin revealed hitherto.secret bers. The martian said, "Now I un·
intelligence information to explain derstand. "
his decision to bomb Beirut. He told
- Begin told Lantos ana Fenwick
Lantos and Fenwick he had known about the continuing exodus of
for several months that the PLO was Israeli residenl'l from cities along
emerging as a substantially dif· the bor4er with Lebanon because of
ferent - and more dangerous PLO shelling. He tiled the example
organization than the hit-and-run of Naharya, a beach resort with a
terrorist group it had been in the normal summer population of 15,000.
past.
It is now deserted, Begin said,
He said Israeli intelligence had because of the peopie's fear of PLO
learned of arms shipments to the attacks.
·
PW from North Korea, Bulgaria,
The prime minister said the PLO
Libya, Syria and the Soviet Union. shellings had seriously disrupted life
What's more, he said, the weapons for many Israelis, and used this in
included long-range rockel'l and ar· explanation of his decision to strike
tillery capable of penetrating deep at the PLO Headquarters in Beirut.
into Israel.
- Before they took their leave,
- Begin seemed genuinely upset Lantos and Fenwick did succeed In
at the two House members' repeated extracting Begin's promise to
expressions of concern over the raid , uphold the ceasefire In Lebanon.
and told them an anecdote to justify
- The two members of Congress
the bombing of uninvolved civilians . also managed to get another
A Martian landed in Dresden shortly promise from Begin that may in the
after World War II, Begin related. lorlg run be more important, at least
Gazing in horror at the sea of rubble as far as U.S.·Israeli relations are
that had once been a picturebook concerned. Noting that the inmedieval center of culture, the man telligence information he had
from Mars asked: "What bar· disclosed was news to them, Lantos
barians did this?" In answer he was and Fenwick urged the prime
told about the German air raids on minister to keep in closer touch with
British cities, Nazi ~estruction oi Congress.
1

familyC:;:;====A=rt=B=uc=hwa=l=d
experience, the loss is greater than picking up the "Star" every day and
they imagine and a part of it seeing what it was doing t~t was
remains with them for the rest of better, and forcing us to be. better
their lives.
because.they were so good at what
The reader, though not as they w~re doing.
emotionally involved, also .ex,,
jleriences a disquieting sense of loss.
Without a second newspaper,
Something has gone out of his life Washington will be a much .quiet
too. The mourning period may be town 7:. much tqo quiet fl!l' Comfort.
much shorter for the reader, but he
When •... President Kennedy was .
or she knows instinctively that when assassin&amp;ted Mary .McGory, qne of
a paper dies everyone is poorer.
tlie papllr'sgreat writers, said to Pat
There are no villains In the death Mqyillhan, '"We'll never Jliugh
of the "WashiRgtoo Star.'' It died again/' . and Moynihan said 'We'D
from natural economic causes.
·laugh again, Mary, but we'll never
For those of us who worked for the .be young again."
·
~titlon there is no joy IIi the
. U seems a fitting epitaph for the
"S"r's" de~.' . The joy waa · deilf.hoftheWastiington~r . .;
· ' ·

Berry's World

,..

,.

Think aga.a1lfnLy-"'~======La=rrr===E=wi=ng==
So you're pleased with the tax cut.

higher til

Bad news folks ; but, If y011 want to
cut YOUI' tax bill, aak the guy you
work for to lower your wages. That's
l\bout the only W!l)' YOII can expect to

pay Uncle S$!n any less.
What COngress baa ji!St aJiproved,
you see, is not a tax cut. It is a cut In
tax rates. Andthere is a dlffer~Cj! .
Firat.of aU, the difference mea1111
that your federal tax biU this year
will probably be higher - not lower
- than it was last year.
"Bracket creep"· marches on for
the time being, since tax lndeKing.
won't take effect until 1985. So, if
your income rises to keep pace with
inflation, you'll be bwnped into a

incut.

(~enti!llly,

thole IU _, p!I eta wi1l be lndeud to
take lnflallln inlo acC9'!11~ U.t

:won'thelpdii!Jrear.)
J

..

JII'OII"UilS and projeciiJ with. .. rlgbt,
1ncrebes In ~a-property taxes,
lncGme taxes, sales taxes.
Tax. cut? Not reaUy.; the new
federal tax pac:kage will just ease
the pain of the tax Increases already
prosrainmed Into the economy.
H you have been counting on a
decline In taxeS, maype that's
becaUBe of the way the newspapersIncluding · ours--reported the
Congressional tax debate.

Even II rour inc:Olne slays the
S8lll&amp;-lll1id); rm sure none of you
. are hopiJit ~ y()U!Jelf for
the SoCia!lecurtty taxes. ·AI If that
were't .~yC!IJ'll also pay lues
on the dlvkWnds you earn, the
· cigarettes )'011 amoke, the gas you
put in your 1:111' and the whiskey
During that debate, each day's
you'll despailtely need come April
15.
.
news would announce a new
And, In cue y011 haven't noticed, proposal, and each proposal would
all kind of petple on the local level · come attached to a billion-dollar
are t8lkllll about financing figure . Thus, President Reagan's

original proposal was said to involve
a f41 billion tax cut; one Senate ver·
sion would have sliced off $37 billion;
and, the bill eventually passed by
Congress would subtract $36 bill. Or
so some reports say; others say $39,
or $42, or $34 billion-take your pick.
But what do all th05e billion-dollar
numbers mean? If the tax cut is $36
billion, does that mean $36 billion
less than last year's tax bite?
Alas, no. It means that the total
bill wiU be $36 billion less than it
would have been without the tax rate
relief.
So-If you think you are pleased by
the tax cut-think again.

Letter to the editor..~;;;======~=On==Cl=in=ch=R=l=·ve=r
men!. In a letter to Energy
Secretary James Edw&amp;fds on June
23, Mr.Stocleman said this:
" ... I liJ'I!e that we must assure
that CongreA Is fully Informed as to
the pui'!M* .of the CRBR Project
and ltll role In the current strategy.
My lettera to Members of Congress
have affirmed that the Ad·
mlnistratiGn'a commitment to the
economicll and safe development of
nuclear eMilY includes assuring
that breeder technology is advanced
sulficiently to permit the private
sector to make market decisions
regarding ita future commercial
developnllllt.
"Projections of electricity
demand grvwth have decreased substantially lince the development of
the orlalnal breeder com·
merciallzatiQn IJ'Ogram by the
Atomic Energy Commission in the
early 1!17911. In light of this, the

A homecoming

Israeli raid on Beirut: heavy blow
Jack Anderson
t o U. S• support'"====~====

· · . Social Security Is not In near u bad shape ulh,l administration would
lead 1GU to beUew. That Is their preface to a dim Ulluit on the~
·whldl baiM!f\'ed ua well for 45 years. The Jirelddllftt hu III'Onllled a speech
In the near future.spelling out his plans. If you have been a Reqan watcher
u I ha", you will know that is only a prelude tci another arm twWtiJ)g 1 :~~~~~~~
I 1111 Ill Clllgreu. He will have to make up U. .. billion In lpeclai lntereit I!

....
.
·.

I

In a July 6 editorial you discussed
the importance of the free market
system. You also stated that one
recent action of the Reagan Ad·
ministration, which ran counter to
the free market theory, .was the Ad·
ministration's support of the Clinch
River Breeder Reactor.
A breeder reactor Is a ~ype of
nuclear power plant that .creates
more fuel than it uses as it generates
electricity. The Clinch River plant in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, is Intended to
demonstrate a technology that has
the potential to tap an . energy
resource larger than the estimated
energy of the entire world's supply
of coal, gas and oil.
· David Stockman, the Director of
the Office of Management and
Budget, has repeatedly slated that
the Clinch River Project does indeed
meet the tesl'l of an energy project
that should be funded by the govern-

By LoweD Wingett
Congress has passed tax cut legislation with aU the deliberation, wisdom
and foresight of a bunch of drunks on Saturday night. Haste and winning
were the watchwords of both parties and the Devil take the hindmost. The
hindmost are us.
I have no intention of boring you with a reswne of what took place in the
· Congress last week. President Reagan said the country took a new direction.
He is right. Now, instead of welfare for the poor, we have welfare for the
rich. Reagan believes that the money the rich saves in taxes will be invested
in productive enterprises and will trickle down through the economy until we
are all prosperous and happy forever after. The president still believes in
WASHINGTON - The Israeli air
for the decision to bomb Beirut. In
fairy tales. He forgel'l that the fat cats did not get fat by being benevolent
raid
on
Beirut,
which
kiUed
hunprivate, sources told my associate
good fairies. Rather, they will hang onto their money, wait for the inevitable
dreds
of
innocent
Lebanese
Lucette Lagnado, the committee
depression and buy up the pieces cheap when the economy falls apart.
civilians,
may
or
may
not
have
dealt
members
expressed shock and an·
President Reagan, England's Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, and
the
Palestine
Liberation
noyance
at
the action of Prime
Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini have one thing in common, the absolute certainty
Organization
a
serious
blow.
One
Minister
Menachem
Begin's govern·
that they are right and anyone who opposes them is wrong . They each will
thing
is
clear,
however:
II
enmen!.
pursue their policies, come hell, high water or the ruination of their coon·
With the blessing of Chairman
tries. In Iran the Ayatollah rules a country in chaos by using firing squads on dangered Israel's traditionally
strong
support
in
the
U.
S.
Congress
Clement
Zablocki, O.Wis., two
his political and religious opponents. England, its economy shattered, has
as
no
other
action
has
in
recent
prominent
members of the Foreign
been tom ·by unaccustomed riots in the streel'l of its principal cities. In
years.
Affairs
Committee,
Reps. Tom Lan·
America your guess is as good as mine what will happen but no one I know is
Like.
the
Israeli
raid
on
Iraq's
los,
[).Calif.,
and
Millicent
Fenwick,
expecting dancing in the streel'l when the Reagan budget cuts become ef·
nuclear
reactor
in
June,
the
Beirut
R·N.J
.,
flew
to
Jerusalem
for a
fective Oct. I.
attack
drew
predictable
protests
private
meeting
with·
Begin.
Tiley
I have two worries over the future . The first is war. The constant sniping
from
Arab
sympathizers.
The
also
met
'
with
several
other
of the administration at the Soviet Union does nothing to diminish my
prominent Israelis, including
worries. Some of our leading diplomats, writers and thinkers are just as significa nt thing about the latest
raid
is
the
distress
it
caused
Israel's
Foreign
Minister Yitzhak Sharnir
worried. The giant anns buildfup proposed by the administration over the
friends
on
Capitol
Hill.
and
Jerusalem
Mayor Teddy Kollek.
next five years, $1.5 TRILUON, leaves all who prefer peace to war aghast.
several
members
of
the
House
Secretary
of
State
Alexander Haig
There is no way that any nation can spend that swn sensibly. Rather it is
Foreign
Affairs
Committee
conhad
been
told
of
the
trip
beforehand,
another way to artificially pump up the economy, another welfare program
tacted
Israeli
officials
here
and
and
called
Lantos
to
deliver a
for the rich .
lengthy
briefing
before
the
abroad
after
the
raid,
pleading
for
In commenting on the state of U. S. and Soviet diplomacy, George F.
legislators
took
undisclosed
intelligence
information
off
for
Israel.
Kennan, whom I have quoted befoe in this space, says:
Here's what went on in the 00.
"I can think of no instance in modem history where such a breakdown of that would help them explain friends
on
Capitol
Hill.
minute
meeting Lantos and Fenwick
political communication and such a triwnph of unrestricted military
Several
members
of
the
House
had
with
the Israeli prime minister:
suspicion ... has not led, in the end, to anned conflict."
Foreign
Affairs
Committee
con·
Begin
seemed bewildered by
. Kennan is a diplomat and author who has served as the keystone of
!acted
Israeli
officials
here
and
the
extent
of
the negative reaction In
American foreign policy since the early 1950s. He shaped the Soviet containabroad
after
the
raid,
pleading
for
Congress,
as
reported to him by Lanment policy which has been followed through the last six administrations.
undisclosed
intelligence
information
tos
and
Fenwick.
He acknowledged,
This year he was awarded the Albert Einstein Peace award. Still active at
that
would
help
them
explain
the
at·
however,
that
he
already had an
age 77, his caution should not fall on deaf ears.
tack
to
their
uneasy
colleagues.
inkling
of
the
situation
on Capitol
The other worry I have is Social Security. Not only because I am a
Few
of
these
pro.Israel
members
Hill,
having
received
an
expression
recipient but also because 3S million other people's future is threatened.
of concern over the raid from Rep.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Democratic Senator from New York, shares my made public statemenl.'l of support
worry and is in a much better position to make his concern fell. Senator
Moynihan had this to say on nationwide television:
"This giant cut in taxes will have to be made up by an equal cut in ex·
penses. There are only two more places where cuts are possible, Defense
and Social Security. Obviously this administration does not intend to cut
It is not easy to write an obituary
thing. It has a heart, a soul, and a
Defense."
for
a newspaper. The death of a
mind of il.'l own. When you first hear
When Ronald Reagan was a candidate and even after his inauguration,
the news of the death of a paper you
he had promised a safety net under social programs. He then began to cut newspaper in any country is a
think of the people who worked on it,
holes in the net until now expectant mothers, babies, school children, CETA tragedy. The passing of a very good
newspaper
is
doubly
so.
loved
it and brought it to life every
workerS, veterans' hospitals, and many others have already fallen into the
The
"Washington
Star"
was
a
.
day.
murky waters of Stockman's Sea of Savings. Reagan's words when he first
became a candidate haunt me. then he was advocating that Social Security very good newspaper. It had some of
Their loss is incalculable. To
be made voluntary. He has since said nothing to convince me that it is still the best writers in the business. It
was
lively,
it
was
informative
and
it
many
it is not just their livelihood
not in the back of his mind.
was
honest.
Because
it
was
printed
that
has
been suffed out - but a part
Social Security deductions from everyone's pay is mandatory. So is the
in
the
capital,
it
had
8
much
greater
of
themselves.
It's hard for someone
equal amount paid by the employer. With the high wages and inflation, all at
impact
on
the
nation
than
any
paper
who
has
not
worked
on a newspaper
once the Social Security deduction is called a "tax. "It is an insurance rather
of
its
size
and
circulation.
to understand how persol)8l it
than a tax with your employer paying half your premiwn. It is hard for a
With il'l death many important
becomes. To the employees the
young worker to imagine that he or she will ever become old enough to draw
voices
have
been
stilled,
voices
that
newspaper they work for is family.
on the Social Security insurance they are buying today but it is Inevitable.
To some their newspaper is the only
But It is to these young and middle aged that the administration is directing should be heard by those who make
our laws and decid.e our destinies.
family they have. .
.
.
itll propaganda. Voluntary participation would end the program.
A newspaper ill 8 very,·human · And so the death is a wrericblng
I may be unfair to the American Broadcasting Company but 1 can't help
but feel the recent hour-long program on Social Security they presented on
prime time was administration inspired. They painted a gloomy picture. By
1990, they said, the average worker would be paying f5,300 Into social
.ecUnty each year. They did nohay that this sum would be only a sman percent of their earnings, as It is today. All their aasumptlona were based on the
praumpt~on that the present:rate of Inflation would continue indef'lilitely, 1

A death in the

.

Page:..-A-~

James }. Kilpatrick

some controversial Cabinet meffio
bers In recent years - Kissinger at
State, Cohen in Welfare, Butz in
Agriculture, McNamara in Defense
- but I cannot recaU a Cabinet
member since the days of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt who has stirred up
the antagonism that Mr. Watt so
manifestly has aroused.
It is truly remarkable. At the very
mention of his name, the environmentalisl'l succwnb to the gurgles

'fllpes-Seiltinel Op-:t:d

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Aug. 9, 1981

I thought I was corning home, to
visit my family, friendS and enjoy a
good party with no harm intended to
anyone. If the music was too loud, a
mere turn your music down would
have been sulficient, instead when
the Gallia County Sheriff's Department was called, they came in
pulling plugs on the pool table, pinball machine and the main electrical
wire to our stereo.
You would have thought that this
would have given us the message to
leave. WeU, it did and we were
picking up and leaving, but thiS did
not satisfy the Sheriff's department,
who came with enough reenforcement to start a mini war and
insisted that anyone that was not an
immediate resident of . Bidwell or
GaUipolis sliould get. In their cars

and leave, or they would be
arrested, their cars impounded and
a greyhound bus would be called to
carry us back to Colwnbus.
While we were going to our cars,
this did not satisfy the sheriff and
they insli&amp;ed on showing their
power, and before theyleft the area,
one member·Cif the party was badly
abused and sent to the hospital and
several othera were arrested for .inciting a riot.' ·
You are always told, if you are not
*elcome u,ywbere else, you can
always bldl home. However, this
was not the eae In Bidwell, Ohio ·on
Saturday, JulJ25, 1981.

go

Mrs. Cora Carter
226 N. VIrginia Lee Rd.
Columbus, Ohio

CHRIST UNITED METHODIST C:HURCH

Introduce•

Dr. Kenneth Cain Kinghorn

Reagan Administration has
The Project is designed to deter·
developed a new breeder strategy
mine if the breeder is a practical and
that wiU place full responsibility for
economical future option for
commercialization in the private generating electric power. Never·
sector.
theless, over 750 electric utilities
"In line with this new strategy, the from across the nation have pledged
Administration needs to move for· $257 rniUion to build and operate the
ward with the necessary research plant.
and development work to permit a
Without the breeder, nuclear
resolution of the technical un- po~er - like oil - will have only a
certainties that would otherwise limited lifetime. If we have
prevent the private sector from discovered only one reality since the
judging the commercial feasibility Arab embargo, it is that the u. s.
of the liquid metalfast breeder reac- should not have to depend entirely
tor.
on one fuel source. Especially if it
'' The current breeder program as has to be imported.
proposed by the Department of
The breeder reactor could provide
Energy is in total accord with this a virtually inexhaustible source of
approach. The Clinch River Breeder energy for centuries to come.
Ronald J . Getz
Reactor should be constructed and
operated - not as a com·
Chief,
mercialization activity or as an
Information Division
economical power generator - but
CRBRP
Office
rather as the logical next step in ..-------....:...._..:....:..._:..-breeder research and development

..

In other words, Mr. Stockman has
stated that the Clinch River Project
is a technology program that right·
fully should be funded by government as a research and development ·
effort. As a first-of·a·kind
technology demonstration project, it
should not be judged on
economically competitive grounds
nor was it ever intended to be
anything other than a step toward
eventual commercialization.

blessed him with an ability to minister in song and in word.
PROGRAM :•AUGUST 21, FRIDAY EVENING
7: JO P .M.-Preaching Service--Spe~ia I Music and Worship .
Or. Kinghorn Delivering the Mnsage.
AUGUST 21. SATURDAY MORNING AND EVENING
8;30 A.M.-Coffe Hour, 9: 1S A.M . Teaching Service .
7: 30 P.M.- Healing Service. Dr. Kinghorn Leadint llle .Worship.
Special Music and Praise.
AUGUST 23, SUNDAY MORNING
9: 4S A.M .-Combined Young and Sr. Adult Sunclay .School Class.
Dr. ij:lnghorn Teachinl.
l0:4S A.M :-wo~. •hip Service. Dr. k inghorn Dellvwl•l 'he Message.

At Cllrist Uni.ted Methodist Church,
1
·state Route 7.

Cli~per

AN

.
{H~l {;;;' ! ~,\/1&lt;

' . rltl1

• ,

,-'

( ll'

Mills on

"'

lid~,{IJ lfllh.TJ''t'l~'l/ltdkllt.'.~ .

.

-1 ! l llt hnt~rll Jttn! i1 r~ ~ m~l 1111~,· r. :lnt.:~'Ji. llfl l: A Fn~d , ur.,· ....

.

SIORI HOURS

Fri. Sat. 9 am til 10 pm

Lady's Fancy

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Hamilton
Wristwatch

CALL 992-3267

location.

.

.

,.

SPLIT

CHICKEN

BREASTS

19

·"

459 Second Avenue
If you still wish to pay your gas
bills in Middleport, you may do
s.o at Dutton Drug Company,
122 North 2nd St.
or
Swisher and Lohse Pharmacy
. 112 East Main St., Pomeroy
Otherwise, tot: serv1ce requests
or information, call us toll free
by dailing:

TOILET

992-5192
Emergency service after 4:45
p.m. weekdays, and on weekends and holidays ,is available
by dialing' the nu!flbers listed
in )::Our phone directory.
As always, we look forw:ard to
providi~' you with quiok and
.· · co~$CientiQUs. ~rvice~
'·

.,~COWMIIA GAS
' ofOhio .,

1

Mon.·Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm .

For Return of

1b more efficiently serve this
area, the operations of our Middleport office are now centralized in Gallipolis, So now we'll
be serving you from our office
there, at:

LL

!•

'

Today's highlight in history:
On Aug. 9, 1974, Vice President Gerald Ford was sworn in as the 38th
president of the United States upon the resignation of Richard Nix on.
On this date:
In 1831, the first steam locomotiv e in the United States made a run bet·
ween the cities of Albany and Schenectady m New York.
In 1898, Spain formally accepted peace terms endmg the Spanish·
American War.
In 1942, the British arrested Indian Nationalist Mohandas Gandhi.
In 1945, U.S. planes dropped the second atomic bomb on Japan,
destroying more than half the city of Nagasaki.
And in 1969, three men and two women , including actress Sharon Tate,
were found slain in a secluded home in Beverly Hills, Calif. Charles Manson and several co-defendants subsequently were convicted in the case.
Ten years ago: at least 13 persons were killed in rioting in Belfast, Nor·
thern Ireland.

Notice to
Columbia Gas
cUstomers
in the
Middleport area:
we're
now
•
servmgyou

The Lord has

a

, Today is Sunday, August 9, the 221st day of 1981. There are 144 days left

REWARD

from anew

•

fr the year.

rr=====================~

Dr. t&lt; inghorn is currently a professor of Chur(h' History at Asbury
Theological Seminary. He has written several MOI.i:s such as, "Fresh
Wind ot'the Spirit," "DYnamic Discipleship," and "Christ Can Make
You Fully H~man ," plus others.
.
~rsons.

Today in history.

•

to Our Community
AUGUST 21, 22 ond 23
He is a great teacher to pastors an.d lay

"Our group has come up with an outstanding
plan to redistribute the wealth - from the rich
- to the SUPER-RICH! "

TISSUE
Bell

2% MILK

$}7~ •.
J

�•
Pa

~A -4

Pomero

The Sunda Times-Sentinel

LEXINGTON, . Ky. - A long
drawn-out barley tobacco harvest
season is at hand for the remaining
weeks of August and through September. The crop all ove the belt is
rated highly •'spotty'' and extremely
varied as to quality and stage ri

But now, only Ideal growing conditions the rest of the season can
bring 1981 production to normal,

Candidates. . .

growth.

(Continued from page A1)
Some early planted fields which
Manuel and Lois M. Wolfe. Lebanon
were topped in July are ready to
Township has three candidates and
head the harvest parade. In these
they are Eugene C. Long, Cecil
the quality is good, but elsewhere
the crop is uneven, and showing the Wayne Roseberry and Morris E.
effects of blue mold, black shank, Teaford. Salem Township also has
three candidates and they are
aphids and the excessive rains that
Harold W. Fetty, Cecil L. Stacy and
delayed planting last spring.
Harley
Grate. Having just two canMany growers and tobacco
&lt;lidates
is Bedford Township. They
leaders are now expressing doubts
are
Leta
Goodwin Hall and David M.
about the predicted large crop.
Brickles.
Dennie E. Hill and Otis F .
Hopes are beginning to fade about
Knopp
are
the only two candidates in
!981 being a big production year,
Sutton
Township.
following the last two years of short
Townships with only one cancrops.
didate
at this point are Columbia,
Government poundage estimates,
L. Stout ; Olive, Lawrence
William
soon to begin periodically as the
Swain;
Salisbury, Donald L.
M.
season advances, should afford
Moore,
and
Scipio,
Raymond R. Cotsome solid indications of the actual
outcome, and whether expanded terill .
Filing deadline for candidates not
plantings under the 7Y. percent
quota increase will bring the desired only for school boards and townstups. but also small village, is 4
boost in 1981 production.
Under nonnal production the p.m . on Aug . 20.
The Meigs County Board of
quota increase would have meant a
Education
has three full term posts
661-million pound crop. With this in
to
be
filled
this
year and the three inview hopes were held early that the
cwnbents, Robert B Burdette,
burley industry soon would be
headed back to a normal supply of Harold Lohse and George Perry,
have already filed for reelection .
tobacco.

.French nalionals scared

Buyers• •.

Burley outlook not so bright
some~ predicting.

This Is particularly disappointing,

to the Burley Tobacco Growers
Cooperative Assoclation and to the
burley trade in general, as leaf
demand is strong and markets in the
southern flue-cured belts are
seemingly having a record high
year.
. With flue-eured selling as high as
$190 per hundredweight, and
averaging $160 and upward, growers
in the south,are marketing their best
quality crop of high yield in several
years, and at record high prices.
Season deliveries to the
Stabilization Corporation, which
handles price supports in flue-eured ,
have been only a fraction of those of
past years.

t, 1911

Au

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

BEIRUT, I,.ebahon (APJ +- Scores
of
French natlonali seeking to leave
(ContinuedlrompageAl)
Iran
were repOrted gathering behind
'
their
shuttered em~y s.turday
Burleson and Forgey's Sussex Lamwhile
the
Islamic ~holding up
bs.
~lr departure ann.ounced more
Auctioneers at the sale were Tom- · terrorist kllllnils anc! retaliatory
my Joe Stewart of Gallipolis andLee executions by firing ~~quad.s. ·
Johnson ·of Rt. 2, Crown City.
Obeervers ill the lrarilan capital
Charles Shaver Of Kanauga served reached by telephone said the main
his 30th year as sales clerk.
gate of the French Embassy opened
briefly each time · more French
Workinl! in the ring were Tom arrived. Most of the French men and
Woodward Jr., Casby (Skip)
Meadows, Myron (Bud) McGhee, women arrived early Saturday from
Pete Sonuner and Jerry Haner.
The event ,lasted 5'&gt;it hours, 19
minutes less than the 1980sale.
Full sale results appear G-7 and G-

Meigs SWCD will sponsor show

e

POMEROY - The Melp Soil and
Water Conlervition District is again
this year sponsoring a hay show at
the Meigs County Fair.
Classes for the hay show include :
I. Seventy-five percent or more
alfalfa. 2. Seventy-five percent or
i'nore clover. 3. All grasses. 4. Forty·

t

~u~rcent

nut- ;

requested anonymity.

••'
•

Hearing Aid Center

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

weat to the MuDD A1r Port at Polut Pleuaut 8lld were
INNOVATION ...;. AD lllilovalloa for memben oltbe
roar· ·~ a time wltli Dr. Plt!keu pllotlal oa an air
from Ida ~tiDe
tear
ol
hltere~llug sights of the area. While waltlal
FridQ ..... me,tlal ,.. pnlvicled by Dr. R. R.
tbere
iura,
Rotartau sucked on botdop 8lld soft
PI~ Friday
IDatead Ill ibe aillll aieelllq, ,
Dr.~ wbo wa Ill proWled ~teadiif ibe roatlae . drfiW proVIded by Vr. Pickens who Is shown wllb club
s-'!Jn, · j!laDe .flllbts .for Retarlul. Club 1Jiemben memben.

444 W. Union St.- Athens, 0.

W~TON (AP) 'Ole the year's end traffic will be 85 to 90
govenunent is mOVing swiftly to percent of norinal, officials bope.
rebuild Ita decimated air controller
. But govenunent and industry
corps, but no one really knows how representatives as well as former
long It !WIIJ,Iake, whether the short.
cuts will compromise safety, or
what effect long-tertn cuts In air
traffic will have on theeconOII!Y·
The govenunent considers the
I II
controller strike over. It is trying to ·

Counties On A Regular Basis

strikers, Before
nearly
replace theof 12.000
two-thirds
the workforce.

1

CLEANER
BIGGER

'·

./ 1 ~ ...

ALL SHOWS

these features:
'
• Calendar and places for classmate photos,
Important names and phone numbers.
• Valuable coupons for the Big Boy
Sandwich, Spaghetti, Hot Fudge Cake
and Strawberry Pie.
• Multiplication and metric ts.Jlee, map,
state capitals, holidays, presidents.
• A special way to remember special things
that happen all year long.
Tltonk

)JjUI

AND

Publishers

N11l iumd Acl\· erti~in l(
Representative, Br11nh1:Un, 17117 West
Nint! Mile Road, Suite 204, Ot!truil,
MichiMMft, ~·

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ByCarrleror Motur Routt
Onew~ ... .. ... . . .. ..... . . . $1 .00
·One Munlh ...... , .
. $4.40
One )l!tlr .. . ...... . .......... S$2.80

SALE

GOLD

AWARD WINNERS
FROM TH.E

GALLIA COUNTY
JUNIOR FAIR

car.l t
so lit&lt;l r&lt;!

1 _,

S[NGLECOPV

PRICE

3SCenL'&gt;

9:00 P.M.

:o~ ubcil:r i pti~.~ruJ;

by nleiil pem1itt tc.i in

tnwns ""here hume u1 rr ier scrvlL't.' is

..

I:&amp;V¥illlbll'.

'

· TtM! Sundtly Time:i-&amp;mtmc! "''ill not ~
l"eSJ)t.wiibh: fur.~&amp;i.lvilnce paymt!nl:; rn1:11dt:

:;

llt CMrrief'!l

MAILSVBSC'RIPTIONS

' j

SundarOnlb.ii,:OiSUdir ... 120.00

'/
. '

OIIM1a_. Wnl VJratlala

One year . . . ...... : . .
· Siunonttl . . . . . . . . . . .

I .1
I I

' S.\1.00

1DII Wnt Vlr-A:Inla

'Oneyea~~r ...

. ...· ...... .. .. ... .. SJS.OO

·:shnnonlh.'&gt; . ....... , .... . .. : . . : f20.00

'M&gt;r&lt;e months

The cash awards for 1st, 2nd, and Jrd place
winners in the . designated categories at the
GaHia County Junior Fair, of non· livestock and
sm._ll ani,IT!als, will be presented to the win·
pers, starting at 10 ·!)~clock on Friday morning,
A.u gust·l.4, 1?81 1 ~t the main off.ices of the Cen·
t.ral Trust. Company, located at 358 Second .
Avenue in Gallipolis,

........... 111.110

CHARGE

LAY-AWAY

. CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTIONS
INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY

. •17.$0

Threr rnooltu . ..... _. . ... . ..... llO,MI
!101e1 Oolllde 0111• .

for coming to...

SHONEYSI~

N ew~pa p~r

Amnican

· As.suchathm,

Nu

'

14 K

Ml!mber: TOO Associated Pre!:l:i, Inland
04:lily Preili k;sl)Ciatinn tmd the

Youth Dailr Pass _ _ 50'
Children
....._""""' 5 Years

BRIGHTER
AND
BffiER

AT
3:00 P.M.
'

·cENTRAL TRUST

COinpMPY- Mull!Jnt!dia, Inc. Second clllll.li
' puslal(e pWd' at G•llipolis, Ohi o, ~l .
•Entered HS Jt«~nd chlss rrutilin)!. matter
11L Pumeruy, Ohiu, Post OR icC.

2.00

THE GATE

.

9.00

1

YOU PAY IS AT

I ·.

A Mullhnedla News-r
Published . each · SundM:y, 1125 Third
Avenue, by the Ohio Valley Publishing

Adult Dailr Pa$$'-,--Season Pass (Aaes 6 · 12)

TliE ONLY ADMISSION

,.

USPS~~

Adult Season Pass
(Aaes 13 &amp; Up)

FREE

J

Federal Aviation Administration officials familiar with the system say
privately the firings will leave a
clear mark for years to come.

·iunft•y 'limre - j:rnfinrl

STAGE SHOWS

are to obtain funding for programs.
GALLIPOLIS - A $490 million
grant has been earmarked !or mental health, drug abuse and Open door session
alcoholism programs replacing the
Mental Health Systems Act which
POMEROY - On August 12, a
ceases to exist on Sept. 30.
representative from Congressman
The state departinent on mental Clarence E . Miller's office will conhealth will distribute the block grant duct an Open Door session from 10
funds on a priority needs and local a.m.-12 noon in the Courthouse in
support basis. The requirements for Pomeroy .
If anyone has any questions conreceiving block grant funds will
remain as they were under the Men- cermng the Federal Government,
tal Health System Act. Local dollars please stop by to discuss them wtth
must be available if conununities _ the representative .

·A ,...INTION

We Serve Meigs . Go/lie and Mason

AU

Earmark $490 million grant

Govemmen.t moves swiftly to rebuild controller corps

Phone t614~ 594-3571

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

Those having any questions about
the hay show are to contact the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District Office at 99U647 or stop by
at 221 West Second Street, Pomeroy,
the second floor of the Farmers
Bank building.

evem.i.

For Hearing Aid
Selection, Service,
or Consultation,
Based On 32 Years' Experience And/Or Referral To Appropriate
Medical Specialists:

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

laltea

Ml¢1! .........0) . Retary' Club

or less legumes. 5.

the entry blank to Mrs. Wallace
Bradford, Secretary, P . 0 . Box 227,
Pomeroy, 45769, by August 14 . All
entries must be in place by 12 noon
on Monday, August 17, arid must
remain in place until 4 p.m. Saturday, August22.

Each exhibit shall consist of one
bale of hay weighing approximately
40 pounds as it comes from the
square baler.
Rosettes will be awardect to the fir·
st place winners in each class by the
district. The Meigs County Fair
Board will provide _premiums of $4
for first place, .$3 for second place
and $2 for third place winners in
each category as well as blue, red
and white ribbons for first, second
and third places respectively.
To enter one must buy a memberhslp ticket to the fair, then send -

!

-

TheS

nt Pleasant

their homes and "IWbed ~y ill·
to the embassY without lllldng to •
anyone," the oblerva'IIIIIM; ~
·:
·All wiQdows J .cloon Ill the :
three-story buildlllfl · otherwise •
remained shuttered for 1 I~ ;
straight day, theobller\'erl~ . ·,
They said $ sign • thll ~r
section said "cl~ Untll ··f~~ribet •
notice,.. but the J"rr!ndd !lag.
tered again on the Iliff·at tl!t maln !
gate after being latin ~ ntday ~
for unknoWn reasons. The olllervers •

DILES-

8.

-~

Winners should come to tile Bank on
Friday morning to receive their appropriate
checks from the Bank officials.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

328 viand St.

Pt. Pleasant , w . va .

·'

LAST.GHANGE ·FOR THE BEST BUYS ALL YEAR
A MESSAGE FROM TliE BIBLE...

SATURDAY· AUGUST 15,.1981
JIM STAFFORD

TliE SPIRITUAL BODY OF CHRIST

3:00 P.M. · 9:08 ; .II.

By William B. Kuglln
When Chr is t co mpleted H1s m is si on on ear th and returned to t he
Father 1n heav en, God gr aced th e ear t h w ith the spiritual body ot
Chr ist , the chur ch . The sam e word " body " wh ich is fr om the Greek
"soma," meaning the whole (complete) body as the inst ru m ent at l ife,
is used ligurative ly wh en instrum ent of life on ear th today fulfilling
Hi s will H e has O NE SPIRITUAL BODY ! God ha s been just as
precise in describing Hi s spi r itual body , the church , so t ha t th e wo rld

'

m ay recognize it
The church is Chr ist' s s piritu a l body on earth today having Christ
as its head : " And h.)th put all th ings u nder his t ~?e t , and gave him to be
the head over a l l thins to the church, W hi ch is hi s body , th e fu lness of
h im that fill ern a l l in al l " (Eph 1: 22, 23) ; " And he is th e head ot the
body, the church .. " ( Col 1 19). and " Who now rejoi ce in my suffer ·
ing tor you , and till up that w hic h is behi nd of the affli cti on s of Christ in
my flesh for his body 's sak e. which is th e church" (Col. 1 : 24J .
The church being the spi r itu a l body of Christ has many m embers:
" N ow ye are the body of Christ . and members in particular" ( 1 Cor .
12 : 27l . Th e m e mbers of th e one bod y_a r e the baptized beli evers , "For
bv one Spi ri t are we a ll bapti r ed in one body ... " ( I Cor 12 . 13) God
adds me bap1ized beli evers to the church, " Then they that gladly
receive&lt;1 his word w ere baptir ed . and the same day there we re added
unto Them abou t mree Thou sand sou ls .. And the L ord added to the
church daily suc h as shoul d be sew ed " ! Ac ts 2: 42, 471 . The pronoun
" ye " ~ as ref erence to the sai nts who were sa nc t ified in Chris t con stituting the church of God st Corin th f I Cor . 1:2) and not to denomina-

. .....,.

~

·~

I

THURSDAY AUGUST 13, 1981
THE HINSON$
3:00 P.M. • 9:00 P.M.
THE THRASHER BROTHERS
3:110 P.M. · 9:00 P.M.

J

·FAMILY ROOM
'

(NOT AS PICTUR~D BUT SIMILAR)
•.

tions!
Christ having one spiritual body ha s one church on ear th today :

"So we being many , ar e one body i n Christ , and every one member s
one at another" ( R m . 12 : 5) ; " For by one spirit ar e w e a II bap tized into
·one bod y ... '' ( 1 Cor . 12: 13) ; ·· But now are they many m ember s, vet
but one body " ( I Cor . 12: 20) ; " A nd that he might r econc ile bot h unto
God in one body by the cross. having sl ai n the enmity th ereby'' ( Eph .
2 : 16) ; " Th ere is one body ... " (Eph 4: 4) and " Let the peace of God
rule in your hea rts, to th e whi ch also ye are ca lled in one body, and be

ve thonkful "

1Col. 3 151

Christ ministers to the world today through His spiritual body the
church : The ch u rc h , being " the pillar an d g r ound of the truth" ( 1 Tim .
3 : 15) , is to preserve the word by preac hing the same gospel (Gal.
1 :6-9) . It is to seek and save the lost going into all the world, prea ch ing
.the gospel to every creatur e, and bapti zing them in the nam e of t he Holy Trinity for the remissi on of their si ns. ( Mtt. 28: 18-20 ; Mrk . 16 : 15· 16 ) .
There are many who deny the one spiritual body of Christ by deny ·
1 lng the church . It is iust as wrong to deny tt,e one church or spiritual
bodV of Christ as it is t o deny His physical bOdY . The one who does so
~ can likewi se be c lassif ied as an anti christ or a deceive r (II Jno. 7) .
For A Free Bible Correspon~ence Cource Write .. .

'i~~l .:/(i/1 celruu-le

of

cel.~t

Bulaville Road • P.O. BoK 308
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 4563 I
SUIIGiy Evtnlni -.,..

We~nhlp6 : 11

12,' 1
THE PICKERS .
3:00 P.M. • 9:00 P.M.
Farm Museum ' Flower Show · Tractor Putting ·

F~r

Queen ' l!'retty · Baby Contest -

LJvetock Shows· Baby Beef Sa,re · Horseshoe Pitching ' Mason CountY Horse Show · Gaspei
SJng · Parade - Tobacco Spilllni Contest · Garden Tractor Pulling - Little Mr. &amp; Miss Muon
County Contest · 4-H Dog ShoVf \ Pony Pulling • 4 Wheel Drive Pulllllg ' Dairy Show- Band ·· .
concerts · Pet Parade - Much, Much More. ,
. .... •
·
·

Wectft•sdly

Ev•nlnt
1:11

THE

J;HE

tOliNTY FAIR

....,.....
Rldl•

"M• sw,.trom

IN WEsT VIRGINA.·.~•

D•Ur-WJEH
11:5SAM

.,

•\'

BlGG~ST 'MND

r

.

Colonial Living Room Group
. -

-·

J''

• Broyhill

I

• TABli W/LEAF • AR'MCHAIR.
.e 'UGHJED CHINA e SID£ ~iRS'
'

SELECTED DINING ROOM,
LIVING ROOM SUITES AND
TABLES UP TO 1/z PRICE

•.

�Page-A·6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

AUg.'· 1981

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

Deputies, police check· num,erou~ ·complaints
~

GAWPOIJS - A security officer
working at the Gallia County Junior
Fair bad several uniform !ihirts
stolen from his room at the EconoTravel Motor Hotel Friday, the
sheriff's department reports.
Herbert Privetls, Parkersburg,
told deputies his room was broken
into sometime before 10:30 p.m.
Friday.
The shirts said "State Wide
Security Officer" on them. Nothing
else was taken, according to reports.
Another room at the EconoTravel, rented by a Parkersburg
woman, was broken into Friday
night.
An undetennined amount of cash
was taken, the sheriff's department
reports.
Gallipolis City Police are in·

Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Cecil
ThiiQ)JISon of Vinton; a brother, Ted
of Huntington, W.Va; and
several ni
and nephews.
A brother al!;o preceded her in
death.
'
Flll)eral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday in the Vinton Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Jerry Neal of.
ficiating. Burial will be in Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends may call at
the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
from 7-9 p.m. today .

Leah M. Wilcox
VINTON - Leah M. Wilcox, 88, of
Vinton, died at 6:10 p.m. Friday in
Holzer Medical Center after an ex·
tended illness.
Born Nov. '!1, 1892, she was the
daughter of the late J. Frank and
Katherine Grate Wallace. She was
also preceded in death in 1966 by her
husband, Harry M. Wilcox.
She was a member of the Vinton
Baptist Church.

i

Complete training

Seeks investigation

POMEROY--Meigs
sheriff's
deputy Paul Rowe, Racine, and
dispatcher Charles Stone, Mid·
dleport, were recently certified by
the National Institute of Corrections,
Boulder, Colorado, after sue·
cessfully passing the examination of
the United States Bureau of Prisons'
Programmed Instructions : Jail
Operations, a training course lor jail
officers.
Previously, deputies Robert
Beegle and Jimmer Soulsby were
certified.
The officers studied the course on
their own time.

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Ar·
chbishop Charles Salatka says he
has asked Secretary of State Alexan·
der Haig to investigate the slaying of
an Oklah"iJJII priest, who was gunned down in his rectory in
Guatemala.
The spiritual lead~r of this city's
Roman Catholics said Friday he
does not "believes reports from the
Central American nation this week
saying the Rev. Stanley Rother was
kiUed in a robbery attempt.

To
install-Installation
officers of
POMEROY

of.

fleers will be held when Eight and
Forty, Meigs County Salon 70, meets
at the home of Rhoda Hackett at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday. The meeting bas
been changed from Monday to
Tuesday.

BACK TO SdiOOL SALE

r

POMEROY-The regular Tuesday
meeting of. Chapter 53, Disabled
American Veterans has been cancelled. In lieu of the meeting there
wiU be a picnic at 6 p.m. at the road·
side park on Route 33. All those attending are to take a covered dish.

0

:!:
"C

Ill

r

Public meeting

0

:!:

RIO GRANDE - There will be a
public meeting concerning the Rio
Grande, CenterviUe, Gallia and
Jackson County Ohio Facilities
Plan, Monday, Aug. 10 at 7:30p.m.
at the Rio Grande College Cafeteria.
The pubhc il; encouraged to attend.

"C
Ill

0

:!:
'tJ
10

OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES

n

20% OFF McCALL'S PAntRNS
50% OFF SIMPLICITY PAlTERNS
'
20% OFF NEW FALL MERCHANDISE

Ill

(\

m

r

20- 30)·50% OFF

;o

m

Ill

r

Georgoa n Stal e
tumole&lt;s lake
advantage toaa 1
and save

9oz.

Beverage

FRESH LEAN

(\

PRODUCE

LB.$149
BAG

10

ASSETS

Cash and due from depository institutions .......... .. , . . , .. , ............... $ 188,722,000
U.S. Treasury securities •...••.••••.•• •••.• • •..••.•• •.•• , .••.••..••.••• , • • 80 257 000
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't. agencies and corps . .. ......... . .•.•.. . ..... , 75:402:000
ObligatiOns of States and political subdivisions

GOLDEN RIPE

do ...• o.... •..... o. ........ .. ....... .. ......... ..

Tdi
.. .......................... .. .......... , .. .. .. • ..
ra ng accoun t secunbes
1'818 '000
Federalfundssold. .. . ...... ...... ... . ..•... ..... . ... ... ...... .. ..........
s'ooo'ooo
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income), .. ... , . , . .• , • , •....... $651 953 1100 ' '
Less: Allowances for possible loan losses .. • • .. • .. .. • .. • • .. .. .. • .. 7'sa1 '1100
46 571 000
' '
22 197 000

'~:ooo
6 223 000
25's2 1'ooo

GALLON · .

••••••••••

•

•

•

•

0

•

••• •

• •

•

•

•

•

•

J

I

I

MEMORANDA
Amounts oustanding as of report.date:
Standby letters of credit, total.................... ....
$ 38 821 000
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
.... "· • "" • .. " .. ·
' '
of $100,01)) or more •••••
194,984,000
other time deposits in amounts of $100 1100 or more
·
145,000
Average lor 30 calendar days ending w'ith report dai~~ • • · .. · · .. · .. · · " · .... ·
Cash and due from depository institutions
Fed . f unds sold •••••• o • • • o • o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
o • • • • o. • • • •
172,499,000
Hft
•• • 0.. 0...••.. 00.... .. . . .
6'"""'
000
Totall oans .•• o • • • • • • • • o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• o • • • •
·
654 050 000
Time certificates of deposits in denominations of · · • • · · ·' ' '·' ''' ·''' ' '' •
' •
$100,000 or more
198 067 000
Total de posits ....... ••o················· o•••••o • o•o • •••••o• • ······ · ·· ·· · 881'923'000
Fed. funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to .Other UablliUes ior bar.·
rowed money••••••••••••••• o • • • • • • • • o • • • • • • • • o • • •
28 1111
Fed. funds purchased and securities sold
·
under agr~ents to repurchase .••. ~ o • • • o • • • • • • • • • • • •
199 822,000
Other liabilities for borrowed money...................... ..... .... .' .' .' .' .' .' .' .'::,., : 28 000
roTAL A.SSETS •••••••• o • • ••••• , • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••
$1,223,729:000
........... .

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

•

0

EGGS
DOZEN
CARTON

29

••••••••••••••

0

•

•

•

•

• • •

•

•

0 •

,,

•

•

• •

•

• • •

•

0 •• 0 •• 0 •• •

140 CT.
PKG.

••••••••• •

0

•••••••• •• ••• •

JUMBO
ROLL

I, Fred H. Gardner, Comptroller of the above-named bank do hereby declare that thta
Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Fred H. Gardner
July 16, 1981
. We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of thta statemer¢ of resources and
· llabiliUes. We ~lilre that It has been ewnlned by us, and to the best of.our knowl"""'e and
belief 11 tn1e and correct.
·
"""'
Joeeph D. Landen
J - K. Lewis- Direeton
J _ E,Mount

r

I

:

VernonC.LIUle,30,.RO!Jtel,Long
Bottorn,travelllngeastlnhlsplckup

wrote to ,the Se.ntinel. TaMehill
would typj!' notes on yellow paper
and send lne when I didn't wrlte. He
would say 'don't quit now - you are
doing good' when 1 missed a week."

__

Thanks to all of you who made the
retirement of Elsie Cross, Racine,
from the nursing profession after
over 50 years such a memorable oc_casion wjth the card!! and flower's. .

:;::a:_~~to~hwa~~
ve~cle. There were no injuries.

MIDDLEPORT -- A . special
of Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;.AM, wtU be held at 7 p.m'

meeting

Tuesday with work in the EA
degree. Refreslunentswillbeserved
followtngthemeeting.

rkl::~.~.~~~~~~~·
~·lfjiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij;i;;;;
•••••••••;;;;t
•
· ......
.

.'

A;.L-~~
~~

You're nice and Elsie appreciated it.

BANKRUPTCY/CHAPTER 13
..

,

Youleaveyourcomfortablehome.
Drive until you're about blind. Pay a
fantastic amount of money to rent a
two by four. Stand in line to get a
meal. And we.caU it "vacation!" Do
keep smiling .
•

1-221-5379
Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N . Maggied
Attorneys -At- Law
88 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH . 43215

The French City Press
423 Second Avenue
Gallipolis. Oh1o

~··········

.

(Wage Earner Plan)

No fee for Information:

Letter-Legal &amp; 11 x17
While You Wait

J

I

Open Daily 10-9

Our !11m mtemron IS to have e~el")) ao~e•
hsed rt em rn stocll. on our stlll~es II an
aovert1:Se&lt;l rlem rs not avatlaDie lor pur·

Sunday 1·6

chue Oue IO

vnlore:seen reasoo
Chec• 011 request
lor the merchii'ICI!:se 1one otem or reason·
an~

K m&lt;~r'f wrll rssiJe a Aarn

ab le lamrl ~ Qua nlr t~ I IO be aurttlilsad at the
sale pr~~;;e whenever avari;JOte or wt ll sell
rou a compar able oual~y olem at il cornpa·

rable reduc11on '"puce

20
bpo~ures

3 Days Only

Bruce has accepted a job with
IBM Compu.ter Co., in Kingston, N.
i; Y., and will be undergoing a 19 week
• • trianing course before going into his
• · new job in November. A 1979
:·· graduate of Meigs High School,
! · Bruce graduated from tbe Ohio .ltr ·
; , . stitute of Technology, Columbus, in
,.. June of thta year.
Ji!iln ,is also attending the Ohio
•J ' Siiil\te"'bf Technology in Colwnbll!l
f.~ and will graduate in Fe.pruary, 1982.
· ·, He is a 19110 graduate of Meigs High
.·• School and is residing with .another
;.( brot!ler, R,onald, . Maybury Road,
.:,: Columbus. while attending school
·~ but spends the weekends here with
~ hlsmother.

,,

3~9
D':1f ,;.". . • . .

f; •:•

.·&lt;

ville, Calif. , and their son, Joe, of

Columbus, spent several days
~ting here with Mrs. Ullian
Smith, Doug and Tina Rosenbaum,
Middleport, and Mrs. Louise Rosen·
ba.um. Pomeroy.
"
It was aU kind of a farewell.for Joe
• who left for the Netherlands to begin
a six month internship with Arthur
Anderson and Co., a large lntemationalaccounting finn. Joe will ·
undergo a week's training in The
Hague and two weeks training in
Geneva, Switzerland, before retur· '
ninil to The.Hague for six months.
. A 1974 Meigs graduate, Joe .
graduated from Ohio !.'tate Univer·
sity in accounting in lf117 and in law
in. 11181 and Is nearing cmpletion
work on hta JJ?&amp;Ster's de~ree in
business admitlistrati.on. The Ro:~en­
baums are former Pomeroy reside I~' J I
~·

.

.

Black 'n White Portable
202

Framed Door Mirror

Handsome 131hx49 1il " ooor m1rror
w1th walnut-look frame g1 ves you •uiJ ..
length look :no compact s1ze Save

SOlid-stole TV operates on house current or 12·V cor'ballerv Stobie pic ·
· lure aM outstanding recept 1on

· Our

UOD.,·M

With Sat

.

rear

42.97 . .•.

' .
ac Car Seat

f ely Shie ld

, ronr. T0 ' 1aces

·

·

ddler;

10 .

our 1.47 Pkg.

$16-PI (205)
p~g .

(210)

sneerNvlon

Knee·hl Hose
suntone Ol
M,s t t o ne
shade S
Nude heel
cr 1 t
8• -11

(208)
3 Days
Only

Portablle Box Fan

Our Reg. 1.78

1.38

Our Reg .

s177
Whirlpool Dehumidifier

Propane Cylinder
Propane ' ga s for use w1tn

nrr&gt;onr'\C torcne s 1.1 1 oz • eo

l

2.5 oz.
1 Right
1 Guard
levular Or
btro·genfte

VIdal Sa11a•' aham·
poo or finishing rinse,
......... . 213 . . .. 1.38

..

Sentinel readers a few years ago
enjoyed regular columns writtep by
Mrs. Golden Clendenin, Route 1, '
· Portlaod. With health problems, the .
cC!1UIIIIIIi quit C)llnlng, bill M..S. P~.
deilln, Is sull afolll)d 11nd IS In ~h.
She writes:
. \,:a_ .
' ' !
"It has !Mien •
. time since I
wrote to thta p~~per. Things changed'
so fast, 'I did not kilow what hapo
ptnecl. My health ia' bad and I am
liolne lllOit of the time. .
.
. ' "( cOilld,not believe that
TaimehtU was , gone. He waa one of
the best friends I hiHt wheill came
back to lilY. ·Mel@_Cow)ty horne Ja
~r,'1988. MY husband died of
a tiU'd llrolie on J-.. a, I.NI. We
, Uved in COIIIIIIbus 10 years. ·He was
!!On) 8I!Ci feer,ed in Olarleaton, W,'
Va .. We met In Columbuil ancl, 10~

4.'97

Pnce

Tw.in-pock film deveiOQS fode-resrstant.
beautiful colored pictures in 1 m1nute
Twin Pack, Focal" Flaohlar II ...... '3,$7(

(204)

Sale Price •

s7ar~::.~th

Tlme·Zero· SX·70" Film

'

Lois and Qick Rose!lbaum of Dan-

kMI0920G

(201)

12.86

Cannan.saugerties,N.Y.

•·
•

:·;
••

'

211 l

Stick
Deodorant
1216) .. 1.17

( 218)

'8'8$

2For

Vonllh" lOIIet . Renuzll"

( 212)

Limit 2

, lowl Cleaner· Air Deodarlzer

Pledge · Polish
Choose lemon o r o r.
i , 14-oz •

.Disinfects. re·
Household solmoves' ' st0 1ns , , 1d air freshen48- oz net wt
er 6-02 het wt

Qles.

\

10 oz.
"

JAR

0 0

0 •••••

,

,• Linnie Leifheit will be observing
;•"" her 81st birthday on Wednesday.
.. Friends are planning a card shower
•: •' and cards may be sent to her at the
~- : · Polneroy Health Care Center, Rock
j: · Springs Road, Pomeroy, Ohio45769.
'i~••. Sylvia Carman and son, Dan, Long
·' Hollow Road, received a telephone
''.. call Saturday evening from another
. • of Mrs. Cannan's sons, Bruce R.

;;o

·.PAPER TOWELS

· Yll!lnlater, be,Ugone. ,
''We had a lOt 'in Bald ,.;;,...,··· •
' Qimetery IIIli ~ to be burled
tllpre. So Jllr!JQIIt him t.c:k hereIIIDit of bill people
With

•

0 0 •• 0 ••• 0..

·7

VIVA

•

0 •••••• 0 •

Donna and Dallas Hill and their
: · ·family watched with a definite
· • feiellng of sa.dness the end 1lf last
· 'week,as a heavy baU awung on a
• ' cable to quickly·
· •. demolJah the two
· · large ftuart~r
buildings and the
· pll'l{erhouse at the
Apple Grove dam '
sl~·s tather,
the late . Carl
. Wolfe, started
BobHoellicb
. working at the dam in 1923, ijboUt the.
. time the operation began, ·and was
there unW his death in 1951.
The dam Itself was removed from
. _the site about 12 years ago. Over the
years, uses for the very sturdy
, r; buftdings at the site were considered
+: ('·by several groups Including the
Meigs County Corrynissioners.
However, no plan ever developed for
:!:.' effective use of the structures and
::i ·· they in later years became the
·~ property of the Division of Wildlife.
:'.i:
Donna and Dallas live across from
:; . . the dam site and their sons, Dean
:
and Dallas, have been moving
: .. . around the location fo_r 9e1(l!r~ yearil
.-; . to keep It in some sort of condition.
•- : The site has been held in.affection by
allbfthem.
·
As near as can be determined
~ • · Early Roush of East Letart is the
.:.: only one of the original workers 'at
:: , the Apple Grove Dam who is still
: :· around. ·
;: ·: Demolishing the structures was a
w'
finn out of Canton. The rubble from
;: the razing, I understand, went to the
gravel pit areas upriver.

'"
•·

$179

GALLON
PLASTIC

••• ••

0 ••••••••• •

e

J

~=

2% MILK

••

o •• •••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 0

"

•

POMEROY-Meigs
sheriff's
AdJnltted-UoydKing, Pomeroy.
deputies checked an .cclc!ent on .. Dlscharged-· Norma Greer,
CountyRoad26neartheMelgsHlgh · Thelma Capehart, Leon Gray,
SchoolFrlday.
·
GeraldJacb.DavldDonohoe

e
demo
.' li.tion
::.: dunng

!:

VALLEY BELL

0

I

·

·y'

•

46' 447 '000

Undivided profits .... , : •......... .. .... . . , ....... . ... , ...... , , , , , ..... , ,
41:453:000
Reserve for contmgencJes •••••• , , ••• , . ••••••• 0, •••••••• , •• , •••••• , • • • • • •
23 (XN)
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .... , ........................ . .": .... . ...... ... $ 100 625,000
TOTAL LIABilJTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .. .. . .. .. • .. .. .. .. • .. .. .. .. $1 263,B89 '000

LB.

HILLANDALE GRADE A
EX-LARGE

•

Su~l~ •• · • •• ·: ••••••••••....••• •• •. •••• o • • • • • • • • • • o •• • o o • • o • • • o •• o . . • •

LB.

SAUSAGE

:::::

•

89~.

49°
99.0

MIXED FRYER PARTS

• ••••••••• •••• ••

0. 0 . , •• 0 ,

0

GOLD KIST

CHOCOLATE
DRINK

LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps ... ......... ,.. ........ $287 084 000
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
' '
prtnshps., and corps . ••••• •• • •• • , ••• • , ••••••• , • ••••••
502,883,000
Deposits of United States Government ............. . ........ , ............ ..
1,250,00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the United States ...................... . ... . ....... , .. , ........ ,,,... . 73,601,000
Deposits of commercial banks.. . .............................. ... ........
19 996 000
Certified and officers' checks. .. . ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. .. • . .. . . . 16,874,000
TOTAL DEPOSITS ....................................................... !)()1'488'000
Total demand deposits .... .... ....... ................... , ....... $334,7771100 ' '
Total time and savings deposits • .. . .. . .. • . .. . . . • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . $566,711 :1100
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase ... .... .... :. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. . lll4,265,000
Interest-bearmg demand notes (note balance)Issued to the U.S. Treasury
20 014 000
Othe~ li~bil~~es For borrowed money .• •.•• ••..•••.•
'u;o;ooo
Bahenk s hab~hty on acceptances executed and outstanding,............ . ... . • .
6 223 000
Ot r 1 tab1hties .•••••••• •..• ••• •..•...••..•..•••••
31' 124 ' 000
TOTALUAB!UTIES ....... ..... .... . ........... ..... .................. $1163'264'000
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
' ' '
Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,500,1100
b. No. shares outstanding 1,270,237 I Par Value) ......................... $ 12 702 000
0 •• 0

RED CASING BOLOGNA

29~.

644.a72 ,()(X)

TOTAL ASSETS •.••••••.•••.•••..••.•••••••••••. , •• , • • . . • • . • . • • . • . . • • • • $1,263:889:000

,

.SUPERIOR

BANANA.S

••

0 .

LB.

BEEF

SUPERIOR

U:ed States
163 ,657 ,ooo
r 00n , notes, an debentures .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. • .. •
:;95 000
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ..•...•...• , .•• • , .• , .. . . , ..•• , • , •
1 914 'ooo

[,.ease lmancmg receivables........... .. .. .. .. .. . . .. . .. . .. . . . • • .. .. .. .. ..
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . .. . . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. ..
Reatl estat~ ownbedl'totthetrhistbaban banknk premises ....... .. ......... .. .......... ,
Cus
oth omers 11a 11 y o
on acceptances outstanding... . . . . . • . . • . . . .
er Assets •• •o. o•. , •• , • o· •••• , ~ ••.• , ••• •• , •• • , •• • •• • . • •• • • •• • • . •• • • • • .

.GROUND $11

U. S. NO. 1

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY, N.A.
of Cincinnati in tbe state of Ohlo, at the close of business on Juoe 30, 1981 published in
response to caU made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Title 12, United States Code,
Section 161. Charter number 16416 Natlooal Bank Region Number 4.
·

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Ill

Ill

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eacn ol tne ~
d• Ueoeflt solll5 J l

WHITE
POTATOES

Loa~, Net,. oo. ooo ~ . o••••• oo. o •• •••• •••• o. o •• oo.... .... ... ... ..... . . .' • • • '

car.

Georg•a n Sr &lt;~re
ClaSSIC 5.0[1tlosucatea
Sll GIJ e un'T1alct1e0 Ouoa!,)li&lt;IV , SIYII f19 ana
desogn o!lll on a ~mo~eo goay tumbl e• woth hef ty
proportoons We proudly olfer 11'1•5 glass.,..are at
subslanto;a t savon gs
CoiiE'CI a S&amp; l o l

:-LOW PRICES- LOW PRICES- LOW PRICES -

I

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'. ·. Sa:dn·e·.s·s·' ·. hl··t -..· .f'-Wllll

to

Feature of the
Week
.

REPORT OF CONDITION

~the

per

' Pollee cl.ted Nannette·E. 8o'lm'ds.
23, Soutiwlde, W.Va., for I'UIIillng a
red light Friday. ·
· The Gallipolla Fire Depariment
~
two fires Friday and
early Saturday mornlne.
.
A mobile ~ owned by Bemlce
Ba1a(len on sit 141 receiVed. ~.ooo
damage in a fire atl a.llL Saturday.
Twenty firemen 1espooled the
'blaze, which started in the bedroom.
The cauae ol. the fire Is ondetermlited.
.
Firemen said no one :was injured.
. A broken {uel Itne Is blamed for a
vehicle fire m Pike Slreet in
Kanauga 11 a.m. Friday. .
'lb! 19'18 Ford F150 Custom.
driven by Unda Johns, Henderson,
received$300damage.
The carburetor, wiring and hoses
were damaged in the fire.

0

Mlddlaport,_Ohlo

1

W.Va., waa stopped In
011 tip:
River Ro84 at the Silver Bridge
Plaza Friday mornlne when abe waa
$ucic in the rear by a car driven by
Mary E. Myeri,l,, Gallipolis.
.
;:1\tyen'. car suatained moderate
damage l!nd l(a~r's car was
sllghtly damaged.
·
·
• A car Qwnec1 ~ James Guinther,
Syracuse, . was · sllgbUy damaged
w~e pa.rked at the Pizza Hut
resturaunt Friday night.
Martha A. Morris, 36, Gallipolis,
was back)ng f!UJI her.parking .,ace
when she struck Guinther's
Her
car waa mQderately dibnaged.
.
Charles R. ·Murplly; Moundsville,
told police hta car wa5 sUghUy
damaged when an unknown vehicle
struCk· ii' while it was parked at
William Ann Motel on Second
Avenue Friday night.

I~-,.;;~r!~~~;;,~-,~~j"i~~;:;:=:~~~~~;:~~~~

m

THE SEWING CENTER

(\

traffic

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-LOWPRICES - LOWPR CES-LOWPRICES-

Meeting cancelled

vestigating a theft at Johnson's
Mobile Homes Inc. on Eastern
Avenue Thursday night or early
Friday morntng.
.
A window in the rear door of the of·
lice waa broken, police say. A
calculator waa reported mlsslllg.
A man in a white Cainaro with
Ohio license plates left the Bonded
gas station Friday afternoOn without
paying, according to reports.
The attendant said $5 worth of gas
was taken.
A plate-glsss window at the Dollar ,
General Store at 312 Second Ave.
was broken sometime Friday ilight,
police were told.
Police are investigating the Incident.
I k
·Police responded to three traffic
accidents Friday.
Evelyn E. Kaufler, 38, Milton,

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·~·~A~u~':·:'·~·';';':~~~~~~~~~~~~~==========~P~o~m~e~r~o~y~M~id~d~le~p~o~rt~--~G~a~ll~ipo~l~is~,~O~h~io-~P~o~i~"~t~P~Ie~a~s~a~n~t,~W~.~V~a~.~:=:=:=:=:===:==T~he~S~un~d~a~y~T~i~m~e~s§·S~e~n~t~in~e~I--~P~a~g~e~A~-7
?. :H_oeflich ~ Beat ~[the Bend
Check accident
Veterans Memorial
·I
Special meeting
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kept me liOme 111111t 111 Ole

SERVIC ESINCLUDE

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Front'orllv For rnorf
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lnttalled Shocko

Meovv ·duty mode1

for monv U.S' cor~
CertYeul. ••. ..

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~or many V 'S -:-::··.
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Ohi~Point

Po

Pleasa

W. Va.

"

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Au~ .

-B.

9, 1981

.. The

Another Story.

Ohio Valley Bank, where you can and
should expect more, introduces the

line . .

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POMEROY - Leo Story sits, outlined by
the light of the window of the room off the por·
ch, and looks through his copy of the "Meigs
CoWity History Book" . He reads abou~ his
~eat-grandfather, Job Story, 'who walked to
Meigs CoWJty from New Hampshire in 1814,
where he stayed to build a home and start a
family. He reads about his beloved late wife
Lucille and the children they had together. He
reads about his grandchildren and great·
grandchildren - the descendants of the Story

sunlight of the StU. Mr. :;tory tenas to tnem
these days.
He ·:d?Bsn't do much anymore, ~' he says.
After fwng hunself a big breakfast each morning ("I make eggs, bacon, toast and juic~.
Sometimes a cantaloupe. I've always had
same thing."), he wiles away the day carifl!!
for the few chickens 'c"I like fresh eggs.''),
the five horses or visiting grandchildren. He
didn't plant a garden this year because, after
all, "There's no one here to .eat it but me.''
The day I was there, he had spent some tinie
mowing but had liad to stop when the tractor
got stuck.
On my last visit, one of his proudest
possessions was his English horse, "Denmark
Cinnamon Sensation' ', which Mr.Story keeps
for his granddaughter, Meg Lochary,
Chicago. Now there's another, a quarterhorse
·''Super '81' ', who Is just a few months old and
already showing his excellent breeding. Story
and his grandson-in-law, Paul Lash may
decide to show "S~r" when he attains his
growth.
"'--1

Yes, Job Story certainly started something.
Leo Story, with his lout children, 10 grandchildren and nine great grandct)ildren, have
been in Meigs CoWity a long time. Some have
moved off but many have stayed.
This is my second "stacy" about Leo Story.
Two years ago about this time, I visited him
on his farm in Meigs County and wrote a
feature about his life.' He lived alone then; he
lives alon.e now. '• But l dori't get lonely. There
are too maqy people to keep me company."
And even If he didn't have the company of
, numerous· grandchildren and their children,
·Almost as lively as the foal is Mr. Story's
he would have his menldries. He still lives in
·granddaughter,
Jessica Lash, nearly three,
the big farm house 0g Kingsbury Road, 'll[hi~h
who
was
present
for the interview. "I got two
was built by his late wife's father, Baxil. ije
grandsons
and
two
granddaughters nearby
and Lucille moved there after their marriage
almost
the
same
age.
Keeps things sort li
in 1~ . Mr. Story has lived there for 62'years.
" I never di~ do much vaveling." He married balanced, you know?" Jessica was busy
Lucille right after his discharge in 1919 from duiing my visit, checking out the horses and
picking a bucket of ragweed for her grandWorldWarl.
·
Although Mrs. Story died over two years father's supper.
He hadn't decided quite how to cook it yet
ago, the house still feels her.touch. Her plants
line tl\e windows, at home in ·the yellow whenlleft.

RITY
DAILY INTEREST RATE
NO WITH
PENALTY
SJ,OOO
DEPOSIT

1 TO 89 DAYS

--THIS IS I T ! - -

A consumer repurchase agreement that does
not require you to get locked into a long-term
investment. You choose the term-from one to
89 days; you choose the amount- from as little
as $3,000 to as much as $99,999!
I'

- -THE RESULT!-You earn high interest computed daily. The rate of
interest will be determined each morning and will
be effective the same day. The rate will float daily.
There's absolutely no penalty for premature
withdrawal. You have access to your money and
its earned interest whenever you choose. And, of
course, you can reinvest at the prevailing rate at
the end of your term.
Leave it to the Ohio Valley Bank to provide a
new investment opportunity that does all this and
more. You enjoy the major advantage of a daily
floating interest rate reflecting today's market
conditions. You have a short-term investment with
daily cash liquidity.

light of tbe window, Mr. Story reviews his family
heritage In the "Meigs County History &amp;ok".

Leo Story.· a follow-up
By Sa!!yanne Hultz

Lifestyle writer

WWJ.

Ohio Valley Bank's Daily Investment Account as
an alternative to Money Market funds is
particularly attractive for the small investor who
cannot or does not want to tie his money up in a
fixed rate for six months, two and one-half years,
four years or longer.
For more information, call or visit any Ohio
Valley Bank offi~e.
·
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- Framed by the

'NEVER TIV~ VEII.Jilll MUCH'- Lee has been at home In Meigs COUDty
for 12 yean aad
he haBD't done mach travellug siDce bls sUal ID

___.;.·FOR DAILY.·RATE-.
PHONE· .
.I

A A!! purchase Agreement is not ade~sit ihs,ured.by the ~e~eral DePQsit
Insurance Cori)Oratton, Instead. 11 ts an ln,vestment secured by United
States Government obligat.ions, a very safe form of investme,nt.
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SUPER '11-Mr.Sillry,_. wllllllil·qaUtenone, eblldrea to 1bow tile Ilene whea they (beib· tile hone
I fell, "Sapier '11," ik llopel to lllow hla peat lfmld- ..... tile giea~)
an eld ~~~.

�Pag~B-2-The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

J

1981

W.Va.

~y

' SIST~ft'S

./·

All Summer
Merchandise

lf2Price

Now

300 Second Ave.
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis

• Mrs. Wilbur Floyd

DeGroot, Floyd marry

Pretty babies abound at Gallia County Junior Fair
GALLIPOLIS Highlighting
Priday moming a t the Gallia County
Junior Pair was the annual pretty
baby contest sponsored by the
Gallipolis Junior Women' s Club .
Director Kim Canaday called the
contest " the smoothest-running one
,,
ever.
A total of ~9 babies, 36 months
and under, entered the contest.
J~dges were Linda Mitton, Gretchen
Barbman and Debbie Hudson of the
Point Pleasa nt Junior Women's
Club .
Pollowmg are the winnmg pretty
babies of the county :
Girls ().&lt;) months: lsi· Morgan
Miller, daughter of Cindy and Justin
Miller, Gallipolis; 2nd· L!sa Jeffers,
da ughter of
Che ri J effers,
Gallipolis; 3rd· Tanya Sutphin,
daughter of Cindy Sutphin.
'Boys o.&lt;l months: lsi· Matthew
McGuire. son of Diane McGuire,
.Gallipolis; 2nd· Brandon Reisig, son
ol Susie Reisig, Gallipolis; 3rd·
Qlristopher Lewis, son of Kip a nd

Judy Lew1s. Thurman.
Girls 7-12 months : 1st· Melissa
Kay Bla user, daughter of John and
Kathy Blauser, Rodney; 2nd· Emily
Evans, daughter of Alan and Carla
Evans. Gallipolis; 3rd· Anna Rose
Seagraves, daughter of Rose
Seagraves, Oak Hill .
Boys 7·12 months : lst- William
Bruce Beegle, son of William
Beegle, Gallipolis; 2nd· Jessie
Taylor , son of Betty Taylor,
Gallipolis: 3rd- Andrew Williams ,
son of Pred and Ruth Williams,
Ga llipolis.
Girls 13-18 months : 1st· Jehon
Casey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Casey, Gallipolis; 2ndJessica Williams, daughter of Pam
Williams, Ga llipolis; 3rd· Brandy
Bahr, daughter of Bill and Ka y
Bahr, Bidwell.
Boys 13-18 months: 1st- Derek
Rose , son of Russell and Beverly
2nd· Josh
Rose, Ga llipolis;
Hamilton , son of Pat and Gary
Hamilton, Gallipolis: 3rd· J. C.

Gi llenwater, son of Debbie and JenBoys 2S-36 months : lsi· Chris Fit·
nmgs Gillenwater, Gallipolis.
ch, son of Sherry and Dennis Pitch,
Girls l!f-24 months: 1st- Jaela Hall,
Vinton; 2nd- Morgan Saunders, son
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hall,
of Mr. and Mrs. Ron Saunders,
Gallipolis; 2nd- Esther Sinunons,
Gallipolis; 3rd· T. C. Beaver, son of
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Mike Sim·
Tom Beaver, Gallipolis.
mons: 3rd ltiel· Erin Prose,
da ughter of John and Marta Prose, , - - - - - - - - - - - Rio Grande, and Jenny Fowler,
daughter of Evelyn Fowler,
Gallipolis.
Boys l!f-24 months: 1st· Joshua
Polcyn, son of Bob and Deb Polcyn,
Gallipolis ; 2nd· Seth Davis, son of ·
John and Jodie Davis, Gallipolis,
3rd- Jeremy Thomton, son of Nolan
and Wanda Thornton, Patriot. , c,,
"
G1rls 2S-36 months: lsi· Whitney
Hastwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Hast well, Gallipolis; 2nd- Ginny Dunsee, daughter of Rod and
Angie Dunsee, Crown City; 3rd (tie)·
Nichole Woodall, daughter of Gary
and Kay Woodall, Crown City, and
Amber WiUiams, daughter of Chris
and Rich Williams, Bidwell.

POMEROY Laura Rae
DeGroot; dauShter of Mr. and Mrs.

Lawrence' ;DeGroot of Fountain,

Colo., ~ 'BJ'1111dd8ughter of Mrs.
Mae Spef!CI!r,' ~r., Blld .Wilbur
Jean Floyd,- aon· Of Mr
Mn!i
Wilbur Floyd, Milledgeville, Ga.
were milrrieil on May· 30 at , the
Unitec! States' Air F~ Academy
Chapel in ColoradoSpriJJp, Colo.
The Rev. Keri Chaplin officiated at
the wedding. Attendants Wer-e Leona

.:IUI&lt;i

Gran

Engagements
Ault-Amsbary

Griffin: W¥ pl"eeeftted the Outstanding Achievement in Drama
Allrard on JIUie aO at tbe Coltunbus
Players' ~ .awarda ceremony
for his role of Benjamin Hubbard in
"Another Part of the Forest."
Griffin received his B.F.A. in comprehensive theater from Ohio
University before pursuing his
master's degree in actintffrom Ohio
State University.

Pomeroy.
Angie Sisson of Pomeroy will ser-

Morgan Mlller, Matthe w M.CUire, Melissa Kay Blauser, Wllllam Bruce
Beegle, Jehon Casey, Derek Rose, Jaela Hall, Joshua Polcyn, Whitney
Hastwelland Chris Fitch.

Michelle George, Chicago, lli.; John
Cates, Sunnyvllle, Calif.; Bunny
DeGroot Gray and Renee Gray,
Nuremburg, · Germany ; Ruby
DeGroot, Gene and Gayle DeGroot
and Greg, Dean and Annette
DeGroot and Felicia, Donald
DeGroot, Marsha and Rod Beck·
)V]th, Jennifer, Holli, and Trisha,
Fort Colllr!s, Colo.; Marge Armer,
Glen and Sherry Yamada, Jack,
Arlene and Andrea, Denver., Colo.

Store Hours :
Tues. , wed. Thur.
&amp; Sat.til5

ve_ as maid of honor. Donna Sees of
, Colwnbils ano Niese! Duvall of
Reedsville will serve as
bridesmaids.
', · Best man will be David Weber of
~ville. Ushers will be Tim
Baum of Chester, Donald Stivers of
Middleport, and Randy Yound and
William P. Ault 'of Pomeroy,
Kathy Johnson of Middleport will
be organist and Janis Carnahan of
Racine will he vocalist. Mary Ed. wards and Karen Jolmson of
Gallipolis will register guests .
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Meigs High School and Meigs
vocational school. She is employed
as a hair stylist at Headquarters by
Juanita .
The groom-elect is a graduate of
Eastern High School and attended
Ohio University, He is employed by
Central Operation Co. , New Haven,
W. Va .
/

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ATHENS - Chrlstopher Moore:
Griffin, son of Mr. and Mrs. John T.

'Remember' moves

Lori Kinnaird, Keith l)oss

Merri Ault

Kinnaird-Doss
HENDERSON - Mr. and Mrs.
Bracy Kinnaird and Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Doss join together in announcing the upcoming marriage of
their children, Lori Ann and Keith
Brian, on Friday, August 14, at 6:30
p.m. at Henderson Church of Christ,
Henderson, W. Va.
A reception is planned immediately following the ceremony at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Doss on Jim Hill Road.

........ -)

STATE FARM

Today's Remember colwnn appearson~ .

Gets cothes clean faster. Can actually be
cheaper than wash ing in coin laundries. Great
for apartments, condominiums, cottages,
mobil e homes or any home.

Hoover®portable
Rupl'lWus'ler
AMERICA'S
MISER ON ELECTRICITY
DETERGENT
WATER!

INSURANCE

®

r;:;:;;:;;;;:;::::;;:;;::::::::;:;:;:;:;::::::;l

DeGroot, maid ·of honor; G~
DeGroot and Henrietta DeGrOot, II
bridesmaids, sisters of the bride:
Deanie Floyd, bridesmaid, sister of
the groom, Usa Gray, and Debbie
Gray, junior bridesmaid&amp;, Nuremberg, Gennany; nieceaof·the bride.
The groomsmen were Scott Land,
Ken Smith, and Rick TenJ:ic, all ·
second Ueutenarits in the U. ·S. Air
Force, and Patil DeBonis, Colorado
Springs. Dean Mitys of Chester W¥ .
the ringhearer; and Jennifer Beck·
with of Fort Collins, Colo. was the
flower girl.
A reception was held at the
!Academy Cent&amp;r .'• The couple
.h~oonedin
tliil~. ·
.
• The bride attenc1ed, V(.eslei'D State
·Univers!W ·at Gunnlaon, Colo, Lt.
Fl~ .gradUated from the Air.Foree
,Academy atQJloradoSptinga, Colo,,
tand·ls now stati~ at Patrick Air
•'Fom! !We In Florida.
' Ahlojlg thOle a~ the wed-'·
'ding fror'll here
Mrs. Mae Speno
ce~. grandrhother of the bride, \tan·
ce Sjleticer• uncle .of the bride;
James I!Jid ·Either Mays and sOD;
couSins of'the bride; Daylton1
and SarahSpencer, aunt and IIIICle
of the bride, all ot' Chester, and
Starling and Mildred Orr. ColUJno

Mon. &amp; Fri. til8 p .m .

'•

Griffin receives
oword ·
'

MIDDlEPORT - Mr. ancf Mrs.
William L Ault of 423 S. Front St.,
Middleport, are 8lliiOIIIlclng • the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their 'daug!lteF, Merri
Christine, to James Kenneth Amsbary, Pomeroy, son of Mrs. Hugh
Custer and the ~le Dr. Kenneth D.,
Amsbary.
The open churi:h ~ will he'
Sept. 5 at 7:30p.m. lit Heath United
Methodlat Church, Middleport, with
.the Rev .. Mark Rowland of CinclnnaU offlclatiilg and the Rev .
. Rqbert Robinson, Mlddle'p ort,
' ~IS!ing. On&amp;-half hQUr of music
will preceed the ceremony. A recep.
tion will follow at the multi-purpose
building on Mulberry Hgts.,

t~esc.T

· PRE'ITY BABIES - Winning In Friday's pretty baby coolest at the
Gallla County Juolor Fair were these cuties. The babies II. to r.l are

Times~ sentinei-Pag~B-~

The sunday

GALLIA-MASON PERFORMING • ARTS
FALL

* Family Capacity * Use Anywhere
* Rolls on Wheels * Store Anywhere
* Wash One Load - Spin Dry Another

-rw..

: At The Same Time

Spring valley Plaza
Phone 446-4396

Like a good neighbor,

State Farm is there.
Stale F11111ln1uumte Comiii Rit:$
~m• Olfictt· Bloomi ngton. llhnoi'

were

Dean;

'bus,
Other out.of·town guests included

MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 1981

BA4£T~

TAP, BATON TWIRLING

Phone ·Patty .Fellure 256-1392

GYMNASTICS, lADIES EXERCISE
Phone Helen linn 446-807 4
Studios located at 5021fz Second Ave., Gallipolis
and Point Pleasant Presbyterian Church

5 P.M.

'LES JEUX(THE GAMES)ARCADE

TWIN, fULL,
QUEEN, KING

Across from the Park

34 State St.

.SIZES

•

Historic, charming Gallipolis . . · .if s closer than you

••
•

lis, Oh.

ELECTRONIC P-INBALL,Ii
AND VIDEO GAMES

••

•

'GOOD GRANDE OPENING WEEK ONLY

.

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JUST. A~R·IVED, A TRUCKLOAD·
OF MATTRESSES! 120· PIECES
Of}SEALY BEDDING. STOP·:I·N"&lt;·
TOD~i OUR PRICES 8RE A
SUR,RISEI .
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Remember when vou could go shopping and come
away with a feeling that you 're important? · ... 11're
store owner let you know that no one cared a&amp;ou f you
more than he did. That time hasn 't been forgotten in
Gallipolis . Were preporina for the future , but we
believe things like integrity shouldn t change. You can
still find the owner there every day to tell you about
value and quality. We don 't just offer products ... w~
· offer our reputation and that's something that do.esn t
end with the sale ... It begins with it, and you can t put
a price tag on that .

•
•

(the Games)

17 DIFFERENT GAMES

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LES JEUX ARCADE
Galli

ON ' ·

•

'1 00 in
FREE PLAYS
34 State St.

•
•
••
•

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coupon

AUG. lOth thru 16th

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Page-B -4- The Sunday T imes-sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OhiQ-Point Pleasant,

.

his brolber, and the ushers were
Roger Abbott, Terry Whitlatch, Jeff
Ughtfoot.

Jemy Cowdery and Carolyn
Bowman were the flower girls and
wore royal blue long dresses with
white trim. Lori Calaway was the
train bearer, and ringbearer was
Matthew Martin.
Guests were registered by
Theresa Dailey. Mrs. Nancy
Buckley assisted in decorating the
church for the wedding.
A reception honoring the couple
was held in the Riverview School
auditorium . The bride's table
featured a four-tiered fountain cake
decorated in the bridal colors. Serving at the reception were Pat
Calaway, Sandy Landon, Connie
Bowman, aunts of the bride, Darlene
Reed, Patricia Martin, and Violet
Sa tterfield
The couple reside in the Village
Green Apartments in Pomeroy.
Soulsby is employed at the Philip
Sporn plant.

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il

Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Souls by
REEDSVILLE - Carla J ean
Cowdery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Cowdery, Reedsville, and
Patrick Souls by, son of Mr . and Mrs.
James . Soulsby, Pomeroy, exchanged wedding vows in a doublering ceremony at the Reedsville
United Methodist Church on Sept. 12.
The wedding was performed by
the Rev . Richard Thomas at 1:30
p.m. Music was presented by Kay
Balderson, pianist, assisted by Kim
Reed, and the Search Ught Band
with Sue Reed as the soloist.
The altar was decorated with a
gold archway trimmed wtth flowers
in the pastel shades of the wedding
as was the railing with candelabra
flanking the archway. White bows
marked the family pews.
Given in marriage by her parents
and escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride was attired in a formal gown of Chantilly lace with
sheer chiffon sleeves with lace cuffs

~elly Hawk, and Jeff

and a high neckline accented with a
ruffle of chiffon and lace. The
overall lace skirt flowed into a ,- - - - - - -- -- l
chapel train and was edged with a
deep chiffon rulfle.
The bride wore a chapel-length
veil of illusion edged with lace and
adorned with lace floral motifs and
carried a bouquet of white daisies
and blue carnations tied with blue
WHOLESALE - RETAIL
satin streamers.
Brenda Rucker was the bride's
lnground
and
above
maid of honor and the bridesmaids
ground
pool
kits
of
any
were Judy Hoschar, Susie Abbott,
type.
Pa ula Cowdery, Cindy Soulsby, and
Fillers • Chlorinator~ •
Pebbles Blake. They wore matching
Motors and Pumps • Safegingham checked gowns in blue, orty Ropes • Pool Ladders •
chid, yellow, green, pink and
Lights • Pool Games •
orange. The gowns were fashioned
Pool Base • Filler Sand •
with short sleeves, rounded neckAutomatic Pool Sweeps •
line, and A-line skirts. They wore
Vacuum Hose • Cleaning
fl owers m their hair, and carried
Equipment • Pool Paint •
bouquets of summer flowers in
Poolside Furn. • Chemical
colors to match their dresses.
Heaters • Solar Covers •
Jimmer Soulsby was best man for
Winter Covers • Skimmers
• Diving Boards • Slides •
Liners.
Buy all your needs from
local warehouse and save.

4ug. 9, U81 ;:

\

Socials£~Jendar

:Cowdery, Sou/sby exchange vows
Cowdery,

Wef!d~ng plans:m~de ··:· :...1

w. va.

Ohio-Point

:i

'l1le open church weddlng'wlll take
,
.
•:
place Friday, Aug. 28 at&amp; :~ p.m. 11t
A misce~ shower_will 1111 ::;:
St Louis CatlloUc Church with held at the Uttle ~yger G_range HaD, ~
Father William Myers officiating. _ Aug. 22 at 8 p.m. for John and'Beth :::
,.!~~a~n~dDa~le~Curtis~
'!:.·---~_!~~L_!the:':!_2~~~th~e:::_Thom~~poo~n~-_ __ _ _..:.__:·

'

:

••..

-.
---"'••

1

-

Va .

All this week
ou'll en·o
Penn are's

rom-.

ANNUAL Parker Family
Reunion, Tuppers Plains Elementary School Sunday; basket dinner
atl2 t30 p.m.
CURtiS FAMILY reunion, Sun·
day at Parker park, AleXIIndria.
Basket dinne~ at noon ;. hostesses,

''

. Times-Sentinel-

'
Wedding plans have biJen .
reception will lle held at the Elkll •
pleted fQr the wedding o1. Cllarlene ' fann.
·
~
RocchlalldrerryWard. , ..
, - . Plan shower

-16m

-

. · RETAILS EFFEClJVE THRU SAT., AUG., 15, 1981

We NMM till ¥1 II IIIII q - M 11111111 1111111111. 11111111111 II Malin. 111111.,..111111 Ill lylllfll(llolcll• plctllllllenan.

. .l

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limit One . Va lid thru Sat.,
Aug. 15, 1981.

WITH THIS COUPON &amp; '10.00 PURCHASE

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Bass to
School

The

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Box

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ADO.:
QUANT. I
$3.00 I

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At Gallipoli s Pennyfare Only .

Limit Three . Valid thru Sat .,

.-.-

Aug . 15 , 1981.

~

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• tender. golden fried, "bite- size" shrimp
• fresh creamy cole slaw
• 2 hush puppies
• crisp, hot french fries
•the Captain's special cocktail sauces

4

WITH THIS COUPON &amp; '1 0.00 PURCHASE

DONALD DUCK CON~~~~~~TED

Orange Juiee : ·

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ONE ~10.00 PURCHASE SAnSRES PURCHASE REQUIREMENT ON ALL COUPONS REQUIRING PURCHASE

CepiO!nDs)

Captain D's.

Hours

1otil 5 Weekdays
10 til 2 Saturday

seafood fl bambafiUI
...lib you like it!

868 CAMDEN RD.
HUNTINGTON, W. V.
429-4788

'We Honor All Senior
Citizen's Discount Cards.

UPPER RIVER ROAD
OHIO

6Y2" Browning Skillet

I I •S f1 m c t or sc h o o l J n d r .m e 10 pu t Th il l Cl &lt;l SS•c s t y l e o t B cl SS

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Sh oes

Shore:, h,w r !h,l l cu:. h o ny sol e t hn l

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The
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'i"M't"'

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rl l ,l k P5 c om t on Th (' on r,,. w,1 -1 10 Sl cl rT c. c hoo l So , pre p,lr e '{ Our se lt tor
,H ! r,ln Co rrw rn ,l n c •, , ' Hw ( 1,1':,5 ( Ol ll'tr ro n ot Brl '&gt; 5 5hoe5

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l.afa\t•lle .\ Jail

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caJiipolis . o .

low&lt;:alorle r 200 pages of smart reclples

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llHif'~· e.'
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Pack-~ges, Labels or· National Advertising,

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Pizza Crisper

Pops corn fluffy light In
just 4 minutes without oil,
stirring or shaking.

Now cook frozen pl&gt;zaa let
and crisp In a 'R.
Alsb grill sandWiches,

A $29.00 ¥alae

A$14.00 Value

Candymaker

A,,,•.

BACK-TO-SCHOOL

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Elcluive '' IIOTAWAVE!'
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!!!!h _. ceelts -1 lee4s fasltf lUI
...- W..! 711 wilts ef Cllkioc ,_.._

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"IIOIICIS1S" ..., I! . . ia
I Dliflnl m.tifc jlll1ft

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Coffee-Tea Maker
Fresh brewed taste, without
waste at microwave speed.

A $29.00 Value

Browning:Skillet
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Tremendous savings on famous Hanes ' underwear
A perfect time to stock up for both father and sc:in.
Soft. absorbent. aJI!-cotton. underwear for men and
·•boys. All boxE!rs. too! Be sure to stop in this week.
'
-~ilver Briage Plaza
..
.
Weekdays 10:00 to 9:00
..
Sunday l :OOto6:00

Tea Bags

16-oz. JAR

1-lb. BAG

Marshmallows

JUMBO ROLL

Towels.

15-oz. CAN

100-ct. BOT.-500 MG.

24-oz. CAN

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for frying, searing
and more.,
.

Pork &amp;Beans

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~o

~~~rrhrr

motor

r~qu1red

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Alu11 is the only 11icrowave
ovtil 1111111fa~rer ' to ean.' . a':.

U.S. Goven•eat ,

fiOII displlyila I

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label

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Stuffed Olives.

..

or juice free cooking

s•• F~

A,.,.•.

1

100-ct. BOX

21-oz. CTN.

p~
micro.wave convection

TH Rotawave Aatenna

1

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L)tj[}f ll\/11 \•l

pancakes, ate.

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Hanes

·

HERE ARE JUST AFEW OF OUR MANY GENERIC ITEMS

BOTH GIFTS WHEN YOU BUY AN
RR·10A, RRI.·10A, RR-9TA
or RMC-30 "COMBINATION" CONVECTION MICROWAVE. ·

Cooks Jellies and Jams
to perfection ...: everytime

MARK HAMILL · HARRISON FORD
BILLY DEE WILLIAMS ·

QuaUty ·And Goodness.

"•=·

~

To Save Money On Your Grocery Bill. Generics Have No Fancy
But They Do Give You Substantial Savings Without Sa,crificing

Vitamin C.

32-oz. BOT. •oCREAMY .

Italian ressing
, ..

...... Coffee · Cr~amer. $1 2.8
Barbecue sauee1.59¢
.

'

Lemonade Mix

. ..

6
9¢
Shaving Cream .

11-oz. CAN

s·abyTShampoo.

$12j

Grape Jelly

...'I' •

Cat Litter

2-LITER BOT.

Root Beer

..... .88¢

7
9
¢
Orange JUice. . .
.

12-oz. CAN FROZEN •
I

I

I

I

I

7
9
Aluminum .Foil. .
¢

12"x50' ROLL

Potato Chips.

Garlic Salt .

• •

•

25-lb. BAG

,•

·

15-oz. BOT.

32-oz. JAR

.

•

1-lb. BAG

'

~whipped Topping 99¢

�w.

Area couples to wed
Lefebre·Longstreth

Mary Ann Carswell
!

'r

·{

r~ -

..

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Lefebre of Route 4, Pomeroy, are
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter , Rena Rachelle Lefebre, to
Kenneth (Lanny) Longstreth, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L.
Longstreth, Route 1, Langsville.
The open church wedding will be
an event of Aug. 29 at 2:30 p.m. at
the La.urel CUff Free Methodist
Church. The Rev. William Newman
will officiate.
Cheryl MiUer, Middleport, will be
the matron of honor and the bridesmaids will be Kim Warner,
Pomeroy, and Sheila Horky, Middleport. Kyle ~pe of Langsville will
be the best man, and the ushers will
be John Longstreth, Langsville.
Becky Corder of Akron will be the

fiower girl, and Brian Corder, also of
Akron, will be the ring bearer.
Pianist for the wedding will be Chris
Miller, Middl,port, and the guests
will be registered by J~e SISson,
Middleport.
·
A' reception will be held follwoing
the wedding in the multi-purpose
building on Mulberry Heights.

Carswell-Billings

at Hill's Deparbnent
Marion. Her fiance graduated from
Whlteball Yearing High School in
Columbus in 1970 and be lB employ~
at the Kroger Store in Marion as comanager.

Baseball a
resume this .

Cross-Mamone
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Earl P .
Cross, Racine, are. announcing the
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Denise Maxine, to Fr~ ·
A. Mamone, sonofMr. and Mrs. Vin- cent Mamone, Strongsville.
The ceremony will take place on
Aug. 22 in Columbus with the Rev .
Charles Norris officiating. .
The bridHlect is a 1973 g~1,1duate
of Southern High School and Is
presently employed by R. S. FUng
and Partners, Inc., Columbus.. Her
fiance is a graduate of Ohio State
University and has been employed
by R S. Fling and Partners, Inc. since 1967 and is presently a partner of

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
William Carswell, Route 3,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Mary
Ann, to Ronald Billings, son of
Thomas Billings, Columbus.
The wedding will be an event of
Oct. 4 at the home of the brideelect's parents, on State Route 33.
A 1978 graduate of Meigs High
School, the bride-elect is employed . the finn.

I

•

ByRALBOCK
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Baseball's
fragmented 1981 season resumes
tonight with the · AII..Star Game, a
h\IITY·Up affair a~anged ~s part of
the settlement which ended a 54klay
~layers s~e, the lon_g est walkout
m professional sports history.
Instead of the usual three-day,
mid-season f~tival, the 52nd All·
Star Game Will mark a welcome
back for baseball, absent from the
spbrts scene since June 12, when the
players went on strike.
By the time regular season , play
resumes Monday, 714 games will
have been lost to the strike. Baseball
hopes some ol the bad taste can be
washed down by the contest between
the best players m the two leagues,
traditionally one of the sport's major
showpieces since its introduction in

TOTAL NEW DESIGN
IN MEMORIALIZATION
'•

The Sale You've Waited
On All Summer!

Mrs. James Lloyd

McNeal, Lloyd marry
OAK HI LL - RoseL. McNeal and
James B. Lloyd we re umted tn
marriage a t 7 p.m. Sat urday, May
16. The vows of the double-m1g can·
dleiJght ceremony were repeated at
the Oak Hill Umted Pres byt en an
Church with the Re v. J ames A. M.
Hanna officiating .
The bride is the youngest da ughter
of Mr . a nd Mrs. J ohn J . McNea l. Sr.
of Oak Hill I Centerpoint!. The
groom is the eldest son of Mr . and
Mrs. J ames H. Lloyd of Oa k Hill .
Mrs. Martha Eva ns presented a
half-hour of prenuptial music whtch
includ ed , " You Needed Me."
"Colour My World ," " We've Only
Just Begun," a nd " The Rose." J ack
Thomas served as soloist accompanied by Mrs. Evans. Mr .
Thomas sang, "There Is Love" and
'' T~ L~d 's Pruyer'' d urin g ~
ceremony . Mr . Thomas a nd Mrs.
Evans sang a duet. " Sunnse. Sunset" as the m othe rs· ent e r ~ the sa n·
ctuary with Hayden Lloyd a' ac·
compa nist.
The altar was decorated with
vases of yellow and wh1te mums and
seven tiered candelabras . The
family pe ws were decorated with
yellow ribbons.
The bride was escorted to the a lta r
on the a rm of her fa ther with Mrs.
Evans playing the traditiona l wed·
d.ing march. She was given in
marriage by both of her parents.
For her wedding. the bndc chose a
floor-length gown of whi te orga nza
over satin , with an empire waistline.
The sleeveless gown featured a
scoop neckline trimmed with ruffl es
of la ce The ful l skirt was fashioned
with a chapel-length train a nd was
held in place with a satin rib bon. fo r
her headpiece, the bride chose a Victorian sty le hat tn nuned 1n lace and
sequins with r1 fin gertip vei l. She
carried a bouquet of whit e mums,
yellow rosebuds a nd baby's brea th
with yell ow streamers tied in love rs'
knots.
Carrying out the trad1t1on of
something old , the bride ea rn ed her
gra ndmothe r 's
h a ndk e r c htef.
he r dress.
somethin g new,
something bor ro wed. her hat.
something blue. her ga rter ; and an
18:i2 sixpence in her shoe.
Mrs. Carolyn Stout Fisher, fr iend
of the bnde. served as matron of
honor. Bridesma ids we re Mrs.
Greta Gcay Jenkins a nd Mrs. Pa ula
Hale Jones, both frien ds of the bride.
The attendants wore identical floor-

length dresses of yellow lace with
crystal plea ts with a matching
jacket a nd ruffles of lace trim. They
carried ma tching bouquets of yellow
carnations a nd rosebuds with green
streamers li ed m lovers ' knol,.
Alicia Chambers and Rae Anne
Lewis, nieces of the bride, served as
fl ower girls. They wore raised waistline dresses with tiered skirts with
ribbon sashes and carried white
baskets fill ed with carnations a nd
daisies.
· Anette Carter, friend of the bride,
served as guest registra r and also
passed out rice bags.
The brideg room was a ttired in a n
a ll-white ta iled tuxedo with mat·
ching ruffled shirt. llis boutonniere
was a y~ llow carnation .
Lorry J enkins, friend of the

Denise Cross

1933. _ .

Ong1nally sch~uled for July 14,
the game will be played in eaver·
nous Cleveland Stadium, site of two
of the largest crowds in this game's
history . This Is also the same
stadium where the American
League's long, puzzling All..Star
slump began in 1963.
The Americans, who once led the
AII..Star series 12-1, now trail 32-18
with one tie. The ·AL has lost nine
straight and 17 of the last 18, a streak
which dates back to a i&gt;-3 loss to the
Nationals in the 1963 game at
Cleveland.
That was the third time that the
big ball park on the shores of Lake
Erie has hosted the Ali.Star show:
The other two visits of the game' s
best players generated huge crowds.
In 1935, a record 69,831 turned out
to see the American League defeat
the Nationals 4-1 behind the pitching
of Mel Harder and Lefty Gomez. The
Stars returned to Cleveland in 1954
and three Indians, Bobby Avila,
Larry Doby and AI Rosen, led an 11·9
AL triumph. Rosen, playing with a
broken finger, hit two home runs and
drove in five runs, tying an All..Star

'

Write for brochures show·
ing memorials in color
with sizes and prices
stated.

LOGAN .MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.
Rena Lefebre,
Kenneth Longstreth

POMEROY , OH .
Le o L. Vaughan , Mgr .
Ph . 992 · 2S88
VINTON , OH .

James o . Bush, Mgr.
Ph . 388· 8603

1 2Price
on all
Summer Merchandise
300 Second Ave.
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis

g r ~n .se rv~ube•man . kff r------------------------~~--------~-------------~--

Elcess and Dave Briske r, also frien·
ds of the gr oom, served as ushers.
They were a tt 1r~ in Ashley gray
tuxedos designed in the same
fashion as that of the groom.
Chad McNeal, nephew of the
bride. se rved as ringbearer. He was
also attired simila r to the groom .
The bride's mother chose for her
da ughter ·s wedding a mauve streetlength dress w1th bla ck accessories.
The groom's mother chose a coral
street-length dress with white accessuries. She wore a corsage of
yellow ca rnations with baby's
brea th .
The fa thers of the bride and groom
wo re boutonni eres of yellow carnations.
Im me diate ly foll owtng th e
ceremony, a reception was held in
the fellowship rooms in the church
bcJsemenL Decorations were carried
out with a four-tiered wedding cake
topped by a m miature bride and
~ room. Mrs. J ea n E vans, Mrs.
Jackie Briske r. Mrs. Julie Evans
and Mrs. J olene Elcess, all Irtends
of the couple, served as hostesses.
Following the reception, Mr. and
Mrs La rry J enkins held a dinner at
their home for close friends and
members of the wedding party. The
new ly wedded couple then left for a
sl10rt honeym oon.

.
.
IN FOR 'ljHE GAME - Pblle"W"'t , ~
muqer Da11u Green, left, ead Pblillea tllli'd
IJueman Mille Sclua.ldtltack tbelr Iawge a1o11g Wltb
·
.
. .

oH

'I

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tbe ball of otberPblWes u tbey
S.turday aftemooa Ill Clevelud for today'a All S&amp;ir baseball
.game. Green will lie tbe llklpper for tbe NaUoaal
League squad. (AP Luerpboto).
-,.
•
~
_..r·
·~ ••~

Reds-Dodgers
tilt
·:
will he televised

record

LOS ANGELES (AP) ..,. The half-

owners' vote made the Reds losers.
way Natiolial League West cham·
"It stinks," was the reaction of
pion Los Angeles Dodgers and the
Reds Manager John McNamara to
sore loser Cincinnati Reds begin the . the split season.
1981 baseball season, chilpter II, in a
The Dodgers seemed quietly
nationally televised game Monday
satisfied with the arrangement.
night at Dodger Stadium.
"Give me my money," said
The Dodgers, who got off to a
Dodger oulfielder Ken Landreaux .
great start when the season began
Cincinnati's Frank Pastore, 3-2, is
last April but saw the Reds steadily scheduled to start on the mound as
whiWe down their lead, were the Reds try to make the ending of
declared the NL WeSt champions 1981's second season different from
when club owners voted for split that of tlHi one that ended June 12.
season last week. The Reds were a
Jerry . Reuss, i&gt;-2, will pitch the
l)alf-garne behind the Dodgers, · "reopener" for the .Dodgers. The
having played one less game, when twilight game starts at ~: 35 p.m.
the players' strike began.
(P.D.T.).
Thus 11 missii\g game and an

a.

Major Leque Ba1eball
AMERICAN LEAGVE

EAST

W L Pet. GB
M 12
.607 -

New Yurk
Baltimore

31

3t

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Delroil

31

Boston

30

z;
:li
:li

16

42

Milwauk ee

26

aeveland
Torooto

.574

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.54-4
.531l
.520
.276

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19

WEST

11
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Oakland

Texas
Chicago

California

13

.617
.600

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3t 'ill
20 :J)
21 :li
Minnesota
17 :II
saDday's Game .
All-star Game at Cleveland,

.511
'400
.368

Kansa s City
Sc!!attle

.304
j

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21~

6
12

lfl l
18

n1

MoDUy'1 Gamn
Chica~CQ j DoLson 7-31 at B03ta'l 1Eckersley 1M1, .n1
K'snsa!i City 1Leonard 6-71 Ill Baltimore
· ID.Martinez 7-31, I DI

a

a,

men's amateur
be played Aug .

•nllrt...oli

Golf Club near~~=~~~~

~

Sunday nigbl's contest gives
Cleveland Stadium the distinction of
being the first ball park to host the
All..Stars four times.
Vice President George Bush is
scheduled to throw out the
ceremonial first pitch before the
8:35p.m. EDT start. The game will
be televised nationally by NBC with
CBS handling the radio broadcast.
The American League starting
team includes four New York
Yankees - outfielders Dave Winfield and Reggie Jackson, second
baseman Willie Randolph and shortstop Bucky Dent. First baseman
Pete Rose of the Philadelphia
Phillies will set a record by starting
at his fifth different position for the
National League .
The starting teams were elected
by fans in computer card balloting
sponsored by Gillette. Voting began
in major league parks before the
strike and then continued in minor

1 Wil cox

Texas at New York . 1n!
Toronto at Detroit, 1n 1

Oakland at Minnesota. 1 n 1
California at Seattle, '"'

~

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Pd. GB
.611

.600
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.333

51'1
lb

.2111

171 t

.m -

.12$

1'1

.491

8

.~

10

.443

.411

g•,

121'1

. BED
,
DOOR CHEST '
TRIPLE DRESSER
HUTCH MIRROR

... NITE STAND INCLUDED

NOW sggggs..

REG. $1995•..
We Could Easi~ Sell ·This. Suite, ·and Others Uu I~ tar Much More,
But We ·Are Passin&amp; o·ur Savinp 0n· To
ln.· : ·;_.,,,,...
Bedroom . .At·This

n

READY. ,.,.

IIIII*C

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- Joe Llllll, ·,, ,..... ,

IMbiida at Stilem ~!)' ~.

P' &amp;I 71' lliiMIJ!i'ft w111te 1'-!1 atataa 11 Pete R1iit.
Wid •
~
,, ilel!ll*n Ill aatlelpallea ol RGie

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Minnesota !Erickson 2-61 , IDI
' . California IK .Forsch 9-3 or Zahn 1-6 1 at
• Se.tUe !Abbott .1.-41, 1n1
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Milwaukee at Cleveland, 2, 1t·n 1
ChlcaJCo at Boston, 1n 1
Kamaas City at Baltimore, 1 n1

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Texas jDarwin 7-41 at New York 1John

Mrs. Lloyd is employed by Bob
Evans Farms. Inc. of Rio Grande .
Mr . Lloyd is employed by the U.S.
Postal Service in Mc Arthur and
Chillicothe.
The newlyweds are now at home to
their fnends in Oak HilL

I

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Milwaukee LVuckovi"tl 8-2 1 at CleveJa,Jd

fBlyleven 7-4 1,

.

league stadiums and
tJim Frey
The starters won their bertlli ...., WID
wltlt Dallas
on just over 3 million llllllull, ft\1 ~ W ,die ipt Sr CliiUing the
below the usual 12 miiJiGII ·. -e. ·t ill* fw 1111 NaU
I! Frey and
generatedintheannu&amp;IIIIIP"!JII ' ,,ar.. ,~ au.t .. l8t ...... -30-man
Joining tbfi four y 1 tin':• . 1111' ,.~~ -. ~ ulldreser·
starting lineup for tile AL- ad- - . ;l~';;~W
cher Carlton Fisk o1. t~a''CN p . ~I.'' Gtlllf
81 Jlin&amp;came
White Sox, first ba._.; W~ ·IJ i·:s
·~ P, 1!1 U Ctrttor1 and
of California, KaDiu Qho' Ullid. l'llldie ' . ,
Valenzuela
baseman George Jnt:t -~ - .
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.ill_lti,.. ~ , NL pit·
fielder Ken Singleton o1. a,w ....
dilllltd. ,_, .. .... 18 pitchers
twa. I II .. winners,
National League ~ t .... I .:t•l ,
Rose are CincinnaU'I Gelrte . .... Pwidi;W
_NINillt and Jack
Foster Andre DaWM!'I a1 Jilaewl ~. fii·DIIrliiL •
and Pittsburgh's Dave,...... 1111111
.... 111!111 1111 . _ Musial's
outfield, Mike Sclllllldt . o( M "' 1 llllpl: ,_...for career
Philadelphia at third but, ~I '~~~~~!!t ~· ~1.- Gil IIIII ....... r.fore the
Dave concepcion ol.· .CI'. 1
*lw .. ..... will !llittk another
lilt .,._~'Mula! when
second baseman Davey l.llllllf·t oi
Angeles and catcher Glll'y~ a1 lit . . . Ill flrlll .. . . lor the NL
MontreaL
·
·&lt; n.f'a b f1ft11 M ..t starting
Brett and Sclunidt, ~ IIGI('r. $ 111M .tor ........,.. pepperpot,
Valuable Players in their Iwc•;... JIIU•• 4' s'J I '&lt;~,a starter at
last year led the f.n
~,I · J:
left field
were the' only playerJ~' ... ,dll~~e ;'', ...
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more than 1 million ............ '*l ·&lt;'
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1,144,272 votes and So •w'4$rwc.oed ·
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,

�Ohi~Poinl

alii polis, Ohio-Point Plea

.

Pleasant,

w. Va .

Defense·shines in 16-10 'Skins win

.

WASI;DNGToN (APl- Jtwulbe
type of pme George Allen 'would

fenae. What they saw was· three

Mark Moseley field goals - 39, 36
and 28 yards - and a defense that
limited the Chiefs to 60 yards in the
first half. For the game, the Chiefs

'bav~ J~ed,

but new Waablngton
Redsklns Coach Joe Gibbs liked it
just aa
The Red8ltins reverted to a combination of defense and field goals to
beat the Kansas City Chlefa 16-10
Friday night in the National Foot.
baU League exhibitioh opener for
both teams.
In another exhibition game
Friday, the New York Jets ·crushed
Denver 33-7.
The New England Patriots will be at
the Los Angeles Rams Monday
night.
.
The Redskin fans, over 32,000,
came to Robert F. KeMedy to catch
the fin! look at Gibbs wide open of-

much.

.

gained 306 most coming in the
Wllllin8 moments of the game against the Redskin reserves.
The key play in the game was a
third-period illterception by Redskin
linebacker Monte Coleman.
Coleman stepped in front of a Bill
KeMey pass and ran it back 28 yards for the score and a I0-3
Wash.ington lead.
"We were in a man..to-man defen~
se and the ball just came to me,"
Coleman said.
"We kept waiting for somethinR to

happen. Monte 's interception · is
what did it," Gibbs said, who
replaced Jack Pardee, who replaced
Allen in 1978.
_
· Kansas City coach Mprv Levy
took the Joss and his team's
mistakes - 10 penalties, six fumbles, four sacks and an interception
- in stride.
"There were a lot of mistakes and
a lot of nervous people out there ,"
said Levy. " There certainly wasn't
much polish but that's why you.play
these exhibition games."
Levy was more worried about
starting quarterback Steve Fuller,
injured while trying to avoid 200pound Redskin lineman Wilbur
Young.

•

Before be was forced to leave,
Fuller had completed 4-of-7 passes
for 34 yards and had one interception.
In relief, Kenney was 7-of-19 for
120 yards .
Elsewhere, quarterback Richard
Todd fired a 31-yard scoring pass to
Johnny " Lam" Jones and Pat Leahy
kicked four fi eld goals to lead New
York over Denver, spoiling the head
coaching debut of the Broncos' Dan
Reeves.
Denver scored its only TD in the
third quarter, a 6&amp;-yard bomb from
rookie quarterback Mark Herrmann
to wide receiver Larry Brunson; It
was Hernnann's first pass as a
professional.

•

Hurlers sharp rn 0-0 tie rn Chicago
.·I

By ALEX SACHARE

WINNER - Valerie Johllson, daughter of Nancy and RlcBard Jetfen, Rl. ~. Pomeroy, Is one of three wluners selected at a Meigs County 4H Horse Show to represent Meigs County at the Ohio Stale Fair this month. Valerie is pictured with her horse Miss Tolal Supreme. She scored 191
points out of a possible 200 In the local show to win the trip to the Slate
Fair.

CLEVELAND I API -"He's the Gonzalez. His purse - $15,000 tax
little guy in the white hat," the bar- free and more than 100 times
maid said, seeing Roberto Duran smaller than his paycheck in New
through a window.
Orleans. His purpose - to_ obtain a
There he was, a snow white hat rematch with Leonard, sometlung
covering some of the mop o£ coalblack hair - Roberto Duran, the
fighter whose image color was
always villain black until that night
We stay open two to
in New Orleans.
four hours longer
The f&gt;-foot-7'h Duran, with the
blazing eyes and the attacking style,
nightly than the other
was Hands of Stone, El Animal.
carryouts. our prices
Then last Nov . 2:i in tbe Superdome
are the lowest, and
he quit in the eighth round and lost
our selection of party
the World Boxing Council welterweight championship to Sugar Ray
supplies is the best.
Leonard.
He said he was sick to his
stomach. He said he would never
fight again.
Sunday, Duran fights again in a
Across from Holidily t nn
scheduled 10-round junior middleweightbout with 22-year-old Nino

Swisher, P. Crooks, C. Crooks, K.
Snowden, and B. Bartrum.
In the finale, tlus lime Pomeroy
outhit Middleport and played great
defense as Rought again got the win.
B. B. Gloeckner had a good night at
the plate as she socked a home run,
double and single. J . Bentley had a
double and single, and M. Moore had
two triples while Rought and Hatfield each tripled. Hatfield, L.
Pickett and D. Stegall each collected
a single.
P. Horton took the loss with six
walks and one strikeout. J . Stewart
led the hitting £or Middleport with a
triple and smgle while A. King and
C. Crooks each had two singles. S.
Zirkle doubled and P. Crooks and K.
Snowden each singled. Pomeroy was
coached by Tom Grueser while Mid- 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : f
dleport was guided by Ray Willford.

BASEBALL

natHmal

I A'&lt;~. ,I(Ue .

N11&amp;iooal katue
CHICAG O CUBS-OptiUnt-d

.J ul·

second basernan . to Iowa of tht&gt;
A!&gt;soc1ation.
PITTSAIJRC.H

Stnun .

Amen c&lt;~ n

P IR ATES- P laced

Robin.Slln . pllch4!r, on the 21-da}

Dun

d t s&lt;~bkd

hst .

Natiooal Basblball AsSOC'iation

•• j

Monday thru Saturday

. by

FOOTBALl .
N•tlollll rottball League
FRA NO SCO 49ers- WaJVed

'

FOR RESERVATIONS, PHONE 446·9010

OSCAR'S,

OF COURSE

57-59 Court St, Gallipolis

CITY
17 Cole Street

Enjoy fine food and cocktails, prompt and courteous service along with
a friendly, relaxed atmosphere.

pplications for Ohio Industrial Gl-ant must be made
.~ ..... 20.

Kevin
Scu.IIL·r and Kevtn Graffi.s, offensive linemen: Rod Morns. ddensJ\'e lineman :
Alitn Mltchell, Wldt- receiver . and Fred
lkrll&lt;lrdJ. placekickt!'r. Pla ced Gus Par·
ha m. defensi ve linem:m . on lhe inJured
reserve list
SAN

Teresa ford

AT

possession of aecond place.

DULUTH, Ga , (AP)- Bob MurTennis
phy returned from a storm delay to
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Secondfinish off a 69 that enabled him to
seeded
Jose-t• Clerc of Argentina
retain a 1-shot lead in the weatherbeat Mel Pur-ewll6-3, 6-3 in the men's
plagued and - again - unfinished
quarter(iniii·Cif the U.S. Open Clay
second round of the 63rd PGA
Court tennla Mllmament.
national golf championship.
In other qaarterflnal matches,
Murphy posted a 135 total, five
Australian Jtllrj Alexander ousted
strokes under par on the stormlashed 7,07t)..yard Atlanta Athletic France's GIBes·Moretton 3-6, 7-IJ', 64; top-seeded Ivan Lend! of
Club course.
Czechoslovakia beat Jose·Luls
Play was called for the .daY at6:57
Damiani 6-2, ~ and No.3 Guillenno
p.m. EDJ. Twenty-three players .
VIlas '· downed unsi!eded Ricardo
were stranded on the course and
~ ; IH. "
.
.,
-came baat at a,a.m. today to~ Cl!Jl9
In wome11'1 l!lngles, top-Seeded
plete their rounds before the start of
Andrea J•-«er and No.2·seed
the regularly sched\lled tlurd round.
· Virginia Rl&amp;lllcl blew past their opSharing second were Larry
ponents in th!tr concluiling sets to
Nelaon, Bob Eastwood ahd Dan
advance to the dlarnpionship round.
Pohl. Nelson shot a 66, Eastwood a
GROVE cri'Y, Ohio (AP) 69 and Pohl had a'li7.
Australian Pllil Dent upset secondWHEEUNG, W.Va. (APJ seeded Brian Gottfried ~. 6-2 to
Hollis S,tacy shot a 4-under-par 68 to
gain the quane,finals In the $75,000
grab a 1-shot lead in the $125,000
National Rn ll6e TeMis Classic.
West VIrginia LPGA Classic.
Fifth-seedet Stan Smith rallied to
Stacy holds a 1-shot edge over
win the secalld set in a tiebreaker
Kliihy Postlewait, who broke out of a
and then bl eead along in the third
12-way logjam at 2-under-par 70 with
set to dispo~e of Jim Delaney, 6-7,7an 18th hole birdie that gave her sole 6,6-3.
.

The Plano Keyboard Nightly

APPROVED FOR VETERANS
FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE
DAY OR NIGHT CLASSES

KA ."lSAS CITY KINGS-Signed FWndy
SmJth.son, ~ua rd .
WASH INGTON BULLETS - Sifr(ned Ga r·
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Sports briefs ...
Golf

Dining Pleasure

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

BA.SKF:TBALL

Amnican IAagur

SANDWICHED- Denver Bronco running bad! Rlek Plli'I'OS l24l Is
caught In the middle at the line of scrimmage by New York Jets defenden Walter Carter (left~ aad Mike Brewlngtoa mtng Friday olgbl's
· NFL exhibition game at Denver's Mlle High Sta.U.. The Jels defeated
Deaver 33 tG 7. 1AP Laserpboto 1.

Presenting &amp; Providing for Your

FRENCH
QUARTER

REGISTER NOW FOR FALL CLASSES

Auditorium between 4:30 p.m.-4:45
p.m. EDT, about four hOurs before
the major league ba~ll Ali.Star
Game at Cleveland Stadium.

Leonard has said wiU never happen.
The 3G-year-old Panamanian's
comeback will be televised live by
CBS from the 9,000-seal Public

LATE SHOPPERS

Sports transactions
MINNESOTA _ TWIN S- Mt w &lt;:l lt'd
D;u rtdl Jackson . llllcher. fmm the d ts.&lt;~ bl l:'d
list and uplwned Rtrk Su!tt'ld. uulfl &lt;"ldf r ,
In t he Tn\l'do Mud Htms uf lhl' l ntr r-

TOPS- Top scorer In a I~ 4-H hone show tG win the oppor1unlly tG
show at the Ohio Stale Fair was Cathy Hoblltetter, daughter aad Mr. and
Mn. Jim Bill Hobstetter, Rutlaad. Cathy IJCOl"ed 1M poblta out al poaaible
200 at the local show tO win tGp honors In the show. Cathy Is pictured wllb
ber horse, "Blaze." She will go 10 lbe state event about lbe middle al
August.

Duran, Gonzalez 'clash in 10-rounder today

Pomeroy softball
team cops crown
POMEROY - Pomeroy captured
the title of the Senior Girls ' Softball
League last week when it captured
two straight playoff games from the
Middleporlll-4 and 11-9. The playoff
was necessary when Pomeroy won
the first place position in the first
half of the season and Middleport
took the first place honors during the
second half.
In the opening 11-9 win, K. Rought
got the win as she walked only five
and struck out one. Pomeroy had
only three hits, but took advantage
of 14 free passes enroute to the wm.
J. Bentley led the hitting with a
double while D. Stegall and Rought
each singled.
S. Zirkle took the loss and added a
double. P. Horton led the lulling w1th
a home run wlule V. Boyles socked a
triple . Getting a single each were P.

FAIR PARTICIPANT- Cindy Crabtree, daughter of Barbara and
Donald Crabtree, Route 3, Albany, Is one of three Meigs County 4-H
equesttians selected to compete In the Ohio State Fair 4-H bone activities
!Ids month. Cindy is pictured wllh her animal, Classy Cassy. Cindy
scored 189 points out of possible 200 at the local ellmlnatlon show to win
the trip to state.

AP Sporta Writer
Tony. LaRussa, manager of the
Chicago White Sox, figured at first
that the hitters would be ahead of the
pitchers whim . major league
baseball resumed following the ·
strike. Then he saw what the hitters
looked like.
"I changed my mind the first day
the players came back," said
LaRussa, whose team played a
scoreless tie against the Chicago
Cubs Friday night ill a game called
after nlne innings by mutual
agreement.
"I realized then that the pitchers
had a better chance to stay In shape
than the players," said LaRussa.
"Notice I said players, not hitters.
Pitchers have only one skill to maintain, while players have to hit, run
and throw.''
A total of 11 pitchers on the two
Chicago teams showed they had
maintained their one skill weJI
enough during the seven-week
strike. Five White Sox pitchers com. bined on a seven-hit shutout, while

the ·Cubs' six pitchers allowed six
hits.
"The pitchen got their breaking
balls over and that surprised me,"
said Cubs Manager Joey
Amalfitano. "There was some good
contact out there but there were also
a lot of good plays. If tlus is any
measure of things, you sure can cut
down on spring training in the
future ." .
The.first game between Chicago's
two teams since 1972 attracted a
crowd of 27,018 to Comiskey Park.
The Cubs' pitchers were Ken
Kravec, Willie Hernande2, Dick
Tidrow, Mike Krukow, Lee Smith
and Doug Capilla, while the White
Sox's hurlers were Rich Dotson,
Lamarr Hoyt, Britt Burns, Ed Far. mer and Kevin Hickey.
"If the pitchers are in shape, they
should have the advantage for a
while," said Dotson. "I heard during
the strike that people were saying
the hitters would be ahead but that
doesn't make any sense. If the pitchers kept throwing during the
strike they wouldn't have much

trouble staying in some kind of
groove."
Two teams whose hitters had no
trouble getting back in the groove
were the Boston Red Sox and Pittsburgh Pirates. The Red Sox had 20
hits in a 13--3 rout of the Montreal Expos, wlule the Pirates collected 18
hits in a 111-3 romp over the
Cleveland Indians.
In other exhibitions, the New York
Yankees lost to their Bradenton,
Fla. farm team 2~. the California
Angels blanked the Cincinnati Reds
fHl, the Philadelphia Phillies edged
the Baltimore Orioles 2-1 in seven innings, the Toronto Blue Jays beat
the New York Mets 7-3, the Houston
Astros defeated the Texas Rangen;
f&gt;-1, the St. Louis Cardinals clol&gt;bered the Kansas City Royals 10-3
and the Milwaukee Brewers trimmed the Atlanta Braves4-l.
Red Sox 13, EliJIOS 3
Carl Yastrzemski and Glenn Hoffman collected three hits apiece and
Jim. Rice and Joe Rudi belted
towering home runs as the Red Sox
delighted a crowd of 19,395 at Fen-

"Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall .. .I can
cope with Nature's changes, but I can't
,. 'Stand service chqrge surprises from my
bank. I don't have to with BANCLUB."
"With BANCLUB I klww precise!¥ what 11111
checking account charge is-each aitd event ·
month. I pay one law nw1t1hly fee regardless
of my balance. Anyone w1th the se1tse of
one of my caws kncnvs it 's best to be ill
control of costs."

way Park, as well as Manager Ralph
Houk.
"When you win eveything looks
good," said Houk. "We hit the ball,
we got good pitching and we got good
defense. I hope this will carry over
when we start playing for real again
next week."
Pirates 10, Indians 3
Dave Parker' two-run homer
highlighted the Pittsburgh attack
before a festive crowd of 7,613 at
Three Rivers Stadium. Mike Easler,
Phil Garner and Bill Madlock bad
three hits each for the Pirates .
" The strike's history. We 're back
to the business of play ing baseball
now," said Garner, who took the
time to sign an autograph as he trotted off the field in the third inning,
Bradenton 2, Yankees 0 ·
Bill Castro and George Frazier
scattered five hits over the first
seven innings as Bradenton, a roqkie
team from the Gulf Coat League that
was bolstered by players from other
Yankee farm teams, blanked the
parent club before 10,200 at Yankee
Stadium .

Paying one low monthly fee Is only
one ol !he reasons lo 1oln BANCLUB. There are more, many more
$10,000 accidental death lnsur·
once; CHfCASH •• , on exclusive
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A CHI

, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-3768
"Se.rving Meigs, Gallia, Athens and Mason County Since 1954"
SUPPLIER OF THESE PRODUCTS &amp; SERVICES
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�C-4-TheS

Ti m es-Sentinel

Po me

Grieb paces 5-0 California win
By KEN PETERS
AP Sports Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. ( AP) - Bobby
Grieb drove in two runs with a solo
homer and an RBI-single and six
California pitchers shut out the Cincinnati Reds on just two hits as the
Angels posted a 5-0 exhibition
baseball victory Friday night.
Jbe game, the first of two tuneups
between the clubs for the resumption of the regular season Monday,
drew a small but enthusiastic crowd
of 11,489 to Anaheim Stadium. The
fans, who paid reduced prices, booed
loudly when the Angels took the field
for the first time since the baseball
strike began June 12, but became
more receptive as the game wore on.
Geoff Zahn started for the Angels
and allowed a walk in two innings of
work. Ken Forsch followed, giving
up a walk in the one inning he was on
the mound. Mike Witt then pitched
the nelrt three innings, allowing the
Reds' first hit, a single by Ken Griffey in the sixth inning . Following
Witt were Steve Renko , Andy
Hassler and Don Aase, who allowed
a two-outsingle to Mike Vail in the
ninth .

Grieb, who . suffered a broken
finger June 6 that mended during the
strike, drove in the Angels' first run
with a single in the second inning after Brian Downing and Dan Ford
had opened the frame with consecutive singles.
California added two more runs in
the second inning, one scoring on an
error and the other on a single by

Downing.
Grieb's homer was a towering shot
into the left field pavilion off Reds
pitcher Paul Moskau in the fourth inning. California capped its scoring in
the sixth when Grieb walked, pinchrunner Fred Patek went to third on a
tw~rbase error and scored on Rod
Carew's single.

-t
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Lv ne Center Schedule
We-ek of August 9, 1981
Date - Gymnasiu m
Aug . 9 1-4 p.m .-Open Recreation
Aug . 106·8 p .m .- Camp Cre~ce ndo

Aug . 11 6· 8 p.m.- Camp Crescendo

Aug . 126·8 p.m .· Ca m pCrescendo
Aug . 136·8

p.m .- Camp Crescendo

Aug . 14 7·9 p.m .-Open Recreation
Aug . 1S Closed
Aug . 16 1·4 p .m .- Open Recrea tion

TRUCKS -

P ool

1·4 p. m.·Open Sw im
1·3 p. m .-Open Sw im
J·S p.m. -Ca mp Crescendo
6·8 p.m.-Open Sw im
e-10 p.m.-Camp Crescend o
l·l p.m .-Open Sw im
3-S p.m.-Camp Crescendo
6·8 p.m .-Open Sw im
8·10 p. m.-Camp Cresce ndo
l ·l p..m .-Open Swim
J· S p.m.·CampCrescendo
6·8 p.m.-Open Swi m
1·3 p.m .-Open Sw im
J·S p. m.-Ca mp Cresce ndo
6·8 p.m .-Open Sw im
e-10 p.m.- Ca mp Cresce ndo
2· .S p.m .·Open Sw im
7· 9 p.m .-Open Swim

Closed

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5. All other health services available.

Openings are still available for
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men's leagu e 10:00 a .m . on
Monday.

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Solid cherry

TUESDAY EVENINGS 9 PM
OPENINGS STILL AVAILABLE
4MAN tEAMS.

in the kitchen.

. For those
·who won't settle for
the ordinary.

LADIES BEGINNERS
ONLY
FRIDAY MORNINGS,

JOIN OUR
HONOR ROLL

...

· LIAGUE

0

10:00 A.M.

Sign·Up Now•••

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Room
S u i te•

Access or ies

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SPECIAL DATES AND
HOURS FOR THIS SALE

WE HAVE TRAINED ·J»ESIGNERS THAT-' ·'
'PECIA.LtZE. IN KITCHE~
·- - - ' . . .,&amp;.
. BATH CABiNETRY.
BELOW ,IS A KITCHEN:PESIGN .FOI'«
A
&amp; ' .. ·,
.CUSTOMER.
CA.N
WE
DO 'ONE-""tllFOR '·v. .""'
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, Monday, Tuesday &amp; Wednesda y,
.; August loth, 11th &amp; 12th, 9 a.m. to 8

·, p.m.

Thursday , Friday
&amp; Saturday,
August 13th, 14th &amp; ISih, 9 a .m. to s

. p.m.
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IA&amp;Jl. lAOS, SHOIS
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; :SifiRJS AND 'IROPHIIS.

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SIGNUP DATES FOR JUNIORS,
ANY AGE, IS AUG. 29
THROUGH SEPT. 5

P. S.

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wi ALSO CARRY
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PARENTS WE ARE INTRODUCING
A NEW JUNIOR PROGRAM THIS
YEAR. THERE WILL BE
INSTRUCTORS AVAILABLE FOR
THE CHILDREN.

Kent and Dave received for their perfect
games, a Diamond Ring, S300 f.rom the house, and a
new Ball, Bag and Shoe Set. These were the first
two sanctioned JOO's at Skyline Lanes.
Bob Tills received 5100 for shooting the most
700's and the highest, a total of 14 700.games. Bob
finished the 80·81 season with an average of 211 .
D. Jackson . .. . .. ....... . . .. .... . :. 290
L. Patrick ................. . .. . . 289-289
C. Dewitt .... .. •. . ... .. . . . .. . . .. . . . 289
L . Yoder ..........•. . .... . . . . . .... 289
Rick Tench . . .. . ... . . .. ............ 288
w. smith .. .. . . : . . . . .... . .. . . . . .. , 289
&lt;D . Book en . . . . . .. ..•....... • ... . .. . 280
Sena Edwards ............ .. .... 267 -659
Cindy Jo.nes .. . • .. . .. . .... . . . . .... . 691

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·:·Phon,~ tlt6436.~.

· ~~!!""'

Monday, Tuesday , &amp; Wednesday, August 17th, lith,
( 19th, 9 a .m. to I p.m.
·
.,_,_ ' Thursday, Friday I Saturday,
August 2oth, 21 st &amp; 22nd, 9
a .m. to s p.m.

LEAGUE

S.op In arid enloy
the ~rlendly, comfortable
.. ci~9!Q~phere
.at .Skyline
"
~Lanes. Don• t ·be late,
· · Slgir
. . ul'.. now.
.

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NEW JUNIOR

BeA.·PartOf
OurTeam•..

* All

YOU

KNOCK 'EM DOWN,
MAGIC SCORE
ADDS 'EM UP.

-- . - - ---:-

-

Furniture

Find Distinctive Savings For Every Room In Your Home! Elegant, Finely Crafted
Furnituie Groupings And Pieces Are In Stock Now.... Priced To Go!

IS NOW
INTRODUCING THE
NEW MAGIC SCORE

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2. Semi-Private and Private living
accomodations.

SIMMONS OLDS.-CAD.-CHEV., INC.
8 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

·-······
-:r·

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t 3. Nursing staff on duty 24 hrs. per day. t

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SKYLINE LANES

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forget to stop in at the Captain's Lounge
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'(located
iriside Skyline ·Lanes). Live Entertainment
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· ~ Ladie~' Night (Tuesday 6 p.m. tll.c1osing)- Happy
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HQur (Mon.-Fri. 4 p.m.· 6 p.m.) •

Look For The White Tag

Price And Savel

Ph.·446-3362

�' Page-C - 6-T~e

Sunday· Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va .

Aug. 9, 1981

Business and finance. ___________-_;.__ _: , ___
.. ;

Aug. t, 1981 ·

RIO GRANDE- On Thursday at
a special Board of EducaUon
meeting, the GaiJia,Jackson-Vinton
Joint Vocational School District
Board of Education approved the
construction of a hwnan resource
center, designed to provide a comprehensive hwnan service program.
The low hase bid for the construction of the new center was
Tucker Construction Co. ol Jackson
with a bid of $475,600.
Low bid in the mechanical areas
were Geiger Brothers of Logan,
$99,384; J. A. Croson of Columbus,

•172.~ for heating and air

con- and evaluaUon center; a work ad-

diUonlng ; Charley Damrou, Inc.,
•193,000 for el~cal. ;
The major coet of constructloo,
,1,206,784, will be funded by grants
from the Appalachian Regional
Commission and the Ohio Department of EducaUoo.
The hwnan resource center will
provide a model for a comprehensive skill development center
and will provide an opportUnity for a
cooperative effort of low incidence
education. Specifically, the center
will provide a vocational assessment

justment center; a vocaUonal and
personal COWIIIeling program; a job
development and job survival skllis
program; a math and reading
enrichment program; a praetical
living and consumer education
program and ·a Job placement
PJ'OI!I'am.

GAIJJPOIJS'
' Uated · 'in. saie
. .oroer are'. tile ' llollel~ '1'111veoer Ptoneen, lli,&gt; Ui&gt;lled Ru]&gt;ber
,
uins• 'liaftt. _.-GCoinmertial and ..
allipolls paid •to
~'-ibltors
"
'his her. I b .
' Worbn Local, Poiht P1eaMnt, IUD; lloatber
per JlOWl!l fO{ the ch"'-l ,._; •
e..u
•
j)l' . C U , Weight, '• Swain, Thlvener Plonoen, m, Hl~&amp;lna
""'~ &lt;'N• .... • "-l!'l' 01'1 •amb at bUyer' and price per pound;·
' .' Qlovrulel, Wlllo,r Wood, II. ..10; Anglo Smith,
the G..... ~·•1 J~Or Fair lamb ·I
llllrkdUuabSale
. • · ~· &gt;110, Central Trust. $1~ 45 ; Sandy Brumsale F.rt~ aftet'ilOori
Dwayne Forjey, t:erltervWt y
F
fiekt; 'MOC"thMP l..ldl ~ l..uaia, 100, C and S
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ua, c and s Bank. ; w..w, :_OWit{l''aiufJ
Bm*, SUD; Scott E~. Southwettem FFA,
The bank i)urchased the lamb· ney Ranttera. ll2 110
Econu T;' · ~·$3JD •
llJ,Jti&amp;liniQIItvJ'Oiet,,l.IOandTeteuHaffelt,
from Dwayne F
. R
Steve p.......
eerd-..:.•1 y .. F
' . ' , Thiv,.PiGMers,127, Centra1Trust.tt.30.
·
orgey, t. 2, Thur-- . Ohiu V.d~yka'*: Qii~ =E~ ' Brad~. Golddl.qm,U4, OVB,Il.IO;
man, • membet-of the Centerville western F'FA 113 WlHmln~
•1-»· seou'' Terea Half~ Thl.veHr Ploneen, . l2.\ Joel
y ....... , . _ ...... _
Elliott SOuth ••L ~A ...,,, t
11.» ; Todd Johnson, Thiveflll!r Pioneen,

Bankers attend seminar

NEW NAME, NEW OWNER-The former Point Pleasant Inn Is now a member of tbe Scottish Inn cham of ·
motels that serves the southeastern part of the United States. Pictured above, left to rtgbt, are Mu Heslep, food
and beverage manager, Paul Austin, new owner, and Wayne Austin, general manager.

Point inn gets new owner
POINT PLEASANT - The former
They also plan to continue the
Point Pleasant Inn, located north of operations of the bar and
Point Pleasant on Rt. 62, has a new restaurant, which also has a new
name : Brian's Steak House. The
name and a new owner.
Purchased last fall by Paul managers report that pool memAustin, a former area resident, the be rships are also being sold and
11
motel Is now a part of the Scottish
Inn chain that covers 16 states in for
e iciency
available
rent. apartments
In addltion are
to the
targe
the southeastern part of the pool and restaurant, the motel
country.
offers 119 rooms and 11 apartNow that a few changes have ments.
been completed, Austin, along with
Austin , originally from the Point
his brother Wayne Austin, the
general manager, and Max Heslep, Pleasant area, is a 1959 graduate of
the food and beverage manager, is Marshall University. He is now a
planning . a grand opening and a Texas partner in the Lincoln
Property Company, the nation's
reception for the public.

largest developer of multi-family
apartments as well as office
buildings.
Austin says he hopes the motel,
with the pool and restaurant, can
become more of a part of the
community as well as serving

COLUMBUS - Jerry C. Hackler,
loan officer of Central Trust Co.,
Gallipolis, was among 120 Ohio
hankers who recently attended the
18th annual Ohio School of Consumer
Credit held on the Kent State University campus, Kent, July 12-17.
The school acquaints participants
with all aspects of consumer credit,
including direct and indirect credits,
collections, special finance plans,
financial statements, bank credit
cards, bank law and bank
nnanagement skills.
Classes are geared to the "case
history" method of teaching, in
which students discuss actual cases
involving Ohio banks.
Each student attends approxinnately 30 hours of classroom
work during the five-dRy co~rse.
Students are required to complete
the entire specialized curriculum,
taught by Ohio bankers and university professor, to qualify for
graduation.
The school is open to all officers
and employees of Ohio Bankers
Association rOBAi member banks.
It is sponsored by the OBA in
cooperation with Kent State University.
The Ohio Bankers Association is
the statewide trade organizational
representing all of Ohio's 383 commercial banks and their 2,000
honking offices.

two group seminar hours.
Faculty members come from
banking, business and academic
fields, with emphasis IHl their practical knowledge, experience and
teaching ability. .The marketing
school curriculum covers: Wlderstanding and influencing human
behavior; markel research; advertising; business development ;
legal constraints: sales promotion ;
media relations; budgeting and
planning; and public relations.

r-------------------------Anp olfer you

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

the ouratandlng

service

State Farm
Is famous for.

CAROllSNOWOEN
411 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, On .
Phone 446·424)0
Hom~ Phone 446-t518

, - - -.... STATE FARM
llATI '-'•••

Ate-

til...,

C.IIJfly

,• ., ....,

:St:•,.=•-=•=-==··=~-

Sells fan units
DAYTON - Robbins and Myers,
Inc., and Patton Electflc Co., Inc.
have signed a definitive agreement
providing Patton to purchase certain assets relating to ventilating fan
products of Robbins and Myers' ,
Comforting Conditioning Division.
Involved are attic, oscillating, airspread, exhaust and window fans .
The purchase price wasn't
disclosed.
A spokesman for Robbins and
Myers said the well-known Hunter
ceiling fan product line is not part of
the ventilating product sale. The
sale of the ventilating product line
will allow Robbins and Myers to better focus on ceiling fan manufacturing and marketing activities.
Subject to certain contingencies,
the transaction should be consununated on Aug. 31. Patton Electric of New Haven, Ind. is a private
-oncern.

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REMEMBER
MONDAY

i BIDWELL SUMMER baseball
: .Jeasue picnic, 5:30 p.m., Raccoon
•' .Creek County Park. Dinner will be
•'
,• ~uck.

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Vision Center in both Gallipolis and
Pomeroy .

Pays dividends
DAYTON - The board of direc·
tors of Robbins and Myers declared
the regular quarterly cash dividend
of 32 cents per share on the common
stock of the company, payable Sept.
15. to shareholders of record .
This is Robbins and Myers' !24th
consecutive quarterly dividend and
the 31st consecutive year in which it
has been paid .
Robbins and Myets is a multimarket company serving spedfic
segments of growth markets with industrial and consumer goods, including fluids handling equipment :
electric motors and controls;

com~

fort conditioning products:
materials handling systems.

and

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•••••••••••••••••
••• THIS WEEK'S ••
SPECIAL.
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DIET :
RITE :

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100 :
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~ o~:ies $} 29 ~ .
Plus tax
&amp; dep.

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ICE COLD BEER.
WINE &amp; POP

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HOURS
Mon.-Thurs. 8tilll
Fri. Sat. 8 til12

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CARRYOUT
. 709 First Ave.

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The -reser;v.e t~iort· lamb was
purchaaed -by Eeono.Tt&amp;vel Motel, 1 . Jlowdl · · · • , ' · ;
.
• Culllna;' Golllr.itli" FFA, 91, Union Tobocco
US 35 ' or ,...
; und
Wlirehoule; "- pley, 11~: t'hristy Curfinan,
. • n .$0: ·'t~·.P~'-~erdBiN:f.uGprl~,-~rtbond,
20
• •
t I'
if'!l'· . per ,po
rom
I . I
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Qt.Hhire· C,ll and Kittens, 117, David Evans,
102
Wendy . -Biit4bur; Galli" lis. J{ FJ;j.~ es, • D.r~ Lewla S~hrnidt• .• 1.1$, Sieve Sl.lO; sean Call, Rebel&amp;. !18, Boso Agti.Center,
. of.the.· .,
., ;
stu{~f c_tnterviUe y~~f'armers, 108, OVB. Ill~· Todd Jotvwoo 11liVener Pioneers 103
mem, ber · Rodne_y Range'r!i~ , .' . tJ' ~ W') ~rl, Caltia · ~rontJe~n, 111, r,;;rt;r.and EvaN~. 11:1$; Mary Earl, Gallia cv:
A tOtal tof .111 l8mbi.were iold in W~n h-' ~~~~~?:~'Pffr· ~~:~· ~= Fruptie~n. 1~. Harlan Martin, 11 .15 : Chris
the ... I
tha · •
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Smith,' T . · ie
Howard, Rio Friendship, 95, Pasquale Electric
1110
. 1...1 sa e-, 12 more n those sold 0~)' MCKt
' .:. 1 1~ Ste B d~"Ho!.l01
...:
$1.20; Ricky .Swalft, Thivener Pioneers, 114:
8
a ...l.;
J09~illl iY. ~_!'
ry~ '"....,.n::,.
OVB, SUO; Mary EMrl, Gallia Co. Frontiersm 198(1,
'f

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·-!fliers.

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m "": q;s, 11.10 . Teresa

men, 124, Carter and Evans, $1.10; Mike

S~.us~ge Sh:op .:~buys .
GAWPOUS -. Bob Evans
Sausage Shop of Rio Grande paid
~
B0 bby Gord
. on; Rt . I ' .Cheshl
. re, $8
per pound• fOr the grand champion
. the . st.
ual h ;
h
21
. og dunng
.· 81\fl
og~sale
10 the show·arena at the Gallla Coun-

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· ty Jwuor Fair Fnday.
Gordon's hog weighed 205 pounds

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Gordon is a member of the tittle
Kyger Valley Boys.
""-.
~~~ pnce ~as 75 cents Up for the
hog pw'chased by O'Dell True Value
.
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Lumber Co. of Gallipolis from Bob
Foster in 1980. The shop paid
•• 2S
a
reco rd 41"·
per poWld for Sean
Call's hog in 1979.
•
The reserve Champton, Owned by
Mandie Pope, Patriot Star Route

·

Bob

Evans Sauaag•

Shop, 18;

Mandie

r.P,

Triangle, ~10, Ohio Valley Bank, l2.25; Bo1JbY
Gordon. l..iWe Kyger VaUey Boys, 2·11, O'De[l
~bl!r, 11.50; ShanMil Belville, Gadmus Redskms, 235, Plico EC, 11.10 ; Wendy Adkins, Hill·
t~, 193, 8 and E Trucking, S1.40; Scott
Lewas, Roell Hill Ranc.hers, 316: Ronald Adkins ,
CPA, $1 .40: Jan Colhn.s, Galltpolls FFA., 212,
Allen Wood. Ins. $1.50; Richie Gilmore, Little
Kyj,ler Valley Bofs, m. Allen Brothers, 11 .60;
Ru~er Waugh. HJIItoppers, 230, Central Tl115t
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agent S Corner

Many pond owners report small,
black specks or larger, yellow grubs
just under the skin of their fish. Both
are types of parasites.that pass one
stage of their life cycle in fish flesh.
Some also spend a stage in snails.
Two "people" ,problems .often
irritate pond owners in swnmer.
,One is· "swinuners' itch," which is
c'aused by a tiny organism that
qurrows into a person's skin. The
other is leeches, which are small soft
bodied ·organisms that attach themselves to fish ·and sometimes swimmers.
Both problems can be cilntrolled
with copper sulfate treatments.
Stockdale recomm~nds using five
parts per million, or -13.5 pounds of
copper sulfate per acre foot of
water. At this rate,. he warns, there
nnay be some fish ~ill .
· Review Coming Up
Farm Science Review officials
planning the 19th big ~arm shpw
Sept. 22-24 expect bigger and ' be~te~
things this yeat. Held on 750 acres of
land near Don Scott Field northwest
of Columbus off 1-270, more than 470
·exhibitors have already,signed up to
display }liore than $25 million worth
of machinery, equipment and supplies.
· lmplement companies will demonstrate fiDotill corn plante.rs and
drills, and specialists will be
available \O answer ques\io!'S. Daily
field demonstrations wilJ. include
tillag~, plowing and ha~~sting or
review crops.
Grain harvesting and drying
demonstrations will be held daily,
Eight different kinds of grain
storage bins with two loading
systems, a leg system and an auger
system, will be used ..
Tickets bought in advance are
$1.50 and may be purchased from
many implement dealers and all
county Extension offices. Tickets at
the ~ale are $3. Persons ·12 years of
age and older must have a tiCket.

Current
Rate

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Kltl.ell!l, 91,

Green, RJoRidCe Runneno, 12.1, fJVII , . 1~

Kent Walker, Suut.hweHlt:m 1- 'fo'A, 1:1'1 , l '~'f" '
•nd P~l.ll; ScoUy CUrfnlllu , IJltl•· KW' ''

Vlllley ~ 1, 119, Jackion PG~. I .'l!J ; Tu ~t ll:tr·
cu:i, otUo kierl,ll9, Ccfltnl Trus t,$ 7~ . All•·"
firecn, Rio Rldlte RIIIU'IefS. 1J7, P11tty f-i•r•~· · r.
SUt»: Aliaoo Flilb, Hannan Tn~ce Jo'Jo"A, 17~1 . r.
~n.l S Ba nk , $. ~ ; Amy

M•lflt,umnery, GSiddi(lers,. M, 8osu A~rr -Ct·rrt..·r .
$.111: .Jennifer [)jniels , Ohio River Rolnl·hcn•. 11 7.
BudLaJWin Jo' ~arm, MosweU, Calif., S . ~ ; .l;,rrr..-1
Wdth, Trhm~k:. 83, David and Fuller ll!:Jtl
~ :sli•lt· . $.7.1; KdlhSpurlock, Trialll!le, 8$, M"'·""'
IlL I C:11 .' I .M: Shcmnun Webb, Triangle, a:i, Ccn·
lr;.,l Trust. $7 ~ : Deanna Caldwell, E.T.C , &amp;.S .
IO:UIJm·,. t•urniturc, $.76; David Caldwell .
Tr}; m,~J, , , 114 , OVH , $.7S: Keith Spurl ock ,

o·Roorke:~~~~~mllH ~=ld'wcii~'~.T:c 1~:
Hardware, s... : O.nny lk•v.r .

'l'tuvener Pionkrs, 100, OVB, U5: Tr~tcy

Stewart,Thivene"rPiooeer!,120,Kin~Tut, $1.60;
Danny Beaver, '1111vener Phm~n;. !l'i, Dan

TfiHIIJ:k K:l , N..d Mas.,ie, s . ~ ; Danny Sheel~ .

Evans, US; Gary Caldwell, Trian~le, 108, Ohiu
Company, U$; Jan Collins. Gallipulis FFA, L1,
Neal Burleson, 1.85; Diann~~ For.:ey, Center\lille
y~ Fannen, M, Jemeoettl 's Pizza, $.85;
Dianl\!l Forgey, Centerville Yoong Fannt!r!l, 101 ,
J&lt;~orKey'11 Fann, $.~: Ricky Swam, Ttuvener
Ptoneen, • . OVB , U~ ; Jall'Ue Montgomery ,

dy·VIlleylfanns, Uil: Mike Kemper, HillbUU..,
112, Hlulns Chevrolet, Ul : Brion Byrd, Han-

.,.1111r·y 1-"im rwr ~. 8&amp;, Mt-Ghee Realty, $.70; Kent
W&lt;tlkt·r, ,"t&lt;&lt;~ Jtllwt : ~ l~:rn F'FA, ~. Davis and
Fuller. S. 7~ a1trl Julw lianicls, Ohio River Ranchers. S:\. Hud1;marr t'~nn~ . M os~·e ll. Ca lif..
Sl .85

nan Trace FFA, 195, Bob Evans Fanns, •.81 :
Am~ ROI!Ih, C!lelhl.. C.ta .and ~liens, 210,
David T. Evans, 1.62; Mlk&lt; Dames, S&lt;lll~
weste~ FFA,. 225. A.llen Baster, 1.94; ~ike MeCo~ck. Tnangle, 229, Produc~rs Livest~k.
W~sh•ngtoQ c . H.. 1.71: Keith McGu•re.
Tnang\e, 194, Pratt Meat Processmg, t .64 : Jeff
Rqach, Rlo Wranglers, 206, A. F. Burleson, $.60;
Mike Beaver, Hannan Trace FFA, 209, G and J
Auto Parts, , .62; Terf1: HoUey, Gallipolis FFA,
2lt, Root

Home, U5; Terry Martin, Ohio Halden, .1.92,
Hammond HIU HOlstein, UO:. ~t Brwnfteld,
Guyan Jung~ Cab, 214, HiJ!&amp;"" Olevrolel,
Wallow Wood, • .U ;• Todd Ragan, Raccoon
Va~ley, 741, Bob EvalVI Fanna, $.90; Mike
Dames, Southwestern f!A, 2Z5, Central Trust,
ll and Mik~ Merry, Rm Rida;e Runners, 232,
HarlanMartin, •. 70. .
Scot!r Curfma,n, Little K~ger Valley Boys, .
Whtte s Wallpaper, 1.85, .Judy . Siders,
Yellowtown Buckeyes, lllfl, Smith Buick, U5:
Gregg Dee!, Raccoon Valley, 199, Central Trust.
11 ; Keith McGuire, Triangle, Q, Phillip Rober~
Ls . Eng.r. UO ; Sonja Call, Rebels, 220, Evans
Enterprise5, $.101 Mike Shoemaker, Uttle KyMer
V~lley, Boys, 221, WaugMialley·Wood, $1.~;
Mike Beaver, Hannan Trace. FF~. 191, MeG Inness-Stanley Inaurance, $.70; MarkGibnore, Ut·
tic Ky~ Valley Boys, 196: Mc0onald'a •. l .71!;
Te"?' Cline, Gtay~n Jungle Cats, 214, OVB, $.111;
Davtd Rtlll!lh. Hdlbllll,es, 2;21. Harlan Martin
1.62: Ec:l Church, Rio Fnendship,
Don
Thomas . Insurance, $.83; Brian Altizer, Sun-dance K~ds, U6, Central Trust, S.71; Jan Collins,
Ga lllpolllj FFA. 209~ JemeneUi's . Pirut, 1.71:
DukelAwhom,SundanceKids,224,JenkinsConcrete, Ull; Todd Dee! , Raccoon Valley, 2Z7. W!Jr.

=·

Farm, Palriot,

1.63

and Lisa Beck,

E.T.C., 230, Centra1Tr:ust.t.62.
D. J . Harden, G1dha B~neers. 187, _OVB.
1.611; Kelly RUU!h, Cheshart' Clits mel KtUeru;,

191, Band 8,.1.61: Tmy Hal1sl!orl!•. Hay....,.,
216, Casey McKenzie, 1.62; Terry Ome, Guran
Jqle Cats, Z20, C and S, f.61; GreW( Belvdle,
Cadmus ~edskiru~, .m . Bob Evans Farms, 1.63;
Richey Gdmore,l.atUe KyMer Valley Boys, 206,
~ AMrl-Center. 1.-61; O.IUI .Green, North
G_aDI.Il FFA, 209, Ohio Valley I.w~~. 1.6.1;
Li~ kk, E.T.C., ~1 , Produl"t!n. l.westock,
Lancaster, U~; Apnl Graham, ~nanjjle, 235,
JackSOf! PCA, S.63; Gary Roach, Rtv Wran~ler~.
19;$, Wl8e11lan AKency, Ul ;. Rv)(,r WaU~oth ,
Hilltoppers, 210, OhillcoFanTI::', $.62; Ed Ctlu~ch .
ltio Frielll:bhip,, 221. Pleu1nt Valley J:lo:~patal.
Ul ; David Ramey, ZJ:i, Harlan M~rt.in, UO;
Ke~ly RoU!Ih, Cheshire Cats and K1ttens, 200,
Baird and Fuller Reo~~ Jty, $.63 ; Bruce Waugh,
Hannan Trace F:FA, 223, OVB, $.61; Dale
Newberry, ~llltoppers, 233, OK Tobacco
Warehouse, Rapley. 1.6$ and Todd Rapn, ~ ccoon Valley, D, ~b Evans Farrns,$.81.
Dale NewbeiTy, Hilltoppers, 218, Edwards
Truckil\ll, Ul ; Mandy Pope, Triangle, 230. Haf·
felt Druthers Carpe:tinll, $.69: MicheUe Beaver.
Hannan Tnce FFA, 196, David T. Evans, $.61 ;
ChristyCurlman. Cheshl.reCatsand Kittens. 221.

Century 21 Southern Hills, $.63 : Denise Davison.
Triangle, 235, OVB, 1.80: s ..... Waugh, Hannan
Trace FFA, 197, Bob Evans Fanns, $.68; Mike
Shoemaker, Uttle Kyger Valley Boys, 221, Pope
and Pope.I.G3: Gregg Deel. Raccoon Valley 23;,
Central Trtu!;t, UCl and Gary Roach , Rio
WranKierll , 226, Gallipoll! Tobacco and Candy

FF A. 203, Cen"•lTcml . IJ;J. """"" "'' '""· &gt;!&gt; .
David r . E""'· 1 58: T•&lt;ld Ae&gt;k•·• . I.!UI•· Kygu
Vall ey Boys, 219, Bob F: v&lt;&amp; rt~ l' ;,rnc, , S !".t'.l ; Ttorry;,
Adkins, Hilllopper.; , 11!7,.Cent ury " ' """'"
Hilla, U9; Allen Gre.n, R10 Hido&lt;&lt;l&lt;uoom, 1".
Cha rlie Ridwmb. 1.61; Chad Lewt s, Htl(:k H1l l
R.am: hers , 214. Bob Evans Fanro:, S.G9. Barbbret
AdBiru. Hmbilli&lt;&gt;. 225. E'""' Ent.rpm&lt;&gt;.l.60 .
Martha Spurlock, Cadmus Redskins, 19:.1. OVf. ,

cu.. 1.80.

Allen Green, Rio Rklge Rutmers, 231, OVB,
$.110: o8n Daines, Southwestern FFA, ~. Bob
E\·ans Fanna, $.69; April Graham, Tria....:le.
211. Cand S Bank. UO; &amp;:ott ROWih, Hillbillies,

l .:il ; Kel[y Miller, Hillbillies, 206, Bob Evttns
Fanm, 1.60; Shiela Miller, Borderliners, 213,
Evans Enterprises. $.59; Raymond Woolum,

231.EvonsEnterprues.l.l9: Dwayne Caldwell.
Hillblllle!, 221 J . o. NOrth Produce, UO : David

SouthweoOem FFA, 186, Richard
GaUia FFA,

Fanns, 1.65 :

20%
OFF
THIS
WEEK
ONLY

I•

SAVE ON PANELING
WE ARE GOING TO DISCONTINUE

•

ALL ARMSTRONG
CEIUNG TILE &amp;
GRID SYSTEMS
IN STOCK

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l

.if·'

·~

'1.

FROM OUR STOCK.

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SALE ·
'10.35

UNION (EDAR

'9.15
1 12.80
'10.20
'15.80
'8.75
'8.99

MESA SToNE
. DARK
'PECAN
'
.
tiGHT BIRCH

'8.99

,

'I

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l i
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-y

Check Our
Low, Low Prices
On Selected
Vanities.

21%0FF ,

'9.30
"

~7

OUVE.St
.
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~

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ALL Mti)ICIN~

.

'446-4464

·'

.CABINETS
• f

r

Ev.ns

21t, Bob

Meltssa Adkms. Hilltoppen;, 186, S&lt;ruthem Hills
Ce ntury 21, 1.&amp;4; Shiela Miller, Borderliners, 186,
Man· Caldwell, $.60; Todd Deel. Racroon Valley,
189, Forvey Club . 1.78; Riindy Martin, Ohiu
Raiders , I91 , BobEvansSteakH~JUSe.l.59; Scott
cu~man . Uttle Kyger Valley Buys, 1~. _ B~ISu
Aj,ln~enter, 1.:)8 : Barbara Adams, Ht!lbtlhes,
216, Gurner Wood yard, $.60 and Paul Wa~h .
HanN!n Trttcc FF A. 192, Jocksun PCA. $.58
Ed Moore. LtUie Kn:er Valley Boys, ZOO, Bob
EvMns Sleak Hou.o;e. $.59: Kevin Junes.
Hillbi!hes , ZOl. B-.ird and Fuller, 1.60: All en
Wau~h, Bocktye .Hi!Js FFA. Ul6. Emprre Fur·
mture, $.59 ; Kevm Jones. Htllbil!ies, 213, Bob
Ev11n.s Steak House. $.119; ScoU Lew1s, Rock Hill
Rancher.!i. 190, Jmncs Ftumly F'urm, S.67:
Shawna 1-t~n~(ord. Htllbillies, 201, Harley Crllll.'lt'
and Son. S.64 : o~·ay ne Caldwell. Hillbillies. 211.
Central Trust 1.6!&gt;: Christy Curfman. Cheshin.&gt;
~ts and K1Uens . 186 . Central Trust. UO : Rod·
ne&gt;· June;, Hill ballies, :0, Ce ntral Trust. S.67:
Brian Kirby . H L ilbl lll e~. 187. Central Trust, S.60;
and Kalh}· l.an«. CumpaLI&lt;(n, 191. Ne11l In·
sura nee. $2.

@mstrong

•

m~.MAIN, ...OMEROY
M' W 9·4; Tllura. &amp; Sat, f'N,OOII; Fr.l. N

M;ller, CPA.

$.59 :. Todd Aeiker. Little Kyger Valley Boy5, 198.
Oavtd T. Evans. 1.58: Bubby Kirby , Hiii!Jillies,
Ul6, Central Trust . 1.60: Andy Adams. North

ROO!ih, HillbtiUes, ~. PhlUip RDberU. 1.61;
Shannon BelvUlt, Cadmus Redskin$, %21, Evans
Eno~. 1.19; D. J. Harden, Gallia BuoCl:lrleer&amp;, 23S, Richard MiUer, CPA, 1.$9: Jud)·
Sidt!rs. Yellowtown Buckeye~, 228, People's
Bank. Point Pleasant, 1.75 ; Tanuny Hartshorn.
Hay.sftds, 233, OVB, Ul ; &amp;ndy Martin. Ohio
R.aiden, 196, Fallon BrothenHOJ( Fann, 1.62:
Mike Brumfield, Guyir. Jungle Cilts, 1~. Herbert !.asker, $.$9 : Amy Roush, Cheshire Cats
and Kittens, Z26, Harlan Martin, $.58; Ed Moore,
ljLtJe Kyl(er Valley Boy:s. 232. A. T. Burleson.
1.60: Tim Green, Hillbillies. 188, Jack:wn PCA.
US; Kelly Miller, Hilltrillie:s. 206, OVB, •. rxl.
Sunja Call, Rebels, 211, Bob Evans fanm.I.M :
Jeff R~ch, Rio Wranglers, 225, Dock Inn, $.58 :
Andy A&lt;Uirm;, North GaUJa fi'FA, 233, Bob Evans
Funns, $.61; Dennis Davison, Triangle, 203,
Steve and Jl)ey WilcoKon, S.59; Matt Kemper,
Hillbillies. 2U, Evans Entei'DI'i.:se:l. 1,59; Connie
Junes, Hillbillies. ~. Bub ~vans Fann'i, 1.60:
Paul Wau~h. Hannan Trace FFA, 189, J . D. North Produce, 1.61 and Gregg Miller, Gallia Buccana.n, 201, Bob Evans Steak HOWle, 1.61 .
Mike Kemper, Hlllbillies, 213, C and S Bank.
Ul: Jamte Thomas, SWldance Kid5. 191.
Claudia Dilniels. U~ ; Dan Daines, Southwestern

Cash Bonus offer expires Augu~t 31, 1881

AccoVnt• lntvrM to S10C.OCOby FSLIC

ROll5h, Chesh1r• ~ I ; ,.L~ illlll

Kitlt.'f\S, 83, Don 'nMmlas Insurance. $.All . .lltrr.w

SprOng Valley

•

Get your share of high Interest and a Cash
Bonus 9nly ~~ l;&gt;iamo~d.: the pj.ace for all
savers offe~ng highest Interest on Insured
savings.

Hnd

Champion Hog for $8 a pound

a

c
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zg.s
0 un ty .
.M e

By Jolm C. Rice
Extenaloa Agent
Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - Many pond owners
face special malll!gement problems
in the sumrrier.
Tom Stockdale, Extension wildlife
specialist, The Ohio State Univer.sity, says mi)Stof his phone calls and
letters about pol\dll . concern fish
kills, wee(l:problems and "people"
problems.
An unus.ual number of pond fish
kills have occurred this year. Stockdale explains that although nnany
suspect it.is ·because of pesticides,
them~ frequent cause is an oxygen
deficiency and resulting fish" suffocation.
•
There an!·two principle causes of
oxygen deficiency. A "turnover" occurs atter strong winds or heavy,
cold rain. The deep layer of water,
which is low· in ~lved oxyg~n.
rises to tiM; top, and the wanner,
oxygen-ftlled top layer sinks to the
bottom." F:isll sUffocate' 'when, attracte(l' to light, . they remain near
the surface..
The other common cause of a summer fish kill is the hig~ demand for
dissolved oxygen by decomposing
weedS. 1'he8e weeds either died of
natural causes or we're killed with a·
herbicide. ~posltiem can tie up ·
so much. oxygen ,t!la{ ·th!!re is little
left for fish, and tliey sufflicate.
Although nothing . can be done
about turnover fish kills, good weed
control early in the growing season
greatly reduced the likelihood of a
swruner kill du~ to weed decomposition.
If you See dead fish or fish at the
surface gulping for air, make every
effort to get more oxygen into the
water. Run water from a garden
hose into the pond so it splashes on
the surfac~ ; pump water from the
pond and let it splash bock onto the
surfa·CI•.,.
the surface with

Rto FriendJhip, 110, Federal Land ·Bank. 11 :

was bo\lltht by the Ohio Valley Bank $1.70; 'r• ..,. Marlln, Ohio !udders, 1111,_ c and s
for $2 25 per pQWld .POpe is inem- . - ·. $1.60 , Matt Kemper, llillllliiiH, m,
•
. . • . .• .
Fruth J Phannacy, 11; JL&amp;Stin Fallon, Hope's
ber of the Triangle H:l Club. Her hog Htl~l!lfl Ha~d, 214, C.nlral Trust, 11.10; Marte
weighed 210 pounds
~llm"'i, Utile Klger Vall!J, Boys, 224, Bob
h
· ,
vaqs anna,$1.1 : Chadl.ewil, Rock Hill RanOne undred and thirty·nifle hogs chers, 190, Ohio Valley Bank, SU~ ; Joe F!J8ler,
were sold Friday two less than th
FFA, 235, _~~~,.or Parts, fl: Duke
. '
e GallltMJIL&lt;
Lawhorn, Sundance Kads, 193, OVB, f .95· Jason
amount SOld m 1980.
Thomas, Upside Down, 190, C and S Ban), f .90;
Listed in sale order are th
Mike Merry, Rio Rldie Runnen, 21~1 . OIUo
. .
.
e
Valley Uvestock $.110; Wayne Waugh, ttannan
exhibitOrs, his or her club, weiglrt, Trace FFA, ,221, David T. Evana,l.11i Ju.stbl
buyer and price per pound·
Fallon, Hope a Helping H.and, ~1. Wilh.s F_uneral
Bobby Gordon, lJtUe KYMf:!r Valley aoys, 206,"

~-MI.

UtUe Kyl'r Valley lloyo, 107.

Mrs. Thelma ~ver, 1: Gary CaldweU,
Trta~le, 108, Evall!J En~e. $.90: " Mark
Beaver, Hannan Tract FFA, 92, c and s Bank,
S.l$ : Gacy CaldweU, Trlan~le, 1111, Or.
O'Rourke, SU:fi; Tlna Barcus, Ohio Raiders. 104.
Hammond Hlll Fann 1.9&amp; ; Sean Call. Rebels, 96,
Harlan Martin, U~; Chris Howard, Rio Frlcnds~ip. 92, Jon Louden, UO: TiNI Barcus. Ohio
Ratders, 99, Central Tnl8t, U5; etru Hm••ard,

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unl~ger~~

1.10: Tim Price,

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17.374%
15.80-%

Annual
Yield

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•• Gallipolis Ice Co. ••
MORNING Dawn l..odge No. 7 · •
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DRIVE THRU
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FlrAM wW meet Monday at 7 p.m.;

; · E. A. degree: Don E. Hemsworth,
- ~ W.M. ; G. GordooFisher, secy.

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... Q.mmond HiU Holstein, $1.35; Mendy Pope.
..!!.'!~.!..~~7,·· ~~-!,Bank, ~;~ma'
Ste
• .v:~s.~
-~, _ ,
'"8"' '"• 113 • ._.
'"' ·-~·
f1 .30j Tadd oM,on, Thlvener Pioneers, • Don
n .."~~· 11.7(1, Steve ,Bradbury, Rodney
·Thoma• Instaranct, tl.SO; • Angie Smith,
,-,.eo;s. 123, R....U Wooil I......,.,., t2.10; Triant~le" llli I!Onint! Buleher ~SilO · Brod
~:: ~inn=e,y~-=:· CJemeerW. o01ddluen.93 .•Joel A • , i1.00; Jan
110

Effective August 4 through August 10

A subs!an118 1in1erest penalty IS requ1red for eany Withdrawal

For additional information on this and any of
our four other Money Rate Accounts, contact
any of our 41 Diamond Savings offices.

lamb.

Amy lbn'\h, f :ht~shin• (Mill

John Hlwll l T. S1nith. 11 : Smm f:all, H.ebetl, 18,
Grand v,,u,.y ll.anlw~tn•, $.15 : hblri: HG!ley,
LewliWIUihlnlllr'Pl't, ll .l:tandMarkBeaver,
Thhll'IM.!t PitMM't!rs, 11:1, Hwl111nl Miller, CPA,
HaMinTnctFFA••• JactsonPCA,Jl.lO.
. .1$ ; IUchy f:illl14)1'1 ', lo~Uit· KyJ:t!r Ylllll!)' Ru)oH,
Mark HoUey, tbivener Plonren, 116, C and S
106, Url* •• ..'anu.-;, Jo'radiM' , S.OC! ; lk~unna C.:,..ldBank. II : Keith Sourlock. Triangle, !H. Pope's
well. K1'. C. &lt;:JuL. 911. Nl•·l Mu...•w·, S.!ll; ltubcrt
Pus!, 11.15; Sh.rt hOWIIrd, ru., Friendlhip,.ltM,
Ho~~llcy, c:IIIIU. Uun ·run :rs. 101 , llilrlilll Mart in.
Carter Tractor Sala:, $1.20: Tim Price, Uttll! . •.• : DltvidC..kJwl!ll, Tria·~~~~. IIU, IIarfdllirlJ!;
SK~.
VFal1ltney. s.Fya'rrne·~~. ~.. OJC$.90:T~'!! II.G6 : Mike fiht~em,•k••r, Littk· . Kygr!r v-.Jh..y
·~
,
•• ...
........... ...
Buy!!, !H, Mn~. A. u. Mlwkt!la:tll!, S.l$ ; M11rk
Warehoulle. Ri_pley , f.95 j Mandy~. Tn,ngle,
Beaver, &amp;nn~:~n 1'rH L~~- 1''1°/i, !II; Jo:vo,m:; fo:n116, Higgina Chevrolet, t1.31!; Heather Swaln,
~ 1.10; Shari lhiwHnl, Hiu Jo'licnc.lo;hip,
Thl
PI
Ill OVB I iO Tim Price
91 OVB S
'd Cakl 11 T . 1 93 0
&amp;oy'•· 9&amp;. ShOrt
ohio:
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''
~-m .. " • 1 1, ·eentra Trust,
down frcrn.the $!2~~ paki in 1980'by ~: S~~ch~~~ ~~'if.~~U~~
F!)l'gey Cent ·nev
F
.. F th
C&amp;S for' Steve Forgeyi s· champion . Pha
'
ervl . oun~ artnefl,, 1 • ru

IIO,Ih•wanl Woyne f"i-.d.,, llond Mark Hulley,
Tiil"'"' I'"'"''"'· 11:1, Ji,kinKConcrde,ll.

•
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•

•e

30-Month Money Market Certificates
Receive $20 instant cash with a $5000 deposit
Receive $10 instant cash with a $2500 deposit
• No minimum deposit
• Highest Money Market Rates
• Highest interest yields with our 365/360
continuous compounding
• Interest rate guaranteed for term
• Interest may be compounded or check
mailed monthly or quarterly
• Insured to $100,000 by FSLIC

I

amount Was

,'-lit:'

e

Bailes joins committee
GALUPOUS - During a recent
meeting of the Ohio Optometric
Association, Dr. Jack Bailes was aJ&gt;pointed to serve on the awards committee for an indefinite tenn.
This comrruttee is responsible for
rev~ewing all activities of the local
zones and the individual members of
the association so appropriate a war·
ds nnay be presented at the annual
convention.
Dr Bailes has served Optometric

--:-• ..........r.s.

Goldda"m, lltl, ~t.an ley Jo;vJ.t¥1~, Pll•; stl.\inntm
Webb, Trllllnl(le, II, fr:ikntl 1.-.nrf JU~nk, 1.11$;
Dwayne For~eey, Gttnta..niiJt~ V•.tm¥, Jo'wnnt~rs,
101, J . Rcb1!rt Evan.'t", 1.1:1 ; .fhm.:l Wt:t,t,,
Trtancle, 13, David T. Jo~v11n11 . I .M wrwl AJI•:u

~ri lluword, Rlu Frl•ndlllip. Ill, Dovld
f:voo..ll.IO; ~li~ ...-.lu,HannanTroce,FFA,

FF.A, 97, Fmdl Cily Shell, fl .Ui ; Bruce W•u,gh,
Hannah Tract FFA, lll, lllnlid Evans. It; Oiall"
111 Forgey, CenterVille Young Farmers, liM.

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j_-=============....,=·=-==-=-=·

OXFORD - Robert T. Hennesy,
assistant vice president at Commercia! and· Savings Bank, was
among 29 students who graduated

r~v~ls~tt~o~rs~a~n~d~t~ra~v~e~le~r~s:_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __::_ _ _

from the sixth annual Ohio School rl
Bank Marketing. Graduation
ceremonies were held at a luncheon
July 31 at Miami University, Oxford.
The resident training school is
sponsored by the Columbus-based
Ohio Bankers Association in
cooperation with the Miami University School of Business Administration. Class instruction ran
4"" days, and began July 26. The
session was composed of aJ&gt;proximately 28 classroom hours and

.
~muer, Ultle ~yger Vauty iloys, 1~1. Cent(il Tnat. 11.16; JamMI w~ Triallfll&lt;, 1111,
Carter and E¥1nl, tl : 8 - Wugh , Hanolln
Tri"" FFA,I13, OVD,II ; JanColllna, C.IUpollli

·u-....... ..

1

Construetioo of the center will
begin this fall. The bulldlng is
scheduled to be Completed in time to
be fully operational by September
1982.

The Sunday Tjmes-Sentinei-Page-C-7

C&amp;S ·~~ pay~~ .$ 10 a .·p ound for.grand champion lamb
Sa

Vo-ed bo.a rd accepts·
.bids
.

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

GAl.UPOUS
I

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OVB top
steer
bidder

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bellot tsaue designed to fluaJiee tbe
COD&amp;Inlctlon of a courthouse facWty
to replace the weal wing deatroyed .
by ftre on Jan. 8. On Tuesday, Larry
Ew!Dg of the Tlmes-Seuttael IJt.
tervlewed the colllllllsslou about
tbat levy BDCI the proposed Clllll"
th01111e. A. traDUripl of that Ia·
tervlew appears on lhli page.

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
SAT., AUG. 15, 1981

GRADE AWHOLE

Fryers...................':.
FRENCH CITY
oz.
.
W1en ers :............ :~~·..

G¥ry Caldwell. Triangle, 1.~. Ohio YaUey
$3.12: &amp;on Elliott. Southwestern FFA.
1.2«1. lA@lln Packing Co., Hardinglon, W. V&lt;:~ ..

Bank.

12.36 : Terry E\li&lt;IU, Rodney Rangt&gt;rs, l ,2«i,

Holley Brothers Construction, '1.40: Klm
Bickers, Hillbillies, 1,196, McDonald' s $1.25:
Tanuny Elliott , Rodn4!'Y Randers, I 098, Bob
EvarL"i Steak House. SUO: David Burleson,
Hillbillies, 1,0!9. Wiseman Agency, 11.18 : Paul
Duncan, Gallipolis FF A, l,{Ol, Wood Insurance ,
U .21 : Rogtr Waugh, Hillbillies, 1,0'1!1, Toler Ins.
Agency, $1.22 : Kevm Withee, Rio Ridge Runners, 970. C and S Bank, 11.35; Joe F oster,
Gallipolis FFA. 1.176, M and T Construction,
$l .lli ; Kenny J enkin.s, Ohio River Ranchers.
1,000, Higgins Chevrul~l. SU2 ; Jud)' Hively ,
Hillbtllies, l ,IM9, Jayrnar Coal Co ., $.82 ; Terry
Barr, Hillbillies, 1.166, Lonnie Gold's Truckin~ .
$.76: Colin McKean. Tht J. J's Gang, 9-11, WaughHalley, Wood, 11.01 , Da vtd Caldwell, Trtanglt,
951. S~ll y Paving Co. $1.16 ; Mike Waugh, Han-

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HOMEMADE

Sandwich Spread

An interview with the .commissioners

· SJ29

Ground Beef...... ~~ ..

Ground Chuck ...~.~.l
BUCKET

59
..
....

.

$ 29

Cube Steak ........ ~ ..

Hlty!i«ds. S3J, OVB, PCI : Mike Kemper,
H1llhlllies. 1.127. Ohw Valley Foodland, 1.75 :
Dana GrH"n. North Gal hi! FFA. il. Par Mar Oil
Cu ., S 71: Will Louden. Rio Friendship 911 . OVC:.
$.70: Jarnie Huff, Southwestern F'FA, 980,
Pleasant Valley Hospttal, $.63: Brad Burdell .
Ran·oon Valley, 902, Emp1re F'urmtlare. 1.68 ; J
C. G\as:;burn, Hillbtllie s, 833, Rtcl'wrd Miller,
CPA. 1.66 : Dav id Nida . Southwestern FFA , 833.
. ll~ n~nettl' :; P1z:ta. $.67 : Jenny Louden . Rto

Fnendslnp , 1.137. Ohio Vall ey L.tvestock. 16:1

Cabbage .......:......L!12$

and Ja~ki e Glassburn . Hillhillies , 1.098. Cent ral
Trust. $.66 .

Greg Glassburn, HJllbtlhes, 833 , l:entral Trust
1.6'1 : Barb Ha ll, Rio Rascals. 902. Oh1u Valle y
Foodland. $.62 : Stoney Johnson. Countrymen .
IWJ, McGinnes.s...Stanley. S.'IJ. Amy Umden. R1u
Frumdshtp , 813. Cl"nlri!l Tru..'it , S.liS : Sl:utt Cald·
well. Trianlo(le. 1182. Vf'rmetc&gt;r One-Man Hayinf(
System. $.61. Matt Withet&gt;. Rio Ridge Runners,
1.009. Cenlri!l Trust . S.67: Todd Deel, Ra cl·oon
Vt~lley , 1,009 . Unioo Stockyards, Hillsboro, 1.67:
&amp;rb Adi!JT\.'1 , lltllbilhes. 900, Pt~ul Stewart, 1.64 :
Sh.Hn HoM·ard . R10 S1lver Thtmbles. 52.3. O'Dell
\.umbt•r . s . ~ &lt;lml St&gt;Htl Ca ll . Rt&gt;brls , 931,
Shnver·s Garagl' . S 64

DARI FRESH

2% Milk..........~:~ }

Farm tour
Wednesthy

Lunch Meat.... .I~.o;••

$ 79

H~NZ

VInegar.............~~..
\

( (J

.te

DETERGENT

84

lEmergency cail

oz.

Limit One Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
OffPr Expires Aug. 15, 1981

I 'RACINE-Tile Racine Emergency
~ -at 8:11p.m. Friday took Don

•Caito to Veterans · Memorial
!Qolpltai.

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69

cit&lt;~"'lll" ·

'ilaeta~ Ill~ 1M ballrd of
coinm'~n.e· clnd-enatloa'
oD the
eveats aiirrouudlng tbe Impact of tbe Hie OD COIIIIty

eeateied

opentiQi· and tbe pr011pects for rebulldl•g. Tbe
followlugl!l auedlied lniDierlpt ofthatiatervlew.,
T-s: HoW would.,YOU characterize your activities i.Jn.
me&lt;;liately following the fjre-being faced with this
situatiol!, what l!l'ere your priorities atthe tlme1
COMMissiON. PRESIDENT JAMES SAUNDERS:
As you lqlow, our 'operations were pretty thoroughly
disrupted after the fire ... we had to shut-down entirely
for a few days in order to gel organized .. .l guess our
priorities were to relocate those offices destroyed by
the fire, begin negotiations on the insurance setUement
and salvage as much as possible, in the way of records
and equipment, so l!l'e could get back to serving the
public.
COMMISSIONER PAUL NIDAY: It was a pretty
hectic 1\ine.,.we devoted a lot of time to the
situation...in fact, still do. We met 23 days In succession
right after the f~ ...this was somethitig none of us was
expecting. We aU knew that this was goiag to be a dif.
ficult yeer for the county, primarily in tenns ol finance;.and, with this,.well, it hasn't been easy.
T,5: For a few wee~ after the lire you housed offices
in existlllg rental space throughout the city. You then
decided tC! place the modular units on the courthouse
grounds..._what led to that decision?
P.N.: Prlrilarlly, we needed to centralize operations,
not have county offices strung all around the city.
These modulars serve as_good temporary offices; and,
are .able to fulfill the .need of the juvenile court for a
·
large courtroom...
COMMISSIONEJ! WNNIE BURGER: And... they
were CJieaper th!ln the other rent we were .paying.
These cast ul; $2,50'a sq~re.fe)Ot ... the places we were

I

renting before were costing from $3 to $5 a square foot.
J .S. : The company we got these from was the only
one that would rent this kind of facility. All the others
we .talked to required that we buy the units.
P.N.: Over the thr~year rental period il will cost
the county around •78,000 in rent for the
modulars ... then .there are other costs like the set-up

·f~B. :'iiie ' ~l'W: ~ve'.aifo;..s a pe~centage- .;r the

rent we pay to go toward the purchase of the modulars
if the county should decide to keep them for some
reason after three years.
T..S.: We have heard people criticize the rent of the
modulars-in essence charging that you shouldn't have
used the Insurance money intended to rebuild the cour·
!house to lease these buildings.
L.B.: That just isn't true. Our insurance included a
$300,000 clause specifically for relocating offices and
reorganizing operations after something like this )lappens. Not a cent of the insurance settlement-the
money to help rebuild-has been spent on these
modulars.
T..S: You are now asking the voters to approve a 2.5
mill levy lor the purpose of courthouse constructionwhy did you opt for that funding approach as opposed
to other avenues of fundlng ... like a piggy-back sales
tax?
L.B.: A sales tax would take about 10 years to
generate enough.to build the courthouse ... our. bonding
attorneys figured· that over that period of time we
woUld be paying over a million dollars just in interest.
P.N.: There are really no other optlons ... immediately_after the fire and, really, ever sin·
ce the lire, 'we have checked with our state and federal
representatives about goverrunent funding. The an·
swer is always the same: there aren't any funds.
T-8: Why did you optfor a special ele,ction, instead of
waiting for the November General Election?
L.B.: We'd like to get started as soon as.possible. If
the levy passes, we are going tp go to bid immediately.
J .S.: Our architect has told lis we need to get the end
of the existing aMell covered before winter ... he feels
the building could be damaged if it stays the way it is

L.B. : With interest rates and inflation the way they

are, the longerwe'wait the more it's going to cost.
T..S: The corrunission is approaching this as a bi·
partisan issue ... but, how would you answer those
people who might vote against the millage because of
something you might have done as com·
missioners .. .like the guy who doesn't like the way you
handled the EMS situation, or the way you approached
the dog pound issue.
J .S.: I have no doubt that we-individually and as a
conunission-have done things, made decisions, that
make some people unhappy .. .that goes with the job.

But, that shouldn't effect anyone's position on the cour·
thouse ... after all, it's not for us-it's for the county.
L.B.: Right.. .it's the whole county's courthouse and I
think people should be able to be proud of it.
P.N.: I'm disappointed when I hear that ... that
someone wants to use this against the courthouse: We
three will actually spend little time in the new building.
It's not for us .. But, it's our duty by law to provide a
facility for necessary courtrooms and county offices.
T.S.: What will happen if the August 25levy fails?
J.S. We'll either have to go with the piggy-back sales ·
tax, or stay where we are ... there are no other options.

IF mE LEVY FAILS? - "We'll either go with a
piggy-back sales tax, or stay where we are ... there are
no other options."- James Saunders, President Gallla
County Board of Commissioners.

FLAVORITE

Margarine .......... !~·.

.. .
.
Plzz·a·..........•......•..,
TOTINO
.

·•

..

'

12;5 .QZ. •

.~l(J I\j

OXYDOL

;Diltrict

...

$} 19

ARMOUR TREET

(Note; 011 Jau. 8, the west wlug of the Galllil Couuty
courthouae was destroyed by ftre. On Aug. 25, the
voten ol Gallla County wiD deckle the fate _. a bond
for tile JIII1'P08e of rebulldlug the facWty. The
COUDty co111Dl1181ou Ia seeklug approval ol a %.5 mill,
three-year levy, wblcb Is e:q~ected to geuerate approDma~Y $2.8 ll!illlou. Tbe total .project CCIII Is
, eettn..*"'!:-'t.N.5~0!1, .~t 'ni~f.• Larry Ewiug

Issue

Rtchard Griffith, Ga llipolis FFA , 980, Or. David
Carman. $.76 .
J errell Cullins. Temp . Ri!!!ing. 1.029. Or . Mtl
Simons, $.77 : Terry tbdley . h.annan Trace FF'A .
.882. O'Dell Lwnber. $.76: Tim Grl't'n , Hillhi!hes.
1,000. Carter and Evans, 176; Steve Lance, Campalfo\R. 902, Boso A~ri-Center , $.76: Joel Colhns,
Te mp. Risml(, 833, OVG. $.75 ; Steven Sanders,

:also

•1

On Auguat 25, the Ga1lla County
Board of Commlllllooen will place
before voters a %.5 mill, ~year

Sunday 10 am·10 pm

. steers when it paid $3.12 per pound
:for Gary Caldwell's animal at the
·30th annual sale in the show arena
:Friday.
· The steer weighed I ,325 pounds.
Caldwell, of Patriot Star Route , is a
member of the Triangle 4-H Club.
The OVB set the record last year
: when it paid the same amount for
·Scott Elliott's grand champion.
· S.S. Logan Packing Co., Huntington, W.Va., paid $2.36 per pound
for Scott Elliott's reserve champion
steer. A resident of Rt. 2, Patriot,
Elliott is a member of the Southwestern Future Farmers of America
(FFA) chapter. The steer tipped the
scales at 1,205 pounds Friday.
The sale sheet noted 76 steer were
sold this year, an increase of 12 from
the 1980 total. Auctioneers at all
three sales were Tommy Joe
Stewart, Gallipolis and Lee Johnson,
Rt. 2. Crown Ci tv.

0

·Times-Sentinel Special _Re

SIORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am·10 pm

. chase price for grand champion ·

POMEROY - The Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District and
Cooperative Extension Service are
sponsoring a twilight farm tour at
the Gene Yost !arm near Racine .
. The tour is set for Wednesday
evening at 7:30p.m.
A wagon ride around the farm Win
show the various aspects of a dairy
:farm. Soil Conservation Service
:(SCS) and Cooperative Extension
:Service (CES) personnel will be on
·hand to discUss com and hay produc·
lion, erosion control practices,
.pasture and hayland management
and InseCt control. Milk production
:and animal waste management will
be on the agenda.
: Following the tour, refreslunents
•will be served by Mrs. Yost and the
:Meip SOU and Water Conservation
ladles aiWliary.
·
• The rost !ann Is located on Town:s111P fiOad (Oak Grove Road) elf
ROute 124.

Aug. 9, 1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

•

GALUPOUS- Ohio Valley Bank
ol Gallipolis equaled its record pur·

rum Trace FFA , 1.088. Central Supply Co., $.98 :
Greu Dee!. Raccoon Valley . 1,029, Dr. Bt&gt;rkic h
and Lentz, SUI : Wendy Simm. Gallia Horseman. l,IX&gt;a, Cremeans Concrete, Neal Insurance . $.93 : Matt Kemper , Hillbillies, 1,098,
Benedict Farms, McArthur , $1 : Tande Pope.
H1Utoppers. 1.107, C and S Bank, $1 : Angela Hudson. E .T.C.. U07. Central Trust. 1.96: Kell y
Hanulton , Th1vener Pioneers, 1,009, Smith
Butck, Sl .00 : Brut'@ Waugh, Hannan Trace FF A,
1,137, Southeastern Equipment, U9 and Apnl
Graham. Triangle, 1,1:!7, Toler lnsl.lrance. M.
and T. Const. , $.85.
Andy Adams, North Gallia F'FA , 1,008, Merco
Minin,to:: . $.87: Wayne Waugh, Hannan Trace
FFA. 1,117. J . D. North Produce, $.87 ; Steve
Wilcox in, Countrymen, I, 176, C and S EUmk, $.94 :
Shane Glassburn, Hillbillies , 1,107, OVB, $.86:
R1choird Meadows, Hannan Tract FFA , 951,
Sprilll!l Valley Hardware, $.93; Charlie Corwin,
Gallipolis FFA, 1.029. McGinness-Stanlt)', $.90:
Jot' Walkins. Campaign, 882. Richard Miller.
CPA, Ull : Ferrell Miller , TriBngle, 1,M9, Ohiu
Valley F'oodland, U9 : Tim Barr, Hillbillies,
1,127. Carter Tractor Sales, S.S9; Darlene
Jenluns, Thivener Pioneers , 1.~. Ronald AUunson. CPA. S.&amp;'J : Edie Duncan . Galllpolis FFA,
1.078. Pope and Pope:. $.89; Kim Jividen,
Thivener Pi~r.~. 1.127. M. T. Epling Co .. l .92:
Ca rl Hively , Hillbillies. LOCJ8, Ohio Valley
Foodland. $ Sfi ; John VanMeter, HiUbillies, 1,176.
Ohio Valltoy Foodland. $87 ; Bill Da:11is, Gallipolis
fFA, 1,176, Swishfr Implement Co., U5 :
Cha rles Stewart, Southwestern FF' A, I ,009, S. S.
Lol{an Packing, $1.02 : Jackie Corwin, Trianglt,
970 , Mike Allen. $.93 ; Harold Burdell, Raccoon
Valley . 901. Holzer Clinic. 1.92 : Justin Fallon.
Hope 's Helping Hand. 1,0M, ~ntral Tmsl, $.91 :
Paul Wiiuf(h, Hannan Trace FFA, 1,078, OVB,
$.81 . Shwan Swisher, Hillbillies, 882, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, 1.77; Jan Collins. Gallipolis
FFA. 931, Jacltson PCA, $.82; Carol Meadows,
Hannan Trace FFA. 1113, OVB, S.n : Lisa
R~..~.SSell . Hillbillies. 1.049, Oh.io Valley foodland.
$.81, Heather Rtle)'. nuve~r Piuneen; , 911 .
Barr's Supennarket, $.79: Glenn Barcus, Ohio
Valley Ranchers , \,009, Central Trust. $.35 and

classified

,

SUGAR
5 LB.

BAG

$139

INSTANT
COFFEE
·'
10 Q'Z,
JAR .

·. $339
'

Tbe proposed oouuty•courthouse
comprised of four stories ud.
cuptee approximately 31,1111
feet. Accordluc to the

architect, ~ IJuildlul!
to be ·comP!ittble with tile
adjo!DJul amiex ·and to rl!fleet
(Javor of
l~al comlnUDlty. Tile fac:lllJty .wCMdd .
.accomodate judces.Chamben,
t r . - IIIII eouty dep81'1mellt
lkel. Total mat of .!lie proJ.tet
estimated at $3.511111Jlo11.
.'

' FreQCh

Reua~ace

�Aug. 9, 1981
1981

Circleville native chosen for post
RIO GRANDE - Jim Fletcher, a
native of CjrcleviUe, has been
named assistant director of admissions at Rio Grande College and
Community Colle&amp;•·
Fletcher came trl Rio Grande from
Hocking Tectmical College in
Nelsonville where he has served in
various capacities with the Ad-

:.I ...
I .

CONDUCT CEREMONIES - Sergeant Major
WIIHs Davis from 0. U. lleft), and Major Robert
Adams also from 0 . U. !right). present master
Sergeant Raymond Parsley I center 1 with his Master

•

_,,~..,·--,-·..·~

Division m Korea as a Senior
Wh ee led
Soecia list.

Veh icl e

Recovery

and counseling at Morehead (Ky.)
State University in 1970. He then
wolited as a teacher at Fed&amp; Creek
(Ky .) Junior High in !966 before
acquiring a teacblng posltion.at Portsmouth Clay High School in 1987. He
held that position unW 1969 when he
moved into the counseling position
at logan Elm High School.

BELFAST, Northern Ireland ( APJ
- Irish Republican Army guerrilla
Thomas Mcllwee died Saturday on
the 62nd day of his hunger strike in
the Maze prison, sparking riots in
Catholic areas of Belfast and Londonderry.
Mcllwee, 23, was the ninth
guerrilla to die at the Maze since the
fasting campaign began March I.
His death came on the eve of the loth
anniversary of Britain's policy of
jailing suspected terrorists without
trial. Although the policy was abandoned in 1!!75, the anniversary is
usually marked by riots.
Youths lobbed gasoline bombs and
rocks at security forces in Catholic
West Belfast after word of
Mcllwee's death spread. They were
answered by a barrage of rubber
bullets.

Sergeant Insignia at the promotion ceremony held ln
the Military Science Building at Rio Grande College
and Community College on Monday, August 3.

Police outside a precinct house In
the Falls Road section, a Catholic
neighborhood, were bombarded by
rocks and debris from apartment
rooftops. Nine people were arrested
when police stopped a march in front
of Belfast City Hall.
A Gennan photographer was
wounded in the leg:i ·Police did not
disclose his name and said it was unclear If the injury was from a rock or
rubber bullets.
Violence also flared in Londonderry, near Mcllwee's home
town of Bellaghy. Hundreds of
protesters and police clashed.
Mcllwee was serving a life sen·
tence handed him by a non-jury
court in 1977. He was arrested in
Ballymena, 20 miles north of
Belfast, in October 1976, after a
worruin whose boutique he firebom-

bed burned to death and a bomb exploded in his car.

Drops nomination
WASIDNGTON (AP)
The
Reagan administration has dropped
its lntention to nominate William E.
McCann as U.S. ambassador to
Ireland, a State Department official
said Friday.
Questions have been raised involving the Chatham, N.J ., insurance, executive's business
dealings, but McCann has said there
was no wrongdoing.
President Reagan is now expected
to nominate Peter Murphy, a
prominent Oregon Republican, for
the ambassadorship, said the State
Department official, who asked not
to be identified by name.

Upon hi s return from Korea, he
was selected to attend the U.S. Army Aviation School at Forst Rucker,
Ala ., a nd was trained as crewchief
for Army he licopters, graduated in
the top 10 percent of his class and
was selected to be an instructor in
the inspection section of the utility
helicopter I UH-11 branch.
In 1968. Master Sergeant Parsley
was assigned to Vietnam where he
served with the Fourth Aviation Battalion. fourth Infantry Divi sion as
the Platoon Sergeant of the Gunship
Platoon . He was then reassigned to
Fort Rucker, Ala ., to his previous
job, then back to Vietnam, thls time
gmng to B Company, 229th Aviation
Battalion tn Long Than.
Back to the U. S., MSG Parsley
went to F ort Bragg, N.C. to the 269th
AviatiOn Battalion, and then back to
Germa ny with f Company. !23rd
Maintenance Ba tta lion in Ansbach.
Germa ny .

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
In memory 0t Charles
The Board of Com· ScoH, who INlued away
missioners.
Gall'ta Aug. 4, 1975, 5 years ego
tOday, Sadly mined by
Metropo!Jtan
Housing Jerry, Donny, Janice.
Authorlly will open sealed Anita,
grandchildren,
bids at their office, Rl. 2, brother and sister.
Apt . Mon14,
Bidwell , ·ohio,
45614,
Seplember9,
1981,
at 2:00 P.M. for Insurance 11
coverage.
In Memory ol Ollie Mae
Specification .may be ob ·
Cozart who departed
tained from the Housing
this life 2 years. 9th of
--·- Authority Director, John P.
August.
ROderus, «6·0251 .
Your gentle lace and pa ·
The Board of Com ·
tient smile
·
missioners of the · Gatlia
With sadness we recall
Metropolitan
Housing
Authority reserves the
right to accept or reject

You had .a k·i ndly word
tor ectch and dled
The voice is mute and

still the heart
That loved us well and
trtJe.
.
Oh, bitter was the trial
to part from one so good
as you .
You are not forgotten.
Ollie Mae,
Or ..,.ill you ever be
As long as life and
memory last
We will remember thee .
We miss you more
Our hearts are sore
As time goes by we miss
yotJ more
Your lovely smile
Your gentle face
No one can fill your va·
cant place.
Sadly missed, Billy,
Mom &amp; ill the Family .

Public Notice
NOTIC~ 'TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE'OF OHIO
DEPARTMeNT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio .
July 24. 1981
Contract Sates Legal

Copy No. 81-716
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be

received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depar·
tment of Transportation,

for improvements in:
Parts 1 to 35 inclusive are
offered liS one contract and

Field

Painting

of

Existing Steel.

ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG ' Opening
soon
specializing In aluminum
cans, aluminum siding,
sheet &amp; cast alum., copper

"The date set for com·
pletion of this work shall be
as set forth in the bidding
proposal."

E'ach

bidder shall be

required to file with his bid
a certified check ,. or
cashier's check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but in no

wire, brass, radiators, and

days proor to the date set

tor openinP, bids in ac·

GALLIPOLIS
Chris Ca rmichael , son of Cha rles Carmichael.
took grcmd champion honors in the
dairy sweepstakes at the !981 Gall ia
County Junior Fmr.
Carmichael's champiOn Holstei n
received a show blanket from Gallia
Roller Mills, show halter sponsored
by Burhle Oil Company. a trophy
from Carnation Red Rose Feeds a nd
a $150 check.
Second and third place honors
were shared by Denms Norman.
Ewington. son of Mr. and Mrs. Mose
Norma n and Carole Carmichael.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Cann1c hael.
They sha red the second and th1rd
place money totaling $225 . trophies
from Mr. a nd Mrs. Ishmael Gillespie
and W. R. ID1ckJ Brown , show
blankets from Boso Agn-Centc r,
Inc., an d Shake Shoppe. show
halters from the Commercial and
Sa)lings Bank and Holley Brothers
Construction.
Taking fourth place was Brian
Y&lt;iung, son of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Young. His animal. a Brown Swiss,
received a show blanket from Central Trust a nd a halter from the
J~nior Fair Dairy PromotiOn Committee.
Young was also presen ted a $75
cijeck and trophy awarded by A. E .
Brown,lnc
Kelly Stowers. daughter of Mr .
arid Mrs . Edward Stowers took fifth
pl~ce. Her Holstein was presented
with a show blanket from Landmark
of Pomhoy, and a show halter from
ttle Ohio Valley Bank.
In addition, she received a $50
check and trophy from Je nkins Conc(.ete .
Capturing sixth place was Chu ck
Young, son of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Young. He was presented a $30
check, trophy from Leland Parker,

Cu rti ss Breeding Service. show
blanket from Jordan's Gas Service;
show ha lter from Clearv iew Estates,
James C. Saunders.
Fir st yea r exhibitor was Wayne
Dillard. son of Mr . and Mrs. James
Dillard . He received a $25 check,
trophy from Jackson Production
Credit Assn ., show blanket by Car·
nuchae! Farm Supply, show halter
by Swis her Implement Company
am! show box £rom Mills Forage
l':q uipment.
Brian Young who had the cha mpion Brown Swiss also received a
trophy from Dick Lakm; Chris Ca rmichael, who exhibited the grand
champi on Holste in , a trophy from
AJhzer f ann Supply; Annette
Moore. who exhibited the grand
champion Jersey, a trophy from
Federal Land Bank and Denms Norman who had the grand champion
Guernsey received a trophy from
Eugene Elliott and Sons trucking
service.
Dairy sweepstakes points are ea r ned on the da iry cattle entered at the
fai r ; top three animals exhibited,
breed cha mpi on class, dairy
showmanship, barn inspection and
f" ir conduct.
Previous winners were:
Year
Winner
1967
Kathy Frye
1968
Kathy Frye
1969
Carolyn Ball
1970
Kathy Frye
!971
Jon Ca rmichael
1972
John Payne
!973
Tom Belville
John Payne1974
Bill Burleson I tie)
1975
David Mills
1976
Andy Plymale
1977
Chris Carmichael
1978
Andy Plymale
1979
Andy Plymale
1980
Andy Plymale

-

. •'

..:

.

'

GRANDE - Rio Grande
cOllege and Community College will
hdst the final Swnmer Freslunen
Orientation session for incoming first;year students, Aug. 14-15.
According to Sharon Toothaker,
director of the Rio Grande Coun!ellng Center. area residents planning to attend the college in the fall
for the first time are urged to attend
the tw&lt;Hiay affair.
Events include information about
cqllege servlcea, ·placement testing
for math and Engliah classes,
aaaciemlc advising, and prerl!gtstration for ctasaes for the 198182 academic year.
. :Registratjon for ctasaes at this

r

time will guarantee that the student
will be able to enroll in the classes
that they want, Toothaker said.
Classes must be paid for on Aug .
15.
The orientation program is
,designed to help incoming students
have a successful beginning to their
college careers. Toothaker said that
parents are also encouraged to attend, and special events have been
planned for their enjoyment.
For further information or to sign
up, contact the Rio Grande College
and Community College Community
Educational Counseling Center at

(614) 245-6353, ext. 275.

(,

Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and specifications
are on file in the Depart·
ment of Transportation and

the office of the Disirict

Deputy Director .
The Director reserves
the right to ·reject any and
allbids.
.

state. A \lia anics recentlY installed, Boom mike,
duel 340' s, GS, MB,
DME, Tr Pon, ADF, 300
auto. pilot, EGT, SP, Ar
ticulate/rectine sea1s,

OAVIDl. WEIR
. DIRECTOR
Rev. 8·17·73

4

tinted glass, deluxe,
exc. cond .' ll30 hrs.,

Aug. 2. 9

. .. ..
-.... . . . .........
.....
'. '

'

'

'

TTAE.

,, :

45 ~sq. ft.
--

..

--

;_

Conslltutlon
• Des rgn fl ows wall

effec t
• Washable

to wall
• 12"' x 12" trle

• 1:r • 12·· lite

" Acoust rcal

Reg.

A pups, beagle and shepar·
ds. Call «6-3758.

67~ sq. ft.

gOOd home. AlSO five kit·

o

• Washa b le 11myl surface

MONEY· SAVING COUPON!

20%

Offer in effect 8/10/Bilhru Bil5/81
~'

·(

''

.

.,. ' 446'3842
,.

00

This coupon entitles purchastr to 20% savings on products shown; . · , . ·
:
I•

Juveniles who arl! not ' rehabilitated now
w·ill be tlie. inmates of tomorrow. We can
pay the h,igh cost of tomorrow or pay now as
an investment in a child'$ future .
· The Juvenile ' Cour1 wants to pay
througM the Foster Parent. progra·m.
will SI!PPIV tile funds, but we need Faster
Parents f~t ta,ke child~en in . ·
. ·., -Millt'e an Investment
.'\,. _B'ilij Foster Parent ,
~·au iuvenlle Court

swer

A male part Co!lle dOg . He

I

·Aluminum cans ·
_! CAwowl"'atel'it4Cans

is _. years old. Never been

Alum{l'lum Siding •
sriHt cast Aluminum

Male biack and white pup·
pie, 2 weeks old. Phone 304·
675-2715.
3 female puppies. Phone
304-675-6415.
WIRE haii'ed terrier, to
good

home,loveable,

ex-

cellent with children. If you
won't love him or care for

675-6559.

2 SACKS of baby clothes.
all sizes, 30~ · 675 · 6937 .
3' HAMSTERS-I pregnant.
1 While mouse. Cages to be
SOld. 304-882·3587.

r---------.,...--,.------""1
,,_ __:W~a~nt~ed~to,_,B"'uLy_ _
Wanted full lime reliable
sitter tor tOddler and school
cabinet with shelves and a age child . Must have
(toy) doll crib or cradle, references and live In city
245-5285.
school district . If in ·
terested write Box 301,
26 In girls bike in good con· Gallipolis Dai.ly Tribune, ·
dition. 9.49·2801 .
8253rd. Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh
45631 .
HARPER · HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO. , lllh and
Viand Street, now buying RAX ROAST BEEF is
metals (copper, brass, seeking highly motivated
A

METAL

STORAGE

aluminum, lead, stainless

steel, batteries and
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, catnip and sassafras) .
10 am to 6 pm dally. Also
1
Yard Sale
Flea Market on Saturdays.
3 Family Yard Sale Fri. &amp; CAII675·5868 .
Sat. 1837 Chatham Ave.,
Gallipolis.
GINSENG·call collect If
you have ready to sell1 ·3()3·
Michigan Yard Sale 50 Neil 762-2581.
Ave., Gallipolis. August 5·
12, 910 7.
:::: : :: ~·.: : ~ .~

;· BMII

'

!Udlators

..

Athens and Gallipolis,
Ohio . Restaurant ex ·
perlence not necessllry, btJt

preferred

teaching

or

st.~pervisory
experience . .
Communicatlon and

motivational

skills

are

essentl a I. Send resume to

Russ
Aldridge,
396
Richland Ave., Athens, Oh
45701 '
applications for full
time position for
Grill Cook. Apply
in person at
BOB EVANS
STEAK HOUSE

OHIO FORENSIC HOSPITAL

3 family yard sale. 4th and
Brown St., Mason. Mon and
Tues.,9·? .
Yard sale, Mon and

Tt.~es,

Aug 10·11 at Arthur
Miller's, Rutland, Oh. 10 to
4. Rain ca"eled.

In Columbus, in a new facility, we are
creating a new psychiatric Hospital program for the State of Ohio. Applications
are now being accepted to fill openings in
the following health service areas :
Psychiatry
Psychology
Nursing, (R.N.'s &amp; LPN's)
11 you are interestell in beco.ming 'involoved in the creation of a new psychiatric
Hospital program, contact:
Personnel Officer
The central Ohio Forensic Hospital
1964
Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43223
(614) 274-7177

w.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

RN'~/~ . P . N.'s

FULL AND PARTTIME
EXCELLENT WAGES, FRINGE BENEFITS .
e FULLY PAID
eRETIREMENT PLAN
eLl FE INSURANCE
e LIABILITY INSURANCE
e SHORT TERM ACCIDENT PLAN
e SHORT TERM SICKNESS PLAN

For further information contact:
JACKSON CARE CENTER
8668 STATE ROUTE 93
JACKSON, OHIO 45640
Call Mrs. Wood or Mrs . White
' Collect At 614-286·5026
'
'
.
An Equal Opportunity,· Employer

W~N·~~;;~;;;;~;;~~;;~~;;;;;;~;;~

'rED, ANY BEDS
CONDITION.
A/IISC., BOX 65. AURORA,
IND. ~7001. GIVE OIREC·TIONWILL CALL SOO"!·

CASH PAl D for clean, late·
.model used cars. Smith
Bulck·Pontlac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call-"6·2282.
to bU\I'· Juhk
cars.-scrap ....,tal, jlnd bat!
ter.tn. can31t1·9303.
~

.

IMMEDIAJE POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

RETAIL MANAGQAENT CAREERS
Do you want your shoes planted securely
In a company with which you can grow?
Do you desire self-satisfaction from
building your career in retail manage. ment from the 11round?
Shoe World Sto~es, InC •• major r.etail sho.e cha!"· ·
has over 400 shoe ~tore~ currently •n operat1on, w1th

54)... ~ew stores opening each vear.
.
'

........... ·-

•n

1.,.

want · 'to

compar•

our j pnl,~t positions to thi_
s o~

In person to:

MOI!I,.. .AUG 10. 11 A,M.·S P.M.

.

perience

required .

.

-~

GET VALUABLE lra ini
a yoyng business person
and earn gOOd money plus

BS

some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on

lhe eligibility !lsi al 992·
2156or992 ·2157 .
Babysitter needed in my
home S days a week, 7 to 4.

Call992 3937.
Alaskan
&amp; overseas
F 0 R MAT
I0 N
IN
ployment, excellent

An &amp;quat QilpOrtunltv Employer

em·
on

in-

LOCATION : Robert Brown Farm on Athens County
Road 34 West, oil Stale Route 690 between Rt. 550
and Rt. SQ.

ITEMS OFFERED : 1- 7 ri ng 24' MFS grain bin
with aerat ion floor , l addeand 7''' hp motor ;
1-U n lo ading
auge r
with
5
hp
motor ; 1 55' portab le auger ; 1- Sweep auger and
spreader ; ! - doub le auger ; 1- 24' Stirwa y w ith Jlh
hp motor
Terms : Cash or Check with proper f 0 on day of
sale. Purchase equipment to be removed within JO
days. Financing availabe tor 7S pet. of the purchase
price through purchaser's county ASCS office.
Loans may be up to aS year term at 14 .5 percent per
annum interest. Loan eligibility should be confirmed through local ASCS office prior to date of sale .
This sa le is being conducted for Commodity Credit
Corporation through the Athens CotJnty ASC Com -

mittee. 540 W. Union St., Athens. Oh . 45701.

Telephone 814·593 ·5333 . Athens County ASC Com ·
mittee reserv es th e r ight to refuse any or all bids
and makes no wa rr ant ies or gua ra ntees . Not

1-~~~~i~i~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::~

come, call 312·741 ·9780 ex·
tention917.

REAL ESTATE AUCTION

CLERICAL mall agents
urgently needed by the
hundreds for inserting
sales material into en·
velopes . Permanent part or

AUGUST 15 AT

lull time opportunity. Ex·

perience unnesessary . Ex·

12:00 NOON

cellent Income potential.
Information, send setiaff·

addressed, stamped en·
velope. Sv!vester , Box 96.
Chicago Hgts., IL 60411 ,
TRAINED

met;llcal

secretary, local physican's

oflice, P.O. Box 276, Pl .
Pleasant,

wv 25550.

RI:LiABLE

babysitter

needed in my home 4'h
days a week , ca ll 304 ·675-

2610.

Homemakers with small
children you can earn up to
$100. a week . For interview

call 882·3433 or 614·992·39.41

between hours 9·6.
FULLER Brush salesman

needed in area. Call 304·
243,
Ravenswood,
WV 1. Box
273-4559
or write Rt.
12
Sltu~tlons Wanted
Room, board for elderly .
Reasonable . 992·6022 .
Semi·retired
l'k
k. d chef
1
t would1
' e any '" o res auran
work . Part tirne or full
time. 992·3619 . Dwight Bur
ton, 620 Laurel St .. Mid ·
dleporl, Ohio.
Insurance

13

SANDY AND BEAVER In ·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century .

Farm, home and personal

property coverages are
available to meet in ·
dividu!l needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, agent . Phone

379·2204 .

Locat.on from Gallipolis : Take Rt . 1 South 3 miles,
turn right on Rt . 218, go 4 miles, turn right on Little
Bulls~ in Rd . First hou se on right .
On the above date the real estate of Norman Hiner·
man &amp; Shirley McMasters will be offered for sale at
auction located on Bull Skin Rd. It has a large barn,
tie house, drive·through granary ana other outbuildings. Also has a rural water, a 1223 pound
tobacco base, a 6 room house on 5.5 acres of land .
This is a real nice country home. Further information , call for appointment to view the property :
Norman Hinerman 2S6· 1189
James Gettles 384 · 2053
or Kenneth Swain 254-1967
Terms : $2,000 Down Day of Sale, the remainder on
the delivery of deed .

SALE CONDUCTED BY JAN GETTLES REALTY
WELLSTON, OHIO

r1-;=========:t=========~
PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 1981 - 10:30 A.M.
Location : From Gallipolis take St. Route 160 apprOlcim.ately 10 m•l es, then turn right oto Old St . Rt.
160 (near Porter l. The following will be offered :
power lawn mowers, new Work Mate, library
Tab le, lard stov e, 2- 12 gal. ston e jcJ r s, iron kettle ,
antique stor e keepers scales. antique barber chair.
Guilder pl atf orm rocker, 50 gallon hot water tank
(neve r used) , end 1ables, wooden rock ing chairs ,
se vera l antiqu e chairs, misc. lumbers, dishes,
screens, 5 good used wooden doors, var iety of harld
tools, sump pump, end tables. bedroom su ite,
hospit al bed, stone IUQ, RCA Victor TV, canning
jM s, Bolens 1053 garden or lawn tractor with 3
blades and 38" cut , 1n good cond ition . and other
misce llaneous i1ems.
4

TERMS : CASH
Mr . &amp; Mr s. Ray Beaver, Owners

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
celled?
Lost your

Lee Johnson

operator's License? Phone

AUCTIONEER

992-2143

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

16
&amp;

RON'S

Radio TV '
CB Repair
TV SERVICE

1111
Spec
no Now
In servicing
zenIth .
HouseiaCalls.

' ·

~;:N:o:I:R:e:~:p:on:s:ib:l:e:to:r:A:c:cStdEe:n:ts:o:r:L:o:•:•:of:P:r:o:pe:r:t:y::~

Motorola Quazar . Call 1·
]04-576·2398 or «6·2454.
Wanted to Do
BABYSITTING in my
home, close to school, 30_.·
675·2784.
Dependable mother with
four month old daughter
will do babysit11ng In my
home. Phone 675·1076.
Will babysit In your home
In evenings. References.
H5·4395.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Of PERSONAL PROPERTY &amp; REAL ESTATE

AUGUST 15 AT 10:00 A.M •
Location from Gallipolis: Take Rt. 7 South J miles,
turn right on Rt. 218, go 4 mites, turn right on Little
Bullskin Rd . First house on right .
Listing :n Part : Large iron kettle, cherry teacher 's
desk , sm~ ll iron kettle, chicken feeders, bench vice.
lard press . brass kettle , advertising boxes, Home

comfort coal &amp; wood range , cow bells, oak chest ,

wardr~be with "'!irror, iron b!!d complete, , di~tte

set table &amp; • charrs, kitchen cabine1 , blue canning
· .. ·- - ·Poibiic.sate ·
&amp; Auction

' .
· SWAIN

AUCJIOill URN
We ••II Anything for
eoyllt!dY at our Auction
·llrn tr I" rour home. For
-lotormafleR •~ol pickup
-•l'VIct u111H-1H7. ,

,........._,.,.,..,
SWAIN

grand

.·

AP·

PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
Box 224· D, Richmond
NY 11418.

Nlthl 111 p.m.'

Watcll ._, ,..,... .., IOcat,ton
'

'

about worki~g witn ~pie . Relatl expenence
helplul, but not required . You should haVI!-excellent
character and
desire to excel.
·

,. ·

A~to latte~ies

This is an auction for the Racine Fire
Dept. to make money . Located at fire
house in Racine , Ohio.
I '
"MISC."
Tools
all kind, lamps, cakes, candy,
paint, trap straps, rope, chain, room
diider , something for e veryone . Come &amp;
see.
Owner - Sherman Tillis
Cash
Positive I. D .
Eats
Dan Smith
Jim Carnahan
949-2033
949-2708

TIME : 10 :00 A.M., SATURDAY . AUGUST 15, 1981
$185.00 to $500 weekly doi
mailing work . No ex·

Individuals to
ioin
management teams in

.eo SK.tiG~S, 307 urper River Ra .. Galllpo'lls

c..,,.rWire ··

7:30 P.M.

3577,

1111 rtu~lt\l? Ap~ly

a

SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 15, 1981

"Not responsible for accidents or loss of property."

"IX'"

"r 1~.)

PUBLIC AUCTION

around children and Is a
good watch dog . Call 992·

y 01/must have the flexibi!IIY !o,relocaie
coil)·
pletl011 of 12·16. weeks of tratntng a~d be ex_c iled

, · s..dallzln8 In '

I1-;:========~==========~

ol

•

eAdvancerrient!Promotion from

OPfNINO SOON

assis t

'

• Paid vacations

'

phones ,

customers and do light
bookkeeping . Apply by sen·
ding resume or writing
P.O. Box :100, Gallipolis
Dally Tribune, 825 3rd .
Ave. Gallipolis, Oh &gt;15631 .

''

eManagement Career' Development
·eJncentlve Bonus·paid Quarterly . .
.
.
• company paid GrouP, Insurance, lncludono Ma1or
Medical.
.
W' th'

.

8

female. All are long haired.
They are real healthy.
They are IIHer bOx trained.
Call 614-667·3977 and ask
for Janet.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We Can P-y Now or PIJ' Later
.'
FEAT~ER

Windltone• 1 eKtured-plasler des•gn

2' 1 4 ' - '

8

I have one long haired
calico cat to give away to

niture and Antiques of all
kl~s, call. Kenneth Swain,
256·1961 'in the evenings.

$256
Ea.

I

Small beegle rabbit dog to
anyone who will take good
care of. 992·3221.

9WANT wanted
to auv
TO BUY
Old fur -

GRENOBLE
CEILING PANEL

'

HelpW~nled

II

Full-time office
work be
in
Gallipolis
area . Must
able to type, keep Illes, an ·

~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~

ft.

·. .

Plank 'n Plaster
• Wood· n-p laster

.

Yard sale. Alma Woods
buld del!very of residence. Vine St. ,
TM fllJIIIIY of Clyde gasoline, heating oil and
William (Bill) Hubbard ex· diesel fuel, call Landmark, Racine. Oh. Wed and Thur.
Drapes, clothing, dishes.
tend their sincere thanks to 992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .
all those whO assisted
Yard Sale Aug . 7·8, 9·Dark
during the Illness and death
of aur husbl(ld, father. and AMWAY distributor . For on Stale Rt. 554 between
grandfather. Thanks to the wonderful products of Cheshire and Porter.
Clothes 50 cents a bag. New
thole whO sent cardS and Amway calllo.t·773·5040.
crocheted Items and new &amp;
flowers and !)ffered
Glve.way
used tools .
prayers. Special thankS to 4
Or . Chol and·the Nurses at
PERSON who has
Pleasant Valley Hospital; ANY
anything
to give away and Weedend Sale Sat. 8 and 1·
Thanks to those who helped
does
not
offer
or attempt to Sun. 9 to ·? 1/4 mile below
aut In carina tor Mark, the
gift shop on Rl. 7. Rain or
soUball teams , the offer any other thing for Sh .l ne. Clothes. books.
sale
may
place
an
ad
1~ this
Syracuse 'Fire De~N~rtment
and Emergel)cy SQuad, the column. There will be no Avons, dishes, old lawn
mowers. and tools.
Syracuse lilalry Bar and char~¥' to the advertiser.
other doctors who assisted.
Thole ·whO sent food and Will jllve away to gOOd Yard Sale One · day only
money, the Rev . Kittle and nome·lntentgent B mo. old Monday Aug. lOth, 9·7. Rt.
turn rlght ·1 mile west of
the Rev. ~obert Stewart, female beagle . Sire
·Jng Valley Cinema, then
and Ewing Funeral Home. registered beagle, mother
May God Bless each and beagle-not registered. Call .. n left 3 14 mile. Only
or contact Evelyn or Paul h..useon right.
everyone .
Wife, Mildred and Knotts. «6·7515 or 416·9545 .
family.
8
Public Sale
&amp; Auction
KIHenslo good home, litter
1would like to take this op· trained, good house cats. Neels Auction Hogsett.
portunlty to thank Mrs. Call-"6·7454.
WVA. Rl. 2. Every Sat. 7:00
· Kathryn Hall and Hocken·
(Consignments
berry Pharmacy for retur· KIHens, 62 Lincoln St. PM. , (will
buy furniture)
nina my money. Stella Tur· behind Rocchi's Resturant taken)
Lonnie Neal367-7101 ;
ner.
,;alter 5.

• Random abstract
desr gn
• Acoushcal

Reg.63~ sq.

comp.

·o·
·...
..

I' ' '

.'
..

Card of Thanks

Ct.tham

Glenwood
• Two -toned embossed
su rface
• Wasllable
• 12" K 12·· tile

Reg.

·~

lowest

74/80. $14,900.
DOUG ENOCH
614-446-2745

~

.•;-·

Orientation session
~ug. 14-15 at RGC-CC
iuo

cordance Wtlh Chapter 5525

see···

.

Lovable kittens . to .g ood
home. Call-"6·9~19.

..

for ten per cent of his bid,
payable to.the Director .
Bidders mtJst apply, on
the proper forms, for
qualiftc~fion · at least ten

f1\S ..

by Larry Wi'lght

auto batteries. Watch this
!Nlper for location and
grand opening. Rosenberg
Recycling, 140 Columbus
Rd., Athens, Oh. 45701. Call Yard Sale. women, men,
!/13-7477.
children clothes. Mise
Items. I mile from 11
Help Wanted
Amway, New distributor. Langsville. CR 10 Dexter
Tupper Plains area . Will Rd. Aug 4·9. 10·8. Call 742· Experienced bOdy man and
2668.
deliver. Cell 667·3323.
experienced mechanic .
Contact Harold D.avls at
Gallipolis Motor Co.
Moving sale . All household
furniture, good condition.
AIRPLANE
992·3056.
Cessna Cardinal, solid

event more than fifty
thousand dollars. or a bond

:tf'o-'9

KIT 'N' CARLVLE TW

4

'"==:::;::;::::;:::=:~~==-'! him don't apply. Phone 304·

will be cohsldered on the .Announcements
basis of the total amount 3
bid .
SWEEPeR and sewing
Parts 1 thl'lll5
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, machine repair, parts, and
Pick up and
Meigs, Noble, Vinton, and supplies.
Washington Counties, Ohio. delivery, Davis Vacuum
on bridges orr various Cleaner, one half mile up
routes and sections, by Georges Creek Rd. Call
cleaning and painting,
-"6·0294 ..

Times-

JunbaJJ 1rimes· jentiaul•~

tens. four males and one

beloved by all.

any or all bids.
JOHN P, RODER US
DIRECTOR
Aug .. 2, 9

Columbus, Ohio, unl1110:00
AM., Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, August 18, 1981,

Chris Carmichael
takes sweepstakes .

The Sunda

Classifieds
'..======::::==::::,

Death sparks new riots in Londonderry

M/Sgt. Parsley earns promotion
R IO GRANDE- Master Sergean t
Raymond Parsley, Military Science
instructor at Rio Grande College and
Community College. was promoted
t &lt;&gt; his new rank on Aug . 3.
A promoti on ceremony was held in
the Military Science Buliding and
w~s a ttended by 2!&gt; members of the
Rio Gra nde College and Ohio
University staff and faculty.
MSG Parsley is a 2()-year veteran
of the U. S. Army and has served in
Germany, Korea, and Vietnam .
II na tive of Kermit, W. Va., he at·
tended Williamson H1gh School.
Williamson. W. Va He ente red the
U. S. Army in 1959, served a short
period as an escort-gua rd in New
York, and was reassigned to
Munich, Germany With the l-16th
Armored Infantry .
MSG Parsley wa s then reassigned
to the 1-B Cavalry, Jst Cavalry

missions Office for the past seven
years. He went to Hocking Tech
from Circleville's Logan Elm High
School where he served as a guidance counselor from 1&amp;74.
Fletcher graduated from Pikeville
(Ky. ) College in 1966 with a Bachelor
of Arts ln Social Studies. He completed his master 's wolit in guidance

Pleasant, W. Va .

AUCnote

SEIVICE

K.......,Sweln,Aoct.
Cilr""' Thlnl &amp; Ollwo

jars, sad irons with hahdtes. wood barre'fs., rocker ,

wicker· baskets.

s

leg oak table, 4 oak chairs,

lantern, cr~om cans, various sire stone ·jars, hand

,. tools of · all kiMs, old pictures, Kenmore wrinoer
type was.her, Norge electric range, large oak
rocker, recliner, sguare stand table , oak spindle
chair, 2 couches, Jots of old books. 2 pld woOd beds
complete, 2 china dolls, Seth Thomas' weight clock ,
Oil lamp, Wicker baby ' buggy, m~rble lop ~
dressecherry chest, • Presto cooker, mirror,
'weeper, magazine rack, dee~lreeu: .
·'- ·
·
·
REAL ESTATE ' .'$
5.5 acres of. land will' 6 room nO..W, a lar ·
1
granary / tie house ~ other outbuildings, ' rural

water, 1223 pound tobacco base .
· ·
Terms: CasK or Check with I. D.
LUnch Served

Owners .- ,.,.man
XTIONE

'

�D-4-The
II

T•mes-Sentmel

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

Wlnttdto Do

.._

0 J 's LAWN MOWER
REPAIR · On Neigh
borhood Rd , all makes ser
viced Specializing in Lawn
Boy
Blodes sharpened
Call ..u. ~5 after 5 p m
Pick up and delivery
available

WILL do housecleonlng In
Pt Pleasant area Phone

304 458 1835
Will fox or build bokes Ask
for Harmon R Phone JO.C
675 1179

Reliable child care 1n my

:---=--...,.--- - -

grade school Experlecned.
references Call388 8832

J.r:

J1

Bus1ness

Opportunity
Woul\'1 you l1ke a busmess
of your own? You don't
need an office to start
Beg1n at home. full or part
t1me
Ideal
family

Unemployed 18 months
truck drtver o.- ma1n
tenance man Call 379 2217

anytime

busone55 Call «6 4273 after
6PM

TV servoce ca lls Call 992
6776 or 992 203.4 Also used
color TV for sale

22

NEW CABIN or small
home, completely fur
noshed, $3900 Coli «6 0390.

New 3 bdr house w1th
garage and full basement
S.S.OOO Caii..U. 03'10
BY OWNER 4 bdr, splot
level, living room &amp; dlntng

room combinat1on. eat•n

kotchen lg family rm , 2
112 baths, located on Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool provoleges, $75,000
Kyger Creek School
D•stnct Shown bv appt

Money to lo.illn

only caii..U.

9~3

Ave , GallopOios Oh , 4.46
7172
Professtonal
Serv1ces

23

COMMERCIAL
JomOwen&amp;Co.lnc
REALTOR

dustnal

and

photography

Phone «6 2909 or

after 4 p m

906A East State St
Athens, Oh

on

..u. 7226

P1ano tunmg and repa1r
Love your ne1gt1bor tune
your P1ano B1ll Ward

Ph S94 3543
A I Me19S Co

18 A c
m /1 located 1n Pom er oy
w1th publi c water and
sewer available Owner
flnanc ng po s.5!b le

Wards Keyboard

..u, 4372.

Gal11poi1S

Pom eroy J 2 Ac
Gooo bu ld ng s te tor
one or more hom es
Owner flna c.ng pass.

bi P

Your P1ano rustmg 1n sum
mer Hum1d1ty? Free 10
spect.on w1th tun1ng Lane
Dan1els 742 2951 or 992

Bob &amp; K 1fty lrtndrum
6fl6 I 082

2082
PROFESSIONAL

Ernest
Woodruff Rd , Allee, Oh
Caii6U 299 0890 after 5

For sale trade. or rent 80
acre farm. 3 bedrooms.
carpet, a1r, Ben Franklm
woodburner, total electnc,
large barn, out bU1Id1ngs,
2.000 lbs tobacco base,

mmeral

base Call 256 9344

Real Esta1e -

General

s

0008

I

EAFORrn
IRGIL R SR
!16 F

\ccond !:l trcc t

Phone
(614) 992 3325

RETIREMENT
3
ACRES - 3 bedrooms
baths
sundeck
some furn1ture dr •ll ed
wel l lots of shrubber y
nght on the Oh•o R1ver
on l y Sl 3 500
I

1

COUNTRY LIVING -

Genera l

~~

1ts be st '" th •s J yr
old J bedroom bn ck
ranch P 1 bath~ cen tral
n1r &amp; heat d•shwasher
stove &amp; refngerator 3
acre!. plus 1iS7 000

CENTRAL REALTY

NEAR NEW BRIDGE
- Haw key es v •ew ot t he
Oh10 r 1ver 3 bedrooms
stove , retr. gerator 1n
th1 s lovely b•rch kll
chen Hof w.Jter heat
with woodburne r
3
acres $65 000

BEAUTIFUl AND SPACIOUS both 1ns•de &amp; cut
E)(tra large L R and formal D R as well as ea t 1n
k1t Well kept q round and oth er b u ld1ng w•th elec &amp;
wMer Look fh •s one over Only $58 YOO
Good

clea n

HERE IT IS that £')(1 r a spec1a 1 home 3 B R '1 1
baths a l l c arpeted F P Heilt a IJtor redwood e)(
ter•Or Allth•s &amp; m or e on 6 acres Askmg $73 000
1

Tl.iPPERS PLAINS - 3 B R ran ch Sllson b g te n c
ed lot garden spa ce Very Qood cond1t on Low

$30S
LAND CONTRACT POSSIBLE on thiS $17 000 home

tocilted n Letart Oh L ow 10°o down payment
THREE SURVEYED ACRES n Rac1 ne land con
tra c t poss1ble Ask.ng Sl6 000
CALL US TO BU'f OR SELL

Nancy

Assoc1ate
P H 843 2075
Vtrg1n1a Hayman - Associ!Jte
PH 985 4197
J aspers ~

Rer1l E s. tr1t e -

MOBILE HOME
1978
H li lc resl
14x70 w 1th
storage I ' 1 baths oil
furn ace used only 300
gals
la s!
year
3
be droom s Only $12 000
RT 7 B'f PASS
3
bedroom
ranch w1th
carport ba th gils heat
c •s tcrn
L C
water
clvallable 1 1 1 acres ol
land S24 000

BAUMS

SUB DIV

V1ew Of Rt 7 Large
enough for chil dren or
garden 3 bedrooms 2
lu ll bath s f am tly rm
wilh
w B f1r eplace
F•n• shed garage w1th
Gen1 e con trol Central
a•r &amp; hea t Really n• ce

at $75 000

Housing
Headquarters

Genercll

Real Estate -

8onn•e Stutes· Realtor

446 4206
James Stutes, Assoc

446 2885
LOVELY BRICK
RANCH

Real Estate - General

Sett1ng pretty on 58
acres
n1cely
land
scaped Lots of space
and charm adorns th1s 4
bedroom home Formal
llv.ng room and d1n1ng,
large modern k 1tchen,
full basement firep l ace
1n family room 2 car
garage
attached
Workshop and a barn
Th1s home
reflects
tender lov.ng care &amp;
true va l ue Shown by

Cao'go Rd Call256 9344
24 Washmgton Street
Albany , Oh10
CoOp Real1ors

OISE IS yours With th1 S
exc1t 1ng 7 room house, a
k1tchen
that
IS
a
woman s
dream ,
2
bea u t iful stone
f1re
places
fa mily r oom
three
bedrooms
2
ba ths Roam over the 12
ac r es then en1oy your
own m ground
pool'

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
REALlORe Susan Gilliam, Assoc. 24~5208

25 LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

WANTS

OF

FERS
three
be droom
one s tor y
home
K 1tchen
bath
and ut •hty room all new
ly remode led Two car
ports
24x42 bU1
w •th full ba se m
Or1g 1n a ll y

$11 500
UPTIGHT

TO

RELAXING 10 th iS 3
bedroom mob1le home
w •ft1 add on
Fam11y
room w 1th wood b urner /
fireplace
Beaut.tully
landscaped 21" acres off
Rt 7 nea r Ches te r H1gh

$30'
80 ACRE FARM

5

miles south of A l bany
Jl J story four bedroom
home barn buildtng s
and m•ne r al r1ghts w1th
pr operty $39 900

You will be pay1ng more
&amp; more rent Why not
buy a home' Loan
assumpt •ory payments
On l y 5387 UO 10CIUd1ng
ta)(es .nsurance 101 2%
1nterest
3 bedroom
ranch , large ea t 1n k1f
chen
11vmg
room
Home
co mpl e tely
carpeted
Very n1ce
Stngle car garge Nor
thup area Pnced .n t he

40 s

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
6 acres of woodland only
1 mile south of R1o

GrandeonSt Rt 325

130 ACRE FARM woth
two stocked
pond s
house barn and trader
lot On hardtop road
A lex ander
Schoo l s

$85 000
GROCERY STORE and
ServiCe Stat 1on located
close to Me1gs M1ne 1
Owner wdt land con
tra ct a l0°o $61 000
49 ACRES ca n be d 1V1d
ed 1nto 5 acre tr ac ts
Owner Will f1nan ce
82 ACRES , pr1ced With

or wd ho ut m1neral
r1gh ts
Owner
wil l
t nance
3 7 ACRES set up for

mobile home, util 1t1es
on property $7,500

General

W'thon walkong dostance

GALLI POLIS - S24,00(l - lmmed1ate posseSSIOn 3
BR frame w1th alum1num Siding Fam1ly room
Eat 1n k•tchen w1th range Located wlthtn walkmg
d1stance downtown
BlOWE LL - 135,000 - Ntce 2 BR, frame homew1th
equ1pped eat 1n k1tchen
Lt~rge
utlltty room.
spac1ous level lawn

basement w•th garage Lar~e

.,

city JUST Ll STED, Ss1

conditioning;' com

304

Mobile home located in
Comp Conley, Extra nice
and clean Phone 30-4 895
3967
1971 DARIAN, 2 bedroom,
lurnlshed S6,800
Un
lurnlshed S5,800 Call 30•
773 5600 after 5 p m

·~~·~!JI!!!·----------------·

WISEMAN

II

I

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
I lie

w1aman Broiler 446 J1U Eve

J 1mcochran Anoc1alt 44'

7U I Eve

B J

Ha~nton Anoc

446 4240 Eve
ClydeWallltr Auoc 245 S27'
Tom Hotsteu' Anoc lll •1•0

(]
.

PHONE 446-3643

'

992·2259
NEW LISTING -

Sp l't

leve l lu xury m th1 S 5
bedroom tot a l elect r c
hom e
'"
Easte rn
D1stn c t Who le house
a ~r
21J baths, rec
room
utll1ty
1 car
garage foyer 12x14 su n
deck Approx 1 acre

S63 000 00
NEW LISTING FARM
- Approx 202 ac res 1' ~
story 3 bedrooms I
bafh house w1th base
ment forc ed a1r fue l all
heat , 2 barns ch •cken
house
and
ga rage
Tillable ac r ea ge p lus
pastur e t1mber Owner
Will f1nance l2°o With 11
down
payment

$90,000 00
NEW LISTING - Brad
bury
Mob1le home
w .rh expando bay w•n
dow centra l a .r co nd1
t1on1ng front porch 2
car garage w1th 2
rooms. a nd 1 l /5 acre
lot Comes completely
turn1shed w1th gorgeous
Quality furn11ure
1n
c lu d1ng washer and
dryer $29 999 DO

Mod

dleport N 1Ce St reet
w1th sox200 lot and a 4
room home w•th a
garden space, front and
rear porch 1 storage
build1ngs garage car
port and a f 'rep lilce

514 900 00
INVESTMENT

PRO

PE RTY - - or a n1ce
home tor what would
pay tor rent It IS a fa•r
ly new J bedroom, one
floor plan home wtth a
large kitchen The walls
are paneled, and mostly

carpeted $19,500 00
FIVE
BEAUTIFUL
ACRES woth part oi ot

APARTMENT HOUSE -S6S.OOO - Good locatoon In
c•ty Seven apartments plus 3 mobile home pads
Call for complete deti!uls

1978 70x 14, 2 bdr , 1 112
bath, front den with wood
burning fireplace, patio
awing, skirting, ap
pllances, dining room table
and chairs No other, like
new furniture
SIO,OOO
Johnson Mobile Home
Brokers, new listing «6
3547
1975 Cameron 12x60, 2 bdr ,
front kitchen, retrig and
range, gas furnance. extra
door off kitchen, carpet,
$5,995
Johnson Mobile
Homes B rakers «6 3547
Trailer for sale or rent
C!all379·2115
1911 12x65 Mastercrafl
mobile
home,
asking
$1,750 Call367 7533

NOTICE

'

1977

bedroom, den, can remain

on present location Phone
304-458 185-4

69 BUDDY 12x60, 304 675
6322
1973 Hallmark, 2 bedroom
Priced ,on inspection 773
5127
1965 Liberty Mobile home,
2 bedrooms, completely
furnished,

33

N 1ce flat tree studded 1ocat1on
rounded by scentc farm land ~''"" ­
l1ve 2 bedroom, v1nyl Sided home
f1replace, new carpet, full basement
detached garage Low 40's Assumable
mtg 91 1 ° 1o

Farms for Sale

buildings Fenced Gas fur
nace 949 2057
15

Lots &amp; Acreage

acres, level, rural water,

city schools, 10 per cent
down Call 379 2196
If you would be Interested
In a 2 acre mobile home lot
tn a subdiv1slon for mob1le
homes and double wldes
only, woth Gallia County
rural water CaiiW&gt;-7901

D&amp;W Estates, Int

10 acres near Portor on old

(Jom E I holt)
Rl 93 North

Ideal for homes or

160

home sites Road frontage,

Jackson, Ohto

assumable mortgage, low

make your payment

call At Your
Le1sure

20 ACRES on black top
road, timber Phone 1 614
263 8322 or 263 2669

Fmancong avaolable
Real Estate
Wanted

1/ACANT
WANTED -

l101
ACRES
Mostly wooded land
lots of w1 l d l•f e Has 2 barns, and 3 small

wtth

•

bu •ld 1ngs 2 story 3 bedroom home
Located I m1te north of Thurman 40's

1165 AC
RT 1111 - Bare land so ac
crop 65 ac pasture 40 ac woods Spr
mgs creek , well , r ura l water 40x60
barn 16x60 shed Call for 1nfo

I

·.~--~F~A~R·M~S·&amp;~B·A·R~E~L·A•N-0. . . . . .

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

168 AC FARM - Own er s moved to
F la Anx 1ous to sell a nd have drop
ped pn ce $20 000 Appro&gt;&lt; 24 ac
crop land 60 ac pasture and 80
acres ot wood l a nd &amp; Wild l ife
Remode led 'J story 3 bedroom home
With newer fir eplace new roof .
storm w•ndows •n su t1
.at1on &amp; garag:.
Ntce orchard large wh1te pme &amp;
some f•mber reported Pr1ced 10

$60s Localed off Rt 554
15 ACRES
N1 ce hilltop l OCatiOn
near R1o Grande on Rt 554 Several
acres c leared some wood &amp; stream

$12 000

39 AC -RIO GRANDE - Excellent
locat1on on R 10
Cen terpomt Rd .
Campbell Rd &amp; Lewos Rd Approx

25 ac woods Beaut.tul home s1tes
160 ACRES - Recently used as
daory Approx 6,000 oi total rd
frontage 50 60 ac crop, 70 pasture,
some woods 36)(50 barn, silo, tobac
co base, several other bUildings 2
story home part
remodeled 4
bedrooms , nat
gas heat , 2

PTION POSSIBLE -

Quality cedar ranch tn a super locatton
1n R1o Grande Beaut1fully decorated 3
bedroom home w 1th 2112 bath, formal
d1n1ng full basement , large familY
room , f•rep lace, 2 car garage plus a
lovely p m e tree studded l lf2 acre yard

171 AC

JACKSON COUNTY ce llent f a rm w 1th over 2 miles of rd
frontage 2 n1ce barns, 4 large sheds,
cnb &amp; gr~nary 3,000 sq ft of concrete
1n barn yard 100 ac woOds, 40 pasture,
40 ac c rop, 4 spnngs 4 CISterns, plus a
mce 3 bedroom home

FLORIST SHOP -

3 bedrooms 3 full baths, n1ce large
fam 1ly room fireplace, formal d1n1ng
nat gas &amp; cent atr large lantjscaped
yard Owners must sell

LAND
up to 500

must be under

2110 Eastern Ave.
Phone 446·3547

41

3 BEDROOM house.
children,

requored, 304 675 3318

101 ,% MTG ASSUMPTION -

few thousand down you ca n take over
pavments 2 yr old 3 bedroom home on
nearly 4 acres Th1s energy eff1c1ent
home has woodburner 11;;.. bath large
master bedroom Also small pond &amp;
some woods $40's

m1nera,l nghts sell w1th this farm and there have

· ~ ~~~~~~~~~~.~--~0--------------~
. ~~---J~~~~~~

bdr 1ra11er, fyrn
prlvate dri'Ve, Btdwell

1 bedroom apts avaolable
ot Roversode Apts Equal
OppOrtunity Housong Call
2 992 7721
1 &amp; 2 bedroom iurnoshed
apartments 992 5434 or 992
5914 or 882 2566

carpeted,

Excellen1

S200

neigh

or 675

borhood, 675 6722
5104

Apartment for rent
992 5908

area Call 388 968-&gt;1
60x12, 2bdr, 1 112 bath, up
town , small deposit req

3 bdr house for rent and 3
rm apt utllltoes paid Call
675 510•or675 5386

2 bedroom tratler for rent
Brown's Trailer Park 992
3324

2nd floor furnished ef
ticlency apt 729 second,
Gall opOlis Adults only, no
pets

Avatlable now, call

bath,

washer dryer,

Sheets,

mtles

3112

south

Camp Conley

200 Second St.
Pt. Pleasant, WV

Apartment for rent 1n Mid

dlepart 4 rooms and bath
Avaolable Sept 1 DepOSit

adults only Call.u6 1519
2 bedroom mobile home, 1
bedroom apt, no pets,
sleeping
room
John SENIOR CITIZENS One

and reference
446 1788

bedroom, ground floor
apartment, low rent, near

For rent,

Foodland and shoppong
area Caii..U. 21•5

Phone 304 675 1658
1 or 2 person .4 room apart
ment, 304 675 3000

Small, turn apt Call 4-U&gt;
1578

-

sitting on nice lot, ready to

STROUT REAL TV

move Into
2711

----~-

Phone 304 576

paod, adults only, $195 00
per month, S60 00 depasot
94 Locust, Gallopahs Call
.u6 1~ or ..u. 3870
2 bdr

unfurn , apt 1n
Crown Coty, Oh Call 256

For rent 2 bdr , turn apt
Adults only, no pets Call
- 19-45

NO PAYMENTS FOR ONE YEAR I'
L shaped ranch has 3 BR's, 1'! 2 baths
large LR, formal dln•ng, equ•pped k.1t
chen den, 2 wood burn 1ng f1replaces
part basement, nat gas heat &amp; large
corner lot $59,500 - 25% down - lO~o
on balance - Ftrst payment due ONE

1

YEAR lrom closong Call RANNY
BLACKBURN at STROUT REALTY
446 0008
GUY AN TOWNSHIP -

108 acres m / 1

located south of Mercero.11lle Approx 20
A tillable balance woods tab base
OWners w tll help f 1nance

CHESHIRE- ROUSH LANE - Lovely

3 BR ranch, 1111 baths

16x24 LR w1tt1
WB f1reptace, complete ly equtpped k1t
chen lovely carpe1 throughout, full
basement (partly ftn1shedL nat gas
heat cent alf garage and pat10

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN
CHER plus 78 ACRES of land 'n
Chesh1re TownShiP offers lots ot good
hvmg for your grow1ng fam1ly Home •s
JUSt l 1ke new w1th U38 sq ft ot 11v1ng
area plus an attached garage
1

spacoous BR's, 2 baths, 8x27 LR. 10x24
k 1tchen w1th refng , d1sp OW double
oven &amp; range , washer &amp; dryer stays •n
laundry Land IS mostly roll1ng pasture
land w1th approx 25 acres wooded Ca ll
tor appo1ntment

START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132

to take m mob1le home tor trade on th1s
!!ONVENIENTL Y LOCATED 3,3 moles YOU HAVE MADE Sl,OOO 00 by wa,ili!IQ
for th1s (hke new) mobtle
s1tuated on 100'x200 lot near Tycoon
Lake Ideal weekender, permanent or
summer home
ptce r~duced to
S6 500 00 Better see th•s one today 11

hewn tog beams, sleepmg loft, large
stone f •replace, modern barn, 14 dcres
wOOds, located '" the Wayne Nat1onal

PRICE REDUCED on tho$ 3 bedroom
IF YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING for a

hO'!)e and • 1 acre of land s1tuated P

mol~s north of Gallopolos o~ Rt

comb1nat10n home and bus1ness op
portumty ~ wet-ave 1t 1 Located 10 dO'!'"

small

town GiUIIpolts and zoned commerqal

2

166

barn 1n rear contatns workshop

and garage, 1deal locatiOn for tam1ly
Proce reduced to 559,500 oo.

~ut W1tti residential use too N1ce, neat
1.424 SQ ft home W1t!l busmess butldrng

;n rear Owner wol1 1 help fonance, or

3 BEDROO'I\. 1 'year old modern
heme. situated alorg Upper Rover Rd.

p'yment Thos os a quality poece of real

Kvoer
Creek
School
overlooktng the beautilul\

J1nance

ent~rely

wittl

30°o

down

estate LetusshOWittoyoytoday''

LOT localed along Kemper
Rural water ~vaolable

D1strtct,
Rtver

oruo

and pr.oced
for. only S45,000
00
.t&lt;
(

1

,•

A REAL BUY IN ' VINT-ON
2
bedrOOm home sotualed along Rt 60
FA . furnace , 50'x249' lot, Ideal begon
ner home • or retlremen~ home for
~ S\5,000 00
\£

BU~I~ESS ~ROPER TV alongVo!le St,
also has 2 bedroom apartment· ~"'l a 1
, bedroom home on rear All thee rent, Is
for onlv S38,SOO oo

,

'

)

'

L!lCATION for sm~lt
buslneta or ,,mOdel and move into
1
Locatell 01\ • the 1n.11n i!orner l "'
ew1~. 101 slza, ~pprOil 56'x170'
Buy th!l pt~tt\1 ~ fol' 520,000 00

Askong $42 SOD

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Resl,cled
buildong lot 1 22 acre, noce wooded se1
tmg c1ty schools SS 900
LOG CABIN - Very unoque. Old nand

3

-

Phone

FOR LEASE
COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY

woll use theirs 949 2591

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of

Middleport OH
A1r Cond1t1oned

Pomeroy Large tots Ca ll

2300 Sq Ft

9'12 7479

Of lice &amp; Sales Area
6,000 sq Ft Storage
f-enced In Yard Storage
Contact J1m Thomas
992 6611

TRAILER spaces tor rent
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, CheShlf e Oh

992 3954

- -- - -

Real Estate-

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

Gener&lt;~l
-------~-~--

• W1lhs T Leadmgham Realtor Ph Home 446

95~9

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

f

.,

KYGER CREEK
SC HOOL DISTRICT
Modern J BR ranch

home approx 41 1 yrs
old
Therm opan e w1n
dows storm doors FA
fu rnace
w th cc nt rcll
a~r k1tch en has built •n
cab•ne t!&gt; sla.nl ess c;, teel
dbl
S1 nk cl nd dtrun g
area
Full
basement
w •th pat •o doors Rural
water syst em g.J r agc
Callnow
ti37't

APPLE PIE
CONOITION
And spark lin c lean bes t
descr •bes th1 s lr • leve l
thr ee
n ce
s ze
bedroom s 2 bath hom e
Fam•IV
room
W1th
lireplace d1n1ng room
modern kllchen w th
bud ! •n S n nt g r~ s hf'nf
and a •r
T wo
car
ga rr~ gc Locnted 1n Spr
, ng
Va ll ey
on
a
benu t dull 'f lnnds cn ped
l arge lot M•SS tn1 s one
and you ve m1 ssed a
good one
I' 4 so

I NVE S rM E N r PROPERTY IN GALLI POLIS
Br 1ck and tr am e 1 apartment house o n lower 2nd
Ave One apartment 5 room s ba th '1 bedroomsThree !Jt one bedroom apartments L1vc 1n one let
th e other three pay for th 1S home Ca ll nov..
,. 486

AMERICAN DREAM

WILL TAKE TRADE - Ownerswollong

room&amp;. large lot 20's

Park, Mason, WV

304 n3 5651

It s easy to make a dream a re alty by own.ng th1 S
1mm"culat e care fr ee home w1th 1hree bedrooms 2
ba th s l pattOS ea t n kllch en w11~1 bu 11 n onk
cab 1nets l arge l 1v1ng room and storage bu il d •ng
Locat ed 1n C1ty Sc hool D• str• ct lh• s one you must
see tobel •eve Ask.n g$44 YOO
f/ 453

sc~ools

Grande Has extra m su lal1on, nat gas
heat. built m cab inets 1n k 1tchen ut.l

~-

Apartment
for Rent

down, upsta1rs unf1n1shed good barn
garage, shed/ near Blue Lake, c1ty

buoldong PRICE 556 200 00

-

only no pets 67S 1-452 or
675 2996 after 5

CLAY TOWNSHIP - Raccoon Creek
frontage, l 1/ 2 story, 4 rms and bath

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE Cozy '2 bedroom home 1n v11tage of R1o

~--

Two bedroom mob1le home
tn New Haven, adults

Excellent starter or
ret1rement home 1n rown 2 bedrooms
large k1tchen, carpet. gas heat, new 1n'
sulatton, plus 8117°o assumpt1on $30,000

nor1h of Holz er Hospttal adtacenr to
Stt"tte Rt 160 3 bedroom, modern home.
w / harctwood floors and part basemen1
70 acte lot 1n cludes 12 'xJ2 stnrage

Equal Hous1ng
Opportun.ty

Reoill Estate- General

lOS KINEOfi -

Assume FHA mtg S33 900

67 5·6679

OR RENT almostnew14x
70, 3 bedroom. 1 '12 baths,

$39 900

bedroom home 1n Kyger Creek
schools Over 11'1 acre yard off Rt 554

ALL UTIUTIES
IND.UDED

requ1red

3

No pets

Oepasot requored 992 2937
clean, no pets, dep req •

cable TV Mary R Traoler

2 bedroom all etectr1c ,
Henderson $150 deposot,
$150 per month No Pets
lnquire614 367 7257 alter 5

Call

apartment

rooms and bath

monthly rates, a1r con
dit1oned rooms by week,

Sleep1ng rooms w1th use of
TV and kitchen or Will
room sen1or ett1zens •f they

-- 2 BEDROOM apartment In
Mason, adults only, no
pets, 304 675 1452 or 675
2996 after 3

Garage apartment 3 room

and

304 882

TWIN RIVERS
TOWER
APARTMENTS
FOR TliE ELDERLY
80W RENTING

FurniShed

«6 0951

For rent 1railer space for

small trailer weekly and

3356

UnfYrn+shed apartment 2
bedrooms, carpeted 1n
Pomeroy Has stove S150
month
plus depos 1t
Utlltt1es e)(tra 992 6678

Caii..U. 0318
2 bdr mobole home for
rent, dep req Phone 367
77&lt;43

Apartment
tor Rent

acre pasture farm mostly rolling &amp; h1l
ly grassland w1th approx 10 A wooded
lots of spnngs. 11 '7 story home has s
rms &amp;: bath, large barn, tobacco case
fronts on 3 roads 1n Walnut TownshiP

$62,000 00

992-4191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 9U-2660
Dottie Turnor99N692
Roger Turner 992-5692

One

Office 446·1 066
Russell D. Wood-Realtor-Broker
Evenmgs 446·4618
Ken Morgan-Realtor-Broker
Evenmgs 446·0971
Mose canterbury-Associate
Evenmgs 446· 3408

LAND CONTRACT - Owners anXIOUS
to sell and Will f1n ance at IQIIJ tnteres1
rates 3 bedroom ranc h With full base
ment Low heat1ng bills CF A wood
furnace &amp; od furnace). garage, new
barn &amp; 10 acres, 9 mtles from town

chenfurnlshed,

rent,

furnished or unfurniShed ,

apt

INC
kif

bolls partially paid

I

cr1b

Henry E Cleland, Jr.

Ca II 446

WOOD REALTY, INC.

Woth a

parch, large older barn

REAlTOR

no

references

room , huge living
corn

REGENCY APT
bedroom,

2 bdr apartment, partly
furn , $175 mo , close to
park, dep req Call «6
3918

Houses lor Rent

room , 3 bedrooms, front
and

For rent mobile home, and

M7•

home w1th a large famt

ly

For rent new 1 bdr
Call.u6·0390

PRICE REDUCED

1.-~~~~--r-~~~~~

I

MOBILE HOMES
1NC.

44

for

Apartment for rent 3
rooms, fYrntshed, utt1tt1es

$300 per acre STROUT
REALTY -446 0008.

JOHNSON'S

Owners anxtous to sell established
flonst busmess servmg Ga tha Me1gs &amp;
Ma son Co Owners ret1rtng Has some
rentals tn c luded Call for deta 11 s

l•'•"•e•p•la•c•e•s• e.tc•c.• c•a•l•lt•o•r•d•e•tallolllsi.
. . .. .
12'•% MTG ASSUMPTION - conve
n1ent &amp; pnvate locat.on at edge of town

acres,

Apartment
tor Rent

44

2 BEDROOM, unfurnoshed
apartment and 2 bedroom
turnlshed apartment, 304
615 5571

very reasonable

TRAILER space 3 miles
from town ,unction 2&amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt Pleasant, 675
3248

'_-=;=~~~=
~6
Space for Rent

Apartments 675 554B

APARTMENT

t~==::;::::;:::::==1':==:=:=:;::==~

2 bdr Air Cond , adults
only Caii..U. 4110

44

36

I

Can

be converted s1ngle home
City water, will consider
land contract 67S 1883 9 5
pm

$9995

B%

2 bdr trailer
Cheshire,
Oh Roush
Phone Lane,
1 304
773 5882

By owner, chotee lot

1 acre

Now arrano- the cirCled lettlfl to
1o1m h IUf'PriH answer u sug
gnlod
Clrtoon

(Anawera tomorrow )
Jumbles CRESS TYPED IMMUNE FAMISH
Answer What the angry tai!Of told the lawyer-

II

information phone

61. 11&lt;43 23-41

PRESS YOUR OWN SUIT

Two bedroom house trailer
on Ashton Upland Road
Sl50 plus utiloties and
damage depOSit 675 4088

'
year protection

I
I
I

vesterCiay t

Professional
manager
on

Space lor Rent

46

Apartment

for Renl

premises Stonewoods Ap
ts, Rt 7, Mlddlepart For

lCHOIR

by""'Prlntanswerhere-(IJ"( I XI I l )"

M1ddlepart, Rt 7

1n

()

ILAUBBEj
() (

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

and references

rooms
resident
rental

1nterest Call388 9060

Live in one, rent others to

198114' Wide

I (I

mo

Lots by Owner 1 114 A to5

-- -

$200 mo , write Willard
Bentz, Rt. 6 Box 4(}.4,
Chapel Hill, NC 27514 or
Ph. 919 933 &lt;4390.

0521

BY owner, 3 apartment

9 12% ASSUMPTION - A n1ce 1 yr old 4
bedroom bnck m R1o Grande Th1S
unusual home offered 2 11 t 111 bath
eQUipped kllchen 12x20 tam11y room
w / f•r eplace {vented throughout home)
full ba seme nt 2 car garage and n 1ce
corner lot 1n a good ne ighborhood 60's

=~-=..:..-··

2 bdr., 1 bath, on 39 acres,
11 miles south of Gallipolis,

down, owner will finance,

house on approx

/'

heat,

6 rm house Sec depOsit

Racine
60X 150
Utlloty
buoidong $5,000 00 9•9 2801

II
I
I

gas

gar- with auto. opener,
nice yard. !IQOd location In
city. See by appointment.
Be vacant Stpt. 15. Rent
$375, dep $200, no pets Call
«6-2513 or 646·1171

44

A.,.rtment
for Rent

0·5

T1mes-sentme1-Pa

The

OPENING SOON Senior I , 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apart
Citizens &amp;. handicapped ments now available at Pt
apt community opening Pleasant Scot1ish t nn Also
Featuring 1 bedroom un a honeymoon SUIIe A II
furnished with wall to wall utilities paid Apartments
carpeting, wall-lex walls, as low as S140 a week
built In bookcase, ap- Honeymoon sutle kS a
pliances, smoke detectors, night CaiiJO• 675 6276
air conditioned, prlvote
patio, storage facilities, 45
Furntshed Rooms
single story with no stairs
to climb, private entrances SLEEPING ROOMS and
with Individual laundry light housekeeping apt ,
facilities on premises with Park Central Hotel
recreation &amp; meeting

living rm , fireplace,

LOTS Real nice catnpSite
on Raccoon Cree~. all
utolitles available, S300

286 3752

STONE RANCH - One of the best buys
' " the market 4 bedroom, 2.000 sq ft
home over loOking the r-ver Has l
baths family room f•replac e, nat gas
heat , cent atr &amp;. 2 car garage $65 900

lg

42

Farm tor sale or rent 8.4
acres with house and

SCHOC)LS
of the pret11est locations 1n the

Well kept 3

extra nice, one

For rent with 91JIIon to buy.
4 bdr. home, bath and half,

basement,

w. Va.
44

Houltl for Rent

owner Cheap 1974 Schultz
U'x65', 2 bedrooms, living
room 14'x20'. New carpet, House tor rent in Eureka
range and rellrgerator. Cali 256 1198
Need on offer on rented
lot
1972 Schultz,
3 5 rm house In Eureka. full
bedrooms, large living, basement Call256-6547
dining ond kllchen Good
condition Need an offer on Small home for rent Fur
rented lot Call 675 3431 nlshed, 2 bedrooms In
evenongs or 67S 3030 day
Racine Adults only 949
2597

Calllmmecliately
2 STORY -

2

2 acres on Floyd Clark Rd
close to Rt 160, $.4,000
Phone ..u. 03'10

$9,295
-

home,

call after 3 p m, 256 6413.

New 198\ 14' W1de

bedroom
home
tn
a qual1ty
ne•ghborhood m town
Has familY
room t1rep tace l''J bath formal d1n
m g, screened porct1 (Wifh a great
Vtew), basem ent, nat gas heat &amp;
garage Low SO's

Mobile

long one year old ranch

vANZANT RD - Eoghty sox acres, 5 BR l r,ame, 2
story home, barn and other outbu1ld1ngs All
been several successful wells drilled In thisarea.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES '
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 PHONE «6-3868 or «6
7274

41

fenced w11h a board
fence Also an 80 foot

Cattle farm approx 90

pasture, fenced Good barn. other outbldg
600' road frontage c1ty school dtstnc1, 6 mtles from
City
acre~

II

s.••

Large mventory

POMEROY,O.

DELIGHTFUl CAPE COD Open sta1rway
graces front entrance Formal d1n1ng, large LR , 3
BR s 2 baths full basement w1fh f1replace , new
roof , atum1num S1d1ng , natural gas f\Jrnace On cor
ner lot 1n c 1ty S43 000

FA"M ... u ACRES Beautoful pasture and
melldow land, some wooded Fenced Good barn
and other outbldg Noce 3 bedroom home, fireplace,
knotty pone J&gt;&lt;!ntling in loving room, kotchen has
built in,oven, counter top range and doshwasher Co
tv KhoOIS Green Elementary Approx 3 moles from
G•llipoli$ JUST LISTEDI $94,000
G~~!;l~ ~~;~ IS TWP - •bedroom ranchwlthfamily
~
m'"&gt;d••rn kot Has F A nat gas furnace

a1r

pletely underpenned
773 .5096

1979 LIBERTY mobile
home, 14 ft. wide, total
electroc :W.-675 5-164

Rea l E str1 t e- General

room house with out
bu ild1ngs tots of woods
and road frontage Alex
ander Schools SSO,OOO

CENTENARY - $43.000 - Three bedrooms P J
bath ranch Cozy tamlly room w1th fireplace You II
love th1s fnendly ne1ghborhood lUSt a few mmutes
from Ga ll•pol• s Nea r ly one half acre level lawn
Shade tr ees C1ty sc hools

J79,SOO -

MOBJLE home &amp; lot in
Mason Lot os 50x100 with
cha1n link fence, nice
parking area Mobile home
12x65 With expando on
living room, all electric, 3
bedrOQm, central heal &amp;

I

•ng
room
w b
f1replace , modern k 1t
chen and d•nmg area 1
full baths
Spacous
fam11y
room
w b
firepla ce 117 bath, ut1 l1ty
room and 'J car garage
Gas heat ce ntra l a1r
Shown by appt only 1
Loan assumptiOn

68 ACRE FARM, love

of R 10 Grande College Good .nvestment for college
student buy 1nstead of pay1ng rent• N1ce 2 BR. 1' 2
baths
forma l d1n1ng
Will amson torced a•r
furance Ga rag e Garden space

157 ACRES -

two

MoblltHomes
for
Prices reduced on all
mobile homes and travel
trailers.
TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES
Gallipolis. CALL 4-U&gt; 7572

4 bedrooms formal l •v

NEW LISTING -

m
l..D

12x60,

AS TIME GOES ON

CANADAY
REALTY
RIO GRANDE - 130,000 -

cameron,

bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
carpet 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom, new carpet,
B &amp; S Soles, Inc , 2nd and
VIand Street, F't Pleasant,
WV Phone 675-..24

COLONIAL Bl LEVEL

$70s

FROM

c.ar·

appt

MEIGS COUNTY
LISTINGS
A PRIVATE
PARA

OWNER

USED Mobole Home 576
2711

new

pet, 1971 cameron, 14x64,
two bednoom, , _ carpet
1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedroom, new carpet 1976

1971 Oarlan 12 X 65, 3
bedrooms
1972 Crown
Haven, 1~ x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms B li• S
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts Pt. Pleosant, WV.
Phone 675 6424

Reii!._E_state = 2enera l

Dallas ' J1m' Love

or Jl!ss House w1th 3 bdr ,
barn, and 2 bu1 ldmg on

House w1th 7 rms, bath,
carpeted, on 6 acres more
or less W1th barn 4ft x
15ft swlmmmg pool, lots of
fru1t trees. and tobacco

675 2046 after 5 30 p m

992 2571

Small farm, 6 acres more

Marlette 12 x 60 mobole
home 2 bedroom S5500
992 ·6122

large family. or 2 apart

1973 Crown Haven, 1•x65,

three bedroom,

Ohto-Polnt Pleasant,

Mobile Homes
for S•le

32

Mobile Homes
for S•le

32

Homes for Sale

Mobtle Homes
tor Sale

12

ment rental , needs some
repair. tn low 30's as is,l04

Home,
Modular
or
doublew1de
1112
acre
ground $8000 10% down
F1ve potnts Paul Simon

Scottown

ntes,

Housing
Headquarters

CONVENIENT LOCATION- Mulberry
Ave
Between Washmgton Grade
School and GAH 5 1 story home oilers 4
or bedrms for your growong family , 2' 2
baths, 17•25 LR. family rm w1th WB
stove, completely e quopped kotchen and a
large scree ned 10 porch F1sh 10 your own
back yard Owner may help financ e
Shown by appo10tment
Cali Ranny
Blackburn al STROUT REALTY - 446

TRAILER
&amp;
LOT 1n R ae nc
neighborhood Ask.ng$11 000

4 bedroom home. large lot.
c lose to schools 992·6309

area, 5 m1les from Crown
Coty Sellong proce $411 500,
rent S200 oo, (depos1t and

Genera l

Eo; t r~te -

ntes,

carpet

•nstallat1on
free
est•mates, ca ll 446 3253

Real Estate -

mmeral

New 3 bedn)Om house, fully
carpeted, carPOrt, rYral
water Near Meigs mine 1

9, 1981

House in Tuppers Plains, 1
acre ground 3 bedroom,
central air, nice yard, unat
tached garage, electric
heat with heat pump, newly
remodeled on dead end st
close to elemtary school
Would rent Available Sept
1 or sell for equity In It Will
trade for ocreage near
Tuppers Plolns Sell on
land controct to right partv
with smoll down payment
Call for appOintment 423
8-&gt;191 or write box 122.
Belpre. Oh

13 room house. Ideal for

references Ca/1446 2002

GALLI A
Clea n ng and
Rent A Ma1d Serv1ce Inc
Free Est1mates bonded
1nsured, phon e 245 9234
Clean1ng by the week mon
th o r contractual

A 3

acres, 1 rm house, all

29

31

31
Homes for Salt
11
Homes for S•le
By owner In town One mile
from school, school bus, 3 3 bdr , 2 Fr P, Family
bdr both, eat-In kitchen, room, 2 112 bathS, WN car
LR on main floor. full pet, full basement, cent.
finished basement with alr, swimming pool, 112
family room, 4 bdr and acre lot Call 4.46 1731 after
bath Carefree steel siding, 6 00 PM.
nat gas. 2 car detached
garage. Near golf course
Life Estate Consisting of
Call 446 1223 for ap farmhouse with acreage
polntment
Further Information call
992 67•7 after 4 00 p m
2 large
bedrooms,
remodeled, ne" chimney
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
Located m Harrisonv11fe
ditoon, 3 bedroom, family
$8,000 992 61-45 after 5 p m
room with fireplace, cen
tral air, basement, 30-4·6752112 year old rustic home, 8 1S.2
acres, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
carpet, timber, private
FOR sale by owner. 2 story
992 77.1

7•2 2746

Loans, Columbus F 1rst
Mortgage Co , .463 Second

Rec"l Est&lt;"te - General

Rcnf

Homts for Sale

f1rm

FHA VA Convent1a l Home

R.alph or V1ck1e Coe
197 2096
PiWI Perry - 797 2280
leila Pologhoff
593 5144
Bflg1tte Lovsey
797 U.S I

31

House with acreage for
sate, J or .c bdrs , fully car
peted 2 barns, 379 2123

home .. across from Vinton

Ohu~-Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.

1ddle

Forest, 20% down
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 2~

down - CampSites

the Wayne
Nattonal Forest S to &amp;-acre tracts wood
ed land, good hunt.ng Pr1ces start at
In

$3,500
FARMER'S FARM - One ot Guyon
Townships tones! 106 acre m/ 1, ap
prox 45 A fertile bOtlom land ,
balance pa~ture &amp; woods Noce modern
brick ranch home has farge kitchen &amp;
famoly rm 1•x18 LR, atlached garage ,
main barn tS .56xlO.t, also tncluded 1s

20x24 steel garage, workshop &amp; several
sheds Owner Is retorong &amp; woll help

r finance
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre larm has Iron
tage
State Route 588, ' Fa~rfleld
Centenary ROad &amp; Vonco Faortleld Rd
£xcellenl for farming or 1development
• Older 5 r"l. &amp; tlatll farm ,hl!me, barn &amp;
solo included. Owners will cbnSlder sell
ong smaller 11racto of Short term flnanc
ing
lor more ontormaiiOn

on

I

&gt;liJ,~OI(SCIN

ENJOY THE COMFORT OF CEN
TRAL AIR &amp; THE ECONOMY OF GAS
HEAT 1n th1s lovely bnck &amp; a lum1 n1m
ranch Your grow1ng fam• IY W1ll love
lh1s J spac1ous BR s Jll2 baths large
L R &amp; k1tchen w1th bu l11n range DW &amp;
d1sp , 2 car garage &amp; lots of landscap 1ng
1n Country A•r Estates Pr.ced for a
qutCk sale at $45 900 Ca ll RAN NY

BLACKBURN at STROUT REALTY
446 0008
l 0 C A T I 0 N - 610 4th Ave 4 BR
21 1 baths large LR forma l d1n1ng rm,
co mplete k1tchen w1th d1sp DW co m
pactor , refr 1gerator and rdng e
6
ftreplaces
garage
new alummum
S1dmg and storm w.ndows Shown by
appomtment only
ROOM TO ROAM - Th1s lovely bnck
ranch offers lots of good llv.ng tor your
grow1ng family 3 BR's 21 7 baths larg e
k1tchen &amp; LR tormal , d1n1ng rm, 2
f 1replaces, wood burn1ng stove cen t
a1r, garage full basement w•th tam•IY
rm , bar &amp; laundry Located on approx
2 acres on Stae Route 554 between
Porter&amp;Eno Pn cedtosella1S59500
INGALlS ROAD - Appro)( 73 acres
25 A Raccoon Creek bottom lan d
balance pasture &amp; woods Old hou se &amp;
bulldtngs
INCOME PROPERTY - R10 Gra nde 4
mobile homes presently rented water
gas &amp; sewer ava•lable

JOHNS

CREEK

ROAD

Ne&gt;r

Mercerv1lle and Crown C1fy m•nes 1973
Duke Crown Royal mob1le hom e
14'x65 , 2 BR , woodburn.ng stove flat
lot w•th well barga1n pnced Call about
th1s one

~~~==~~~~~;m;ustsell soon

WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME
Lo ca ted 10 ctly of Ga ll1pol 5 c lose to super m nrkct ..)
and bus.ne ss sect 1on 10 r oom s 3 or 4 bedroom s
modern k1t chen w 1th lots of ca b1nets dishwasher
garbage d •S posa l e l ectr•c table top rang e Formal
d!ntng room f amily recreat1on room Just lots of
room Central a ~r natural gas F A furnace ce ntral
P A sys tem II re p lace p lanter m hom e Young ap
pi e and peach trees flowers and shrubs and a lot
m ore MU ST SEE T H IS CITY HOME
.-391
COUNTRY
Re modt.:ILd 4 5 bedroom hom e wilh t r epla ce
locat ed on 53 &lt;'!cres of I li ab le ;md pa'&gt; 1ur e land
pond barn IMge m e tal budd 1ng tobc1CCO base A ll
th 1s l or the low low pr.ce of !..:12 'tOO Cal l lor more
del &lt;'Il lS
P 479
PEACEFUl AREA

hall Mrc more or less w•th frutl tr ees plus .1 three
be droom home I1V1ng room kd c he n w1 t h built 10
cs btne 1s ut1 l 1tY room lull b asemen t and qarage
part1at1y converted nt o a den An unt•n shed r oo m
wllh a heatola tor !!repl ace N1ce fenced .n yard
Call tor det ail s
"491
A

62 ACRES M OR L VACANT LAND
Wood ed and pasture land off o ld Rl 7 on Horse
Creek 1n Oh1 0 Townsh•p Poss1ble coa l ve n Af
fordable .nvest men t property
Call tor more .n
torm aTton
"4 bB
18 ACRES VACANT LAND
Hunter s Parad•s e Lot s of buddmg S1tes along old
State Rt 7 ta c 1ng the Oh1o Rtver Lars of t 1mber
Lots of valu&lt;' to r a low pr1 ce
"446

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588
- Remodeled home mcludes 6 rms
and bath, carport, stove, retng
diShwasher. al most 2 acr es of land and
prtced for qu1ck sale
OHIORIVERVtEW - ApprO)( Bacres
wooded land n1ce bu1ld1ng 'S1Te county
water located on Route 7 approx 5 m1
south of town $6 500

MORGAN TOWNSHIP - Small bul
mce , 2 BR home 1 1S only 2 yrs old &amp;
clean as a p1n Perfect for a small tam I
ly, weekend retreat or huntmg lodge
S1tuated on 36 acres of Morgan Lane

FANTASTIC BUY'
R E OU C E 0 FROM S35 900 TO S28 900

OWNER SAYS 'S ELL NOW
Modern 8 room r an ch 10 the countr y Large ilv1n9
rooml6 x l8 famdy roo m1 1)(12 w1 th woo dburn•ng
f1rep1a ce Rur al water cen t r al a1 r Ap pro)( 1J acre
of clean land Large concret e pnl•o ca rport See
th1 s home now 1
11 323

HOME - l ACRES IN THE COUN TRY
7 room home w1th 3 or pos s •bl e 4 bedroom s K1tchen
w1th buil t 1n ca b• nets storm w•ndows and doorsLa rge c h1ck en house, storag e bU i d1 n g l wells plus
rural water on a State H 1ghway All th 1s tor only
$36 500 00 Call for appo1ntmen1 now
11 364

Rd

DRIVE A LITTE SAVE A LOT
J BR lu ll basem ent whtte a1um1num s1d1ng tu el oil

LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should

FA furnace 30 x40' ba rns h•nQI Cd root lot s at
young peac h and apple trees A ll th• s reduced to on

descnbe th1s lovely 3 B R bnck ranch
Spec1a1 features are a large LR &amp; d1n
lng rfltl , eqUipped k1tchen, l 112 baths,
laundry, quality carpet, cent atr &amp; an
overs• zed 2 car garage Located on U S
35 WeSt &amp; Shown by app01ntment

RIO GRANDE AREA - Roo Center
peon! Rd (Cherry Rodge) appro• 75
acres woodland , fronts on 2 rds , counly
w~ter available
Owner may help
finance Proced to sell dt uoo per acre
HUNTINGTON

TOWNSHIP

-

108

acres m/1 vacant land, fronts on R ac

ly$14900

''51

LOAN ASSUMP r ION
Noth1ng fancy - noth ng b1g bu t n r ea l cute ~ m:l
cozy fwo bedroom starter ho rne&gt; or a n1ce SIZe h om"e
for ret1rees It has a fuel ad furna ce, f•replac e &amp;
can also be heated by wood onty All th1S on a 57 ac
lot approx 211 mdes from Galllpol• s Pr1ced at only
91 1%

$28,900 What a buy' Call today
• 478
A LOVElY HOME
3 bedrooms, med•um to lar ge 11 J bath s moderh
and beautf.ully decorated k•tchen &amp; d1n1ng room
Pa110 doors from to concrete pat •o '"rear of hom e
Carport. storage room Beaut1lully lands caped lot
100')(300 A very lovely home on State H1ghway

cooh Creek 11. the Tom Glen Rd Appro•
31 iii Iable &amp; the balance wooded Under
$400 per acre

'Call lor detaols
39ACRESMORE OR LESS

BUIL:DING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx 5'1' acres located on the
Graham School Rd , co1water, aver 300
It rd frontage, Green Grade School &amp;
Gallla Academy High School S10,900

2 ACRES - 4 ROOM HOME
12' d5' MOBILE HOME

I

COUNTY FARM 1()6.
approx 30 A tillable,
bil.llai)•o' o•sture &amp; woodO, nice 2 story 7
metal barn,

SIMPLE PLEASURE
N tce 3 bedr oom ranch lull b asement ,.,,,h re c
room lots of n •ce built 1n cab 1ne ts wa ll oven and
counler r an ge co mb1n e to make a l ov ely l&lt;~t c n e n
large land scape d lawn garage w1th concrete dnve
w •tn•n wa lk 1ng d1 stance ot Gr een E l em enta r y on St
Hwy 141 Approx 3 m1les tram Gall•ooli s N• ce
ne 1ghborhood Th1s h ome has top ca r e Owner will
he lp Pn ced .n th e S40s
R ~98

'&lt;p

Tillable pastureland, some t1mb ~ r plenty of spr1ng
water. 12 m11e frontage on Prospec1 Church Road
Phone for f\JII deta1ls
.- 497

L1ve 10 one, r~nt the other Rent now com.nQ 1S
S175 00 a month 2 acres of wood own water svst cf11 1
FA gas furnace N1ce modern kitc hen All of th1 s

lor only S23.000 00

�9,' 1981

Page-.-0· 6 -The Sunday Times- Sentinel
54

51

Misc. Merchandise

Standing limber . Contac t
Ruth Chapman, Rt. 1 on us
33 on II&gt;P of MI. Alto hilL

HOU-kl Goacls

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. ot- GE 8500 BTU air con·
toman, 3 tables, $500, Sola, ditloner S125. Call after 5,
chair and loveseat, S275. 304-675·5181 .
Sofas and chairs priced
from S275. to 1695. Tables. MAT ERNITY dresses &amp;
S38 and up to $109. Hlde-a - outf its, sizes 12· 1i., 304· 675·
beds,S:UO., queen size, S380. 6937 .
Recliners, Sl65., $295 ..
Lamps from S18. to $65. 5
pc. dlnenes from S79., to Wh ile metal detec to rs 136.5. 7 pc ., $189. and up. Opening Special 20% off on
Wood table and ~ chairs, ell white metal detectors.
$350 up to ~5 . Hutches , Spring Valley Trad ing Co.,
1300. and $375., maple or Spring Vlllley Plaza. 446pine finish. Bedroom suites 11025.
Bassett Oak, $6~9 . ,
Bassen Cherry, S765. Bunk SWIMMING
POOL S :
bed complete with mat- PRE -SEASON SALE :
tresses, S250 . and up to $999 .00 INSTALLED! I!
$350. Captain's beds, 5275 . Above ground pool COMcomplete. Baby beds, $89 . PLETELY INSTALLED
Mattresses or bo• springs, starting at $999 .00. Pr ice in·
full or twin, $55., firm , $65 . eludes pool , deck, fence,
and $75. Queen sels, Sl85. 5 filter , liner , and i n·
dr. c hests , ~ 4 dr. chests, stallat ron under norm al
~2. Bed frames. S20.and
ground cond i tion . Free
S25 .. 10 gun · Gun cabinets, shop at home service. Catl
$350., dinette chairs S20. 1·800-624-8511 .
and S25 . Tappan gas or
EASY credit availabl e now
t o purc hase furn i t ure,
tele visions, or appliances.
V illage Furn i ture 2605

electric rl!lnges , $285.

USED

.

Rang e s ,

refrigerators, and TV ' s,
J miles out Bulaville Rd.

J a ckson Ave .. 675 1773.

Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
thru Fri ., 9am to 5pm, Sat .
446·0322

dryers,
ranges .
pliances,

peache s . Now lhru Sept. 20.
Any quantity available.
Retail &amp; whole!.llle. Bob's
Market, Mason . Phone 773·

refrigerators ,
Skaggs
Ap ·
191 B East ern

5721. Open daily till9 p.m
Kitchenete, coffee &amp; end
tables, bedroom suite.
stereo &amp; stand, 2 buffets,
etc Call 992·6709 after 6

Ave .. 446-7398
Dryer

and

coffee

tabl e.

F r e ezin g
c orn .
Houdashe lt . 992·7451.

For
sale
16 c u . ft
refrigerator-freezer , $H 5

Call256-1327.

Calll -61N9d ·78d2

living room chair $15. See
at 769 Brownell Ave., Mid·

$60 .

For the best buy in shoes,

buy Knapp Shoes. Call 992·
3«2.

304·67 5·

Ha lf r u nner beans . Ceci l
Maynard
r e sidence,
Ra c ine 949·2602

CB,TV , Radio
Equipment

For sale Sanyo color TV set
with stand, best offer Call

388 9616.

NEED several items of tur ·
nitur e ,
appliance s ,
televisions . Big discounts
for
quan1ty pur c hase.
Village
Furn1ture 2605
Jack son Ave 675·1773.

Antiques

53

A TTENTION :
l iM
PORTANT TO YOU) Wi ll
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibtes or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watc hes, and
coin collection s. Call 557 ·

3411 .

Pets for 5I te

Sol

9Q lOS

.,
...•u• ...
tKZ

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 3677220.

.AQJ

WEST

BI G disc ounts f or cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue , 675·
1173.

GYM se t. $40. 30&lt;-675-5511.
Encyc lopedi as

for

sa le

Ca ll30d-675-2699.

9J842

DRAGONWYND
CAT TERY - KENNEL, AKC
C how puppies . CFA

tQIIDill

•to 117

Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call .u63Watter .. p.m .

SOUTH

.K5

9AKtH
+A S3

KENNEL

• KI2

Boarding ell breeds, clean
i ndoor·outdoor facil Ities.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

Also AKC Reg . Dober·
ma ns. Cal l «6-7795.

Norlb

Welt

Pau
Pass

Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.

Pass

p,.,

•• .

Pa u
PI!!
Pass
Pass

~·
&amp;t

Pass
Pass
Pass

Call 446-d1 91.

7t

Sou ..

,.p,.,
Obi.

19
I NT

'"

fem ale, 1 112 years old,
needs r oom to run Call 446-

•a

Openmg lead

and Alan Son1ag

Call446 1262 .

East's one notrump was
the so -called "comic
notrump." The comedian
ran to two diamonds
alth~ gh he would have done
better to pass and ·take an
WOO -pmnt penalty Anyway.
North and South got to seven
hearts aft er a long senes of

M( x ed breed puppie s. ... 6
wk s old . 9'2·6505 .

Open tH Mon . thru Sat .
F r i. hours 11·6.

pups 895-3958.

$30 . Hall Sheepdog puppies
$5. 304-895-3624 .

above ground at

OhiO.

S3,UOO .OO

each . Phone 1·30.4· 422· 2781.

Call379-2425.

1 Ford 3 point hayrake .

1 Ford 501 mOwer. $550.
Call 985 -3301 or see at
Baum Lumber, Chester .

Lowry organ

Double

Like new.

rythm se lec tion .
firm . 985·4197 .

58

Ful l

BACKHOE , call alter 5,

S lSOO

Oak H i ll , Ohio. 614·682·7332 .

ke yboard .

d2

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

1NCH cycle bar at-

tachment for Gravely tra c ·
tor. Phone 304·773 -9555.

Green beans, p• ck your
own $6.00 bu . Toma toes by
the busheL Raynor Peach
Or chard , 5 mi les below
Gallipolis on Rt. 7. «6-d807.
Ha If runner beans, S8 00
bushel. Call Jack Corwm

446 0198 .

63
For

Livestock
Sale Holstein

auto.,

PS,

P8,

cruise control, AM radio,
good cond. Cell after~. 367·

001 .

1976 Grand Pr ix ~.000
miles, AC, PB, PS, and
PW. $2,350. Call388-8769 .

80 Toyota Cellca Liflback,
Auto.. AC, 14,000 miles.
Call992·7356 evenings.

way. When

1979

tt

came time to

ruff his last diamond be
layed the king of spades.
ed to dummy's ace, rufted a

cashed the queen and king of
clubs. ruffed his last diamond with the queen of
trumps and made the last
two tricks with the ace and
king of trumps.
Both play s required that
West hold two diamonds.
The complicated play also
required that West follow
suit enough times In spades
and clubs
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISEASSN.)
•

Camaro

Z28 .

3.50

automatic. T Top. Power
windows. rear defogger,

AM FM radio. 992-7570.

71

For sale or trade 197-t Old·
smobile88, good cond ., new

bull

1974 El Dorado Cadillac all
power ,
low
mileage ,
beautiful car, must see to
appreciate. Call 614·367·

1209 .

Bro~ e r · Auct1oneer

L1 FE

INSURAN CE
428 Second Ave.
Caii446·0SS2 Anytime
1nves1ment Pr operty - 2 BR home
s 1t uated on a 1~ ac r e lo t J m il es fr om Ga ii1POI 1s
Pn ced to se ll Ca ll now
BMR 400 -

61

6809.

station -

wagon, 6 cyl., power
steering, 4 new tires Dayton, 4 new shocks Sears easy riders, new clut·
ch, new Sears 48 month bat ·
lery, $2,200 . firm . Call 367-

0417.
exhaust,

new brakes, and new tires.
Call446·17d9.

BUCKSKIN mare , 5 76 Chevrolet Nova, $2,395.
years old, $500. 304·895- Good cond ., good interior, 4
new tires. Call379-2782.
3815

STRAW FOR SALE Phone
256-1113, Butler Hereford
Farm, Lower River Rd :.

Gallipolis.

OLIVER ·77 row crop tra c ·

tor . Call 388-9657 or 388-

968d.

auto., quadratrack, hardtop, power steering. Call

379-2589 .
1976 Buick Limited tully

HAY for sale . 304-675-225d
&amp;675· 1302.

equipped One owner, low

mileage, gOOd cond., $3,495.
Call446 · 15~ .

-Real Estate- General
---- ----- -- ~-~-

·

BMR 3'97 - Gr eaf tnve srmenf B u y th is duple"~&lt; t or
only $2 ,500 d own Owner l inanc .ng at 12o,o As k 1ng
pr 1ce $17,500. C•J r r enf r en t a 1S140 per un 1T

BAIRD &amp; FULLER (]
REALTY
., ... .

·~-

-- -· -- - ·-

POOLS

SIDING

7

KAY'S
EAUTY
SALON
B

78 Ford L TO II, air conditon, am ·fm

radio,

row

m ileage SOSO . Phone 30d·
675·6429.

72

Trucks for Sale

1967

International

169 N.lnd

..

- -

- Portraits
- Weddings

- Anniversaries
-Passports
- and Now, an impressive, complete line

basement on Route l41 . pr iced to sell now.

PRICE REDUCED - New br.ck &amp; tudor 3 BR ran ·
c h has family room wi t h fireplace , P .. bath, 2 car
garage. A r eal bargain .
sss,ooo

$16,500

Farm. Lower River Rd .

1979 JEEP truck, nice, low
mileage, $4900. 1977 XS750
mi l eage,

$1000 . caii304-67S-3436.

Real Estate - General
.. - - - - ·- -·-- - - -- -- -· -

-· --

--

on tg. flt~t lot includes detached 26x26 garage plus
18x36 in· ground pool. Owner· transferred and anx·

louUo sell .

3"-

BMR
New Listing - Two story home presently bl;ing used as duple•. could easily be converted to
single family . Choi~elocation in Gall ipolis . Situated
on two lots.
BMR 401 -

See this one now -

Ow-ner financing to

quaflflea buyer. Modular home with 3 B~'s, _ 2 full
baths. large li'llng room, dining area, bullt· in kitchen. Priced to selt quiCk at only S21,500.

311 -lfc

~offitt ,
Gutter ,
· R'oofing , Remodeli ·
R
Ad
-ng,
O'lm
ditions,
Drywall
and Repair
Call :

ROBERT MASH
7·24 1 mo. pd .

ibN

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

water-Sewer·E lectric
Gas line-Ditches
water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

Ph. 367·7560
1·7-llfc

Free Estimates
992~011

eWil)ht'n

• Ot ~ p!IUI ~

eOrvu ~

• D•shwastlcH
•HotWat ~r I &lt;'I nk ~

elh ngiH

For all of your wir·
ing needs .

L~un!lr.• \

.- Pe-nt;~l

-- Apl

Propl'rl1t'S

Hou s e-Owner ~

WANTING TO BUY
SCRAP
( Pomeory Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
rop price s pdid for auto
bod•cs, scrl\p iron .1nd
.mct.lls.
·
we s T o f
1 mil e
r .ltrqrounds on Old Rt

33.

Mon .-Fn. 8 : 30 to4 : 00
.After Aug . l

Ph . 992-6564
7·26·1 mo. pd .

SMitH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

ALL IN ONE PACKAGE -

Summer

A PICTURE OF EXCELLENCE -

pl ace inc lu des 2 bedroom mobile home
w ith large deck , fu r niture, 1961 23'
Cru1 se r bo.Jt and trailer, storage
bu i ld.ng, and boat dock located on Ra e
co on Cr ee k . priced at$16,200.
II BJ6

A cre of rolling lawn, main leve l. kit
c hen, forma l dinmg area, living room , 3
bedrooms, 1't2 baths. Full finished base·
ment, fami l y room, 4th bedroom, rec
11796
area &amp; ut i lity room .

219 ACRES - H1ghly producti\/e farm .
Older remodeled 4 bedr oom home. 3
hog houses, tobac co barn , tool shed,
1920 lb . tobacco base . 65 acres tillable .
Rural water Owner will lis ten to any
reasonableotter .
"761

I

(t ' "

PRICE

REDUCTtON

plus · loan

Pomeroy, OR
992-2174

''YQ!ING'S
CARPENTER
.SERVICES"

Central air, woodburner . intercom.
Basement . Garage. 3 acres. Only 1
ol d. City schoo ls .

093

RESIDENTIAL

Call 742 -3195
l H II (

LOAN ASSUMPTION - New Listing Brick . 3 bedroom s, nice kitchen and
dining combina t ion with sliding doors,
beautiful bath, large utility room , tulty
carpeted , air condi Tioned, garage . Nice
garden and 11-a ac re lawn , more or less .

072
Your

first peek in the front door wil t convince
you there is nothing better on the
market. Living room with firelace,
fam i lY room, 3 BR , 2111 baths, 2 c ar

garage. Mid SSO's.

1791

NEW LISTING - Nice fenced yard
with alley entrance . 2 bedrooms, large
kitchen . Closed in front porch. In town.
Excellent

beginner

home. Priced tosefl.

or

retirement

1114

electr.cat work

you this

1794

CONTRACT

-

Route

Siding

Roofing 1 Gutter
Remodeling
!;,erv.ng Your A rea tor
20 Years
fr ee F. stimatc s
C.1ll Collect
Ph . 1143 · 3322
/ · 13·2 mo. pd .

L&amp;M
Maintenance
and Demolition
• Building
Maintenance
• Removal of
Old Buildings
Free Estimates
Ph . 247-3534
8-6-1 mo.

of $25,000 . Sd,OOO down and 8% interest .
owner needs to sell.
Hl~

bedroom mobile home. 1111 bath$, wood·
burner . This one has it all . Rural water,
workshop, cellar, wood shed. Option to
buy more land . Listing price $26,000.

home with stone fireplace and n~w fur ·

,

nace . Ux6S mobile home compl,e tely
furnished. 3 wells. Mineral rights. Close

RES IDENT IAL

0

MODULAR HOME AND 8 ACRES &amp;
priced to sell In the S20's. 3 bedrooms, 2
lu ll baths, compl-e te kitchen. service
area , living roqm , dining room, some
furniture. appliances. A good buy

a,

located in K.C. School Dlst . .

• 74, ,

NEW LISTING- A PRIZE IN ANY'S
BOOK 1 Dver 6 acres. Rolling , tieoutllulty maintained tract. Handsome 6 room
ranch . Garalie. Pond. Qarn .- ·2 nice
building lois . Prlced1n lhe_fSO:s•. • 7U

.'' .

17 ACRES -

ACQUire equity fast by

finishing this 2 t*troom .. home, Har· .

.

rison TownshiP . $13,200.

.

I

.'

~

,

•

.

1763·

.

1709

tillable . Older

.s

V inyl siding . Base-

'

RI;STAUR:ANT BU&gt;INESs··..:. A going
business -and fi~e location in towh. -t\ 11 '
inventory goes. Buy tot:la.y and choose"

,your own work(ng hours. Call lor more4
details.
U34

.

!=arm ,Ponds· Land
Clearing · Roads.
·· • 'tall:
I.

For Information Call
949·271 o or 949-2806
8·2·1· mo .

'

~tl

..

~

PULLINS
-•EXY4CATJNG.

.

,~(.. '·•~- .

or

t

· Blaine Milhoan
!" ' 985-3965

and

LOC K SMI T H

Res idential.

s

automotive.

882-2079 .

Call

FrH estimates.

fully

pening
service, 10 a .m .·6
p.m
. 675·5868.

FOR BEST In Carpel
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer' s
Steamway , Call 614-446·
2096.
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpel Cleaning
446·~208

JIM MARCUM Roofing

estimates.

Remodeling .

Call388-9857.
STUCCO PLASTERING textured

ceilings,

COOK ' S
v i ce ,

Televisi on
Henderson ,

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home

Phone675-2250 ,
82
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

malntainan c e
and
remodeling . Phone 388 -

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Hear1ng,

' P l' C ~

-11 11

m.

lb

ROGERS

601 Main St.

w

ld

Pt , Pleasant, . Va ., o
state liqu.or store.

finish . Call388·87 11
Improvements/
additions, siding,
etectrica·J &amp; ·air condi "
tioning, anct- insurance
claim reports .
·Guaranteed work. Free
.estimate.

SOLUTION

~ou th e ~l '-&gt; I C rn ln ~ u 1.11 10 n

&amp; ( on '&gt; t

Mldd=Otl·
MJ
•1111·

........

T v pc·,: blo w·
•nq ,
c t•lu lo ·.e
F r ee
f' ', t lm .l l C' .
Work
q t1.1 r.1nl r• (' t1 &amp; ln'&gt; u re d .
ho m e •mpr o\te ·
Aho
m c&gt;n r. o. l vt· H.1ger &amp;

CASH
gold : anytlting marked
10K , 14K, 18k (cla ss
rings, dtfftall, silver
coins or sterling . Bring
to Tope Furn. Ask for
Tom . Top prices every·
day! Or see MTS Coins,
6: 30·8: 30 Thurs. Eve

Cabinets,

picnic
tables,
porch
swings, most wOOd produc-

J .IV tl .•n c ock , Ow n ero,

4 46-6605- 44!1 · 2637

BILL'S

ts . 101 Court St ., Gallipolis.
ca 11 446- 2572.

Home Improvement "'
Nu - Pnme Rep lacement
W1ndow s, Storm Wm·
dows a11d Doors. Pat10
Covers ,
Carpo r t s .
Mobile
Home
Ac ·
ces sori es .
F ree
Esttmates.
6tl Mil! er DLI.Ilf
446· 2641
-

- D&amp;F ELECTRICALComplete Hortu~ " '•ring,
Resident.al R. C- .,mer·
c1al .
· Li&lt;en s edEt~tnctan s
·
Guaranteed Work

CON -

CRETE · quality and ser·

interior and

446· 3458

J

exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling .

20 yrs. e•p. Ca ll388·9652.

PH. 992·7201

FREE ESTIMATES

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

7. Soutt)
American

1 G1ves slyly.
as a kiss
7 Desen
12

17
21

22
23
24
25

26

dwellers
More
anc1ent
Hurl
The
firmament
Cap
Course
Prepare lor
print
Negative
prelbc
Shortraclo.et

28 Sling

30·Act
property

3:2 Scale note
33 CArry on a
trade
35 Chimney
carbon
37 Begin
39 lnsecls
40 Noise
41 Printer's

measure
43 Harbor
45 Sedate
47 NY'SneiQh·
bor

48 Stupid
person
49 Blem•sh
52 Tidy
5~ Capers
56 Bee homes
57 Conference

59 Jog
61 Stalk
62 Treat lor
Rover

63 Small broolo.
64 Teutonic
deity
66 Pedal d1g1t

67 Fondle
71 One, no
ma1ter
whiCh
12 Capuchin
monkeys

U.S. Rt.-SO East
Guysville , OH .
Phone 61~ · 662 · 3121

C&amp;W
CONTRACTORS

CHAIN LINK FENCE

ani mat

76 European
77

Beopaner

78 Yttrium

symbol
79 L88ther
&amp;trips

81 Detaa:·

8283 Ctoth Strip
B4 Comedian
- Laurel
85 Wine cup
87 Rumor
B9 Boundaries
90 HoStelrieS
92 Baseball

team

- -

IV Agure ot

136 Compass
pl.

t37 Wild goose
139 River
islands

141 AI home
142 Exist
t43 Obstructs
145 Enthusiasm
147 Hauls
149 vast age
152 Pronoun
153 Appohions
155 Mounlies ·
terntory

t57 LingeJ
159 Greek leiter
160 Toll
162 Poetry muse

94 Certain
95 Colonize '

168 Hea-ly

96 Old·
womamsh

168 Break

97 Masterful
99 Write
100 8lory
t01 Cairo's river

102 Chore
103 Guido's high
note
105 Labor hard
t07 Nau1ical
abbr.
109 Femate deer
110 Pulverize
111 Facial
eMpression

164 Forgive

. bOdy
suddenly

169 Epic tales
170 Growing OUI

ol
17 t Flight of

steps

DOWN
1 Vessel
2 Narrate
3 Babyloni an
de.ty

4 Ha1lt
5 Permll s

20 Chores

27 Midday
29 Happens
31 Odin' s

brother
34 Annually
36 Waste

allowance
38 Snicker

40 Pigeon
42 Small
lacl!lf\'

44 Fruit cake
46 Count
calortes
4B Eat
49 Scatter

50 Blemish
51 Compass

pt.
53 Sound ol

hom
55 Me1nc abbr
56 Residena!
58 Longs for

60 Athletic
group
62 Bundle
65 Inlet
68 Glassily
69 Jacket

pan
70 Fat
72 vaptd
73 Romance
language

113 Food fish

6Pry

11&lt; Seed
115 Tin symbol

7 Hebrew

75 Equality
76 Father and

month

mother

116 Palh
111 tnsect

t 18 Ba In debt
120 " - Cid ..
121 Storm
122 Tall and thin
· 123 West German capital
124 Lampreys
126 lmpaSSIV8
128 Retail

establish -

ment
130 Distant
132 r ..rs
I:W Dwell
135 Al\tlara

8 Legal
matters
9Limbs
10 Whips ·
11 layers
12 Conjunction
13 Tennis
stroke
14 Fight
between

two
15 Morals
16 Respond
17 Golf mound

18 Shade ot

green . for
short

77 Italian poet
79 Gravestone

60 Facial
expression
82 Dull ones
83 Name
84 Stair over a

fence
86 Southern
blackbird
88 Young dog
89 Depart
90 Workmen
9t Vegetable ·
93 Rudimentary
95 Quiets

Ken Soles
24S-YIIJ
V7Um
98 Man's name
102 Cistern
104 Century
plant 106 Fish eggs

82

P[UMBIN G
AND HEATING

Cor'. FourtA and Pine

navian

83

FOR FREE

121 Asian desert
122 learnmg
t23 E!Kisl
125 fireplace
part

7~· 2753

!1

.EDWARD'$ lll&gt;ckhoe and
Qozer SerVice .· Specializing

· Jn~ptic tank . 675-1234

129 Soup Oish
t30 Hindrance
131 SuHer
paUenlty
133 Pactc away
136 TransactiOns
136 Visible s•gn

BACKHOE and SeptiC tank
Service .

Larry

Siden

stricker . 675-5580.
_
Electrical

84
&amp;

140 Trades

143 Pl. of a liter
144 Antlered

Refrigerati~~ ~

_

Fuller Electric Co. Com ·
ptele rewiring, comm erc1al
or residential , and elec ·

animal

146 Rome. to.
a Roman

trlealcall.
malrttainance,
also.
on
Ph . 4d6 ·217l

Gall1polii.

~

·~1;::1~~;,~ I,HbtAir
Condition
·water
tanks ,.
all- makes

Phone

11'1·2196 . Chartes Kiesl 1ng .

Mus.

163 Bone
symbol

167 Nickel
symbol

s 1tver Bndge Plaz a

D-07~e-r-w~o~rk-.-Sm- ~-1-1-jo-bs- a ~~~~~~;;~;~

specia lt y

127 Tan1111um
symbol
128 Brands

165 Tellurium

ISears I

DITCHER Compl ete ser
vic e. wa~r and sewer
lines, dra inage ditches.
French City Mobil e Hom es,
Inc. call 446·9340 .

name

pagoda

ESTIMATES
Contmuou s Gutl er.ng ,
Roofing , House Pa1n1 1ng , and Ch&lt;1 1M l•nk
F c n~
cc"'·----....,

BACl&lt;HOE Complete ser ·

119 Lamb's pen

16 t Coated lava

CAll 446· 2770

Exc,avating

· ViCe. French City Mobil e
Homes J.nc . caJI-446·9340

117 Explosive

156 Insect egg
158 Ch!nese

Spec•atizing m Contr ete
Rooting &amp; Remodeling
Home Improvements
Exterior &amp; In tenor
Vmyl Stding and Solftl
Re sident1.at and com mercia I. Work msured
367 ·0lt4 or 367 042.7
1
or 446·6310
_, _

Phone 446·3888 or 4-4&lt;1-4477

110 Horse's
neck hair
111 SpaniSh Iitie
of respect
112 PilCher
114 Sally
116 S•ngtng bird

mountaltl
15&lt;4 As written:

Plumbing

'CARTE~S

107 Firm

153 High

Gr ;~ nde

&amp; Heating

108 Scandi-

146 Sediment
150 Hebrew
measure
151 CaSheW~ .

RIO

..SEWING MaChine repa1rs .
service. Authonzcd Singer
Sales &amp; ServiCe. Sharpen
...Scissors . Fabric
Shop ,

Pomeroy . 99:1-22~ - JACK'S REF'RIGERATIO N . air cohdttlon service ,
commercial, · i ndustrial .

Phone8B2· 2079 .

AD\/ ANCED
CLEANING SERVICE
446-3915
No Answer 446·2062
Modern steam cleanmg
for carpet &amp; upholstery
(insuranc e work) .
• Scotchguard - 3M
• Walls, floors, window s
• Wat e r
&amp;
s mok e
damage
Industrial
Commerc1al
Qesidenli.JI
Dependable, B years eM ·
penence . we do care!

~~~~~~~~~~~
~~IMPROVEMENTS

qr

Bill's

T

Nu-Pnm e r eplac ement
WindOWS

Storm windows &amp; doors
Alumtnum &amp; v 1nyt
siding
How met Pat1o Cov ers
How met sc reen rooms
Mobile hom e awnings
Aluminum utility
bu1tdings
691 M i ll er Dnve
446-2642
Free Eslimates

, Authorized John Deer,

New Holland, Bush Hog
F .lrm Equiprflent Dealer

FARM EOUIPMEN r
. PARTS/SERVICE

Culloden Nursery
Spnng Sal e!
We st V•rg1M101 's
" Gr eatest Nurser y "
Beautiful
C.an a d• a n
Hemlock s,
Scarlet
Maples, Sugar Maples,
Pin Oak s, Japo1nese and
Chinese Crabs, Green
Ash ,
Purple Plum s,
Pink Dogwood, Brad ·
ford Pear, Uprtght &amp;
Spreading Evergreens .
Afl nursery stock is pnc·
ed to self. 25% oft Rt1tny
Day Purchases.
All sires of flowering
trees
guaranteed to
bloom this Spring!
Designing &amp; Planting
Services,
Free
Estimates . Nursery is
located 1 mile out
'Charley ' s Creek Road

..

tin

tile

left

Wesleyan

TlleVillqeot

. .....
. or

I

FLOO R tNC.

PAWN&amp;(OIN SHOP

Tra•tt Pickup tri
I

VtNT O N CEMENT

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

Free estimates.

PAINTING

o r~ •n9 tt c tght
f ' A~OU.Ol F

a 14·44'6-T i

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpel Cleaning featured by
Haffell Brothers custom

·

H . R V IC f

v

com ·

SANDERS
CON TRACTING , Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446-2787.

675 1582

L enno x H eat1ng &amp; Air
C ondttton•n g.
All
Typ es
ln s ul .a t• o n .
E tectr tca i W1ring.
Calf 446·8515 or" 44 6·

Home building , home
remodeling
and· r epair.
Custom work from start to

merclal and residential .
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

vice, call

RUSS AN
E LLIOH

r u -_ C! RI &lt;
IS 'J rh1rd A v e

Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367-7853

9326.

446· 1142

t.f Rl.b.l AUCt&lt; E. T

Ser ·

wv

guaranteed .

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

or-446· 2~4 .

Dave' s Appliance Repair.
Washers, dry ers, plum bing, electric, general handyman . Phone 30d-S76-2921

CALL BETWEEN
8A .M . &amp; 5 P.M .

all work

MSHA

RON ' S Television Service .
Sp ec ializing In Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar . and

I

GOOD SOIL
DELIVERED

ci~,
lnduttrfal commer·
and min·
Residen.tial,
In g. electric work .

HARPER ·Halstead, lawn
mower repair and shar·

or _446· 3080

Frank Rose Canst. co.
R-emodeling ,_,. i r, new
construction, 111 types .

Service .

Emergency serv ice.

Ca ll 446-3896

f~~~~~~=====~

SAftiTATIOfl
.~

ro

···, Ul ·. ,

_../"'

I '•~ ·992-2.478

ACREAGE

to

-~ - -

• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
• water, sewer &amp;
· Gas Lines
• Dump Truck
• Trencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded ·

'

Racine and Middleport
·Ages 3 a~d Up
Aduli Classes Olfe~ed

'

li. ~

..

1

Enrollment For

COMMERC IAL
I.)

,

september Classes in

t 782

"~c'

rates. Scothguard, 992·~-

35 Court St .

Gallipolis, O~i o

-.-electric • ewer
Lines Installed .
Pb. 367 · 7560

house calls . Phone 576·2398

68 ldentlcat

Now Taking

Iarm for tile money . Priced In the $SO' .s .

Free est i mates, reasonable

RINGLE ' Smason,
SERVICE
·e• P-,
erlenced
roofer
carpenter ,
ele ctri c ian .
rat
repairs and
re~mcl&lt;liling. Phone 304 -675·
or675·4560 .

Home
Improvements

691leholdl

Pomeroy, Oh .

buildings Pond . Wooded area . A lot of

BRIGHT AND SHINY and affOrdable is
PR1VATE110
of be
· th 1' s 3 BR hbme situated on 1.71 acres .
acres
autllul seclud·
ed woods; lust rlerfect lo· build · \lout
Featuring living room ' with woodburn'
dream home . Road teading \
_ing stove, Eq~lppe&lt;! kitchen &amp; 2 baths,
prope)ustoff Rl. 35, Call·today!
·
There IS also a · troller ·f10Qi&lt;up, r.ur.al ,
,
fTlO
wa!er, . g~rden . space. Priced in the 3 ACRES, flat t~ rolllng, ~some w~s . .
$30 S.
,.
f-677 &gt;Large 2V&gt; car •garage perfect for ·tliat ,
I NEED HELl' - With a little paint and machine pr welding shop. "'l~o .2
the touch of • dO· Il·yourself man. Older trollers. Ltve In, one· and re~t the other.
2 story home. 3 bedrooms, 4 flrepl,aces , Call Today! Owner want~ alast·sale. ·
and a beautiful view of ·the Ohio River 6
9
from our'back yard. S17,SOll; . ~ u92
A
' ·
'I' ·
· , •
.1
L !liD ' CONTRACT •· ' ~-llh · 1 sm-a ll
NEW LOT$- You can eflortt atose to do'Nnpayment vou can "JOve·lnto this 3
Hospital . Rural water available. Lot bedroom rai)Ch. Aluminum sldlnq Insize approx . 100 fl. •115 ft . 54,000 each.
suloted. outbuilding. ~losil
Sliver
,
1111 Bridle Pl•za. 119.000 . .- .
032

•:

t9H215 tir 9t2·731•

. Garage . Large barn . Several out·
·'

VINTON COUNTY - Sliuated close to
Vinton County line. 48 acres. 2 bedroom

to No. 3 m in• ..

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

8-6-1 mo

I

V. C. YOUNG II

more or

a~res

beautiful location, 8 room home, €:ellar
house, 31!2 acres. Selling at the low price

KERR BETHEL ROAO -

8

NG

233,

FARMS

Approx. 1'12
acres of scenic wooded area . Deluxe J

PH. 247-3534

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

'

LAND

81

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

- Plumbing and
· (Free' Eslill)a't es)

'VIOBILE HOMf:)

- Scenery is tops Large exciting home
close to hosp1ta1 . Attra c tive 3
bedrooms , 2 bath s, deluxe kitchen, for
mal din.ng room , lg . l iving room , full
basement, large patio, fenced Vard 2
acres.
17SJ

BET YOU'LL LOVE IT TOO -

•OW

ALSO ALARM WORK

- Add oris and
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work

- ·"

O'BRIEN
El.ECTRIC
SERVICE
15 Years
Experience
Reasonable Rates

brick home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths . Buill·
1n range with grill, trash compactor.

"1•••

Let us

5·7-lfc

assumption on this spacious. sparkling

...---·""""-

NEW LISTING -

Ph .

Tree Tr imming,

R bu i 1ding ,
For sale. Camper bus, no remodeling, also papering,
engine. must be towed . carpet installation , and
Sleeps 6. Hes stove general
home
im ·
675
5689
large closets,
water
tank2. provements .
.
• 675 .
refrlgetor,
table,
couch.
Besloffertakes II. 992-5260. ~ ·

Let George Mtl~l:•;,:','jj:[f.;'nrl WEATHERALL

your pr esent
system .
R estd e nt~r11
&amp;Commcrc•al

EUGENE LONG
.- (olfl

the

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream ••traction.

and Refinishing

. SEPT,,_
1NSTA\.LE D
e Water . • Gas

DENNY

949-2862
949 ·2160

and Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
eS1ding
• Remodeling
• F~ee estimates
• '20 vrs. e .. perience

GOODOLDEBOYSHouse
painting inter.lor and ex·
terlor . Call 446-7797 or 446·
2877.

stump removal. 67 5. 1331.
T

WOODSHOP

992-7656
SERVICE

OHIO VALLEY ·
ROOFING

K

REESE -TANKS
JRENCHING

Call446-2107.

35 Yrs. Experlenc~.

BMR 392
less man

New Listing - Close to town 3 BR ranch

No sund~y Calls

NATHAN BIGGS

WHAT A WELCOME PLACE TO BEl

BMR 391 -

Custom Kitchens. Ap·
pl tan c es,
custom
8athrooms , Remodelin ·
g, Plumbing, Electric ,
Heating .

Pll.lii'H AND SER VIC E
ALL MAkES

~~~~~~~~~~-

949-2860.

Construdioo

Radiator Specialist

Easy financing . Call for appt.

ranch . Situa ted on largetlat lot . Call for details !

Ph . 614 -843 -2591
6 15 tf c

Free Estima'tes
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howo1rd

Heo1ter Core to
Largest Radiator

schools

Prtee greatly reduced on this 3 BR bri c k

Rt. 3,, Box 54
Racrne, Oh.

2 4 tf c

-· -- --- --

or

C. R. Mash

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
FrOm the Smallest

BMR 3ll6
Qu1 er coun tr y home on 1 .' .1cr e lot 1n
eludes 20x70 bnr n wt fh loft r1 nd pa rt1 n l basement
Yo u wil l cn1 o v l h1s onc 5~ 9 . 900

BMR 375 -

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

·All types of roof work,
'new or repo1ir gutters
and downspouts, gutter
·cleaning 11nd painting.
;Au work guaranteed.

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367~228
Darvin Bloomer, Realtor, 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

miles. $3,250.00. Phone 2561113 , Butler · Hereford

siding

949·2801

F &amp;

dillon. Coll992-2963.

Carpets.

It L WHITESEL
ROOFING

ACRES - N1 ce wooded land, e xcellent bu ilding
site in the country only 3 mires from town.
11 10'20

tires, excellent cond ., .(8,00

SMALL

Utility Buildings

7-51fc

home and 1.4 acres O\ lo oking the
Ohio River . This home ho · 1..:w carpet ,
v i nyl siding, dishwasher , ra nge. Easy
access to river for outdoor pleasures.

COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
WE SELL IT ALL
REAL ESTATE &amp; CHATTELS

Sizes
" From 30xJO"

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x4Cl

Ph. 949-2160

9' 1% 1NTE REST - Assume the loan on
thts charming bi ·leve l 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, f amily room w ith lireplace . Cen
tra l a •r . Low heating bills An above
ground pool Convenient loca tion . City

BMR 391 - Tht s houst:- has r ecen t l y be('n r emodeled
inside and out , has ba sem ent , heat pump for' year
around comfort, five mobi le hom e pads, lots of fran
tage on Route 7 plus an equal amount on the Ohio
River Thi s one could be a m oney maker . Call now .

Farm Buildings

PH. 949-2285

$28,000

s

BMR 33q . F
You be th e 1udge on the v alue of t h• s
ol der hom e and JO ac r es ncM R 10 Grrtnde Owner
.n us I sell

G AH 5

10 7 tfc

ALL STEEL

Located at Maplewood
Lake in Racine.
7·17 · 1 mo.

Lovely fram e home, garage, fenced in
inc ludes furniture. good rental prop ; erty ,

INVESTMENT PROPERTY
2 nice lots with 4
r ental mobile home pads, all are rented, e ach pad
has concr ete runn er s and pa tio, located in Rodney .

free

ceramic tile, floor tile, lor·
m lcacountertops,allwork
guaranteed. Callo146-8019.

Hoover sweeper s repaired
at Empire Furniture, 8d2
Second Ave, Gallipolis, OH.

contained. Exc:ellent con ·

992-6323

992· 5682

Mo11day · Friday
4 p.m . to 11 p.m .
All Day Saturday

TOWN ~

IN
10 1,

76 Datsun pickup with good

"'

Now IS you r chnnce to l1 vc tn tow n tor
$40,000 Thr cc&gt; bed r oom home nea r

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs. : Mon .· Fri.
9 a.m .· 5 : 30 p.m .

109 High St., Pomeroy

S36,000

NICE TO COME HOME TO - New bric k &amp; frame
ra nch with 3 bedrooms, family room with fireplace,
bea utiful ca rpeT , 2 car ga rage .
~ 1495

for

estimates,

Rod &amp; Rftl Combo · Zebc:o
600 reel, Pfleuger S·250 rod
- · Special $9.99 . Spring
Valley Trading Co .• Spring
Valley Plaza. 4411-8025.
1976 21ft Starcraft Wonder
star travel troller . Self·

"Bi~i~:~~~;.c:es:.~m
Call

In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio ,
basement, oar age floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
yearse•perlence. Call367·
7891.

and siding.
30
I~=========:;-~=========:j spouting
years experience
. Free

TOM HOSKINS

aMR l8B - Lonn nssu mpt. on w 1Th 81·· 0 o 1nTer es t 3
bedroom home .• nc ludes tam ly r oom w 1th !•r epla ce.
Don ' t pass t hi s one

BMR 380 -F - Ex cel lent fr~r m or co m m erc ial prope r ·
ry 100 acr es mar c or less Loc n ted near Ro dney .
Owner will co ns1d et.nnnc1nq tor qua l , ft ~ d buyer

an-

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

BM R n I
Pr. ce reduc ed to $1 1,900 Owner w r~ n t s i 1
sold now ! IOxSO m ob ile hom e s ~t u.J t e d on a n ver
front lot E)(ce l len l bu y for new l ywed s or for ret 1red
per son s Ca ll now

SMR 371 Res rr ,cte d bu +l d 1n q l ot in c•tv sc hool
di stn ct 0 6.4 of an ac r e Ca ll now

anct

obligation.

REASONABLY
PRICED
HOMES &amp;
FARMS ARE ALWAYS IN DEMAND . IF
YOU NEED TO SELL. CALL US TO·
DAY . WE HAVE PROSPECTS THAT
NEED TO BUY.

SMR 13~ Tw o sror y nom e •n Gall•poll s. pr •ccd to sell
at on l y S7q .9QO Call l or del n il s

Wedding

ni\/ersary invitations
and
accessories .
Reasonably
priced,
quick service.
- Look
without

BMR 39q - Ow ne r tr ans ferre d and has l ound a
nome m h is new area, and now m ust se ll l h• s f1 ne
l ou r BR h om e. Tw o l ull ba ths, fi ne kit c hen. Car pe t
tnr oughou r, hea t pump new pa 1nr 1nside and out
See th1 so ne soon C•tv sc hool s. G re en E lem entar y

BMR 3t6 - New L 1St1n g. L shaped f ra m e and br1 ck
ranch . Three B R' s. 15x2 1 t am lly r oom w.rn on c k
f 1r epl ace. b u i lt in k •tche n, 11x 1J d10 1ng roo m Th er e
1s much m or e to be sa •d tor th1 s ftn e h om e Give us a
call tor a pri va te show mg Galt 1p011S Sc hOols, G tve
us a call f or a pn va l e show 1ng Ga ll1pOI•s School s
Gr een El em entary $60 's

8-6-1 mo .

BISSELL
SIDING CO'

~=====~~~~~~=====~~~~j~==~~;;~~==~
lHE PHOID
VINYL
ROGER HYSELL'S
PLACE
GARAGE
Sl DING

CENTENARY - GoOd 2 BR starter home with lull

Call367-7533.

low

Mason, W. Va.

8_6_1 mo.

•Steel • Aluminum •
Casting • Trailer Hit·
ches
•
Metal
Fabrications.

GOOD CITY LOCATION - Cozy 3 BR ranch with
full basem enf and large fen ce d rot , low ut1llties.
only
519,500

Yamaha,

C, L KITCHEN

BARNETT'S
WELD SHOP

1600

series truck, $500. 1973 1 ton
Ford, 25,000 miles, $1,7.50.

Ph . ( 304) 773·5634

6-28-1 mo.

loca te d al 2129 Che stnut St.
73 MATADOR , phone 30d576-2584 .

• Vinyl
• F ' berglass
1
• Stainless Steel

Middleport, Ohio

OFFICE 446·7013

· ..,:! • • ·- · ~ ~

·- -

NOWTHRUAUG . 31
Now $17.50
S25.00
Now S22 .SO
no.oo
Now $27 .50
GWEN' S SPECIAL
Wave Length Perm
Far ~t~~:f.~ W S29.5o •

no.oo

AM-FM radio, tilt wheel ,

73 Vega , good conditon,
new paint. Phone 304·675·

new

0

0

Vinyl &amp; A·luminum

of

best offer, excellent ocn·
dition,
leather
interior,
electr ic window, seats,

350 cu .in., PS, PB, good
cond., $1 ,200 firm . Ca ll 367·
0633 .

power,

General

1977 CORDOBA $3200 , or

2414 .

all

-- - --·-·Real estate -- - ·-- -

·- - -

PERSONALIZED

304-675-2571.

1976 Chev . Caprice wagon,

1979 Jeep CJ -7 Renegade,

Farm Equipment

·-

PERM SALE

ac, ps, pb, 49,000 miles, ex·
tra sharp $2650. firm Phone

camper lop, good radial

E arM &amp;gpplles
&amp; bl estBEII

1978 Honda 750K, excellent
Harley Davidson, low rider condition. Loaded with ex·
1980, under warranty, 3,000 tras. Sl800 or best offer .
m lies 54500: Phone 30~- 882 · 742- 31~ .
2356.
76 Kawasaki , K2400, must
1980 Kawaskl KDX 175 sell,make off1&gt;r. Phone 30~ ·
$950. Phone 304-675·5350.
675·5504.

FOR sale or trade· l973
Ford L TO, AC , PB, PS,
AM·FM stereo radiO, 30.4·
675 . 1707 .

5 p.m 304·576-2d90 or 675·

68 Chrys ler Imperial, 2 dr .,

Guernsey milk CCIN and
ca lf, just fresh S62S. Phone

1973 Yamaha 250.Dirt Bike.
Call256·6836.

Motorcycles

gOOd cond. Prefer 76 or 77.
742 - 27~ or .W.0200 .

air and new tires . Call after

Ply-1/olare

..
.

1975 Honda 750 motorcycle.
1979 FORD Bronco Windjammer fairing, air
Custom, new tires, 54950 . horns, luggage rack .
304-89S· 362~ .
Locally serviced. $1500.
Chucl&lt; Knight 992· 2151 .
74

0 ·7

,.. -

1976 Ford Mustang, GHIA

Autos for Sale

1977

1979 Honda CB 750-K . C::all
«6· 271~.

~~~;:~~::~::::::~~~~::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~r:~~~~O~h~lo-~~P~o~i~nt~P~Ie=a==~~w~.v~a~.~~~~==~~~~~~
___l_t._.s__i""Tn__e__s_s___S__e_"r_v_·_z_·___ce__s_. . .~ ;~~t5y1 ~~=::rn~rc!:r. ;;~~.;~gr~~r£;:~3~~ ;~~:.o~~{!f.~~~~;:r: t~~Se~~rv;-~;~·~t; .·~e;~smo~'J~~~~J'e~r,~e~d~~il
-___B

1976 Harley Davidson Spor· .
76 Ford Chateau van, a ·c, Isler. Custom paint and ..
am-fm radio, delu•e seals chrome. Invader mags,
$3600. Phone 30H7S·6429.
$3.200.00. Call «6·9228 afl,r
5:00PM.
1975 VOLKSWAGEN Van, 7
passenger, lnter1or and 1978 Kawasaki, KZ·~.
body In gOod condition, 1,800 miles. helmets. 2
runs well,new heater boxes HR78·15 radial snow tires.
and exhaust system, new 992-6276.
c lutch, 12500. ~·895· 3652 .

Wanted : Monte Carlo in

MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson. wv. Phone6751574 or 675-2881.

Motorcycles

1972 Della 88, Good e'nglne
S250 . Phone 304 - 675 · 1~5.

.£.. . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . .

calves, $100. Call256·6315 .

JOd-882-3326.

CANNING tomatoes, $5 00

1975 Plymouth Fury, 318

enolne,

1971 vw Squareback.
Clean . SlOOO . ~~6 · 2149
evenings, 9~9 - 2504 days.

tires, 5695. Call256-6582 .

Baum Lumber, Chester

Musical
Instruments

379·2~.

first, comes to hta hand with
a club, draws trumps and
claims.
However, South came up
with a super-complicated
play He started the same

Four 15.000 gallon tanks

Sd50. Call 985-3301 or see at
51

on whether or not West ruffs

Farm Equipment

located

A KC
r e gistered Old
English Sheepdog, 7 ye t~rs,

He

79 Ford Thunderbird,
21.000 miles, ~.500 . Call

1979 Jeep Wagoneer ~ dr.
Full equipped, auto Iran .
Built In ell; Cruise control,
AC. ~ ••Ira tires on rim.
$6,500. Call 7~2·3117 after 5
pm.

1-------;;..---.----------....j
---------.......... ·-· ......
61

A KC
Da c hshun d ,
Pom eranian
an Poodl e

74

clobs, ruffed another spade,

By O.wald Jacoby
Reg Coc ker Spaniel pups.

ynusual bids.
Tbe band u reJ&gt;Orted In
" lnterutlonal . Popular
Brtdee" wu supDOIOII to
have been played fn Moroc·
co by 1 Polilb pair. We tblnk
someone kidded tbe reporter
or else tbe reporter lddded
the m1111ine.
South baa 1 ratber elementary way to come to 13
tricks.
takes kine and ace
of diamonds, leads a trump
and finesses dummy's 10,
comes back to his hand with
a spade and lelda hll last
diamond. He ruffs or over·
n1fls In dwnmy dependlnJ

spade, led to dummy's ace of

20d2

THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675·2063 , Pt. Pleasant . New
hours. Now open on Wed.

ssoo.

r.

AK C Gre at Dane black ,

6729.

Ge ner .J I

East
1 NT
2t

1.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

per bushel , phone 304·675
R eal E"' til te -

EAST

.QH8

HILLCREST

Autos for Sale
1973 Buick La Sabre 350 cu.
ln ., good cond., need bodY
work,
Call «6·7&amp; of·
ter S:OO.
71

The comic notrump
NORTH
t-1·11
.Al0141

Used cornet, i n good cond .

4072.
52

BRIDGE

Athens ,

For sal e. Used R·-40 and R·
100 Ditch Wttch Tren c her

USED brown and white

mattresses,

Don

~ --------

MAPLE bunk beds with

Building Supplies

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, 0 .
Call 2~ · 5121 .

p.m .

Call446-3732 .

dleport .

55

Yellow Freestone canning

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washer&gt;.

Aug. 9, 1981

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

. Fll.

»&gt;·

between

,
o..

•
11

'·

Camp

"

Ground. Only U miles
from New Htgn. ·Mall.

,

Trailer .lo.d deliveries.

t·

Scons , Bluegrass sOd
iliy.ilable. 1 "'
•
iY'' .~
I
7~3·9996

.

�~

~alltpolt£5

Terminate 44 cases in Meigs Co uri ·

11iha rp

~eeps. • •
Ry .1 . Samut·l

P et· p ~

tember 193ll.
B. Everett G. Royer 193ll to
Janua ry 1946
9. Forrest A. Brown Februa ry 1946
to June 1948.
!0 . William P. Smith 1948 to 1965.
11. Bryson IBud l Carter 1965 to

IN J ANUARY . 1939 the Gallia
Co unty commissione rs ma de funds
ava ila ble for a home demons tra tion
agent . T he fir s t horne ec agent ( ac-

ting 1 was Mrs. Chris Judy Sowers,
who started in April , 1939. Two months la ter Mtss Cla ra Belle Motter aceepted the rob. a nd it's she - now
Mrs. Cliffo rd Dunn in Henderson -

EMMA ESTEP, 71 Mill Creek
got a let1er I' other day from U.s:
Sen. Teddy Kennedy along with a
tw&lt;rpage uews release. which
she's pictured here reading. Jeff
Grabmeier took the Tim esSentinel newsphoto. The senator.
who almost beat Jimmv Carter
for the Democ ratic Party

Aug. 9, 1981

Pomeroy Middleport- Gallipolis, Oh io-Point Pleasant, w. va.

Page--0·8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

whom we talked to to r em inisce
a bu ut Ev Roye r. E \' had his picture

" ' the Culwnbus Sunday Dis patch
fur August 2 m the bustness section
under the headline. "Executive
Manages llusmess of Fa nnmg OhiO
La nd Nobody Wa llled ."

nomination for PrPSident last

year, wrote that he agreed with
Emma that Reagan· , proposals
to reduce certain aspe-cts of
Social Securit)' "constitute a
breach of faith with the American
people." Emma said that she had
also written to House Speaker Tip

Twenty-i!ight persons were fined
and 16 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs CoWJty Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Tracey Dodderer, Johnstown,
Martha Reed, Shadyside, and
Donald F . White, Dak Hlll, Ky., $22
and costs each, speed ; Claude Reit·
mire, Pomeroy. $10 and costs, fialed
to display valid registration; David
Marm, Pomeroy, n4 and costs,
speed; Venetia Evans, Pl. Pleansat,
Lillian Harris, Hartford, and Larry
Koenig, Tuppers Plains, $21 and
costs each, speed ; Randy Car·
penter. Amsterdam, $5 and costs,

unsafe vehicle; Thomas Hoschar,
Pomeroy, $250 and costs, 30 days
confinem~nt, one year probation,
fined and 25 days of confinement
suspended, non-support, $150 and
costs, 30 days confinement, one year
probation, fine and 25 days confinement suspended, make
restitution, bad cheek ; William
Neugbauer, Akron, George Hackett,
Ill, Pomeroy, and Jeffrey Pat·
terson, Pomeroy, $20 and costs each,
speed; Michael O'Neil, Pomeroy, $5
and costs, no helmet; Robert WOOd,
Long Bottom, $23 and costs, speed ;
Ronald R. Lavender, Mason, n4 and

Dayton man hurt in accident
GALUPOUS - A Dayton man
was not seriously injured in a twocar crash on U.S. 3:i near Gallipolis
Friday .
Harlis H. Sheets, 45, was taken to
Holzer Medical Center, where he
was treated and released.
The Gallia·Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Sheets was a
passenger in a vehicle driven by
Kenneth E. Beekman, 20, Marion,
while westbound on35 at 4:45p.m.
Beekman was reportedly unable
to stop in slow-moving traffic and
struck the rear of a vehicle driven by
Herbert E. Myers, 51, Henderson,
causing moderate damage to both
autos.
Two minor collisions in Gallia
County were investigated by the

costs, speed; Brenda K. Chappelear,
Rt, 2, Pomeroy, $23 and costs,
speed; Mqrvin Satterfield, Miner·
sville, $20 11nd costs, left of center;
Steven Schneider, Reedsville, $2oo
and costs. three days confmement
license s)ISpended 30 days, OWl;
Kent B. Oswald, Huntington, $30and
costs, speed; Frank B. Barton,
Colwnbus, $24 and costs, speed;
Danny 'M. Barber, Reedsville, $25
and costs, illegal passing; William
Levacy, Bidwell, $10 and costs,
failed to yield one-balf of raodway;
Noah Chasteen, Middleport, n4 and
costs, speed; George Korn,
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, stop sign
violation· Richard Hubbard Rt. 1
Racine, $75 and costs, 10 days con:
finemnt suspended, six months
probation, no operators license;
Gloda Reynol!i5, Pomeroy, $25 and

costs, speed;

Alan Vandall, Hinton,
W. \'Q ., $24 and costs, speed.
Forfeiting ~ds were Kenneth R.
Wilt, MinersVIlle, Thomas E. Ro~, .
Middleport, Linda Beaver, RaCIIle,
Bernard Belanger. Quebec, Cal!ada,
Paul M. Kalmbach, Upper Sandusky, Daniel A. Wilmoth, Lan:caster, Samuel B. Hergog! ~nton,
Howard ~· Newton, IT, ClnclMBti,
and DaVId R. Wolford, Newark,
$40.50 ~ch, speed; Gar_y Eynon,
Mmersv1lle, $60.50, excessive speed;
Jeffrey Boyd, Addison~ $31.50,
s~; James H. Young, RO,
Racme, $60.50, . reckless operatton;
Raymond W. D1ckerso?, North Can,_
ton, $35, · speed; Davtd A. Nolan,
Patriot, $35.50, speed; Clell LaBonti,
Rt. 1, Long Bottom, $360.50, OWl;
Stephen 0 . J~nklns, Hemlock Grove,
$52.55, msufflc!entfunds.

patrol Friday.
Donald R. Craigo, 17, Gallipolis,
was westbound on Rt. 588 at 5:05
p.m . when he slowed for a right tul"l) .----~....:.-------------------­
and was struck in the rear by
another westbound auto driven by
Delores E. Chambers,19, Gallipolis.
Chambers was unable to stop
when the crash occurred, causing
moderate damage to both autos.
The patrol said a car driven by
Sandra S. Sheets, 39, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, was backing from a
private driveway on Neighborhood
Road at 6 p.m. and collided with a
southbound car driven by Brian 0.
Taylor, 16, Rt. 4, Gallipolis.
Damage was moderate to both
cars and no citations were issued.

NEW CAR
FINANCING

1

•
Up To 48 Months

O' Neill and will write to othe r

leaders .

Small Down Payments

BILl. SMITH was Ga lha Count\·
agriculture extension agent for 1.7
years and two months , longer th an
anyone e lse. and he held the roo
when the junior fair begcm The
present county ag agent - Bud Carter - is dose with 16 yea rs sta rt ing
m 1965. nght after Bt ll beca me a n

Smith Buick-Pontiac

area agent: Bud was alrea dy in the
extension offi ce . as 4-H agent. Russ
Priddy was the firs t 1-H agt· nt. s ta r ting in Nove mbe r, 1957 Fred Det• l
is 4-H agent now When Peeps carne
to tuwr1 frurn Kentu cky In 19·to . E \
Royer was county a gn c ulture age nt,
1

1

but in those days Wt' JUsl ""lied the

YOU'VE BEEN SHOWING FOR~~

hea d m cm "county age nt. ..

HERE'S

A

LIST

of

co ullt l·
agri c ulture ag ents frur11 19 18 tu t h~·
prest&gt;nt .

1. E . M. Fa ulkner April l!JIH to
August 1920.
2 H. H. Marttn Octobe r 1920 I n
Fe bruary 1923
~

Paul

Youn g .lun t'

192:l

tu

January 1926.
4 Henry Coulson Ma rl'11 1926 to
March 1927.
5 L. W. Barn es Septembn 1930 to
July 1932.
6_ F. . H Reed .January tu September

1~34 1less

!tum one

n:~Qr 1.

7. R. Ro St&lt;J rbuck 1934 to Sep-

'81 Pontiac Trans Am, 3900 mi ..............$9995
'80 Datsun Pickup, 10,000 mi.. .............. $6495
'80 Buick Century Sed,, air, nice........... $6695
'80 Pontiac Phoenix, LJ Tudor, air: ....... $6795
'80 Chev. Luv Pickup, 4 wh. drive ......... .$6495
'80 Chev. Monte Carlo, green, air. ....... :. $6695
'80 Chev. Monte Carlo, silver, air. ..... .....$6695
'80 Chev, Citation, air, silver................ $6495
'80 Olds Cutlass Supreme, white, nice.... $7295
'80 Ply. Volare 2 Dr.
a! r, one loca I owner... .............. ......$599 5
'80 Chev . Chevette 2 Dr., air, auto ......... $5495
'80 Chev, Citation Sed., air, blue........... .$6795
:8o Chev. Caprice Sedan, 18,000 mi ....... . $6995
'80 Chev. Malibu St. Wagon, 9,000 mi. .... $6995

Lottt&gt;ry winnc·r
CLEVELAKD I AP I - The win·
ning number drawn Friday mght ir,
the Ohw Lottery's daily game "The
:-.umber" was 539
The lottery re ported earnings of
$687,110.50 on the game.
The earnings came on sales of
$1,025,98J , while holders of winning
tickets are entitl ed lo share
$338,872.50. lottery officials said .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Hanes

'79 Pontiac Bonne. Sed.
4 to Choose From ........................... $599 s
'79 Chev. Chevette Sed., auto., clean .....$4295
'79 Olds Cutlass St. Wag.

Y- 11118

BACK·TO·SCHOOL SA' F!

One owner, air .•••••••..••••.•...••.•.••...•• $5995
'79 Chev. Caprice 2 Dr., air, silver
$5995

250A»OFF

'79 Toyota Pickup, long bed, 26,000 mi. $5795
'79 Dodge Ram Charger, air, black
$5995
'79 Chev. Pickup, auto., Bonanza Pkg. $5295
'79 Chev. Pickup4x4, auto., short bed $5795
'79 Chev. Malibu Tudor, 18,000 mi.
$5495
'79 Chev. Chevette Tudor,
air, 21,442 mi ................... ............. .$4695
'79 Chev. Chevette Tudor, 4 speed, red. .. $369S
'79 Chev. Monte Carlo, 16,000 mi ........... $6295

MEN'S AND BOYS' UNDERWEAR

'78
'78
'78
'78
'78
'78

Y-21118

Chest or upright freezer

'77 Buick Estate Wagon, local owner: ..... $4225
'77 Chev. Pickup, black, air, auto ..., ...... $2995
'71 Olds 88 Sedan, Extra Nice .. .............$4295,
S~rinter. Motor Homli!·. L:.oaded .•......$1S,QOO
· 7'7 Lmct;~ln 2 Dr. 41,000 m ..................... $5995 .
'77 Dqdge Aspen St. Wag,, air,
·
Sp-eC. ECI ..••..• o~ ••••••••••• ~ •• ~ ••••••• ~ • • ••••• $2795
'77 MG Midget Conv., 4 Speed ..... ; .. , .. .....$2cJ9S ,
'77 Ford Pinto, Panel Truck, Nice ......'...$2995

$32549

Your choice

;11

12.0-cu. ft. chest freezer
It 's an easy-to-open Kenmore • freezer wtth
counter -balanced fid . Lighted DynaWhite
epoxy· finish interior. Defrost drain, Almond.

~
~~§-~~

This Kenmore has 3 grill-type shelves and 4 door
shelves. Power Miser .switch-IJelps save energy.
Th1nwa11 foam msulat1qrt Almond. . ,
. ,.

•.

Tremendous savings on famous Hanes " underwear.
A perfect time to stock up for both father and so n.
Soft. absorbent. all-cotton underwear for men and
boys. All boxers. too' Be sure to stop in this week,

catalog suppl1ment

'

~

. '-":

•

•

•

•

•

'

• '

?6 · ·

·~-se~~p~~~ns

cnar9t • l"rrcts • • utlog prices • -

.C., txtra

0.. -'in ·

"Y"
,

~:·

bch ol these ildwrtlseclltems Is relellly liVJIIIIIIIe
,
for ule as aclllertlled.
·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•

..

Many~......,...-.,. .tvallateln cOlon

Sale Ends Sept. 4th
1,\

' '76 Chev.. Monte Carlo, white. SharP, ..• :.~32;S
'74 Ford ·P.itkup,'rough, runs good •..••• ·
Ghi'ct; 34;49lmiles,_.a
'·
, 76
Expect ·the Best 134'9§
'76· LU
.
•1• Ford

12.0-cu. ft. upright freezer

25%0FF

/Sears I

Silver Bridge Plua
· Gallipolis,
,, Ohio
.

;,

,r

Chev. Pickup, auto., red . V·B, p.s ...... $3495 '
Chev. Luv Pickup, one local owner. •.. $4395 ,
Volk. Rabbit, Tudor, 30,600 mi. ........ $4495
Buick Estate Wagon, local owner. .... .$5495
Che11, Blazer, black, one owner•....... .$4995
Ford Pinto St. Wag, air, sharp. ...... ...$3995

..

Listings For August 9 .- August 15

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