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                  <text>, Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 20, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

rr========:=========College football scores:==========\========~
Iowa .•••.•...•. 36
Miami .......... 7
Syracuse ....... 27
Ohio University . . 20
Ohio State .. • .. • 14

I

Meigs happenings.
Funds distributed
Gov. James A. Rhodes announced

that the Bureau of Motor Vehicles
has the lOth distribution of 1981
:icense LaX r.::venues totaling
$12,000,075.16 ready for disbu:'St!menl to local governments. Mt:igs
Cow:ly's share is $3ll,099.38.

To meet Tuesday
The Middleport·Pomeroy branch
of AAUW will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m at the Meigs Inn.
Roberta Wilson, lopic chainnan
and Racbel Downie, coorununity
representative, will present a
program "money talks." Refreshments win be served and yearbooks
will be distributed.

Storms ..

r
Oh l•O···-----------~-----------------------~------Continued from page 11

• •

Thanksgiving dinner

a joint.conference committee finally
t!llerged wit,h a eomprornise.
It provides for doing away with

A charge wide Thanksgiving dinner will be served at the Rutland
United Methodist Church Sunday at
12:30 p.m. Those atlending are lo

using book value and returning to
!he old system in which buyers
signed affidavits attesting to the
'price, At Jhe same .time, tbe com-

bring a salad and a vegetable or

dessert.

Other foods

will

be ,

provided.

Cities Wednesday night.
" The dome wa s under highe r
pn~ssure tha11 normal beca use of the
snow load,' ' he said. ' 'The additional
pressure 1nay well have been enough
to catch a manufadu1·ing fl a w in the
dome pa1iel. "
Seen through the stadium doors.
the sagging roof r;escmbled a soufne
gone flat.

Hospital nt'ws
Veterans
Memorial Hospital
Admi tted--Thomas
Hayman,
Syracuse.
Dis,charged--Fa nnie Phillips,
Millie Price, Virgie Hobstetter, Earl

Up to 8 inches of snow fell in part&lt;;
uf Wisconsin, and wi,llts gusted up to

41 mrh Thursday night. Tempcra tures were in the mid 20:; in
son1e a rea s, bul the wind~chill factor
ma de it feel m ore like 2 degrees , of.
fi ci als said . Io wa had up to 3 inches
uf snow.
In Atlanta , meanwhile, a line of
ll1u nderstorms slashed across the
huge Hartsfield Internati onal Airport earl y today, dama ging
buildings and six Delta Air Lines
planes . There wen~ reports of three
1ninor i njul'!es.

·'It is not &lt;:til anl i ·&lt;:~bort.ion bill, but a bill desigJk U to ensure, among
other things, that a wo1nan contemplating a n ab1rtion is given the
medil'al facts that she needs in order to g iVe her informed consent,''

He said present law fa ils to protect the right of women lo kn ow about
possible complications and alte nwlivcs .

Judge fines 29 in court,
14 others forfeit bonds

Robert Cllrislian,

Belpre. a nd

Donald Smith , Pom~roy , $22 and
costs each, . speed; Melvin Dill.

Colwnbus, $29 and cost,, speed;
Juanita Thomas, Middleport, $10
ami costs, failed to display valid
registration; Henmm Holler, Sr.,

Orient, $20 and costs, speed ; Ricky
McKnight, Middleport. $25 and
costs, speed : Kenneth Reed. Recdsp
ville, $25 and L'Osts, littering ; Betty
Walb.ce, Pomeroy, $10 and costs ,
speed: Ralph Ncigler, Jr. , RHL'ine ,

and Stephen Hysell, Pomeroy, $10
anti cOl!its each, failctl to yield right
of way: Ben Coppick, Middleort. $23
and eosts, speed ; Gene Hopkins ,

days confinement, J5 days su.spendcll.
one
year ' s probation ,
n •s tituticm fur damages to
cmtonmbilc. nu uperator's license ;

Keith Phalin, Po:nei'tly, $100 and
~,·usls .

$50 suspended, five llays confin ement, suspcndclJ , one ycal''s
probntion, assault, five days cnrifinem ent, su~pcndeU, · one year's
pn1balion , restitution for damages
tn trailer door, n iminal mischief ;
Mnx Geary, Middll•port, $.'i and
costs. humper· llci ght .
F.mi~iting bnnds were James H.

Huff, Marietta , Stephen S. Gussler.
Cu lumbt,~s .

Dorothy I.. Musser,
P·)mcroy, James W. Clifford , Rt. 2,
Pnmt&gt;n1y, Ja cquel ine McLoda,
l.ak c w;uth , Fla., Mit:hacl W.
Michelson, Piketon , Donald L.
. Myres, ·HmTicanc, ant.l Rose M. Call,
Parkersburg, $40.50 t!at.:h, speed;
John Martin, Gallipolis, $39.50,

speed ; Mary C. Fowl er, Coolville,
$60.50, no oper·ator's li Cense · Ricky
MdKnight, Middleport, $35.,50, n~
cycle

endorsement ;

Jernme

K.

Howard, fl L 4, Pomeroy. $261.35,

Marietta, $18 and costs, speed ; Elva
Haye, Rulland . $10 and co,ts.
assured clea:· distanee, and Eddie

spntl ightin g; Leroy Richard~,
Reedsville, ~112 .55, illegal firearms;

Sowards, Albany, $300 . and costs,
overload.

~:~ 1 . 50 . s~ed.

Donnie Devore, Scott Deport, $30
and costs, speed: Mark Clark,
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, speed ;
Carroll H. While, Racine, $200 and
costs, t11rce days collfinernent, Iicon·
se suspended 30 days, DWI ; Jeffrey
Dilcher, Albany, and Jerry Markin,
Albany, $100 and costs each, five
days confitlcment, three daYs
suspended, six months probation,

Eddie McCallister.

Charleston,

Flllwlr Shop

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

roday's

these rates.

Four people

were injured in
separate traffic ac-cidents in Gal!ia
, County Thursday, tbe state highway
patrol '"'it).
The Gallipolis Posl said an lnlernationallruck driven by Lawrenl'e Mooney. 71, Eureka Star Route,
was northbound on Rt. 7 in Ohio
Twp. at 5:30p.m . when the vehicle's
right front wheel came off its base.
The truck then los! control, went
off the righl side of tbe road and
struck a parked vehicle owned by
Thomas E. Allen, 30, Eureka Star
Route, a11d two other parked autos
owned by Jarhes G. Scott, 50,
Eureka Star Ro~te , ~:ausing
moderate damage to all four
vehicles involved .
Mooney was injured and taken to

Pleasa11l Valley Hospital by private

U.S. 35 and collided with an eastbou::d vehicle driven by Jackie Hill
41, Poml Plea,.,nt.
' '
Hill and'a passenger in Milstead's
car, Faye Murphy, 74, Gallipolis,
were both injured in the accident,
but not treated,

T-S

'

There was severe damage to Hill's
vehicle

and

moderate

to

the

Milstead car. Milstead was cited for
failure to yield.
According to lhe report, a car
d,riven by Thomas R. Hutchins, 28,
RL I, Gallipolis, was unable to stop•
on U,K 35 and struck a slopped car
driven by Lisa D. Barris, 24,
Gallipolis, in the rear.
Hutchins' vehicle was severely
damaged . and moderate dama'ge
was done· to Harris' car. Hutchins

was injured, but not treated, and
cited for assured clear distance.
The patrol investigated a threecar accident on RL 160, one mile nor-

th of the Gallipolis city limits, Thursday morning.
The report said Thomas 0. Stutes.

the age::cy could detennine exactly
what caused the damage.
Es:neie'r specula led that it was a

houses blown away and· the fire

downrush of wind, which can be extremely strong.
If it was a tornado, with typical

department radio aerial flattened.
"I don't lhink a thunderstorm did
lila!," said Assista::t Police Chief
William Race poinling to some
twisted streelligl1ts.
Race :;aid many objects were lif-

circular winds, it apparently
touched down briefly in a very
localized area and lifted off, he said.
"Tornadoes such as that are almost
impoS.ible to detect'' on radar.
Utility crews labored through the

un~ ~~r~~10~:1in~:~tore

d~~~~f~1'a sudden, it was real light

just before il peaked. The whole
• house shook," said John Jasper, who

.

Answer four calls

vehicle into the n·ar of Stut~s' car,
causing slight damage tn Stutes,
moderate to Adkins and severe to

and' Susan
Pomeroy.

JJ;ukadoo, who was cited fo1· assurc'll
clear distance.
.
The patrol said F:·ank 0 , Markiils,
75, Northup, was cited fo:· failure to
yield in

electric

Renee

Swann,

17,

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;~

a collh;ion with a vehicle

driven by CnnJlie S. Ramey, 24, Rio
Grande, al6:55 p.m. Thursday.
Further details on the accident.

which occurred at (he- intcl'scction of
Rt. 588 and Fairtiehl-Vanco Rnad,
were not available.
Troopers said Kc~v-ir_l S. Milchdl,
16, Gallipolis, was ea;tbuund on U.S,
35 at 6:08p.m. when his car str:uck a
dt~er which ran onto the nlad . ThC

and

The Cily Building suffered minor
damage, police said.

POMEROY
PASTRY SHOP
IS NOW OPEN ,
Mon.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
Sat. 7:30a.m. to s p.m.

NYS.E. Issues
Consolidated Trading
,

Friday, Nov 20

Volume Shares

62,174,310
Issues Traded

. 1,144
Up

1048

-

Unchanged
388

Down
508

•

eN.Y.S.E, Index

in-th&amp;-rnellwhenyoubuv.-.r2~"therrn~l oocterwe.rprmenls.

11-00 .... 64

If you re going to work or play outdoors this winter
you'll be needing Hanes thermals, The special
'
:nsulat:on of Hanes 2-layer fabric holds warmth in
keeps cold ouL Buy any 2 Hanes thermal garments
and get a ~2 00 refund in-the-mail' For a limited time
only, See details in our store.
.

aS,&amp;P. Comp

121.71 +

,__,,.;

,

t--::

Hanes 11'8k88

1.00

eOow Jones lnd,
AP
. 852.93 + 8.18

ELBERfELD$ IN POMERnY
feelgoQdAall under!

Four eal.ls were answered Thur~

Business,
E-section
StatUe of death,
A-6

ALL AT

. .$39995
TILL 8 P.M.

·REG. 1548

meanwhile, the land, if used at all,
will be used in some way as to not af~

feet the primary development of the cordi::gly, the company has halted
plant site. "I feel sure something the study of a prospective synthetic
will happen on that site," he said. "I fuels complex in Point Pleasant. It
don't know what or when, but will, however, continue. to monitor
whatever it is wlll be beneficial lo developments in the synfuels area
and will be positioned to 1reactivate
Mason County and Point Pleasant."
Orr seld that while nwnber of these efforts with changing cirConsolidated will
factors entered into his company's cumstances.
honor
its
commibnents
lo complete
decision to stop work on the synfuels
its
property
acquisitions
at Point
project, the decision was primarily
Pleasant
and
is
currently
studying
ari economic one. In a printed
alternative
uses
for
that
plant
site."
statement, CNG said, "A nwnber of
When
Consolidated
first
animportant changes have occurred
nounced its decision to study lhe
since Consolidated Natural Gas
Company asswned an active role in feasibility of constructing a coal
gasi(ication plant in Mason County
synthetic fuels develop111ent.
Among the most significant are t~e ,, last Octoqer, it estimated that up to
improved outloo)t for conventional 3,000 people would be employed over
gas and the Department of Energy's a IO.year construction period, which
cutback on funds for the eastern w~ scheduled to have begun in 1982.
coal-t&lt;&gt;-gas demo plants.
,
"After weighing these factors
against future market requirement
demands for invesbnent elsewhe::e.
Consolidated is discontinuing further activity in synthetic fuels. Ac-

a

Served with
Choice of Salad, Roll
and Beverage

CROW'S.

FAMILY RESTAURANT
'
'
PH.

992-5432

~2•2•8•W···M·A·I·N~.-~---~--M-I-IO._Y.O._H~. 1

ficials we would never have come
this far."
·

.,.

News brie

By KEVIN KElLY
Ttme.Seotlael Staff
GAUJPOUS - To say legislatipn
imposing a new state and county.
sales tax bere is being met with less
than enthusiasm by retailers.ls putting it mildly.
While no major problems have
been cruted by the imposition of a 5
percent sales tu, some store
llK•S 11 Mid they are unhappy
with lloe liiOr ....
But as . - manager put it, "you
.can't flcllt city hall."
· .The lliitte Illes , tax was railed
from f to 5.1 percent when Gov.
James A. Rhodes slped the state's
tax increa8e Into law Nov. U.
The,tu was to take effect the next
day, but the resulting confusion over
the' uneven method of figuring the
tall caused legislators to cut it hack
io 5 percent last Thursday.
On Nov.17, theGallla County com·
missioners, after holding two public

a resolution imposing 1 a tuilf-percent piggyback
sales tax on top of the state tax. The,
county motion must be.certified with
tbe state tax commissioner by this
week, but is expected to take effect
Dec.!.
Despite the clarification made,
some local store managers feel
there is still confusion over what to
charge. Larry Wilbourn, manager of
the K-Mart outlet in Gallipolis, said
he received ooe of the several
thousand le\ters sent to retailers explaining the increase the same day
as the tax went Jnto effect.
Wilbourn said he had 'received no
prior'notice of the increase and consequently was unable to re-program
the 'store's computerized cash
registers in time.
'
In additio~, the manager said he
had received a lauiird set lor 61!"t_
cent, the temporary tall increase
from earlier this year, which is now
hearings, signed

outdated. And with the Increase
slashed back to 5 percent, the cards
sent by tbe state e~rlier this week
are again unusable. ·
"l don't see any sense in it at all,"

he said.
·For the past week, Wilbourn said
the store has been charging the old 4
percent tax, and he said h~ intends
to make up the difference to the
state later when things become
more settled.
, "Nobody minds paying less," he
commented.
~
Bill Mills, tnan88er of the G.C.
Murphy Co. store at the Silver
Bridge Plaza, also felt the sales tax ·
increase was sprung or: the publlc
without warning.
The timing of the increase, just as
Christmas shopping season has
begun, was poor.
"We didn't have much choice," he

said. "There wasn't much comment
(Continued on A-4)

ceremt~ny

Friday

tiD

Capitol HiU fur the dedication of the

James Madison Hall of the Library of Congress. Behind the pre&lt;ident Is a
statue of Madlson, 1who was president of !he Unlted States from 1809 to
1817. lAP LaserphotoJ.

Legislature approves projects

--First deep well
drilled in M e,igs
By BOB HOEFLICH
, Times-Seatlnel Staff
· PAGEVJILE - Thousands
upon thousands of dollars have
been literally :•sunk" into the
tifOund at the 14~acre farin of
Ann and John Williams in tbe
PageviUe area whe::e the first
deep well In Meigs County some 4,202 feet - has been
established.
Mr. and Mrs. WlllialllS, long- '
. time resident. of Detroit, Mich.,
and residents of,Meigs County for
ooly some six years, have no idea
as to the result of the test well
which wsa started last June 22.
DriiHng was the Burdette Co. of
Charleston, W.Va., and samples
were taken every 10 feet to send
to the laboratory as the process
mov~ along. At two poinls

Mo111fE:NT- President Reagan bows hfs head during an hivocation at a

GALUPOLIS - Four project:; affecting the area were approved by
the Ohio legislature when it passed the capital improvements bill
Thursday night.
State Rep. Claire (Buzz) Ball Jr., R'Athens, said a $3,200,000
building to house a natural sciences department at Rio Grande College
and Community College was approved,
Also, a planned $5,220,000 branch of tbe·college to be buili in Jackson
for credit and non-credit courses was also on the list of proposed

during the drilling a semi-truck
equipped to take computer pictures inside the well was moved
.in. On Nov. 12, three 3,000 gallon
waler tanks were moved onlo the ,

projects.
,
· Dr. Paul Hayes, ,~ollege president, who has been working closely

with the latter project, was not available for further details Friday.
Also approved on the list, Ball said, was $50,000 funding for cottage
equipment at Gallipolis Developmental Center,
Tbe equipment is lor lhe last set of cottages built at the state facility.
The state also approved $600,000 for steam tunnel renovation on GDC
grounds:
,
The bill also okayed more than $70,000 for community mental retardation programs.

.scene and Wednesday, last week,

12 large semi-trucks moved onto
tbe spot with the chemicals and
:naterials to fracture the well.
The entire process has been an
active one on the Williams fann .
At one point a helicopter came in
carrying a mechanic and parta to
repair equipment. Neighbors
have watched and even relatives
came from a distance to be a part
of the Williams "striking it rich."
At times a geologist was on hand
24hoursa day.
After the fracturing of tbe well
- hopefully to be the source of
(Continued on A-4)

Seroice station robbed
'

POMEROY - Vance's Service Station, Harrisonville, was robbed
by an anned gunman Friday night who escaped with approximately
$100, the Meigs County Sheriff's Department reported.
,
Deputies said a white male, approximately 5-2 in height, with blond
hair a::d wearing a dark blue jacket and blue jeans, entered lhe station
anned with a single bolt sawed-off shotgun. Th~ station alte::dant was
John Ward.
The suspect is believed to have fled north on Rt. 684 i:: a 1974
Chevrolet Impala, white top and yellow bottom, with possible dama~e
to the rear.
Assisting in the search were tbe Vi::ton County Sheriff's Department, Wilkesville, Rutland, Pomeroy and Middleport poli~e and tile
state highway patrol.
Anyone having any information is asked to c'Ontact the sheriff's
department.

Take-One, Insert

lo ,

Sundo~

:·

DINING ROOM ONLY

'2'5

Nearly 1,500 persons would have
been hired on a pennanent basis for
operation of the Ohio Valley Synthetic Fuels, a co-venture between ,
Consolidated of Pittsburgh and
SOH!O of Cleveland. Coal would
have been transported to the site by
river barge and rail from Consolid;&gt;ted Natural Gas System's coal
reserves in Marshall County, W.Va.
and Green County, Pa.
"We appreciate the things the
people in Mason County have done to
help us put !his all together," Orr
said, "Community acceptance is a
big factor in a project such as this
and without the suppQrt we have
m.&gt;eived from county and city of.

New sales taxes cause problems
-M•rket In Brief-

$2 00 REFUND

West Virginia Experimental Fann,
along Route 62 north of point
Pleasant, to the Traffic Circle near
tbe Mason County Fairgrounds, and
includes sil:ne tracts or: both sides of
the highwa)'.
Orr explained that Consolidated
has put a great deal of time and
money into preliminary land studies
at the site, such as air, water and
soil tests, aerie! maps ,and surveys
and an economic evaluation of the
area, and is interested in holding on
to the property as a potential future
plant site. The land is unusually well
suited to synthetic fuels and is
possibly tJlji best site east of tbe
,Mississipp'!'River for that type of a
plant, he added. If Consolidated itself do.s not re-enler the 'synfuels
market at some future date, Orr said
other synthetic fuels operators will
be steered toward tbe site.
He further pledged that in the

5.1 into 5.0 won't go

CLOSED SUNDAY
216 E. Main
992-2971

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

sday by local emergency units, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
reports .
Pomeroy at 7:51 a.m, treated .
Darrell Swartz al his residence near
Pomeroy and at 11:50 p.m. took
Jeannine Thomas from Rose Hill to
Holzer Medical Center, The Rutla::d
Unit at 10:34 a.m. took Lawrence
Weiss from Meigs Mine 1 to
Veterans Memorial l:lospital and at
11:48 p.m. took Joy Ander&lt;on from
ber residence lo the Holzer Medical
Center.

I

Issm~d Jict'nSt'
A marriage licnese was Issued to
George Brenl Sisson, 16, Pomeroy,

Adkins' ,

losthischimney.
'It roared like a freight train. It
kept getting louder and louder, then
it peaked oul," said Jasper's neighbor, Rick Gripshover.
,
Carol Mulroney '"'id she opened
her doors lo relieve the pressure inside the house. She believes this
saved her home from major
damage, which her neighbors surfered.
Chuck Esmeier, weather
specialist at the Cincinnati Nalional

lhe shaken northern Ke11tucky town

ted and dropped in other areas

collision forced

ELBERFELDS

of 6.982, But Radenheimer said tbe
wi::ds carved a straight, two-block
swath of damage.

He said trees and wires were

The

vehicle, causing moderate damage.

acl'illent CC:iu.sed sliKht damage to

Weather Service orne~, said a field
inspection would be required before

downed, roofs from half a dozen

Lookadoo Jr., 45, Vinton, was unable
to slop and struck the rear of Adkins'
vehicle.

Coal gasification plant project abandoned
llyJUDYOWEN

parently lefl the sccue.
B•)bby Mitton, 43, Rl. 1, Viulon,
was weslbow1d 011 35 al 7 p.m. Thursday when his car struck a deer
which :·an into the palh or his

9 sections," Pages JS Cents
A Multimedi8 Inc. Newspaper

Sunday, Nov . 22, 1981

Consolidated to exercise purchase option

Spe&lt;lal to lloe TliDos-Sealla,el
POINT PLEASANT -'- Con'
solidated Natural Gas Company an-·
nounced Saturday that plans to construct a $2 billion coal gasification
plant in Mason County have been
scrubbed.
In a meeting with the County Comtillssior: of Mason County a::d Point
Pleasant Mayor J.J. Wedge, R.M.
(Rick) Orr, manager, resources and
, materials, for CNG E:Mrgy Company, 1 division of Consolidated Gas
Supply CorporatiOn, said, however,
that Consolidated does l'!an to exer·
ci8e its option to- purchase, nearly
1,0011 acres of land or: which the syn·
llletic fuels plant would have been
located.
Ed&amp;ar 0. Heiskell, administrator,
land and real estate, for Consolldlted,, said the closing on some
90G acres of that land will take place
tho first week in December. The optioned property is located from tbe,

Mitchell's vehicle ani.l the deer ap-

32, Thurman, slopped in traffic lor a
left turn at 7:35a.m. A car driven by
Charles R. Adkins, 21, Oak Hill, slopped behind Stules, but another
vehicle • driven by Harold V.

SPAGHETTI DINNER ·

ting rights suspended for two years,
spotlighting ; Randy Randolph.
Pomeroy, $75 and costs, 10 days con·
finement, hit-skip, $75 and costs, 30

.. rne waV Americcl
sends Love"
9¥2 ·2039 or 992· 5121

Vol. 1S No. 41
Copyrighted 1981

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

finement, weapons forleited , hun-

and, ~ofit1
l'aiiMIJ

can be a losing proposition, Credit
card charges, for example, often are
fixed by law; in some cases, the rate
is below the prime. The current interest slwnp is unlikely lo affect

EVERY MONDAY NIGHT AT

hunting rights suspe::ded for (wo
years, attempting to lake u deer
with a gun during the closc'll deer
season, $100 and costs, lwo days con-

lftQ:uLD~rt

high rates, making conswner loans

'

FORT MITCHELL, Ky. lAP ) Nobody '"'w a f4m:el cloud in lhe
heavy downpour. but residents of
!his suburban community four miles
south of Cincinnali are convinced
they were hit by a tornado.
" All I can say is hearsay, but
people are calling it a tornado," said
Fort Mitchell Fire Chief Paul
Radenheimer, He said about a doze::
homes plus tbe City Building were
damaged by the gale-force winds
Thursday night.
There were no injuries reported in

Kasi&lt;:h said.

111omas Mohler, Albany.

tmes,•

Peterson said thai even at today's

the funds, re-investing the money ,
S. Lees Booth, economist and
director of research for the National
Conswner Finance Association, said
he thought it would be mid-1982 or
"later even,' before i-ates for things
like auto loans decli::e.

Michigan State • . • 7

Kent State ....... 7

Cincinnati ....... 3

•

Four
injured in Thursday
accidents
.
.

Ft. Mitchell, Ky.,
hit by high winds

Sponsored by Sen, Jnhn R. Kasich, R-We&lt;te•,ville, tile bill would

Rochester, N, Y .. $2; and cnst,.

for s&amp;Ls Is coming down, thanks in . you're locked in to (high ) costs for
part to lhe All Savers Certificate, extended periods of time," hNiaid.
which offer&lt; tax-free interest in exRates on the certificates are tied
change for a lower rate. But he said to rates on Treasury bills. What hapa lot of the money on deposit comes , pens to mortgage rates, Christian
from six-month and 2'h·year cer- said, depends on tbe yield oo
tificates, purchased before the in- Treasury bills when the certificates
terest rates started to slide. "So expire and conswners 1'roll Over"

Virginia C. Milstead, 67, Gallipolis,
apparently pulled from R\,, 160 onto

reqUire a physician to provide women st;t!·king abortions with ccrtain
medical infonnaiion , including fads abnut the physical development
c,f the unborn child. In addition , it gi ves a woman 48 hours after
rect~ivin g the infonr1ation to consider her decision .

spc~d;

West Virginia ..• 24

'

(Continued from page I)
R ell"ef.···---------~----------------~-------

Car, where he was treated and
released for cuts to the nose and
hand.
T11e patrol said a vehicle driven by

Tlw measure now gnes ln th e House, wl1ere ~ imila r legislation
sUllied earlier 1his yce~r .

Werry, Pomt!roy , Jost~ ph Tl10mpson.
Chesapeake, JOan Culj), Athens, and
James Roberts, Belpre, $21 and
costs· each, speed: Mark D. Angelo,

Michigan .••••••• t

'J

COLUMBUS - An informed-coi1sent bill requiring doctors to ~ive
women specific information bcfore they const:nl to a11 aborti on dearell
the Ohio &amp;nate on a 21-10 vote Thun:alcty.

Fined by Judge Patrick O'Bnen
were Gary Carter, Gallipolis, Ralph

ferc'eS.
Also at issue were whetber Orient
State and Apple Creek hospitals
should be converted into correctional 'facilities and whether a new
prison should be located on the
ground of the old state penitentiary
in Colwnbus.

Snyder.

Senate passes informed-consent hill

Twenty·nino defendants we r e
(ined and 14 olhcrs forftli ttJcJ llonds in
Meigs County Court Wt'C..Incsd~ y.

bers were too far apart lo gel • eompromil!e before fall adjournment,
They identified the stumbHng
blocks as,the use of prison labor on
some of the projects - demanded by
the Senate but not acceplable to
Shoemaker or the other House con-

.

: Conti::ucd from page 1l
·--------~~---------------

Poss, executive Llir~ctor of the
Metropolitan Sport8 Facilities Commission, said the t:ollapse tnay have
been caused indirectly by· the lO in~
ches of snow that fell on the Twin

promise calls for keeping the tax
break new car buyers get when they
lrade in their used cars.
Shoemaker, chief sponsor of the
prison bill, and Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer,
R-Bucyrus, bill manager inl the
Senate, both agreed the two cham-

Ctuate tr.dlllonll roll-arm styling with
thick button-tufted attocllod pillow back
and - t cushion.

:·

.: :.: ;..:

Traditional elegance with but1on·tutt8d
attac:hed pillow back, roll armo end smart
slngto welt cushion.

.:

::::

•,:•

::

.

.LAYAWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS

Area deadls ......... A,.

DEC£MBEI 24th DELiVERY
.. . .

SHOP DIE AREA'S
LARGEST FURNI'JURE

DERRICK - 'ltil IIIII ~dl
marb lbe lite .af I .... weD
wlileh .... beeD - by MWral
c mpn'" oa lbe AD ui Jella

Wdlllmlfarm-l'llmJle·

.

•

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:

. • 'l • '

--- ===

WEATHER FORECAST - The NalhiDal Weather Service predict.
rain Suatlay for pat1tlllllbe Pacific Nll1bweot1Dto Nevada. Showers are
ftllftllli l•lbe Mlulttttlppl VaHey. AlA Iaiiie fOftetllt period, IDOWitt exPKied ID New ,F•&amp;f-1 allll flarrieiiD parlllllllbe Plain States aad New
Eqlaatl. (AP
·

,v
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...

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Nov . 22, 1981

Commentary and perspective
he said, in which an innocent

too loosely. In recent years we have
talked of a war on poverty, a war on
inflation, a war on drunk drivers,
and even a war on the
Mediterranean fruit fly . The war we
hear most about these days is the
war on crime. And the grim truth is
that we are losing it.
We are losing this metaphorical

population lives at the mercy of
criminals of the most hardened sort.
The problem here, as In so many
great cities, is the problem of the
drug trade: marijuana, cocaine and
heroin. The stuff arrives by the ton,

by the planeload, by the boalload.
All the evils of gangland Chicago in
the days of Prohibition have returned. Rival gangs fight bloody wars
for a share of the tun. Local law enforcement officials are as helpless
as so many Cub Scouts in a rwnble
· with the Black Panthers.
Miami's 200 Club held its annual
fund-raisin~ dinner the other night.
The•. club's purpooe is to provide
Jump-sum benefits for the widows
and orphans of police and firemen
who die in the line of duty. A dozen
local police chiefs were in attendance. Vehemently, almost bitterly, they pleaded for the kind of
fedeal action that might change a
no-win war into a winnable war.

" war" for the same reason we lost a
real war in Vietnam : We are not

serious about winning it. For all the
talk, we have yet to take those
measures, especiaUy at the national
level, that would involve an all-out
eorrunitment of money, manpower
and resources.

Last week this beautiful but
beleaguered city recorded its 549th
homicide of '1981. Charles Whited,
writing in the Miami Herald, bluntly
defined the area's No. I problem:
' ' Violent, brutal, vicious crime of
epidemic seope ." Miaffii hal!i
become " a community besieged,"

I

~~
ADlvlsloool
~m~ ~'--r•rl"E:a=·~
~v

111 CoortSt., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

825Thinl Ave., Ga!UpoUs, Ohio .
(614H4&amp;-234Z
'

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

AMEMBER urTbe A~•oclated rr~ bK, Inland D1111ly Pre~s A8iOCiathm and the American
Ntws ... per PUbll!ibt'rs AssH•.'Iatlun.

LETIERS OF OPINION ar~ "~ki.Jm~d . They should be lcs~ than 310 word!i lung. All

letten; are subjer.t lo edlllng und must bl' slgnt¢d wtlh DBI!k, 11ddre~K and Lelephaat'
number. No Ullldgned letlen; will bt- pu.blbhed. Lt!ltel'li ~Should be In gnod l.al;k, wddre!i~&gt;lDg
111lue1, nut ptrt~oBHiitleti .

&amp;nse, cents and nonsense.
.

'

The line item veto
.
By LOWELL WINGETT
.
Most weeks there are many items which deserve conunent here but are
neglected because of opace limitations: Because the mail is no more certain
at 20 cents than at three eents, this column is written and mailed a week

dangers to society,
The Florida police chiefs wan~ a
short and simple federal law' to this
effect: Any person convicted of
using a firearm in a criminal offense
gets an extra five to 10 years jn
prison- mandatory, no deals, no
plea bargaining •. no time off, no
suspended sentences. If such a Jaw
were strictly enforced, word would
move swiftly throu~h the under-

ground. So1J1e of the homicidal
violence might be contained. A
dozen such bills are pending in
COngress. What's wrong with
Congress, the chiefs ask. Why
doesn't Congress act on these
things?
Most criminal offenses, of course,
are state offenses, not federal offenses. The prevention, detection
and punislunent of crime must

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Many
states have been hard hit by 'the
sagging economy and the Reagan
budget cuts. But none has felt their
twin effects as severely as has
Michigan.
As Gov. William Milliken put it
during a recent telecast announcing
the greatest spending cuts in state
history, "It is not an overstatement
to say that Michigan is fighting for
its economic life." No other state is
· as dependent upon a single indu.&lt;;tcy
for Its economic sUrvival as Is
Michigan upon the auto Industry.
Most of the car makers posted
record losses in the third quarter,
and their prospects for a quick
recovery are slight. '
The response of the auto industry
to plummeting sales . has been to
retrench. This has led to near-record.
unemployment that is rupning more
than 12 percent statewide and much
higher in the big cities.
And while high unemployment is

remain primorily local responsibilities. Alm.,st no one disagrees
with that proposition. But here In
southern Florit!a, criminal activity
and drug activily are so intertwined
that one cannot be separated from
the other-and drug smuggling most
emphatically is a federal crime. We
are fighting this war-rith popguns:
No wonder the lords of cocaine are
'1. wmnm~
. ' .

Do something about bail, said the
chiefs. Eight months ago, after a
tedious and dangerous investigation,
the Drug Enforcement Ad·
rnini.stration arrested a notorious
trafficker in drugs, one Jose Antonio

Fernandez. A federal judge in Vero
Beach fixed his bond at $20 million.
In April a federal magistrate in New
Orleans, where the case had been
moved for trial, reduced the bond to
$10 million. Shortly thereafter,
another federal judge further
reduced the bond to $000,000. The accused's lawyers prornplly showed up
with a cashier's check for $500,000.
Fernandez hasn't heell seen since. It

J\IEMPWS (NEA) - Casual ·Observers watching the broad
MissillSippi River majestically
surge past thiS city have no reason to
suspectlhat they are witnessing an
act of irreparable destruction.
Beneath the water's surface,
however, approximately 40 tons of
the country's most fertile topsoil is
being carried down river every hour
of the day, every day of the year.
North of here, Illinois farmers are
losing two bushels of topsoil for
every bushel of com they produce.
In Minnesota, nine million acres of
cropland suffer from wind and water
erosion at a greater ,r~te than cao be

~

Feds could have. avoided silver·boom
bust SCandua~J========~=======J=ac=k=A=n~=~==n
WASHINGTON - The great silver
scandal of 1980, which boosted· the
price of silver products into orbit,

silver used in t11ese tiny batteries
In the first weeks of 1980, the price
dropped bsck to near-nonnal pri ces, of silver had gotten so high that
they still cost 80 cents a year after . family heirlooms were being melted

poses a warning for Ronald Reagan .
He should be cautious about

the s peculative binge began .

emasculating the federal regulatory
Theoe entrenched bureaucratic
have driven small
busines15e~ into despair or bankruptcy by their niggling insistence on
dotting every ' i'' and crossing every
empires

1

''t." They are,\ in the Reagan view,
before it is published. Therefore, spot news is out and the only oubjects left the social tinkers who want to im·
· are those which promise to be news in the future.
pose their Olympian view of life on
For instance, I could write this week about the historical night of the every ~nerican.
Columbia, the first reusable space vehicle and its two 'pilots, Astronauts Joe
'l'he president ,. justified in hi&gt;
Engle and Richard Truly. This was a second lest flight and the fact that it en- :assessment, but not a ll regulations
ded three days early was in no way the fault of the astronauts nor the basic ·. are bad.
design of the ship. Rather, it was the gremlins that have haunted the Colwn·
A good example can be taken from
bia since it came from the factory , leading one to suspect that Chrysler had a the boom and bust in silver in the
hand in it. construction. I had a Dodge that acll-d the same way . Perhaps last six months of 1979 and the fir•1
NASA could work out a deal with Japan to build the next Columbia. In spite three month• of 1980. The federal
ol its brilliant'pertonnance so far, I doubt that a pat·simonious president will regulatory agencies that should
continue to fund NASA experiments. The Columbis will have to show a profit have prevented this multibillionor else!
dollar attempt to corner the market
Or I could write abo~t the trials and tribul~tlons of two of President in silver were noldoing their job.
Reagan's right-hand theh , Budget Director David Stockman and National
If you think this was just a battle
Security Advisor Richatld Allen. Could it be that the president has been of the big boys with no impact on the
clasping an unbeliever to hls aging bosom these last ten months? It wouJd average American, forget it.
seem so. An article in the Atlantic Monthly, quotes Stockman's musings to a Heat·ing-aid batteries cost 45 cents
Washington newspaper reporter over the last eight months. You have been apiece when the silver boom started
deluged with newspaper and TV accounts of the Stockman episode so I will in July 1919. By March 1980 - just
not bore you with them here. He was only telling you what I have been saying · before the silver market collapsedthe last eight months. The shocking thing is, while he was cutting school Jun· the same batteries cost 95 cents. And
ches and children's milk, he didn 't believe a damn word of the program he somehow, even after the price of the
was selling the American people. As for Allen, he "forgot" a $1 ,000 gratuity a

There was a similar effect ""
other onsumer goods that depend on
silver: X-ray paper, photographic
film, brazing alloys, sterling-silver
tableware and electrical parts,
among other thh1gs,
As just one example, the GAF Corporation discontinued its production
of X-ray film because of "sharply in·

dOwn for sale by the ounce , and the
family with a set of sterling-silver

and thus have monopoly control. of
its price - went on lor more than
seven months. There are explicit
government regulations that frown

sustained.

In Iowa. some farms are losing 50
to 60 tons of soil per acre each year,
and soli scientists at Iowa State
University fear that some portions
of that especially bountiful state will
become barren within the next
several decades. ·

on such activities. ·

Yet · the federal agencies that
tableware was well advised to hide it
in the attir or rent a safe-deposit box should have moved in, simply didn't.
to thwart burglars cashing in on the In fact, it wasn't until March 26 ,
,19110, the day before the bottom dropboom.
The congressional investigators ped out of the silver market, that oflaid blame for the 675 percent in· ficials from the agencies that could
crease in silver during the boom hove done something even got
pcdod on the speculative together oil the silver problem.
On that day, officials of the
cfeased and chaotic" silver prices manipulations of two groups - one
Treasury,
· the Securities and Ex·
and clos~d a plant employing 630 headed by the Hunt brothers of
worket·s.
Texas, the other known as the Conti change ConunillSion, the Federal
"Small users, people who need X- group.
Reserve Board and the Corrunodity
rays, film, hearing aid batteries or
What was corrunon to both - and Futures Trading CommillSion finally
electronic conductors, continue to is a matter of grave concern to the met to exchange information and
pay for the 197!Hl0 spiral," ac- House -subconunittee - is the fact opinions. ·
cording to a still-unreleased draft that wealthy Arabs were involved in
In sho11t, it was an incredible
report . on the silver scandal both of the wheeler-dealer combines example of the federal governprepared by the staff of the House that were trying to corner the silver nient's regulatory agencies - each
Commerce,
Consumer and market.
·
of them set up by Congress to protect
Monetary Affairs Subcommittee and
The size of the · speculators' tlie public from a specific threat reviewed. by my. associates Tony · .. holdings was enormous; Jtccording simply roUing over and playing dead
Capaccto and Vickt Warren.
, to the House investigators, by when the Hunt brothers and their
In case you've for~otten, the December 1979, the two groups Arab frtends decided to corner the
speculative bubble in silver burst on Hunt .and Conti - ''controlled •ilver market. .
March 'll, 1980. Within 24 hours, the . through futures contracts for
AS the congressional investigators
artificially inflated price of the delivery more than :!50 million oun- warned, "a wealthy group of tradOrs
metal dropped to $10.85 an ounce. ces of silver, almost 100 million could acquire large quantities of a
That was a 33 percent decrease, and more ounces than total U.S. in- commodity thro,ugh cash and
$39.50 less than silver's manipulated dustrial consumption in all of 1979,"
futures transactions and unduly af·
high of $50.35 an ounce two months
The speculative hoarding- the at- feel the commodity's price level and
earher.
tempt to corner the market in silver volatility.''

Because soil erosion threatens to

deplete one of the nation's most
precious and irreplaceable resources, it may be the country's most
pervasive and ·persistent environmental problem. But it is seldom
viewed as a crisis because of the

think it is foolish und deceitful to keep calling it a reccssioi1 when unem·
ploymcnl has reached ahnost nine million . There were 8.5 million unemployed November I and since that time th~re is scarcely a company in the

courlry that has not been issuing the pink slips. As of November 1, LJ million
people have lost their jobs since Reagan asswned the Presidency , The White
House defends itself by claiming tl:cy inherited a " mess." They did not

itlllerit 8.5 million unemployed. For over a year the threat of "supply-side
economics," has hovered over the nation, creating fear and distrust and the
highest unemployment since 1939. It is a Reagan deprcllSion. No one is to
blame but Reagan and he'• stuck with it. Don't think the Democrats will
ever let him forget that.
,
Those are some of the things I could have written about thil:l week but
didn't. Instead I have chosen a topic not terribly newsworthy now but about
which I predict you will hear much more later. It is the s&lt;&gt;-called "Une Item
Veto." It is being introduced to the public now with all 'the careful attention
Madison Avenue bestows on a n~w it~m it intends to market. It is being given
the "casual" treatment. It was first noatcd by President Reagan as a kind of
trial balloon .at the meeting uf editors at which time he also unveiled his
thoughts for limited nuclear war. He .scared the pants off our friends in
Europe by talking of limited nuclear war and scared the pants off thinking
people in this country by talking of the line item veto.
The constitution has served us well for 200 years and now is not the time
to cast it aside like an old shoe. No president has ever asked for that kind of
power. It would take the power to appropriate money away from Congre""
where it is constitutionally mandated and give the power to the president to
pick and choose the items in the budget which he either approves or disapproves. If he had such authority he would be the financial dictator of the
country. The United States is not yet re•dy for a dictator.
No doubt every president, at some time in his term, secretly wished for
the power to veto some part of a congrellSioual budget bilL None of the 39
presidents preceding Ronald Reagan had the temerity to Bllk Congress lor
that authority. If such a ·request had been made and Congress had passed
such a biU, I doubt if it would have been judged constitutional by the
Supreme Court.
i
1 am sure such a bill. will be introduced in CongrellS as soon as the
eongre9S reconvenes after the first of the year. It has been given too much
c&amp;Sual mention, not to be a carefully planned action. George Gallup has con·
dueled a poll which showed 64 ptlrcent favored strengthening the president's
power over the budget. I give little credit to the poll because both sides of the
question were not presented. Or maybe it's because I hate to admit that M
per~ of the people are such damn fools. Only last night I heard a
Republican Senator giving 'the bill the old soft sell on the McNeii·Lerner
Report on PBS.
. ..r·
1don't think this president, or any president, shOilld be given dictatortat
power over the country's finances. I don't think CongrellS will, or should,
!iJve up any of the duties entrusted to it by the constitution.

"

Home

m

much money we have coming and
how much money we have going out,

and it will tell us if we're spending

too much."
"I can tell you that," she said.
"Ah, yes, bot this computer can
tell it to us 100 times faster. Let me
show you. We have to buy a new fu,...
nace for $3,500, or we can have the
old furnace repaired for $2,000. How
much will · be save by having It
repaired?''

· "Nothing," my wife :wid.
"You're wrong: The . comput~r
says we'll save$1,500."
"Did the computer tell you even if
we have the old furnace repaired,
there is no guarantee it will work,
and then It will cost us $5;500? ''
"How does the computer kllow it

..

..

....

°

..

Paul Davies Jewelers

won't w·ork?' '
"It doesn't But the furnace man

"How can you say that?"

Now ask it where we can cut down on

0Ur real estate taxes came our food bpdget? ... What does it
today.
The city has raised them by say?"
said he couldn't guarantee it."
"It keeps repeating the words,
24
percent
to make up for the tax
"Well, then, we'll have to feed that
"FOOD
STAMPS.'"
cuts Reagan gave the people."
tn . A computer is only a8 good as the
"I
could
have told you that.''
"Why didn't you tell me that
infonnation it receives."
before I fed the computer?"
"Tell it the furnace man said if the
"Why didn't Reagan tell us that
old one fails on us aft~r it's repaired,
"I will not be deterred. This home
the house will fill up with carbon . before he gave out a tax cut?"
computer is prograrruned to tell you
" I know what yo~ problem is. how you can make enonnous cuts in
monoxide, which we won't be able to
· You're afraid of my computer, and your electricity bills. I will put In
smell."
you are showing your hostility by this disk, and type in the question,
pretending to know more than it · 'How can I save on electricity?' "
"All right."
1
does. But we programmers are used
"What did it say'"
' Whatdoes it say?''
"We're all going to die."
to skeptics. I shall now prove to you
"Turlt off the all the liKhts in the
"! could have told you thai " my
that this electronic marvel Is worth house when you aren 'I using them.''
wife said.
'
everr dollar I paid for it. Let's say
"Do you know how we could have
' ·~ut not as fast as the computer,' '
we are sptlnding roughly $30 a week really saved money this year? By
,
I pomted out. "There are · always forg~ries . ''
not buying that.stupld computer."
people putting tkiwn computers
"You couldn't get a roast beef lor
"Maybe you're right. I'll call the
beCause they don't · undel'6tand
$30."
tnan who sold it to me and tell him
them. Now I will type in how much I
we really don't need it."
make, and how much I will save un·~vuu mean we're spending more
I returned a few moments later.
der Ronald Reagan's tax cuts. In the
than $30 a week for groceries'!"
HWhat did he say?" my wife
first year we will be ahead by
"Wpuld you believe $150 a week?"
asked.
$1,780."
"Noobody spenda $150 a Week. for
"He said he wouldn't take it
"The compoter~s wrong. We will groceries."
back."
'
be behind·by$2,~."
"PuUI It in the computer, buster.
"I could hljve told you that."
'

4

,

Robert Walters

funding from the approximately $200 • return for their willingness to parmillion to $300 million now being ticipate in conservation programs.
•-pentannuallytoaboul$30millionto
A survey conducted by
Topsoil erosion across the nation
$100
million
per
year
in
the
future.
agricultural
economists in 10 major
now exceeds five billion. tons per ·
Even
under
the
current
system,
farm
states
and presented earlier
year. More than 140 mi!Uon acres of .
both
the
executive
and
legislative
this
year
to
the
House Agriculture
cropland - about 30 percent of the
branches
of
government
encolll'age,
Committee
found
that a majority of
country's 470 million tillable acresare losing soil at a rate that even- through a system of elaborate price farmers endorsed the "eros comtually will decimate agricultural support mechanisms, the abuse of pliance" concept of requiring
tnarginal land and the intensive adherence .to conservation
productivity.
More than $15 billion has been cultivation that are leading causes programs to qualify for federal suppo.r t payments.
spent to staunch soil erosion since of erosion.
the mid-1930s, but wind- and water·
That approach received majority
According to David Sheridan,
caused loss rates today are 25 persupport
in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio,
cent to 35 percent higher than they author of a report on the subject
Nebraska,
Minnesota, Michigan and
were during the Dust Bowl days a published earlier this year by the
President's Council on Environ- Oregon. Only in Texas was it rejechall-century ago.
At a recent congresSional hearing, . mental Quality, Congress ap· ted, while those surveyed in North
Agriculture Secretary John R. Block propriates $5 to encourage &lt;K· Dakota and Washington were about
portrayed a · situation that has ploitation of the land for every $1 it evenly divided on the issue.
Others have suggested different
spends on conservation.
reached crisis proportions:
approaches,
such as amending the
"When
farmers
receive
federal
"Soil erosion is reducing prOctuc·
tax
code
lo
mak~
soil conservaUon
for
farm
operations
and
support
livity on one ilut of every four acres
measures
undertaken
by fanners
then
fail
to
practive
conservation,
we farm .- Upstream flood damage to
for
federal
tax
credits.
eligible
the
federal
gov~rnment
is
financing
cropland and pastures is increasing
yearly, and on more than 60 percent soil wastage/' says Thomas Barlow
Some form of prompt and comof the nation's range land, erosion of the Natural Resources Defense
prehensive
action is certainly
CounciL
and other deterioration is cutting
required
but the Agrk'ulture
Barlow
proposes
that
guaranteed
productive capacity in hall."
Department's
plan to slash public
t;rop
Joans,
target
prices,
crop
inBut Block offered a frugal and
funding
and
dump virtually all
inadequate proposal to deal with the surance, storage payments ' and
problem - drastic cuts in federal . other fonns of goverrunent support future responsibility on the states is 1_
~
be provided to farmers only in ' surely not the answer.

Says deputies 'needed'
Gallia County- cannot get along
Niday, Saunders, and Burger- if
without (he striking deputies. Crime yOU really care about US - give the
is rising by leaps and bounds and • deputies what they want and right·
everything is going haywire! Mont- fully deserve. Recognize their union
gomery is not reveBling to the public ·and put them back to work! We need ·
all the calls he gets that cannot be them!
handled. He is making appear as tf
Rebekah Tabor
things are running smoothly without
Rourt 4

his deputies, but that is false!
We need the deputies working! !
They do not enjoy striking. How
could anyone poosibly think a person

:;.::~n1!:"~ ~:':J
enjoysittingonastoolctayafterday
watching crtme g9 rampant? All
theyareaskingforisjobsecurlty.In
other words - signatures of stubborn county commissioners - endorsing recognition of their 'union.
Wh8t's wrong with that?? 1 'don't
blame them. They're not even
asidngformorernoney.
What the matter with our com18
~ssioners? Maybe they ought to be
in my shoes for awhile. 1 Uve in the
county- alone- and right now I do
not feel very secure )¥ith the "crippled" staff they caD the sheriff's

department.

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KDOObS

XZ035

JG004

$79.50

5135

$130

Prices star.ting at

'

"

$49.50 '
Pulsar~

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Quartz .

Alway s o beat beyond. In technology. In value .

~~
:a.,.,.
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d.y

SUNDAY

I l l IIIli

and

.D"fllftll

MONDAY
ONI.Y

they stood together and
changed the dest1ny of
an enti.re frontter.

NOVEMBER 22 and 23

ENJIRE STOCK
LADIES'

DRESSES

Thanksgiving is Thursday. November 26.

Send ourFTD

AND

~ivei'Houquet

.COATS

25%
OFF

Specially
deStgnedta
all the

colors of

n"" '"'" ~Viith7""
fresh flower!)

for

in on exclusive
Woven Fern 13osket.

MISSES, JUNIOR
AND WOMEN'S SIZES

Call or vlslr us rodoy.

Phone 446·6681 or 446·4848

Sme}tzer ' s
.

DRESSES Regular
.

. '18.00 to '86.00

449 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH .

COATS Regular

~arden Center &amp; Flower Shop

r
•

&amp; '

W

Rnlping
"'W ~V it right.
I.{'W
l

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
Prillnul Llf• ,.,,..,"'

"'

•

TWO DAYS
ONLY. JUST IN

AUFE INSURANCE PRODUCT WI1H EARNINGS UP TO 14.22CJ,. lHE
MOST REVOLUTIONARY pRODUCJ ON 1HE MARKET TODAY. GUARANTEED
DAIICE PROGRAM •
10 ADD MORE FLEXIBIUTY 10· YOUR INSU"""
GARLAND M. DAVIS F.I.C.• ·f:IPHONE
-------------------------.,
OR WRIT.E FdR INFORMATION
I
!nsur•n~••nd, . Flnlnciii .S ervlces
512 2nd Ave.
.Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph ant: Office446-1235
Residence 318-9691

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$70.00 TO '150.00

flr=~==~G~a~lll~tis~O~hl~o~456:~3~1!:=~~====~~=~~===~=~==~~,-i
•
NOW A r LASTI

TIME FOR THIS
COLD WEATHER

1
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I 1would llkeinlorm•tlon on the Now Product.
1
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1
I Address
1CiiY ......... .... St•te .. · ...... -.. · Zip Code .. " .. " .. · .. 1

I

11Phone 1 ................................. · .. .".. · · .... • .. · 1
1
I Besttlmoto call you ....... ..... ............... · .......... · 1

.___....
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_______
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...._••_ _ _ _ _... '!!!!".!.~!!"-=~~-=.:..

_______________ _

.,

Silver Bridge Plaza ·

_.. ...

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Letter to the editor

·.
.

introduces a new concept
in quality quartz watches.
Tremendous
Quartz value.

coptt!Jre

11

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gi-adual and subtle nature of . ihe
destructive process.

Today is Sunday, Nov. 22, the326th day of 1981. There are 39 days left in
the year . .
Today's highlight in history:
On Nov. 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assa9Sinated as he
rode in a motorcade in Dallas.
On this date:
In 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill and China leader Chiang Kai.Shek agreed in Cairo, Egypt on
measures to defeat Japan in World War IL
·
In 1974, the U.N. General Assembly granted observer status to the
Palestine Liberation Organization.
In 1977, the BritiSh-French supersonic airliner, Concorde, began ser·
vice at New York's Kennedy International Airport after a lengthy dispute
over noise levels.
And in·1979, 13 freed boatages returned to the United States from Iran,
but 53 other Americans remained captive.
Ten years ago: The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that arbiirary
discrimination against women is unconstitutional.
Five years ago: President Gerald Ford and President-elect Jirnn'ly ·
Carter cmferred at the White House in their first meeting since the election.
One yeBr ago: Former House Speaker John McConnack died of
· pnewnonla at a Massachusetts nursing home at age 88;
Today's birthdays: actor Robert Vaughan is 49.
Thought For Today: "There was never yet a philosopher who could endure the toothache patiently.''- Shakespeare.

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"

Bpending cuts of $270 rnilllon in the end of the year unless local voters
currnt lilll:al year,
agree to emergency bond issues or
Of that total, $152 million will
property tax increases.
come from social services. State ·
spemling will thus return to the level
And things may be even worse
• j
of two years ago, although costs than they, seem. Public Sector, a
have increased about :i4 percent sin- consulting firm that specializes In
ce that time.
'
state finances, predicts that
Among the cuts are $43 million (6 business firm that specializes in
percent) from state aid to families
with dependent children (a welfare busineos will be so bad in the auto
family of four now will have•to feed, . and related industrtes this 'year that
clothe and sbelter itself on about the state's revenue shortfall will be
'
~75 a mooth•; ~ million from the · cl&lt;iser to $too mi!Uon than to the $140
~
state corrections department, which million that state Officials have
~
t
"Oh, lor heaven 's sake, man. snap out olltl
is desperate for money after four forecast. Thefirmestimatesthatthe
'
~
You're not the ONLY one in the CIA who wants
prison riots last spring;· $14 million potential deficit this year will
· from public health; $19 million from amount to a staggering $65(l million
to get back into DOMESTIC spying." '
''
local revenue spending, and,
rather !hap the $270 million r------~------~---------­
perhaps most devastating of all, estimated by state officials and
'
~1.4 million from education.
reflected in Milliken's cutbacks.
' '
Says Gerald Favennan, president
..Several of the state's Jargesi of Pub!ic Sector, "This is going to be
School districts are in such bad the toughest year of the century for
financial shape that they may have Michi~an - tougher than the
to close their classrooms before the Depression."

Today in history

comp.E=u=t=e=r==============A=rt=B=uc=hwa=ld

I finally got sucked in by all the
ads and bought a home computer.
The day it arrived and I unpacked it,
fny wife said : "What did you buy
that!or?"
"Because it will solve all our
household economic problems. All 1
have to do is feed the computer bow

Thus, the recession, the depre9Sed
auto iodustry, the rapidly growing
welfare rolls and the cutbacks in
federal aid have combined to push
the state to the financial brink.
All of this is further complicated
by the constitutional amendment
pass,lld by Michigan voters two
years ago that requires the state to
balance its budget . Because
Michigan now cannot resort to
deficit spendin~ to get through the
crisis, Milliken was forced to call for

Page--A·l

Berry's World
'

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Japanese magazine gave him for an interview he arranged with Mrs.

Reagan. Such absentmindedness can hardly b&lt;i believed by the householder
who is wOrrying about enough money to pay his heating bill.
Perhaps I should write of the Depression. Yeo, I said DEPRESSION. I

The sunda'y Times-Sentinel

croplandu========~============

•

ought to be lock ed up, incorrununicado, and denied, bail in

agencies.

placing tremendous burdens on
•'tate services, the losses by the auto
industry and by many of the state's
other large companies are causing
state revenues to drop at least $140
mi!Uon below anticipated levels.
In the past, a state in theoe cir·
cumstances might have turned to
Washin~on for ald. But Michigan
was among the greatest losses of
federal revenues as a reslllt of the
Re~an budget cuts.

We ·are -losing

was a mere business expense.
The big dealers, once arrested,

any amount. ay extension. those

w. Va. '

in troubl.~===========R=obe=rt=J.=.~=a=gt=na=n

_Nov. 22, 1981

cies.

peddlers with a record of criminal
violence ought aloo to be detained as

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

Wat action? Bring ·on the United
States Navy, urged one police chief.
And theAlr Force, too, said another.
Their point was that the nation
maintains a highly sophisticated and
effective system of coastal sur·
veillance. Not a plane files in the
Caribbean without the knowledge of
the Air Force. Yet for some un·
fathomable reason, embedded in the
old Posse Comitatus Act, this in·
telligence cannot be made available
to civilian Jaw enforcement agen-

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

A·state

Page-A·2

Our' no-win war on. crim~===========J=ames=J.=.=K=ilpamc=·=k
M1AMJ- W~ us~ the word "war"

Pomeroy

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Pagc- A-4- The Sunday Times-Sehtinel

Nov. 22, 1981

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

Takeover testimony ends
CLEVELAND ( AP) - Testimony
has ended in Marathon Oil Co.'s
·court battle to block Mobil Corp's
takeover attempt, with a federal
judge expected to rule in the
multibillion-dollar battle next week.
Testimony:ended late Friday; and
U.S. DiBtrict Judge John M. Manos
scheduled closing arguments for
Monday.
Under vigorous questioning
Friday by Marathon COW1Sel, Mobil
expert witness George J. Stigler, a
University of Chicago professor,
held to his, prediction ihat the

First deep
weII .
.

OVERSEE - Mike Maze, left, and Don Smith,

PageviUe. Tbe well was fractured Wednesday with

employes of the Waldron and Associates Co., Wooster,
oversee the now of fracturing materials frum a deep

nine "semis" arrived on the scene with the necessary
materials.

(Continued from
pageAI)

gas rather than oil - workers .of
the Waldron Co., of Wooster,
were on hand to oversee the
release of the fracturing
materials from the well into·near- bylanks.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Williams are
completely in the dark as to how
successiul the test well is or when
they will hear from one of the

well at the home of Ann and John Williams near

~veral companies

Tax measures could spell
trouble for hudg~t hill
r

involved.

Although oil and gas drilling is
a risky business, one cannot help
, but feel that the companies involved in the deep well in Meigs
County, imd several others in
Athens County, must have had
some pretty firm opinions that
the venture·would he successful.
Undoubtedly, the Williams hope

takeover would have oo anticompetitive effect on the industry.
He called the proposed merger "a
~orrecting mechani.,m" in a market
!hat had undervalued Marathon.
· "There's no important market in
which I can see any lasting or even
short-run adverse effects fof the
merger) on compelition," he said. ·
stigler's conclusion contrasted
sharply with that of Northwestern
University professor Frederick M.
Scherer, who testified earlier as an
expert for · the Findlay-based
Marathon.
_Scherer predicted that a Mobil·
Marathon combination would be a
"loud signal" for other takeovers,
spur a movement toward monopoly
by certain big companies and violate'
gover~ment guidelines on market·

.

Nov. 22, 19.81 ·.

'

OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK
Name of
organization ............ .......................... .
Type of Entry ...
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•••• o •

o •••• o ••• o

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o •• • o . . . . . . . o • • • • • • • •

.Phone ..•....•... ~ ........· ... • .••.

o • • o • • • • • • • • •• • • o

Deadline for entry Is Friday, Nov. 27. mail all entries to
Gallipolis Area Chamber of .C ommerce, 16 State St.,
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631. The 1981 p;~rade is scheduled
Satu.rday, Dec. s, beginning at 11 A.M.

the adoption next spring of planned· legislative leaders don't anticipate ~so:·--------------------~~====::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::~
COLUMBUS, Ohio ' I API Legislative changes in two lax for spending cuts and temporary any revenue loss from the casual
auto sales tax change beyond the $30
measures plus a pending lawsuit business tax hikes.
million already set aside in the
The
new
state
budget,
which
took
could spell trouble for Ohio's new
budget to cover it. And he said an
dfed
Sund~y,
included
a
provision
budget bill, but Senate President
improved
economy could alleviate
under
which
stale
spending
can
be
Paul E. Gillmor says it should he in
the
effects
of the one-tenth percent
cut 1 percent if iax revenues fall
balance as or now.
·
drop
in
the
sales tax during the
below
projections
by
March
15,
1982.
Just before adjourning for the
second
year
of
the budget.
year, the General Assembly agreed Additional revenue declines in April
"Based
on
lhe
revenue estimates
to trim the recently increased sales · and May would trigger one-time surtax Iron\ 5.1 cents on the dollar to 5 charges in the corporate franchise that we have, we're in balance ... if
the revenue estimates are wrong,
Cents and to repeal what had amoun- and public utilities taxes.
Senate Minority Leader Harry we're in trouble," Gilbnor, R-Port
ted to a tax increase for casual or
non-dealer auto sales. In addition, a Meshel, [).Youngstown, says the Clinton, said. ''It depends entirely on
lawsuit has been filed challenging change in the sales lax could cost the the economy."
Ihe constitutiOnality of a new tax on state $70 million betweeq now and
Gillmor conceded thai there is a
syrup used in the production of foun· the Jun'e 30, 1983, end of the current·
possibility the cushion of a spending
bud~et.
•·
tain soft drinks.
.
cut and .business lax hike next year
Lawmakers from both sides of the
Sen . Ril'hard H. Finan, R·
aisle are predicting that those Cincinnati, says losses from U1e might have to be used.
"I- think it's possible that the
moves could cost the state millioll!i casual auto sales repeal could total
of dollars in revenue and touch off more than tl)e $30 million already trigger mechanism will have to be
· anticipated in the budget. And if the utilized," Gillmor said. "That's not
soft drink syrup tax is voided, it likely to happen, but it could."
Legislators reduced the amount of
could cost the slate $68 million in
the sales tax after learning the
revenue. .
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose, R· budget as passed increased it to 5.1
Lima, says the odds now are heavily percent instead of the 5 perc'ent
in favor of the trigger taxes being originally intended. They also
imposed. "We've reduced any changed the brackets adopted under
(ContinuedfrompageAI)
margin of error we had , the.measure boca use they could not
be acconunodated 011 the cash
on it."
drastically," Rose said.
registers
of many merchants.
Mills also blasted the confusion
Gillmor said Friday that
the two tax increases will create, but ~;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;:::::::::::::::;;j ======
he said Murphy customers haven't I
resisted the increase.
However, the increase Is now even
with West Virginia's 5 percent sales
tax. The additional half-percent may
discourage shoppers from across the
river who patronize GaliipoliS area
stores, but not heavily, according to
some managers.
"The 4 percent lax gave us an advantage," Mills said. uThe increase
will create a tendency to look twice,
especially on a $500 item. That's a lot
of tax to pay."
Office Hours by Appointment Only
Wilbourn agreed, slating K-Mart's
"hard-ticket" items, like
refrigerators or stoves, are J)kely to
CALL (614)-992-21 04 .
be hurt by new taxes.
"If my price is not inducive,l may
or (304)-675-1244
lose tpe customer to a West Virginia
retailer,'' he said.

·It's sometblng to be
·
sbared •••

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POLI~S=H---:~~~~~~::~
SAUSAGE

UIPS-

AMultimedia Ne.........Publiahed -h Sund.y. . . Third .
Avemoe, by 1110 Ohio Volley l'llbllolling
co,npony-Mllllimedla, Inc. - c l u o
- · pol~ It GolllpOiia, Ohio, 11'31.
tnteNd ulecond cW. mailin&amp; nlltler
at Pomerey, Oldo, PGilOffke.

ALLISON'
GRADE A
XTRA LARGE

,.

.

-

Member: '~'be AlllleiiiN Prell, tnl!Utd
-'-"""" .... 1110 .
Newap.per
PubHth~r•

Dolly

Amerlun

~IIUve,

~
(

;:

. ianht t;..,.. imthttt

AUoct.lion.

'

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.

CLOSED SUNDAYS

~·

Veterans

NatlOilll

Adver111in"

•

•

BranMan. t7117 Welt
Nine IWe Rood. SuUe S4, Detnlit,

IIIICtqan, 410'11 .

•

IUBOCIUPTIONIIA'IBII

One- ............... . . . . . .

One..!l~~~~--11.00

,OnefOU ...................... I$1.10

IINGU:COPY

PKICE
lleenll

-.. -f-- -- .

..

N~ IMI~ bJ mail penniUed in

·-ble.

""""

"

.

Tilt
1'lmol&amp;ootlllol wiD not be
, ; •Ne ror ldvlnce Plrmentl IMde

-.

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Fri.-Sal 9 am til 10 pm

PRICES GOOD
MON•, NOV. 23 thru
SAT., NOV. 21
WE WILL BE CLOSED
THANKSGIVING DAY

..&lt;·.
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...

ADMISSIONS - Mary Meredith,
Pomeroy.
.
.
DISCHARGES- Annand Turley,
Fioyd Firra, Inez Stivers, Patsy
Laudennilt, Clarence McDaniel,
1
Jr., Hazel Femll.

.

itntintl

Mon.-ThuiS. 9 am til 9:30 pm

trip to the National 4-H Coogress
Npv. ~Dec. 3 at the Conrad Hilton
Hotel in Chicago.
The announcement was made by
the cooperative extension !lervice at
West Vil'l!inla University.
stephens is one Of 31 West Virginia
4-Hers receiving trips to the session,
which will feature ~arious
workshopo and nwnerous tours.
Stephens, 15, daughter of Mr. and.
Mrs. John A. Stephens of Jericho
Road, haa been a member of the 4-H
Trailblazers in M!lson County for
four years and is a freshman at
Point Pleasant High School.
Her hog project began with hog
feeding and progressed through conducting IG-week hog quallty studies.

•

NO PURCHASE IS NECESSARY, BUT WE
ARE FEATURING A CASH-N.CARRY
DISCOUNT ON. THIS DAY.

STORE HOURS:

Adults Over 21 Only

..:....
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MORGANTOWN, ·W.Va. - Out-

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emphasize that enough," Marabito
said.

French Quarter

:-&gt;
••

standing work for DeRosa Stephens,
Point Pleasant, and her hog project
have earned her an el&lt;pense-paid

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29th

'

vcl'y closely, very closely. I can't

~~·

Wins 4-H trip

it's the newspaper habit 1

DOOR PRIZES! R~ESHMENTS!
.
SANTA WIU. BE THERE FOR THE KIDS!

NO ADMITTANCE- Beverly Hltls, Calif.; PQlice officers talk wllh
men' wbo Identified themselves as being affiliated with the collliulute of
Turkey In Los Angeleo In lobby of building housing the collliulate Friday
nlgbl Earlier, ~ bomb exploded outside the door of an upstairs suite oe·
eupled by the consulate, ca1111lng extensive damage ·but no injuries. A
caller saying he was from an Annenlan group claimed resPQnsibllity.
!AP Laserpltoto).

HALLMARKS

.. .
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...
.

will

ouAre

.

GEORGE HALL

•
•

' in car·
ATHENS - Instruction
he
diopuhnonary resuscitation
offered to the public by O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital atid the Athens
County Heart Bra!ich at the hospital
6:3G-10p.m. Dec.1·2.
A1ao known aa CPR, the proceSs is
a life-saving technique used in case
of heart attack until advanced care
is available.
·Registration fee is $8 per person
and $10 per couple. The fee will be
waived for those unable to pay.
1'hcee ·interested must pre-register
by calling Mimi Smith at 593-5sil,
ext. 229.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST-

.
.
A merrier Christmas starts with us! The shop is filled with gilts
.and decorations ... vibrant poinsettias, holiday wreaths.
sparkling centerpieces, whimsical trims - and ·fiower5,
flowers everywhere.
Join us in the spirit of this wonderful season. We'll be looking
for you.

NORTII PERRY, Ohio (AP) - A
A spokesman for the Cleveland
federal Nuclear Regulatory Com· Electric flluminating Co., which 1¥,
mission report says that a defective building the~ billion plant, said that
719-foot weld that was disguised by a ' subsequent tests would have
long piece of steel has been revealed the faulty weld if the worl!·
discovered at the Perry nuclear men had not come forward.
power plant, which is U)lder conThe defective weld joins half-Inch
stnlCtion in Lake County.
thick stainless steel plates that
The report, which was completed make up a cylinder 120 feet wide and
this week, said two welders· told a 20 feet high. The tank colleclll excess
subcontractor at the plant "that they ..s~tea~m~t~o~r~el~ie;:::ve~~~;:__ __
had been told by their foreman to
mask defects or possible defects to
prevent detection by their quality inThe Great
spection program.''
The foreman was fired and his
supervisor suspended by the sub. contractor, Newport News In·
Entertains Nightly
. dustrial Corp. of Ohio, the NRC said.
PLUS
Work on that part of the plant- a
The
Original
pressure relief tank that is located
inside a ' re~ctor containment
building - has been. suspended and
all welds are being X·rayed and
Friday &amp; Saturday
tested by Newport News, said NRC
spokesman Russ Marabito.
"We will he following this action

Offers CPR class

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

It's a common habit... reading the newspaper and, it'~ a habit wt• •hould all
develop because, what we d'on 't know might hurt us sometimd
Your newspaper is the bigge~t bundie '!fin-formation around and •hari~~~
it wi~h a. ho.use~old buddy i" an ea•y WI!Y to become a well-informed family. ·
Brmgmg . national, world and local news, events of social or sports or
financial importance, guiding shoppers to the best buys, reportinjl statistics
and data, your newspaper is one heck of a great buy for the money and, readin~e
it is a real growing experience, an entertainment, and a great, , in-houst•.
teil&lt;"her/learning tool!

Pa11e-A· S

..

New sales
taXes. • •

NOON TO 5:00P.M.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Finds plant defect

sideswiped a parked car owned by
in mercllandi.oe waa atolen 'from Glen M. Elkins, 31, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
Pasquale Electric Co., 152 Third and left the scene.
Slight damage was done to both
Ave., sometime Thursday nit!ht, acvehicle and there was no citation.
cording to Gallipolis City Police.
The department investigated a
· Officers were informed the
building had ~n entered sometime .tw&lt;&gt;&lt;:'ar wreck involving property
after cloolng Thursday afternOon af· damaMe early Saturday.
ter a wooden door to the upstairs • The report said a vehicle driven'by
Thomaa K. Ritchie, 20, Rt. 3,
storage room waa forced open. · ·
The room waa located over, the GallipoHs, entered the intersection
main office, the repc&gt;rt said, and the of Second _Avenue and Grape Street
inajority of items !allen Included while southbound at 12:35 a.m. when
amp rna~ breakers and circuit an eastbound vehicle driven by Jeff
panels.
· C. Steele, 'n, Gallipolis, pulled, into
The Gallia County Sheriff's Depar- the crossing at the same time.
Ritchie lost control.of hill vehicle
tment reported a Eureka Star Route
as
he braked, slid · acf'Ol!S the in·
residence owned by Michael
tersectlon
and struck a flower planWheldon was entered sometime
ter
identification
sign owned by
Thursday morning, aDd two stereo
Tope's
Furniture
Galleries, 151
speakers were taken.
Secood
Ave.
City pollee reported they cited a
The accident caused moderate
driver In a two-car accident at the
damage
to Ritchie's car.
U.S. Post Office Friday morning.
Also
cited
by polic-e overnight
The report said Violet Smith, 73,
were·
Audree
A.
Belville, 49, Rt. 2,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, pulled from the post
Gallipolis,
failure
to obey a traffic
office driveway on Second Avenue at
control
device,
and Gary G.
10:24 ·a.m. and struck the side of a
Boggess,
39,
Rt.
I,
Southside, DWl
southbound vehicle driven by
and
fleeing
a
police
officer.
Richard A. · Long, 34, Gallipolis,
causing moderate damage to both.
Smith was cited for •failure to
yield.
The department investigated
another two-car wreck at the in- ~ ­
tersection of Fourth Avenue and
,;~:
Pine Street Friday afternoon.
Two cars, one driven by Susanna
Klinger, 28, . Crown City, and the
other by Bertha E. Diehl, 49,
Pomeroy, both claimed they had the
green light at 12:29 p.m. and
travelled . illto the intersection,
colliding.
There was moderate damage to
both vehicles and no ·citation was
issued.
Officers said a vehicle driven by
Charles H. Paxton, 68, Gallipolis,
pulled ooto the 200 block of Third
Avenue at 3:06 _p.m. Friday and

Theme "Christmas, An American Custom"
Sponsored . by the Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association.
·

AddresS.

w. va .

GAI.LIPous L More than ft.ooo

GALLIA COUNTY'S 1911 . CHRISTMAS PARADE

•••••••••• o •••••

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Investigates theft

.' ...

share within all spheres of the in·
dustry.
Mobil, the nalion's No. 2. oil com·
pany, of(ered on Oct. 30to buy No.I?
Marathon in a cash-and stock deal
valued at fS.I billion or more.
However, U.S. Steel.Corp. upped the
bid thursday, offering a cash and
stock deal worth about 16.3 billioo.
Mobil has been barred from actual
stock purchases by Manos and the
Federal Trade Commillsion. U
Manos approves the preliminary injunction against further Mobil stock
purchases, the decision could favor
U.S. Steel, barring other court ·
·developments or offers. But permission for Mobil to resume pur·
chases could bring new-bidding,
Marathon is seeking
tinuation of the injunctioo,

o •••••••••••••

Pomeroy

:

.....,.

M.\O.IlJIIICUPftONI

... -

IDAHO

.................... at.•

Onef"U.ooooooooooooooooooooo . . . .

----C*Io
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... ...................
............................
.................. .

E5

C~RY
ONIONS
,

~~!!.:.:
=:::-..;:.:: ............... ..

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

Baking

•

59~ 59~~.

10 LB•
BAG

Potatoes
$189

..,
..
,

�..
••

•
Page-A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Nov 22, 1981

Nov. 22, 1981

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

W yam a C• MCGhee
GALLIPOLIS
Wyorna
Catherine McGhee, 79, of 30 Neil
Ave., Gllllipolis, dled at 11 :25 a.m.
Friday .In Holzer Medical Center,
having 11eet1 in failing health for the
last lour years.
Born ~pt. 2, 1902, in Gallipolis,
daughtet ·of the late Jonah M. and
Mary West Borden, she attended
Paint Creek Baptist Church, where
she was choir director and pianist
for many years.
She married Elbert D. McGhee,
who survives, on Dec, 19, 1917, in
Gallipolis, and they operated a
grocery at Third Avenue and Pine
Street tar many years.
Also Slli'Viving are a daughter,
Mrs. ChaJ:Ies (Bette) Hall of Colwnbus, three grandchildren and a
great-grlllldchild.
She was also preceded in death by
two brothers and a sister.
Funeral servit"es will be held at 2
p.m. Monday in Paint Creek Baptist

Garnet King of Cincinnati, and three
nieces and three nephews.

fldating. Burial will be in Pine
Street O!metery. Friends may call
at the Wau~h-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home from 2-4 and 7~ p.m. today.
The body will lie in state in the
. church an hour prior to the service.
Pallbearers will he Torn Dun-

Funera l services will be held at
I :30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kirkpatrick
Funeral Home, Washington C.H.,
with Frank Berry officiating. Burial
will be in White Oak Cemetery.

mer Meigs County resident was

placed in the custody of the U.S. Attorney General lor 15 years.1
According to information received
by the sheriff's department, the former Meigs resident was Jimmy
Franklin Conner. Others sentenced

Friends may call at the funeral

home from~ p.m. Monday.

Glenn won't commit
self to presidency
BEDFORD, N.H. (AP)- Using a
·Democratic fund-raw,. as a forum,
Sen. John Glenn, (){)hio, sai.d
President Reagan's economic and
foreign policies have yet to get off
thegl'OUild
· "Where ;. that tidal wave of confidence, that surge of jobs and that
rising lido of investment that would
lift all boat. into a sea of economic
tranquility'" Glenn said Friday in
speech at the lund-raiSer lor Gov.
Hugh Gallen.
For now, at least," Glenn said,
''it's dear that the ship of recovery
has not set sail. "
AlthOIIgh delayed several hours by
rain and forced to change his travel
plans, · Glenn arrived from
Washington, to be the main al11

traction.
The former astronaut had planned
to fly in his own plane with his wife,
Annie, into Manchester, but rain

The prime interest rate continues

to hover at 16 percent, he said, "and
the construction industry has fallen
into a coma. Owning a home used to

last year, he spoke of a '' misery index" of 1~.8 percent, the swn of

unemployment and inflation&lt;ates.

li cense plates, forfeited $35 bond.
Charged with use of unauthorized
plates. Donna F . Fooce , 33,
Gallipolis, fined $50; charged with
speeding, fined$«.
Rodney W. Geiger, 28, Rl. 1, Bid·
weli, charged with speeding, fined
$11.
Charged with speeding, Donna K.
Ramey, 22, Gallipolis, fined $44.
Forfeiting bond lor speeding
were:
Harold D. Heim, Chelsea, Mich.,
$25 ; Daryl L. Martin, 25, Rl. 2, Bidwell, $25; Stanley L. Reese, 44, Ash- ,
ville, $25; Douglas B. Taylor, 24,
Tuppers Plains, $25.
'
Sharon A. J effers, 40, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, $26 ; Dean E. Hill, 20,
Gallipolis, $30 ; Ricky D. Martin, 20,
Gallipolis, $31; Victoria 1.. Wilcox,
'll, RL I, Bidwell. $32.

STATUE OF DEAm - AJIU.DIIclellr cleolollstrators marc:b tbrough tbe slreelll ol Amsterdam
Saturday wltb a earteature of tbe Stalue of Uberty
weariDg a deatb mask and brandlllblug a millslle.

I ..
were .Olis Lynn Short and James
ByJAMESF.SMITii
nuclear
al1llll, because they would arinsrace.
Jackson Redmond. ·
Associated
Press
Writer
have
to
handle
the weapons In a c&amp;nIt also comes in the wake of
The three were named in a multiAMSTERDAM,
Netherlands
(AP)
flict.
President
'Reagan's offer last Wed. county indictment returned by a
The
vanguard
of
an
expected
The
march,
organized
by
21
peace
nesday
to
scrap
plans to deploy 572
federal grand jury in Ashville, N:C.
200,tlll0
anti-nuclear
protesters
swar·
and
church
groups,
follows
similar
Pershing
II
and
cruise missiles in
Sept. 8. The indicbnent charged the
med
into
the
city
today
for
wbat
mass
demonstrations
in
Bonn,
Lon-·
Holland
and
lour
other NATO
subjects with theft and possession of
police
sald
could
be
the
largest
don,
Paris,
Brussels
and
Rome
last
nations
in
return
for
the
dismantling
heavy equipment and a pickup
demonstration
here
since
World
War
month,
reflecting
growing
European
of
Soviet
SS-20s
and
older
mediwntruck.
alann over the East-West nuclear range missiles.
On Nov. 2, Short and Redmon Il.Thousands of Dutch protesters ..-----~--------.;_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court
were
joined
by
sypathizers
from
in Asheville and Conner pleaded not
guilty and was tried in federal court West ,Germany, Belgiwn, Sweden,
Britain and the United States for a
in Asheville on Nov. 4.
The jury deliberated ten minutes morning Of . music and peace
workshops on the city's Musewnand returned guilty verdlcts 'on five
counts for which they had been in- pleim (Musewn Square), police
·
said.
dicted.
They were arriving in l,fiOO charConner was placed in the custody
tered
buses and nine special "peace
of the U.S, Attorney General for 15
trains"
during the clear and
yeBrs, Short received a live year
relatively
wann early morning
prison sentence and Redmon, a 64hours,
organizers
said. The forecast
year old retiree of Carolina Power
was
for
rain
later
in
the day.
and Light Co., received a three-year
With
the
crowd
estbnate
steadlly
probationary sentent"e and a line of
rising,
authorities
were
f.'Onsidering
$10,000.
The three subjects were involved adding a second march route in addition to the . original 3.7-mile
in a theft operation in a number of
corridor through the narrow streets
states which Involved theft of heavy
construction and road equipment. · of the 17th-century city center,
police said,
The sheriff's department turned
'
Joining the crowd was Jan Wlllem
FREE COFFEE WHILE YOU WAIT
over the information to the FBI. ·
de Han, an anny doctor wearing full ,
rnilitary uniform despi)e a government ban.
"I want to show by coming in
606 E. Main
992-2094
·Pomeroy
POMEROY - Pl!rsons whose last
unifonn
that
I
am
nota
pacifist,
but
Front
End
Alignment-Most
cars
·
name begins with an S must have
Brake Service
their new license stickers on by mid- I am strongly opposed to nuclear
night Nov. 30, according to Meigs
posterity,"
he said.they threaten
· our
weapons
because
Deputy Registrar Sarah Gibbs.
Members
of
the
Drafted
Soldiers'
To obtain the stickers, car owners
must have the title and registration Union told reporters Friday that
with them. The license bureau, about 300 soldiers would demonlocated on Mulberry Avenue, wiU be strate in unlforin, defying a han by
open Friday from ~ : 31&gt;-7 p.m. and on Defense Minister Hans van Mierlo.
Saturday morning to accOmmodate The union argued that soldiers have
a right . to express their views on
the public.

POMEROY, OH.
LIO L.
Mgr.

•

VINTON,OH •
Jameso. lush

"The plaintiffs will not narrow

down whom they will try," said Darby.

"We're "being stonewalled/' complained plaintiff attorney Louis
Gilligan.
Gilligan, wh9 said his group plans
to show that the fire was spre;&gt;d by
the chairs, said Gasser's lawyers
have declined to tell him what kind
of plastic loam padding was used in
the furniture.
Diskin said his pretrial order "'ill
t'Ompel a firm statement on the
exact claims the jury will try . He
said he would take under advisement Gilligan's motion holding
the defendants in contempt of court. .

'.

Satellite TV~ ••

,

-.

---

join in the challenge.
"I got150 volell, and I have no
complaint," said Clare"?' Surgeon.
"I'm not a sore loser. Evidently they
are- they got closer."
.. ,
" It's not my style," Louis ·, "
Bruggeman, who got 133 votes, satd "
of the challen~e to Laml •,
..

PWLADEtf&gt;HIA (AP) ~ The
Reagan administration moved too
fast in enacting budget cuts aimed at
welfare benefits lor 110,000 of Pennsylvania's working poor with
children, a federal judge has ruled.
The decision Friday by Chief U.S.
Oistrict Judge Joseph Lord Ill will
forC&lt; ihe state to continue monthly
paym&lt;nts of $5.2 riliUi9n In Aid to
Families with Depe.ndent Clrlldren.
Lord said the cuts in the AFDC
program, part of Congress' swnmer
federal budget slljshing, were put into regulaiion form without sufficient
time lor puillic conunent.
.
" As a matter of law and as a mat·
ter of fact, good cause did not exist
for dispensing with normal
ru(emaking procedui'es," the judge
said.
Lord's decision only halts the cuts
in Pennsylvania since each state adrnintsters it. own welfare pt'Ogram.
· About 2 million children and their
parentS nationwide collect AFDC
payments to supplement their
. wases.
· Federal and .stale attorneys oppealed the declalon to a three-judge
~Jolthe3rdU.S. CircUit Court of.
Appie•l•, and U.S. Attomey Peter F.
Valra said the Jud8es ~ expected
to~ a rulin8 M,onday.
"Althoulih I have no doubt that.
tbla declalon will be loolnvenient to
federal govemment and the
11.1~ cvidenc:e on.tbla !Joe II

'
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··

BETZ HONDA SALIS·

'J

Lardlllld.

SEE IT AT:

IIIII 1111

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

UpJifll' Rt. 7
.
Gallipolis, OH
Across from the Sliver Bridge Plaza

Rt. 7
I

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on SIOCII. on Our s~t' •l'! ll ar
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ll4i: 1 rr 1111111 att.-..

not awartao·e

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~rC I'IaFIOrse tone rl tm or 1e1150n

lol tl'lt

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priCe wheneve• a~;a•lable 0' w•l! se r
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25%

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or JO'torns ct

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lec:hargeable
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31o/.

Our Reg. 3.5 7.J.8 7Ea.

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Save

L/

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Our Reg. 4.67 ( 402 l

,_...

3 33

Trash Can liners
0 p:oll•c mer· H /':.

Misses', Girls' Thermals
Po1ves~e1

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~ounl rf'Jg

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For use on Oil grease O"'~d
erec fr r:o. lrre• ''"'C ' Ud.E'S

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'•bole

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$18
$25 1
s7

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Coffee Saver'"

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12,;75 'Jr ' j· ' " .io HO~ J
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Factor y Qet&gt;ote

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rr,:;......, v('ur ·a·•.:-· ''.: :o ~~
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tur e~ Camero r'!Oo; li~ ~ d . tocu ~ 10'"lS

25 Chrislmas Photo Cards

Focal' Color Prinl Film

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7·DAY SALE

...

~to•••,.. 'KM Special' Fiberglass
Belle~

489~eg

'..·• .

Whitewall Radials

Pl55180R l3

37 97
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on teo•

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ll ii E' rotors

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pod• ono D•c ~~ hn
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lnttalled

With henange
Our Reg. 61.88

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35.97
Lube, 011 And Piner
LollOr inci&lt;Jdod For
manv cors. light
trucks Save row.

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Manv US cars Ltght
tnJCks.&lt;fi'PO!ls htgre•

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callled to the
pllln!Uis u a
of diPrlvatlon
to ccrmment on tbeM
resulationa at a
Ia entlUed lo sub- ,

.,

!•Sell •tem

·

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NO INTIRIST CHARGE"

Open Oatly lo-9
Sundays H

welfare cut

''

"'

MERCHANDISE POLICY

Court halts

•

J

,,

cast an illegal 'ballot without
knowinglt.Buti'msureiwasliving
there (in Medina)."
Lamb polled 40 percent of the vote
in a five-way mayoral race. He had
1,823 votes, while Greenwood was
second with 1,505 and Jlt,yor Eble
third with 988.

. .,

Save 38'i.

1982 HONDAS
'ARE NOW IN STOCKI

Layawar youn noww-wlth a
· small deposit a.DCI pay for It
before March 1Sth., ••

.LOGAN MONUMENf CO.

Friday's pretrial hearing,
lawyers for the viclims complained
that defense lawyers haven't filed ·
their cross clabna nor allowed them
to question about 45 expert defense
witnesses.
Daniel Darby, attorney for Gasser
Chair, said most of the expert witnesses live in other cities and have
been hard to round up for
questioning by the plaintiffs' attorneys.

4 PLYS ALL WEATHER

Discover Mome

WINTER PRICES ON
1982 HONDA5-

..... '155 .

of 19'19 li8ted a Panna Heights address for Lamb, school records
showed. In Oc;\ober of that year, the
. address on his payroll card was
· changed to one in Medina.
.
Lamb said he was living in Medina
and couldn't bnagine going to Parrna Heights to vote.

''

At

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

11
•

Election records shoo\ Ulat Lamb
wasnotregisteredto\'QielnMeolina
County until Sept. 26, !til. Records
in-neighboring CUy~County Indicaled that Lanlb votect=ln.Parma
Heights in · the 1llll0 J - primary
and !he 1979 generalelecUon.
A three-year contrart: with the .

ile1ns.

POMEROY HOME.&amp;AUTO

Stickers ·due

GAUJPOLIS - The following truck driver, and Vicki M. Lloyd, 23,
peopie flied lor marriage licenses Gallfpolis, secretary.
durill!l the past two weeks in Gallia
J oseph A. Wilson, 26, Gallipolis,
County Prollate Court.
construction worker, and Maureen
Carl L4mbert, 38, Patriot, tem- E. Hennessy', 24 , Gallipolis,
porarily disabled, and Monna Air . assistant house managttr.
bolt, 4(1, Oak Hill , unemployed.
Jeffrey H. Burger, 2!1, Gallipolis,
Terry L Sanders, 17, Gallipolis, construction worker, and Sara J.
.student, lllld Sharon L Beaver, 18, Simpkins, 19, Gallipoiis, student.
Crown City, Wlemployed,
John F. Sanders, 29, Gallipolis,
Mark E. Allen, 22, Gallipolis, mechanic, and Sharon K. Hively, 25,
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative Gallipolis, data processing.
employee, and Kelly A. Clark, 18,
Danny R. Johnson, 24, 'Gallipolis,
Gallipolis, at home.
unemployed, and Pamela Douglas,
Michael V. Bryant, 25, Rodney, 23, Gallipolis, housekeeper.
truck drtYer, .and Carla K. Wagoner,
Larry A. Sheets, 20, Gallipolis,
29. RodDey, laboratory technician ,
unemployed, and Danette Jo Clay,
Rick D. RaUl!f, 19, Gallipolis, 19, Gallipolis, dietary aide.
deckhand, and Brenda K. Siders, 20,
Daniel A. Clark, 21, Gallipolis,
Galllpolla, unemployed.
carpenter, and Diana L. Reef, 20,
Emellt E. lnrin, :14, Gallipolis, Gallipolis, waitress.

November

Demo111trator at eenter carries an Amerlean flag
while •lKD in background reads: "No new nuclear
weapons in Europe." (AP Laserphoto).

Peace groups plan huge rally

r-----------'----------------1

File for marriage licenses

•

••

Starting A.t
PLUS TAX ANO
RECAPABLE TRADE-IN

He added that while Reagan was
campaigning against the Democrats

Pleas Court that the 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld,
schoolteacher isn't eligible because
he does not meet residency aod elector requirements of the city charter.
The cl)arter sals that \he mayor
must be a resident of the city and a ·
"qualified elector," which accordiQg to state and county .election

NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) - Lawyers
in both sides of the latest Beverly
Hills Supper Club fire case have until Dec. 1 to Iron out their differences
or face contempt of court charges.
','I feel like a one-man Federal
Trade Conunission, Jt . rnay be
necessary for me to referee some of
these dlsputes," Campbell Circuit
Court Judge Jolm A. · Oiskin said
during pretrial hearings Friday.
Diskin also told defense lawyers
for 15 manufacturing companies. to
detennine their cross claims by
Dec. 1 or he would dismis. them.
The trial, scheduled lor Jan. 16, involves manufacturers of materials
uaed in the club, which burned down
May 28, 1977, claiming 167llve8 and
leaving about !()Injured.
Lawyers for families of the victimS have won more than $20 million
in previous litigation,'including outof-court settlements.
The Gasser Chair Co. of
Youngstown is the main defendant
in the third trial. Other defendents
are ·COmpanies that supplied furniture rnaterials, including plastics,
paint, padding and dozens of other

'2050.

becoming an American nightmare. ''

Ma~ Augual Eble and City Council
President Fred Greenwood, who
trailed political newcomer William
C. Lamb in the mayoral election
Nov. 3, have gone to court
challenging Lamb's right to take oflice.
, They allege in a petition fUed Wed·

cite lawyers

•

RETREADS

be the American dream. Now it's

-

Judge may .

RADIAL

City court ·ends 18 cases
GAUJPOLIS - Eighteen cases
were terminated Friday in
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Trent D. Harrison, 19, Gallipolis,
charged with high rear bumper, forfeited $25 bond.
Charged with improper lane
usage, Milton M. Houdeshell, 61,
Gallipoli•,lorfeited PI bond.
Karen A. Kidd, 18, Langsville,
charged with assured dear distance, forfeited $30 bond.
Chari!Od with improper passing,
Larry F. Miller, 41, Rt. 2. Vinton,
forfeited $30 bond.
Dennis N. McGuire, 20, Gallipolis,
charged with failure to stop for a
stop •ign, forfeited $30 bond.
Charged with failure to display
valid licelltie plates, Ora D. Rodgers,
:;o, Gallipolis, forfeited $35 bond.
Richard D. Smith, 21, Rt. 4, Oak
Hill, charged with failure to display

.'

•.

SNOW TIRES IN STOCK

caused a delay. Instead, he took a
commercial flight from Washington
to Boston and drove the :;o miles to
the cocktail receptions.

T

!~2,}o!.e~.i.!9,!!!o~~U~~c!!'!~...~~e~.. !i.~~-~e~~~!!...... ~ ;

smore, Bobby Casey, Char!""
Williams, Charles GoOd, Jack Carr
andRobertHowell.

Church, with the Rev. Grover Tur·
ner and the Rev. John D. Ki11g of-

Ohio-Point Plea san

'

Checks
accidents
PoMEROY - The Meigs Cotmty
Sheriff's Department investigated
.two accidents, one on Friday and
one Saturday morning, in which no
one was injured.
Friday alternoofl on Rl. 124 in
Goldie M. Page
Syracuse, Errunettt I. Goosman,
GAUJPOUS - Goldie M. Page, Belpre. was \raveling north in a
81, of 663 Third Ave., Gampolis, died truck owned by Suburban Motor
. at 4 a .m. Saturday in Holzer Medical Frieght, Colwnbus.
Goosman missed a tum and had
Center, having been in failing health
stopped on the highway. As he at·
lor the last several years.
Born Aug. I, 1900, in Gallipolis, tempted to back up he struck a
daughter ,of the late Eli and Myrtle vehide driven by Jack Adams, Rt. 2,
Farley Hix, she resided in Columbus Racine. Adams was also traveling
and Fayette County, Ohio, and north and had stopped behi~ the
worked as a nurse aide at Juvenile truck.
. Saturday at 4:30a.m. a deer was
Research in Columbus.
She attended White Oak Grove killed when it ran into the path of a
United Methodist Church, and was a vehicle traveling north on Rl. 7, normember of the United Church th of Forest Run Road, driven by
Women and the Gallia County Senior Julie Maxey, 17, Hartford. There
was moderate damage.
Citi~~ns organizations.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
She was also preceded in death by .
r her husband, Everett E. Page, in Proffitt reported that as a result of
1958.
the department's recovery of a DitSurviving are two sisters, Mrs. ch Witch that was •'!olen in HenHelen Walker of Gallipolis and Mri;. dersonville, N.C., last May 25, a for-

·

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__
'
Pomeroy-Midtlle!Nirt-G•IIipolis,
Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Page-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. Va.

Did pollution cause Silver Bridge
of the eomMient which produced
lllreU COITOIIon cncldng," tile
report lltltel.
1
Now retired, Bennett beUeves the

By-&amp;WS I
.o\1111 I II I " ' - Wrttor
MORGA!ft'OWN, W.Va. (AJ').Congr
,., ...._ for a Moly
count to ,..uty claallllir at llaidi
should ca l'r Ill 1118'1 111m'
Bridge eillapae, ~orfiac to
sclentilll who ~ the
diluter.
The ..... cr ' I Into 1111 Olllo
River dllriiiC n&amp; I 1 tratrle Dec.
15, 19117' kllliltC 41.
The Hatlonal Tnaa,.rtatlon
Safety Board laY till llillml on
bridge.......,_. 11M the d I*
orlglna... from a 11rea1&lt; Ill an
eyebar, ,.r1 of tiM WW.•'•
suspe-.l)atea.
But I llttiHII IZ litMJ by
anotherlaolorahl 1 l...tlllfur
in a tiny one~&lt; lllll W to tilt .,._.
fracture. And one II 1110 autlt1 ra of
that stu11J says tbllllllur ,. I 'lilly
came fnlm air p ' 1\ln ...-,ced
by coal-llarnlng ,...... piMa.
"The...._ •
Ut -*e
that report wu lllll the PIWII:
ment report (the H1D doc
t)
covered so many~ n n 1M
it would 1M ' II lnt.....t to
metallurstats te leoll at the
metallJWIIcal as• 1U," sa:ra Jobn
A. B..-t, the eHIIIhor Ill the
second report, done ., the fMiral
Bureau of standor*. "It wa;; a

Ohio Valley's many power plaDII
were the most probable source of
the sulfur c:ampound. In addition,
be saki, CJ111er cbemlcala from the
bellvily lndultrlaiiHd tlrUI 11111rby

Compromise flops;

Sept. 24.

;' Earlier this year, senators ha.d
• exempted themselves From a

would exempt the Pentagon,
re\renue sharing, the judiciary, Jaw
enforcement activities and benefit
programs such as food stamps and
Social Security.
It would mean an average reduc~
lion of 4 percent in hundreds of
domestic programs and foreign aid.
Tl1e proposal would give Reagan the
authority to make the cuts. but no individual program c'()u[d be reduced

:limitation on the amount of outside
' income they eould earn. The House

•declined to take such action.
, Several hours before the midnight
: deadline,

congressional

leaders

• signaled that they were giving up the
:effort to beat the clock.
: House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
. · Jr., 0-Mass., recessed the House at
I
r8:05 p.m. EST Friday, and about 90
: minutes

later. Senate Majority

al acid

rain.

:

''You put In
whole
craoberrlet~, and wben
they come ou~
they're
all
squashed u~."
commented ooe
youngster as be
worked wltb
..,rent volunteer
Ollta Heighton In
maklng the cranberry salad.

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IN MERCHANDisE
MUST GO BEFORE 1912
•
OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN

BUY BRAND NAME ·1982· fURNITURE'

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An education in cooking
•
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The proposa l, similar to one rejec·
ted narrowly in the House earlier,

Imagine fiwe-year olds
preparing their own Thanksgiving dinner!
But that's just what Middleport kindergarten classes
of Mrs. Mary Rose did this
week.
The menu was complete
with roast birds (chickens not
turkey), baked potatoes, cranberry sauce, stuffed celery,
pwnpkin pie and milk.
And with the exception of
making the pie shells, cutting
the celery, and the actual
baking in the cafeteria ovens,
everything was prepared by
the children ..
They washed, measured,
mixed, stirred, buttered, stuffed, and spread.
Stations for each food
preparation activity were set
up in the kindergarten room
and the children working in
units of five or six, moved
from one station to another.
This gave each child the experience of assisting in the
preparatioo of. all of the foods
on the menu.
Mro. Rose, her aide, Mrs.
Adeline Snowden, and volunteer mothers, Mrs. cathy
Swartz, Mrs. Ruth Riffle, Mrs.
Judy White, Mrs. Debbie
Fink, Mrs. Olita Heighton, and
Mrs. Brenda Haggy were at
the stations to advise the
children.
This was Mrs. Rose's eighth
year to take .her kinderga11en
children through the
preparation of a Thanksgiving
Jjlnner, a part of an overall
St'udy unit on the First Thanksgiving.

ByCHARLENEHO~CH

Times-SenUnel Staff

percent he originally H.sked for on

'frozen at $50,112 for two years. Their
·pay would go to $57,500.

'BILL

RIGHT: David Hardwick
.....,Uy dillplllyed one of the

NO PURCHASE .NECESSARY. JUST COME ON
AND SIGN U.P.

cllickeiiB, aD battered and
bagged and ready for the
ovea. FAR RIGHT: "First
you scrub the potatoes, !ben
- you wrap tbem In loU, and
then they're ready to bake.
It's that simple."

PENTAX
IMU£1111
-- TAWNIY

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

another
disagreement, the
byInmore
than5percent.
Senate voted to have the measure
expire on March 31, 1982, while the
House set an expiration date of Sept.
30, the end of fiscal1982.
Maj9,rity House Democrats have
indicated a willingness to make the
overall cuts that Reagan wants , but
they diUer_with the Senate in how to

; Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R•Tenn., told senators to go hom e.
:sessions were scheduleil today in
:both houses.
: After Congress recessed for the
•night, deputy White House· press
' secretary Larry Speakes said the
administration was left "with no
.
choice but to initiate government aei'Omplh;h them .
The emergency measure is
:shut-down procedures."
necessa ry because an· earlier ·
: But he was un'able to name any
;specific government services that . stopgap biJI, expiretl Friday at midnight. Without the new spending
-woUld be affected immediately:
;, Even if Congress had met the authority, most of the government is
deadline, the measure still faced a technically out of money since 'threatened veto frmp President with the exception of a measure
financing its oWn operations ·Reagan.
: Baker has said Reagan would sign} Congress has not passed any of the
compromise package that con- regular money bills for the fiscal
:taineil a S'enate plan to cut $3.3 year that began Oct. 1.
According to the administration's
•billion from domestic programs.
:Otherwise, he said, the president figures, the Senate-passed bill grants about $5.8 billion of the $8.4 billion
'•1ood ready to cast his first veto.
'~ Speakes said, 'It is the president's in additional c-uts Reagan originally
;position that he will find it difficult to sought from domestic programs.

RIGHT: No canned pum-

l*ln for lbese Utile pie
' mallen. Mn. Mary Rose,·center, tbe killdergarlen teacher,
cut up the pumpkin after
wlli&lt;b IJie cblldreo removed
the lnlldes, broke 11 Into
Po-, ·washed I~ alld then
carried 11 off to the kitchen to
be coolled. FAR RIGHT: We
lllank lhee, ·Lord. These Middleport klndergartea children
paiUied for prayer before
eatiDithelr Thanksglviag din-

. ner.

.

-,~:,

ABOVE U
: m, Urn good. A
· little len peaout butter to he
used lo slllfflng the celery, but
doesn't every good cool! taste
oceaaionally( LEFT: BuJt..
lerlng up the bird seemed like
b:Jl...t!____:.:.!_~:.!itid,,..:~~~~_:·:·J the mostfun.

t

:a

1

jEvidence turns up in trial
J ATLANTA (AP) - A judge's ficient to support a finding of
; denial of a defense motion in the probable cause."
of Wayne B. Williams, charged
Defense attorney Alvin M. Binder
:with murder in the slayings of two of Mississippi, making his llrst court
•young blacks, clears the way for his appearance in the case since joining
:trial to begin Dec. 28.
Mary Welcome and CUlton Bailey on
; Superior Court Judge Clarence • the defense team, had argued that
!Cooper ruled Friday that Fulton County Magistrate A.L.
prosecutors will be allowed to in- Thompson should not have issued
, trilduce evidence seized by police in the search warrant since the af.
:a lot-hour search of Williams' home. fidavit was not sufficient to justify
• The ruling disposed of the only thesearch.
·
.
:remaining .pretrial motion by defenCooper issued hls ruling and
:se attorneys, who had asked sup- halted the hearing shortly after
:presslon of evidence found in the lunch break, refusing to hear delell:
·June 22 search.
se argwnents that the affidavit con-' Williams,
a
freelance tained misrepresentaliona designed
:photographer, is charged in coo- to mislead the mqiatrate who
;necllOJI with the deaths of Nathaniel issued the warrant.
•Cater, '¥1, and Jlnuny Ray Payne,
Items seized during the search of
:21, two of 28 young blacks whose Williams' south Atlanta home 1J1:
;deaths are under investi~alion by a eluded carpet and bedding that
speciAl pollee lasll force. No arrests authorities said contained fibers
have beellllllde the ol.her C¥'!9·
critical to tilt state'a cue,
, Cooper ruled that a contested
contended lnin~::
. pollee affidavit used tD oblain a Prooeculonl
hearings that fl ben! link \'1
to '
·warrant for the sea• ch 11'11 "sufboth
IdDings.
.

:case

a

in

Ln--------------II'-

to·+

OPT.
HUTCH

0

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Making the pie.
wa• great fun for
the kindergarten
children who
measured and
mixed In the
logredlents.

UPGRADE FURNITURE

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Bedrooms, living Rooms, Applia~a~, Televlsiolls,
Recline.S, Desks, Rocllers, lJmpi - EYEIYTHINCI!!!

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:vants whose salaries have been

B

Nov. 22,1981
·The sunday Times-Sentlnei-Pag~ .

CONTINUES II

MetaJIIqlatl f.-4 lll1fltr • the
suriacea Ill the inllilll cncb Ill the
eyebar that g..., fty, ta•cllllng
that seme oulfllr _.pllliM was
present Mtng 1111*"'1...-t of
cracks. The S... of lltall*rds
report JIIIUell8d lllll!Jie cvz••.und
might baYe been bf*o8ea a.lflcle.
The tiMing "JMe _.. =wort
to the liJpethetll u.t (I"* sgen
sulfide) wu elK' ol . . cet*"M nts

accept anything less than the Senate
By CLIFF HAAS
bill."
Associated Press Writer
But sidestepping the question of a
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
veto.
he declined to say how much
federal government technically ran
. out of money at 12:01 a.m. today af- further the adrninlstration was
:.ter Congress failed to enact willing to compromise on its
· emergency spending legislation. But proposed sptmding reductions.
"We'll just have to wait and see
the While House said hardly anyone
what happens in conference," he
should notice- for the time being.
said.
~
As the midnight Friday deadline
Leaders of both parties agreed
arrived, congressional negotiators
: called off until today their efforts to that the president has more than
: hanuner out a compromise stopgap enough support to sustain a veto if
the compromise they rCach is unac-.
•measure that would keep money
ceptable
to him.
:flowing to various goverrunent agenO'Neill,
an opponent of the cuts,
cies. The House and Senate had gone
has
said
the
House might go along
home hours earlier.
·
with
the
Senate
plan.
: But before adjourning, the
Baker
sa
id
Friday
night: " I'm
: negotiatiors agreed to recommend a
still
hopeful
that
during
the day
:4.8 percent pay raise for House J'omorrow that we can get
the
:members - about $2,911 a year resolution
passed
·
and
on
the
·but no salary increase for senators.
president's
desk."
:since all members of Congress now
He conceded , however ,
' make $60,662.50 annually, the
significant
and substantive
"
provision seems certain to spark opremained.
disagreements'
'
;pt'!Sition when it comes to a vote in
The
biggest
disagreement was
:uie Senate.
over
Reagan
s
demand for ad~
: The salary increase was attached
ditiOnal
spending
Cuts - several'
;to a provision granting 14.8 percent
billion
dollars
but
far
less than,the 12
·pay increases to senior civil ser~

lllelf wwldn't.do lt. but wllb allltle
other imparltlll" It mllbl, he Ilk!.
"'l'bere'a aD tiDdl of lluft In the
adJniiNihere .down In that valley."
· Benjlmln Unity; an alr quality
consultant and Iormor Well

VIrginia Unlvenlty prafeuor, uya
there II same q....U011 about the
IJpe of IUiiur eempopnd relpOnslble for depalltl fOIDid In the crack.
He bellens tbat, rather tbu ·
.hJdrolen aulflde, the moat likely

7MA .
COUN7DOWNI

unique eue."

government broke

may have helped lltlmulate tbe oornl81oo.
• "Maybe hydro1en aulflde by

collapse~

'

*'II

•.

STOCKMAN CALCULATES - Budget Director David Stockman,
left, uses a calculator to figure numbers while meeting with Senate
Majority Leader Howard Baker Jr., R-Tenn., in Senator Baker's office on .
capitol Hill on Saturday. (AP Laserphoto).

'

Nov. 22, 1981

.j,

L

•

�I

Nov. 22, 1981
Page-B-2-The Su11day Times-Sentinel

PpmerPy-Middleport-GallipPiis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va.

'

Kennedy weds Griffith Wilheltn .and ~aker exchange marriage vows

VVeddm.~s~--------------------------~--------·:
~

Davis, Bachner marry

Yonker

we~

Sauters

Carry and Wilcox wed

The sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-Fl -3

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

NOV. 22, 1981

Church decorations included can- colonials made of yellow daisy porndelabras at the altar and two ' pClm8, purple miniature carnations. _
and baby's breath. 1bey also wore :
baskets of nowers llll the railing.
:..:_
The bride wriB aUired iJr a white combs made of silk nowers.
The beat man was Rick Baker,
quina lmil gown with Venice Lace
and pearl trim. It had a high neck, Gallipolis, brother of the 'groom,
bishop sleeves and a sunburst Groomsmen were Jim Craft,;
pleated skirt with an attached Ga!Upolis, Ron Adltins, Rlo Grarrde;?:j
cbapellenth train. She wore a hand- Ed Butler, Crown City, and J.,
rolled, fmgertip veil and blusher of Golf, Gallipolis.
A reception was held at the churc~
illusion which was held on hack in
place by a Juliet cap of Venice lace after the wedding. Ann Butler{
and seed pearls.
Crown City, registered guests.
•
She carried a cascade of white
The couple took ~ wedding trip ~
sweetheart roses ·with purple Snowahoe Sid Resort, W. Va., am! ·
· miniature carnations and baby's then to Gatlinburg, Tenn.
The bride graduated from Defiano·
breath,
.
'Maid of honor was Janet Bachelor, ce High School, Defiance, in 1m and
Gallipolis, sister of the bride. works as- a loan clerk at Central · ,
Brideamaida were Barb Wilhelm, Trust . Company's Southerri Ohi~
Defiance, Donn.a Wedge , ·Division. The groom is a 1976 Galliao ,
Wllrnlngon, Karen Bauer, Colum- Academy High School graduate an&amp; '
bus, and Pam Kraus, Shaker graduated from Rio Grand.e Colleg~ (
Heights.
in 1980 with an A.B.S. He works as If ~
They wore polyester knit gowns of
cost accountant at Robbins an~
huckleberry fashioned with a chiffon Myers.
. ~;
bc.lice and a drape skirt and carried
The couple resides in Rio Grande.¥ ~

••
•

•j

'

Flowers for a state treasury
Mr. and Mrs. Baker '

Mr. and Mrs. Griffith
-

.

Mr. and Mrs. Bachner

Mr. and Mrs. Sauters

.

_RUTLAND:.._ The Ruti8nd Church bouquets of carnations with baby's
of the Nazarene was the setting for breath and ribbona In the ralnbo\f
the ~uly 19 wedding of Angela Ken- colors.
nedy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Schneider, Pomeroy, serKeith Kennedy, Rutland, and . ved as best man, and the ushers
Michael Troy Griffith, aon of Mr. were Tom RoUsh, Mlnersyil}e; Chris
and Mrs. Danny M. GriHJth, Uncoln Taylor, Pomeroy; Jack Humphreys,
Hill, Pomeroy.
,
Pomeroy. They were attired in beige
The Rev. Uoyd Grlnun, Jr. per· tuxedos and wore tinted carnation
fonned the 2:30 o'clock ceremony boutirnnleres to match the bridesfollowing a pi'Ofiram of rtliJ!Iic by maids' dresses.
·
j'lllly Hall, Pomeroy, organlst, and
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Debbie Gllrnore, Rutland, soloist. Keimedy wore a pink lmit gown with
1'heil' selections included "I Pledge flowing skirt and matching Jackel
My·Love,' ' ''Twelfth of Never," and and had a white carnation corsage
"Sunrise, &amp;unset."
tinted in pink.
The altar decorations included a
Mrs, Griffith was in a blue knit
golden archway with white satin gown with V neckline and fitted
bows, doves, and pink, blue, yellow waist with a softly gathered skirt.
and green daisies and streamers, Het while carnatioo eorsage was tinflanked by ·two seven-branch can- ted in blue.
·
delabrs. The pews were decorated
A reception honoring the couple
with while satin bows. ·
was held at the Rutland United
Given in marriage by her father, Methodist Church basement. The
the bride was attired in a formal bride's table featured a lighted foungown fashioned with an. empire tain five-tiered cake surrounded by.
waislllne featuring a front p&amp;llel of flowers and gremiery wlth a~ ·
pleated organza, a pelirl beaded lace ding Stairway. Cheruba and wedding
brldil-'11 with a Queen Anne neckline bells were used between the tiers.
and long chlfttrn sleeves with wide
The cake was tiJ!Ipell with • a
lace around the wrist.
miniature bride ll!d . gtoom with
Tbe gown flowed Into a full-length
miniature attendanfs on the atalrway. Two layers had bouquets of
train of lace ewer taffeta. The fuJI..
letigth veil of illuaion accented with · daiBiea and carnations in rainbow
lace and a blusher abo edged in lace colors on top.
fell from a lace headpiece. The bride
Guests ere registered by Sandy
carried a bouquet of roses and carHysell. Paige Harden distributed the
nations in rainbow colors with mat- rice bags, and Goldie Carson and
ching ribbon and baby's breath. She Ullie Kennedy presided at the
carried a white Bible. and a white reception table.
handkerchief edged with lavender·
The couple now reside on Condor
lace belonging to her late grand- Street in Pomeroy. The new Mrs.
mother, Dora E. Kennedy. The Griffith is • 1981 graduate of Meigs
bride's jewelry included a heart- High School. The bridegroom, a 1979
graduate of Meigs, is employed as a
shaped diamond necklace, a gift of
boiler fllllker with B. and W. Conthe groom . .
Kelly Brown Qf Rutland was the struction Co. at Cameron.
maid of honor and wore a blue qiana
knit gown with blouson top and slit
capelet sleeves with a full pleated
skirt with matching picture hat. The
bridemnalda were Kellee Griffith in
a pink qiana knit gown, 811!1 Gina
Griffith, in a yellow qlaria knit gown,
fashioned with V necklines, blouson
waists and fiowing A-line "skirts,
both sisters of the groom; and Greta
Kemedy, sister of the bride, in a
green qlana knit gown with chiffon
overlay waist- and flowing A·llne
skirt, also with slit capelet sleeves.
They all wore picture hats in colors
. to match their dreasea and carried

'.

Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox

POMEROY-Tamara Kay Davis
and Steven Clark Bachner exchanged wedding vows in a doublering candlelight ceremony at Forest
RWI United MethPdist Church at

Pomeroy; Scott Reuter, Eleanor, W.
RACINE - The Racine Baptist light pink,laahioned Victorian_:;ljlle
POINT PLEASANT-Carmen E. Gallipolis, was flowergirl.
Va.; Mark Eaton, Colwnbus, and Church was the setting for the Oct. with lace yoke ,aDd .ruffles, puffed ea,ry, Point Pleasant, married
Best man was Jarvis Kirby,
Mick Davenport, Middleport. The 10 wedding of Melissa Ann Yonker, elbowlenlihsleeves,andgoredskir- William G. (Gil) Wilcox, Cheshire, Gallipolis. Ushers were John
groom was in a pearl grey tuxedo dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. George ts. Mrs. Lawrence and Mrs. Yonker Oct. 24 at Main Street Baptist Chur- Wilcox, Murray, Ky., Gary Wilcox,
with grey ascol, while the grooms- Yonker, Route I, Racine, and · were in wine gPWOs and Miss ch, Point Pleasant.
Owensboro, Ky., and Mike Carry;
6:30p.m. Oct.IO.
men wore pearl grey tuxedos with Timothy Vaughn Sauters, son of Mr. Sauters and Miss Slavin were in
The bride is the daughter of S.F .c.
Point Pleasant. Ringbearer was
The bride is the daughter of black ascots and white sweetheart and Mrs. Leroy Sauters, Route 3, mauve gowns, all in similar design and Mrs. H.J. Carry, · Point David Klrtiy, Gallipolis.
Robert S. and Jonetta Mae Davis, rose boutonnieres.
Pomeroy.
to the one wom by the maid of honor. Pleasant. .The groom is the son of
Areception was held atthe V.F.W.
Yost Road, Minersville; and the
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
The double-ring ceremony was They wore pink baby's breath in Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wilcox, Murray, in Point Pleasant after the
groom is the son of Jack and Carolyn . Davis was in a floor-length gown of performed by the Rev. Charles their hair and caJTied baskets of silk Ky.
ceremony. Martha Gibson and Pam
Bachner, Lincoln St., Middleport.
mauve with a cocoon jacket. Mos. NoJTis, cousin of the bride, following flowers in the wedding colors.
. The formal, double-ring ceremony Nibert served the cake and Miss
The Rev. Stanley Merrifield per- Bachner wore a floor-length gown of a program of music by Barbara
Stephannie Thomas, Burleson, was officiated by Rev. Steinspring.
Max Figgins registered ~uests.
formed the ceremony following a dusty pink in qiana and clipped Bailey, organist, and soloists, Joy Texas, was lhe flower girl and wore
Music was provided by Kim
The bride graduated from high
prograrri of music by Jane Wise, chantilly lace with a cape effect Sauters, sister of the groom, and a white eyelet dress with pink acBurris,
organist,
and
Mike
Wheeler,
school
at Moanalua, Honolulu,
organist, and Denver Rice, violinist. floWJce falling to a poinl in lhe back. Bonnie Boso, Portland.
cent. Pal ·cleland, Route 3, soloist.
.
Bawaii
in
1977, and from GalUpolis
Their selecUon.s included "Always Both mothers had white rosebud corThe altar was decorated with a Pomeroy, was the ring bearer and
Matron
of
honor
was
Patty
Hanes,
Business
College
in 1981: She works
11
and Forever," lCThe Rose," The sages.
circular candelabra with votive wore silver grey tuxedos as did the ' Washington, N.C., the bride's sister. as a purchasing clerk at -Robbins
Way We Were," and The Lord's
A reception honoring the couple cups, accented with large white groom. The other attendants in grey Bridesmaids were Lola Rayburn,
Prayer." Aflower aJTangement was Vl3s held in the church social room bows and flanked by fern in tuxedos were Ed Nottingham, Route Point Pleasant, Ju)ie Perry, Hun- and Myers. The groom graduated
from Murray High School in 1975 and
used on the organ and bows marked where Debbie Pickens served the pedestaled containers, and a profile 3, Pomroy; Steve Yonker, Burleson,
'
tington,
and
Debbie
Nibert,
Point
is a manufacturing engineer at Robthe family pews.
punch, Joan Tewksbary the cake, kneeling bench.
.
Texas; Mark Sauters, Route 3, Pleasant. Stephanie Sampson, bins and Myera.
Given in fllll!'l'iage by her parents and Tracey O'Dell, the mints and
Given in marriage by her parents Pomeroy; Jim JoiUison, Racine;
and escorted to the altar by her nuts. Usa nne Reynolds and Mrs. and escorted to the altar by her and Bin Row!h, Syracuse.
'•
father, the bride wore a gown of O'Dell registered the guests.
father, the bride was '"'tired in a
Mrs. Yonker wore a dove gray
aheer polyester lined in acetate tafFor their wedding trip to Paradise gown of polyester organza with a fit- polyester dress and a corsage of
feta with a~ents of chantilly lace Island in the Bahamas, the bride ted bodice and sheer yoke !rimmed pink, rPSe, and wine with pink
aud appliques.
changed into a brown suit wilh beige · with Venise lace, pe~rlsand sequins. baby's breath. Mrs. Sauter wore a
The bodice was fashioned with a U and brown.
' The full bishop sleeves featured cuf- . double knit tw&lt;&gt;-piece smoke blue
neckline, sheer full long sleeves with
They now reside at 1046 Commons . fs trinuned with lace and pearls, and dress and a rosebud corsage.
All of our exclusive ' ·,
lace at the wriat, empire waistline Road, North Reynoldsburg.
the bouffant skirt with appliques of
A reception honoring the couple
Classic, Western and
with a satin ribbon belt. The boufThe new Mrs. Bachner is a sequins aud pearls on lace was was held at the Racine American
Casual boots are benchfant skirt flowed into a chapel train.
graduate of Southern High School designed with a hemline OoWICe Legion hall unmediately following
crafted 'IS'v
skilled ' ·
The · bride's fingertip veil of and the Gallipolis Business College. which flowed into a chapel train. Her the wedding. The three-tiered pink .
·hands, not rolled off an
illusion edged with lace, and her Mr. Bachner graduated from Meigs veil of illusion fell from a headpiece aftlt·white cake featured.l!.mo!fe~n
blusher, fell from a headpiece of High School in 1976, and the Hocking of lace, pearls and sequins.
assembline.
bride and groom before a heart.
lace. She carried a cascade Technical College in 1980 and is now
The bride carried a handkerchief
Donna Hubbard Clay and Raeleen
, ~111!11101\Jiail"'l!'f'Mli!B
aJTangement of silk carnations and employed as a computer program- from her greal-grandmother, Mrs. Oliver registered the guests, Mrs.
,,
i
We also have
stephanotis In white and mauve with mer at Physicians Insurance Co. of Etta Shields. Her bouquet was silk Sandra, Baer, Mrs. Kay Proffitt,
satin streamers in mauve.
Women's
Frye leather vests
Ohio, Pickerington.
flowers in pink, mauve, wine and Vicki Sauters and Pauline Wolfe
·The bride wore a diamond
Among the out-of-town guests at- white with baby's breath.
presided at the serving table . .
Fry, .
_and ha_ndbag_s
necklace and earrings, gift of the tending were Mr. and Mrs. George . Maid of honor was Sonja Hill,
The couple resides at Route 1
Boots
MMMliBllllil
gf!lOm.
Dallas, St. Paris; Mrs. Ruth Cuber, Route 1, Minersville, and the brides- Racine. The new Mrs.·Sauters is a
Serving as maid of honor for her Toledo; Mrs. Delwon Roberts, ' maids were Peggy Lawrence, Southern High School graduate. Mr.
:UHI Second avo:.•
siSter was Tina Davis, and lhe Mason, W. Va.; Mrs. Lucy E. John- Racine; Paula Yonker, Burleson, Sauters graduated from Meigs High
Layaway
LafayeUe
bridesmaids were Brenda Ash, son, West Columbia; Lorna Johnson, Texas; Mary Beth Slavin, Syracuse, School and is employed at the Jones
Now for Christmas
GallipPiiS, 0.
Millersville; Ann Diddle, Pomeroy;
and Pam Spencer, Syracuse. Their West
Colwnbia,
W. Va.
; Mr. and _!'omeroy.
~a~nd~~C~he~n~·Miss
~S~au~t~er~s~
, ~R~ou~t;eJ3~
Mrs. Floyd
Capehart,
Moundsville,
Hill wore
a gown in, ~Bo~y~s·---~-----JL~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,_
gowns were floor-length and W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Alton Johnson,
,
I
fashioned with bateau necklines, Olester; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Slultz,
~
elbow length puffed sleeves and Joshua and Molly, Parkersburg, W.
I
flared skirts. The maid of honor was Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Belcher,
I
in :mauve, and the bridesmaids in Olarleston, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
huckleberry. The gowns were ac- Mark Eaton, Columbus.
CI!IIted with antique lace on the
Mrs. Dana Johnson and Gerri;
'
!~
sleeves and front Qf the gowns. The Mason, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
attendants carried bouquets of silk Redman, Ray, Jr., and Lori, Mason,
d
c8rnations in hucklebery with a lily W. Va. ; Mrs. Eulah Redman,
center and ·stephanotis, tied with Mason, W. Va.; Mrs. Pauline CWI.-;
safln ribbons 1ft huckleberry.
ningham, Mason, W. Va.; Mr. and
The Dowergirb were Teresa Sim- Mrs. Frank Eschlernan, Beverly;
~. Pomeroy, and Molly Stultz,
Mr. and Mrs. James Stephens,
Parkersburg. They were in gowns of Dublin ; Mr. and Mrs. James Amssimilar design to the other at- bary, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Grian Johntendants in mauve and huckleberry.
son, Mason, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard S. Owen of Pomeroy was Edward Tewksbary, WellSton; Mr.
best man for the bridegroPrn, and and Mrs. John Parsons, Colwnbus.
ushers were Kevin Betzing,
14

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holds meeting_

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RIO GRANDE - Members of the
Gallta-JackaOn-Meip-Vinton Counselors AISociation held their first
meeting of the academic year recently in the cafeteria of Rlo Grande ·
· College and Community College.
Mark Abell, financial aid cllrector
at Rio Grande, apoke to the group
aboQt changes In financial aid at the
local, alate and federal levels and
816w•ed queat10111 about student
ald In the future.
.
· Offlcenr were elected for the upcoming year. They Include,
pnlident, Jelllll' Berridge, an admluiCIIIi c:oun.elor at Rio Grande
ColJele; .tee president, Richard
JWnllton, guidance COUDIIOiof at
()all; HIU Jflah School; and aecretarytriuuaa Deanna Col*, guidance
counselor' at Gallla Academy High
Scbool.
According to Berrldle. the JIW""
(1011 af the· group Is to bave COWJo
1111111 praf 111!111 fnllll the four
cGIIIIt1- pther to~ COIIIIDIIII,PPtl nllld-na. Also, to
........ ablnlaflnnalkla to'-"
. 11r . , . eldi ro.r± hr~l IPidfle

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•

NASHVIUE, Tenn. (AP) - The
chainnan of Tennessee's House
Finance Committee, recovering
from surgery, says he appreciates
the Dowers but wants well-wisher.;
to turn lheir attention to another sick
patient - the state treasury.
Rep , John Bra gg , DMurfreesboro, was in fair condition
Friday after ~ndergoing surgery

GALLIPOUS--Rita J . . Wilhehn,
Gallipolis, married David A. Baker,
Gallipolis, Oct. 17 at Grace Unlted ·
MethPdist Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. ·
and Mrs. Cletus Wilhebn, Defiance,
.and the groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Baker, Gallipolis.

The formal, double-ring ceremony
WBS officiated by Re. James Frazier
andRe. Dean Bachelor.
'Music was provided by Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Sauber and Sandra HolIman of Defiance, Andrew Potter of
Athens, Karen Bauer of Colwnbus
and Janet Bachelor of Gallipolis.

~
two days earlier at St. Thomas :;
Hospital for a 1 pacemaker to •
regulate his heartbeat.
!
"I appreciate all the expressions :•
of good wishe~," the 62-year-old ~
lawmaker sa1d 10 a mem ~
d1stnbuted by hrs Office.
-~
"In lieu of flowers, please send
eontribulion lo the 1981-82 Tennessee-.,::
State Budget."

Lemley and Fellure wed
GALLIPOLIS - Janet I..emley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Froud
Mercer, of Patriot, and Mr. Ralph
Fellure, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanton
Fellure, Gallipolis, were imited in
maJTiage on Nov. 13 at 7:30 jl.m. at
the home of the bride.
Vows of the double-ring ceremony
were read by Rev. Everette
Delaney.
The bride was attired in a streetlength dress of mint green with a
brocade yoke of beige flowers.
Serving as her matron of honor
was
Donna
of the
groom.
She Grymes,
chose a sister
street-length
dress of beige with dark brown
jacket.
Fellure selected Terry Davis as
·best man. The groom wore a brown
suit, and the best man wore a durk
blue suit..
For her daughter 's wedding, Mrs.
Mercer wore an orchid dress. Mrs.
Fellurechoseadressofbeigefloral.
Following the ceremony a rer;eplion was held in the bride's home.
The cake, baked by Dolores
Williams and decorated in pi_nk,
white and mint green, was a· tw&lt;&gt;tiered cake separated by cherub
pillars with a miniature fountain in
the bottom. Heart-shaped cakes
surrounded the bottom. it sat on a
table decorated with a wliite linen

tablecloth and vases of rosebads.
· 8eNing "lit the reception were
Doiores :Williams, Crown City,
Audrey Hedrick, Patriot, Teri
Killebrew and Patty Maynard, of
Gallipolis.
The bride is a graduate of Southwestern High School and is employed at Gallipolis Developmental
Center. •
,
The groom is a graduate of Gallia
Acadernyand Is also -employed at
GDC. They reside in GalUpolis.

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Picture of a man about
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Including all the sOup&amp; salad
you~eat

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flllllh&lt;d poll"""'•butra&lt;d peas, cranbCrry saocc, cdcry,

,wmn -.,.mnbladandall rhehol~""P~
pnlmfrahoolad~cancat

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. Sficd11111anksgiving Trcar

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IT'S ALL HERE .••.

"tlu'l a1oo IICI•IIIIIII soft drink and a pic« of pumpkin pie wlrb
aalnf IOilPirrll at no c:xua~That~ .... war of~

AIJo •••ilobldor au;ry-our, -..tdrout

,,

He's shopping around for a real "Bargain", but shopping
for "price" alone isn't the wise way to find one. The retail
merchants in Gallipolis ~er you price, quality and friendly
service. You see, the answer is in the store where the owner
Is there to serve you better ... Stop in soon and see what
Gallipolis has ....

Come 10 Shoncy) and &lt;ni&lt;&gt;!' tender rurkcy wlrb atblct!P"vy. Ughr corn

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Thanksgiving
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ooup 1: Iliad bar- 12.99.

lt.llkedMiaC ta•tJ*may~tubldDJIUifa'pumpkinpcrorl,. aua.

Iiiii !I ;

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0

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�Nov.

w. va.

ments

Ruth-Hamilton
Mrs.

veteran of the . U. S. Army. He is
currently employed at Foote
Mineral at New Haven.
The open church wedding will be
in Rio Grande.
The gl'Oflm Is a 1978 graduate of held Jan. 9 at the Main Street BapGallia Academy High School and Is a tist Church: Point Pleasant, at 7:30
p.m.
carpenter.
.
· The wedding will take place at
Rev. James Stinespring will of·
Faith Baptist Church in Rodney on . fidate. A reception will follow in the
Nov. 28 at 2 p.. with a reception to church social room.
foltow at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Clark.
Rev. Lynn Lahaie will officiate at
the double-ring ceremony.
COOLVILLE - Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Avis, CoolviUe, are a~~o
nouncing the approaching marriage
of their daughter, Kay Avis, to Larry
E. Spencer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elson Spencer, Racine.
.The wedding wilt be held on Wednesday, Nov. ~. in the Archery
Building at Roy Oak Park near
Pomeroy. The music will begin at 7
p.m.. with the ceremony to take
place at 7:30.
.
The gracious custom of open wedwill be observed.

. JACKSoN-Mr. and
C. Kenneth Ruth, Main St., JackSon, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Judith Kay to James
Richard Hamilton, .IDfl' of Mr. and
Mrs. J. •"rank Hamilton Lower
River Rd., Gallipolis.
'
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Jackson High School and received a
bachelor of science in home
economics education from Ohio
State University. She is a member of
Grace United Methodist Church,
Jackson.
lfer fiance graduated from Gallia
Academy High School and received
bachelor's. and master's degrees
from Marshall University.
Both are employed by the Oak Hill
Union Local Schools. They are involved in various school activities.
She is an instructor in the home
eco~ornics department, sponsor for
Future Homemakers of America
and the advisor of the junior high
cheerleaders.
He is a school counselor, is. in-

The bride-elect is a '1m graduate
of MI. Vernon High School and is employed at Bob Evans Sausage Shop

Day-Lancaster
BIDWELL - Retired Chief
Warrant Officer and Mrs. Billy E.
Day, of Virginia Beach, Va., annoWlce the engagement of their
daughter, Linda Marie, to Edwin
Lee Lancaster, Jr., oflfampton, Va.
He is the son of Angeline Lancaster
Fry, of Clairton, Pa.
Day graduated from Kellam High
School, Virginia Beach, and Ohio
· State University. She is a lieutenant
in the U. S. Navy, ser,ving aboard the
USS LV Spear, Norfolk, Va.
Lancaster graduated from Clairton-High School, Clairton, and is pursuing a bachelor degree from
Golden Gate UniverSity. He serves
in the U. S. Nary and is stationed at
Navmaclani, Norfolk.
Day is the granddaughter of Erma
Robie, of Bidwell, Mr. and Mrs. Ercell B. Day, of Johnson Ridge,
· Gallipolis, and Everett Robie, Mesa,
Arizona.
A December 19 wedding is planned
·at Bula ville Christian Church,
Gallipolis; Day's uncle, Rev. Judson
Eugene Harmon, will officiate.

Avis-Spencer

FREE TURICEVS

Now thru Wednesday, Nov. 25th Johnson's
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Drawing will be held every day at 4

p.m.
No Purchase Nee; IIII'J • Need not be present to win!

OPEN .
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DAY
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Mrs. Paulette Burris, Point
Pleasant and Mr. Jack Burris, West
Columbia. announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Kelly
Gene Burris, to Mr. Terry Allen
Krebs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Krebs of Point Pleasant.
The bride-to-be is a 1979 graduate
of Point Pleasant High School and is
enrolled at Marshall University

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3 - Baptized into His death: The onlr way we can be saved or reap
the bi.neflls of Chrisl's blOOd is by "Thelitood of his cross" I Col. 1:201. ,
Si11ce we cannot be literally crucified on the literal cross and washed
In the literal blood of Jesus. we can be baptlled in His death where His
blood was shed, ''Know ye not, that so many of us as were INpliled Into
Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? Therefore we are buried
with him by b.lplltm Into death•.• " (Am . 6:3, 4). When we cont1ct
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newness of llfe" IRm. 6: 4).
·
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The only waif we contact the s1ving blood of Christ 1S •n bapt1sm
and nol the moment we believe. To dillY baptism is to render the
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WE HAVE AVAILABLE
BUTTERBALL TURKEYS

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~MILK $1~.~-

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8-16 0..

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WITH THIS COUPON AT IGA

WITH TMIS COUPON AT IGA

Double Value

Double V•lue
COUJIIII Ftii.IIIO 01 LUI

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Only one. Ooubie Value Coupon ·

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be refunded.
This offer applies only to
manutach.lrer•s coupons . It does
not apply to : retailer's coupons,
orocery coupons or free coupons.
Not valid with beer , wine or
tQbacco product coupons.
Limit .4 double
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teach that baptism saves? No! On the contrary, to say that baptism
does not save is to render the Lord's death on the cross as useless, for
it is in baptism (water baptism) that the penitent believer {sinner)
contacts the blood of Christ (cleaning element) that washes away
&lt;saves from) sin .
,
1.-Chtist's death: Jesus came into the world to "save ~is people
from their sin~· · (Mtt. 1:21) . His being "the lamb of GOd, wh1ch taketh
away the sin of the world" (Jno. 1:29, 36) shed His "precious .blOOd
.. .as of a 11mb without blemish and.withOut spot" I I Pet. 1: 19) '"His
death upon the cross, " .But when they came to Jesus, and sa~ that .he
was dead already, they brake not his legs: But ·one of the sold1ers w1th
a spear plercecl his side, and forthwith came there out blOOd and
water" (Jno. 19:33, 34).
2.-Christ's blood: "Without the shedding ot blOOd there is no
remission" (Heb . 9:22), therefore, Christ's blood ... (l) ·cleanses from
sin, "the blood Jesus Christ his Son ~leanseth us from all sin" (I Jno.
1:1); (2)·washes awav sin, "Unto h1r:n that loved us, and wash~. us
from our sins in his own blood" (Rev. 1:5); (3) ·purges or pur~f1es,
"How much more shall the blOOd of Christ .. . purge vour conscience
from dead works ·to ser\le the living God?" (Heb. 9: ,_.,; (.f) ·redeems,
" ... and hast redeemed us to God by the blood .. .'' CRev . 5,: 9, Heb.
9: 121 ; S·reeonclles or draws 'nigh unto God , ''But now in Chr1st Jesus
ye ... are made nigh by the blood of Christ" (Eph . 2.:13) ; (6) ·remlts
sin, ' 'For this is my blood of the new testament, which 1sshed for many
tor the remission of sins" (Mtt. 26:28, Rm . 3:25); (7) ·redeems and
forgives "In whom we have redemption through his blood, the
forgiven'eu of sins ... " ( Eph . 1:7, Col. 1: 14); (8) ·iustifies, "Much more
then being now justified by his blood ... " (Am. 5:9); (9) ·sanctlfies,
"Wherefore Jesus also, that he might sanctity the people with his own

8-16 OZ. BOTIUS

--Etc..•

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volved in the school athletic
program and sponsors the junior
and senior high honor societies.
A'Spring wedding is plaiUled with
the date set for April tO

BAPTISM SAVES
Do you render the Lord's death on fhe cross as useless when you

MI.,••

Ofler valid NooMmbet 20, , . ,
througll- 2. 1112

,,,,,

AMESSAGE FROM lHE BIBLE. . . .By WiRiam B. Kughn .

5 lb. bl&amp;

See Us

,,

Ruth, Hamilton

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

SUGAR

SWEET Pf'AS

WELOOME

Quantity Rights Rmi'Jid - Prices Good lbru Weds., New. 25, 1981

INDIANAPOUS (AP)- When 77· ·.-.....!~---------j
year-old Margaret Sullivan won a
one-minute suponnarket shopping
spree, she figured her age would
slow her down and she'd only
manage to nab a Thanksgiving
turkey.
But with a little help from a store
clerk Thursday, she came away with
over $100 worth of groceries, inWe have been fortunate to
cluding a turkey for one holiday
have purchased a large
' table and a ham for another.
estate
which icludes 39 aniji 'l'1n one of their best cuso1ners, ''
tique
rings.
If you are In· '
she said. ''I've been shopping at that
terested
come·
in and lay
store for 17 years. They gave me a
one
or
two
away lor
helper. They're very nice people." ·
Christmas
.
Store manager Robert E. Bunnell
said contest rules don't allow store
20% OFF
employees to help load groceries inStones in rings are
to the cart. But since Mrs. Sullivan is
guaranteed for life.
a regular customer and "doesn't get
around too well," he decided to bend
the rules and allow one of his clerks
to lend a hand, he sam.
"I only went down one aisle, but
I'd tell the girl what I wanted, and
she'd run and get it. I felt like queen
Gallipolis
Second
for a day. Wilh prices the way they
. arel~uessldidn'ttakethatmuch. "

COKE, TAB,
SPRITE &amp;

-

SundaJ

Shopping spree winner
gets aid o(

.

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FRIENDLY
CARRY.CJUT
..,
SERVICE AVAIIMI E • I
' ..
FOOD STAMPS

GALUPOUS - Wedding plans flower girl.
have been completed lor Sara Jayne
Charlie Corbin will be best man
Simpkins, daughter ·of Mr. and Mrs. aod ushers will be Fred Wheeler,
Carl Simpkins, Gallipolis, and Jell John Davis and Todd Lockhart.
Burger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ringbearer will be Sam Waits of
Burger,Jlso of Gallipolis.
Columbus. Sandy Petrie and.Laura
The wedding will take plac.: on Sclunidt will register guesls.
Nov. 28 at 1:30,p.m. at the Grace
A reception will follow in the churUnited Methodist Church, with Rev. ch social room, with Carolyn
· David Price ol Proctorville per- Cooper, of South Charleston, Janie
forming the ceremony.
Cooper, of Marietta, c'Dusins of the
vocalist Teresa Ford ac- bride, and Polly Hudson, of
. companied by Lisa Allen will Gallipolis, cousin of the groom ser·
provide a ball-hour of music before vin~. The custom of open church iwll
the service.
be observed.
Letty Walker will serve liS maid of
After a honeymoon trip to the
honor. Bridesmaids will be Ann Poconos, the couple will reside at 520
Epling, Lucy Norvell, and ViCki Spring Valley Drive.
Baxter. Leah Johnson will serve as

SUP.REME
,PURE CANE
SUNNY VALLEY

USDA GRADE A

••

(H)ICE!! .

SIORE 'HOURS: 8-9 Daily
11~

OUR MEAT IS

Wedding plans·complete

$.149

' 16 oz. can

J

786 North 2nd Sl
Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY BELL

ROYAL

16

RIVER VIEW

•

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couponsper

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Double Value
MliiY.AIIfACtUMI'I
.CGUPOII FIIIIOC II LUI

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Page-B-8

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

w. Va.

Nov. 22, 1981

·.

i.lnniversarie~------------------------------------ 1•
Newells observe 50th

.Williams reach· silver

Nov. 22, 1981

Pomeroy

Actlvitlea for lhe week of Nov. ~

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Senior
Citizens
Calendar

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November 22, 1911
Many of the things you've been
hOping would happen could
become rulltlos In the year ·
following your birthday. This will
1

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Mr. and Mrs. Newell
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs:
Blaine Newell will celebrate their
50th ;.edding anniversary on Sunday, Nov. 29, with an open house at
the First Christian Church
fellowship hall, 24 West State Street,
Athens, from I to 4p.m.
The celebration has been planned
by ·.their children, Harold Newell,

Chester; Lois Ashcraft, Ta)lmadge;
Royce Newell, Coolville; Joyce
Dailey, Athens ( Barbara Lindsey
Pickerington; and Carolyn Burch:
field, Orlando, Fia.
Mr. and Mrs. Newell have 13 grandchildren and 011e great-grandchild.
T~e couple requests that gifts he
omitted.

MIDDLEPORT - The 50th wedding anniversary of Elizabeth and
Paul (Pape) Keller was observed on
Nov. 14 at the Route I, Middleport
home of their daughter, Mrs. Paula
Rife.
Elizabeth Dalrymple and Paul
Keller were married on Nov. 14, 1931
at the Meigs County courthouse. Attending were their daughters and

.··

Co~sumer

from
By the Editors

When Conswner Reports 'looked at
mi~priced washing machines, they
found that all the machines did a
gOQd job of getting clothes clean.
TM 12 ma~hines tested were all top
loajjers - by far the most popular
lYP.&lt;' - and most were in the
moffer.ate price range. In CR's view,
the: higher-priced machines are
more C&lt;Jmplicated but not much
more useful.
1)\'o of the machines - the
Maytag A710 and the Sears 20721 arf"'&amp;lso avaUable in a special sudssaver model that costs $20 or $40
moi'e (respectively) than the standard model. This device Jets you
store the wash water for r.,.use .
However, unless there's a water
sho(.lage
your
area, the feature
isn't worthinthe
trouble.
Getting a mchine that's efficient
wit6 hot water IS worth the trouble,
because healing water is the most
expensive part of foind the laundry.
Thof. MayU.g and Whirlpool LA5800
we~ the most efficient users of hot
, water. They were also the most efficient toU.l-water users regardless
of temperature setting.
All the machines tested use comJl!lratively littleenergy. The Maytag
used·the very least.
If you have a lot of pennanent-

opinion.

sons-in-laws, .Bonnie and Richard
Owens and Paula and Worley Rife,
and Karen (Jackie) Thacker. A
daughter, Wanda Campbell, was
unable to attend.
Grandchildren and greatgrandchildren attending were Mike,
Debbie
and Mary,
Karen Art
Kauff,
Lisa
Kauff,
and Tim
Art, and
Jr.,
Tobin, Paul and. Jack Miller, Mike
Thacker, and Eric Owens.
Cards ~nd gifts were presented to
the rouple.
.
·

•

. Whether you line-dry or machin.,.
dry the wash, you want a washer
that extracts as much water as
possible. Norge and ' Ward's ronsistently removed the most. Linting
was no problem with any of the
tested models, but Sears and GE left
the least lint in t.he tests.
Overall, Maytag outscored all the
other washerl:i , as it has for several

CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby WiUiams, Rt. I, Crown City,
will celebrate their silver anniversary November 29 fr~m 2-6
p.m.
The custom of open house will be
observed at this celebration which
willbeeldattheProctorvilleJunior
Women's Club, Proctorville.

•
Mr. and Mrs. Williams ·are the · '··
parents of one ehild, and one grandehild, Mrs. Michael (Robin) Nichols
and son, Michael.
they were married Nov. 23, 1900,
at Kitts Hill, Ohio, by Rev. Orville
Carrico.
Friends' · presence is encouraged.
,,
The rouple requests no gifts.
,

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today for two reasons : (I) being
In the right spot at the right time;
and (2J, oltlers will be pulling
strings for you .

SAGITTARIUS CNav. 23·0ec.

21, You have a marv~lous faculty.
today for brightening the scene
wherever you go, A social
gathering will cease to be du II on·
ce vou enter the picture.

CAPRICORN CDoc. 22-Jan. 19)
You'll find a little friendly com·

petition very stimulating today.

Whars more Important Is that if
you do happen to win, you'll be a
gracious victor.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
Your basic philosophy, or ideas

vou

know from e)(perience will

work, can easily be conveyect

Joday to friends you want 10 help.
When you speak, they'll listen .
PISCES (Feb. 211-March 20J
You continue to be in a very

promising cycle in which you

benefit In some manner from
things others Initiate. However,
these advantages may not be
evident today .

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) In

your Involvements today, do

~

years. Maytag has a low frequencyof-repair record. It also has a hefty
price tag.
If you don't want to pay the $459 to
$589 1$521 average) that Maytag
costs, buying a Whirlpool can save
you more than $100. It was No. 2 in
the ratings, has an average frequen·
cy·of-repair record and cost from
$360 to ~ In our buying •urvey.
Speed Queen and Sears were ranked

FALL &amp; WINTER
COATS

313 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport , Ohio 45760

November 25-29, 1981
Services Begins
At7:00 P.M.

next.

For Conswner Reports' rating of
dishwasher detergents and another
household cleaner, send $1 to CONSUMERS, P.O. Box 461, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019. Be
sure to ask for the reprint on
detergents.
(C ) 1981, Conswners Union

t

I

20%
OFF

THANKSGIVING
PRAISE SEMINAR!!!

rou. butter,

Buy Closs if;eds

.

~~w~aum.
Wedneada,7 - Johnny Mar- 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

p.m..
Tbunday, NOll. • - Qoeed•
Frida:r,No¥.27 Ooeed
The Senior Nulrltloo PrG1ram will
III!I'Vetbe followln8 1111111118 :
Monday - Porlt
pattie,
parsley
potatoes,
uuertraullcaraway aeed, darlr:
bread, butter, haneM cake, milk.
Tueoday - Turkey, dreulng and
gravy, wtnler aquuh, gnin beans,

zettl/cheNe, lopping, broccoU,
pineapple Iliad, Italian bread, butter, !ap!oca, mliiL
Tharlday- CICIM&lt;I.
Friday- ao.d.
OlOke of beverage zerved with

•-se

eacbmeal.

PRE-CHRISTMAS
SALE

.

CONnNUES UNTIL NOV. 2Ith

"Servlce!J rendered on a non-

'

dlacrim!natorv buls. ''

Astrograph

everything In accordance with

your highest standards and
ideals. Something wonderful

could mult.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 201
Even though this may not be a
normal work dav for you, you

could come up with

a very

profitable business Idea. Jot It
down so .that you can use It
tomorrow .

,

G,EMINI

(May 21-Juno 20J

portunltles

you get today to

Take

advantage

Of

any · op· ~

develop closer relationshiPS With
persons you now kno'N casually.
New alliances may result .

CANCER (June 21·July 22J
This Is a 9ood day fo tackle
proiects you've left half-finished

up to this point. You're extremely

resourceful

at · getting things

done.
LEO (July 20-Aug. 221 Try to

find activities to cfllllenge your
imagination and creativity. You
could come up with something
you would be very proud Of.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·5ept, 22) Con,
dltiOns couJd t~tvelop · unex· ~

pecledly that could make, It

possible to get something vou
You'll recognize the
signals.

want.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Lady

L.uck tends to favor you today In

situations you personally Initiate.
It there's a venture you' ve wan·
ted to promote. this is the right
day tolaun&lt;:h 11.

NOYt'"ber 23, 1911
People basically like you. and
you have mort frlondo than you
may realize. Thil coming year
pals you mav never have fUlly ap·
preciated will be helpful to you In
ways which really count.
SAGITTARIUS (Nav. 23-0tc.
211, Seek the company of friends
tOday who are hopeful, en·
thuslastlc

and

Interested

,

a

real

sense of

AQUARIU~ (Jan. 20-Ftb. 19)
Have faith in methods today

which have' worked successfully
for you previously. This Is one of
rhoS@ days when Lady Luck will

follow familiar footsteps.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcll 201 A

big change will begin to occur
this time In a situation vitally lm-

portantto you . The ~hilt will start

to facilitate a condition for which
you've been hoping.

ARIES (March 21-Apr/1 19)

You are likely to gain more from
partnership arrangements toda.y
than you will from efforts of your
own. Cooperation spells success
and progress.

TAURUS (April 20-May 201

Those In authority at your iobwill

20% ro·3Q%

OFF

EVERY WATCH IN STOCK

too terge or cumbersome for
others to manage' today can beef·
flclently n'andted bv you . Assume

goals. Go after something big
that will give you
achievement.

~

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Situations which may be a little

In

progressive ventures. You could
prove lucky for each other.
CAPRI CORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19)
You are capable of substantial
accomplishments today; so try
I)Ot to waste your efforts on petty

AT

be carefully watching you at m1$
time . Perform at your best le.Jel.
It could mean a raise, or even ad·
vancement.

authority If n!!Cesoary.
CANCER (Junt 21-JUIY 22)
Allhouvh you'll be primarily con·
cerned In doing lor others tOday,
your good deeds will work for

.

NOW

20% OFF '

. ..

.~-·'·' ..
'

______. -.

IULOVA, ;SEIKO,
---......,;,._ CARAVELLI '

you, too, In the long run. Un·
selfishness has Its rewards.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Maintaining a positive attitude In all
Involvements will work wonders

lor you loday. Regardless of whal
occurs. think "victory."
VIRGO !Aug. 2S·Sopt. 22) Ways
can ba found loday, If you apply

~

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~

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FREE
ENGRAVING

FREE
RING
SIZING

FREE
GIFTWRAPPING

-

-

.__..s•'•o•RJWiiiiiiiii•D~Ij,tiisiiiiA,.~.•Niiiiiioiis_ _ 1~:
. .•

yourself, to either Increase your
Income or enhance your financial
base. Be 1 bit adventurous In

money matters.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23J Con·

tlnue to maintain control over
situations which are personally
imporlant . Don't. be afraid to
assert yourself where you feel It's

ALL

' ALL

STONE RINGS

14K GOlD
NOW

NOW . 25%oFF
/

necessary .

113 Court
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-2054

OFF

Chains, Bracelets, Earrings

FREE SIZING

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22J

Your ability to forecast the even·
tual outcome of events should be
right on target today . Don't
ignore strong, intultlve feelings
or hunches.

20%

....

1. :~

l ~·
(}If"'_
1;;
· '',\
i

342 2nd ·Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
446-2671

~====================================~~~~~~!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

"
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CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP

Monday, Nov. 23 - Cilorus, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 24 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15a.m.; 11llnkrjllvtng Dinner, 12 .
noon; Craft CluJ, 1-3 p.m.; BJrtb.
day Party, l:llllp.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 25 - Vinton.

cranberry fruit gelaUn,

The sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8· 9

.SANTA'S ELVES MAKE THE TOYS BUT HE
ORDERS HIS I I u I 1, «» i n I APPLIANCES
FROM POMEROY LA"DMARK. COME IN TODAy I
11
CU.T OUT THE MIDDLEMAN" AND SAVE.

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MICROWAVE
OVEN PRICED TO SELL-OUT!

Including

be.,·bur port.t~,.t

fl 7 Cycle Potwasher with
Power-Scrut&gt;e control g
Energy-Saver dry cycle Ill

• London fog

3-Level Power Wash™

system Ill Short Wash

• Aigner

cycle II Cherry veneer
wood top .
Mode l HOBB20

• LealhiiiS
• AH Purpose

Beautiful Color
Selection

~~~t0

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• fp •• LnL...
___
_

Announcing the Opening of
. MICHAEL SPINA
Oceanside, N., Y.
Teacher, Evangelist

Karen's Cut &amp; Curl
Beauty Salon

300 Second Ave.
Lafayette Mall
Ga Ill polis, OH '.

GRAND OPENING
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23rd

\

Ell .Large

L3 cu. ft. capacity
1111 Automatic temperature
conlrol.ll!ll 35 Minule 2-Speed
timer IIIII 3 Power levels with
defrost cycle I!B Handsome
black glass front.

OPENING SPECIAL
ONEWEEKONLY '1800
PERMS
Reg. $25 NOW

that handles them well. CR
engineers h•ve found that agitating
in cool water (as opposed to simply
dousing with eold water) is the best
method for cooling permanentpress. Maytag, Whirlpool, Speed ,
Queen HA7001 and Sears use that

PH . 446·3055

HOURS :
11 :KI&lt;l.m . t ll5p.m
Monday thru Sa lurd&lt;ly
Eveninos b~ Appotntmcnl •

LOC.alecl -4 Milt'S South ol Glll!ipol is on Rf .

1--Turn RiQht Ill Clipper Milts- 5th
hOuse on R lght- Walch lor SlgM
Owner &amp; Operator : Kar~n ChciJalier

-·

..•"
.:

Model RE928Y

SAVE 550

30" HOTPOINT
SELL-OUT PRICED!

IT OFFERS ASHORTER WASH PERIOD, &amp; USES
·up TO 24% LESS WATER THAN ITS OWN LOW-LEVEL SETTING!

'

"•

..as a plush. praci1Cd ·
Roqm Saver wa Recliner!

OHIO VALLEY

•

Cau&lt;hllft comfort that C.. 11 """ from
hood ta ..... while -..g you only lnct.
from .... wall ~ ' wtlh tuflod, loamfilled ·.~ .., ap'td back. · •dit 1 ' 'a
plOp-up I IWI
Gllu•'-'Y·

TAl-FREE

..•
•

•

period for you .
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 221
Good things could happen for you

.

r-;~i\iil~""":u;;;:=======::::;====-1

press items, you'IJ want a machine

'

make It an. exciting end unique

•',I

Reports

method.
Sears and Whirlpool had the
largest tub capacities (useful
volwne). For very small loads, the
GE WWA8350B has a removable
plastic "mini basket," but it uses
about 17 gallons of water no matter
how few pounds of laundry you put
into it. Not worth the bother, in CR's

of Cousumer Reports

Mr. and Mrs. Williams

••'·

follows:

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

' Study, I p.m.; c.rdG~me~, 1-3
Bible

Astrograph

'

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27 at lhe Senior Citizens Center
located ot 220 Joc:Uon Pike are u ·

Middleport

_EVERY DIAMOND IN STOCK

••

Mr. and Mrs. Keller
Golden year~ celebrated

}

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addo--

•

:
UsesJu;:iBsk. hours per month" with energy.
saver
r
normal position ~ Efficient foam
insulAtion aJ 190 Cu ft. no-frost rel rigera tor·

Let Santa Check One

...

Substantial

penalty

::;:d~w~~Ooo . tar

for

premature

indlvittuals, up
u,oooon iointreturno.

EM:II DEPOSITOR IIISIJRm UP'lO $100,000 BY JHE FOI¢
~- fnlm
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steel oven liner • Llfl·off
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keeper and flwl/vegetable pans.

VALUE PACKED OVEN-RANGE!

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••

-

',. '

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5

i

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LOW
LOW

POMEROY
LANDMARK
w.
Jack
Carsey, Mgr.
Drive a llffle and save a lot-FrH delivery within 75 miles
Y" ' we service at your locill Hotpoint Dealer
Stont Hours: 8:30to5:3D. Mill Closeclats:DO P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gallla and Mann Counties.

PRICES Ill

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�•
Page-B-1 0-The Sunday Times-sentinel

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

Katie's Korner J

Melvin VanMeter, chief of the at 992-2049 and evenings at 992·2431.
Pomeroy Emergency Squad, in·
Now I know most of you will be
fonned us that the squad has
received a donation of ~.31 from treated to a delicious Thanksgiving
dinner but, as an added treat,
The
Modern
wouldn't it be nice to take your
Woodmen oi
family to see the last presentation of
America, camp
the Big Bend Minstrel Association
7230, Burlingham.
directed by Bob Hoeflich.
The donation to
The "Fall Follies" will be presenthe squad was
ted Saturday, Nov. 28, at Meigs High
made possible by
School. Curtain time is 8:10p.m.
money making
Advance tickets ·are now on sale in
projects sponPomeroy at New York Clothing,
sored by The
ModemWoodmen.
KATIE
• Swisher and Lobs~, Pomeroy Post
Chief VanMeter expressed sincere Office and The Daily Sentinel; in
thanks to The Modern Woodmen, all Middleport, Dutton Drug Store and
the residents of Burlingham and Village Phannacy; in Rutland,
Bedford Township for their generous Rutland Department Store.
Advance tickets are $1.50 each and
donation.
VanMeter stated " it is continued at the door they will be $2.
support like this from responsible
Do have a nice Thanksgiving and
citizens in the community that we hope to see you at the Big
rnakes !he efforts of the local volun- "Shew." II is outstanding as always.
•.
teer squads less.tedious.
"The officers and members of
Jeff McKinney, Middleport, was
camp 7230 are to he commended for very successful this year during the
all the contributions they make in bowc and arrow season on deer.
our conunurfity. It is nice to know
Jeff landed a nine point buck hack
that this organization is made up of of Pomeroy. The animal weighed hepeople who care about helping tween 250 and 300 pounds.
everyone converned," VanMeter
eoncluded.
Gig Powell reports that the newly
fonned Athens Ballroom Dance
Rose Sisson, Pomeroy, would like Club will be staging a dance at the
very much to locate a 1932 Pomeroy annory in Athens on Dec. 5 with
High School Yearbook.
Royal Oak Ballroom Dance Club
If any of you readers out there
members being invited to take part.
have one and would be willing to Providing music for danelng will be
loan it to Rose please give her a call.
the ·Tony Cwnbo Band. Local club
during the day she may be reached · members are to contact Powell fer
tickets and more info·nnatiolt.

be

will

served

following the program.
December 3, 10 a.rn.-3 p.m. - All
c'l'afl items to be included in the
Holiday Bazaar should be delivered
to Riverby. Any items not sold, will
be returned to the perosn who made
them.
Ile&lt;:ernber 5, I p.rn.-5 p.m. - All
baked goods to be included in the
Holiday Bazaar should be delivered
to Riverby.
December 6, I p.m.-0 p.m. Homes for the Holidays Tour of four
homes and Riverby, with homes
decorated by four local norists. In·
eludes the Holzer and Wetherholt
homes on First Avenue, the Eva~~
home on Third Avenue and the Johfi·

COAD
•
:seruor
.program
The COAD senjor nutrition
program menu for Uiis week at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy Is annoWICed. It follows :
Monday - Pork sausage pattie,
sauerkraut, parsley potatoes,
cooked apples, bread, butter, milk.
· Tuesday - Thanksdlnner dinner
Roast turkey, mashed
potatoes/gravy, ·dressing, green
beans, fruit salad, cranberry sauce,
cookie, roll, butter.
Wednesday - Johnny Marzetti,
broccoU, pineapple salad, tapioca,
l.tallan bread, butler, milk.
· Tbunday and Friday - Center
Clooed...!. 'lbanksgiving holiday.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
. milk or buttermllk served dally.
Please regiater in advance for lunch.

HARRISONVIu.E OES Past
Matrons Club will meet at the
home of Mrs. Marjorie Rice,
Monday, 7:30p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY United
Methodist Men's Organization
will meet at 7:30 p.rn. Monday at
the Asbury United Methodist
Church in Syracuse. The IJ1eetirig
is open to all men of Meigs County.
MEIGS

COUNTY United
Me,thodis~ Men, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
•

POMEROY - Religious Real·
finnation Sunday at Pomeroy
Masonic Temple 2:30 p.m. Sunday under sponsorship of
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Roy~! Arch
Masons. Sennon by Rev. Robert
Kuhn. Masonic bodies of both
Meigs and Gallia Counties in·
vited. Refreslunents following
service.

MIDDlEPORT · POMEROY
branch of AAUW will meet
Tue:;day at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs
Inn. Roberta Wilson and Rachel
Downie will present the program,
"Money Talks." Refreshments
will be served and yearbooks will
be distributed.

POMEROY
Ladles
Auxiliary, Veterll\lS Memorial
Hospital, Tuesday at 7:30p.m. in
the hospital cafeteria. An exchange student from Denmark,
Nette Verlang, will be the guest
speaker. She is attending
Wahama High School.
MEIGS
'ATHLETIC
BOOSTERS will meet ·at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday to finalize plans for
the sponsorship of the Big Bend
Minstrel Association Saturday
night production.

POMEROY
American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew Weblter
Post 39, Pomeroy, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. at the legion hall.
THE
HARRISONVILLE
Golden Age Club 'fill meet
Tue$y at 7 p.m. at the toWnhall.
All members are asked to attend.

GALLIPOUS - Pembroke
Club meeting, 8 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Michael Corbin.

•1·soao

rEELING GREAT - ··Ohio Slate quarterback Art
Schlichter I• lifted info the air Iller he IICOI'ed a ltueltdown in the •econd quarter by Ohio Slate's Gary

.,, .

•

OFF

A beautiful arrangemem. A lovely piece ol Eanhenware in
neurral tones ro march every decor. That's our ThanbtJivina
Bouquet In A Crnvy Boar. A beaurilul, thoughdul, re-usable
gilt that will be used and remembered all year long.
Fint it's a wonderful cenrerpiece. Then it becomes a handy
aervina piece. FiUed with de~cioua gravies and sauces.

•

So oend the gilt they'll remember aU yeor lona.
Thomkl!£iving is Thursday, November
ro gobble up.

'/J&gt;.

It'• a gih they're

lUre

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
992·2281

Way America Sends Love"
106 Butternut Ave.
PH. 992·2039 or 992·5721 ·

L

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It has Its own vent and lght.
It looks bult-ln,
but you do It :yourself.

•

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••
•

Litton Microwave
Cookiug School
November 30th·

..

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TheMia
N~e:~~~~
Wave
•UUon Eri

7:00P.M .

CALL FOR RESERVATIONS
742-2211 '

--S2QO

*e FeMures

-~· Ceoldng Perfolll•tce
- Time-s-'" eor.do
• Largo 1.1 cubic !oat ...... aMiy

••
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Retail Price ........ $899.95
Store Discount ..•.. $150.00
Total. • ; ......... $749.95
+ Flletory Rebate •.• $ 50.00
Sale Price
After Rebate ....... $699.95

SAVE S150

•••
•

MICROWAVE COOKI~G SCHOOt

a

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
.
RUTLAND, OHIO
'

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CALL

1'1-'"*---...

.•

_.,...

NO OBUGATION TO
. BUY!!!

..,..,:::,~

e

742~2211

u,...,_._..,,
........ fOU ..........

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Mldo • c..111nt.

•'

•

attempts of 26 and 23 yards in the ds to the Buckeyes' 18-yard line.
Schlichter then drove the
third quarter to put the Wolverines
back on top 9-7.
Buckeyes 82 yarda in 13 plays for
Michigan had several chances to Ohio State's other touchdown, taking
put the game away but never could the hall over himself with 9:~7
break the Ohio State defense.
remaining in the second quarter.
On a third-and-goal situation at
Michigan drove to the ohio State 6the Ohio State B-yard Une, Michigan yard·line early in the third quarter,
quarterback Steve Smith tried to but Smith lost 3 yarda on a third-anddrill a pass to tight end Craig 3 situation at the Ohio State 6 and
Dunaway but it was tipped by Ohio Haji..Sheikh kicked his second field
State defensive hack Shaun Gayle goal.
and intercepted by Buckeyes rover
Michigan's Tony Jackson picked
back Kelvin Bell.
off a Schlichter pass intended for
The hall was brought out to the Cednc Anderson at the Ohio State 48
Ohio State 20-yard line and in the third quarter. However, the
Schlichter marched ..llle Buckeyes Wolverines had to settle for another
down the field for the l'lloning touch- field goal when fullback Stan Ed·
down in 13 plays.
wards was slopped after I yard on a
·
third-and-3
situation at the Ohio
Turnovers played a key role for
State
7-yard
line.
both teams throughout the game.
It marked the third consecutive
!.ate in the first quarter, Bell tipyear
that the horne team has lost this
ped another ~ss - .Uso intended for
Dunaway- to Ohio Stale linebacker . traditional season-ending game bel· ·
Marcus Marek who returned it 8 yar· ween these two longtime rivals.

f;leveland coach not taking
today.'s encounter lightly

CLEVELAND (AP) - '!'he what they want to do offensively,"
been decided by a total Of 10 points.
Browns are :HI, and the R~liano said. "They've had 1 lot
The Browns won last 'year's conJllfiiW'gb Steelers are W. But even of injlli'lll. Bill they have Bradllbaw,
test at Municipal Stadium 27·26. ·
jf pitllbojrgh was 0-11, . Bl'!llml
StllllWOI'tb and. Swann and the best
Caadl Sam Rutlgllano wouldn't taJre offenalve Une In football. In the
Morton Doubtful '
ilariclat• pme llgbtly,
drive, they're going to do what they
CINCINNATI (API - Denver
''Reprdl- of what position did liilt Sunday: get the ball to Broncos Coach Dan Reeves said.
tbty're In, they always play us ex· StallWOI'tb and Swann, the guys with Saturday he doubted 31-year-old
tNmely well - as evidenced by the Super Bowl rings on four fingers."
veteran Craig Morton, the No. 1
fact that we've ooly beaten them onClevelimd'a victory over the 49ers
ranked-passer in the AFC, would
ce in leur years," Rutigliano said.
Cam. on a lUt-minute, 24-yard field play against Cincinnati bere today.
.Bath clubs are chasing Cincinnati, goal by Mall Bahr, formerly a 4ller Morton suffered a shoulder spiain
a., In the American Conference and, before thai, a Sleeler.
during Denver's victory last week
West, with just five games left in the
''If lllaU Bahr was with us in the
over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
National Football League season. beglnninjJ of the year, we could have
Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg said
·Yet neither Rutigliano nor Plt· won one more game, and that's
he planned no difference in
'tsbursh Coach Check Noll believes
preparations for Denver
conservative," Rutigliano
the II~ chase wlU end for Suriday's said. "We probably could have won
loser.
two more."
.
Both Cincinnati and Denver have
''Thia ls a pivotal gal)le for uil, as it .
It's very possible tl)e · kicking
identical 8-3 records. Denver. leads
.ja for Pittsburgh," Rutigliano said. game will again be important this
the Atnerican Football Conference
."Bul I don't think it's going to be \reek, sirice the last three Steelers- Western Division and Cincinnati
totally over until four or five weeks Browns g~ in Cleveland have
leads the Central.
from now. I think this ll going to be a
lq five weeka, and a lot of m,terestlng things are going to happen."
"I don't know bo'A&gt;the rest of the
season wlll work out," NoU said.
"We m just getting ready for this
•
grune. I'm not in the prediction
business."
.
Ctntntl Ohillu•
N.U..I .......I LI!IC:IIe
The steelers and Browns both
Minuesul.ti
7 I
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.WukwC.....iCitt
Gram81ty
0: 217 249
anapped !~arne losing · streaks
r..wr.Div'-llla
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217 .115
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PA.
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0 ,..
lui week, Pltllbw-gb beating Atlan- Miami
Tampa lla)'
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7 3
I 211 122 .182
Chicll~O
3 8 0 16t 152 m
ta 34-20 and Cleveland edging San N.V. .Ietl
I 211 I'll
Wrwtrm DiviNhlll
0 117 192 .515
Buffalo
FI'IIICllco 1$-12.
San Francsco
8 3
0 137 113 .727
0 24CI 2rl7 .112
2 9
NewEnolnd
0 ,.., 223
;
o II$ m .otl AUcmLI
. Tbe aftenslve lholr by Pllt.lbursh
I 10
Balllmore
I.OSAnJ(el~s
6
0 237 131 .116
wU 111 bat Iince the seeond'w!lek of CtnciMIU CH&amp;nllli\1.._
Nt&gt;wOrlt!ns
3
0 i3t 131 .%13
3 0 292 201 ,1%7
Sunday
$
0 243 219 .51.1
Plttlllurgh
the u qUII'Ierback Terry
' Denver ut Cincinnati
$
0 •• ~
cleveiMd
Br •m.., COIIDIL'ted on If of 23
OetroU 1:11 Chll'.lt(o
$ 8
.&lt;55
0 . . "'
GNen Bay at Tam~ Blly
~ filr 253 yards and a cl. .
Wntenl Dfvll5.1
New England at Buffalo
0 ... 1$6 .m
3
I:JenYff
New Orlet~ns at Hou~ton
~the
7
0 23 211
KoNYCIIy
NV Giants at Philade~hia
$
Tbe pme marked the flrlt lime
0 31:i 291 .515
Pittsbur.w:h Hl Clewlan
0
174
Ill
.455
Scallle HL Kur\SII,ll: City
lllnc:w tilt Steelers' IS-71rlumph over Seattle
I 7
0 196 249 364
st.Uuhl aL ,Ba!titnorll
'end five weeb earlier that.
~c..fernc~
Miami at New , Yurt Jets
-Divllleo
Sa&amp;n Diego at ,Oakland
PltiiiJirlh receiWi'ii Jolm StallWor- Phi~
2 0 217
San Francim:u at Los An~eles
th and~ SWIM. bealthy for Dallu
I 3 0 :ro; 2%2 J%7
Wa11hington at Dallas
0
222
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0 210 270 .45S
Minne.YOta at Allanta
0
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"l'lttlbur8h ll atrualln&amp; With

ByCHUCKSCHOFFNER .
AP Sports Writer
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - PhU ,
BlatciM:r rushed for a career high
247 yards and scored two touchdowns as !9th-rated Iowa defeated
Michigan Stale 31-7 in Big Ten Conference football Saturday to earn Its
first trip to the Rose Bowl in 23
years.
The Iowa victory, cuupled with
Ohio State's 1f-9 decision over

Michigan, made the Hawkeyes and the field after the game, surrounded
Buckeyes co-champion ·of the Big the Hawkeye players and tore down
Ten.
both goal posts.
Iowa, which had endured 19
Iowa, which finishes 6-3 for the
straight non-winning seasons prior regular season and 11-2 in the con· .
to thll year, becomes the Big Ten's ference,last played in the Rose Bowl
representative in the Rose Bowl following the 1958 season. The
New Year's Day beeause Ohio State Hawkeyes' last Big Ten chamhas been there more recently, going pionship was in 1960, which also was
two years ago.
the la•'l year Iowa won as many as
Hundreds of Iowa fans poured onto eight games in a season.
·

bel"'

Pomeroy

Ilia Co. as your

·····················~················································ ••••••••••••••
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S .
•
It saves caUnter Jllace.

:
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flttveJand

Plan to be with us for our Christmas
House on Sunday, December 6th.

THE FABRIC SHOP

WDUaDill on Saturday in Alilt Arbor, Mich. OSU went on
to win, U-9. IAP Laserpbolo).
•

.

A Thanksgiving Bouquet
in a Gravy Boat

m w. 2nd

·1

Iowa shares Big 10
title with .Buckeyes

-

LET SINGER HELP YOU OUT
CLOSE OUT PRICES

Third. Florists are Amyl 's Floral
Fashions, Dudley's, French City
Florists and Smeltzer's Flower
Shop. All arrangements available
for purchase . Riverby also
decorated by all four florists.
Refreslunents and Holiday Bazaar
at Riverby. Chaired by. Vivian
Kirkel. Tickets $2.50 to visit all
homes. Available at Riverby, PJs,

••
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••
••

By HARRY ATKINS
AP Sport. Writer
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -Ohio
State quarterback Art Schlichter
swept I yards around his right end
for bls second touchdown with 2:50
remaining in the game to lead tho
Buclceyea to a lf-9 Big Ten fonthall
victory over Michigan Saturday:
The victory guaranteed the
Buckeyes at least a share of the Big'
Ten championship· with a 6-2 conference record and dropped
Michigan lo 6-3 in the Big Ten. Both
teams fi~ the regular season
with6-3 overall records.
Scf!lichter, a 6-foot-3, 208-pound
senjor who has started evef)' game
during his four years at Ohio State,
plunged I ·yard for a touchdown in
the second quarter which put the
Buckeyes ahead 7-3 at the half.
Michigan place-kicker Ali Haji·
Sheikh, who booted a 19-yard field
goal in the first quarter, was ~ood on

MEIGS COUNTY Grange Of·
ficers conference · 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. '

••
••
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•

NOV. 30
7:00 P.M •
CALl. fOR

RESERVATIOfiS

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
'

THE MEIGS AREA H~
Association will meet Tuelllly, at
7:30p.m. at~ Racine Church of
the Nazarene. The Rev. Jan.es B.
KltUe, pastor of the 8)'1'KU1e
Church of the Nazarene, wiU be
the guest speaker. There will be
special singing. The public Is Invited to attend.

Tuesday

-- . - -

son home at the corper of Cedar and

•••
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c
OSU comeback
•
nips Michigan
Nov. 22,1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

DON'T KNOW WHAT TO GET
HER FOR CHRISTMAS?

wall coverings, table rnats, bells,
purses, etc., depicting the heritage
of a small colony of Laotian textile and from all trustees.
December 7, 8 ·p.m. - Fourth
artist&lt;, through the Ohio Foundation
Doeent
Cl!'ss, instructed by Janet
on the Arts,lnc.
Byers,
on
art forms, "hlstory and ap·Gallery Hours, Tucosday and
preciation.
Anyone interested urged
Thursday, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.;
Saturday and Sunday, I p.m. unlil5 to attend.
Deeember 13, 4 p.m.-0 p.m. -Anp.m . .
nual
Family Christmas Party for
November 23, 8 p.m. - Third
F
AC
members and families .
Docent Class, instructed by Janet
Cl1aired
by Suzy Reiser anti Jerry
Byers, on art forms, history and apSkaggs. Refreslunents planned by
preciation. AIJ who are interested
Martha Willis. Special en-·
should attend.
tertainment at River by.
November 24, 9:3().11 :30 p.m. December 14, 8 p.m. - Fifth and
Final workshop on bread dough ornaments; many need to be painted. final Docent Class, instrueted by
Anyone interested, urged to attend. Janet Byers, on art forms, history
These wilt be for the Holiday Bazaar and appreciation.
at Riverby on December 6, 1981.
December 20, 2 p.m.-4 p.m. . Christmas Musicale at Rivcrby,
Janet Byers, instructor.
November 30, 8 p.m. - Poetry chaired by Phyllis Rowan.
Reading by Mark Harslunan and r------------L.=::::::
members of his creative writing
class. Members of the class will read
some of their original work, as will
It fits OVS"J'OIII'range.
Harshman. The public is invited. ••• .
Refreshments

.Monday

The Women and Men's
Fellowships of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will have a
farnUy dinner Sunday at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly campsite at 5 p.m. Those attending
are to take a covered dish and
their own table service. Al7 p.m.
there will be a special service
with Rick Snyder, speaker, and
Jesus' Company of Malta.

u'/.!"0

pieces of needleworks, including

There will be a hymn sing at
the Nease Settlement Chuch
featuring a cavaliers Sunday at 2
p.m.

DER CREEK ~ Deer Creek
Church will hold a revival begin·
ning Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Evangelist Richard Garrett.
Special ~inging nightly. Don
Price, Pastor. Everyone
welcome.

:.../

Annual River. Recreation Festival
Exhibit and II) The Common Thread
of the Laotian Hmong. Fifty-three

'

Sunday

c0

pastels, watercolors, acrylics, etc.,
recipient of many awards during the

I

Coming Events

Riverby Calendar
. Exhibii for the month of November - II Eighteen works of William
Missar of Chicago, Illinois, including

Nov. 22, 1981

••••••
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touehdow••·

a.,

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=~

I

NFL standings

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,.,""

COMING 111ROUGH - l.Jnlvenity of Miclllgan
fullbackSianleY Edwardll (32) receives a ha,..ofl from
q•rterback Steve Smltb (16) during flrllt quarter ac-

tloa against the Ohio State l.Jnlverslly Buekeyes in Ann
Arbor Saturday. &lt;AP Laserphoto).
,

Predict Ball State will capture MAC cage title
th with 2tltl. Ohio University and
Miami tied for eilhth with, 206, and
Central Mlchlpn was lui lrlth 1111.
The Clrdliiala, 20-10 overall 1ut
lle&amp;IOII, are led by All-League guard
Ray McCallum. The :HI junior, the
MOlt Valuable Player of the leque
tournament 1111 aprlng, averaged
18.4 polntl lut - · Tbe other .
. l'llumiDII 111arten m 11-4 -'or
~ ,Jobn Willlaml and ..
6 .tor lorwlrd 11Gb Alblrtlail.
Yodlr, .....- . leell.7.foat ..uor
.... Jfll Plrklr llllldl the by to

coach said.
Toledo, always a title factor under
Northern Illinois, 17·12 last veteran Coach Bob Nichols, lost the
abo will build around an all· league's Most Valuable Player Ialit
culfa .;...,oe selectlon, 6-9 senior lor- season, Harvey Knuckles. But
wankenter Allen Rayhorn. Despite Nichols lllill has three holdover
belnC double-teamed most of the reguiars, 8-7 junior forward&amp; Mitch
time, Rayhom ave1'118ed 18.1 points Adamek and Dan Boyle and ..1
and 11.1 reboundl a year qo.
sophomOre guard Tim Reiser.
Till bl8 problem for the· Huskies
It wlll taJre a much better te.m to
. . , be tbelr IChedull. They play Win the eo11ference this ttartllan
Ion, DePaul, llotre Dame, Nor- lui year," Nldiots llld. "There are
tbw lenand~Loyola.
1 lot of lellill with I grat deal of
"I doa't llllow' If the scbedule ls to meterial back."
advlillap,"' said Northern
Tbe Rockets were one of five
. llllDall Cotlcb Jollll McDoupt "We teams that lied lor the ~
IIIIC. ........ Olf I II
..... Cllli ..., • to 10 mlnalel, heft Ill tlllDk lbaut not belni
·cbampiOIIIhip. Flnllblnc at
10-8 were Toledo, Northern llllnoil,
will baa fiDGd.~" !be BID stale clemorillled."

Ball' State, Bowling Green and
Western Michigan. Bait State won
the league tournament.

,

..

PERRYS~:~t~~·: 'r::J~Uo-01 T~ Ml~ ·

American Conference Media AuoclatlW~.'s.
prMktiona for the 11111-83 ballketball finl!ih in tho

..,.. (with fint place vote» in parenlheaes): •
- I. BaDa.!lll
2.N.-(Iill
.. , _ ( 4 )

)16
$11

• .•. llll:hlpn Ill

413 '

u : . - ('l
e. Bowlin&amp; C....,
1.1on1a.
L(lhloU.
llrtilml, UNo
II. C.lllldlipn

•·

Polloi&lt;
:181

tl8

• '
•
1M

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�w. Va.

'Ohio-Point

Nov. 22, 1981

Meigs in· preview victory
ATHENS- The Meigs Marauders
got the 1981-ll2 baaketbaU season 'Iff
to a good start with a 25-18 victory
over the Federal Hocking Lancers in
the Athens Shrine Preview here
Friday evening.
CoachGordonFiaher'sMarauders

points, Roger Kovalchik end Randy
Meigs to overtake a two point &lt;leficlt Murray added six each. Mark
and take a six point lead. Bob Ashley Friend added one for the winners.
led the way with six poinla during For the Lancers, David Glaaa had
the spurt, paving the way for the :IS- nine while Allen Koker, Brian
'
.
18 win.
Fi.sher, Carl Thompaon, and Pat
Ashley Ied· the winners ·witlJ '12 Tabler added two apiece.

r-;;~;;;::===============::;::~=;:;
t~t:::nssec:':::~~w.atlll
·~ .Marks The Spot For All Your
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Building Needs
~=ba~sf:~=b:~~~-r~~
CASH &amp; CARRY SPECIALS
overcame
deficit
at thestonned
end of ·
the first period,.
. then

~

clubs missed several key shol,ol
during the first quarter,dt!SJ)ite
moving the ball well on offense.
Meigs substituted throughout the
game with every player getting to
see action by the end of the firSt
period.
An eight point spurt 111idway

2x4 Precut Studs

NAllS J2?j

•1. 19

By SCOTT MilLER
FORT MITCHELL, Ky. - Forward Richardo Hairston came off
the bench to score 16 points and haul
down six rebounds here Friday night
to lead Rio Grande College to its
fourth consecutive win of the season,
an 84-79 decision over Thomas More
College.
With t\lree Rio Grande players
getting in e-rly foul trouble, Red·
man coach John Lawhorn turned to
Hairston off the bench and the 6-3
junior forward from Columbus
responded with a six of seven card
from the floor, and four of five at the
foul line for the 16 markers. In four
games this aeaaon, Hairston has
avenaged 10.8

Fischer came back witb a baseline
Hairston netted a follow tip and
ds per game in a reserve role.
The win upped the Redmen to 4-0 Kevin CUtleman a pair of free drive to cut the margin to six, at 77··
on the seljS()n heading into Monday throws to give the Redmen a big 13 71, with just 54 seconds remaining.
night' s clasil with Union College in' point lead at 47-34 in'the first minute
Vince Wollenburg notched a three
Barbourville, Ky. The aeaaon· of ,the second haU and the lead point play to put the lead back at
stayed beiween seven and 13 until · nine and be appeared to ice the .
openin~ I""" dropped Coach Jim
Connor's Rehels toO. I.
I
the. final two minutes of the game game when he hit another drive at
Neither team could 'generate when the Rebela started .tlleir' final the 34 second mark. But Wollenburg
11\UCh offense in the early going charge of the game dOW!) the stret· was whistled lor a foutafter.the shot
Friday night. The lead see-sawed ch. · ·
and Fischer calmly turned it into
back and forth for most of the initial
Hairston had given the Redmen a two free throws.
stanza befi&gt;re J:lairston and 6-7 fresh- comfortable 11 point lead at 77-116
At the 24-second mark Rebel Jim
man forward Dan CUrry connected witll a three point.play with just over Fox was fouled as.he attempted a 13on back·to-back drives to put the two minutes remaining in the game, footer and converted it into a pair of
Redmen in the lead by six.
but the boats came stonnlng back. free throws. FisCher and Fox. each
The visitors stretched the margin ' Bob Homes netted a drive on a base- netted two straight at the line as Mcto nine, at 43-34, with a rally ju.st line drive and Jeff Fischer one of Donald and Jerry Mowery picked up
hefore the half.
two at tile foul line as Corry was their fifth fouls to cut the margin to
62-79 with ju.st 16 seconds showing.
whistled for his filth foul.

~unday

Times·Sentin c i-Page-C·3

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RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (APITom Seickmann of the United Stale&gt;
fired a par-72 and maintained a I·
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tournament.
Sweden's Jan Sonnevi shot a 70 on
the 6,349-yard ltanhanga Golf Club
course and wao second at 139. Tied
for third place at 141 were Ramon
Muno-l of Venezuela and Jaime Gonzalez of Brazil, both of whom had 70s
. in the oecond round . .

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76ers 99, Cavaliers 94
Julius Erving scored 28 points and
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AVERY GOOD SB.ECI10N OF 1981 &amp; 1~
(451; Jeff Moles (211; David Sands (11) and Keith
Clark (41. Southern wun, 43-38.In the othr"haU-game"
exhlbitlons, Eastern outlasted Soutbwestera, 2&amp;-21, and
North GaUla topped -Hanaan Trace, 35-27. - Kris
Wllson and Kelly Whitlatch photo.

-.,.

R•mlnglon ' 170 V•n~llb Shotgun·

9

BEAGLE DRIVES- Southern's Zane Beagle (21)
drives underneath hoop In Friday's annual Southern
Valley Athletle Collferenee Cage Preview at Kyger
Creek High School. On left is Tornadoes' Tyrone
•. Brinager. Kyger Creek players are J . .D. Bradbury

-·'.''

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· The Rebelo had a chance to pull to for 80 percent compared to ' the:
wllhin one when they picked off tile Rebels 37 of 45 card for 82 percent. '
inbounds pa!!S on the ensuing play,
Rio Grande was successful on 30 of.
but they misfired at the 10 second 59 field goal attempts for 51 percen£,,
mark and Tom Jutze cleared it for while Thomas More &lt;'Ould hit only 21
the Redmen. Jutze was intentionally Qf 571or 37 percent.
:;
fouled and converted . both of the
The Rebels held a 29-24 advantage;
charity shots to ice the win.
dn the boards with Fox clearing si~
Hairston led a balanced Rio G•·an· and Baumann five.
~
de attack with 16 points, while McRIO GRAND~ 184) - McOonaldc
Donald and Curry chipped In 14 5·4· 14; curry 3·8· 14; Castleman • · 7-~
10; Mowery 0· 1-1 ; Penrod f ·O·&amp;J .
each, Wollenburg 11 and Casteman Hairston
6·4· 16; Jutze 3·2·8; Wollen.·:
10.
burg 5· 1· 11 ; Burson 0·2·2. Totals 30.-!.
•~ •
Fox led Thomas More t;vllege with 24-84
THOMAS MORE &lt;711)- Baumann,
:ll points while Ken Baumann netted
5·5· 15: Fox 6-10·22; Gray 2-3-7; Nest-:
· heide2·0·4; Sch neider 1· 1·3; Smith~&lt;
15.
6·6: Kuhl 1·5·7:
F ischer 1·5· 7r
A total of 57 fouls were called in Leni han 2·2·6; Romes 1-0 '1. Totats·~
'
the game with the Redmen making 11·37-79.
Ho11ftime score - Rio Grande ,
Tho
mas
More
34.
~ood on 24 of 30 al l he

Open Daily 10·9
Sunday H

ANYTHING

·Lend! breezed past Uruguay's
Diego Perez 64, 6-1, while Vilas
defeated Rolf Gehring of West Ger·
many 7-!i, 64.
The other' semifinali~1s are un~
seeded Pedro Rebolledo of Chile,
who moved on with a 7~, 6-1 defeat
of sixth-seeded Andres Gomez of
Ecuador and West Genriany's An·
dreas Maurer, who scored a 1&gt;-7, 7~.
7-5 victory over Spain's Juan
Aguilera.
·
Mayer triumphs .
BOLOGNA, Italy (API - Third·
seeded Sandy Mayer defeated fifthseeded fellow Ameriuan Tim Mayo!·
te 7-G, 6-2, and Czechoslovakia's
Tomas Smid, seeded fourth, downed
eountryman Jiri Granat 6-2, 3-6, !Hl,
to move into the semifinals of the
$75,000 Volvo indoor tennis tournament.

1he

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IN SULATIOft·

. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (API
- Top-seeded Jvan Lend! of
Czecboslovakia and bometown
favorite Gulllenno Vilas led tile advance to the semifinals at the
$175,000 Argentine Open tennis tour·
KOVALCHIK SHOOTS - Meigs' Roger Kovalchik • Friday's pre-season cage preview at Athens. The.
; ;~ ?41 flteil a jump shot against Federal Hocking during · Marauders won, 25-18." On left is Melg•' Greg Taylor
I321. -David Harris photo.

'6.39 .

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Middleport-GallipoliS, Ohio-f'oint Pleasant, VV.

Hairston .comes off bench to pace .84-79 Rio .victory

through the seeond period 'allowed

a~

Pomeroy

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Pomeray, OH.

PH.992-6614

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Ky., Friday a1pt. Pewid IICOI'ed elpt poblll utile Redmen lleld oil a
late Rebel raDy Ia neord their fourth·~ vlclary Ia nm their rec~rd
tot-O. (PbotobyScoUMDier).

49.97

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KUMAMOTO, Jajlall (AP) The ICanlu City Royals acored .six
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befort a,aoo lpeCiators in this
aoul!wn Japeeae city Saturdoy.
eailcepclon had a solo homer and

"'

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The 'llctary evened tbe American

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Page-C-4-The Sunday Times-sentinel

engage

1

in

a celebration

of

another sort.
Forty minutes later, as time is
recorded on the clock suspended
from the concrete and metal
dome, the champions of college
basketball for 198H2 are
crowned. Somecne, perhaps one
of those two young men, has a
pair of scissors in his hand.
Voices in discord reverberate
through the girders as the net is
cut down.
The young man may be Sam
Perkins, a sophomore student at
the University of North Carolina.
II may be Stuart Gray, a firstyear student at the University of
California at Los Angeles. Or, it
may be one of many other college
students who has prepared his
mind and body with the same
goalin mind.
It is now, a time for conjecture.
Let's say, !01' the purpose of
argwnent, the two inen in the cir~
cle wiU be Perkins and Gray. At 1
the end of Perkins' bench sits
Dean Smith, ending his 20th
season as basketball coach at
perennial power North Carolina,
but never a winner of the national
championship. At the end of
Gray's bench sits l;arry Farmer,
in his first sea son as ·coach of

UCLA.
Experience aside, the two
coaches have many things 'In
common. They find an abundance of experience on their
teams, melding wilh some of the
nation's best new players. The
experts are split down the middle
on which is the best team in the
country.
Smith returns three of his five
starters from a team that went to
the final game bf the Final Four
last season before losing 63-50 to
Indiana. They are Perkins, a 6foot-9 center who became a starter as a freshman ; James Worthy, a 6-9 junior whom many con-

sider the besl forward in the
country, and Jimmy Black, a 6-3
senior guard who had 188 assists
last season.
While losil&gt;~ s•cond-~eam AllAmerican forward AI Wood a11d
starting guard Mike Pepper
Smith unearthed a vein of freshmen gold judged to be one of the
best in the nation. They include 64 forward Mike Jordan of
Wibnington, N.C. , whose standing jump has been measured at
42 inches; guards Buzz Peterso11
of Ashville, N.C., and Lynwood
Robinson of Mount Olive, N.C.
and 7-footer Warren Martin, of
Axton, Va.
Farmer, who took over after .
last season for Larry Brown in a
seemingly endless string of John
Wooden successors, re turns
UCLA's entire starting team

from 19110-31. His most Important
acquisition may have been Gray,
a 7-footer from Kennedy High
School in Granada Hills, Calif. He
is the big man for whom
Wooden's succellSOrs have been
searching ever since Bill Walton
graduated in 1974. ·
The addition of Gray, who
averaged 31.3 points and 18
rebounds as a high school senior,
will allow Farmer to move Mike
Sanders, a 6-6 senior, back to his
forward spot, where he wiD team
with either Darren Daye, 6-7, or
Cliff Pruitt, 6-7. In the backcourt,
Farmer has returning, starters
Mike Holton and Rod Foster, who
is among the best point guards in
the nation, certainly one of the
quickest.
Tbere will be several teams of
quality standing between either
Srriith or Farmer and the national
championship. They include
Louisville, national champion
two years ago; Kentucky, despite
the injury to center Sam Bowie;
DePaul, still strong after losing
Mark Aguirre; Georgetown, with
the best freshman haul in the
nation, and Iowa, the pick of the
Big Ten.
Certainly among these teams
in talent is Wichita State, which
recruited hometown boy' Greg
Dreiling, a 7-1 center, but the
Wheatshockcrs don't have a
chance in the playoffs. They are
banned from postseason play by
the NCAA for recruiting
violations.
Louisville, coached by Denny
Crum, is equal in talent to any
team. Many of his starters this
season were integral parts of his
1979-&amp;l championship team, including forward Derek Smith, a
6-5 senior who led the Cardinals
in scoring last season with 15.5
points a game.
Juniors Rodney and Scooter
McCray will add power on the
front line, along with 6-7 freshman Manuel Forrest of
Louisville's Moore High School.
Forrest averaged 33 points in his
senior year in high school.
Bowie, a 7-1 junior center who
averaged 17.4 points last season,
broke a shinbone on the opening
day of workouts, OCt. 15, and it's
not certain when he will play. At
any rate, Wildcats Coach Joe' B.
Hall ca't count on him af fUll
strength until January.
In the meantime, 6-11 backup
Mel Turpin can handle the pivot
with help on the front line from 66 •-wingman Derrick Hord and IHi
forward Charles Hurt. Senior
Chuck Verderber, 6-6, and
sophomore Chuck Bearup, 6-9,
serve as qualified reserves. Dirk
Minnifield, a 6-3 junior with 151
assists, runs the offense.
When Coach Ray Meyers lost
Aguirre to NBA hardship, he
said, "I believe that we'll have a
better team concept." He wasn't
knocking Aguirre; it's not the old
gentleman's style. He merely
was stating fact. With Teddy
Grubbs and Terry Cummings in
the middle and Skip Dillard run. ning the offense, the Blue
Demons look very h~althy,
Tbere also was the addition of
6-10 homestate freshman Walter ·

Nov. 22,

will

i

I

lack from point guard. The Tar
Heels are counting heavily on 6+
freshman Michael Jordan, who has
a 42-inch vertical leap.
"By the players we have returning, we should have a good team,"
Smith said. "But we can't have any
false confidence. We're young. We'll
learn what we have to work with

DOwning, who averaged six
rejections a game In his senior
year in high sqhool.' His development could add some real defense to ·compliment DePaul's
proven offensive 'bility.
Georgetown's freshman crew
is acknowledged as the best in the
nation. Patrick Ewing, the 7-foot
Jamaican from Cambridge,
Mass., set Off one of the most intense recruiting wars since
Virginia snapped up Ralph Sampson three years ago.
Ewing, who scored 1,763 points
in high school, could be awesome,
and he teams with blue-chip
freshmen Anthony Jones and Bill
Martin, both of Washington, D.C.,
to form the frontline of the future.
Eric "Sleepy" ·Floyd, a guard
who averaged 19 points, is among
Thompson's five returning starters.
Forward Kevin Boyle aod
guard Kenny Arnold are Iowa
Coach Lute Olsen's only returning starters, but the Rawkeyes
also have an abundance of good
freshmen. Rookies include state
players-of-the-year Michael
Payne of Quincy, Ill., Greg
Stokes of Hamilton, Ohio, and
Todd Berkenpas of Mapleton,
Iowa.
Wichita State Coach Gene
Smithson's recruiting effort apparently was untroubled by
threats of probation. He snared
Dreiling, and with super forwards Antoine Carr and Cliff
Levingston at his flanks, .there
may be no stopping the Shockers.
Senior guard Tony Martin returns tQ run the offense along with
freshman Aubrey Sherrod.
By regions, the rest i&gt;f the
nation shapes up like this:
EAST- Connecticut brings experience combined with a few,
well-chosen freshmen to the battle against Georgetown in the Big
East. Corny Thompson, a 6-8 forward, may be · the best in the
league.
Villanova, led by center John
Pinone (15.8 ppg), and Boston
College, with guard John Bagley
(20.4 ppgl, make the Big East one
of the toughest conferences in the
nation. The· new Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (Fordham is
best), the Eastern Eight (West
Virginia shines) and the Ivy
League (a threeway battle
among Princeton, Penn and Har·
vard) are not quit~ strong enough
to compete for bragging rights.
SOUTII - North Carolina has
competition in the Atlantic Coast
Conference from Virginia and ,
Wake Forest, and Louisiana
State or Georgia might challenge
· Kentucky in the Southeastern
Conference. With AlabamaBirmingham, South Alabama
and South Florida all stro!lg, the
Sun Belt Conference can't be
overlooked, while Louisville is
alone in tbe·Metro Conference.
Virginia can beat anyone when
7-1 junior Sampson (17.4 ppg) is
right, but he'll start the ·season
with a pulled hip muscle. Wake
Forest relies on forwards Alvis
Rogers (11.9 ppg) and Guy
Morgan (9.4 ppg),
LSU's Howard Carter (16 ppg)
and Leonard Mitcbell (10.8 ppg)

anchor Coach Dale Brown's
squad, while many consider 6-7
Dominique Wilkins of Georgia
(23.6 ppg) the best forward in the
nation.
Alabama-Birmingham ·tends
toward speed with guard Oliver
. Robinson (15.9 ppg), S~uth
Alabama returns forward Rory
White (16.4 ppg), and South
Florida has 6-f forward Vince
Reynolds (13.7 ppg).
MIDWEST - In the Big Ten,
Iowa must contend with the likes
of Minnesota and Indiana, the
1981 NCAA champion.
Among the·· great Midwestern
independents, DePaul, Notre
Dame and Marquette vie for
regional honors. Missouri is the
class of the Big Eight, and Tulsa .
will battle Wichita State in the
Missouri Valley Confere~e.
Randy Breuer, 7-2 junior,
averaged 15.2 points for Min.
nesota Coach Jim Dutcher last
season. Indiana Coach Bobby
Knight muat compensate for the
loss of Ray Tolbert,Isiah Thomasand Landon Turner. Knight
recruited 7.J Uwc Blab, a West
German exchange student, and
1 returns forward Ted Kitchel (9.2
·ppg) and guard Jimmy Thomas,
who excelled in the Final Four.
Notre Dame has trouble in the,
middle, but junior guard John
Paxson (12.9 ppg) is back.
Marquette may be the Midwest's
Cinderella team with Coach Hank ·
Raymonds banking on guard
Glenn Rivers (14 ppg).
SOUTHWEST - Houston and
Arkansas are the cream of the
Southwest Conference.
Rob Williams of Houston (25
ppg, 53.4 FG percentage) seems
to be everyone's All-America
pick, and Cougars Coach Guy
Lewis recruited a 7-foot Nigerian,
Akeein Abdul Olajuwoa, to play
center:
Coach Eddie Sutton lost U.S.
Reed from the Arkansas team
that beat Louisville in the NCAA
playoffs la~t year, but he has 6-10
center Scott Hastings (16.3 ppg),
and swingman Darrell Walker
(11.3ppg). .
FAR WEST - UCLA has tittle
competition in the Pacific 10 Con- '
ference outside of Southern Cal.
Brigham Young and Wyoming
lead the Western Athletic Conference, but San Francisco of the
West Coast Athletic Conference
might pose the real threat to
UCLA's western supre1nacy. ~ · ·
Southern Cal was barely a ,500
team last season (14-13), but they
have Improved. Dwight Anderson, a 6-3 transfer from Ken'
lucky, is eligible · for the whole
season, and freshman Ken Johnson, a 6-9 forward from La Jolla,
Calif .• canhelp. .. :
BYU lost All-American Danny
Ainge but returns its entire starting frontline of Greg Kite (8.3
ppg), Fred Roberls (18.8 ppg)
and Steve Trumbo (10.1 ppg).
Quintin Daily, 6-3 San Francisco guard, may be one of the
most Impressive players on the
Coast. He averaged· 22.4 points,
and the Dons also have a palr of
16-point scorers on the frontline
in center Wallace Bryant, a 7footer, and John Hegwood.

Kentucky, Georg~a could draw some
support as the preseason SEC
favorite. The Bulldogs are led by
Dominique Wilkins, a leaper with
spectacular moves who led the SEC
in scoring last year.

..

·-Alabama also returns most of last
ye1rrl&amp;._ .~earn, incl~ding allconference performer Eddie
Phillips.
TenneSsee figures to be in the ·
Continued on C.S

.

early."

Virginia lost two outstanding
players in Jeff Lamp aod Lee Raker,
but the Cavaliers can't be counted
out of the picture because of one
man - 7-4 Ralph Sampson,, college
basketball's Player of the Year last
season.
Wake. Forest, with four starters
back, and Clemson also could be in
contention in the ACC race.
Louisville, which has one national
title under Denny Crwn, has every
starter returning from a team that
had a horrendous start a year ago
before coming on late and returning
to the NCAA tournament.
"\'Jaturally we would be picked to
win, but the Metro has had a lot Of
surprises in the past and anything
can happen ip this league," Crum
said.
The Cardinals feature Derrick
Smitl., last year's Metro ·Cr&gt;-Piayer
of the Year, the McCray's- Rodney
and Scooter ~ and point guard Jerry
Eaves.
Cincinnati, I~ by Bobby Allltln,
finished second in last year'a Metro
Tourney and should be the clCIIIest
challenger to LouiBville again.
Virginia Tech, whicb has one of the
league's top players In Dele
Solomon, and Florida Slate Could
horn I"' way Into the picture, too..
With Bowie's lllatus unlmown at
('

Nov.-22, 1981

TAKE PRIDE
. IN

YOUR TOBACCO
HONEST PRICES
FAST SERVICE
OPEN FO'R RECEIVING NOVEMBER 13
FIRST SALE DAY NOVEMBER 23

1:104.

~J ·'III•I

'•

In the NCAA West Regional later that's where all the at~nUon frti!Tl
that season, San Fnncllco knocked the poUa hall come," Smith said.
the Tar Hoell out of the cham- "It's bued on last year."
·
pionahlpchase.
.
During a meeting of ACC basketSmithdidcallthisyear'sselection ball coaches in GreensbOrO, N.C.,
an honor, but he praised the the 1981). last Sunday, Smith mention~!~~ the
81 .squad that finiahed :IN, losing to players IIlii! will belp the Tar Heels
Tar Heela 'jllll'll ~ No.1 In the Indiana in the national. cham- defend their top spot this sellllon.
AssOCiated Preu
20 college• _pionshlp game, for making the selecReturning from Smith's 1~1
basketblll poU last week was un- tion·pDIIIible.
·
team are three starters - &amp;-fool-9
deratanc!•Ny ~
"AI Wood should be happy wben junior forward James Worthy, U
"The col1lae lillkutball rankings be sees us ranked highly in sophomore center Sam Perkins and
really dcln't ~ anything," Smith p-eseason polls ~ause he's one of 6-3 senior guard jinuny Black.
said in a prepared lllalement from the reasons we're there," Smith Smithalsonamed"sophomoreforhis office. "The naUonal cham- said.
ward 1\llllt'Doherty as a starter for
pionship lw ..,..Mied by playing the
Wood scored 39 points agaiust j!IDrtll Carolina's opening game
game,"
,
Virginia in the NCAA semifinala in against Kansas Nov. 28.
·
The Tar Heels were ranked first Philadelphia. He now is a member of
"They're two great basketball
prior to the 1977-78• RUOn after the AUanta Hawks of the National players, two of the best in the coun'losing to Marquette ' in the 19Z'I Basketball Association.
try and are both Improved from last
championahlp game. Although they
"We also need Ideal ~bemistry, year," Smith said of Perkins and
finished 2U that year, North which you never know you have Worthy. "With Perkins and Worthy, ·
Carolina was ouated in the lira! when a team is broken up. Our team you have to be good."
. round of the AUanUc Coast Con- is broken up from last year and
ference · tournament by Wake , . . . : : . · · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

:rop

JOE NUXHALi., ealler, a former Cllleillllatl Redl pltcber 81111 now
radio oporllleaater, chats with Mary O'Brien IUid Linda lAwther at lbe
American .Cancer Society's receat Crullacle Tralaln£ Conf-noe In
Columbus. Mary Ill with Spo&lt;lal Events and Unda, l'llbllc lnfot'IIUitiGn
for the Meigs County Unit oflbe Cancer ~ely.

An AP Sports AIIBiysis
ByBRUCEWWITr
AP Sports Writer
It's not exactly for all the marbles,
~onsiderlng tbere •iill will be four
weeks remaining, but a meeting between two teams with first place at
stake is caq,s'e for. celebration in this
year of parity.
Who would have thought, eight
weeks ago, that th~ American Conference's Eastern· Division lead
would hinge '"' the Miwni Dolphins'
visit Sunday to the New York Jets.
Eight weeks ago the Dolphins were
unbeate)l, the Jets "'ere winless.
Now, though, Mia1ni is 7-3-t' to ·
New York's 6-4-1. The Jets are on
roll. They've won six Of their la•t
eight gam~s. and a seventh was a 2828 tie in Miami. And they're coming
. off an emotional victory at New
England while the Dolphins were
route-d by Oakland last Sunday. ·
The ,lets wil.l keep rolling.
In Cincinnati, the Bengals take on
Denver in a meeting of the AFC's
otber division leaders, the teams
with the conference's best records,
each 8-3. Each has a three-game
winning streak going. The Broncos
wHI make it four.
Last week's record against the
spread: 6-6.-For the season: 79-73.
This week's picks (h..ne teams
capitalized): NEW YORK JETS
minus 21'.! over Miami: If the Jets
don't have a healthy quarterback,
lhey might go to a single wing and
ram the ball down the I&gt;olphins'
throats. New York's sack-happy
defense will run wild in the Miami
backfield.
Denver plus 312 over CINCINNATI: It figures to be a lowscorin~ game and the edge has to go
to lhe Broncos' dc&gt;fense, the best in
lhe league.
·
·
DALLAS minus 7 over
. Washinglon: The Cowboys will
s~nd a lot of time counting the nwn-

ber of Redskins on tile field and
rolling up ,tbe .numbers on the
s&lt;:oreboard.
·
Minnesota plus 4 over ATLANTA:
The Falcons' secondary is tailormade for .the Vikings' kind of Tommy-gun offense. UPSET SPECIAL.
Pittsburgh plus 2~ over
CLEVELAND: This one figured to
be for a division title. Now the loser
could be out in the cold.
· San FrancisL'Il plus 3 over LOS
ANGELES: Time for the 49ers to
start another winning streak. Wave
bye-oye to the Rams.
San DiegQ plu• 2'2 over
OAKLAND: No way . are the
Cha~ers are as lousy as they looked
·last Monday night.
Other games:
. New Orleans plus 6 over
HOUSTON.

I· .,

wts...

Experts pick Broncos
.and Steelers in today's tilts

Forest.

.

w. va ..

1he sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-5

==~=·whorantbe

' '

two National Invitation Tournament
teams, So1Jtb Alabama and Rose's

•

•

•

the
3-polnt Qelq goal at the NCAA's
request.
'Funnan, which got 22 points a
game from Mel Daniel last year,
figures to be the most serious
ehallenger to the Catamounts and

No.~

Tt'am

~

Jim'.sGtlll .

~2

No. 5

41

Furcsl Run Block

34

NaJ

19

Hit:.h ind. JI.HIIIl' ....,. June l.umbt.'l'l 180: Pat CarDeny Whitll:ttch 169.
Ui~lr ,l:ierieH - Junl! J.a111~11 4i5: CHrolyn
8Hdmer4419: Pa1Ctu'"!lon458.
Tc11n1 hiwh ltiiJ!tc- Jim'~ Gulf
4&amp;1.
Tc11111 ht~~:h YcriL~- Mt'il(.'llnn 1295.
~1111112 ;

N"'·
"· ""
Sl•""'"''

~~-:.Inn
Sl.arSup!JlyC«•.

Brcl slogged through mud and

!:

free-.ting temperatures Friday night
to L"apture the $1,000 featured mile
pace at Lebanon in 2:10 1,.0. The winneDr patid $4Id.601, $3.80 ancodn$2d.40re.turn•·n•
. us y ea wcu; se
,
0
$7.60 and $3.40, and Mis Ev A. Lean
finished third, paying $3 .
The 5--2 double of Misty Mont and
Swe~ter Than Honey returned $57.60
and the crowd of 1,537 wagered

fil

PLYWOOD

1981 INVENTORY CLEARANCE!

$28.95EA.
30"

'29.95EA.

PRE-FINISHED PANELING
4.84

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PC.

17.84

6.99

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17.84

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CEILING TILE

NOW UNTIL CHRISTMAS

2'14' lAY-Ill

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ALL
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DWINS.CORIIIG

$1 8'¥A

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$3.84 :~
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50% OFF

PLUSH SHAG CARPO

MFG'S. LIST PRICE

",au

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•

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VINYL EASE
NO-WAX FLOORING

'

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ECONOMY WHITE

KITCHEN
CABINETS

·'•••

$6,148
$10,911
Sl1,763
$12,105
$16,205

PC.

PEG&amp;PLANK

BIRCH

LODGEWDOD PECAN

SALE

'

INSULAT(ON

'

•••

$4.75

CLAAS - Dominator 76 Combine Includes 4 row corn
head and 13ft. grain fable ••••••••••• $84,265 $58,684

'

. IMPLEMENTS '·

:.~·

.

•

$1045
$710

'.

THIS SALE WON'T BE REPEATED.
FOR BEST SELECTION.

$3160
$1575
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•.

$531
SSIII

•

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DALE Nil.(
FORD TRACIOR
PtmeNy

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1» MILTON

n~eaary.

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P.S. •• ..,,.. to reJI•ter for. free drawln1 for a Chr,.tma• .·
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-t:

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PHDII; Ml·illl

BELLE

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'

o::=·· \.

~~

A

;o;::::;liill
,.
-"""""'
--'
~~tf!.;:::;...
R
, t e CATLETISBI,J G
l\J Rl. 23 1-14· Pllooo: J3t-412t

1u--

ELKVIEW

~71. IIIVIIW EXIT AT

'

PHOIII: . .,...

il •\

w DALUPOLIS
FERRY f
IT. IIOIITH

•
•••

...-1: I)IM)IJ1-4114·

. !",.,.

,.,f"~

- unuunHRIEIRD.

•

:

)

esT. ALBANS ·

3 . . . lorlll of Rl. 10
"""" 722-3311 llloohr 722-2111 H111o Cooter
•

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'''
••

DELNEIW AVARMtE AT REASIIMMLE RATE$

•••

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WIUDA\'11:t0 A.M. • 1:• P.M. UTUIIDAWI 1:01 Ul. · 1:10 P.M.

••
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ii'f.MIMT

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FIBERGLASS

'

-lAYAWAYS WELCOME-

Ford 503 Ri!kt •••.•• , •••••• _•••••. , •• 51655
Ford·101 Plow 2-14'1 .• ·..•• : •..••.••.•• S119G
Ford201 Flex Disc _ •.•• _ .... .......... $1620
Ford 131 Chisel Plow ••••••••••...••.• $1605
Ford 208 Field Cultivator •.••••••••••.• $1945
New Idea 323 Corn Picker ••••. _: _ •.••• $6679
New Idea 177 Elevator 36ft. • .••..••••• 52543
New Idea 214 Spreader 206.Vu. • ; .•••••. $4168
New Idea R402 Rake •••••••.••••••••.• $2065
Woods 84NC-2 Rotary Cutter 7ft.•••••.• $2497
Ross'l Wheel Rake ••..•••••••••••••.•• Sl95
Wood Splitter 3 Point .. , , •••••••...••.• $975

.

3

OF BLOW .. IIACHII£ FOR 011 OAY WITH A PUIICHASI OF ZO BAGS DR 110111.

UM.ITED TO QUANTmES IN ~lOCK

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CELLULOSE BLOW IN/POUR IN

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SPECIAl,. EQUIPMENT

24"

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Ironton, Ohio 45638
PH. 61H32-0101

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DOORS
BOREO WITHOUT

DRYWALL

SHARP SAVINGS FROM SANTA

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To fulfill future drilling programs write or call and be sure to include
property location and •creage that is available for lease. Also thosr.
that have oil and gas teases that are due to expire within one year.

SAVE .15%

PC.

INTERIOR
PRE-HUNG

1/2"x4'x8'

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2"x4" ·
PRE-CUT

$1.09

URGENTLY NEEDED OIL AND.GAS LEASES

'4.
15.54

3.64
14.85
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$6.09

CONSTRUCTION

r·~T;B.~~~,d~an~d~F:uU:';'Re;:•ll.v;~~~~:~··~:.~~$1~50~,;76;1~.~~~~~~~;:;;~

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'3.46 .
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2.08
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RJ;:TAILS
(3) 11013 H.P. Diesel ..... , ....... ·... 56,325
(1)1SG020H.P.Diesel .•.• : ••.. , .. : .. $7,459
O&gt; 360040 H.P. Diesel ......... , _•.• 514,627.
(I) 4100 45 H.P. Diesel .••...•..•••.• $16,042
(I) 4600 52 H.P; Diesel ••••.. , ..• _ •.• 517,311
(1) 5600 60 H.P. Diesel ...... _... _... $21,841

12'

1

Chiistmas

TRACro.S ·

Lebanon results
,
lEBANON, Ohio (APl -

·· ·'
1\n•~;day Trlplh•att&gt;

sidered.

'

59

Slotr Supply Co.

and Tennessee-Chattanooga also must be con.

•·

Plti.

Mci~sinn

.,

'

S. Stephens with 512.
Bob Ev11,. F11nn woo shl; point.s from Nt!w
River Elec. High bowler for Bob Evaflll Fann
wu H. MMynard wilh 55$ . Hi~J:h bowler for New
River Elec. was G. Hustman with 47&amp;.
Jimanetti'1 Piz:rM won •ix p:~int.a from Baird
l:UII.I Fuller Realty. High bowler for Jimanetti's
PittaWIIsG. Mc&amp;tchin wilhSII:!. Hi~h bowler (o..
Baird and FuUer Realty was 8. Holley with 560.
McDonald's won five points from Villa!!e Ins.
HiMh bow.ler for McDonald'~ wall R. Stout with
561. Hi)(h bOwler for Villa~e Ins. walt H. Keyser
wilh511.

Slaodings

Missouri, 2Z-10, 273; Georgia, 1~12,
233; LDuisiaila State, 31-6, 2M;
Arkansas, 2U,l!l6; Noln! Dime, 2S6, 1411, and Alabama, 1..11,140. In. .
diana and Arkansu received the
otherfirst-pla,ce votes.
·
The final poll of the 1~1 regular
season had DePaul No.I, followed by
Oregon State, Arizona State, LSU,
Virginia, North Carolina, Notre
Dame, Kentucky, Indiana, UCLA, .
Wake Forest, Louisvlle, Iowa, Utah,
Tennessee, Brlgl&gt;JiP&gt; YI7Uilr, ·
Wyoming, Ma,.Yliiid, Illinois and
Arkansas.

.ALE!

. The Elks won llix pointll frqrn The Hair Clippen. Hi!!h bowler forT~ Elb wa1 R. Fergt»&gt;oo
with 5U. Hi~J:h bowler for fheiHaJr Clippers was

NIIv. 10, 1!181

z:H, 285;

"

Nt!Jonwith~l.

2%11: No, 3Z22(j,

~•Y Triplkak-

Appalachian

Layaway
Now tor

.,

G.&amp;J. Aut oParts
·~­
No.(j
53
No.3
, 38
Ma;c'slnc.
31
SilruJJOnsOlds, Cadillal'
lind Cbtrolel
30
C. &amp; D. Pennzoil
ZB
, Hi)(h ind. l(alllC - Betty Whltl~tlc h 192 ; Bar·
bara Whittlnl(lon Jl8;. Lenora M~·KniKhl 11nd Belly Whl\IBJ.i'h 118.
.
~i)(h Ind. 3-ll,ame:~ - &amp;lty Whillutch' ~.l: Barbara Whitt!nl(lon~1)a; IA!IlOI'Il Ml'Kni~ht.fl!i.
Hil(h te~tltlg&amp;lnt - G. &amp;J. Auto Purl.ll 11&amp;0.838:
No.5804.
I
.
Hil(h team ~l(l:uneM- G. &amp; J, Auto Pc111112~1:

South Florida club, a., expected to ~~·;•Gulf
make the Sun Bell race a four-team ,.,,.,., Run\11,.,,
40
~air.
,
N·~r~h ind, galllt~ - Pal Carson 200 : Kim &amp;1;!
· · Western Carolina has four starter 17!1: Mitrtha Grue~r 173.
·
·•-~ •• points a game, __ year_ ·
Hi~h scrit's - P11l C~&amp;rsun ~ : CaJ·olyn
auuua~ on
WilL
,.
Bul'hnt&gt;r41Kl: Kim Ball'yt:.it.
and generally,is considered the team
Team hi~~:h ltamc - Mciltli lrm 498.
to beat in the Southern Conference.
Team hr~h!:let'it'll- Mt!i~ lnni414.
For the second COII8eCillive sea&amp;on, Nov. I!. fill SloYII..nLoooue
the conference wiD experiment with
S&lt;uoll.tp

..
•

Na\1, 17, 11111

Alabllma·B~ham,

1,119 points, and Kentucky, coming
off a 2U Qempeign, was third with
eight No.I . votes and 1,041 points.
Louisville, with four - ~iace
votes, w&amp;s No.4 with 1,017 pOinl&amp;,
and Gedrgetown collected two firstplace ballots for a distant fifth w(th
861 points.
Rounding out the .Tov Ten were
Wichita State, 211-7, 794 points;
Virginia, 29-4, 739; DePaul, 27-2, 701;
Iowa, 21-7, 700, and Minnesota,1H1,
513.
The Second Ten consisted of
Tulsa, 211-7,482 points; Indiana, 211-7,
405; . Wake Forest, 22-7, 382;

Bob Evans Farm
51 37
The E1b
19 39
New River Elec.
411 40
Gavin Elec.
111 40
Htadquart.ers Q.ar
46 4Z
Warebime'•FwleraiHome
46 U
Jlmanettl's
42 1&amp;
The Hair Clippen;
40 44
Village Ins.
39 49
McDonald's
31 51
Central Supply
:0 59
Warehim~'s JWOn six polnb froln Ctntral Supo
plr., High bowl~r for Wa~himt.&gt;'s 'l'tas R. Tench
wth 523. High bowler for Cent nil Supply was B.
Shawwith5J9.
.
Gavin Elec. won six points from He»dquarters
Bar. High bowler for Gavin wa1:1 kennedy with
517.1ligh bowlt&gt;r fnr Headqua11«1 Bar was H.

IIIORNINGGLORIFS

T"'m

Smith called the fifth posiUon a
toss-up belween&amp;-2 junior guard J.lm
BraddOCk and tl-4~ freshman guard .
Michael Jordan.
"If Michael's shooting well from
the outside, then he would start over
Jin'l because be's a lot· bigger,"
Smith said.
In AP's nationwide ballot Of sports
writers and broadcasters, the Tar
Heels received 25 of 81 . first-place
votes and 1·,138 points, placing them
19 points abead of second-ranked
UCLA.
The Bruins, 20-7 last seasop,
~athered 20 l,irst-place votes and

I

Local .bowling

POMEROY BOWLING LANEs

, Continued from C-4
race, but defending champion
LouiBialla State, which finished fourthin the NCAA last year, lost moSt of
its talent, although it does return
Howard Carter and Leonard Mitchell, twG starters. ·
The Sun Belt features two coaches
who have carried tWo or more different schools' 'to ·the NCAA tournament ~ GeAe aartow of UAB and
Lee Rose of South Florids. Bartow
got the Blazers into the tournament
last year and earlier in his career
·· went . with Memphis State and
UCLA. Rose carried the first Sun
Belt champion, North CatollnaCbarlotte, to the Final FQw- and then
went to Purdue, which also made an
· NCAA tourney appearance.
Bartow bas the preseason
favorite, a team led by the smooth
styie · of. Ollver Robinson. The
queStion will be how W.U UAB
Virginia CammoiiWealth, which
,also weal to the NCAA last year, and

Christmas is Just 32 Days Aw~y. Hurry our Supply Is
Now Llmitad.
·
'
·

Hunloft91on W.•l Yll9"l•• '~ 70l

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Poinl Pleasant,

CHAPELHIU.. N.C. (AP)- N?"
th . caroi1Da c.ch DeUI Smith
remembers only too well wbat happened to hia Tar Heels the last lime
they~dlOielluthenaUon'sbe81 ..
team m pruellll" buketball polls.
So, hia ~on to news that the

TOYS

HUNTINGTON PRIDE IN TOBACCO MARKET

f'omeroy

Pre-season rankings don't mean. anything, Smith says

'Lots of balance this year' --Hall
ATLANTA (AP) - Coach Joe B.
Hall of Kentucky says preseason
bask•tball ratings won't mean much
this year because "there's an awful
lot of balance."
Hall's Wildcats, a perennial
Southeastern Conference power, are
likely to be highiy rated this season
along with several other Southern
powers, including 1981 national runner-up North Carolina and thirdplace finisher Virginia of the Atlantic Coast Conference, Louisville of
the Metro Conference and AlabamaBirmingham of the Sun Belt Conference.
"There's an awful lot of talent
spread all over the country and until
eight or 10 games are played, you
- _ r&lt;:llllY can't tell," Hall said. "There
will be some teams come out of the
pack that are equally as good as
those that are ranked high."
With 7-foot-1 Sam Bowie sidelined
with a fractured shin bone, Kentucky could have trouble just trying
to win the SEC. Georgia, a
newcomer to the league's basketball
elite, and Alabama return enough
starters to give the talent-laden
Wildcats a fight.
Bowie wore a cast for eight weeks,
irut Hall recently said the bone had
not bealed as expected and his star
center could miss a month or more
of the season.
Coach Dean Smith lost AllAmerican forward AI Wood from
last year's team, bot North Carolina
ligureS to be the strongest out(it in
the'South this year.
,
The front Une
feature two
talented &amp;-9 performers - James
Worthy and Sam Perkins - and
Jimmy Black returns to run the at-

19~1

March 29, 1982

A look ahead:
By JOHN NElSON
AP Sports Writer
The site is the Louisiana Superdome; New Orleans. The date:
March 29, 1982. Outside, residue
of the Mardi Gras has been
ground into the sidewalk, stubborn evidence of a week-long
celebration. Inside, two young
men, equally stubborn, face each
other in a small c~rcle of paint on
a hardwood noor, ready to

w. Va.

...,
._

IU.DAYI l;w A.• . · I · P.M.

�.
0

Nov . 22, 1981

======~~=============;~========~~============~P~o~m~e~r~o~y~~M~i~d~d~te~p~OI~!"~r-~G~a~ll~ip~o~l~is~,~O~hgi~o--~P~o~i~n~t~P~I~e~a~sa~n~t~,~w~.~V~a~.==================~T~h~e~S~u~n~d~a~v~T~im~e~s-~S~e~n~t~in~e~I~P~a~g~e~c~-~7 :

Nov. 22, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport.:....Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. \Ia.
0

Rio to face Union five Monday

.Soviet wQmen favored in
.gymnastict championships

has averaged In double digits In
points and rebounds.
Workinf! In the backcourl will be
Jerry Mowery, a &amp;-8 freshman from
Williamsport, 81111 VInce Wollenburg,a&amp;-2sophomorefromNewark.
Scheduled to see action In a reaerve role ate lh'l Richardo Halnton, &amp;3 John Maisch, &amp;-a Bob Shaw, iMi
Scott Burson, 6-6 Tom Jutze, and 11-0
Rick Penrod.
.'
Unioo CoUege got its first taste of
action when It hooted Sue ReMelt
College in a scrimmage last week.
The Bulldogs are coming off a 1-26
record In 1910o81.
Acwrding to Bulldog coach Pete
Moore, the offense, particularly the
boundspercontest.
_
team's ability to fast break, 1mAt the post will be 6-6 senior Wal~· · pressed him the most. "Our running
son McDonald of Wa&gt;Tell, McDonald game was the highlight of the scrim-

RIO GRANDE - Coach John
Lawhom's Rio Grande Redmen will
take lo the road for their fifth
stralglt noa-conference game of lbe
season Monday when ·they travel to
Barboursville, Kentucky, to batUe
Union CoUege.
Game ilme Ia 7:3&amp;p.m.
LawhGm Ia anllcipated logo with
the same 8laJ'ting , lineup he has
reUedoniDtheearlygolng.
Kevin Cutleman, a 1-6 forward
from Colambul, will ~ al one forward slot, while Dan Curry, a 6-7
freshman from Derby will work opposlte him. Both are averaging in
dOuble digits In pointa while Curry
has been pulllng down over 10 re-

(

By DAVID MINmORN

•

In two OlymPJca, withdrew from look as strong as in 1979."
The Romanian teen-agen upset
the Moscow meet because of
MOSCOW (AP) - With Romanian . "Inadequate
the
Soviet W~~men In team compreparatlor ''
supentar Nadia Comaneci out of the Romanian offlcllils said:
petition at the champiOJIBhips two
competition, Soviet women are
But other sources In Bucharest years ago in Ft. Worth, Texas.
favored to dominate team and in- said the :»-year-old athlete decided '
dividual event. at the World Gym- to stay away because she is still
East Gennany, Czecboalovakla
nastics Championships starting 8Jlili'Y about judging at last year's and Bulgaria alao have strong
Mooday.
Olympics, where she was runner-up women's teams ih Moscow, and the
About 35 countries have sent men to Russia's Yelena Davydova In the ' Americallll appear to be the only
and women gyt1JII88!s to the sevenprestigious all-around competition. Western squad able to challenge the
day tournament, lncllldlng squada Comanecl may C0'1'e to Moscow as a East E;uropeans.
from the United States, Japan and spectator, the sources said.
"I'll be happy we getltlth," Peters
China. Those three countries boycotof U.S. women's chances in
said
"The Soviet women will win the
ted the 19110 Olympics here.
team
competition. They were a
team competition," predicted U.S.
Colnaneci, a gold medalist In women's Coach Don Peters. "I saw disappointing sixth in Fl. Worth and
previous world competitions well the Romanians traln,BIIIi they don't failed to win any medals.

luocla!e~J Pnlll Wrltor

IS

..

as

WATCHING mE WARMUP - Los Angeles
Laken eoacbes Pat Riley, left, aDd Jerry West watch
their pbyen dln1ag warmups prlur to start of game
Friday 111~1 Ill 1M Angeles HKHIIIlll lbe San Anlonio

Johnson has act together,
Lakers humble San Antonio
•

'·

'
l
\

I

•

II

0

AUTOMATIC
PORTABLE

'

By UN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporll Writer

setup with Pal Riley and Jerry Wesf game for tbem due to all that's hapRiley theorelically is coaching the pened to them in the last couple of
Until a couple of days ago, Earvin
defense and West the offense, days. They wanted badly to win.
"Magic" Johnson wun'l having too
although the Conner apparently has They ran, they hit the open man, and
:niueh fun with the Los Angele.•
been charged with directing the on defense, they ran the ball right
:Dikers. But now with a change of
back at us."
team.
J:»achj!s, be seems to bave gotten his
In other NBA action, it was Por·
Asked what he told his team
]t! together. ·
.
before the contest, Riley grinned !land 106, New Jersey 86;
::: ~r j1151 decided te go out there and
and replied, "I lold 'em to wing it, Philadelphia 99, Cleveland 94 ; Seat~ ve filii," said the Los Angeles
lie 90, Dallas 89; Houston 95,
just like I'm doing.' •
of!uard Friday night after scoring 20
Washington
94; Boston 112,
Riley, unlike Johnson, thought the
'points IJJid handing out 16 assists in · Lakers were up for the game.
Milwaukee 89 and Utah 105, Chicago'
llle Laken~' 136-116 National Baskei''It was an emotional game for me 103.
,ball Association victory over the San
and tbe team," said the 36-year-old
Mitch Kupchak had 25 points,
~tonio Spurs.
Riley, a former member of the making all II of his field goal at- The reason for Johnson's euphori•
Lakers who was the club's assistant tempts, and 17 rebounds fclr the
;;.as obviowi. Unhappy with his role
coach until Thursday. ''But we were Lakers as they improved their win:00 the team, he had been at odds · definitely not tense or light."
ning streak to six games. Kareem
:with Lakers Coach Paul Westhead.
San Antonio Coach Stan Albeck Abdui-Jabbar led Los Angeles with
.IIlii WeSthead was fired Thursday,
agreed: ''I think it was an emotional 30points.
~ving the way for a dual £"achin£

u.s.

COAUWOOD HEATER
Sale Pirce

Sate Price

After Sale Price S37.95
Instant fan forcecl 1320 watts.
Wide angle knob Selector with
positive off position. Cool fold
down handle and tip over safety
switch.

.,

After Sale
Price
$59.95

Large capac·
Jty firebox.

Portable, ef·
fective heate·

air-tight heavy duty con-

tings for dif-

r. Has

. s.truction, au -

$33

ELECTRIC HEATER

After Sale
Price
$395.95

H

95

Terr y Barr , x - Vern on Bing, x - J .
D . Bradbury, x- M i ke El l iott, Kel ly
Jo ll ey , Oi!vid Martin, Raymond
Polcy n; Po3ul Smeltzer and Shane .

Stovr r

~

Freshmen - John Carrol l, Larry
Ed ge, Buddy Harbour , A nthony Kitchen , J ohn M cG u ire. Ba rr y Mat
t hews, G&lt;1rr y Pennin gton. Brian

Roush. John Si gm an, F ra nk Swrm
son, x - Chuck Vogel. Bri an W.1ms
lev and Steve Waugh.

x - Va rsity Lette,.-s./ BM .

Dan Brisker asked for a moment
of silence " for a dear friend and
Jnyal booster club member who

passed aw~y lhis past season,"
Robert "Pt!le" Baker. He spoke of
all lhe years Baker had supp11rtcd

ferent

tom'atic non-

.'

Nl~l Bukelball.u.d~Uua

Atlutk-DIY51Ma

room

Philadelphil
I!Gslon

load of coal
provides steady heat for

Milwaukee

Atlanta
Indiana
Cleveland

0

...

Denver
KarwasCity
llallu

Loe:Angeles
Golden State
PhoeniJ:
Seatt).e
San Diego

E

;:·

Seniors

IJII!3&lt;- nm Birr, x - Ed Moore. x -

•rtc '--t. Terry --..Ins, x - Troy
• - Metr 1'04cvn. x - Jeff
rd, a - Mill:t e•tr.ins, x - Craig
teft. . . . X - ft«* WOUgh, X - Ed
.,IH, K - 08V"kk Sands, Stevr

:iiC~tt•a

!

~orter.

Mike Elkins, Ed Moore, and
..,ob Waugh served as trl ·capfains.
,;..r Jun'or Anthony Polc yn, Ed
Hint. x - ROOH" Strouo and Ran·
TllotiiH.
..,. SophomOres OUtne .... Abshi re.

J.

50% OFF SNOW TIRES
NITREX M.PG
OIL ' CHANGI
· .
.
WITH OIL PILIIR

ATlAS BAnERIES

'

.364

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6

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t

2

•'

5
S

7

.118

.too

.$00
.444

.300
.091

~

1
2

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3~

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NVRan~:ers

Washington
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Montreal
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• •

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YUASA EROSENE N
14,600 BTU

9000 BTU
16 hrs.
heating

$179

95

11'1• hrs.
heating

~

18,000 BTU

$189

95

15 hrs.
heating

$229'5

"

LONGIURNER 330

'769"

0

LONGIURNER 324
'•

0

After Sale Price S684.99
Black Door
••

87 OliVE
UWI*CIJS

•

REMINGTON 1100
DEER llARREL
REMINGTON 870
DEERSLAYER SHOTGUN

1'

VICTOR 110
Sign Up
For .
Our

Specia
Reg. $BN7
$1'09.95 ~

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Reg Tag

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Special

$24995

Reg. S37.55

CONIBEAR TRAPS

Doz.

· COMPOUND BOWS·
BLACK BEAR II $74.50
GRISSLY ltl50.00
DENIM $69.50

Big

Buck
Contest

SPRING VAllEY TfW)ING CO.
Spring Vallev Plaza
Ph . 444-8025

and

Cross-

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51246810014
9, IS 3 ' til !18 . 9

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Frldily'•Camea .

Toronto 3, PitlJbUrgh 3,' Ue
Bulfalo t, COlorado 3
·

........

Wuhirllton at Philadelphia
Quebec •• NV Jalandenl at NY Rangera
st.t.o.Ui ' at Wlrmipeg

Color_.OO at Vancouver
· MiiUII!IOta at Chicq:!t

s,.n. Truucd1.'81

c.uecc BukeU.U Scum

N•u.aal Leape·
CHICAGO CUBS-Named Tom Harmon
l&gt;lllpen coach, .

Friday'1Gamel

A FREE
DAY
II
.. ·..-....

-.v u.e

we·wantto
help you
wlntll' ••••on. And to
prove it, we Invite you
to register at any Appalachian ·
Tire Store fo; one ·of three
6-dav Ski Vacation Gift
Certfficetes worth $780.
Tl)is.fabulous Ski Vacation Includes:
•LIFT TICKETS
•LOD.GING
•AND LESSONS FOR TWO PERSONS
Simply atop by your local Appalachian Tire Store
to register. A winner will be d111wn and notified for a fun,
filled week at West VIrginia's flneat ski resort-Snowshoe.

\

,

And to make your trip to Snowshoe a safe one,
we've reduced prlcea on our finest lines of
Goodyear anow tires. We can also·totally
"winterize" your car In our Car Care Service
Canter.

Dr•aWillll' will be held Dee. 19th.

'SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)- !;arrie~ the Syracuse-based ·Carpenter
ihe arena's 220- · Ri~ging and Contracting Corp.,
ton, air-supported roof ~ Its which roofed both, decUned comacid test wi!IJ a trouble-free fl.rst •nent, but architect Paul Gossen of
winter.
· . New York City's Geiger Berger
"Worried? No; I lite to think we're Associates said It was unfair to comalert. We've got an "''J!i!ri~ pare the completed Carrier Dome
group of JM!Gllle who've been~ with the under-constructldn
a wiDier before,': Nld Thomas Ben- Metrodome.
zel, rnan.ging director of the dome
The Carrier Dom~'s roof was inon the S)'I'IICI* University campus. flated in midsummer of 19110, while
~comment Friday was made as
the Metrod!Jme roof we~t up Oct. 2.
companies that built both the
"You have ,to ·reallze that you're
Carrier Dome and the Hubert H. talklnt! about two dlHerent s!alles,"
Humphrey Metrodome In Min- he said. "Jn the Carrier Dome, aU
neapolis Investigated the collapse of the , equlpmeni was.- connected and
the Metrodome's roo! after 10 Inches operational, while in the Metrodome
of heavy, wet sno1r feU In Minnesota we don't knoW whether all were. In a
the pteviOul two days.
cOmplete IIII'UctUre, things are much
Michael Holdridge, the public more under fOOtrol than (during)
relations dlroetor In Benzel's office, the construction.
said a 8110wmell 8)'llem 011 the
"t11e llkeUhood that the roof would
Cmier Dome'• ftberalau roof per- deflate at .the Syracuse dome Ia
founed well lilt winter.
v~, very remote because the
"!Iavine U1e melting 8)'llem up badup systems are operational,"
there II 1 good feature. It ileepllce a-added.
frGm lllllldlnll up and overloading
Holdrlclle uld rooftop sensors In
the roof," .. llld.
the c.rrter Dome automatically
Dan Poll, ~ve dlreclor of plek up IIIOWfaU and send hot air Inthe MettopoUIIIt Sportl FacWIIes to layera ol tile TeOOIH!OIIed roof,
COmml..lon, haa blamed the
meltlntl - · whldl l'UII8 olf
Mellodorile roof collapse In~ on a throu&amp;b
drain plpse. Another feature
m.lfuncllon 0( the new building's of the l)lltlm manufaclllred by
meltlnlllyal4m.
Hume BMw IIIIUna S)'llems Inc. of
The Carrier Dome, a IIO,CJOO.eeat ~ OM, Ml\liL, II 811 Blllifreelle
....... -die flnl ollllllill to llold IOllllla ........ oV CCIIICiele aup• .Ia roof by air I*
e ralber parla It-die liMe ol the roof to awith IliON e•JMIW'It lirdln pedlteiiiOwad.
... ollla'flad iiM*II. The. The lllll'DIIaiiWI melting I)'IIMI
a TI'Diea ued the ullle . - ... bt ..,. CantradiDII of
lllll' I'll' to build the 1upr MltllllpaiJI, 'llldllll atfened aU
Dome officials say

•

Aiter Sale Price $911.1i3
·Nickel Trim

•

Sti'OftMSVille 7$, Parnw $4
Tol. S..'Ott r7. Ckwe. . Hay t3

Prices Good Thru November 28th
Red. Tag
Special
REMINGTON 870
Reg.
$97,95

Carrier Dome officials
not worried, but alert

J

eutem t3

HUNDREDS OF ITEMS REDUCED

PHIL'AD'ELPHIA
PHti.LIES- Named
John Fehdte ITlalliMI!r of their Ealltern
~l(ue rann club in Reading, Pa. Named
Cedorvillc II, Dy.. 82
Ron Clarlt lllllllllt(er of their Oklahoma
JtiUiklngum 11, Bluefield, W.V ~. 66
City fann team lw the American A116ocl·· ' bAIT--mea'
·
ation, and nam~ Butch Hughes, flcla·
Dovis I. Eltl" II, F1'1l01bul'l! Slalo! Ill .
homta City's· pllchl~ roaeh.
Walsh Colleye 86 , Wllmlnjj;ton 64
•
I'OOI'IIALL
N1tioool Fuolboll Leo,.. '
IOWII Wealyan 91, MI. Vernon Nazarem.!
SAN
DIEGO
CHARGE,RS-Ciaimed
Ill
' &amp;.'Ott Fit.zkee, wide ra-elvt'l', on walwer1:1
! Denit~on 85, Ohio Dominican 72 , (rom the Phil11tlelphia Ea!fla!.
lllllldll~ 1'1Mu"Daawal
1
'
HOCKEY
HiiJsda le
tl,
Oefl.nce
U
NatJOial Hoeby Ltacur
MIJI&lt;CIIyQul"' .
· PITTSBURGH PENGt11N8-SIII.ned Ed·
Tri-1'*- lid. 71, MIIW., Ofdo51 die
Johnston, held coach; Mike Corrigan,
Oflllq W~Twruintat
a~~~&gt;istant c011eh, and Bab Ba11tlen, ){ent!nll
Ohio Wesleyan ... MarWUa 15 '
•nana~e r, through the lts344 .

'

J-40 '

Cl ew. W'. Teeh a, C\evt . Rhodn u
Col. 81"0akhaven • . COl. DeSai-. 58
Col. Cetttral Tt, O.y. While !1
Drfiance 11, Tol. Woodw1rd $7 '
F.. Clevellnd Shlw 71, Cleve. Glenvil~ '

Due to the response this sate Will be
extended thru Nov. 28th.

---

,.1-20

w... .

rtt

SPRING VIII FY TRADING CO.

Rio Grande 14, 'I11I;lmal More, K)'. 79

\

1~-e

htrick Divi•M
WLT .G FGA.Pb
1044718524
9 7 4 7 4 73 %2
IQ 7 1· Ill 18 21
810 · 18617 17
3J.f. { Sof737
AdlmY Dlvlilion
114481 572:8

Buffalo

Edmonton

sy ne A-.dlled Prnt

.

liMen .,,

Cl~. Mayea tl. Cleve. South •
Clare. Kemledy M, Cleve. CoOinwuod 59

,I

BASEBAU.

Ollio

Clev~ .

Gallipolis, Ohio

Hartford

II

•1'1/
.600

·

NY lllltuldel"'l
PiUsbUJ'IIh

Minnesota
Chieago
Z~2
Winnipe){
31.1 . llelroil
·4
St. Louis
Torunlo
. Slt:

,
s.dar'aGamr
New Jersey at SQ.ttle

' .• t

LOW ••, . '.
AS
.

6

CedartllltTIMitUIIItllt

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LIMIT ·
.5 QUARTS

,.6311
.600
.566
.t:JS

611
8·~

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0

;:ream

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.300
.182

~':! .

mlldelohlo ... Cleveland '\'
,Ulah IIi!, C~ 1011
Seollle It, Dollu 11 ,
Lew AnP!ea 131, San Antonio 116 ·
PortlanQ 101, NN Jeney II

&gt;.

PLUS F.E.T. BALANCE NOT INCLUDED ..

.833

Bostoo HI, Milnukee •

0

'68.95

2

Friday'• G-.

•

All baseboard and wall heaters
Reduced 20%! Get 'em while
they last!!

•

3
7
I 10
Pltclfk! Dlvblltll
a 3
8
4

.....,.,.,

RADIALS

Hl78·14

.'

llowJjoo

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ALL SEASON

P225·~5

GB
,9119 -

MJdwal DJYIIIJGm

San AntDnlo
Ulah

0

"

Paxton, che,erlei:ldcr advbnW; Mike
Mulford, assistant coach; Mark
Hartman, assistant coach;- Sharon
Vannoy , volleyball eoach and De,:yl
Well , head football eoach.
Gills of appre.:iati on WCI'e presellled to the followi n~ by the players:
Todd Mayes, Mi~e Mulford, Mark
Hartman, Bob Polcyn and Deryl
Well.

7

Pet.

.f.
8
.333
WESTERN CONFERENCE

•

LARRY'S SOHIO

:ifaculty trainer Todd Mayes
~nized Jack Matthews · as
;ipc~ent trainer.
awards were presented to
:!fie van~ty players. The boosters
b provided plaques and pictures
the Ienior athleteulong with letand or service bars provided by
:lfle school athletic department.
:bwardll werepreoented to :

4

rrw.r'•lleAIIII

Anna 71, IIIIEa ..
Cleve. o\dlml 71 , Clevl!. Eut 84

&amp;.did ~. Genev• 50
l'•lrilwn .S, BotkiN tl
Forl Loro&gt;nl&lt; II, H-.. 5S
Fotl Ret'Om'Y 71, l.Jnt.'Glnvitw 39
- " ' ... c.!,
N. Roy- " · c.l!l'nbia II
Northwelltem. Pa. IZ, COnnNMI. U
P.tnavllle Harvry 73, Lake Cath. 57
Reynoldolburo 57, Col. ~-.......,. 61 •
Spring. Catholic ' ~1. Sprin11.
NOf'th.:

WalnCOnfft'tlk'e

Chicago ·

0

Poleyn, ju11ior high L't&gt;aChi Mari~

•

Cellini Dlvblloo
7
4
6
4
$
4
5
6

Detroit

'

I
2
7
7

••

Nt!wJeney

With Blower

L

10
10
3
3

New York
Wbh.lngton

10 hour-s or
. longer. A Iso
burns wood.

W

• "I 1m looting forward to having a
lot of new talent," ho says, ''but I
realize that new talent means inexperience. It's gonna take lime to
mold our young players into the
system."
·
The Redmen will be bact at Lyne ,
Center December 5 when they host
Center.

0

• UniQue tllld , _ llOm)&gt;OUIId
hal - l l y Ill . . ~
undeflllt'-

'

2-ply load range B.
plus 11.53 FET.
No trade ne eded.

• The strength of 4 lull
plies of polyester
• Hard-pulling deepseated tniad cleats
• Eftective in slush.

snow. and hard

p~ck

•••

426 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

a.

1111 J •••
DlllleiF. Telro. .... 1111111111' of
.~ .

•

'

Nau..I ,HIK'RyJ..colpe

. EAB'I'EIIN CONFERENCE

set-

si zes, no-exposed heating
el e ments .
Two speed
fan and 2
heat levels.

electric thermostat. One

the nstional baske;ball team, which was·to compete In,
Asian basketball championships recently . . . Jeff and his sister Susanne were recently in attendance at the Rio Grande homecoming buketbaU
game · with Ohio University-Lanc~ster to· accept a
plaque Inducting their father into the' school"s:Athletic
Hall of Fiune.
..
Art Lanham is best remembered for his JO .~rs of
coaching at Rio Grande. A 1959 graduate-If Union,
Lanham had an overall record . of 2711-JJI . befOre
resigning in 1980. The sehool had 18 winnill!!' seasons
during his.tenure, including !our conference·championships in his last six years of coaching.

For the record.

:i. i~· .' .. ,_

the athletic programs at KC and how
much he is and will be missed by all.
Gifts of appl't.•ciation were presented to lhe following by Booster Club
P1·csid.ent Charlie Ma1tin:
Todd Mayes, faeulty trainer ; Bob

:;Twyllia
Connelley. received va rsily ,-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
:J~tter~. Second year pla yers
•Nc.:!iving awards were Amy Roush
:l&lt;ind Cindy Swisher. Third year
:Players receiving awards were
:Chris B.,. be, Tammy Proctor, and
:J.oretta Gilmore. Fourth year player
J'!'Ceiving an award was Kelly
~ibert . All league players for this
-•son are Kelly Nibert, Loretta
:tiJmore and Chris Beebe.
: ·Cheerleader Advisor Marie Pax·
::Ihn pn.-ented certificates to the
~iemben; of the r.,..rve and varsity
~eerleading squads. The varsity
"'"'t..~rleaders receiving certifieates
. :.ere: Stephie Noble, Amy Roush,
PHONE 245-9111
::iara Nay, Libby Miles and Pat
.
.
:;$!utlina. Senior Cheerleading Cal"
,RT.
35
RIO
GRANDE,
OHIO
~n Stephie alao .was given a plaque
::Jild picture. Reser.ve cheerleaders
::toeceivlng certificalell were : Debbie
;;r,olland, Lola Wlight, Annette
:ttessner, and Shellie Bradley. Also
~ were the Bobcat MaS&lt;.'Ot,
;iit.onda Sargeant and the junior
~rletlder Beth Bradbury.
401000 MILES AND
:t:;Assialanl footbed c'Oaches Mark
~rtman and Mike Mulford presenROAD HAZARD WARRANTY
~ awani&gt;l to the junior varsity foot;alu te.un. Four year manager
~nkin Halfhill Will commended for
AR78·13
·'47.95
P165·13
;~ill ouUtanding job in his career as
t...n manager. Miko Bradbury,
'49.95
P19S-14
ER78-14
3l:slxth grader at Cheshire'Kyger.
P205-15
~es~ with the mana,gerial
FR78-14
'65.95

, RIO GRANDE·- Mooday night;s game between Rio
Grande College and Union College In Barboursville,
Ky., wiD have a special twist for local basketball
foUowen.
Fonner Gallia Academy standout Jeff Lanham, son
of ex-Rio Grande coach Art Lanham, will make his
debut against the Redmen. The younger Lanham Is
listed by Union Coach Pete Moore as a 6-1 , Hi:;.pound
sophomore reserve guard on the Bulldog squad. Union
sported a1-:!6 record a year ago.
· The elder Lanham is currently director of the
American coaches wilh the United States Sports
Academy In Indonesia. He has been traveling all over
Indonesia visiting coaches and recrui!!f!g players for

McGraw-Edison

[Kyger Creek athletes honored
:: CHESHIRE - The 1981 Kyger
; creek Fall Sports Banquet was held
: l!ecently at the high liChool cafeteria.
::'fhe pOtluck dinner banquet was
rSjlOnsored by the athletic booster.!
::Ctub, Approximately 260 people at4 ended.
: : Athletic Director and Higll Sehool
~incipal Dan l!risker served. as
:lllaster of ceremon ies. The in::Iocahon and ~e benediction were
:given by ,John Fellure.
·
- ::-&lt; Coach Sharon Vannoy presented
...wards to the volleyball players:
::.... First )"'ear awards were prese nted
::ill' Diane Schartiger and Deanna
::t'roctor who received numerals ;
:ttoill' Baird, Robin Hanunond, and

Jeff Lanham, son of ex-Rio .
coach, .to ·debut against Rednten

Cold Weather
·Is Here

Spun. In a move unique in th~ Natloaal Buketball
Association, laken owner Jerry Bus• 1111med West and
Riley .. c!H!oaches after firing former head eoach
Paul Westhead. The new coaches woa their first game,
136-116. (AP Laserphoto).

mage for 111. We wwwi't very consistent of defe8ae, wbldlll prabably
the area tbal n'U need to develop
thelllOIIIduriJICihe-."
Mooe singled oUt M.rlt Herd,
Dwight Dopuuilld Ola Crawford,
aU freshmen, 'for their~
in the 11C11111JU11f. "lflid did an exce;IentjobreboundiJicliiMlacoring,".
he said.. "Dwlll also played a good
game, at both ends Gf ~ Ooor, as
did Crawford."
Union will be clependlna heavily on
young playen Uke lllri, Dunn and
Crawford, with a ,...... that lneludes 10 lleWCOJDefi Including
seven freshmen. That erep of new
players includes some -oatstandlng
but untested talent, -aeeordlng to
Moore, but he Is optlmis&amp;lc about the
upcoming season,

High school cage scores·
.__.....,..,....._
.,
.,.,.._..........

CJiill noiiatoitl&amp;·

'675-3930

.

.

'

'•

�Page--C-8- The -Sunday

·s,n~es - Sentmel

F'omeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w _ Vn.

Nov . 22, 1911

Washington CH gains state
lly Tile U. I I&lt;J rr-

Cieveland lle-.lletine Coach
Augie a-u know tile u..ortance
of getlinf a breall: ill a big . . -.
Rick 111ng came • with a deflected p911 -and 111ft II yanll for a
touchdown to help Blfldictine
knock iJft Y~ M001107 21-17 .
Friday and advlll&lt;ll to the Ohio high

Wittenberg
pre-sea&amp;on
favorite
COLUMaUS, Olllt (AP) - Wittenbefl Coach.......,. Hunter i.lys it
mealll little now lllat the Tlprs are
the prneaoon pick 1o win bolth the
Ohio Conference ncuiar- and
tournament
titles.
,
"You don't will the oc championship in Dtcernllor. In the end it's
the teams that are the . - consistent that will he ill cont...tion. I
just hope we're one ol them," he said
after the predicti- Thuroday by
the co.ches and rnoolia.
"It's ·flattering lobe c . _ number one. It does giw the kids a goal
to shoot for," admitted Hunter,
whose wiMing pereentage of .132 is
the best of any active college basketball coech at any ftel. Ilia teams
have a five-year retwd of llt-24.
· The Tigers retum otarters Derrick
Byers, ROOney GObert and Mark
Williams from their 2&amp;-3 squad that
shared the replaNeBliOrt league

.j

tM t ·t"t-:'
SHE HAS HOPE- Jane Upton Bell islhe guiding mind behind "Bob
Hope's SlaDd-Up and-Cheer for the National Football League's 60th Year
-Au AIJ..Star ComedySIIlute to America's No. 1 Spectator Sport.:• II will
' be.sbowo t0olght1&gt;o NBC. (AP Laserpholol.

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspoodeot

. . o.::~

Athletic11

Divit~ion

of

l n t~ r co llc giu t e

II Una! football pol\, w1th fin=Ot·
pla~.-e- vot~s. sea~on's ret.Vnls and polnl..'l :
I. Pac. Lutheran 1H 1

l William Jewell, Mo.
3. Cork.'Ordla, Minn . 121
•· Westmnstr, Pa.
$. Panhandlt• St., Okla.
&amp;. Austill, Texas
7. Anderson, Ind.
I. OtckinsonSt., N.D.
t. Sui RoSB St,, Texas
10. Findlay, Ohio
11. Com..'On,liu, Neb.
12. cal Luthrrlin

13.1l&lt;lhany. Kan.

14. Linfield, Ort~on

15. Sl. John'11, MuUI,
16. Jamestown, N.D.
17. MUsowi Valley
11. Baker, Kan.
!j. Peru St., Neb.
20. St. Thomas, MU\n.

9-G-0
IG-0-41
9-0-1
.....

-316

!H.{)
8-1.(1
7--0-tl

220
204
191

9-l.O

JBS

8--HI

175

!1-1~

1-:l.(l

174
170
132
JO.l

7-241

83

6-Hl

79

.....
8-U

9-l~

8-2.{)

;!%

284
281

~·

n

8-2:-(1

58

7-2.(1
7-2-0

35
28

NCAA INvillun I·AA
By 'J1W' Auodated Pn!Wi
Tht&gt; Top 10 teams in lhe National Colleltillltl
AlhleUc Assoc!4J.tion Divi!IOO I·AA foot~!!.· w1lh

Reds plan
oldtirners tilt

'

I

CINCINNATI CAP) - The . Cincinnati Reds are planning an oldtimers' game for next season, the
first one that would be held at River·
front Sladlwn sin&lt;e 1975.
, The game is scheduled for Sunday,
JWle 8, when the Reds play the New
York Mets: No other dl!lails were
available Friday.
Reds Publicity Director Jlm
Ferguson said the club stopped
boldlng old-timers' games after

1975.
"1bere was a periOd

where

bulcelly the- players had been

COIIIIDi

bllet (far the games) for
Ferguson sald. "We
got away fnm It far a while.

some time,"

Jllllt

1'lllre
no pertkullr
" of
The waa
old-limen'
game-II-one
..-.1 aeeduled -u at 111112 Reds

......

crown la¥t. seaH(I'I.

Byers, • Mool_. oenior center,
averaged 10.9 points, Gilbert, a 6-1
junior forward, 111 poinls, and
Willi81111, a 6-1 jallior g..rd, 8.4
points. However, Wltlenbe.-.Iost the
OC's Most Valuable Player, Tyrone
Curtis.
zany film dips, will feature some
Elevet1 of the 14 conference
real live human beings who won't be .
wearing helmets and pads, prin· coaches picked Willenberg to win
cipally Elizabeth Taylor, Barbara the regular-seuon title as well as
Mandrell, Susan Anton and Howard
other three chou Otterbein, c&lt;&gt;Cosell.
the tournament'
champioo
with clwnpiollBhip.
Witlenberg in The
the
Liz Taylor plays the first woman
football corrunissioner. Hope has fun 1!160-81 regular-- race.
Wittenberg earned 192 points and
with Cosell of wbom he says,
Otterbein
173 in the co.ches'
"Howard Cosell is the one man Will
ballotilli.
·
Rogers never met."
Muskingum
third wllfl 166
"It's a sort of spoof but more a fun
points,
Baldwin-Wallace
fourth 149,
look at history," Bell says. "We
Ohio
Northern
fifth
1411,
Capital
sixth
have some amusing situations. It
129,
Heidelberg
seventh
It,
Ohio
has pace and variety."
Wesleyan
eighth
fl,
Kenyon
ninth
88,
Pro football actually traces its birwoo.ier
.lOth
71,
Marietta
11th
58,
th to 1920 with the formation of the
Mount.Unionl;lth
Ill,
Denial&gt;n
13th
42
American Profe&amp;'lional Football
and
Oberlin
last
311.
Association by Chicago's George
Of 30 media hellot.l, Wittenberg
Halas and friends. It officially
was
named first 171imes and collecbecame the NFL in 1922. For years
ted
a
leading 403 points. Otterbein
the pros struggled in the shadow of
was
second
with alne fi1111-place
the college game but took off with a
votes
and
317,
Mlllldngum
third with
boom after World War II and the adthree
fints.
and
Mi
and
Baldwinvent of television.
~
Wallace
fourth
arlth
one
flnt
and
Bert Bell, scion of a wealthy
313.
Philadelphia family and a Penn
The media c._ Ohio Northern
player who participated in the Rose
fifth
SOO, Capit.l •ixth 218
Bowl, became the third commissioner in 1946. He died alter suf· Heidelberg sewnth :105, Konyori
f"ring a heart altatk at the Steelers- eighth 1M, Ohio Wi~Myan ninth 189,
Eagles game at Franklin Field Oct. Wooster loth 151, Jlleent Union 11th
128, Marietta 12th Ill, Den~ 13th
11,1959.
105 and Oberlin 111111.
The media alae ~ Wittenberg
to win the toumamont.

In Other semifinal playoff gannes
Friday, TrotwOOII Ma\liBon dumped
Columbus Whitehall 21).7 in the other
Division II contest, Akron
Vincent-st. Mary beat Elyria Catholic
~ and Washinf!lon Court House
downed Hamilton Badin 21·7 in
Division III games, and Tiffin
Calvert blanked Marion Local 2'1-0
and Newark Catholic shut · out
Mdgadore 7-0 in Division V contests.
Paul Hrisko tossed three toucl~
down passes, including two in the
fourth quarter, to give Benedictine
·the victory over Mooney.
"We did what 1\'e set out'to do in

St:

Frank Starrul, who added 58, and
Randy Lepley, who rusiHid for ~
yards Including a 21-yard touchdown
in the fourtll quarter.
:1
In Springfield, Jon Jon Thonias
threw two touchdown pam;es eld
returned an interceptioll for anotlij,r
score to lead Washington ~
Ho!19e over HamUton Badin. _ -j
In Lima, senior lullback ~k
Cool scored two touchdowna.to te4d
Tiffin Calvert to victory over Mantn
Local. Cool scored both touchdO\JIIS
on :i-yard runs in tile si!COnd qua~.
In Canton, Newark Calholfc!'s
Tony Gilinsler scored the BarrH!'s
only toucbdown with 42 seconds 1411
in the first half, and hill tean1's
defet1110 held Mogadore in check for
its victory. ..
..
'

classified

ClEVELAND (AP) - Vice President George Bush
says the clearest characteristic of President Reagan's
administration is consistency.
Speaking to about 800 people at a $150-a·plate fund·
raiser for Cuyahoga County Republicans Friday night,
Bush said-that although Reagan has been criticized by
political opponents, he won't sway from hiscampaign
promises.
"I've met with 126 foreign leaders since I've been in
this job. They aU seem to understand now that the
United States of America with Ronald Reagan as
president will aclllke the United States of America.
"The recent Libyan case was a small incident interms of history, but it was a strong message to the world,
and that message is this: 'Don't tread on the United

O.J. Simpson will
tell you ...
Get in step with
Dingo.

8tates.'"

'l1IE BIG PICJURE - Vice president Gtorge
llulh prailell doe job Preoideot Reagan is doing in an
adclretia before 800 Republican lallhlul at a lund raiSer
In Cle""land Friday night The dinner was sponsored

!IOi nt:; :
l. E. Kl!ntucky 131
2. 1dahoSt. l ll
3.S.Caroli naSt.
4. Boise St.
~.Jackson St.

!1-Hf
~~~
H~

~2~

11-1-l

6. l.ehi ~h

~,..

1. Teune~'!t!e 51.

~2~

8. Delaware
9. Massachusetts

1-U
6-3-0

10. NcwHa1np.~hire

1-3-&lt;1

tie Yoon~stown St.

7-3-&lt;l

..""

.

$2
4$

""'
34
28
24
21

NCAA Divllllunlll
Dy Th~ AMSodaled PraM
MISSION , Kan . lAP ) - T~ Top 10 t.eams in •
till' Naliun~:~l Collr,~tc Alhldil- ASllotialion
Di vision Ill rootba ll pull, with first--phi l~ vote11
1:1nd th1 s season 's l'ccnnls and pQints;

l. WiLII!ner rJ t
2.. Dayton Ill
J. Alfred
4. Au~ustana
5. l.awnmcc
6. W. Gcor~ia
7. MontchurSI.

'

I

10-1-.0
,.....
....
! ....

5I
5I&gt;
Sl

........ ,..
~~~

8. Miun-Morris
9. DePauw

7-2-1
~~~
~~~

10. Wabash

17

33

,.
32

12

J .
by the Ohio Huulle Republican Campaign Committee
and the Cuyahoga County Republican party to raise .
money lor their campaign war-chest (AP Laserphoto).

Bush, often critical of Reagan when the two battled
in 1980 for the Republican presidential nomination,
also defended hlm against critics of his domestic
policies.
"Not that we think everything is rosy, b~i we have a
president who adheres to principles and is onthreatened by his enonnous job," Bush said. "This
president is a radical in that he is doing as president

what he promised to do in his campaign. Nobody seems
to understand that."
Bush directed specific criticism at fanner Vice
President Walter Mondale. Bush said Mondale was
wrong for publicly saying Reagan's policies were
failing prior to Oct. 1, when sorrie of the Reagan budget
cuts went into effect.
He said rising unemployment figures should not be
deemed a serious problem because recent declines in
the prime rate are positive influences on the economy.
Bush arrived on Air Force Two at6 :30 p.m., one hour
late because of adverse weather conditions. He left
Cleveland for Washington, D.C., immediately after his
speech.
The dinner , was sponsored by the Ohio House
Republican Campaign Committee and the Cuyahoga
County Republican Finance Committee. Gov. James
Rhcdes was honorary chainnan of the event.
Bush said Cleveland's fiscal recovery under
Republican Mayor George V. Voinovich is "a national
success story." He also praised Rhodes, saying the
governor has sincere eoncern for development of job.s

in the state.

CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446·4290

·Ttial of Sadat assassins opens

Ulre a IIOO(fl]e/ghbor, •

Slate Farm Is there.

STATE FARM

Q

StAll .....

'"""*" Ca..tnloa A
Hilmi Dlttcll:
••••u.':'c
11

~j;B;Iool;m;~;"""'~·;~11nllll;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~t
'•

I 'Center cloted

voks and th i!t season·~ r~-onls cwd

D .,

is Reagan's plus

~---------r-----:----------..:_-----~i­

"llreatmy
policyhoklera
llkelndlv·
lduala, not
numbers .•.
each has
different
insurance needs." Call me.

Nov. 22, 1981

Bush says consistency

w•

first-pla t ·~

The Top Twenty terun.'l In the National
Allsol'iati on

the Rarru; and Cleveland Indians
baseball team and is sponsor of one
of the pro tour's top golf tournaments.
While declining to reveal the plot,
both Jane and Bob let the cat out of
the hag in warning fans that the
salute to the NFL wiD not be a dull
re-creation of old games.
It's going to be jazzed up, as only
Hope can do it, and, besides a few

Twenty teams

ByTheAt~~~udllt.edPreij~

life.''

stopping their runnJng pme and forced them to throw" u1d Moooey
Coach Don Bucci. "Millll t.1rnoa when
we do that, we come out a winner.
But their quarterblck did a great
job under the condltiona."
In Dayton, quarterliaek P.hil Yost
threw for two touchdowna and ran
for another as Trotwood Madlaon
downed Colwnbua Whitehall: Trot·
wOOd taUback Tony Cospy ran for
101 yards on 22 carri...
,
In Panna, Akron Sl VIncent-st.
Mary piled up 297 yards rushing, led
by 105 yards from senior fullback
Craig Mears, to easily defeat Elyria
Catholic. Mears scored on runs of 5
and 57 yards. The St. Vincent-st.
Mary attack was boosted by Tim .
Wallace, who ran for M yards;

""""'"ll

Today's

jane Upton Bell recalls as if it
were only yesterday the long transcontinental train ride from
Philadelphia to Los Angeles with her
dad nearly 30 years ago.
"Dad haled airplanes and refused
to fly," she said. "When we got off
the train we were met by Pete
Rozelle, who, instead of booking us
into our hotel, whisked us off to a
beautiful club where we had lunch."
Present at the lunch were Jane;
her dad, Bert BeD; Dan Reeves and
Bob Hope, who were partners in the
ownership of the Los Angeles Rams,
plus Rozelle, a lowly press agent for
the Rams who subsequently succeeded Bell as commissioner of the
National Foothall League.
Mystically, the luncheon partyminus Bell and Reeves, who are no
longer aUve - wiD be reunited
tonight in a lw&lt;&gt;-hour TV special
which carries the long-winded Iitle
of "Bob Hope's Stand-U!Hind-Cheer
for the National Football League's
60th Year - An All.Star Comedy
Salute to America's No.1 Spectator
Sport" (NBCIHOp.m. est).
The title alone takes up two pages
in the TV guides.
"I think that meeting really was
the genn of the idea," Bell said from
her home base in Los Angeles. ·
The grandiose special came out of
her own ~d. A successful director
and prcducer, she is the producer
putting all the pieces together. She
persuaded Hope to go along. Then
she got approvalirom Rozelle.
"I thought it was great," said
Hope, a sports buff who boxed as a
kid, put some of his excess cash in

school Division II football finals.
"That_play helped us mentaUy,"
Bosou said. "Our defenoe came to

fin~s

RIO GRANDI!: - All facilities at
Lyne Callier Co-. pool, 1N1gbt
room ud hailllball eeurt) will be
closed Ulltil cla
r.une fer win, \erquarteronM....,,Nov.•.
A , _ oclwxlilll IIIII bo ~
at that lime.

I

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - The trial of 24 Moslem
fanatics acci!sed in the assassination of President Anwar Sadat began Saturday with the chief military
judge reading the indictment to the defendants, who
shouted "God is great"lrom a steel restraining cage.
· Before the three major generals serving as judges
entered the courtroom, the man accused of leading the
.assuslns, army Lt. Khaled Ahmed Shawki el' Islambouly, shouted, "I am Khaled el·Islambouly and
• ·I am the one who killed the tyrants."
· · Security was light for the two-bour opening session
::at the Gebel el Ahmar army camp. Reporters were
-:checked at a police roadblock about a mile from the
• camp and again a half-mile away.
.
•• Six men Identifying themselves as def"nse attorneys
':were denied entry to the camp because their names
.Were not on the list checked by security men at the
' gate. The families of the accused attended the first

• session.
After Ieday's opening session, the military panel has
the authority to close any further proceedings to the

public.
The authoritative October magazine said the sentencing, at least, would be public. Conviction carries

an automatic dea!h penalty.
The defendants appeared in gOOd spirits. They chanled that they were not part of any group or party and
had carried out the ass&amp;liSination independently.
Some had undressed wounds on their heads. They
, ·were not bound or handcufftd in the steel-barred cage,
which was divided into four ~ections. ·
, The government news agency reported that some of
• the accused refused the judge's offer of defense at·
• ~eys, saying, "Gcd i~ the best lawyer of the faith- ·
, ful."
·
· Before reading the indictment, the judge called the

i'&lt;tD of the 23 defendents who were present. The abse111
' defendant was reported receiving medical treatment.
Some defendants complained tltey had been
mistreated and that their solitary cells did not have

.,.

toilets. Others claimed their families were being
harassed by the authorities.
All 24 defendants are charged with capital crimes.
The four men accused of shooting Slldat to death
during a military parade Oct. 6 face charges of
premedilated murder and the 20 others are accused of
conspiracy to commit premeditated murder.
In addition to Slldat, seven other people were killed
and 'tl wounded when four men dressed in army uniforms jumped from a truck and fired automatic weapons
into the reviewing stand.
Goventment sources have !IBid the defendants are
iinkL'&lt;I to the Moslem fundamentalist group Takfir Wal
Hi~ra.
.
The newspaper Al-Gomhuria has published what it
claimed were the confessions of the four men accused
of carrying out tlie assassination, in which they say
Slldat was the sole target.
Slldat's successor, Hosni Mubarak, has said the goal
of Ute assassins was to slaughter Egypt's political,
religious and military leaders, seize state broadcasting
facilities and proclaim an Iranian-style Islamic
republic.
The semi-official newspsper Al-Ahram said the
defendants were transferred to a military prison close
to the court, which is near the assaliSination site sevfn
1niles northeast of Cairo.
A civilian judge told :rhe Associated Press that
although only two of the defendants are soldiers, the
case is being tried by a military court because the
crime occurred at a military parade, nin what is considered mi lilary territory.''

The judge, who spoke on condition that he not be
identified, said that if the defendants are sentenced to
death they probably will be hanged, evert though most
milil&lt;try executions are carried out by firing squad.
" But a firing squad confers dignity on the con·
demned men~ and the nature

or the crime these men

are accused of perpetrating is so base and low they
wouldn't be given that dignity of bein~ shot," the judge
said.

•

~

'~ '

.

on saturday. Steel cage on right r.ootalnll the defendants, speclators and judges sit in rows and the judges
can he seen on the stage at !runt of courtroom. (AP
Wireplloto).

'i

At -least _1 4 dead following killer storm
..

The winner nt1raa11 "· SUI anc1
$2.20.
Brandy Lee - IOCOIId, paying
$4.20 llld
willie cw.nt's
Divides~!~ paW f4ferllni•Nxullird.

...

$4.•.

_

"'

..

~

...;....,

"·

'.;:-

GARAGE
SPECIAL
24' X 30' X8' EAVE
1- 16'x7'.0verhead
1- J'x6'8" Service Door
4x6 Pressure Treated Timbers
29 Gau_g e Painted Steel Siding (ChOice of 12 c:aiWII) wltlt
5 Year Warranty.
·
28 Gauge Galvalume steel Roofln; with :10 Ynr
warranty .
UIR..IR
·
.
·
•JVW TOTAL E*ECTIO "UCI
Prices lnclud&amp;Tax&amp; Dclhu: t
Many other Building ~lzes and o,tlwll AW!IIeble
For More Information, Caller Wrlft

MINNEAPOUS, (AP) - Midwesterners digging out
today from a soggy snowstorm that killed at least 14
people, cut power to thousands of bomes and stranded
' one city's fleet of snowplows behind electric garage
doors that had no electricity.
Foot~ snows from the season's first big
snowstorm cracked tree limbs and toppled power lines
in Michigan, leaving 92,000 hom·es and businesses
blacked Olit by the time the snowflakes stopped falling
late Friday. Temperatures were in the 30s throughout
much of the Midwest, leaving the snow heavy and wet.
Some parts of Michigan got 14 inches of snow, the
National Weather Service reported.
In Atlanta, officials said Friday a freak twister tlult
struck just alter midnight with 100 mph winds did $2
million In damage to planes and buildings at Hartsfield
International Airport. A Flying Tiger DCll had one of
its four engines ripped off by a small twin-engine plane
which was blown under the jet. Five people were
slightly Injured.
The rural areas north of Muskegon in Western
Michigan were hardest hit, with 30,000 Consumers
Power Co. customers still blacked out by late Frijlay,
said ulillty spokeaman Robert Wischmeyer. He /said
power may not be restored completely before Sunday.
"The weather ill so bad that it's hard to locate lines"
that are downed so that repairs can be made, Wischmeyersald.
"It's going to lake us most of today to put G111nd
Raplda back together," sald Consumers spokesman AI
Shepard.
• ' .
Snow plows were stuck in a Muskegon Heights city
garage because there 1'(89 Jio electricity to run the elec-

IRON..,_.

'~
· --~--~~~--~-L--------~----~----------~··~--~--------~--~·~1~

~-

,

.

NOII1lii\ANDALL, Ohio (AP) Jockey Mart Salvagio rode Arctic
Herb to victory 1.1 the featured
eighth race at Thistledown on
Friday, touring 1111 lix harlonp In
1:16 4-5.
'

le

i

SADAT ASSASSINS' TRIAL STARTS -'- General
view of the Courtroom at the "Red Mountain" Army
camp oli the outskirts of Cairo where the trial of the 24
acclllled of assassioaling President Sadat Oct. 6 began

Thistledown

l5140 Middle l"orlt Rd.,

•

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wu palled fruiiiiMIUe ftle t.n
after 1be I a.m. aeeld elit bat elfarlllo nYiw 111111 at •
llouipltllll~ (API as pWo).

tric door openers, said city clerk Emery Sisneros. City
workers finally opened one door manuaUy, freeing a
few trucka for service•
Snow began flllllng shortly after millnight and left 6

•

'I

wo~Jo~, Sbermao

lo 10 inches in Muskegon. Up to 12 inches Or snow fell on
parts of Newaygo County, where many schools closed
Friday, said Sheriff Leonard Somers.
The National Weather Service said 13 inches of snow
fell at Hesperia on the border of Newaygo and Oceana
counties and 14 _inches fell on parts of Roscorrunon
County.
In Minnesota, Northern States Power Co. officials
said Friday it could be late Sunday before power is
restored to more than 77,000 customers iJ1 the Minneapolis-51. Paul area, which was hit by a record
snowfall of 10.4 inches Wednesday night and Thursday.
The National Weather Service said it was the most
snow to fall on the Twin Cities in a 24-hour period since
1966.
The sheer weight of the snow snapped tree limbs and
some power lines and caused other lines to sag and
short out.
The collapse Thursday night of the fabric roof on the
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome also was blamed on
the weather.
·
The storm was moving toward central and southwestern Ontario Friday night and was expected to
bring 2 to 4 inches of snow in some areas. A spokesman
for Environment Canada said the brunt of the stonn
was to hit the Georgian Bay anclna'}iburton regions.
Before snow fell in Indiana, a line of tornadoes and
severe thunderstorms swept Into the state, causing
damage esltmaled at nearly $500,000. Up to 3 inches of
snow had accumulated in southern Indla!lB by today.
Up to 8 inches of snow fell in parts of Wisconsin on
Thursday night as winds guated to 41 mph. Temperatures were In the mid-208 In some areas, but the
winckhiJI factor made it feel more like 2 deer-, officlals said. Iowa had up to31nches of snow.
At least 10 people died In the sl10W81onn's march out ·
of the West:
.
.

'

\

�'
'-/"'
Nov . 22, 1981

he

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

By8TEVEN P. R06ENFEUl
AP&amp;rfllmll'ritet
NEW YQIIK (AP) - 1be natloo's
houaing indWitry, by some

for retirement
accounts

meaaurea, ia having ita worst year
since laD, with even established

. WASHJN:GTON (AP) - Despite

industry , federal financi a!
regUlators are going ahead with
their plan to let banks and savings
and loans offer new retirement
savings accounts that have no interest ceilings.
William B. O'Connell, president of
the U.S. League of Savings
Associations, called the decillion, announced Friday, "irresponsible and
arrogant."
'l'he American Bankers
. Association, however, described the
&amp;

builders feeling the pinch.

SlORE HJUIS:
Mon.-Sit. 8 ....to pm

protests from the savings and loan

11

Industry groupe and outside
analysta say hopes are rising that a
turning point Ia near, but that if conditions do not Improve, a w•ve of
failures will sweep what is left of the
building trade.
"In market after ITW'ket, observers streu that II Ia the large and
experienced builders who are in
trouble now; the marginal ones went
oveboard a year ago or two yeus
ago," says Robert J. Mylod
president of Advance Mortgag~
Corp., a leading mortgage banker
and affiliate of the investment
banking firm of Oppenhelrfier&amp; Co.
"Various deadlinOs are given for
how loogbuilders can hold out under
current conditions: 90 days 120 days,
1110 days," Mylod says.
·
The Commerce Department ·
reported !hill past week that builders
started work on new single-family
houses at an annual rate of 48'1,000 in
October, down ·25 percent from September and the lowest rate the agency has ever computed.
Over•ll housing starts fell to their
second lowest level since !959 and
building permits for future ' construction dectined for the sixth
~traight month.
' 'The current state of the housing
market ill the most dismal since the
Depression. But we may be close to
a turning point in the market, if interest rates continue ~ir slide of
the past few weeks and providing the
recessioo does not cut too deep " according to a quarterly survey by Ad·
vance Mortgage. "After two more

Sunday lD.am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
1
PRICES GOOD lHRU NOV. 28, 1981

major victory for the

public."

The savings and loan industry
. fears the uncapped accounts will
cost the nation's sx 1..'1 roughly $750
million over the next 12 months and
spark price wars as i!lstitutions vie
for savers' money.
But the banking industry foresees
the accounts generating $50 billion to
$80 billion a year in new deposits.
Interest in the accounts is running
high beCause the new tax law ex·
tends their eligiblllty to millions of
l!meriC81l! who previously were
prohibited from opening them. As of
Jan. I, those who are covered by
private pension plans can open Individual Retirement Accounts.
Keogh plans -are for the self·
employed.
'
: The new accounts go into effect a
IJlOnth earlier, on Dec. 1.

Priests
convicted
'

MIAMI (AP) ·. -

One of two
convicted of

Episcopal priesls
"trading with the enemy" for
bringing 411 Cuban refugees to the
United States during the 1980 boatlill
says he'd do it again if he had to.
The bells of Grace Epillcopal
Church in New Orleans began tolling
Friday evening, shQrtly after guilty
verdicts were returned in Miami
federal court against the Rev. Joe
Morris Doss and his curate at the
church, the Rev. Leopold Frade.
The two priests, who were acqllit·
ted of conspiracy charges in the
case, face UP to 10 years in a federal
penitentlary and $50,000 in fines
each.
U.S. District Judge Edward B.
Davis, who presided over the twoweek trial, set no sentencing date.
"If I had to, r would do it all over
again because we were acting in the
name of the Lord," Doss said after
the verdict.
"It's not a matter of bittemesa,"
Doss said after he returned to New
Orleans. "!'m disappointed that
what I believe as the truth was not
acc!epted."
Miami Methodist Minister Roberto Perez was found innocent of both
charges. Anurse, Ofelia Hutchinson
of Kenner, La., was given a
verdict of acquittal before the case
went to the jury Friday. She
traveled witli the priests to Cuba to
pick up the refugees.
" If anyone should have been indicted, it was President Carter
because , of his indecision in
policymaking," said Perez, who left
the courtroom in tears after !i.e jury
delivered its verdict.
"The Cuban community will be
very upset at this. I will tell my church memben to pray for these
priests,'' Perez said.
"Maybe we're paying for a lot of
sina from the old administration "
Frade said.
'
Frade and Doss ferried Cubans to
Key West, Fla., in June IIBJ aboard
a converted World Warn submarine
chaaer they renamed the God's Mercy. Nearly 125,000 Cubans came to
the United States in the fivHilonth
"Freedom Flotilla" alter Cuban
President Fidel Castro opened the
port of Martel.
David Hiller, a special aaslatant to
the U.S. Attorney General William
French Smith, uid the guilty verdicts uphold Immigration policy.
"We cannot and will not tolerate
another Marie!," Hiller said,
referring to the Cuban port where

MIXED

USDA CHOICE

dinB bolla lee*IIWc.bL
.JuiiiD Murray ti !few Or1eena, lilt
deflnle altuuoey far boll! prfella,
sUI he pl8llllld to ftle for • dlneled
pcliWfal aeqalltal, and if that
fallal, he -'d make i motion for a

.

Round Steaks....~.~1
BUCKET

'

.

Cube Steaks ....:..~.~

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

99

16 to 24 LB.

E-Z-CARVE

· CON'J'IUBUTES TO HOSPITAL FUNDS - Area
busineaetl are still conlribullng to the Holzer Medical
tenter pediatric television and loy funds for children
~laying in the h08pital during November. In tile top
photo, Earl Neff (lefU gets the contribution check from

Boneless

LB

·1

Ground Beef.......~!

estimates of inventory buildups.
· And rising inventories right now
are
the subject of a great deal of con~W YORK (AP) ~ No matter
cern.
As goods build up In the
wi-t the weallierbrings, Wall Street ·
pipelines
of the economy, they tend
i9o braci!lg fOr a long cold winter for
to discourage further production and
t1ie U.S. economy.
encourage layoffs.
Though some of the official
"The economy ill weakening
criteria for a ~~recession" have nOt
rapidly," noted Aubrey H. Zaffuto,
yet been recorded in ' . the
statlalicians' books, almost every economist at the investment
economist agrees that prospects for management firm of Schroder .
the economy over the next few mon- Capital Managementlnc.
"Even if inventories can be
ths are poor at beat.
brought
under t'Ontrol in the next
"This recession has begun as we
few
months,
real GNP is likely to,
enter the all-imporlant Chrilltmas
slip
at
a
greater
than 5 percent anseason, when 30 percent of all connual
rate
in
the
fourth
quarter and
sumer sales are transacted," Paul ,
fall
further,
by
perhaps
4 percent
Rjithman. an analyst at Advesl Inc., rate, in the first quarter ofa !982."
based in Hartford, Conn., observed.
•. ,''With unemployment rising, this · Edward Yardeni, economist at
year's holiday shopping season may E.F. Hutton &amp; Co., is projecting a 7
be a bwruner . . Companies'' cash percent drop in the current quarter,
flows to meet their bills and pay off followed by a more modest decline
their high interest loans could fall in the first three months of 1982.
"We think the current recession
short. ·
will
be much more severe than last
41
If this is so, annoWlcements of
year's
downturn," he declared.
fin)ncial distress may accelerate in
Faced
with such gloomy prospec·
COming months."
In the past week, the government Is, the stock market turned in a
revised its figures for the gross mixed showing in the past week. The
national product to show. that the
Jones
dropped
2.115average
to 1152.93.of 30 Industrials
-.bon's output of goods and ser- Dow
The
New
York StOck Exchange
vices, aner adjustment for inflation,
composite
index
rose .14 to 70.99, and
rose at a 0.6 percent annual rate in
·
the
market
value
index at the
the third quarter. Previously, it had
American
Stock
Exchange
edged up
~ estimated that GNP had fallen
.39
to318.11.
·
·
·
0.6 percent in the July-September
Big
BoQrd
volume
averaged
47.56
period.
million.
shares
a
day,
against
49.!19
Economists cautioned,· however,
'miltion
the
week
before.
that the change should not be read as
The pre-Christmas financial picany' sort of encouraging news, since
ture is by no means all Scrooge and
it mainly. reflected
an increase--in
.. .
By CHETCURRIER
As110&lt;lated Press Writer

39

•

Bananas..............~·
KRAFT

·

Parkly.............~.. 2/$1

.,

~

e 2% Milk..........~..!

69

BANQUET ·

Pot Pies.~ ...... ~~..,4/$1
HOUSE

SUGAR

-

5LB.

$129

INSTANT COFFEE
lOOZ.

$3~

CRISCO

COROiiET DELTA

Tl~

,,

SH0111NINO

69'

3L8.
CAJI

u.B. illdltltr)'.

1be ~oped

.'
/

will

l

Quality

~in which .~.,...

..
'•'

1-----------L----------~'

,l

"
'. '

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Happy.40th
Anniversary

''

..

Manniqgand
Dorothy Priest

'/

" l

''
Love, Children Larry,
Bell, DoHie, Connie &amp;
families.

.

II ;

r.====~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~J
3 DAY'S ONLt'
MDIII~ TUES., WED.
IIOV. 23, 24, 25
.,,,~

Lay-Away lor Christmas .

~

CINCINNATI (AP) - Blame for
the nation's productivity problems
in buSineaa, govenunent and achools
can be placed squarely on the
s110ulders of hollies, a~g to a
fiWIIIgemenl expert.
Knowing what to say and how to
say ·it Ia the most overlooked
fiWIIIgement s1dll, said Lawrence
Ajipley, former chairman of tt.e
Atnerican MaJliiSe!llent Aasociatlon.
Ajfpley l1lllde his remarks Thursday
before about 100 execu&amp;lveo.
"The reason foremen don't talk to
their people Ia that they don't know ·
what to talk about and they don't
kOOw how to talk about 1\. Every
productivity Jll1lb1em Ia related to
one of the breakdowns in thai area,"
said Appley. "If the elementary
......,ement proceaa were followed
s10llfully, t1!ere would be ilo prodilctffity probleml...
He uld the ayllem that .... in. . producllvlty 1P Japen,
~ ..,....., upon open commilnk:atlan, doeln't fit lilt model of

I

•

no Santa Claus: Opeo-market in·
terest rates have fallen
dramatically in the past month, and
the bond market, which responds
directly to interest rate changes, has
&gt;'!aged it. strongest rally of the year.
Some actively traded bonds have,
in a few weeks' time, recouped
roughly two-thirds&lt;lf the losses they
piled up earlier in the year, when
bond prices were reaching record
lows with monotonous regularity.
The prime lending I'ate, which
spent much of the summer stuck at a
near-record 20t percent, has since
come doWn to the 16-16\2 percent
range, and is considered likely to fall
further before long.
A few large lenders have even
. begun to lower their mortgage rates,
though rates on those loans remain
at steep levels.
A substantial drop in interest rates
is normally considered a potent plus
for the stock market. This time It
hasn't worked out that way, apparently .because stock traders have
regarded falling rates as a symptom
of the rapid falloff of economic ac·
tivity.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Republic
Steel Corp. saya it has agreed to
transfer to an unidentified company
certain federal income tax benefits
In tax lease transactions valued at
some $139 miiUon.
Bruce C. Wheatley, director of
public ~elations for the finn, said
Friday the deal involved transfers of
tax benefits pursuant to leases
which permit Republic tu retain title
to Republic equipment at various
faciUiies for all but tax purposes.
He said the major item of equip· menl is a newly constructed coke
battery in the Chicago area. Other
Items were among a wide range of
production equipment in other cOmpany $ilea. He would not elaborate.
Repubtic said the company
already has received ~.8 million of
the benefits and expects to receive
some$106millionmoreonDec. 22.
Wheatley said he did not know the
name of the second company involved.
The benefits are part of the
Reagan administration' s tax
program approved by Congress in

,,
.,

28DL4301

.

'

.' '.

cur soo Sean Best

'.

DieHard" battery
Our highest-powered
battery. with S25 cold
cranking amps*. For fast.
reliable starts.

..,

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•S.ttoly ~.. 24

Boss gets the blame

DARI FRESH

/

Mary Lou Tawney, former manager of 'J1drly·Five
West, Inc., lor th~ TV fuad and ID the bottom photo,
Neff gets the loy contribution from Helen Thomas,
•ecrelary of the Ohio Valley Chapter No. 80 of the
Telephone I;'ioneers of AmeriCll.

Wall Street braces for winter

MWirtal.
I \&lt;

.

,,

$ 79
Hams....~-.
(HALF $1.8!L£

quarters of postwar (World War II) Joana."
lows, housing should begin a slow · And, he _says, capacity for con-'~
'steady recovery."
.
' structioo has been so reduced by W
Michael Carliner, a vice president housing slungp that if there Ia a surge
at Regional Data Associates, which in the industry, builders could not
makes forecasts on the housing in· keep up with demand.
l
dustry, said that in the past 12 monAnd Mylod says there
be stiff
ths the lllflalulot-adjusted price of competition for mol'll{age loans next
-.
new homes has fallen 13 per~ent the year. He said homebuyers will vie .
greatest decline since 1920.
'
for funds with bol'I'O\Wers who must •
In terms of difficulty in selting refinance short-term home loanS:
houses, the industry is cerlainly in they arrang!'lf in recent years . irl
its worst condition since World War hopes that interest rates would fall. ·"
II, he said.
Meanwhile, the recession outlooli:' ·
High interest rates on home mor- worsened.
'·
!gages and on building loans are
· President Reagan said th~
blamed for the downturn.
recession was "slight" a month ago.
While the prime lending rate at This past week, Murray Welden: •
major banks has fallen from 20.5 baum, chairman of the president's
percent in September to as low as 16 Council of Economic AdvisOl'S, said ·
percent this past week, mortgage the downturn has become
rates remain near record levels.
"average" for the post-World War II
The Federal HDr[le Loan Bank period.
Board said home mortgage rates
Weidenhaum said he e&lt;pected R
reached a record 18.17 percent nearly stagnant 1 percent average·
average in October.
annual rate of growth in the
. This paat week, however, some economy next year, down sharply'
major lenders annouced slight mor- from earlier administration •
tgage rljte reductions, in some cases forecasts. But he predicted 1983 will '
the first cuts since Augusi 1980.
be "a very prosperous year."
"
"A mild rec.SSion would help
Tt.e Commerce Department ·
housing by bringing interest rates reported that the economy grew in
down," said Carliner, But he added
the third quarter, revising a' ·
"I expect the next month or so to ~ preliminary report from last montJr
very bad."
of a slight decline.
He is predicting mortgage rates . - - - - - - - - - - - will fall to 14 percent by the end of
1982. Multi-List McGraw-Hill, a real
estate information concern, predict.
KOREAN KARATE
mortgage rates will fall as low as
THE BUDORYO DOJO
13.5 percent by the end of ne.tyear.
Jerry Massie, Shodan,
"If things don't turn better, the
lns.tructor ·
prospect is for a lot of failures in the
New Beginners Classes
buDding· industry," says Carliner.
Starting
"'I:hal would leave lenders in the
Thursday, December lrd,
position of owning a lot of houses
1981 - and
Friday,
they didn't mean to own.. .. It would
December 4th, 1981
rnake them more afraid to make
Women's Class:
Thursday 6:00·8 :00 p .m .
Men's Class:
Thursday 8:00·10:00 p.m.
(Ages IS and above)
August. The legislation permits
Children's Class:
money-losing corporations with tax
Friday 6:00·8;00
credits and depreciation deductions
All c1.1sse s .uc 10 wee~s in length .
to sell them to profitable companies
Tuition : S3 .00 per week . 'C la ss
'si1c limit to 12 person s per clas s .
seeking tax shelters.
lcMn :
To transfer the benefit, the
• self dcfehs c
previously purchased equipment
• physical fitness
ewca pons training
must be sold to a company willing to
•traditional t&lt;ore;~nKri\t e ·
pay cash for the tax benefits and
•tournam ~ nt compe li1ion
then lease the equipment back to the
CaU 446·8161 after 5: 00 p .m . tor
intormation.
original owner using the equipment.
The company using the equipment
retains title and possession.

·Firm gets tax break

49

Turkeys ................ ;

refulees were picked up.

ao--

'

Fryer Parts........ ~.~

directed

"Any succeuful pro,ecution '
related to Marie! would carry the
m· •II" of thil admlnim'atioo: Immigration laws cannot be !pored."
The priests testified that they
bought the God'l Mercy after being
fiooded with req-'a frtm their ·
congregation to bring back family
members flvm Cubl.
IlurfnS the trial, county offictala
leltified thM dlrfll8 the chaoa at
Key 'II'lilt
(Illite 11ft wilat
-lilt ao•aUiiidlll'l policy .....,..

I he Sunday Times·Sentinei- Page- D·J

Intlustry hopes for turnaround

No ceiling

action as

w. va .

workers plan development and over-

aee quality control together "is not
for our society" because lf.S.
Workers are not confonnlata like the
Japanese, Appley aaid.
"The Quality Circle becomes fundamentally importanl when It
becomes part of an overall
management atyle" stressing open
communication, he said. "We are
asking oar people to sit down with
their 1Upervlaors and create. That's
not euy," he said.
Ajlpley said nearly·every bou can
use management tralnin!l but that
govennnent. ~ala need it
most. In sovernment, rewards go to
boese8 who can aJ'naaa the mOlt
subordinates 1nltead of those who
get more work out of the ones they
have, he said.
·
Aller government, .achOola ~
ho1pltal1 have the- worst
maaapaent problems, he sPL
Teaehen aDd doctln lncomlctb'
be1left that their apecil1laed stllll
qualify them ID be IJialllli8I'B.
And ....... are IDdlvlduallatll
who . . . management reponslbiUti.. he said.

••

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radial -CUT SZS.
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BOB'S ELECIROIIICS
Upptr Rt. 7, Gallipolis
"Across froln 1t1t
Sllftr Brld.. Ptua"

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pllir . ptus
U .01F E T

P~ices are catalog

prices • Now. on s•le in our "TB" fnd "DL" Catalog
Sale SuppiiJ!11ftiS
s.t......., ~tnlftd or Your Morwy 1«11

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w

Nov.

Some ~estions remain
unasked ·o n nuclear waste
COL'UMBVS, Ohio (AP) - Some
questions left W1811SWered after ~

week's meeting on nuclear waste:

f

BANK ROBBERY FOILED

Two Norfolk

policemen examine the suitcase used to bOld a suppos·

in his foiled bank hold-up attemt at the Bank of
Virginia on 21st Street. ( AP Laserphoto)

ed bomb. Accused robber, Roy Todd, 53, used tbe bomb

Carney case could go to jury
WASHINGTON (API - A federal
court jury m Washington could begin
'deciding the fate of a former
Youngstown congressman Monday
- if the JUdge heanng the case
doesn't throw it out.
U.S. District Judge William B.
Bryant attacked the government's
case agamst former U.S. Rep.
Charles J. Carney repeatedly durmg
five days of testnnony last week.
Carney is accused of VIolating the
Gratuities Act by accepting and

usmg an 011 company credit card
while he was in off1ce.
Government lawyers have conceded that their case "gamst Carney
is mcwnstantial but say there 1s

enough evtdence to prove that Carney understpod why an o!i company

executive gave him free use of a
credit card for the eight years he

was in Congress.
Unless Bryant decides to throw

the case out, tt is expected to go to a
jury of SIX women and SIX. men Mn-

day
Bryant said the goverrunent has

not shown "one single point' to prove
that Carney understood that it was
because of h1s off1c1al pos1tion that
oil execul!ve Wlillafll G. Lyden Jr. of
Youngstown gave him the Amoco
credit card in 1969.
Lyden 011 paid a total of $9,435 in
charges on Carney's card from 1971
to 1918. Lyden pleaded guilty last
year to a Gratuity Act charge and
paid a $5,000 fme.

w

Will govenunenl force private
dustry to handle Its own nuclear
WB9te?
Will there be a nuclear waste test
site chosen next year?
Will a state have a voice in
whether it hosts a test site?
If not, will it have a voice in
developing a test site?
How much financial aid can a
stale expect to host the test?
Re!Wdless of the questions,
nuclear engineers and sci~ntists at
the annual National Waste Tennlnal
Storage Conference got one clear
message, Get on with it.
' That came from President
Reagan's October policy statement
and was repeated by Department ol
Energy officials at the meeting.
Reagan said nuclear enef'8Y is the .
way to go, acknowledged that the ·
goverrunent has shirked responsibility oo developing a waste
system and directed that the' work
proceed swiftly.
"We must take steps now to accomplish this objective and demonstrate to the public that problems
assoc1ated with management of

years ol consideration, Congress Is
beginning to grapple seriously with
the problem of waste disposal. They
ezpreased hope the Senate might

adopt deflititlve lqW.Uoa on
nuclear eGef'8Y by Chrlslmu. But
they said the House a(lliears lesj!
stable.

Some assurance came from two
speakers who said ' that after 30

367- Cheshire
318-VInfon
245-Rio Grande
256--Guyan Dist.
643-Ar:abla Dist.

-- · - Pub he Notice- -

-----·---NOTICE OF
FILING OF
PETITION FOR
TRANSFER OF

FUNDS
Notice Is hereby g1ven
that on the 16th day of
November . 1981 , Add1son
Townsh 1p, the Unders•qned
pet1Honer, fi led a pet1t1on
1n the Court of Common
Pl eas ol Gallia County,
Oh1o, be mg Cause No
M•sc. 56 on the Docket of
said Court, ask1ng that
$9,000 00 be transferred
from the Ge nera l Fund to
the F1re F und , as prov1ded
by li'i w. for the reasons set
forth 1n sa1d pct1t1on , and
that sa1d pe ti t1on Will be for
hear1ng on the 30th day ot
November , 1981. a t 9 00'
AM

Meigs Co. Area Code
614
992- Middieport
Pomeroy
985-Chester
343-Portland
247-Letart, Falls
949-Rac,ne
742-Rutland
667-Coolv•lle

Mason Co., w . Va
Area Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
458- Leon
576-Apple Grove
7.73-Mason
882-New Haven
895-Letart
937-Buffalo
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Charles Mart 1n
Ric hard SiSSOn
Robe rt Ha sk1ns

In Gallla County

In Mmgs County

446·2342

992-2156
In Mason County

675·1
Pubhc Notice

Pubhc Nol•ce
-- - - - - - - - ~ -NOTICE TO
loc at 1on s, by apply 1ng
CONTRACTORS ~- railroad markmgs to the
STATE OF OHIO
pavement usmg cold ap
piled preformed plastic or
DEPARTMENT OF ~
TRANSPORTATION
retroreflect1ve paint, as
Columbus, Ohto
des•gnated
November 13, 1981
The Ohio Department of
Contract Sales Legal
Transportation
hereby
Copy No, 81·883
notif•es all bidders that 1t
UNlT PRICE
will aff1rmat•ve1r, 1nsure
CONTRACT
that in any con ract en·
RRP-0005(86) tered into pursuant to thiS
Sealed proposals Will be advertiSement, minority
rfce1ved at the office of the business enterpriSeS Will be
D•rector of the Oh10 Depar· afforded full opportunity to
tment of Transportation, subm1t b1ds in response to
COlumbus, Ohio, until10 00 1 this 1nvitat.on and will not
A.M , Oh10 Standard Time, be discr 1minated against
Tuesday, December 15, on the grounds of race.
198l,forlmprovementsin
color, or national origm In
· Athens, Carroll, Colum
consideration
for 11n
i)iana, Galha, Harrison, award.
"'
Hockmg, Holmes, Jef·
"Minimum wage rates
ferson, Meigs, Morgan, for th 1s project have been
Tvscarawas, Vinton and predetermined as required
IIJashingtonCountles, Ohio, by law and are set forth in
oa various routes and the b1d proposal ." '
.

DAVID L. WEIR Nov. 22
DIRECTOR --~=-=-c---8 - 17 7 3
Public Notice
Rev .
NOTICE OF
Nov 22, 29
FILING OF
PETITION FOR
_ _,_
P,ublic t!D!!_C_e __ _
TRANSFER OF
FUNDS
SHERIFF'S SALE
ON EXECUTIOIN
Notice IS he reby g1ven
Ca se No 81 CL 325
that on the 16th day of
In pur suan ce to an Nove mber , 1981. Addison
exec utmn ISSue d to me on Township , th e Unders1gned
the 12th da y of November pe11t1oner, f1led a petit1on
1981 1n the case where 1n the Court of Common
Sh.rl ey A Baker •s the Pleas of Gall ia County,
Pl a intiff and Bentley' s Oh 10, bP.ing Cause No
Supe r1or
ConstructiOn M1sc 57 on the Docket of
Company , Inc
•s the sa1d Court, ask1ng that
Defendant, I will offer for $12,000 00 be transfe r red
sale a l public auct.on the from the Ge neral Fund to
loll OWing QOOds and Chat the Road and l3r1dge Fund,
lei s. One - Ze ro X Cop•er, os prov 1ded by law , for tt1e
MOdel No. 3100, Sen a I No reasons set forth 1n said
57799 at the. front door of pet 1t1on , and that sa•d
the ·court House on Thurs pet1tion win be for heanng
day, December 3rd, 1981 at on the 30th day of Novem
10 00 O' Clock A.M the ber, 1981 at9 ·00A M.
Charles Mart1n
above hsted goods and
RIChard SISSOn
chattel s to sat1sfy an
Robert Haskins
e xec ut1on 1n favor of the
Plamt1ff , Sh irley A B~er . Nov 22
JamesM Montgomery
Shenff of
Gallia County
Ronald G Calhoun
Altorner for the
Plamt lf

PublicNatlce
LEGAL NOTICE
I am Offering for sale a
1967 Dodge Coronet
automob1le owned by the
late Hobart J . Raub,
De~eased
Said motor

-;---------..L...-------'-:::=::-'::-N~o:-v:.:2:.:2_ _ _...:__ __..j_v_e_h_•c~le~w~·~ll_:b:.:e_:s:.:o:::ld::..:•::.'.:_'h:.:e:..j
Public Notice

:~~~~~~~~~~~=-;~~~~~~~~~=--=-~:§~E~~~~~~~~l

.. NOTICE iB hereby g1ven
the
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio has made
aPPlication to the United · States
Qepartment ol Asrlculture, Far·
Home Adminlstr8tion, for
fiilanclaJ usistance In order to
d;velop the Old Pomeroy High
sthool bulldl11f! lor use as a Village
Hall, for which there is no practrcable alternative to Imparting a
f1f&gt;odplain.
•AII practicable designs or
niodlflcations to minimize hann to
ot within a !loodplain or wetland
have been Identified and agreed to
by the prospective client. These
nSeasures
Include
designing
nj!chanlcal and electrical equipmenttorninlrnizefiooddamage.
~ project would be located
wlt11ln a !loodplaln because of the
Ilk er lty of locating the ViJia«e Hall
iD cloee pro.dmlty to the Village it
serves, which in tum, Is located
IMfS

•

\

.

-

•

Giveaway

drama.
Pyles is a senior at the .college
with a paslor's major.

set ol bod springs Phone
615-7363.
FREE, wood tor removal
of tree. phone 304-615·5211 .
FREE puppies. 112 Old
English Sheepdog, '12
Collie. 1921 North Main St.
304-675-5711 .
6

Lost and Found

LOST Coonhound In Bid·
well area. Name on collar
is Randoll Tackett. Call
446·3103.
FOUND : Cushion to l•ving
room suite on Rt. 7. 742·
2211
LOST: Black dog half bor·
der collie and german
snephard. With little white
on throat. Rutland area.
614·367·1191.

(;J11ssi[ied Pages cover the
,, follmvinl( telephone exchanges ...
614

Buying Gold,
Sliver,
Platinum. old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale . Spring
Valley
Trading. Sprillil Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 or "-'o\·8026.

Kittens: 1 calico, 1 yellow
tiger, litter trained. Call
4-'16·3897.

According to Robert Allen,
assistant professor of communications and the director of the
play, it was one ol the best examples
of eighteenth century English

within
It was
that no ac·
ceplable sites, not located in the
floodplaui, were available which
could meet the ,constraints of the
project. These constraints included
coil limitations which ruled out construction of a new building. The fact
that the Village was able to purchase
the Old High School for $1.00 was
therefore an important factor m its
selection.
The proposed project wiil not
viOlate state or local wetland proteclion standards.
Whereas the proposed project involves no disturbing ol soils or
clearing of vegetation, no effect wiD
be caused to natural floodplain
values. RecycUng the Old High
School building, Is regarded as
preservation of an important
cultural resource.
Partlclpatioo in this project will

be by
Economic
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce (Weatherizatioo Grant
totalling $76,450.00) and the Fill"
mers Home Admini81ration, U.S.
Department of Agriculture ($100,000
loan).\ The total project cost will
therefore be $178,460.00.
'l11e project would be located near
the center of downtown Pomeroy 011
State Route 33. The JXIlpe&gt;-lt consists of the Old~ SchoolltullcJing
and a site measUring 190 feet by
125.5 feet.
Any party willtlng to comment on
the proposal should provide com.
ments within 15 days flUD the date
of this notice to:
Mr.LiwrenceBowman
Chief, Conunl!nlty Programs
FannersHomeAdmlniatrauon

200 N. HJsh Street, Room 50'/

Columbua, Ohio 43215

( II ) 28, 22, 23, 3lc

•

Public NotiC:,ec__
off1ce of Crow, Crow and
Porter, Attorneys at Law,
Pomeroy, Ohio, on Wed·
nesday, December 9, 1981.
at 9 30 a m to the highest
bidder To •nspect this
automob1le
contact:
SlepHen Tatterson, 844 E.
Ma1n Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, telephone · 992·6398.
Said motor vehicle is appraised at $300 00 but Wilt
be sold to the highest b1d·
der Said sale is subject to
the approval of the Probate
Court of Meigs County,
Oh10. The nght •s reserved
to reject any and all bids
Joanne Tatterson,
Executrix of the
Estate of
,
Hobart J Raub,
.
Deceased
Ill&gt; 22, (12) 1,8,3tc

·• ····......
.... .......
. . . ..........

-""'

~

Card of Thanks
We wish to thank all
those who helped In any
way during the illness and
death of our loved
one We expecially want
to thank the staffs of Holzer
Hospital and Camden
Clark Hosp1tal, Ewing
F uner a I Horne, The Mei ps
County Chapter of The
American Cancer SOciety,
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service, Rev. Her·
bert Grate, and Rev Ray
Satterfield~ our wonderful
friends and neighbors for
the beautiful floral
tributes, their donations to
the American Cancer
Society. and many other
kindness. The Family Of
Jane M. Smith

3

Announcements

Stanley Home Products
Dealer Glenda Kay Hunt,
36470 Bashan Rd , Long
Bottom. Phone 614·985·
4111.
PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL
Professional Electrolysis
Center . A.M.A. approved,
Doctor referals, by ap
polntment only. 304·675·
623.C Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday &amp; Saturday
·

' lam1ly of Claude
The
Olin Re1tm1re wish to
express our sincere
thanks to the Racine
Emergency Squad and
Staff,
Veterans
Memorial Hospital and
.Nurses,
Dr.
Ray
Pickens, Rev. William
Middleswafth,
the
Pallbearers. Also to
friends. neighbors lor
all the kmd expressions
of sympathy, the food,
floral tnbufes. and
money at the loss of our
loved one.
•
S•ncerely,
W•fe and Ch1ldren,
Mother ,
Brothers,
L..:.s
'
.
:.'
.
:.'
e
_,r_,s
_a
n.:.d:....;f
•.:.m.:.•.:.l
i.:.e::.:s._ _J
1

NO
hunting &amp;
no
trespassing without written
permission on Woolhan
Farms at Apple Grove .

NO hunting &amp; trespassing

on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Woolhan
Farms.
No Hunting or Trespassing
on Kenneth Watson farm,
Without
written
per
mission Kenneth (Butch)
Watson.
Stolen Property. Antique
kitchen safe. Ant1que
d•ning room cabinet. Two
rock1ng chairs. Other
items Anyone knowing or
seeing this furniture being
hauled In the vicinity of
Flatrock, WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward is
Oflered 615·1302.

t·

3

Announcements

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat, nights
6:30p.m .. Bashan. Factory
choke 12 guage shotgun .

POSITIVILY no hunting on
the old H. C. Brown Farm
opposite Racine locks
Letart, WV. Signed Bill Me·
Daniel.

The lzaak Walton Club will
have their deer slug
shooting match at the
lzaak Walton Farm 3 112
The family of Blaine Car· miles south of Chester and
ter, ·Jr. wishes to express Shade River Rd.
The
our sincere thanks to our match will start at 1 p.m
friends,
neighbors,
Sunday Nov. 8 and will be
relatives
1
t
'
c assma es, continued each Sunday at
Alexander Lions Club, co- the same time until deer
worken at Ohio Unlver· sa•11011.
II will be ·bench
sity, Walker Funeral ond off hand shooting.
Home, the pell·bearel'l 1 PriiH will be turkey. ham,
and Pastor Denny Coburn andbocon.
for the kindness they exprosHd cturlno fht de!lfh of
our husband, father, anct No hunting or trespassing
on the property of Earle
ond Morybolle Schultz off
for
all
tho
p;ayors,
cords,
brother. Special thanks SR6111n Reedsville, Ohio.
flower&amp;, - · end monoy
which we received.
"

Hunter's special. 10 ft.
Franklin pickup camper,
self contained, $950. Phone
615·3509 after 5 pm.

SLUGSH.OOT
GALLIA COUNTY
GUN CLUB
SUNDAY, ·
NOV, It&amp; NOV. 29•
1 P.M.tif7

3

Announcements

TRAPS lnd· TRAPPING
supplies
Gene Hines,
Amesville, Ohio. 614-448·
6141. Dally after 1 p.l)l.
NO hunting or trespassing'
on former Frank Clonch
farm, W. A. Woods or G. E ,
Allbright farm without
written
permit.
All
violators
will
be
prosecuted.
Owen
Allbright.
NO hunting or trespassing
on Raymond Smith Farm.
DUE to vandalism there
will be no hunting or WOOd
cutting on !tie Grover
Arrington · Farm wt1hout
written permsslon by
Garland Ar.rington, owner.
Property will be checked
daily , violators Will be
prosecuted

WATCH FOR OUR
GRAND OPENING
FRENCHTOWN
CAR CO.
1640 EASTERN AVE.
446-0069
BILL "Gene"
JOHNSON
OIL I GAS

LEASES
WANTED

7

For bulk dallvery of
-line, bellll)g 011 and
d-1 fuel, CIH t.:andmerk,
'192-2111, P01Mf11\', Oh.
Gun Shoot RKino Gull
Club. Evwy lun. alartlnt
at 1 p.m. Factery ciM!IIe

gunsonly.

•

clau

Items
614·

Home .Productl

For rnorchandl&amp;e or
caH 614-f49·2W.
Holter.

•'

Ellm Restnome. Care tor

handlcoppeq, aged, or bed
patient. Temporarv or

limited care. Gr continuous
home with us. Equipped for

wheel chair . 7•2·2266.
13

·

1 Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER 1n·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insuranee
coverage in Gallla Courity
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property cover.eges are
available to meet in·
dlvlaual needs . Contact
Nell Ins. Agency, agent.
Phone "-'o\·1694.

Wont to buy ~hest type
lreezer. Caii2.56·1S58.

AUTOMOBIL.E
IN ·
SURANCE
been can·
celled? ' Lost
your
operator's License? Phone
992·21&gt;13

- -~-----

BEDS IRON:· BRASS, old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households.
Write: M.D. Miller. Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·776fJ.

11

Wanted to Oo

Butcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; processing.
Call "-'o\·2851, GallipoliS,
Oh

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab. $10.50 per ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock Springs Rd . ,
Pomeroy, 992·2689.
'

Would ll~e to be a com ·
panion to a elderly person .
Will live in Call 4.46 4938.
Housewife
&amp;
mother
wishes to babys1t In her
home anvti me. Have
references, experience .
Call 446·0696

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport 9923476.

Will do babysitting in my
home. Call388·8240.

.NEED MONEY? I need
furniture. New, used or antique. Mso buying glass,
china, gol_d, silver, coins,
walches, chains, etc. Mar·
tin's General Store, Mid·
dleport, Ohio 992·6370

Minor repairs on autos
Tune· ups, shocks, oil
changes &amp; lube Jobs, muf·
fler &amp; exhaust replacemen ·
ts. etc. Call "-'o\·0865.
Haul small deliveries
anywhere .
Fill dirt
anywhere in Bidwell or
Gallipolis area for S25
otoad. 446·ol851 .

Raw furs, hides, 'scrap
metals,
batteries,
radiators. ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering. Harper·Halste
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 615·5868.
Also Flea Market open
dally. Open Monday·
Friday 1·5 pm

TV service calls. Call 992
2034. Also used color TV for
sale

Will baby sit in mv home,
weekly basis, I nqu1re at 222
No.3 rd. Middleport.

LOCUST posts, 8 II long.
4" small tip-chip poles 30.C·
675·6325 after 6 p.m.

WILL do Holiday baking,
candy
making, cake
decorating. sarah Pearson,
~;all
30• · 675 ' 5527 for
estimate.

Girls brownie uniform, size
7. Call collect 675·6.f80

•

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

WILL do odd lobs, general
house maintenance Have
experience with carpentry,
plumbing, electrical, some
appliance repair. Call JO.f·
675-3170 or 615·5918 Ask for
Steve.

~- ·

serlllees

Four fa'mlfy yard sale, 116
Liberty St. Point Pleasant.
Avon, Thursday·Saturday

Mature,
responSible,
christian woman, .40·50 yrs.
to do occastonat overnight
babysitting. Three children BABYSITTING In my
aoes6, 4, &amp; 1. Send reteren· home. Rt 62 between Pt.
ces and salary required to Pleasant and Mason 30.f·
box 700 in care of The 615-4506
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
825 3rd. Ave, Galllpoll!, Oh
05631

to-s
8

..

Public Sole
&amp; Auction

11

Maintenance repair, ex
perience all phases, no job
too large or small,
reasonable. 615·3985 or 614·
379·2196.

011 and gas well drilling
equipment. Private sale to
settle estate. All equipment
of Talbott Drilling Corp. In· RN's local 100 bod ICF is
eluding Speed Star rotary currently seeking a dlrec·
drilling rig, mtd. on ccc tor of nursing, are you the
truck, Sullolr light plant, 4 dedicated professional who
Lerol 750 air compressors is qualified by educat•on
with Joy bOoster, gaso mud and or expe\-ience, and whO
pump, 065E Kometsu,
our commitment to
trailers, trucks, B·E cable shareS
high
standard
patient
tool rig, G.E. radio system, care? Your salary
will
all other related equip· cominencerate with your
ment. Ready for operation . experience and our benefit
For list of equipment and package is liberal. Scenic
sale terms phol'le··Sharon Hills
Nursing Center, P.O.
Cottrill,
Secy·Treas, Box 262. Bidwell, 011 05614.
Talbott Drilling Corp., 61HS6·7150. Attention kim
Pomeroy, Ohio, 614-992· Nye, administrater. Weare
3071 or Mary Jane Talbott, an Equal Opportunity Em·
V·Pres.. '14-661·6653, or
James B. Dunn, Pres. 61-4· plover.
373-9211.
Need babysitter In my
home. Prefer older person,
Auction every Wed. night doyshifl. Call388·9342 ,
at Hartford Community
Building. Sale time 7 p.m.
Lot5 of new and used mer· Why seltle for less Sell the
chandiH every week. Con· best Sell Avon For more
signments trom dealers information call 446·3358 or
and Individual• welcomed. 702·2354.
Richard Reynolds Auctioneers. 304·275-3069.
Full time bookeeper. 2 yrs
exp. Degree preferred but
9
Wanted ta Buy
not
necessary .
Send
resume to Pomeroy Health
WANT TO BUY Old fur· Care
Center,
36759
nllur'e and Antiques of all Rocksprings
Rd . ,
kinds, call Kenneth swain, Pomeroy, Ohlo-45769
256-1967 in the evenings.

DIXIE ENERGY CO.

One acre or less, water and
sopllc system. Phone 675·
6958.

11

Shooting match every Sun·
day. Corn HOllow. 1 mile
from Rutland on 124. Fac·
torv choke guns only.

SituAtions Wanted

Help Wanted
Men, women·, YotJth
organization, earn 6tra In·
come, sales help wanted.
Coif 446 A176.

Pool table wllh slafe lop
call895·3572.

For information leading to the
arrest and conviction of persons
responsible for the theft of a
Wisconsin 2 cylinder oil field
engine, Serial No. 5793450, off 'of
Gravel Hill Rd .. in Gallia County
-belonging to Orwig Oil Co. If you
have any Information contact the
Gama county Sheriff's Office or
Orwig Oil Co., 614·38H638.

12

' Yard·SIIe
Yard Sole Nov. 20 to 22.
Fri.·Sun.
Glassware,
clothes, misc. Items. 622
Jay Dr .. Gallipolis.

Call or Wrllo Today

'500 REWARD

the ellglbllltv list. ot 992·
21S6or992·2157.

Will' do house clean•ng or
babysitting, live ift or just
care tor elderly. Call .c.t6·
4423.

"

Htlp Wanted

L.PN needed,. e)(Cellent
benefits, paid vaca?lon and
holidays, retirement plan,
life and disability tn·
surance, hospitalization
available free after 1 year.
Call Arcadia Nursing
Home, Coolville. 61.C·667·
3196.
Day care center help, local
area. Send resume to 346
Banyon Lane, Port Orange,
FL32019

The

KIT 'N' CARLVLE"'

21

~~-

baths, located in Tar•

HARPER Adult Care Cen·
ter · provldlng the personal
care your elderly need in a
home like · atmosphere .
Vacancies now avallible.
call 304·6~5-1293 .

House trailer

3 bdr house. 2 baths. fully
carpeted, S300 plus c:leposit,

322 Third.

Ave. Adulls only, no pets.
Call446·3748 or 256-1903 .

3S Chillicothe Rd., no pets.
Call446·37ol8 or 256· 1903.
2 bdr. furn mobile hOme
near Centenary, adults
Unfurnlsbed house for rent, only , no pets, private lot
1 bdr ., $160 mo.. dep. Call "-'o\·3918.

0

•

.c

bdr.. housa with garage,
pool, pool hOuH. lam .
room,
2 bath&amp;, full
basement, near HMC, low
$70's. Caii446·8S63 .

r-equired, no utilities paid,
no pets 57 Ol1ve Sf . Phone 2 bdr mobile home in coun·

4.46·1886

3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths. family room. Full
basement, garage. 9-6·
2079 ,

·~~=~~~~::::::;~;;~~~~~~;;~

.......__
32
Mobile Hames- - 32
Mobile Homes
HANDYMAN Special. For
far Sale
for Sale
Or rent 12x65, 2 bdr ,
young couple with flair for
remoclellnU and desire to 12x65mobilehome,21otsln mobilehomeinCentenary
learn carpenter. plumber &amp;
Plantz Subdivision Call Call446·429l.
electriclal work. 6 room 446·129.C.
plus house partially started
to rebuild . 289' BroadWay MOBILE HOME ADD· A 1973 14 x 70, 3 bedroom, in
St , Middleport. InQUire at ROOM Complete selection very gOOd condition, pnced
300 Broadway or call John Of sizes and floor plans for
quick sale. Phone 882·
3433
Krawsczyn, Sr . 992·2717
del•vered&amp; installed. Fren·
Could
be
In - law ch CitY Mobile Home, Inc .
arrangement, upper and Call-446·9340 .
· 1977 VICtorian 1.4 x 70, 2
lower apartments .
bedroom, family room , all
electnc. Call 675·3987 or
1972 12x60 Indy mobile
Sale or Rent. Beautiful home. 18x36 garage. 3 675 3862 .
country home to qualified acres of land in Vinton
persons. 2 or more area, $10.000 Coll388·8747. Pi-1ced to sell , two used
bedrooms
Deposit
mobile homes. 2 bedroom,
required Located In Flat·
can
seen at 0 and W
Big Selection of clean, used
woods area. 446·2359.
former K and K .
mobile homes. Kanauga 675 3000,
Mobile Homes. Kanauga,
2 bedroom home, large OH 4-'16·9662.
garage, 11!• acres includes
1968 Gregory, 2 bedrooms,
large trailer lot. Near
12'x54', large bath &amp; l1v 1ng
Racine. Call985·3537
1979 Oakbrook 14 by 54 room Like new. Call 304·
mobile home. Clean, un· 675·3030 or 675·3431 .
Warm 3 bedroom home. derplnned. $7500. 614·992·
Double garage. workshop, 5609 or 614 245·9518 after 6 THREE fourths acre, 12x60
central air Minersville. p.m
mobile home with tip out
Fenced yard. Call 61.C·992room, 1 mile out Bud Chat·
31S9 .
12 x .f.f New Moon 2 t1n. Selling due to health,
bedroom, completely fur small down payment.
Or rent-3 bedroom fur· nlshed, gas he!t, un · assume loan, phone 304·675·
nlshed home on Bud Chat· derpmning and block . Call 2345.
tin Road on big level lat. 614-992 3006.
576 2711'
33 for sa ie --1971 Oarian 12 x 65, 3 120 acre farm, Guyan
THE Roush hOme at 2515 bedrooms. 1972 Crown Township, barn &amp; out
Mt. Vernon 1S for sale call Haven, 14 x 6~ with 8 x 10 buildings, mineral r1tes,
the son at6U '127 ·5413.
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973 timber, tobacco base Also
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms. right to sell 5,000 lbs tobac·
1972
Invader 14 x 70, 3 co lhis year . 614·532 ·1020
The Roush home at 2S1S
Mt. Vernon, Pt Pleasant, bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14 before 5 or 614·532·0925 af·
1s for sale. Call the son at x 60, 2 bedrooms B l!.i s ter 5.
Sales, Inc 2nd and Viand
614·927·5-413.
Sts Pt. Pleasant, WV.
BETHEL road· just off san
Phone 61$·4424.
ALL brick, 2 story, 3
dhiiL 30 acres (r::"lllllg &amp;
bedrooms. full basement, 2
level land). Farm pond &amp;
car garage, 304·675·3030 or USED MOBILE HOME
outbuildings, goad well,
516·2111.
675 3431.
n1ce 6 room house Will conSider trade. 304·675·3431.
ONE acre &lt;more or less), 2 1973 3 bedroom i4 x 70, un 675·3030.
bedrooms, bath, eat-In· derpinned. 675 .f064
kitchen., abundance of
closet space, garage, plus 1970 12 x 70, 3 bedrooms. 1 1_5 --~ots &amp; Acreage==more. $39,000. Jan Gettles and half baths, new carpet, LOTS Real nice campsite
Realty, 15 East "A" St., .and underpinning . Priced on Raccoon Creek, all
utJiities available, $300.
Wellstoo, Ohio .t5692. Caj I to sell. 615·3793.
down, owner Will finance.
614·384·6301
or
Faye
call after 3 p m., 256 6413.
Williams. Realtor Assoc
614·205·5096 after 6:00p.m
Would you like to own a
home of your own . We
32
Mobile Homes
d1dn't have $10,000 tor a
for Sale
down payment nor $5,000
TRI - STATE
MOBILE
Smce 1959
nor even $1,000. Do what we
HOMES . Golllpolis Yeor
d•d CaiiSlJ-592·9175
end sale, price reduced,
198114' Wide
used mobile homes. CALL
18 acres, tobacco base,
446·1572.
l4x70 mobile home, Jbdr., 2
baths, $29,500 Call 256

..---- -

- ---·---------.:arms
-----------

sgggs
Call At
Leisure

Financing
Availallle
5 year
Protection Plan
Large Inventory

14x70 Windsor deluxe, 72
model, 3bdr , total electric ,
central air, carpet, un derpinning, sale for SIO,OOO
New curtains in living
room . Call-'46·6642 .

1156

BY owner. 3 apartment
house on approx l acre
Live in one, rent others to
make . your payment. Can
be converted single home
City wafer, will consider
land contract. 675· 1883 9·5
pm

try, water furnished,
sewe r , ref &amp; dep. required.
7 rm . house In town. Call614 286-239.C after 5.
Inqu ire at 918 2nd . Ave .,
For sale or rent. Four
Gallipolis. Call 446·3874.
deluxe mobile homes,
beautiful riverview In
.f bdr house for rent or sale Kanauga. Call ~- 6642 .
over looking Ohio River
Phone -U6· 1615 or "'-46· 1244.
2 trail ers for re nt. Ca11675
9 rm house for rent in Rio 3475·
Gronde. Cal1446·3485
; - bo- d_r_oo
_ m-.- -b r- lc- k-.- 1 112
bath, carpet, gas forced air
heat, central air, garage,
Kyger Creek school
district
Loci:lted on
Georges Creek Rd . Rent
S300 mo. plus $200 deposit
Ava 11able Dec. lst Call 446
1171 or ....6·2573

2-bedroom
tra•ler Adults
---~~!y ~;~~ ns Trailer Park .
. .;

99

4

2 and J bedroom furn1shed
mob 1le homes at New
Haven 304 882 2466.

2 bedroom Mob• le Home, 1
bedroom apt Ut•lities paid.
No pets or drunks. John
6 rm house , bath, near Sheets, Jlh m1 south Mid·
Thurman
Ref. &amp; dep dleport, Rt 7
required. Call 614:286·2394
after 5
Nice clean 2 bedroom
mob1le home in Chester.
2 bdr house •n City, adults , 985 3839
no pets Ca11446·0958
--,------- 2 trailers 1n Tuppers
2 or 3 bdr home, tully car Pla.n s S1SO. month plus
peted, large yard and gar ut lllt1es 667 ·3487.
den, 3 m1 . from town. Call ~ ·------··446 0648 afters.
Two mobile homes jO X SO,
2 bedroom, two m 1les out of
Large farm house, 3·4 bdr., town on Rt 2. S125.00
roomy d1nmg room &amp; k•f depostt, $150.00 per mot'!·
chen, enclosed back porch th ,plus ut111t 1eS , references
&amp;
basement,
newly requ.red. 675·3000 or 675·
remodeled ,
Ewingron, 6271
..,. . /
~-Ohio Ref &amp; sec deposit
Call245 5818
One bedroom trailer,
adults only , furnished, you
---- -/')~
2 bdr. home in town, gas, pay ut111t1e~ . Pho('le 675·
•
central
a1r,
garage, 2535
deposit Call 1·866·6406 , after 6PM
MOBILE home spaces. '3
mile.s from town. Jet. 2·62
Centenary J bedroom , 2 at Old Y, 304 675·3248.
bath, garage, adults only,
. - . .. - ·:::.;-:..=_c_:.
44-____
'APiftmemt
no pets Call614·643·2644 ,
•
- - - - for
- Rent
5 rm house and bath in Furnished apts. S210.,
Eureka. dep requ1red, no utilities pd , 1 bdr , near
pets. Call256·1413
HMC , adu lts Ca11 446·4416
after 7PM
2 bedroom all electric ran·
-·
ch style home 1 mile from 2 bdr apartment unturl'l ,
Rac1ne References and 1n Crown C1ty , Oh10. Cal)
depos1t requ1red. A\lallable 2S6·6S20
-·
Nov 15 Call614 949 2849

-------

____

----

----

-~------

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

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

bedroom house, fur
n1shed
Brown's Trailer
Park, M1nersville. 992 ·3324

2

Mob1le home m c1ty central
air and heat, adults only,
dep 446 0338
~-

House turn , 4 rooms &amp;
~ath . No pets Call992·1106.
Beautiful country home for
safe or rent to quallf1ed
persons
2 or
more
bedrooms ,
deposit
required . Located in Flat
woods area. Phone 614·4462359
5 room house with bath,

utility room , 3 bedroo ms 1n
Gallipolis . Ca ll 614·446·
1519
TWO bedroom, furnished
cottage at 2103 Jeffer son
Ave. DepoSit re guired 304
675 4100. day

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

2 BEDROOM apartment,'

kitchen furn1shed, HU D1
program , utilit1es paid, ; ~
qualified. 30.f 615·5104 on

304·675·7364 .

l

--~---·---

--- -·-- l

APARTMENT for
Call446"0390.

Rent •

Small furni'shed house,
adults only Call 446·0338
Furmshed upsta1rs apt . 3
rms , and bath, adultsonty ;,
no pets, clean. Call 446·,
1519

--

---- - - ---·-- '
2 bdr , apt . large living
room &amp; kitchen, · no pets '
Coll446·3937

'

'

---- - - - ·- --· --~I

Bradbur'y Apartments ~
2nd floor furn•shed el ,
f1ency , rental &amp; dep '
requ ired, adults, no pets ;
COUNTRY home. 7 rooms 729 2nd Ave 446·0957.
•
&amp; bath , free water, fenced
in yard, close to school,
churches &amp; store, close to NOW AVAILABLE first
Stauffer and Goodyear Ave I ~ 2 bedroom apts
plants. call 304 675 4673, Adults only , no pets, dep
req PhOne 446·8221.
675·1315 or 675-6443

HOUSE for rent, Sandhill
Road 304 658 5180

--·--- ----

-- ----·-- - -

23

PiANO
TUNING-Lane
Daniels
Associate:
Brunlcardl Music Phone
61HA2-2951 or 614-992-2082 .
Discount to Meigs residen· .
IS.

lease with option to buy
w ithin the next few weeks.
All over s200 per mo. &amp; 42
Mobile Homts
required referen ces &amp; _ _ _.!:fo~r..!R~o!!n!!t_ __

0

Estates. Club houH and
pool •lvlltves. $1$,000
llrm . '-!fOr Creek SchOOl
District. Shown by appt.
on!¥ call -1411·9.000.

South
Front 2Ave,,
bdr.,Mid·
671
small house,
dleport. 992·5171 .

HOUSE for rent, 304-615· •
3&lt;131 or 61$·3030.

homes for r-ent, lease or

depos•ts . For more In· 2 bdr . and 3 bdr . mobile
formation c all Strout homes. Cali «6·0175.
Relllty 4.16·0008.

--~portunity

Professional
Services
Piano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your Piano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 446 4372,
Gallipolis.

.......

BY OWNER : 4 bdr., &amp;ptll·
level, living room &amp; dining
room combln•tlon, nt·ln
kitchen, lg . family rm , 2

3 bdr . carP'!'tlng, fireplace,
redwood dock, lot with

Tim

41
Houses for Rent
We will be having several

·~

Business

T'raller ParK, 15 spac~s
plus 3 bdr .• brick home on
approx. 3 acres, will dl\llde.
$150,000 w•th 50,000 down,
owner will carry. Also park
owned trailers available In
Jackson. Good cash flow
Call286-7019

-

by larry Wright

Columbu&amp; Flnl Mortgage
Company FHA·VA Finan·
clng L.oon Rep. Cool&lt;le
krouner (3041615·3473.

us right owoy ana get on

Toy s•lver Schnauzer pup.
Col1388·98•2.

1 greyhound, female.
yellow, VIcinitY of Kapp
Ridge, Rt. 87. Reward. 304·
372·5686.

CASH PAID for clean, late
model used can. Smith
Bulck·Pontloc, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Coll446·2282.

P.O.Boxw
Woosltr, Ob. 44691
216-26+H12

some great gifts as a Sen·
tine! route carrier. Phone

Reserva·

Male klnen, grey, 4 mo.
old, hOII&amp;ebroken. ca 11 4.46·
2258.

Va., where Pyle!j is a student.

•nd earn good money plul

Store. Golllpotis446·2691 or
992-:!0S..in Pomeroy!

tlons must be made In
Octo-.

November.

Part Labrador puppies, u
to choose from . Call 4.46·
0028 or "-'o\·0842.

LUNCHBURG, Va. -Mark Pyles,
son of Woody and Judy Pyles of
Gallipolis and a 1979 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School, recen·
tly held a major role as Young
Marlow in Oliver Goldsmith's
comedy, "She Stoops to Conquer."
The play was sponsored by the
division of communications at Liber·
ty Baptist College in Lynchburg,

as a young business person

or anything stampe&lt;l
sterling. Clarks Jewelry

Will hive Inside booths
avollablt by the lSI Of

Gr.ay male k1Hen·7 mos.
okb Must provide gOOd
home, nice Christmas
present. Will ·hold until
Christmas. Call-"6·2996.

Pyles holds part in Goldsmith play

11
HolpWonled
GET VALUABLE training

BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER
paying cash for anythl!lil
stamped lOK, 14K, 18K and
dental gold. Class rl!liiS,
Wedding rings, sliver coins

motors. and batteries. Call
388·9303.

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or aHempt to
offilr any other thing for
safe may place an 1d In this
column. There will be no
charge to rhe advertiser.

COMING BACK- Two and on,_baU year old Lauren Toolley plays iD
her room at Children's Hospital in Plltlbargb Saturday moi'DIIII. Llllftll
underwent a Uver transplant Salllrday, Nov.14. (AP Luerplloto). •

,- -- W";ntfdto&amp;uy-

Junk cars with or without

4

'

446-Galllpolis

FlEA M ARI&lt;ET

GENWL SIORE
Ph. 992-6370

Classifieds
Gallil Co. Area COde

l
AnnouncamH...- B &amp; E ShOe S.rvlce, 421
Second Avo. Gallipolis.
Ohio will be closed for em·
ployees vacation Novem·
ber Ufh. through Decem·
ber 6fh. Will open Decem·
ber1fh.

MMnN

nuclear waste can be resolved," he
said.
•
Others at the meeting made it
clear that the technology exists for
safely disposing of nuclear waste,
and the biggest problems are social
and political. The public must be
convinced that disposal is safe, and
politicians must be persuaded that
accepting a disposal site Isn't career
swcide, they said.
II was also made clear that the
feds are fed up with states playing
mus1cal chairs over which one wiD
host the first nuclear waste disposal
s1te. Somebody, said Deputy Energy
Secretary W. Kenneth Davis, will
soon have to bite the bullet.

Ohio-Point

JOHNSON'S

·NOTICE

Houses for Rent

FOR LEASE
RENTModern
3 bdr . OR
ranch
near

MOBILE HOMES ~oe~~sit$3tt p~~,e~~~~:,
required
Call STROUT

New 1981 14' Wide

INC.

SS,295
.
.

call

41

REALTY 446 0008

2t0 Eastern Ave.
Phone 446-3547

Immediately

2 bedroom mob1le home s
miles from Holzer referen·
ces and depos•t requ~red . 1
small child &amp; no pets. Call
4-'16·2995

ESTATE AUCTION

(Jim ElllotU
Rt.91 North
Jackson, Ohio
286-1152

.....~

I.,:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;.J,__:.::_______~
to-

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

ESTATE AUCTION
Saturdey, Nov. 21 at 12:ll P.M. 1 mile off County
Road 41 (SUCCOIS Rood). Approlt. 3 miltS 5. of Tuppers Plains. Leave St. Rt. J, 1'.'2 mites s. of Tuppers
Plelnsaftd follow auction signs.
Will sell the pononal P&lt;ot&gt;trtv of tht lalo Allee
Osborn as follows:
ANTIQUES AND COLL.ECTABLES: Curved-gloss
china closet. cupboard, kitchen cabinet, Singer
treadle r.ewlng machine. upright plano and bench,
weight clock, 2 dressers, .c straight ·chairs, 2
rockers. 2 oval back c:halrs, 5 old pictures and
frames, 2stands, dishes, glassware, crocks, etc.
HOUSE HOLD: Linens, bed clothes, etc., 2 wooden
be&lt;ls and spring and mattress, 2 mirrors. 5 - ~ece
dinette, 2A In gas range, &amp;mall Coldspot
refrigerator, metal C41binet, recliner chair, couch,
warm Morning gas heAter. coal or WOOd stove, elec·
trlc neater. Easy wringer wnher. POrtable radio,
translster radio, ax, scythe, etc .• •nd miSCellaneous
Items
MOll&amp; Countv l'rolllte Coul'l, C.l8 Nwmtoer 2 Nof responsible 1« a c e - or 1011 ol,_rty,
NancY 1- Colo, Admtnlttralflx,
E&amp;lelt of Allee~. tlecH&amp;ed.
1. 0. "MAC" McCOY-PHONE IU-:1944

.,

SATURDAY

•

NOVEMBER 28, 1981 7:00P.M.

1981 Greene Co. Fa~r-Grand Champ-M&lt;~rk Vesl
1981 Greene Co. Fa.r Res. Grand ChnmpJoanne Shawhan
1981 Feeder Calf Round-up Grand Ch&lt;~mp....!.
' Oennis Campbell
1981 Res. Grand Champ Gallla Co . F.1~r­
Giendon Elliot Family
1980 Res. Grand Champ Galha co FaJrGiendon Elliet Fam11y
1980 Res. Grand Champ Green co. FairJoanne Shawhan

SAT., NOV. 28, 1981
10:00 A.M.
Located at 390 N. 3rd In Middleport, Ohio, the per·
sonal property of the late John M Stivers. Watch for
sa1es1gns.
"HOUSEHOLD "
2 pc. living room suite, Hotpoint electric stove ,
zenith color T.V.• Amana refrigerator, breakfast
set. platform rocker, end &amp; coffee tables. sweepers,
J pc. bedroom suite. chest of drawers, dresser, bed ,
single bed, corner cupboard. base kitchen cabmets,
Kenmore electric grill. Cra1g tape player , Maytag
washer &amp; dryer. small Coldspot deep freeze. 6,000
BTU westinghouse air conditioner , portable sewing
machine, deSk, cha•is, metal wardrobe, mise quilts
&amp; linens. lamps, dishes, pots &amp; pans. B&amp;W portable
TV .
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Oak dining room table &amp; Chlllrs. oak buffet, Duncan
Phyfe tables, one wig lass toplpink dep. butter dish,
desk, foOtlocker', wardrobe, trunks, laundry stove &amp;
coo-coo clock.
"MISC.!'
J c. Higgins bolt action, 22 rifle, 30·30 Germony
Mayser." pellet guns, Colt 2$ IN/pearl handle, J2
pistol, hunting knives, fishing gear, Bearcat police
scanner. Chr~tmas deCorations, lawn mower and
lots of tools .
Eats
Potlllvtl.D.
Casll .
Gall L. Coble, Executrix
Din Smlfh
AUCTIONEERS
Jim Carnahan
MHt33
9!9·270a
"Not re&amp;ponvblt for accidents or fon of property."

II

50 EXOTIC STEER CALVES 50
10 EXOTIC HEIFER CALVES 10

MANY CHAMPIONS&amp; CLAS S WINNERS
WITH CALVES FROM LAST YEAR ' S SALE

Case No. 23614

Roofing, insulation, plumblng, and general home 1
maintenance. For estimate
call 675·.5.496, If no answer
call615-3147.
1 .---,.,.----,,...,.~

EXOTIC Cl.UB CALVES

Sale will be held at lhe farm, located J miles South
of Cedarville. Take SR 72 South from Cedarville, to
Federal Road. Left or East on Federal Road to 2nd
Farm on South s1de of road. 4549 Federal Road.
Cedarv•lle, Oh10.

I

D&amp;W Estates, Inc:

I~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~iiiiiiiiiiii. .

P.O. Box 14
Cedarville. Ohio 45314
Pfione: 514- 766·2021 - 767· 849t

t cc c
A A
MT
p T
t L

Auctioneers;
MERL.II'f WOODRUFF
Urbana, Ohio
513·789·3711
KEITH SHERIDAN
Cedarville, Ohio
513-766·2021
767·8491

•

EI

L
L

0
M
p
A

N

v

Federal Pike
Cedarville. Ohio
513·166·5629

54~9

'

�The Su

Ohio-Point Pleilsant, W.Va.

44

45

1st. floor unfurnished apar·
tment, c;tepOsit &amp; referen·
, c~ requ ired. Call at 631

Fourth

Ave..

OH.

Gallipolis,

FURNISHED apartment,
30H95·3.15(1.

.1';i!nauga. Call 446·6642 .
furn. apt. Court &amp;
~econd Ave. 1 bachelor
~ #urn . a pl . 1 st.
Ave .
. fireplace. 'call 446·1615 or

•,,f.'~partments. 675·5548 .
~

mobile

houses ,

P1.

· ·~------------------

r:2 bedroom

twin Single in
Pleasant ar 205 Poplar
~ :street . $200 month plus
Jo ~eposit .
1·61-4·263· 8322 or
~ ;614· 263 -~669 .

L~mp coal $.15 for deliver.
Firewood S30 T delivered.
Call379·2617.

Street,

•

} •Twin single. large rooms

r,;and yard.

Pt. Pleasant .

~. Deposit ~nd

references. 1·

)

..

' _Apartment. 615 -6020 after

___

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

4, 446-2200.

•

~ - Ava i lab l e , First Avenue,
!"Gallipolis . Apartments-!
t:;ahd 2 bedrooms, adult s
s. 1on l y , deposit required. 4J6~ -, 8~21.

'-

I~ •

.

·

'

~" THREE
room furnished
~ :apartment, c l e~n. private ,

·. adults. 703 Ma1n, 304-675-

...
....-.---------- ---'•11591.

,.

..

·7,000 BTU space heate'r $95,
40' electric; range$65, frost·
free ref . white2dr. S9S,' GE
automatic washer SSO ,
Speed · Queen automatic
washer S95 . Skaggs Ap·
pliance, Upper River Rd.
by Stone Crest Motel. We
also have parts depart·
ment .
- '---- · - - - - --- ..

TWO piece l i ving room
suite, $100. 304;675-2794.

-----,
WISEMAN

-~------

~ - THREE bedroom apart~o :ment, excellent location,
"phone 304-675-4045 .

Display or Gun case, SJOO.

Walnut formica, sliding
glass doors. Jock. See at
Gallla·Nieigs airport or. call
367·7615.

USED ~EFRIGERATOR ;
electric rang e, as is; dinet- 5-plece dinette set, brown
te set. 4 chairs .. Corbin and wlth floral chai~s . Very
Snyde r Furn1ture, 955 good condition, $.45 . Phone
Second, Gallipol is. Call446- 446·0391 after 4 p.m .
· - - - ,_
------ 1171.
Pocker toveseat, $150. Also
Rodger's Trad ing Pos t 92 round dinette table with 4
Olive-. St.. Gallipolis. Open cha irsC swivel), h.d. white
9-5, 6 days a week . Fur· wrought iron, $225. both
n i ture, appl i an ces. an- items like new. Call 446t iques. Sell , buy , &amp; trade.
7322 .

' '6U·263·8322 or 1·614·263·
•••
t.,2669.
.,- -------------

.,,r

I
I I I

ext. 177,·

tMELVUL

GOOD
USEO
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
tefrigeratprs,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave .• 446·7398 .

~ - Mason, wv. 773·5651 .

'•

New buildings at_factory ,
all parts accovnteO for, all
structural steel, . carries
full factory ·guarantee
bui~ding 10,000 sq. ft. to th~
smallest 1,200 sq. ft. Must
sell Immediately! Will sell
cheap. Call toll free 1·800·
248·0065 or 1·800·2-48·0321

Household Goods

Sl

": ~-----------------

~

I

~

Patriot Home Builders will
now build a 3 bedroom fully
carpeted and finished
hOme on your lot. Only
$24,5CJO. Phone 379·2617,

• w. .......... ... ..... .

:.:Efficiency rooms by · the
Main

who sin?

-

54- MliC. MercUndice

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

~-· pt .

on

tour OfdiNoy -

Furn i shed room. S11 .t
utilities pd ,, stove, refrig ,,
single male. Call 446·«16
after 1PM .

I efec1ric trail er lots. E .
. Schwartz. Locu st Road,
Bell meade . 675-1076.

Gallipolis.

614-446·8221 or614-245·9484.

... Week

Do you know what
happens to people

OM . . . Ipad'l~, 101onn

couNTRY MOBILE Home
Park 1 Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992 ·7479 .
-·-....------------· ·-.....-MOBILE home spaces
available,
Henderson
Trailer Court . 304·675·2946.

;.~ 446·12-48.

and

u. ............... ~.

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

.t ~ room

.;;:Pleasant

SL EEP I NG ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Centra l Hotel .

44 --· sEa:!~ M-Rent--

\,

.. APARTMENTS,

~fi9Nfrnfl ~~lHAT=rut-lbliiMOOAIII
CUI~~~·
by Hom Arnold
Bob~.oo

Room and board for senior
citizens in the coun try. 614742·2266.

Deluxe apartment with
Hreplace. beautiful v iew in

: ·hOmes ,

Fu-rnishect iooiftS
---- -----· --

.

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REAL ESI'ftAJE AGENCY

I

-

Ike Wiseman , Broktr, 416·11" Evt.
J1m Cochran. AUOCIAft, 4U·1151 Eve-.

1
1

s . J . Halnton,Auoc., 4U-4240EV"t.
Cl~d• walker , As~c . ~•s.sn•

rn

PHONE 446-3643

• I All 'I ~

CI_TY SCI:fOOLS- RT. 118 - Modern 3
Modernized old time 2 story
bedroom ranch situated on over 1.3
l~cated 4 miles from town in Green
acres. Has large living room , kitchen,
School Dist . House has 3 bedrooms
bath, basement, woodburning furnace,
fireplace , dining room , glass enclosed ' carport &amp; mob ile home hookup _ Priced
porch &amp; bath. Very sceriic location with
at$32,000. Assumab le 11% mgt .
lots of shade trees. t mi le off Rt . 7. Low

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Misc. Merchandice

Stoves, closing out our en·
tire stock of stoves and
lireplaces inserts at dealer
cost, or less. Outdoor
EC!uipment Sates, jet. Rt .s
7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph . .446·
3670 _ Closed Tues . &amp; Thur.
unti 1Mar. 1, 1982 _

~

UNCU~ SHEETS OF US

CURRENCY
Government issued S1 bills .
16 subject sheet, $30. 32
subject sheets S60.
UNCUT SHEETS OF
BASEBALL CARDS
( Donruss) Complete set of
5 sheets, $23.50.
We buy gold and sliver .
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446·
8025.
Size 12 fitted dress coa1,
like new, multi colors,
mink trimmed. Call 4460595.
Quilting frames, bookcases, kitchen cabinets.
anythihQ made of wood.
Call Arnold Skaggs, 446·
~ 0978.

USED APPLIANC~S &amp; HEATERS
40" Hotpoint Electric Range •...• 599.95
40" Frigidaire Electric Range .. ; • S69.9S
36" Coppertone Gas Range., ... • . 599.95
Frigidaire Refrigerator ....•.... 550.00

Used tires . Hanshaw's,
Lucas Lane Road . 675-7360 .

Coppertone Side-by·Side Refrigerator
Runs good ................. . $199.95
General Electric Refrigerator
White, 2 dr.................... $99.95
General Electric Refrigerator
2 dr., looks sharp .... .........• 5250.00

CALL:

POMEROY
lANDMARK

PRICED 'RIGHT.

=====-~----Jieal

.

4 7

. NEW U.S. Army · field
jackets, clothing , leather
combat paratrouper boots,
packs, bags, Surplus ren1al
clothing . Sam Somerville's
Warehouse, 7 miles east
RavenswOOd's new bridge
&lt;Rt, 56·211 . Open Satur·
days, sundays I :00·7: 30
i p.m. (Call inorders304-675·
: 3334 Pt. Pleasant.)

----·- --- - -----------

--·-·-------

-

AI&lt;C Registered Collies,
champion blood lines. Call
446·63.10.

Discontinued cabinets, top,
stove, hood, sink. $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center . 675·
2318.

Large beautiful English
Lop rabbits &amp; small Bunon
quails. Nov. 22th at 832 3rd .
Ave . in Gallipolis_

Building Supplies

Building mat~rials , block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245-5121 .

· - T"" -

~--

~-

RGIL B.SR .
216 E. Second StrHt

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Call"-'6·7795.

3 horse gooseneck trailer
with dressing room.St.SOO.
614·992-7757.

55

REStORED Conn 'rom·
bOne, new bell, like now
with carrying case, new
price w ill toke $1!5.
Contact Brunlcardl Musi c
lnc. .u6-G617 .

NEW LISTING - Verv
well located 3 bedroom
home on corner lot. Has
l'h baths, hot water
heat, some carpeting,
lots of closets, full
basement,
gas
fireplace , garage and
carport. Asking only
$40,000.
NEW Ll STING - 4.15
acres of woods and
small 2 bedroom houSe.
A handyman's dream.
All utilities near. Need
only $6,300 and will sell
on Land Contract.
NEAR
TUPPERS
PLAINS like new
1700 sq . ft . family home.
4 bedrooms, 11J2 bafl"!s,
lots of closets, large
mOdern equipped ' kitchen. special nat. gas
F .A. furnace, large
basement. 2 car garage
and large lot. Ranch
type home for $46,000.
RACINE
AREA
Lovely older home that
has been restored. 4
bedrooms, central heat,
4 porches, basement
eat· in kitchen and formal dining, carpeting
and large lot. The real'
feeling of home.
POMEROY This
home has excellent car·
peting , 3 bedrooms,
elec. B.B . heat, nice kit·
chen, front porch, side
patio,Jully insulated, st.
doors and windows,
Ohio Power and garden
space .
Reduced
to
S32,500 .
Offer
welcomed.
C. Bruce Teaford
Hetelt L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associltes

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, NOV. 29
2:00 · 4:00 P.M.

13~4.

1

Reg . Quarter horses-sales,
bording, training, English
&amp; Western lessons. Dan
Beam, Gallipolis, 446·0183 .

For sale Chihuhu. black,
tiny, $35. Call ~ - 4576.
HOOF HOLLOW Horses L
ponies .
Everything
imagrnable In horse equipment. Also belts, boots. 698·
3290 . Ruth Reeves.
Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave ., Pt.
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon.,
Thurs., I Fri. 11 to 6. TUes.,
Wed., I Sat. 11 to .4. Check
our Fish Special.

Make this the best Christmas yet with a
brand new home. Watch the wl'tOie fami·
ly's eyes sparkle with delight. Come and
visit our open house. From Rt. 35 lollow
Rt. 160 N. to PorJer and turn right
through Porter on Rt. 554. Watch for
CENTURY 21 signs.

AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle
pups, 304-895·3958 ..
AKC Cocker Spaniels, 2
fema les, $30 . each. Also
AKC Cocker pups.' 304·675·
5726 .

Ontuag·· ·.
led m21
e

23 Locust Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY
~
OFFICE
446-7013
.
- ·
'

CHESHIRE AREA furniture stays.

1 101~

R 10 GRANDt; - Beautiful_. bedroom , dining room;
1 ssso
custom cab.
RODNEY- 2 lots set up for 4 rental mobile home
spaces .
IOU!

GOOD BUY - Frame home, fully carpeted. rwedS
repair, owner wan1s offer.
1 018S
HAPPINESS FOR SALE - New ranch, brick
frame, family room -fireplace .
I
LOWER RIVE A frlOAD fireplace , oarage .
IN TOWN wOOd fence .

6 ACRES -

Ni ce ranch, 3 bedrooms,
~ , ... .

Ranch with full basement. lot w ith
1 ntt
LOTS AND ACREAGE
Two mobile homes, storage buildings.

""~

SUPER FARM - Large house, several bUildings,
195 acres, call for details.
10115

IN TOWN - · Large tract
lots .

Ot

vacant land, several
12000

21t1 ACRES- Good building or mobile home site, ·
Addison Twp .

11

ROAMIMG ROOM Gratlar'n School Rd .

GOOd building site, 8~4 acres. 1
N 1080,

RIO GRANDE - Nice lot, 78' xl60' .
RT.

sn- 112 acre lot, only Sl,OOO.

156011'
, 1003

PRICE REDUCED- Nice rolling land, 5 acres.
.
#111'"

How-;iny

446-6610

'

Mobile home, 2 bedrooms,

Headquarters

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367.0228
Darwin Bloomer, Realtor, 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

L

Real Estate- General
=- -- - - -- -- ---- - - -

..- - - - . - · - .-

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066
REALTOR'

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Mor~n... R~lb!!. 'Eve. Ph. ~.()971
Mose CanterbuiJ,_Associate
. .. 446-3408

446-3636

Ron Canaday, Realtor ~3636, Audrey eanadaj, Realtor, 446-3636

bedroom

~ --

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DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL 'AKC
black Chow puppies, c FA
Himalayan, Persian ·and
Siamese kittens. Call 4463844 after"' p.m.

AKC Registered Chow ·
Chow puppies . Call 446·

1964 'Chevy, one and a half
ton dump truck . 1975 550
model Honda street bike. 8
fl . truck topper for pickup .
Edward lhle882 ·2870.

Cherry
cabinet.
home or
beautiful Chrlstma1 music.
2-6235; 2-73311. Call 9~9-2118,
ask for Pete.

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220 .

G. E. Washer &amp; Lady Kenmore Dryer. $50. ea. 992·
7827.
'·

WOOD slabs, mostly oak.
304-675·1048.

P.A. $Vstem ; · Peavey
speaker cabinet, Allee horns•. mixer and amp. Phone
675-5027 . .

Pets for Sale______._

t coal furnace, upright
deep freeze, pool table. 992·
7165.

OAK firewood, $40 truck
load , split &amp; delivered, 30.4882-3.415 after 5.

li11truments

sa.oo.

S4

51.-·- - - Mus'lC•I .. -.1nstrurntnts

Mu•lc&lt;~l

51

Flat 20 to 2~
gauoe . Porcelian enamel
coated . Sizes 4 tt by 8ft. 4 II
by 12 ft . Manv building
uses . Prices $5 .60 to
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 614·
667 ·3085.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
A K C, Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.

'

AO's.

surrounded
acres of privacy,
Jiving room with

Wrangler Blue Jeans.
$12.99 &amp; $9.95 pr. Acme
western boots. Reg . $59.95 .
Sale price $39 .95. Bailey
Shoes. Middleport.

LUMP coal US.
ton
deli vered . Firewood $30.
ton delivered. JOA-675· 7199.

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

, GUN _ cabinet, 10 gun
capability, Xediteranian
; ~ \ ~~:alood condit ion,

Est.lle-: Genera.-- - - - - -- - - - - - - " - ~--- - - - - - - - - - ~--.. ______ - - - - - ·- --------- - _____ -- - ·- _______,.,eal Estate- General
-

Firewood . Spilt, stacked &amp;
delivered . SlO a large
pickup load. Call 446·8535
or 446·7993.

'

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"No Be•ter Bargains Anywhere!"

Large Franklin wood &amp;
coal stove, screen &amp; brass
decoration, fire utinsel,
S200. Call 446·1735.

Seasoned Oak Firewood.
Call675·2757 after 4 pm.

ELVIS 1st. collection bot·
" tie, music bbx, ~=!hone 304·
I 675·4098, 67S·2852.

40,000 BTU Warm Morning, auto blower
(New Price $449) ••.••..••.•.• 5199.95
40,000 BTU Used Little, Looks New
(New Price 5449) •.......•.•.• 5249.95
65,000 BTU Warm Morning
(New Price $~99 . 95) ... ,. ..... $249.95

For Farm and
Hotne Delivery Of
Gas ~ Diesel •
Heating Oil.

Utility trailer for sale.
Phone 2.&amp;5-5242 alter 6PM .

1969 Starcraft pop-up,
: sleeps 8, furnace, new can' \las. S500. 675·2983.
• HAND crafted to gun cedar
; gun cabinet, brass locks &amp;
, handles, $225. 304·675·3489.

.GAS HEATERS

614-992·2181

1972 Buick , 1971 Pinto,
refrigerator, wood cooK
stove. early American
couch set. Calllt5-92Al .

Lump Coai ·Zinn Coal co
Inc. Call446·1&lt;08 between '9
8 ft . pOOl table, slate top,
and 5.
exc. cond. Call ~ - 1121 .
15% discount on WOOd &amp;
coal s1oves while supply
last. Gall ipolis Block co,
.123 112 Pine St., 416-2783.

The

----------

Misc. Merchandite

World Book Ch lldcraft En·
CYclopedia, 15 volumes
Plus 2 extra boQks L , 25,
color Quasar Tv ' floor
model, Qood cond. Phone
446·794 1.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
BARGAIN CENTER

Table and chairs, organ,
new baby bed mattress,
car seat and other baby
items. 676·3112 .

DINING room set , 30.4-675·
3793.

=Milc.Men:haftdiU -

New woodburnlng furnance S450. Davis 700 tren- 275 gal. fuel tank, filter &amp;
cher &amp; hoe $5,500, .., ft. stand Included, $35. Call
2H ask for Anita
Fru@hauf box trailer Sl.SOO,
~6 ft . goose-neck flat bed Taylor.
trailer $2,500. Phone 614256· 1216.
· Deer Stayer
20 gage Brownie
More than 100 pieces of magium. Ph. 446-2724.
brown underpinning for a
mObile home. used just one Automatic
Hume-lton
year . A seven and one half washer, 18 lbs. load, real
feet by S8 Inch wide oval nice, S90.00. Call446·8181 .
rug, and white uniforms
size 9-10. Call 446-3065 after
.(:30 PM.
· Firewood. Seasoned hardwoods, $35 piCkup load,
delivered . Caii-U6-4176.
For SaJe: 750 and 1000
gallon PLASTIC septic
8 Living room suites, all
tanks . State and County ap·
flowered velvet. Assort·
proved. Total weight 300
lbs,, Haul In vour pick-up ment of colors, ~ off
regular price. Must sell!
truck. Ron Evans Backhoe Call367·7869 .
Service, loc~hed 3 ' miles
South of Jaclfson on st: Rt.
1972 Chevy 1mpala, two
93, 286·5930.
living room suites, stero,
color TV. baby crib, dinette
RestaUrant
equipment set. Cal1446·2097.
reconditioned by RADCO.
CAll 30~ · 523· 1378, Hgtn. ,
Corn, S2.50 bushel. 675·2786.
WVA.

'30 inch gas range, S25.
Phone 675-263.4.

One dinning room table
with three leaves and 5
chairs, one old bed beadboard, one viny chair needs
small upholstery job . 6751832.

OhiC&gt;-'Point Pleasant, w. va.
54

fireplace , kitchen
...,.r,o breakfast bar. Most

feature

-

ASSUMABLE LOAN ONLY $5,400 down, 9%
rate, 27 yrs. Asking
v$56,900.
HELP
Lovely
overlooking the
_3 bedrooms ,
room. modern kit.. . ,:hen. full basement.

nice family room with
wb fireplace . In-ground
swimming pool all sit-

ting

on

an

acre

of

ground!

1 ·; ios c:N WALK TO SCHOOL Private location located [ust 1 block WHAT YOU WAN!, AND WHAT YOU
from GAHS. Modern 3 bedroom ranch CAN AFFORD - are 2 different things,
w / fult basement. Has a new k itchen. UNTIL NOW! The house and location
nat. gas .heat, garage &amp; landscaped are ideal. Owners hate to sell but have
yard . Owners will finance at low rates. to. Need the money to buy home out of
sta te. Will sell at a very reasonable
Only $32,000.
price Cassume low interest mtg .).
•
House in rl)Ove-in condition and has
everyth ing that really matters . 3
~edrooms. 2 baths, familY room,
f~replace, 2 car garage, patio, over 1700
sq , ft. Mu-ch more. Only $61,000.

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...ASSUMABLE
$3,800

LOAN
down,
int. rate. Paymen71 including
ins . Modern 3
ranch, large
and kitchen
area . Only
$34,500.

ijiM_MACIJLA•TEI Y KE·
Just like new
:&amp;ou!&gt;lo•m
bu i lt 14x70
home .
3
large lovely
room, modern
: •buiill·in kitchen, dining
a l l carpeted,
covered patio.
Storac•• building . 9x10
dry cellar all
on 1J;4 acres of
grc&gt;und . Shown by appt .
Priced in the low

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2NO AVE. - Everything about this
home is perfect. An immacu late, well
decorated 3 bedroom home on Upper
2nd in a good neighborhood . Fam ly
room. woodburner, 11.~ bath, nice kitchen, nat. gas, cent. air and fenced

~~ ya:::~:SSIONAL

12 acre estate with a "Dallas" fl;,vor. Rail fences, stil:lle, swimmin

surrounded by beautiful level land. Visually excitin: :r~~
ome. Sunken ga_th_ering room, family room with glassed shelves and fire lace
elegant fprmal dm~ng room. Four bedrooms or three plus a study. 2t;2 ba~hs
k1tchen that prom1ses to t11rn a novice cook ·into a pro. Nutone work cent~r
double ovens, dishwasher, range and breakfast booth custom designed by Chan:
dlers. ~ustom drapes, plush carpet. Attached 2 car garage Expensive• Yes b t
··n~oss1ble to rejllace lor the asking·price.
•
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DO YOU NEED A SMALL HOME IN
TOY;IN? - Then ttlis one is perfect.
Cozy and modern 2 bedroom, 1 floor
plan. H~s, bran~ new kitchen, dining
r~m, . ltvmg room, detached garage
at;d ntce flat vard. Make us an offer.

w~

OWNER WILL FINANCE '- Lo~. low
down payment, low interest financing
for qualified buyer. Remodeled 2
bedroom home has new hat. gas furnace, some new carpet, large living
room &amp; utiL room. Several fruit &amp;

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FO:h::~:-=~::::k:e:: ::t:::~l-ve

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$25,000 . LAND CONTRACT • A gOOd
buy on th!s 3 bedroom home on Central
Ave. m R1o Grande. Has full basement
nat, gas heat, large porch &amp; nice sized
yard. Make us an offer.

"I

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION You
better look now or you'll m.,s the buy of
the year In Rio Grande. An unusual
bedroom, 2 story brick home thlifa only
2 years olcL Has2'h baths, family room,
ASSUME"" MGT. - Owners must sell flr.eploce, 2 efficient· heating systems
NOW! Spacious 3 bedroom home near (one Is wood), full bisement and 2-car
rown. Has 2 baths, beautiful new kit- garage. S60s. 9112% assumption.
c.hen &amp; dining room, full basement', 2
1
fireplaces. family &amp; rec. roo·m , 2 car
garage, nat. gas, cent. air. 60's,
"DISGUSTED" SALE - Owners
1
must sell to any ready, willing and
18 ACRES - 2 STORY HOME - A qualified buyer 11111 very nice 4
1
home with cheracter on 1ower Rt.
4 .bedroom 'bHtvel. Has 21/t bath,
Qedrooms. 2 baths. fomlly room, family room, INOodburner. big kit·
flrepl•c•. WOOdburner, 2 car garage. chen, di11ing room, 2 car oareoe and
Nice WOOded 1creage. A real eve- a private 3'4 ac. Vlrd wllllln·ground
catcher.
~1. Prlc.cl In
Mtj(o us •n of·

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.._ -----I

- ~arage/workshop

OFFICE BLDG.
••
br1ck colonial building with a diqnlfled atmosphere The freestanding bldg ha•
3600 sq. ft., large and small rooms and Iaroe concrete parking area Wilfre~f atl 1
or part. Call Ike Wiseman for details.
r...r
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We sell.beautiful things

9~'.1% ASS!.!M~TIO~- One of th'e pret·
hest &amp; p~tvate locations in the area .
9W~'o ASSUMABLE MTG. Nice Located m Northup this charming
roomy bi · level with 3 bedrooms, 2 home has vinyl siding, fireplace, fu ll
baths, family room w/ fireptace, very basement, new carpet, detached 2 car
nice equipped kitchen, nat. gas, cent . garage plus 2 acres with lots of trees
air and garage .. Nearly 11; acre w/pool , $43,500.
'
Near town. SO's.
$39,900 .:._ This attractivelY ·d ecorated 4
OWNER WILL FINANCE~ With less bedroom home is located at the edge of
than 20'% down payment and 11% in- town . owners must sell (have bought
terest. 168 acre 'f arm off Rt. 554. Ap· another home) . Has family room
prox . 20-25 ac . crop balance in pasture dining room, full basement, nat. ga~
and woods. Lots of pine (red &amp; white) heat &amp; low equitv, low interest mor·
barn, plus mOdernized 3 bedroon\ tgage.
home. 60's .

101 ACRES ~ Owner will finance at
very reason~b l e rates to qualified
buyer . Excellent land for hunting, horses or a few cattle. Mostly woodland.
A_l~o older 2 story home in livable conditiOn . 40's .

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THERE'Ll BE A SCRAMBLE FOR
THIS HOME- 4 bedrOom tri-level w ith
loads of living space. Stone fireplace, 3
, family room , equipped k itchen.
room , woodburner. 2 car garage,
4111 acres of lovely pin e lan·
l ~:i.~:~bng . A real fine home pr iced at

IVE
exceptional ly nice
'.r•dsc:apePclrofession a II y
:~
Featuring a
rustic family
w i th massive
"""'kshellvesf, ire PI ace '
"!
bay win nd
beamed
Large spacious
entry . Modern
kitch&lt;•n with pantry, tor·
dining room and
ng room . Everything
your comfort. Set·
on the edge of town
semi -wooded lot.
by Appointment.
in the 60's!

NEW LISTING 2
acres of land with this
be autifu lly
finished
brick home . 2·3· or 4
bedrooms. 2 full bclfhs
w i th
showers .
futl
basement, nclf. gas
f ir ed, hot wat er heat.
asbestos-state roof, copper flashing, 2-car atti'l c hed gara ge with
ope ners . .. This is a
QUALITY BUlL Thome
and you will be proud to
. own it I Priced in the
S80' s.

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2·YEAR
OLD, 3 ·
bedroom, modern home
situated on 1 acre lot
overlooking
the
beautifu l Ohio River .
Located along Ohio
Ri Jer. ·$45.000 .

,

CENTEI(ARY - $43,500 - Three bedroom' I'
bath ranch .. Cozy family room With fireplace v'-ou·· ~
love this fr~endly neighborhood iust a few · .
from Gjllllipolis. Nearly one-half acre levellar:Jri.utes
ENTERTAIN EASILV or hide out In your second
floor ~droom with a GOOd book. Exceptional fover
~a~ br1dal _staircase ... powder room. Spacious
hv_mg_ and d1nlng rooms. Kitchen has island range.
btHit·1n oven ... breakfast nook with view of bricked
c~rtyard . Peacefurenvironment In the heart of the
c1ty. Assumable mortgage. $S4,900.
VINTON- $32,000 -

Commercial Building- 2.220

sq. ft. su(table for grocery, hardware or would be
good location for' arcade. Two nice 2 bedroom apart·
ments on second floor.
KYGER CREEK AREA $65,000 P~ivacy
guaranteed. 13 beautiful . wooded acres surround
this 3 bedroom ranch home . Larger kitchen with fOr ·
mal dining area. 20'xAO: pool . Assumable mortgage,
RIO GRNADE -130,000- WltWin Walk{ng dlatance
of Rio Grande College. GOOd Investment for co11011e
stUdent, buy Instead of paying rent. Nice 2 BR. 1-'h
batns, formal dining. Williamson forced air fur·
nace. G.a!,!OI. Garden space.
·
NEAR RIO GRANDE- llerv private country set·
tlng. F~r bedroom ranch home surrounded by ll'lt
beautiful acres. Home his formal dining, family
room. attached garage, Move-In condition. Lar.ge
b&lt;lm, other outbuilding. Auumable mortage
$79,,51)1).
.

COU.NTR'I' LIVING just a few miles from tile clly
Appro_x . 3 acres Slfrrounding 3 BR frame home. For:
mal d1ning, lg. ut11ity room, sewing or hobby rQOm
2 car garag~ and heated greenhouse. Covered patio ·
Highest gas bill last winter wasS29 .00 . $53,500 .
.·

A VEA'f SPECIAl cozy• home with lots of nice
touches. F emily room has fireplace wi·th slate hearth, soft plush tarpet, custom plant Window. Eat-in
kitchen with range and dishwasher. Full basement,
gas heat. Cent. air cond . City schools . OWner will
finai'K:e on land contract wUh $6,000 down payment.
20 yr. terr11 at 1~ Interest rate . Mon1hly payment
$363.36. $39,000.

t

'
ENO - SlOO,OOO- Beautiful
building sites along ·
blacktop road ... rural wafer available. ·Rich c:rop
.land elso some timber .. Over 100 acres. Cell tor·a
showlno. Yot.l'll see this Is good investment proPer··
tv.
•
'·
RE-NTALS
In .:lty, 3 rooins, bath, $150.00
deposit requited,

mo.

Reference and

In city, • rooms, 2 baths. 1200.00 mo. Reference anct ·
deposit requlr.cl.

'

Ill
ACRE
FARM,
situated near VInton. SO
acres bottom land,
woods, has 3-bedroom
house, new heat pump.
NE!eds some work .,
Blacktop road to front
door. Also, has lg. barn
and · 100'x20' . storage
shed. Owner will sell
some
farm
equipment. Call tor
more information .
PRICE REDUCED on
this combination home
and
business
op ·
portunlty . Located in
downtoWn Gallipolis
and zoned commercial,
bu1 with residential use,
too. Nice neat 1,42A sq.
ft. home with business
building in rear. Owner
will help finance, or
finance entirely with
25~
down payment.
This Is quality piece of
real estate. Let us show
It to you today t
RENTALS
AVAILABLE:
6·room house, 2 baths
$250.00 mo.
'
6-roorn house, 1 bath
S150 .00 mo.
3·room apartment
$125.00 mo.
at· room apartment
S200.80mo.

ALL THE' COMPORTS
tor modern living but
with the sol itude of the
country . 3-bedrooms,
living rm ., dining room,
utility rm .. modern kit· ·
chen w/oak cabinets, 2
baths. 14'"1d8' master
bedroom .
Ap ·
proximatelY 50 fruit
trees and 6acres of land
near Raccoon Creetc; . All
for $78.500.00.

-THIS IS TRUE - ComfortableS
room house and two room apartment. 3
BRs, ba th , built-i n kitchen , oil furnace ,
aluminum siding, fruit trees, only
$18,000. Owner wil! help finance . Next
door to Tara Estates.
898

11//fh.
LABLEsuburban home, S room,s
3 BR. spacious LR, built-In
with breakfast nook. County
water. Level lot which fronts on Route
7. Close to church, shopping center.
Priced in the SlOs.
#900

ACREAGE
LAND CONTRACT- Owner Will do tile
financing on this 22 acres. 2 olc(er
homes . 3 wells. Tobacco base. All
mineral rights. Owner will possibly
consider trading. $22,000.
I 826

s

ACRES, more or less - Has rural
water, septic tank, barn and will sell on
land 1contract with· smelt down payment. Listed for $8,000 .00
ffll

NEED LAND? - 30 acres of vacant
land . IS acres wooded. 15 ., acres of
rolling pasture. City scl'feols. No
restrictions. $15,500.
AI Iff
NEW LISTING - Stur·
dy , brick structure
located along R1 . tltO In
Vinton . Formerly used
as financial business
·bui lding. 1,118 sq. ft., 2
rest rooms , 6,620 sq . ft.
parking area, drive-In
window. use as Is or
convert to home with
large security vault .
Priced to sell S53,000 .00 .

WOOD IIEALTY, INC.
S2 LOCUST ST.. GALLI POLl I

HELP FINANCE!
Hide-away acres. Reduced $17,(100,
Florida bound, wants sale now! New
home, 23 acres, immaculate home
overlooking beautiful valley. Living
room, fam il y room, 3 large bedrooms,
appliances included. Green Township.
2.450 sq. ft . totaL Call for details.
1191

ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL IN
TOWN - New listing : Make an appt.
today to see this very impressive quali ·
ty bi"ick ranch with a coun try atmosphere. FamH.y rm., fireplace,
beautiful kitchen, dining rm .. 3 BR, 3
-baths, 2110 sq. ft. Walk in closets. Lots
possible_ ~~ P.xtras. Loan assumption
o_~sible .
,1903

LOAN ASSUMPTION
INTEREST
- Move in now. Sp&lt;iciOus tri-level. 3
BR, LR, family room, large modern kitchen, 2 baths, natural gas heat, centra l
air, deluxe fireplace; two car garage.'
Superior location. Close to hospital.

*"7'

•

HEY "NATURE LOVERS"
Put your green rhumb to work on this
4.3-40 acres. Enjoy country living in this
3 bedroom home located on state
highway. Other attractions are a 30' by
4S' Wicks ·bUilding, tobacco base, plus
more.
1102
NEW LISTING , 2
bedroom home situated
jusl outside city limits.
22'x20' garage, 'nice gar·
den area, F .A. nat. gas
, heat,
city water .
S-49,500 .00.

MEMORIES LINGER in this older 11h
story home in need of repairs. Some
outbuildings. 6 acres ·total rolling to
flat. A very good buy pr iced at $13,500. f
9
1
9

WILL TAKE TRADE IN toward
property . 1975 12x70 Penthouse mobile
home. partly furnished. •;~ acre lot and
located on Blue lake . A very good buy
priced at$19,500.
1913

Most all level, tillable
3 ACRES ground, some suitable for cabin or
1827
house. S3,000.
WOODED ACREAGE
GREEN
TO.W NSHIP - Approx. 2 acres. Over
900 ft. road frontage. County wat!r
avallab1e. ~ miles from Gallipolis.
Priced atsa,OOO.
#921

CHASE
AWAY1
bedroom ranch.
baths, family
room, stone firpelace, fenced
backyard, pano. well deCorated,
convenient IQCatton. Possibility of
loan assumption. Mid $50S.
1151

PERFECT START
Roomy 3
bedrooms , 1 bath, spacious kitchen and
dining area. Large lot, carport and
storage building . Edge of town. Priced
in the S40's.
1155

RESIDENTIAL

COMMERCIAL
RESTAURANT BUSINESS- A going
business and fine location in town. All
inventory Qoe5. BuY: today and ch905e
your own working hours. Call for more
details.
All34

POTENTIAL! - So mucn pot...!lal on
this lovely 3 BR home.·-eountrv setting
with 1 acre Of lawn, natural gas tap,
county water available. Buy on land
contract at a very low prlcf! and Invest
in your home for tomorrow.
IIS3

RESIDENTIAL

FARMS
HILLS·TREES - Older 4 room home,
now rented. Shallow well water: system .
some outskfe buildings. including root
cellar and cellar house. •2 acres, most ·
all timber land. A noiticeable amount of .~.
hard "100&lt;1. S26,5CJO.
NBBO 1

.

OWNER WILL TRADE tillS well cared
family home in the Village of Rio Gran·
de. 3 bedrooms. b&lt;lth, formal dining
room, basement. Chain link tence.
Large lawn. A home mat is nice to come
home to.
I 174

COME SEE ME II Big c,ountry 3 or. 4
bedroom home in a small village. 2
baths. living room, family room ana.
~ltchen. Full basement, enciOied back·
porch and front porcn. Situated on '1/o
acre with Iaroe 2 story storage building.
southwestern ,scnool district. Rural
water. ·
,

:1

MODERN DAIRV FARM - 70 acres.
Near Gallipolis, Green Twp . Th1S can
be familY OJ)eratlon. 48 free stan barn . '
Pond, concrete watering trough, Coun·
ty water available . $60,000 . Cows and
~hinery can be nego1iated .
N915

RESIDENTIAL

'BS7

BRAND NEWill owner financing
available . custom bUII1 3 bedroom
home. 2 &amp;athl. Kitchen·dlning·femlly
combination . Woodburner. Hftlt pump.
Well insulated. 2 car garage. AU ap·
pliances included . Best grades of carcounty . 1.32 acres. Must see! #920

AFFORDABLE COUNTRY HOME 111' acres, woods. oarden space, ian·
dscaped vard. Ranch style. 3 BRs.
20x20 family room witb flreplaee.
Southwestern School Oist. priCed to sell
tnt. 52~.900. Call today.
1112

'·

or
lots
storage?
Then you must see this home to ap·
predate its value. Central air, beautiful
stone chimney for woodburner, 2 car
garage, basement, nice garden space
and lots more on 1 acre m/1.
1165

pet.
~

·'

SPI'AWLING SPLIT LEVEL
D1seover
this
beautiful
home '
overlooking the Spring Valley Plaza .
HWOf- dining, living and family rooms. 3 ,
Of' .t
bedrooms, electric heat, 2
ttreplaces, 2 baths, 2 car Qrilfaoe. Can be ..
purchased with 2 or 22 developing ,
acres.
1190t ..
.,

r

�:
P omero

Tomes-Sentinel
6l F a 7m e9uipmenf
tor for cheap running
304-675 4467 .

Flori da . Tomatoes.
oranges.
tangelos.
grapefruit, pecan · yams.
apples. Rayburn' s Market.
~~aug ha. Ohio. 4-U.-8247.
r

For Sale or Trade
2 ,d~ble mattress with box
sp~i ngs, 1 double

bed. want
t9 tr.acte tor twtn 'bed w ith 2
mciftress·and 2 box springs.
Cal l4.46·2378.

. ..

----

,.-

1 arm Supanes
..-- &amp; bl vgsfQEIC
6] . .. Farm Equipment
Gra);'ely parts, usecj. We
have junked several old

rr1oQet

Gravely

tractors

ana ... w l ll sell servi ceable
p~r ts at 1/ 2 pri ce. Outdoor
Equ ipment Sales. Jet . Rts.

7 •a. 35, Gallipolis, Oh. Ph
•46·3670. Closed Tues &amp;
Thurs unt il Mar. 1. 1982.
---~-

.Q.VIDEN'S
FA RM
fiOUIPMENT Full tine of
~ujpment,
~rmeer .

From Long,
Kuhn. Kelley ,
ma~w others With

~d

i.Qur sellctton of parts and
mptet • service USED.
dro 70 IH tractor Wke
w ), 2-.US Long tra ctors, 2
~kes,
hay bind. round
taler , bus-hog d1Sk, plows,
O&lt;jlllvators. CHECK OUR
~ICES &amp; COMPARE!,

i

~- 1675 .

."'. . - --

iototlller Call 245-9285.
~------

~DEA LE R

WANTED·
STE EL BUILQINGS fo r
your area to handle our
co mm e r c1a l
a nd
agricultural pre·eng1neere·
c1 steel building lines on a
par t t1m e bas1s, good
profit. Call 614·294 ·3273,
8· 30AM to6 .00PM .

......A -DEA-LER
--·----WANTED
J.TEEL BUILDINGS

tot" your area to handle our

co:H' mercial
and
agricultural pre."engineere·
d ~feel building lm es on a
part-time bas1s . Good
prDflt
call 614·294·3273,
B:Jti.a m. t o6 :00 p.m .
- ~------ -~-

~ eal

..

Estatt

General

~

~ar .

model Gravely
$200.00, 304·675·

.

·----·-- --- --··

TWO sections metal drag
harrow, 10 ·H . wide, ad ·
i ust able, 1n good condit1on,
$75 .00. Phone 304·895·36'21

-

---

-~---

--·-~

___

1981 mOdels s1111 in stock at

greatly

71

---·- -----

-

--

-B.!~Es tale-&lt;!!nera
_l________ _

NEW LISTING - Qu1et street in Racine. Nice 2
B R. tra 11er, large liv1 ng room, eat-in kitchen in·
et udes appliances. Of fered at S11 ,500.

••u
•••ott
+nt
WEST

EAST

+1071

••

•Ia.
.Q81
+AJ81

.QIII
tJ!3
.QIOI32
SOUTH
+AIQIII
• JIOI
• K 75

81 M'onte Carlo 1,800 miles,
81 CordOba 10,000 miles, 81
Grande Pr ix 16,000 mlfes.
All cars in excellent condition, priced ~for quick
sa le. Cafl446·7322.

+K

Vulno;rable: Bolb
Dealer: Soulb
Wnl

Nortll

E11t

Soutb

Pau

2t

Pm

~

Pau
Pau

4 NT

Pus
Pau

p.,,

~

••

~·
Pau

lloulb llado blmooll ill ..
abaunl lis fiJIIdo caalrll&lt;l
beca1110 North bu overllld .
lo pt !bono. Woot tbo
1970 Cadillac coupe, runs
""" al cluba. Eut pla,a tbo
gOOd, fullv loaded, body
""" lOUth ctropl his
needs work. Best offer. Call
U.:.iot looill at tbe deuct 4.46·8263.
carefully and leadl blldeuce
of cllamon&lt;ll. Dummy'a Diaa
1972 Charger, good cond .•
forctl S:UI'I jack. SOU!l
one owner. Call after 7PM.

lakes bla kla1, draw•
1rumpa, leadl loll aeven of
dis-. finellell dummy'a
l 0 and .... ill dilcar&lt;l •
heart on the 1001 diamond.
West Ia mad at Eut. He
wanta to know why Eut
UJed the dou,. of clu• u a
oult pre{.....,. lipll for a
dlamOIIII ohlfl.
Of """""'· Eut'a play of

the deuee wu nothlnf more
than a normal p!Jiy o a low

canl to lell

w..t

that Eut

had no lnle ... t ill a club

coatinuauon.

But even If Eut and Wool
were p!Jiyl"l IOIIH! lilly •fll·
tem lD wiaicll every card was

Opening lead: +A

a suit preference there was

446·0271.
1976 Cadillac Sedan
Deville, good cond. FJriced
S2, 195. Call A4H398 or 4.46·
8334 .

Monte carlo,
cond. Call 446-2103.
1973

good

1978 Thunderbird Town
Landau. Call388·9779.

a diamond.

aad Alaa Sootag
In the August bulletin 'or
the ACBL, Fomsl Smltb has
an article entitled, "S1gnals
should be sensible."
It ts even more Important
lo r..u.. tbat every play Ia

not a aign1I

If Eut belli that king he
was aolna: to make It
lrrespecUve of wbea dia·
mends were led. If be held
lhe jack as wu the case II

wu important to make
declarer attack the aull.
(NEWSPAPER ltH'I'IRPRII&amp; AIIN.)

1979 Dodge Omni. Auto.
AC, PS, AM· FM cassette,
front wheel drive. rear

rL-----------,----------~ defogger,
dition Call excellent
614·992· 7467con·
or
71

Auto for Sale

1976 Monte Carlo one
owner, loaded, $1,500
Phone 4-46·3974.

65

Buick Skylark A /T,
regular gas, 2 winter tires,
good cond Caii446·436S .

1968 DOdge Da rt, 6 cyl.
gOOd tires, runs good .
Phone 773·5155

1979 Pontiac Trans . Am . T
loaded, 16,500 m 11es

.

.

1967 Pontiac
Phone 675·4230 .

. LI~E
INSURANCE
428 Second Ave.
C_aii446·0S52 Anytime ·
BMR 391
Price reduced . Owner wants It sold
now! 10x50 mobile home situated on a river front
lot. Excellent buy for newlyweds.

BMR 386 - Qu1et country home on 'h acre tot in
· etudes 20x20 barn with loft and partial basement
You Will er10Y t his one. Reduced to $25,900.

601

E . Main
POMEROY,O.

BMR 392 -

992·2259
NEW LISTING
Newer 2 bedroom home
1n Porneroy w/ garage in
basement. large double
lot Forced a1r natural
gas fUrnace. Carpeting,
patio
and
many
features. Only $21,800
NEW LISTING - TUP·
PERS PLAINS - A well
3 bedroom
1nsulated
home with a large liv ing
room, util ity room . and
a t1ni shed attic. has a
large concrete front par·
ch and is at the end of
th e street for quietness.
Real nice at $34,500 .
NFIN LISTING - IN
POMEROY - 2 lots
suitable in size for house
or mobile nome. All
ut ilities on property
$7,000.
NEW LISTING - MID·
OLE PORT - A 12x:60 2
bedroom mobile home
w•tl1 central air, gas
heft to live in and on the
same 70x9S lot are 2 fur ·
nished rental mobile
homes with rental in·
come of $325 a month .
$2A,900
ONE ACRE NEAR THE
MINES Plus a 3
bedroom. one floor plan
home with beautifUl
woodwork, bay wmdow ,
Store build1ng and

garage. $30,000.
R'&amp;MODELED ONE
FLOOR ·PLAN 2
t41room. ~i~chen, li ·
r•m , d1n1ng
umitv, and bath. Nice
brock garage and
workshop. 31_. acre lot on
bradburv Road . 523,000.

'

Now 1s vour chun.:e to live m town to.
le 55 th an $40,000 T hree bedroom home near
G .A H S

COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
WE SELL IT ALL
REAL ESTATE &amp; CHATTELS
Price greatl y reduced on th iS 3 BR bnck
ranch S1tuated on l r~ r ge flat lot Call for deta11s1

BMR 31&gt; -

BMR
on lg
18x36

398

e

Close to town 3
R ranch
fl~ lot includes detached 26x26 garag~ plus
1 n -~round pol Owner transferred .

BMR 399
Two story home present·
tv be1ng used as duplex, could eas11y be converted to
s1ng1e family . Choice location in Gallipolis. Owner
will help finance.
BMR 139 - REDUCED - Two story home on Se·
cond Ave Aluminum siding, 3 or 4 bedrooms.
Reduced to $22,500. Call for details .
BMR 402 - 37 Acres bare land, 1401 tb. tobacco
base. 30x30 tobacco barn. Check on this one!
BMR 403- New Listing - 1981 Mobile home on ren ·
ted tot. $10.900. Nearly new.
BMR 400 - Check this one. For Only $8,500 you can
buy a two 8~ home w/ rural water and b\ th .
BMR 397 - Owner says sell, and he will do the
financing at 12% It Is an Income produp ng duplex.
BMR 389 - This f1ne 4 bedroom home 1s located m
the city school system. You will enjoy a large lot
w1th a total country atmo~here, and the same time
have all of the city conveniences Call now.
BMR 404- New Listing - City schools, newly car·
peted and painted . This three BR home is priced In
the lowSJO's, a great buv on today's market .
BMR 405 - Greallocatlonl A very nice ranch style
home w1th a full basement with family room . Main
floor has three BR's, large living room with a cozy
bnck fireplace. All situated on 43 of an acre and
only two miles from Gallipolis.

BMR 4Q9 - Top of the line spill foyer . This fine
home Includes J bedrooms. 2 full baths, large den
with tireptace, heat pump for year •ro~nd comfort.
see thiS fUII'f carpeted home now . Pnced at only
S69,900. owner will help qualified buyer with very
attractive financl~g .

s~.ooo.

BMR 395 - Three bedroom home on NelghbOrt&gt;OO&lt;I .
Rd situated on 1 acre more or less. Includes two
mobile home pads. Reduced. Coli for dela list

.

liULTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
"2-6191
• ASSOCIATES

Trussell 94,__26ta0
Tur,er H2~ S6f2
Turn.r "2·.5692

Utility Buildings

Si11t5 from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x:36.
Insula led Dog Houses

Trucks for Sale

1919

Chevrolet Silverado
short bed, .4-wheel drive •
very clean, 25.000 miles,
deluxe interior. auto .• PS,
PB, PW, POL, air, not been
used off road, $6,500. Call
256-6056.
•

STROUT REALTY, Inc.
•

vUI~

Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614-143·2591
6-15 ttc

1979 ford F 150, 4· wheel
drive, black step side. AC.
PS, PB , automatic, 17/40
tires, $5,800. Call 446· 1724.

WELDING SHOP
Trailer
sites
&amp;
Driveways. Srnall jobs a
specialty. Dflcher or
Trench Service.
Gas &amp; Water Lines

JIM LUCAS.
PH. 742-2753

PH . 992-5663

11· 19·1 mo.

Willis T, LHdlnghlm, Ra.oltor, Ph. Home 446-9539
Phyllis Loveday, Phone 446-2230
JOiln Boggs, Phone 446-32t4

MEIGS COUNTY
3.2SACRESMorL
POND .
8
room
remode le d
country
l'lome beautifully- lan
dscaped, alI 3.25 acres
mowed. Garage with
concrete
driveway
24'x27' fam1ly room with
f 1replace. Large block
storage building. Fruit
trees . Been reduced
over $17,000. You must
see th1s country home
Phone now for e~n ap
po1ntmen t .
# 507

IN MIDDLEPORT
N1ce. could be 100 year
old home in n1 ce con ·
d1110n . Sol!d, 1t has 7
rooms, 4 bedrooms, 111:2
baths.
basement ,
modern k1tchen , family
room , f1reptace All city
utllities. Carport Shown
by appo1ntment only
Phone now
N506

5 YR. OLD SPLIT-LEVEL- features A
or 5 BRs, 3 balhs, 30 fl. LR, 2 familv
rms., 2 wOOdburning fireplaces. large
kitchen and dining area, 2 car garge,
one of the county's nicest pools {20x50)
and a truly professionally landscaped
lot . Located on Debby Dr1ve. Owner
says sell ... so call RANNY BLACK ·
BURN for a personal showing You'll be
pleased you d1d.
HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a hun·
fiflg lodge, vacat1on home, etc. Rustic
log home is built from hand hewn
beams and has ~ sleeping loft, modern
bath, large stone f i repla\:e and approx.
27 acre of woods in the Wayne National
Forest. Extra land available Easy Ter·
ms.

FARMER'S FARM - One of Guvan
Township's finest. 106 acre m/ 1, ap·
prox. 4S A. fertile bottom land, balance
pasture &amp; woods. Nice modern kitchen
&amp; tam . rm. 14x18 LR , attached garage
rn 56x104, also included IS 20)(24
garage, workshop &amp; several
sheds. Owner is retiring &amp; Will help
finance .
BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx . Slf2 acres located ol1 the
Graham School Rd., co. water. over 300
ft. rd frontage, Green Grade School &amp;
Gallla Academv High School . 510,900 .
WALNUT TOWNSHIP- Beef, hay &amp;
grain farm . 80 acres. m/1, approx. 35 A.
gOOd cropland, 10 A . wOOds, balance
pasture, good fences, 9 rm./bath, home
was built in 1Bn &amp; ha' been parti ally
remOdeled, soxso cattle barn wlth con·
crete floor, large silo with auto.
unloader, several sheds, large pond,
q'"lrings, standing crops go to new
•ner .
HUNTINGTOWN TOWNSHIP - 176
acres mil vacant land, fronts on Rae·
coon Creek and the Tom Glen Rd. Ap·
prox . 31 tillable and the balance wood·
ed . Under $.400 per acre.
COUNTRY, YET CONVENIENT Great family home with 3 BR. 2 baths,
15x27 LR with gas fireplace, large
modern kitchen with range, self·
c leaning oven, OW and disp., laundry
rm. with washer and dryer. part base·
ment, large covered patio, garage and
over 6 ac res of land at the edge of town.
OHIO RIVER view - Approx. a acres
wooded land, nice building site, county
water , located on Route 7 approx. 5 mi
so~th of town. $6,SOO.

BEST BUY IN TOWN - StyHsh 2 story
home was built In 1894 and must be seen
to appreciate. Large open foyer and
stairway, LR, dining rm., parlor. com·
pletely equipped mOdern kitchen,4
BRs, 2Vz baths, new Siding, garage,
near scnoots, shopping, etc.

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCHER plus 78 A~RES of land In
Cheshire Township offers lots of good
living lor your growing f.11mlly. Home Is
just like new with 1438 sq. ft. of living
area plus an attached garage. 2
spacious SR's, 2 baths, 8x27 LR. 101&lt;24
kitchen with refrlg., disp., ow. double
oven &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays In
laundry. Land Is mostly rolling pasture
land with approx. 25 acres WOOded. Call
1
for appointment.
GRE.EN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fron·
tage on Stale Route 588, Fairfield
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfield Rd.
E)(cellent for farming or development.
Older 5 rm &amp; bath larm home, barn &amp;
silo included. Owners will consider sellIng smaller tracts of short term financ
ing. Call for more information.
JACKSON COUNTY FARM 106
acres MIL, appro)(. 30 A. tillable.
balance pasture &amp; wOOds, nice 2 story 7
rm . home, new 40xBO metal barn,
several other buildings, must sell soon.
Call for other deta11s.
GUY AN TOWNSHIP- 108 acres m/1,
located south of Mercerville. Approx. 20
A . tillable, balance woods, lob. base.
owners will help finance.
PRICE REDUCED TO $37,900! N1ce 3
BR low maintenance home IS less than 3
yrs old and features large LR, dining
rm ., kitchen, bath, part basement,
utility building and almost 2 acres near
Route 218 City schools
CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted
butldlng tot. 1.22 acre, nice wooded set·
ting , city schools. $5,900.
ROOM TO ROAM- This lovely brick
ranch offers tots of goOd living for your
growing family 3 BR's. 2112 baths, large
k,itchen &amp; LR, formal dining rm., 2.
f1_replaces, wood burning stove, cent.
a1r, garage, full basement with family
rm :, bar &amp; laundrv. Located on,aDDrox.
2 acres on State Route 554 between
Porter &amp; Eno. 15rieed to sell at$~9. 500 .

START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
acre pasture farm, mostly rolling &amp; hi I·
IY grassland with approx. 10 A. wooded.
lots of springs, 1112 story hOme has _.
rms. &amp; bath, large barn. tobacco base.
fronts qn J roads In Walnut Township.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE Remodeled home lllCiudes 5 rms. &amp;
bath, carport, sto¥e, refrig., dish·
washer, mobile home pad, almost 6
acres on 5882 mi. from town. $30,000.
NEAR CADMUS - Fortv ecros. op·
prox . lh tillable and 1f.z WOOds~ old :2
story term home In need of repairs,
barn. shed,sfronts on 141 . Owner flnan·
clno available at 10%.

Dealer
,'-4!

FA~M EQUIPMENT

SWAIN

PART5&amp;5ERVICE
USEC I':OUIPMENT

AUCTION BARN

GOOD TASTE AND GOOD BUY
Crouse· Beck Areil
Beau t ifUl 3 to 4 bedrooms , two and one-half baths, 2
cnr garage, eKtra large kitchen leadmg to a sun
deck, family room w 1th firepl ace. ex tra lot, plus
more Superb cond1t1on and 111 CitY schools . Listed in
the mid seventies
N514
LIK E NEW BRICK HOME - KIN EON DR .
6 rooms,
3 bedrooms, garage . Immediate
possess1on natura l gas furnace, cen1ral air . A l l
close ts ar e cedar l1ned Th1 s IS one well built brick
home You can see the quality in th1s home Call for
appomtment
11 SlS

PARTS AND SERVICE
AIL MAKES
•Washers •
•Dryer'

•Ranges

•DilpoiOII
' •Dishwashers
•Hot Wat•r Tanks

.9-5-tfc

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

C. R. MASH
OONSTRUCTION

NICE -CLEAN
6 Room home, bath, cellar. 2 storage buildings, own
water system. Nice country atmosphere, nice
ground, lots of shrubbery, large level garden area
and priced only $:29,900, You must see this one.
Phone .
1516
ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOME
Well kept, 9 rooms, 5 bedrooms. On State Highway,
approximately 1700 sq. ft. living space. Concrete
block cellar with frame smoke house. Large tool
shed, large block workshop w ith 2-car carport with
concrete floor . Four lots - over 1 acre of levelland.
All for only $A1,900 00.
I 513
CITY SCHOOLS
3 bedroom ranch style home Eat· in kitchen, full
basement. SpaciDus living room . Owner must sell.
Priced drastically low. S29,900.
'.

( Pomer'oy
Scrap
Iron
&amp; Metal)
Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies.
scrap iron and metals.
1 mile west of Fair·
grounds on Old Rt. 33.
Mon.· Fri. 8:30 IO 4: 00

Custom kitchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin~ electrjc, and
heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH, 992-11011

992-7656

Ph. 992-6564
10· 12·1tc

B·20·1fc

Tractorw/ Cab
MOD·.aOIO D•eniJ.O. TroJCIDr
MOO· JU I Row New Idea (Orn
PICker

1965

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

NOW

OPEN

used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
NEW PHONE NO.

992-6259

SUNRISE
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

~

1958 DOdge panel truck,
very good condition
$700. Phone 1·304·529·0254.

1980 DODGE picKup, 21,000
mlles. 2 snow tires, 304·675·
1303 after 5.
73

1981 CJ7 hard top jeep.
Wheels and tires, headers.
Alpine am ·fm cassette with
speakers. Fully carpeted
614 992·2073.

------

1978 FORD FlOO custom, A·
wheel·drive, lock· in hubs,
automatic , 44,000 miles, 4
new tires, $4,000. 304·675·
6662.

OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk into formal entrance with open staircase to
this lovely completely redecDrated home located in
the city . Withtn walking distance to shopping area. 3
bedoroms. 2 full baths and charming large kitchen.
Spacious living room with wOOdburning fireplace .
This grac1ous home has a natural gas F.A. furnace
like new. Immediate possession . WE ' RE WAITING
FOR YOUR CALL.
1146
MODERN HOME APPROX. 2'/z ACRES $39,900
Lovely 8 room home, 3 bedrooms, 1112 bath . Family
room with fireplace and formal dining and livmg
room. Country style lritchen with lots Df built·in
cabinets, self cleaning range and stainless steel
sink. Two car garage. Assumable loan City School
I 509
System. Ca 11 tor your appointment .

Appolnlmenh

nol llwlyi
neceu.,y . Fomr•rly l&lt;ul·rHCllrl

74

h•utv Shop.

10·28·1

1977 Honda Goldwlng 1,000,
fully dressed, 9,000 miles.
Call446 06A8 after 5PM

1979 Honda 750K less than
1.000 miles. full dressed
fairing and saddle bags.
Must sell, asking $2,450 but
negotlble. Cell4.46·2030.

SL 125 Honda, 1973. Calf af·
ter s, 992·7105.
1980 Honda 400 C.M .T. with
sissy bar, excellent con·
dition . Sears metal detec·
tor with G .E.S. 304·675·
6987.
1965 BSA 650 cc low rider,
eKcellent cond1tion, see
Jim Waugh at Ashton, WV .

For

all

of your wir-

AND CUSTOMIZING
R.. Biue and Re·Finlsh
Restock, paris, etc.
Order Guns 10%
Above Wholesale

ing needs ,

BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES $47,000 3
bedrooms, 11/2 bath home with lots 9f extra nice
features, built in cabinets, self cleaning rane, dish·
washer, garbage disposal and large dining room ,
Kyger Creek Schools.
1501
- --~ACRES
Within 10 min. drive to clowntown Gallipolis. City
School System. Has hookup for mobile home, Gallia
Rural Water, electric and septic tank, nrte light on
pole, 200 lt. 'f rontage on Graham School Rd. Tlmber.
Building sites. Call Now.
#477
SPRING·VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots, nice size building lots with all utilities
there. Lot size 101.8 by 1712 Better get ' urn now .
N4S6
BUY THIS HOME
FROM OWNER WITH $2,500 DOWN
And tow Interest rBte on balance with owner :2
bedroom cottage within 5 minutes of Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza.
1260
2 LOTS GREEN ACRES
lot N21. Sidewalk, 75' xlol8' .
Lot N23, Vacant 811' frontage by 148' depth. Priced to
sell.
N33H333
ONLY $1,700.00
WOOded lot, almost an acre, 200' of road frontage .
Suitable for development or cBmptng lot on Davis
Rood. Callfor details.
N43t
. --- - --ViiOWI
Look what you can vet on a land contract at 9% In·
terest. Owner reduced the price 17,900 and is
anxious to sell. This three bedroom spotless, air
conditioned home has :z baths, living storage
building, heated garage, all furniture Included.
Everything you n - In one purchase. In city school
district.
I ~7

Let
George
Miller
check your prestnt electrical system.
Residential
&amp; commerc:ial

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
Call Afl~r 4 P.M.
992-7656
11· 12· 1 mo.

Call742·3195

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

----. ---·- - -

Auto
window
t1nting
available, installed by
trained personnel. Auto
glass installed. Insurance
claims welcome. Southern
Glass Service, 446·1011 .

1·304-675-6276

WilSON
BUILDERS
AND
P'AINTERS
ALSO

"Interior Remodeling''
FREE ESTIMATES
Phone 992·2771
or991·7093

A &amp; c Home Insulation,
Inc. No Job to small 'or
large. 2 yrs. experience &amp;
training. Work guaran·
teed! Save up to 30 to per
cent on heating bills. Free
est1mates. Call 286·7171 or

INSULATED topper, good
condition, $150. phone 304·
576·2108.
Auto Repair

Duality AulobodV &amp; Paint
work . Insurance work

~j\_1;d"l~om ;~r:2"io~ A~~
T'JnCenter,446·1968 .

78

Camping
___ Equipment

HUNTERS special-10 fl.
F.ranklin plck·up camper.
Self contained, S9SO. phone
304-675·3509 after 5 p.m.

. 10·28·1 mo.

•
•
1
•

B"ckhoe
Excavating
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
•Dump Truck

GENES
CARPET
Cleaning . Special rates for
Nov. and Dec. only , Call
now and save. 614 992·6309.
LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential. automotive.
Emergenc y serv1ce. Cawl
882·2079.

·------ - --

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stymp removal . 675·1331.

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

SIDING

BISSEU..
SIDING CO.

~a and

•
I

-~rwmocl!'·-'"'l·-!dlllllna

.JIOO/Ing ollll guHor

ark
-ec::='wond

::::l:i?~r.-)
V, C. YOUNG Ill
"'-'31S.t tft.ftl•
,.,._.,., Ohio ':»-tfc.

•
i
)

&amp; Aluminum

Vinyl

'

"BiaUIIIul, Cullom
lull! OlriiH"
Clll lor lrte IICIIng
eallmlltl,
or

Mf-2160,

,..,1

No 11111111¥ Cllll

3·11·Hc

Finest Quality
Excellent Service
Fish- • G.tme Heads •
Life Size Mountl • Plus
Hide Tanning
Phone 742·2225
11-20-1 mo.

1----------1
· You'll
tract It down

•uch faster
wl th a

WANT AD

ACROSS

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
.Phone ..t.46·388B or 4.46·4477
13

Excavating

Construction Equipment
for sale. Backhoe S30 Case
Construction, I( lng with 24
in. back bucket, $4,200.
Located In Chester, Oh.
For more Information ca ll
collect 1·216·2A3·0256, asK
for Paul.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service. Larry Siden ·
stricker 675·5580.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpe1 Cleaning
41.6·4208
JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding 30
years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling.
Call3t8·9857.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured bv
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call &lt;146·2107
PAINTING · Interior and
exterior . plumbing,
rOOfing, some r{mOdeling.
20 yrs. exp. Coll388-9652,

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

.....

wood
73 Maker of

d1suse

remarks

75 Habituates
77 Bristle
78 Pilot
80 Loved ones
at Donkey"s

19 Corn::urs
21 Zeus'&amp; Wife
22 Rockfish
23

Recip~ts

algiHs
24 SIUQQISh·
ness

COUSin

139 "'The Greatest"
140 Form
141 Mother of
pearl
143 Italian com
145 Malay

82 Cok&gt;nlzflf"
84 Draw forth

gibbon

146 Tough

30Mi'l
32 Sped

89A._
92 Dress
protector

153 Great

33 Temporary
sheller

95Lanes
98 The sweet·

154 Do a

VIP
37 Paradise

39 Equ&amp;alty
40 Fuel

sop .

99Pass&amp;g&amp;wavs
101 Fortune-

41 Evergreen

telling
cords
103 Bell sound

42 DISCOrd

tG4 Frolk:
tos Shake-

...

,,

_..

g&lt;&gt;&lt;l&lt;leo•

rl-

44 Trapped

46 Semester

106 ··- 1was

sa)'ing"

47 Performs
48 HerOic
poem
5Q Nutrition

consultant
52 Part of

a camera

53 Plumbum
symbol

55 Urge on
57 Tra IOIIOwer
58 River

Islands

107 Comparative ending
108 Uquofy
ttO Part of a

ci&lt;Cio. AblK.
111 Exclamation
112 Stove part

119 German
120 Tied

62 DOE's

121 Outstanding

Mex , etc.

69 River into

t57

-

Mediter-

ranean

tSS Matured
159 Grafted.

....

160 W1nter
....ides
DOWN
I Den•
2 Related on
the mother"s

3 Make ready
4 Forever, to

Brvon

..

7 Tie Iabrie
8SMdarac

,,

9 Breastwort\

Abbr.

68 Can .• USA.

156 Extras

5 Permits

60 Ni1on
symbol

-·

gumshoe's
lOb

6 Digraph

money

66 Hebrew

rov-

113 Matures

59 AnknBI coat

64Sow

Torv

148 Oi5closos
150 Renovate
152 Guarantee

1 ts Overhead
ral
t 17 Study, e.g.

perf~

124 Grove
126 Prophet
127 Mountain
lake

t28 Re~alwa
130 - tho line

.......

170..--- ·

88- .

18Curvod
lel20 Locauon

19 Chi. ·s ..ar8
90 &lt;40th Presl·

~:=:sslon
27 Nova

1

-·

'91 Anc.ent
charlo!

formerly
28 Shine
31 Sput

!\3 Sea bird

Teers

93 Family
member

94 Amtrak ..

96Mod
musical
97 Heavy blow·

38 Metal

100 Tin symbol

fastener
40 Soup

102 SluggiSh

43 Drinks

105 Declare
109 Sound p
horn
112 Done
113 Danish

~"""'
45 Harvester

114 Waterway . , •

46 Powertul

1t6Luauwear· , ·

lngredien1s

-41 Baptismal
boafn

poraons
47 Farmer's
place

island
118 Meadow

12t Difficult

51Ringwofm
52 Rents

122 Ungrateful ,.

53 CronMti'

1231rlah dance

54~dlreciiOn

125Lament
126 Sll1y
127 Narrated
129 MIJ~
131 Scorched
132 MOham-

once
59Giwr
60 Short tetter

p&amp;riiOfl

81 Rip

maden

63 Soekod
65 What to
lorget
Thanks--

ludgos

giving
67 Biller 11'81Ch
69 Chaktean
clly

70 Struck out
72 A6ds

133 Addttlon.al
134 Asphalted,
136Wargod
138 Lock ot halt

140 Cer186n
pinto

U 1 Flrn
142 Verve
144 Snakes

7-4 NY"s ne6Qh·

1~71'•nt

11 Dandelion,

bO&lt;
76 Botl'l ot77 San&lt;laJ part

148 Tal1ered

lor one

79GrMdeor

68"""""
14MISplar:Od

83 Gratuity

15 Barbecue

85Coward~

bultlnslu
t6-

88Fat•

Ebro

'

120 Weirdest

49 Hints

S6 ,.,.....,.

.

sounds

10Command

12 Goal
13 Nelghbo&lt; ol

~-~ 1

92 Muched

Scotia,

36

.,.,.

cloth
149 Pose tor a

portrau
151 Hindu

87 Narrative

cytnbata
153 Sun god ' '
155 Frencl'l
artlcte

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. AuthoriJed Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2284.

JACKS REFRI(;ERATIO·
N air condition serv1ce,
commercial, Industrial .
Phone 882·2079.
Gtneral Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367·7A71 or
367·0591.
NOW HAU Ll NG house cool
&amp; limestone for driveways.

Call lor estlmetes 367-7101.

U

M, H. Repair

•

MObile home roof palntinv
and anchoring. «;all D and
w Estates, former K and
K. Phone675-3000.
0
87

Uplloltttry

TRISTATE
BING'S CONCRETE CON·
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
STRUCTION · Specfoffzlnv
in concrete driveways, 1163 Sec . Avo., Gallipolis.
sidewalks,
patio, Wr7133 or 4411·1aJ.
baaemonl, goroge floors ·
and tic. Fr" osllmalos. 11 MOW~&lt;;YS Upholstery Rt.
yeoruxperlence. Call 367· I Boll: • Pt lea· ant, 3047891.
675·4\

•
J..

Moolem
134 Hog
135 BfisUe
137 Barracuda
1

86 Fond Wish
87 Backing

34 Barn
35 Tln~nown

'

13:Z Singer Vlkkl

133 Philippine

26 Marched
28 Confers on
29 Talk. mod

.....

Stark's tree trimming and
removal. Insured. Phone
576·2010.

Plumbing

7t Strip of

J8Cket
6 Snare
10 Is Indebt
14 Fa111nto

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes
Pumps Sales and Service
30A·895·3802.

&amp; Heating

the Caspian
70 Female deer

t Part of a

RINGLES 'S SERVICE eK·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
etectric 1an,
general repairs and
remodeling Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675-4560.

HOMEBU I LDI NG· Compl ·
ete housebuitdlng serv1ces
froro 1 foundation to root .
Local builder w1th best
references will bu1ld to any
stage or complete lob . Also
room
additions
and
remodeling . Call H. S.
Roctevitch. 304-576·2730

SUNDAY PUZZLER
'

I

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zen ith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

85

Ph. 992·7201

I'

Harne
tmpro~ements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com·
mercial and residential,
tree estimates. Call 256·
1182.

Licensed a. Bonded

11-12· 1 mo.

' I

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

Nu· Pflme replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
How met Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utilitY
buildmgs
691 Miller Drive

teller

81

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Bill'S

so

84

DRIVEWAY
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL
• House, Coal
Ph. 992·2772

SOLUTION

Call 446·:2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control Free
est1mates, Bill Thomas

81

;:.==::::;:;~~~;;-t';:===;:~~===:;llr==::::::::::::::==:;1n

MIU!R ELECTRIC
S&amp;W
SERVICE
. GUNSMITHING

Motorcycles

CHARLIE ' S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service , buy
automobiles. radiators and
batteries. 446 7717

Rates based on

French Ci ty
Painting
Residential, commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging, and texured
ceilings Ph 367·7784or367·
7160.
.

286 57AO.

9 2 1-tf c

OFF SEASON RATES
S120WEEKLY
5400 MONTHLY

Home
Improvements

1973 Jeep CJ5. 675·2745.

Middleport, Ohto

CERTIFIED GA.S
Our Specialties
C1gs: 63c pk.; cartons
15.95 reg,; $6.0Sion9s.
We sell the followtng :
8 Pk . RC, Diet RC or"RC
100 S1.29 plus dep. &amp; tax
6 pk. RC products$1.59
a pk. Peps1 products
Sl .l9 plus dep. &amp; tax
6 pk. Pepsi products
$1.99 &amp; t.n:
8 pk. 16 oz. Cokes
Sl.l9 plus dep. &amp; tax
Hours: Mon.·Sat.
6 A.M.·9 P.M.
Sunday 8 A.M.·9 P.M.
111S· 1 mo

81

Vans &amp; 4 W.D .

276 Sycamore St.

Stylists: • Mark Mora
and Cindy Cuthbertson.

Tappan Recuperative
Furnace. Coleman Air
conditlolng, Arkla·Ser·vel Gas Air Condition··
ing. Sheet Metal Work
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp;COOLING
Rt, 2, Albany, Ohio
614-198-6791
11 ·16-tfn

F ·600 flalbed

1971 pickup truck. F irst
$500 gets II 675· 1302.

HAIR REMEDIES

New Hours:
Mon. 11 :00·7:00
Tues, ll:Oo-5:00
VYeds. 10:00·8:00
Thurs. 11 : G0--8: 00
Fri . lO:OCI-5:00
Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-3021

Ford

ter
6 p.m
. 61H49-2725 af·
truck
. Call

76

LOTS ON BLACKTOP ROAD
$7.500
We have :2 lots Situated on Bulavitle Porter Road .
Approx . 112 acre each . Call for details.
1510
FIND YOUR ROOTS (Extra Lot Available!
The pedect all brick home is right here in Northup
and ·features J bedrooms, l'h baths, spacious living
room, dining area. cheery kitchen. 2 car garage,
patio, plus much more. Call now and let us make
your dreams come true .
f'
1512

ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE ,
44,·J915

1-No 1.00 O•eul Forll

2 Locations
322 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport
&amp; 10788 u.s. 35
Jackson, OH .

New Homes - ex·
tensive
remodeling,
• Electrical work
• R ooling work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
11 ·19 ·1 mo

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service

........ •'''

,\

U.S . Rl SO Ea11
GuysviUe, Ohnr
Aulhori•ed .I oM Deere ,
N•w HollaiMI, Bulh Hoq
Ferm Equ ipme-nt

---------t---------1----------l

1 ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
Nice comfortable home with nice large shade treM,
concrete front porch, loll of fruit trees (apple,
cherry, plum and peach), grape arbor, raspberry
vines good garden land, oil level . In Groen Twp.
, Rurai water, 2 cor garove. fuel oil FA furnace.
Basement, barn appro•. 16'x24'. Priced In tho 120o.

BMR 388 - Owner financing probable . Three
bedroom. large family room with fireplace . Natural
v•• heal avg. bill 532.00 month last year. Call for
~omplete detfllsl

SALES &amp;SERVICE

11·13·1 mo.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

367·0194

BOGGS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Future Reference

"'

7~ 5--tfc

Boots &amp; Shoes tor
the whole family.

KHp This Ad for

Roofing, remodel·
ing, concrete,
Ph. 446·6310 or

Ph, 949·2160 or 949·2412

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. "2-2174

. ..

TOM HOSKINS

CdMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the smallest
Hea,ter Core hi lhe
Lar~est Rodlalor.

elnsulation
eSIOrm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph, 992·2772
11 -12-1 mo .

mes- Sentinel-

C&amp;W

And Home Maintenance
•Roofing of an types
•Siding
•Remodeling
•Free estimates
•20 Vrs. e~~:perience

11-6· 1

Vinyl
Aluminum Siding

Th e

Services Offered.

ROOFING

~=~:;~;;;=~t==:;,;.~;.~==j;::======~=J
J&amp;l BLOWN
BAILY'S
INSUlAnON
&amp;
SHOES

l
,.

REPAIR WORK
•Gas &amp; Electric
•Cutting
•Brazing
•20 Yrs, Exp,
Reasona'ble R ales
866 South Third
Middleport. Ohio

W. Va ,

·A· DAY

OHIO VALLEY

D&amp;D

985·3561

BMR 4G7F- Just llsttcl - - _ _,es m/1, sltull1ed I
with frontaoe on Raccoon Cr., as well as frontage on
black lop county highway.

\

Water·Sewtr-Eiectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 3'7-7560
1-7· 1

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Torino.Phone

.

aM::. 406 1.25 acres m/ 1 located close to
Gallipolis. Fr.;ontage on Route 160 and Bulavllle Rd.
Owner will hP.Ip f inance .

NEW LISTING - EX·
CELLENT UPKEEP rt~6 room , 3 bedroom
h
with bay window,
hit dwood floors. full
blsement, block garage
and a good buy at

12

lEESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Sfz!!!~~~t
SMt~

Maverick,
vinyl top, good condition,
assume payments, 3CM·6751636.

1976 BRONZE

Firebird .

Real .EstateGeneral
.
.

' 1 Broker-Auchoneer

1972 CHEVY , frame
broken, gOOd t ires. all other
parts are in good shape,
sell whole car for $150. 304·
675-5638

ALL STEEL

1967 Camero, needs work.
Best offer 675·29(17.

CALLUSTOBUYORSELL
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
PH . 843· 2075
Virginia Hayman- Associate
PH . 985·4197

M!Jve into your new
ttome with Hawaiian
tan. Will send you and
\'OUr spouse to Hawaii
for a week's vacation if
you buy our home, 3
Bdr., 2 bath, large FA
with w .b. fireplace, LA,
kitchen with lots of cupbeards, 2 car garage, 11,
acre, city schools.
Owner financing.
CALL 446-4485.

top. 882· 2438

69 FORD Falcon, good
molar, good body , $150. 303
HendersOn St. Henderson
wv .

61A 7A2 315A

Auto tor Sale

CLOSE TO NEW BIRDGE - Has to sell at $12,900.
Could be 3 B. R. home. Stove and refr 1gerator stays.
Good starter home or investment property .

BUILDING SITE Near Portland . 11h acre,
suitable for underground or solar home. Owner may
help f inance with down payment.

1967 Nova two door hard·

.Business Services

1969 Plymouth Wagon .
P S., 318 auto. 985· 4346.

1973 Ford
576·2010.

NEW BRIDGE AREA - A·frame . Th is 3 story
newer home on 6 plus acres features 3 BR's, 2lf2
baths, f 1rep1ace , bU 1It·in barbecue , 2 decks, 2 patios
&amp; many extras Separate garage and outbuildings.
Priced in the m 1d $70's . Owner may finance part.

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS
'
NOW
AVAILABLE
through
government sales. under
S300. Call 1-71A-569·02A1 lor
ylour directory on how to
purchase. Open 24 hours .

1967 PLYMOUTH, 2 door,
hard top, $300.00, 30H75·
97114. Aftor 3 p.m . 675· 1682.

1971 Olds for sate cheap.
Call992 ·2507 .

1970 Plymouth GTX 4~0
74 Plymouth no rust, $800 Magnum . Auto. Com ·
or best otter. "Will trade for pletely restored, all stock .
Duane Weber, 61 4·742· 2143.
pocKup. Call4.46' 1826.

Owner will ca rfy on land contract -

MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, wv . Phone 675·
1574 or 675·2881.

1977 Cutlass Supreme
Salon, PS, power windows,
PB. reclining buckets, T·
top, velour . interior, like
new. 992·6362 , $4,500.

BEAUTIFUL BRICK - Home has 3 B.R.'s. llh
baths, laundry off kitchen, fireplaces storm win·
dows, well constructed, assume small equity &amp; take
over 10% mortgage Asking $35 ,900 .

20 ACRES IO%down

1973 Ford, 1~75 Cadillac,
and 1978 Mercury Monarch. If Interested, contact
Scolt Shank, 105 Union
Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio or
phone61H92·3293

is, Ohio-Point

no reuon for West to lhift to

By O.wald Jacoby

71

A"uto tOr Siie..,.. - -

-------

76 Malibu, 4 dr , auto .
trans., PS, PB , AC, 61 ,000
miles, $1 ,900
446 2888
anytime .

Restricted bu1ld1ng lot 1n city school
dtstn ct 0,64 of an acre Ca ll now .

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71 • ·- -

Auto for S11e

PORTLAND AREA - 7 miles from bridge. 3 to 4
ac r es, could be ~ B.R 's, vinyl Sided, large orchard
Askmg$ 25,000

BMR 371

''

NORTH

+Ju

Auto for Sale

77 Ford Mustand 28,.(30
miles,
AM· FM stero·
cassette radio. new tires.
e)(cellent cond . Call 440·
3599

71

Give sensible signals

1 panspurtaflpn

CENTRAL REALTY

FREE HAWAIIAN
VACATION

Real Estate- General

•

BRIDIE.

reduced pr ices .
Outdoor Equ1pment Sales,
Jet. Rts . 7 &amp; 35, Galllpollo
Pl'l , 446·3670. Closed Tues
TWO· model 323 New Ide a 1 &amp; Thurs until Mar 1, 1982.
row corn picker SJOOO.do
each . One· New Idea no. 10, New Massey Ferguson
l row picker $950 One· late Equipment. Select 1on . of
mOdel New Idea 2 row
equipment. we are Ul
na rrow pic ker, 12 roll used
miles from end of Bridge in
husking bed. $6,500.00 One Ripley W.V a. 13.9 pet.
used 7 sha nk Glenco soil f inancing on New Massey
saver $3,300.0091 ·one new Ferguson for 2 years 1n
7 shank Glenco soil saver
· Nov 30A·37H875
$4,900.00. One new model
400 Mor1dgegrain dryer 400 -.--~----bushel capacity $ 7 ,900.00. 63 - --~ LiveStock ....... ~=One used Myer Morton 250
·--------~
bvshel grain dryer $320. REGISTE RED
Poll ed
One used New Idea 300 Hereford Bull, 18 months,
bushel manure spreader, call 30A 675-3030 or 675·4232.
hvdraUc flu id end gate,
tandem axeL very good
condition
$2,300 . 00
KEEFERS
SERVICE
CENTER, 304-895·387A, St.
Rt 87, Ripley Road, Pt
Pleasant,
OLDER
tractor,
1538.

W . Va

DEER HUNTER SPECIAL - 1 acre 2 8 . R: . fur ·
ni shed tra 1ler W1th city water in Long Bottom .
$8,000

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~Farift Equipment- -

want 19 t r.ade 48 case trac· GravelY tractors, several

Fresh truck load sa le from

St "

ii ~

Ohio-

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�Page--D-10-

T~e

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Z ndav Times -Sentinel

f 'omeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

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w.,va.

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Nov. 22, 1981

Report downed plane .had
been under surveillance

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PageThe Sunday Times-Sentinel

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EDWARDS, Colo, (AP) -A twin·
, engined turboprop plane that
smashed ito a wooden Colorado
mountainside killing· all seven
people aboard may have heen
carrying cocaine, according to a
federal agent. '
.
· I'Ytyne Valentine, agent-in-charge
of the Drug Enforcement Ad·
ministration office in Denver said
Friday that the aircraft that crashed
had heen part of an investigation as

on the mountain about three miles
west of Edwards, said ' Roland
Stevens, a pilot for the Colorado
State Patrol
Authorities identified the dead, in
addition to Sall, as !'&lt;&gt;-pilot Charles
Sall, %1, of North MiB!Ili Beach;
Allen Rivenbark, 40, of Eagle, Colo,;
Larry Shenfeld, 54, of Miami; Kenji

Bando, 30, o(Japan; Herbert Meier,
'11 of Hialeah, Fla.; and Shelly
st:W,k, 32, of Fort lAuderdale, Fla:
The plane. was reported mlssmg
wednesday evening alter the pilot .
radioed the Eagle County AirpOrt at
6:14 p.!fl. that he was low on fuel and .
preparing to land. The plane was on
a flight from Miami to Eagle.

South America.
Two DEA .agents were among
those investigating the crash site on
Red and White Mountain, V~lentine
said.
There is a "very likely possibility
the plane was carrying cocaine," he
said.
Officials said the cause of the
crash remained under investigation
Friday. Civil Air Patrol officials
said the aircraft's pilot, Howard
Sail, 29, of North Miami Beach, Fla.,
had radioed the nearby Eagle County Airport that he was running short
on fuel before his Mi tsubishi MU2
crashed Wednesday night. Rescuers
found the twisted remains of the
plane Friday morning on a wooded
ridge a few miles from the airport.
The turboprop clipped .a stand of
tr.ees and ·catapulte&lt;i into the woods

1

Nov. 22, 1981

AppJiance outlet
to
open
.
eighth store here Friday
ByKEVINXELLY
store will also carry the latest in
Timet-8e1111Del Slalf
television and electronic en·
G~POIJS - HIUield and Mc- tertainment .from RCA, Zenith,
Coy is bringing its "leudin' and Quasar and Sony.
. fussin' to' faght high pricin' " sales
Speir said the brand names, plus
pitch to the Silver Bridge Plaza the eaay availability of delivery
Friday when it opens its ,_ retail from the firm's Jllllin warehouse in
outlet there'.
Huntington, W.Va., will make shopThis will be the eighth Hatfield ping .at the store attractive to
and McCoy store to open in the Ohio customers from the tri-county area.
and WeSt VIrginia area since the
The finn also buys directly from
companY,'s beginning several years -the ,factory, allOWing for a high
ago. It's located next to the Sears voluine of goods, Speir OJ9'lained.
catalogue store and the construction
One of the slore's features will be
oo the new Duff's Restaurant.
a sale, held in conjunction with all of
The store 'features brand name ap- its grand openings, and further
plilmces and carpeting, but doesn't details on this sale will appear in
carry a line of furniture, 11 believed local advertising in the nest few
by some, according to Paul Speir, days.
who is involved with the finn's ad"We're looking forward to the
vfrtising.
market," he said. The area is a
W)lirlpool, Tappan, Hotpoint and nice focal point of ·activity, a nice
Gibson .are among the appliances ,niche in.our. chain. We looked at the
which wili be stoc~ed by Hatfield area for some lime and decided to
and McCoy w)len they open, and the make a· rapid thrust toward

' a suspected carrier of cocain~ from

E

11

establishing a store there."
Construction on the tw&lt;&gt;-story
;1rueture ·began early in October
and the building rapidly took shape.
The final cost was estimated at
$312,500 by the Ohio Department of
Industrial Relations:
While there is "masSive activity"
going on at this stage to get the store
completed by its' opening date, Hat·
field and McCoy officials are confident the interior will be done in
time.
Interviews are presenUy going on
for the hiring of four or five sales
personnel, and the store will be
managed by Dan Sayre, · who is
moving into the area from Morgantown, where he managed the local
Hatfield and McCoy ouUet.
The firm has three other West
Virginia locations, at Charleston,
Fairmont and. Winfield, and its Ohio
stores can be found at Belpre,
Marietta and Chesapeake.

STORE OPENING- Hatfield and McCoy appliance
and furniture retailers wilt open their eighth outlet in
the Ohio and West Virginia area at the Silver Bridge

Plaza in Gallipolis Friday. The firm's offleiab are confident the building housing the store will he finished by
the opening dale.

\

MICHIGAN FANS OPEN FIRE - University of
Michigao Students throw snowballs at photographers
before Satunlay's game between tHe University of

Michigan and Ohio State 'University in Ann Arbor,
Mich. Michigan was favored in the game that decided

which Big 10 team went to the Rose Bowl. lAP Laser·
photo).

Woody makes trip to Michigan
at insistence of Earle Bruce
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP )
Woody Hayes made his first road
trip wrth his old Ohio State football
teB!Il paturday, but insisted on
remaining in the background for the
Buckeyes' Big Ten football
showdown with Michigan.
"I came at Earle Bruce's insistence," Hayes said while sipping
on a pre-game cup of coffee in the

Michigan Stadium p!'ess box.
"It's a gOod feeling. But I just try
to stay out of the way, though," said
Hayes, fired as Ohio State's coach
afler the 1978 S.ason. He was
replaced by Bruce, one' of his former
assistant coaches.

Bruce called upon his old boss to
address the team for a second
straight season after their final
regular season practice Friday.
"I told the players ahoul the same
thing as last year. So many little
things show up in a game like this.
Just keeping your hands warm can
be a problem," said Hayes, looking
out at the fans who were huddle-d in
30 degree weather.
Despite remaining at the far end
of the huge press box, the 68-year-old
Hayes was a center of attention.
General manager Jim Campbell
of the Detroit Tigers, Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke and Larry
Catuzzi. a Bluebonnet Bowl official,

and Michigan Athletic Director Don Hayes, and then' he paused, adding,
Canham were ifmong those greeting "I wouldn't say he's any hetter than
Hayes. .
· Rex Kern. · Rex could do something
Hugh Hindman, Ohio State's to a ballclub that no other quar-

arrested financial promotor Richard

F. Carey, alleg,ing that he bilked
"President Reagan's son Michael and
20 other investors out of $370,350,
authorities said.
Carey was arrested Friday at Los
Angeles International Airport as he
prepared to board a plane for
Houston, where he lives. He was
held in lieu of $50,000 bail, officials

said.
Carey is to be arraigned Monday
on 53 felony counts, many of them involving alleged fraudulent
promotion of Stock, according to a

criminal complaint filed against
him.

District Attorney John Van De
Kamp also confirmed that Michael
Reagan will not be prosecuted in
connection with the case for steering

.
WASHINGTON I AP) - Interior
Secretary James G. Watt is going
along with a congressional reque;1
that he not approve until next summer any oil' drilling leases for 80
million acres of federally protected
wilderness areas.
Bowing to a non-bindi~g _request-'·
by t~e House Interior Committee,
Watt tentatively agreed Friday to a
six-month moratorium on wilder~

athletic director, who . fired Hayes

terback could do." ·

ness mineraHeases to give Congress

for hitting a Clemson, player after
the 1978 Gator Bowl, watched the
handshaking.
" We're on wonderful terms now/'
Hindman said, glancing toward

Kern led Ohio State to its third and
last national college football title in
1968.

time to study whether it should
change wilderness prot•·clion laws
because of his policies.

Hayes.
Hayes whispered to Catuzzi , " I
think Ohio State is going to win this
one.''

Someone asked Hayes if he had
been invited to this game by
Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler,
who played under and coached for
Hayes.
"Bo didn't invite me, but several
Michigan newspapermen did, Bo did
invite me to the Notre Dame game
earlier this year. but I turned that
down."
Hayes appeared to be in better
p 1ysical condition than he did
'
earlier this season while watching

the Buckeyes from Ohio Stadiwn.
The retired coach had undergone
stomach surgery last spring.
"!feel pretty goOd," he said. "I've
gained seven pounds back. I'm up to
165 now."
Hayes was asked if Art Schlichter
ranked as Ohio State's best quar·
terback ever.
"Oh, I would think so," replied

Arrest man for bilking Reagon's soh
LOS ANGElES (APJ - District
attorney's investigators have

Optometrist joins father's practice

· Watt agrees ~n
moratorium
on oil leases

investors to Carey, but he will be a
witness for the prosecution.
"Our conclusion is that Reagan
was a victim along with the other inv.Stors and ended up losing $1,500
himself," Van De Kamp said.
One of the other alleged victims
was fonner actress Terry Moore
who was romantically involved with
Carey in 1979. The. complaint says
that Carey used Ms. Moore's Brentwood house as security to get two
loans totaling $169,000 in March 1979
without her knowledge. The actress
'said he disappeared from her home
in May 1979, three day,.after they
had gone through a marriage
ceremony in Tijuana.
The complaint charges Carey with
26 counts of grand theft, 24 counts of
selling securities by false represen·
lations, two counts of forgery, and·
one of fradulentiy issuing a check
without sufficient funds.

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PLANE CRASH SITE- Rescue workers searcb'altbe crasll'slie of a
twin-engine aircraft ncar Edwards, Colo. on Friday wh"re •even people
w~re killed. A portion of the plane's ID number, N «4 AR, con be seen on
what n·mains of the fuselage, Federal Drug Administration officers
;search~d the crash scene as the plane was believed to luive been u•ed in
drug •muggliug. ( AP Laierphoto)

r--------------..,..------;------------------------'-----.:....'
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· year: He said employees will vote
soon on the pay cut proposal.
Company chairman Albert V.
Casey has said American's profits
need to be higher to support plans to
buy 45 new wide-body jets.
The layoff ' announcement by
American followed Dallas-based
Branifl International's announcement that Braniff has told 132
pilOts and 88 flight attendants they
will be laid off Jan. 1.
Braniff President Howard Put.nam said the new layoffs atem from ·
the airline's previously announced
sale of nine Boeing 727·100 aircraft.

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ac a1r.
sale
II

~ood

RockeiS • Wall-Away ReclineiS • Swivel
Rockers • Rocker/ReclineiS - Huge

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Selection of Fabrics and ColoiS.

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CIIISTMIS • , , FlEE

• DILIYERJ

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CHARLES A. POWELL

eight months, said her job covers
pUrchasing
food,
orderin_g

restaurant supplies and organizing
the menu. She also works closely
with the customers and serves as a
1naitre d'.
.

"This speaks of our high standards in the kitchen and rooms, as

AS banquet manager, '(!\Johnson

"Our ethphasis now is on the
restaurant and we plan to 1:te very
ag~ressivc in bringing conventionS
and banquets to the Scottish Inn," he
continued.

oversees sl.l'ht!tiuling of dinners and

parties and sets up the banquet
rOom, located in the lnQ's motel

side, which seals up to 250 people.
Austin said the Inn was also recen·
tly given AAA approval by Lynn K.
Schneider, field representative for
the national travel department for
AAA'sortice in FalJs Church, Va.

Firm sells
DAYTON - Robbins and Myers
has signed an agreement to sell its
Twin City Monorail business in New
Hope, Minn .. to Jerome L. Lague for
undisclosed amount of cash, according to Fred G. Wall. president of
Robbins and Myers.
The sale, which is scheduled for
Completion Dec. 3, will not have a
material effect oo Robbins and
Myers results. The cOmpany had
previously announced its intention to
sell this business because of lack of
fit with company strategy.
Under the purchase agreemen~
Lague will acquire monorail
business
assets
includin~
machinery, equipment, and inventory. Lague will lease tile
building and grounds with' an option
KEN SCHILLING
to purchase. ApprOllimately 100
people are employed at the Twif\
City MOnorail operations.
Lague also owns Arow
Engineering Sales Co. of Chaska,
Minnesota. Arrow Engineering
makes bulk, package, and unit load
conveyors and is a distributor for
overhead materials handling
. sylteml.
. Rellblns and Myers Is a $250
million diversified Dayton based
Jllllnufacturer of pwnps and'valves,
electric motors and controls, hoists
MARIETTA
CaJTibridge
and crane components, and ceiling
Production Credit recently announc:ed the- promotion of Ken fans.
Schilling from assistant manager to
braneh manager of the Marietta of.
!ice at 405 Colegate Drive.

an

Our enure stock of quality chaiiS.is included
in this sale. Sewing RockeiS ~ ReclineiS •

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POINT PlEASANT - Two local
women have heen named to-manage
re.taurant and banquet facilities at
Brian:• . Steak" HoUse in the Point·
Pleasant scottish' inh, ~ccoi-d'ing to •
Wayne Austin, manager.
Patty Rose of Point Pleasant will
be restaurant manager while Donna
Johnson, also of Point Pleasant, will
be the banquet manager.
Rose, who has been with the Scot:
tish Inn, located on W.Va . Rt. 62, for

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Managers named for facility_

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after
leaving
in 1975 and by the swruner of 1977- he programs
Philadelphia;
the
first
with
Dr.
had gained senior status, allowing
Walter
S.
Ramsey
of
Charleston,
him to he granted early admission to
the Pennsylvania College of 01&gt;- W.Va. and later with Dr. Charles H.
' May of San Diego, Calif.
lometry.
Nibert was involved in recent orHe began intensive post-graduate
1hokeratology
· researcl1
ami
work in the fall of 1977 and received
pr·ogressive
fitting
of
new
extendedhis bachelor's degree.
Nibert later served as an intern ·at wear contact lenses,
fie is married to the former
The J;:ye Institute in Philadelphia.
Specialist rotations while at the Tamara Shay Tolliver of Glenwood,
clinic included pediatrics and and they attend St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy. The Niberls
pathology.
Nihert served in two resident make their home in Point Pleasant.

curriculwn at Marshall University

I

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American planning 45o layoffs
GRAND PRAIRIE, ,Texas (AP) American Airlines, which earlier in
the week asked workers to lake an
across-the-board pay . cut, plans to
lay off 450 employees at a date not
yet announced, company officials
say.
,
American spokesman AI Becker
said Friday that of the 450 positions,
32tl are in management. He said the
the jobs "are spread all throughout
the system."
On Monday, the airline asked its •
35,800 employees to accept a threemonth, 5 percent pay cut at the
beginning of 11112 and a freeze on
wage increases for the rest of that

-POINT PlEASANT- Dr. Byron
Nibert, 24, has returned to Point
Pleasant to join his lather, Dr.
George D. . Ni,bert, in a local optometry practice.
A 1975 Point Pleasant High School
graduate, Nibert was honored
during that lime as an '.'Outstanding
· Teenager of Alnerica '. ' and was a
member of the National Honor
Society, the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes and vice president of the
Key Club.
Nibert began a pre-medical

PCA

promotes

Schilling

Science can be fun

Schilling has heen with PCA for
over four years serving as 1 loan of.
fleer, aaeistllnt Jllllllaler and director of public relatlona.

science can be fun, chiim two
physiCI proleuors here at the

Schilling has a bachelor's and
mqter'a in agriculture from Ohio
State University. Previoua to jOilllllJI
PCA, he tauahf'qrlculture bua'at IUe Gftndl, x.a l'lllldll In 0111
Grvvw wllb 1111 wile Jllllt, IIIII

Unlvenity of Wisconsin.
They recently traveled to
Oklahoma to put 011 a science circus
·for 4,800 lltudenta and teachers. "A
uuaa .-. 1'11111 cw. morale," say
a-. • Ill 11M Rlcllml Dill·

dlla;ltterAIIIy.

Till Marietta PCA office -

WubiJicton, M0111J! aad Moarae
coomU• wllh ovw .... nd!Hm In

.... aatl IIWtBidlatl llrnl finD
cnllll. 'l'hl finD cndll cagpsNIIn
. . . . tiYII' a finD flmlllll 111 111e
lhreHounty area •

,.

MILWAUKEE (AP)- Clauroom

I

- . " ' • t111t -.....uauons
can cllrlfJ &amp;Allie prlnclplel.
To prvw llil, Dittmln lay down
011 a bid Ill IIIIIL "U you lit on a
tbr K lneb IIIII, It wiD hurt. But if
, . Ill• ~ llllla pi-' cl-]f
1'*, I - ' t burt u much
bee 1Kl ltatlJIIIIclrt II dlllributed

•s

--peblll.

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NEW HAVEN - 'n11·ee employees
at Appalachian Power Co.'s Mounlaineer plant at NeW H~ven have

faciiiity itself," Au:ltin said.

been promoted, one of them to the
company'li John E. Amos plant in

Morgan's Landing, W.Va.
David B. Synowiec, who was
openttions superintendent at Moun-

Austin said the steak house is
already the site for many civic

taineer, has been namell an
assistant manager at the Amos

meetings and a three-day American
Legion convention is scheduled for
January.

facility.

GALLJPOLIS - Fred L. Taylor,
Rt. I, Ewington, manager of the
Super America store at 801 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, has been elected a
member of Super America's Ex·
cellence Club. ·
· The election came during a recent
meeting of SA managers in which
·area managers.

Club members compete with 160
other managers in eight states for
the best overall store perfonnance.
Taylor has managed the Gitllipolis
SA store since February, 1981,
replacing Douglas Muchow, who
was transferred to St. Louis, Mo.
Taylor · was previoiJsly assistant

manager at the Wellston SA store.

He worked at Ohio Power's Kam·
mer and Mitchell plants before tran·
sf~rring tO Mountain~er in 1979 as

to the Amos plant a year later. He
beca1ne plant per-fo.rmailce superintendent in 1979. ·
·
A
mechanical engineerin~
graduate of Virginia Tech, he is
married and has one child. He and
hi:-i fami~y live. at 35 Windsor Court,

Point Pleasant.
Life is also a mechanical
engineering graduate of Virginia
Tech. He joined the Amos plant in
1972 and worked there until
becoming production superintcndt!nt at Mountaineer in 1979. He,
his wife and two chih.lrt!n live on
Jl'richo Road , Point Pleasant.

Bankers attend campus program
RIO GRANDE - Twenty-five
area bankers recently attended a
program entitled '·Running the Personnel Function - Without a Formal
Personnel Department" at Lyne
Center on the campus of Rio Grande
·College andCorrununity College.
The program, sponsored by the
Ohio Bankers Association and the
Hills oi Ohio Chapter of the
American Institute of Banklng, was
designed to assist bankers who are

Houck appointed
to rehab service
COLUMBUS - Curt E. Ar·
mstrong, acting· director of the
rehabilitation division of the I~·
dustrial Conunisslon of Ohio, an·
nounced' thai James H. Houck has
been named deputy administrator of
field -services.
Houck, of Columbus, is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Robert Houck,
of ·150 First, Ave., Gallipolis, and a
native of Galli a County.
In announcing the promotion, Ar·
mstrong said, "Since the
rehabilitation division was created
in 1979, it has been expanding its
operations, most recently in the
Cleveland and POrtsmouth area. To
keep pace with this expansion, there
musr be a strong supervisory and
adminimatil·e staff.
"Mr. Houck has been with the
rehabilitation division since
February, 11ltl0," Armstrong con·
linued, "and has the expertise that is
esoentlal to the success of tbe
division."
-Houck joined the rehabilitation
dlvillm u a consultant and was
811101111 the first rehabilitation conlllltanta trained lor the Ohio
prosnm. He wu promoted to director of employment services and
later to his p~Wa~t poe!Uon. Formerly with the Bureau of Vocational

the New Haven planl.
Synowiel', an elcclrit•al
engineering graduate of West
VIrginia University, joined the
American Electric Power .system, of
whieh Appalacl1ian is a part, in-1966
as an elcdrical engineer at the
Zanesville office of Ol1io Power Co.

He has been succeeded at Moun~ operations superint~nd~nt. He i:-;
laineer by Charles A. Powell, who in married and has three children .
turn has been succeeLicd as plant . Powell was employed by the com·
performant·e superintendent at pany in 1969 as a perronnance
Mountaineer by Ralph E. Life, for- engineer at the Philip Sporn plant aL
merly production superintendent at Graham Station, and he transferred

Elected to club

Ky., honored 24 of store and five

DAVID B. SYNOWIEC

Promotes 3 at Mountaineer plant

well as for the management and the

owner Asl1land Oil Co., Ashland,

RALPH E. LIFE

Reb· . ~uJtation of the Rehabilitation
Services Commission, he was a job
placement specialist counse1or and

worked as director of handicapped
services,

liaison counselor

and

vocational rehabilitation counselor
for the Division of Vocational
Rehabilitation at Marshall Univer·
sily, Huntington, W.Va.
He also taught high school
English, journalism and history In
the Circleville school system, Cir·
deville.
t

Houck has a bachelor of science in
English with a minor in government

and history from Rio Grande College
and a master of arts degree in
rehabilitation from Marshall
University.
In his new position, Houck will be
reponslble for eooi-dinating and
supervising Field Service operations
of the Rehabilitation Division
throughout the state. This includes
69 disability prevention teams and
their support personnel. The
rehabilitation division was created
·to help those with lndustriallnjuri"!'
or compensable occupational
dlseases to return to productive employment. For additional in·
formation on the program phone I·
IKJ0.-~17.

new in the personnel area or are
charged with personnel responsibilities in small banks, and for

As~odatlon

Personnel Committee
presented the program.
'
Topics covered included the em· bank executi; es with some ex- ployment process, performance apperience in operating the personnel
praisal, equal employment opfunction - but with no formal portunity considerations, elements
training in thfSarea.
,
of salary administration, practical
George Denton, vice president of training processes, ahd a group
Union Commerce Bank ol discussion on personnel problems.
Cleveland; John Scherba, vice • The program was designed to he
president or' the First National Bank practical in nature with an emphasis
of Akron, and Jerry Woessner, on da}-lo-day concerns of bankers in
secretary of the Ohio . Bankers this area.

�'. ' '

-

~

"'

'

.,
Page

E·2

Pomeroy

The Sunday Times: sentine'l

Nov. 22, 1981

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

Nov . 22, 1981

F' o eroy

Food cost production in

By JAMES SANDS
GALUPOUS ~Between 1914 and World Warn, the only marine boiler
shop between Pittsburgh and Louisville (on the Ohio
River)
was
Gallipolis' own
Acme Boiler
Works.
Acme was first
organized
by
· Charles Arthur
and Gordon· C.
Greene in 1911
using the Shepard wharf bulldingsat
First and Grape. From 1926 until the
close of the compsny's btisiness they
were located at the end of While

U. S. to hit $87.8 billion

BALL ON 4-H PANEL- State Rep. Claire "Buzz"
Ball (R·A tbeas) has been appointed to the Ohio 4-H

Foundation Board of Trustees, succeeding well-known
GaUls County businessman Bob Evaas. Boll (right)

and Evaas are showa here discussing tbe work of the

\

~-

Homemakers'
Circle

· Agriculture and
· \our community

.

'

. .'

~

ft·aturing
An nil' Ariyhndy

Hy RETTIE CLARK
Exh·nsjon A~t·nt,
H11mc E&lt;'onnmi~·s

lly lli\YSUN l\.lllUil1 (1\1\TEI\
(;alliol C'uuuty Extt•nsiun Agt•nt

GALUPOUS- ' lDivide what you

I

29-member board. The board coasiders proposals submitted by Ohio County Extension Agenls for funding of
leadership programs and innovative ideas for projects
that could strengthen the quality and quaollty of Ohio's
4-H membership.

need by what you have and you
won•t go wrong in ~iguring out how
much fertilizer to apply in met&gt;ting
your soil test recommendations.''
Let's suppose your soil lests eall.s
for60 pounds of nitrogen, 240 pounds
phosphoric acid and 240 pounds of
potash per acre. This is nol unusual
on legwne-.grass meadows par·
ticularly :where the soil is "run
down.''
Let's also suppose you are using&amp;24-24 fertilizer. It would take 1,000
pounds per acre of this fertilizer to
meet your soil test recommendations. Dividing what you need
by the percentages in the analysis
give you 1,000 in all three divisions.
Now you and 1 know all situations
aren't this easy. But, you've got the
hang of it now so give it a try. !(you
run into problems, give me a call at
f46..7007 . .'
We're havint: another Fertilizer
Meeting this coming Tuesday
evening, Nov. 24, at the same place
and time, 8 p.m., Senior Citizens
Me.eting Room on St. Rt. 160, next to
theCow1ty Highway Garage.
Dr. Jay Johnson, Ohio State
University Extension Agronomist.
will b&lt; the featured speaker. He will
conduct a thorough discussiou of
Nitrogen - What it does - Where it
goes and Characteristics of Nitrogen
Fertilizers. Anyone, in Gallia and
neighboring counties is welcone to
attend.

When you send a soil sample 111 for

GALLIPOLIS ~ The "Fresh
le.sting the fertilizer rc~om~ Dressed" Turkey ~ A Favorite For
m~ndations that you receive in
The Holiday~ Conswners like fresh
return are based on how high i:l yield foods ali year around, but especially
goal you said you wanted to achieve at holiday times. A turkey that has
when you sent the sample in. For not b&lt;en frozen is the accepted
example, if you said you wanted to definition of "fresh dressed."
gn&gt;w 100 bushels of corn the coni- .
A "fresh dressed" turkey, like any
puW.r will make a rel'ommendation other fresh food, is a perishable food
fAw 100 bushelS . If you say you· want product. It must be handled
to raise fom· tons n( hay per acre ca refully after purchase. The
then the computer wiU tailor your customer may want to order' the
fertilizer recommendation to, four turkey and pick it up so there is a
tons per acre.
minimwn of holding time. Tile tem·
perature for holding a "fresh
It's important that you put down dressed" turkey should be as close
the goal you would like to achieve. If
to 32 degrees F. as possible but
you want to raise 160 bushels of corn never over 40 degrees. If the turkey
then indicate that to our secretary Will not be roasted w1thin one to two
when the soil test form is being filled day~. it would be a wise decision to
out. Maybe you would like to shoot \ freeze it. The conswner is respon~ for 3,000 pounds of tobacco or $ix
~iblc to see that the turkey is not sub- ,
tons of hay per acre. I£ you're fer.·
jt.-clcd to ha11dling abuse, so. alwaytJ
tilizing bluegrass pasture you h~ve
.s:tore in the refrigerator after pur~
only two cat~gories to choose from,
ehase.
one is a yiel'd goal of two tons or less
in making t11at final decision beand the other is oVer h.\.•o tons per tween purchasing a ''fresh dressed' '
acre.
or frozen turkey, consumers need to
lake
into al'count whether they can
If you do not put something down
the soil test Jab plugs in a typical or prnehase that "fresh dressed"
average yield goal which may not be tu1·key at the store at the ''right"
whal you want or it may not li1ne to insure proper handling. Cost
challenge you enough. Give these may be another fal'lor. "Fresh
yield goals some thought over this dressed" turkeys do conunand a
winter and when. you submit your . higher price per pound. Personal
soil samplel:i during the next few preference of tile conswner will be a
months give some extra attention to major factor in the decision making.
In selecting a turkey, the question
yield goals.

often arises, "Which should I choose
a basted or non-basted
turkey?
Conswners should read
to see what is included in the basting
fluids as the ingredients vary from
brand to brand. Basting fluids may
include butter, vegetable oils, broth,
water, flavoring or s.alt.
Frozen basted turkeys do cost·
more than frozen non-basted
turkeys, and rarely is a basting fluid
injected into a "fresh dressed"
turkey.
Cooked at U1e proper oven tem·
perature (325 degrees ) for the
proper length of lime (meat ther·
mometer reading of 180 degrees-185
degrees), both basted and non·
basted turkeys will be moist and ten·
der.
Wl1ether a turkey is " fresh
dressed,'' froz~n, basted ·or not, it is
importanl to know that nearly 100
percent of all turkey is processed un·
der Federal or State l11speclion.
State Inspection must be equai to,
or !:iuperior to the Federal Inspection, which means that the
turkey has been inspected for
wholesomeness and quality. At lhe
processing level all necessary
1neasures have been lake1.1 to give
the consumer a high quality product.
Grocers .and conswners both share
the responsibility for· i(s
wholesomeness when they purchase,
hold and cook the turkey .

Russia buys more wheat from United States
WASIDNGTON tAP) ~ An additional 425,000 metric tons of U.S.
wheat- about 15 .6 million bushels
~ has been sold to the Soviet Union
for delivery in 198HI2, the sixth year
of a long-term agreement with the
United States.
The Agriculture Department said
Wednesday that the latest sales
raised to 10.1 million metric tons the
amount of grain the Soviets have
bought under terms of the pact's six·
th year. That includes almost 5.3
million tons of wheat and more than
4.8 million tons of corn.

A metric ton is a bout 2,205 pounds

equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat or
39.4 bushels of corn.
The Soviet Union has been given
approval to buy up to 2J million tons
of wheat and corn from the United
Stales in the year that began Oct. 1,
some 15 million to1~ more than
guaranteed by the agreement.
In a related development, the
department said China has canceled
contracts for 200,000 metric tons of
wheat which had been scheduled for
delivery in calendar t982, the second
~

year of a purchaseagreement with
the United States.
On Tuesday, the Agriculture
Department announced the sale of
400,000 tons of wheat to China for
delivery in 1982.
No reason for the 200,()()().ton ca~
cellation was announced, but China
has done this in the past on several
occasions. One official, who asked
not tq be identified, said it probably
con·cerned deHvery schedules,
prices or other contract details.
Sales of grain to foreign buyers

Department experts are predicting that retail food prices may go up
about 7 percent in 1982, compared
with an estimated gain of 8.2 percent
this year.
Asked about 1982 food expenditur~s, Harvey said there will .
be further increases for labor and
other costs of handling food after it
leaves the fann, but "everything
depends on bow the weather and the
economy'' develops in the months
ahead,
However, only a relatively small
increase in the !ann value of next
year's food biU is expected.
Last year, when conswners spent
$260 billion for farm-produced food,
the !ann value was $81.4 billion and
the labor portion $79.1 billion.
The entire cost of transporting,
proceSsing and mer&amp;handizing food

after it leaves the fann - including
labor - is expected to be around
$197 billion this year, up by more
than 10 percent from $178 billion in
1980, the repori said. '
ACCOI'dJng to the figures, the entire food "marketing bill" is going
up !0.3 percent this year while the
!ann value of food is up 8.1 percent.
Labor costs, which are part of the
marketing biU, are up II percent
froml980.
Although labor is the largest
single component of the food.
marketing bill -- nearly 4li percent
- some other costs abo are cUm·
bingsteadily. '
Packaging of food products, for
·example, is expected to cost $22.4
billion this year, up 7.2 percent from
$20.9 billion in 1980.

Avenue.
IT IS HARD to believe today but in

ACME BOILER WORKS ruins stili staDd at foot of White Avenue off
Garfield Avenue in Gallipolis. Acme BoUer Works was built in !928 by
Gordon C. Greene and Charles Arthur. Here were repaired numerous
rlver1x.ats In the period before World War II.

Meigs_County
agent's corner
By JOHN C. RICE
Exleoaioo Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY - Agricultural, Gross
Income Up in Meigs County by
$1,000,000- The gross income for ag
products in Meigs County was over
$9.7 million in !!itlo. This was an increase of $1.3 mliUon over 1979. For
you suspicious minded people, this
does not include the sale of
Jl8rijuana. Over one-half of the increase was in the sale of livestock
products. Dairy products accounted
for 29 percent; cattle, 22 percent;
vegetables, 15 percent; and poultry,
11 percent.
Deadline for Ordering Tree
Seedlings is Near - 4-H, FF A, and
landowners should plac.: their orders now for tree seedlings. 4-H and
FFA members can order 200 trees
free of charge and Westvaco will
match white and red pine orders.
Shipping will cost $2 for each 4-H or
FFA order. Order and price fonns
are available for landowners. West·
vaco will match these also in the
while and red pine. We need the 4-H
and FFA or&lt;lers plus the $2 shipping
chige by Nov. 25.
There are advantages in fall soil
spading or plowing, Freezing and
thawing durit;tg the winter months
help improve soil structure. And,
fall weather usually permits one to
gel the work done while the soil is
dry enough to work.
Spring plowing is often delayed
due to rains. So, earlier plantings
are pos~ible where soil was
prepared in the fall.
Fall S(l!lding or pl&lt;!wing is best
suited to soils where erosion is not a
hazard and to those soils not
requiring organic matter buildup
from cover crop incorporation.
Leaves - Don't forget those
leaves. Most of them are down now
and should be removed from lawns.
Excessive leaf cover packs down
and damages lawn grasses.
Protect Trees - Protect young
fruit trees from rodent injury by
pulling a straw mulch away from the
plant's base. Replace with hardware

.the late 19th century the area around
First and Grape wa• a beehive of ac·
tivity, thanks to the efforts of J . C.
Shepard. In 1888 Shepard built a
freight elevator at the foot of Grape.
This eight horsepower elevator
could carry down to the river from
Fir!:il Avenue 15,000 sacks of wheat
in a Ill-hour day. Shepard ~reeled
one building 125 feet by 24 feet and
one building 60 feet by 20 feet. These
were the buildings that Acme later
used.
IN THE

iS90S Shepard also

By ROBERT L. FIRST
DlstrietConservaHonist
Soil ConservaUoa Service
POMEROY - The United States
Department of Agriculture has announced a new national conservallon program to deal with the
serious resource conservatlon
problems ahead for American
Agriculture.
Four points highlight the program
offered by Secretary of Agriculture
John R. Block:
- Selling soil and 1faler conservation priorities;

cloth cylinder around the lower
trunk. Newly planted trees should be
staked to protect them against winter winds.
Apply mulch to landscape plants
to protect them during winter. These
include rooes, shrubs and like piants. You ca plant donnant, bare root
roses this time of year. Be sure to
mulch enough to prevent heaving
from freezing and thawing.
Storage Pesticides for Next
Season c- You must always consider
safety and product quality, whether
storing pesticides for a few weeks or
a year or more. It is best not to have
leftover pesticides. However, there
are usually surplus pesti~ides left
. over at the end of the season and
preseason purchases are often very
eeonomicnl. Be sure to follow the
points listed:
1. Always erad the label. Certain
formulations · or products have
special storage requirements. Those
restrictions ,or directions or direclions will be printed on the label in
most cases.
·
2. Make certain that the label is in
good Cfllldition (readable) In order to
know what is in the container and
have directions for safe, effective
and legal use.
3. Write down the purchase or
delivery date on the label. Use older
or opened products first. Products
several years old may not be
chemically effective.
4. Keep .an u(H&lt;Hiate inventory of
pesticides to assist in purchase
decisionsandincaseofemergency.
5, Usually, storage temperature
should not go below freezing nor
above 100 degrees F. Ventilatlon is
important for storage of most
pesticides. Keep pesticides dry and
out of direct sunlight,
6. Store pesticides away from her·
bicides to prevent use mfx"'lp, conlamination and possible plant
damage. Never store pesticides with
feed or seed.
7. Pesticide storage areas should
be placarded ,and locked away from
children, Irresponsible adults, and
· J.s
an11ll8 '

are handled by private export corn·
ponies who report the sales or cancellations to the department. No
prices or other details are made
public. ·
c Allowing for the cancellation,
China still had on order almost 1.2 .-------------------~.,-----­
million tons of wheal for 1982
delivery, officials said. Sales in 1981
total about 7.6 million tons of wheat
and 342,900 tons of corn.
Under its agreement, China is suP.
posed to buy .6 million to 9 million
tons of U.S. grain annually.

NEW YORK (AP)- A majority of
Americans oppose tax breaks for
parents who pay tuition to send their
children to private elementary and
secondary schools, according to the
latest Associated Press-NBC News
poll.

The poll, of 1,598 adults telephoned
Oct. 25-26 in a scientific random
sampling, also said that most
Americans would be no more likely
to enroll tbeir children in private
schools even if tuition tax credits
were available.
F.ifty·two percent said that paren'-" who send their children to elemen·
tary and secondary private schools
should not get a tax break for the
tuition they pay, while 44 percent
· said there should be a tax break for
private school tuition and ~percent

were not sure.
A bill is before the U.S. Senate that
would give taxpayers a credit for
tuition payments to private elementary and secondary schools and
private and public colleges.
The credit, limited to $250 the first
year and $500 thereafter, would·cost
$2.7 billion in 1983 and up to $7 billion
a year by 1986. The Reagan ad·
ministration has endorsed the
proposal, but recently Justice
Department officials have expressed concern that it might violate
the constitutional provisions for
separation of church and state.
A similar local tax credit proposal
for private school tuitions was over·
whelmingly rejected by Washington,
.D.C., voters earlier this month.
In the latest AP·NBC News poll,

respondents with no children 17 or
younger were only slightly more
likely than parents with minor
children to oppose the tax breaks.
A majority of tbe parents whose
children attend public elementary
and secondary schools opposed tax
breaks, but 70 percent of the parents
whose children attend parochial or
other private schools favored tuition
tax breaks.
Men and women were evenly
divided on the tax breaks, while
people in the East and in cities
favored the Ia~ break while people
in the suburbs Md rural areas and in
the West, South and Midwest opposed it.
Among ali respondents, 56 percent
said that availability of tuition tax

Conservationist, Meigs County.
other features of the program in·
elude targeting USDA conservation
dollars and people to crillcal 'areas·
promoting tax incentives for con-'
servation systems; targeting
research, education and inlormatlon
toward the most critical pro,blema·
and setting up pilot projects to tesi
new· solutiosn to conservation
problems. Current programs would
continue.

This program is the proposed
response to the Congress required
by the Soil and Water Resources
Details of tbe new program are
Conservation Act of 1977 (RCA)
in the RCA Revised Draft
'
presented
reports Robert L. First, District

Program Report and Environmental Imriact Statement available
·for reference use at local SoU Conservation Service offices throughout
the state. The USDA office will also
have leaflets that swnmarize the
program and that contain a postagepaid, pre-addressed response form.

Commenls on the proposed new
program are encouraged. They
must be mailed to Robert L. First,
District conserv~tionist, Box 432,
Pomeroy, Ohio f5769, before
January 15, 1982.

·" ' '" ,, il l&lt;' J,..,, .,,.,,.. 1&lt; ' I"'"
"'"''"· :\h' ll.,l!,uul b.ol&lt;'l • hu•
,,,,,, •Hid '' '"''~' ' .·qnl tlnw•u l~t·

I oiii~&lt;'

VHI I

111 , ;~

n,,. "" ""'' v&lt; •u I"'~ · till' l.u Ut'l

&lt;h\ll(lt•li&lt;l

•IIVI•k·l•d, t..·do hom "~11&lt; '11'11 :-.;, •....,.

The three objectives of the Honora
Program are: to constantly

cballenge superior students by the
most advanced study lor which each
is capable; to indelle the IICOpe of
educallonal altalnment by providing
a JII'Ofll'8l1l in greater breadth and
deplh; and Ill JII'OYicte apeclal •
recognition and HonoraScholarahips
for outstanding • scholastic
achievement.

G31lipolis was !:iOlllelimes known by

boatmen as ''the bo11eyard' ' because
,lf lht!se old boats parked here.
Jame:-; Scwds' address is Box 92.
Clarksburg , Ohio 43115.

credits would make no difference in

whetber they enroll their children to
public or ptivate schools.
Meanwhile, 26 percent said they
would be more likely to enroll their
children in private schools.
1\s with all sample surveys, the
results of AP-NBC News polls can
vary from the opinions of all
Americans because of chance
variations in the sample.
For a pOll based on about 1,600 in·
terviews, the results a&lt;e subject to
an error margin of 3 percentage
points either way because of Chance
variations. That is, if one could have
talked this past week to all
Americans with telephones, there is
only 1 chance in 20 that the findings
would vary by more than 3 per·
centage points.

NEW YORK tAP) ~ A major
medical group cautions against applying grease, butter, sprays, oint·
ments or home remedies t:o burns.
For minor and sericus burns, the
first step is to put the burned area in
' coltf water or apply clean, · coJd~ ·
water compresses. Get medical at~
tention for serious burns, the firstaid handbOOk suggests.

OR. GEORGE W. DAVIS
OPTOMETRIST·-----

•
how;e, do you often see him slum·
DETECTING BABY'S
bling over things that he should
VISION PROBLEM
There isn't rnul'h a baby can have seen and avoided?
There are other signs to look
see Clearly when he's first born.
He doesn't have the ability yet to · for. Check to see if he is using
focus quickly or accurately. It both eyes to focus on an object. If
takes a while before he learns he tilts his head to look at
how to use both eyes to see well. sOmething or l!iquints or closes
one eye to look clost!ly at
In the beginning each eye acts in·
somdhing, there may be a vision
dependently on the other.
problem. An eye examinaUon is
As time goes on, if baby still
doesn't seem to be seeing well, he the only way you can be sure.
should have an examination.
There are certain telltale signs a
parer\t can watch for. Does your
In the mtere5 t o f bener vision
child find it dif!icult to pick up
Irom the otfJcu o.'
small objects? When he reaches
for a toy, does he miss it corn·
GeorgeW.Davls,o.n, ·
pletely• And when ilc starts to
4S8 Second Ave., Gallipolis
walk and hustle around the
Phone44&amp;-2236

*******

should expect more, introduces t(le

~

cn.h plus

il 1111 ; ~ ..

".,..,....

~~

:-;1, 11\dllt'r if o\;"u

rio.,,...,.

HALLMARK'S ULTIMATE ARTISTIC EN·
VIRONMENT - Gwen Pettis, production art super·
visor for Hallmark Cards, works in her office, wblch
more resembles a garden, recently at Hallmark's
world_headquarters in Kansa• City. Hallmark provideo

rh,• dlvidlillll lwt•

rtiMIJ 111 1'1~" ~-,n,,nc ... tl•lloll i, rh .. o,.,, tum• 1o
hu\1 S~ry ~ ...... Hu11MU b.llt'h. hny tool, &lt;'lild
'"'"9'1 ot4U1pm.,n1 Su.ip in lor &lt;til lhQ dt'tlllli

&lt;!ll ~1hl••

r&lt;~ •h

"'

Moving people
WINSTON-SALEM, N:C. (AP) Patti Davidson kDows about moving
people.
Davidson, supervisor of a travel
department with a staff of seven, ..
coordinale.!J travel plans for more
than 83,000 R.J. Reynolds employees
worldwide .
In an average month, ~I includ'IB ilsulnR !,500 airline tickets,
renllng f60 cars and reserving !,too
hotel rooms.
Wl1lle the company saves money
011 hotel and cor rental rates, Davidson..,. shopping lor lower airfares
is one metllod that just doesn't pay
off.
.
"Bullilea travelers are often for·

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CARTER TRACTOR SALES.

22041ASTUN M.

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it8 top arti~ts with an environment designed to
stimulate ariisUc creativity. With no annoying pbones
ringing at their deslui, the arti•ts are obliged to step into the phone booth ior calls. lAP Laserphotol

1TO 89 DAYS MATURITY

A consumer repurchase agreement that does
not require yoo to_get IOctced Into alorg-t81m
investment YaJ ci'0080 the term-from one to
89 days: yoo ci'0080 the amoont- from as little
as $3,000toas much as$99,9991

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h,ov ,nul lur.u,jt' 1.'4U IJlii W!11 h
LllviJ11nd whet~ purch.,.,.,,,j wldo

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Ohio Valley Bank, whete you can and

lookill!J llll· div]d,•nd. ~' IIU ltld\'
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11\•idlhw\ ""•hotll•ll u,.• d,,h•

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program of study at the University.
Recognized this year were 235
Agriculture, Home Economjcs, and
Natural Resources Honors Program
students and 150 students eligible to
enter the Honora Program,
·

family which traced its ex:clu.sive
ferry privileges to 1792.
1\s far as we know Lane nev er
used the Grape Street wharf and
boiler how;e for much of nnything,
after Greene and-Arthur moved to
White Avenue.
,
Ac1ne Boiler Works was finally in·
corporated in 1926 with Ora Arthur
and Captain Mary Greene as the
principal owners along with Charles
1\rthur and Gordon Greene's family.
We are not sure when he Greent!s
abandoned Acme. The na. ' e on lhe
buihlin~ now standing ur.used on
White Avenue is the Holiday Boat
Company, about ·which we know
nothing.
PERHAPS THE MOST mo•1 regular
custnrner of Aceme during the 1920s
and the 1930s was the l~dand Queen,
lhe Coney Island e&lt;cursion boat.
The "Queen" made the pil~rimage
to Gallipolis for l1er annual ch~ck·
up . It should also b&lt; noted that between White Avenut: a.nd downtown
Gallipolis (along ihe riverfront)
were parked numert)US " dead
boats"' that Al'me eauld not rt&gt;vive . .

'•

·-

FH!I! fin lOCI! Opllun.h ,, ,,.,,,(' ol

&lt;!ll,llil\- f"l •I lol'h

j . . . . . . . . .. . . . .

BIDWELL
Patty Dyer, Honors Banquet given for students
daughter Of Mrs. Mulne Dyer, Rl. and their parents.
I, Box 110, Bidwell, was among The
The College of Agriculture and
OHio Stale University College of
Agriculture and Home Economics Home Economics annually
students acknowledced recently as recogni•es, through the Honors
Honors Scholars. Dr. Roy M. Kotl· Program, thoae outstanding studenman, Dean of· ~ COllege, made the ts who have maintained high
annOuncement during the aMual schoii!Slic achievement ln their

ilpetated on the riverbank just south money in building a new incline rail
a mlll that that would more easily move the
.ground corn, buckwheat, and rye, · frei~ht up and down the bank. 1\s
By 189f Shepard had also added a previously mentioned it was in 1911
coal tenninal to his Grape Street that Greene began to take over the
operation, And in 1907 Shepard erec- rest of the Grupe Str.eet river
ted a canning factory oo the river· operation.
bank that canned 2,000 quarts of
FROM 1955 UNTIL 1923 Ac1lle not
tomatoes per day .
only repaired old boilers but had a
So when Acme took over hand at installing the boilers for
Shepard's operation it had inherited most of the river boats built at Point
nwnerous buldings. Gordon Greene Pl~asant. The last such boat to b&lt;
of the famous Greene Line that built fat least it' inner workingsl
operated the Delta Queen from 1946 · was the Tom C. Greene which in 1929
to 1969 began· his connt&gt;ction with had a celebrated race with Fred
Gallipolis ln 1901 when he took over Way's Betsy Ann. The Tom C.
the wharfboat that sat on the Ohio Greene was built in1923.
River at the foot of Grape. At that
That year John Lane bought lht•
1 thne Gallipolis also had a wharfboat
Greene wharf and the boiler house
on the river b&lt;tween State and COurt for $1,400. Greene later rented back
Streets.
the facilities for his business. But
IN 1907 GORDON Greene sold the about 1925 Lane raised his rent and
Grape Street wharfboat ul'1Jlg with G1·ccnc protested. What ensued was
the psrk front wharf, and for a few kind of an interesting battle between
years Gallipolis was without a Lane and Greene. Gordon Greene, in
wharfboat. Greene brought the retaliation against Lane, tried to
wharfboat back in 1912 and it stayed start a ferrY boat to put Lane out of
for a few more years. It was more business. Lane made a great deal of
public relations than good business his Jnoney in operating the Gallipolis
that returned ' the wharfboat. ferry .
Gallipolitans were outraged that a
LANE TOOK GREENE to court
river town would try to exist without and through a ruling Greene was for~
such a facility.
bidden from starting a ferry as Lane
ln 1907 Greene spent con~iderable had sole rights by purchase from a

DAILY INTEREST RATE
NO WITHDRAWAL PENALTY
'3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

IUH

.Gallia .youth is ·Ohio State University honor student

'I he Sund.w Times·Sentmei-Page E·J

:JJf Grape and First

Cold water helps

.

- Strengthening the role of local
and state govemments in conservation planning;
- Increasing budget coordination
and cooperation between USDA
agencies; and
- Targeting more USDA conservation assistance to Critical
problems a~d areas.

W.Va.

Majority oppose tuition tax credits

Announce new national conservation
program to deal with soil problems
.

f ' le~s.1nt,

Arthur,Greene organized_Acme Boiler Works

•

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Labor
costs Of producing food in the United
States are expected to almost match
the farJI)er's share of the consumer
food bill in 1981, according to .
preliminary Agriculture Depart·
ment figures.
The projections, included in ,a
current issue of Agricultural
Outlook, show that Americans will
spend around $285 billion on food
produced on U.S. fanns. That ex·
eludes seafoods anl! unported items.
Of thai, labor costs are expected to
total $87.8 billion and the "funn
value" aboui $il8 billion. As used by
the Agriculture Department, the
farm value of food sold at retail is
equivalent to what farmers are paid
for raw products.
Dave Harvey of the department's
Economic Research Service, who
wrote the report, said Wednesday
that U.S. farm-produced food
generally accounts for about 85 per·
cent of total retail food expenditures.

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

I'IIDfll UU52J

UWPGUS

SPEr-RY ~~ 1\&amp;W HOLLA•f\,C,-----....i..l
I·

ced to clllnle their plana," she says.
•tWe ead up canceling or
l'tldlldullng 1111 often that we can
rarely n.t the requirements lor
reduced farel."

A'TTENTIONI
EARLY -BIRD .SHOPPERS

GIVE THE Gin THAT GIVES
ALL YEAR ·LONG
@) MEMBER_SHI~S
ASK ABOUT OUR 20/20

DISCOUNT

.

i~(".a . GALLIPOLIS
~-Jiq
Phone 44, 1699

:uo Second Ave.

---THIS IS I l l - Ohio Vaney Banks Dal~ Jnwstmont Aro:lunt as
an al1arnative to Money Marl&lt;et turds ill •
paMlci,Jiarly attractive for the arnal -who
canrot or c1oet not want to tie Iii money YP In a
llxlci rate lor llix monthl, two and one-hall yelll,
lotJr veara or 1011gtr.
1111r morelnfwmlllon. _. arNIIIIIJ 01t1o
Yllly link ofiiM,
.

FOR DAILY RATI

,•

'..

''

PIIONI

•446-1631

..

,•

..

•..

. .....
,.

�.'
Pomerov-Middieport- Gallipolis,

f

Ohi~Point

Pleasant, w. va.

Nov . 21., 1981

Nov . 22, 1981

Burley markets are filling up for Nov. 23
LEXINGTON, Ky. - Burley
tobacco lfellverles to llllll'ket are
keeping pace with a stripping _,...
that Ia well ahead of nonnaJ, and
ample supplies seem assured all
oyer the belt for the aeilson's
opening sales on Monday, Nov. 23.
The size of the 1981 crop still Is the
talk of the trade. Latest government
estimates again confinn forecasts of
an oversize output, up 29 percent
above last year's crop. The midNovember estimate announced by
the USDA Crop -Reporting Board
was 716.5 miJllon pounds, unchanged
from October.
Last steps before market openin~

are uDder way at. the Lexington
headquarters of the.Buriey Tobacco
Growers Cooperative Association,
with receipt of official word from the
USDA on handling the price support
· progrim. Grade charts and report
sheets have been distributed to
mar)&lt;et centera ' for the pool's
representatives and the wa~houses.
Ranging from $1.011 to $1.81 per
pounds, the advance loan rates this
seasoo are based on average support
level of $1.63 per pound, up 12.2 percent over 19110.
·
Directors of the Burley
Association from the five-state area

Slates of nominees

'

lift ..•~;

CALMED BY THE PRESIDENT- Presideat Ronald Reagan pals
the 50 pouad live turkey 011 the back that was presented to him by tbe
National TUrkey Federation recently in the Ruse Garden at the White
House. Just before this photo the turkey got very excited aad tried to fly
away hut was grabbed by members of the federation. At right Is Hugh
MeCiain, president of the turkey group. (AP Laserphoto)

of Kentucky,' Indiana, Ohio, West
Virginia and miasouri last week at
Lexington con!lnned earlier Y!ew•
that quality of the crop is gOOd to excellent'
Some ot the directors reported In·
dicatlons that tobacco is weighing
light, and hasty preparations to get
it on the market are resulting In
delivery of some wet burley. ,
Baling is mgre in evidence,
especially in the Bluegrass area.
With baled burley fully prie&amp;suppOtted ~orne markets are
showlne up with 50 to 75 percent of
tobacco in bales.
U the crop weighs out and comes

~veloped

for

acreage during the week, while
those in Indiana and Ohio harvested
20 percent," the report said.
"Even though mild temperatures
and dry weather aided the drying of
grain, harvesting was slow in some
areas due to continued high
moisture content of the com," the
report said. "Harvest neared completion across the SOuth."
A year ago, when the corn harvest
was much smaller, 'II percent of the
national acreage was harvested by
mid-November.
Only :i9 percent of the com crop
had been harvested as of Npv. I,
compared with the normal 70 per·
cent pace for that date.
Last week, the Agriculture Department estimated this year's corn
harvest at a record 8.1 billion
bushels, up 22 percent from the ,
drought-reduced 1980 yield of 6.65
billion bushels.
The latest report also said 86 percent of the soybean harvest was
finished by mid-November, compared with 90 percent • year ago and

up to government estimates the !IIIII
output should largely offset talk of a
worldwide burley shortage, ln the
Ylew of Burley 'AisodaUor.leaders.
This is eopecially true, lt is beUeved,
in. Y!ew of lncreoalng supPlies of
foreign-grown burley, Government ·
figures now put the amount of Jm..
parted stocu at ?M .millioo poWlds
on hand in Ill&lt;' United States.

Planting of winter wheat for the
1982 harvest was reported almost
finished in most slates, except in
California, where fanners had planted only 40 percent of their acreage
by mid-November. New wheat
seedlings had emerged on 89 percent
of the acreage, the report said.
"The crop was rated good to excellent in Kansas and fair to mosUy
good in all other states," it said.
Pastures were rated generally fair
to gOOd nationally "except in parts
of the Southeast where poor to lair
conditions" were reported.

China purchases additional tons of wheat

co~mittee

I

Officials said Wednesday that the

latest sales boosted to more than 1.37
million metric tons the amount of
wheat now conunitted to China
during the second year of a longterm trade agreement.
A metric ton is about 2,205 pounds
- 36.7 bushels of wheat or 39.4
bushels of corn.

election

,,

. HOOVER~
CelebrityT• Ill Air-Ride
Vacuum ·Cleaner

Sales during 1980, the first year of
the agreement, included 7.45 million
tons of wheeat and 342,900 tons of
corn.
The agreement calls for .China to
buy between 6 million and 9 million
metric tons of U.S. wheat and corn
annually.

· Aides On Air!
. No Wheels •••
No Runners.
.'

. COMPLETE
WITH
ATTACHMENTSJ
•

95
Regular

89.95

5

Your Christmas Club check arriving
just when you want it most- just when
you need it most- what a joy it will be!
A nice size check in plenty of time for yqur Christmas Shopping.
And Christmas Club is so easy to join. So easy to keep up
because you choose the amount of your regular deposits.
Come .in today. Santa has a way of arriving suddenly, you know.
Join his favorite club- Christmas Club- now!

C&amp;S Bank

.

• Actual periorm11nce charactetiSiics mav
vary in accordlnce wrt"llh normal
manufacturing tolerances.

"

1•2

CC.ft~

A•t.

Phoftt "6·1.05

The Commercial &amp; 5a!lngs Bank

••

.,

GolllpoUa ·

Mombor FDIC

'

..

Spring Valley

,}

t'

lT~l LJpOII

hun und the United States Anny .

Charles Allison Weed
called outstanding
·.alumnus of Rio
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - One of the two
outstanding alumni of Rio Grande
cOllege died TUesday (Nov. 17) .- He
was Dr. Charles Allison Weed. With
his death went a sizable fragment of
the history of the !():;.year-old institutil)ll founded by the Atwoods.
In fact, the printed college history,
"Lamp of the Hills," credits him
with being the prime source for
much of what was writlen and printed in the book. The book is able to
describe every president of the
college from Ransom Dunn in 1876 to
this day because either Charles or
his father personally knew every
president from Ransom DuM to this
day!
.
Charles talked with his father
about presidents·who served prior to
Charles' ability to do so.
Clmrles Allison Weed. A friend of
_ .. ,youth. A devout disciple of .Jesus
Chrlst. A believer in education. ·
Here, Reader, was a man- Charles
Allison Weed.
'

LOY PAULEY, 103 Oakwood
Place, Parkersburg 26101, who was
pre~ident of the Gallipolis Blue Devil ·
Boosters Club in 1969, sends us a
clipping·about his son Greg's saving
the life of a heart attack victim. The
clipping is a picture of bemustached
Gregory Pauley as he received the
Ohio Electric Utility Institute Award
of Merit. His wife Kathryn is with
him, and their address is 303 Oakpark, NW; North Captor, Ohio 44720.
They have three children. It says in

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) · easy way tQ remmber to check your
,c ai''s tire pressure every month is to
do it every time you pay your monthly rent or mortgage, says
Theodore T. Fountain, president of
Ironsides Tire Company here.
"Monthly pressure checks are
essential to get effective wear out of
a lire," Fountain said.

the
clipping from the unidentified
newspaper:

r-::;;;;;;!!ijiiiii~iiiiii!!iiiiiii--~1

Check tire pressure

Pauley, persunnel supervisor for Ohio Power
Ca.'s canton Oivl.!!ion, was playing In a softball
game May 2 when he noticed a c.ommution In the

w:randstand. He di.YCovered a 56--year-.old ma n
suffering a heart attack. Pauley ad-

WBlf

ministered cardiopubnonary resuscilaUon about

J(l.odnutes until an ambulanee arrived and continued to adminiater it on the w&amp;y to the hospital
Inside the ambulance and at the emergency
room. While lhe man later died in the hospital,

,.f'
.:1
'•

rescue squadllmen said Pauley had done every·
possible to save lhe victim'alife.

U1~

Though unidentified, the
new.spaper bears the date of Nov, 6,
1981, and it's Page 13. Loy's letter
read that "this was published in the
Canton/Akron area." Loy says:
"Even though we have been gone
from there for awhile, we still think
of Gallipolis as 'home.' We lived
there 21 years." Greg is a 19119
graduate of Gallla Academy High
School and 1973 graduate of Harding
University.

Poons show

Tlle~Farm

~nee

cac=:.u

It's a revtew of your insurance
coverage s and needs. H.ome . car.
life and health And tl doesn't
cost any thing Call me lor a Fam1·
ly Insurance Checkup today

1.49

~og .

2.99

I

Rea. 6.99

I

J.99 SET

14" x 50" D'oor
Mirror

)

35 Light Minature
Tree Light Set

Frames are pre·drilled
Oislo,ion he!. shall~··
resistant final plate glass.

Ul llsted. Avltllble m ultd.
cte11 or mulli ·nlor lliiSh1ng or
rwl n !lashin g, mdoo• or outdoor

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

AGENT SNAME
ADDR ESS

LOUISE A. BELCHER, 39 North . BOSTON (API - Recent painITAH , .... ,..
Portage Path, Akron 44303, sister of lings by Larry Poons will be shown
the eminent Paul Belcher, remem- at the Museum of Fine Arts Nov. 11,
'
bered at least two friends of Paul 1981, through Feb. 14, 1982.
Like 1..,.. nel&amp;hiMr,
INIIIIANCI
Slatr
Firm
lstMrt.
Belcher in Gallipolis. One is Atty.
The exhibition, "Larry Poons:
)I~TI fiRM 1"-i URAIIC( LO .... i'AN I[S
John E. Halliday. The other is Prof. Paintings of the 70s," will be the arHomeOll•cn lltoom•nal~n Ill
Aibert E. Merriman. Both showed list's first one-man museum show in
ol' Peeps the printed material which ~thl~sc:o~un~try::·_ _ _ _ _ _ _j_:~~~~~~~~~~~~
went with Akron's aU-out encomium ,for its adopted son from Gallipolis.lf---~~~;u;
LouiBe Belcher went to Akron only II
two or three years ago, after a lifetime In Gallipolis. She was payroll
clerk at Holzer Hospital when it was
located on Cedar St.

A

39.99

Reg. 19.91

· ...

. ..
·

·..: .

MRS. E. L. HONESlEY, 461 W.
St, Mansfield, OHio 44903,
called Henny Evans in mid·
November to say that she had in her
p uwl'ID an old Evans Bible. She
wOUld Uke to see lt go to the lsmlly to
whom It belongs.
She knows this much about
family - there was a son Jack
Evans (John) who attended Oberlin
Collep abOUt 19112-63; while attending there his home actually was I
In Florida.
· He bad a sister Margaret who
lived In Wadownrth, and ~r
husband · worked at Western Auto
there; llhe bellevetlhat they had ooe
· - . There wu another brother who
Uved In Cleveland but who, she
beliiYel, la now dead.
IWpret and Jacll were teachers.
ADyCIII (mowing which Evanaes
u.e mlabt be llhould coatael Mrs.
.......,. The only hlndwrlllng In
1bt Bible la "Mill Mary ADD EYIDI,
Jab' llO, 1172." Mn. HOIIIIII)''I

~&amp;~.

b ......

All ·purpost cabinel has 1np design tn hold
18 " IDol box. Two drawer Tool Chest 8i1,1

capacitr e~binet ·musure5 IB'h'' wide. 12 "
deep, 28 1ft" high Wllh casters. lnfllr door
panel is p1rtorated lor standard·site
pegboard hooks (nol induded ). Door
lu1Utel spring c&amp;!Ch and padiDck hasp lor
lockmg securily.

CHICKEN
DINNER
sz99
'A -.,at
~
D

Homak Roller Tool
Cabinet

...

C~Ot)

Thlni

'.

Silver Bridge Plaza

military !!e.-vice lind rcnect 'great

A veteran of the Vietnam War,
Major Porter, who was an All·
SEOAL lineman on the 1960
®allipolil 'lllhar!'-..., Gallipolis Blue Devil football team,
also holds these other decorations;
Distinguished Flying Cross with
three oak leaf clusters - he was a11
Anny helicopter pilot, Meritorious
Service Medal with one oak leaf
cluster, Anny Conunendatlon Medal
with one oak leaf cluster, 29 awards
of the Air Medal, the Viet Cross of
' Gallantry, a11d Bronze Star W/V.
His wife is the fonner Karen Sue
relative of HeMy's at the Ohio Saunders. His parents are J . SherGeographical Society in Mansfield man and Margaret Lloyd Porter, 921
- apparently at a meeting there
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, Major and
when the Bible became part of the Mrs. Porer are the parents of J().
discussion.
·
year-old Amy E. Porter.

AKRON'S
Beacon-Journal
magazine sedion had a piece on
Paul Belcher on Oct. 18 by Janis
Diane Smith; "SilO Scrappy and
Sharp As a Tack," illustrated with
photographs,

•

25 Court Street

~ttpS .. ."£\

Ma jor Porte r '.! numcf'OO!j accompllshmentli
art&gt; in keepin ~ with tht&gt; high tradition.'! Of the

Captain D's.

•

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

Prlce; Sr. (armor), for et&gt;-authoriag a manual, "How to Fight." Looking
on are Daughter Amy Porter,IO, and Wile Karen Sue Porter.

to 25 Sept~nber 1981.
' Major Porter broul(hl .to hili usl~nnwnt . a
fre!lh pen;peL'tive, an inquiring ml nd, a
profeS!Iional approach, and a capacity for hard
work which enabh..od him to make an WU'ivaled
L'Ontiibutlan to his organtzauoo·~ mi'l•don acL'Omplishnient. His performam."e in a pO~ition of
special trust and respon!ilbiHty w~ s characterized b)' devotion to duty, loyalty, and an uncouunon breadlh of knowledge and under:.1andii1Jl.
.

ANDPHONE

"

Christmas
Club is h(!ppiness
•
'oinNowl

FORMER GALLIPOLITAN David L. Porter (center), u major In the
U. S, Army, reeelve• the Army Achievement Medal from Col. Roy C.

' :;

• CONVENIENT CORD WRAP
• POWER-PEDAL SWITCH
• FULL-TIME EDGE CLEANING

IS H1\.ffiN£SS

r

PAUL E. BELCHER received'the
iribute of 570 people ln Akron's
Tangier restaurant Oct. 28, Wednesday night 570 people who praised
und raised - praised him as chairman of the. Akron Metropolitan
Housing Authority, college wrestler,
bank chainnan, economist, news-paper columnist, and bird watcher;
. raised $20,000 for the Edwin Shaw
Hospital Development Foundation.
It says in a neatly printed black
bOOk that various things happened in
Akron in 1922. "It was the year that
an energetic yoUilg man from
Gallipolis came to Akron." It was
the year he was graduated from
Ohio University. ·

1.7 PEAK HP* (.19 VCMA HPI
12 QT. MULTI-MAGNUM BAG

·'

@I I

- meritoriCIU.!i lltrvh.'e b a contrlbutinJ: author
and principill 5Ubject maUer upert on Training
Text 17-94-Z, field manual " How to Fil(ht" 17-95,
Doctrine Division, Command, Staff aod Doctrine

"'

~

WASIDNGTON (AP) - China has
bought an additional 400,000 metric
tons of U.S. wheat - about 14.7
million bushels - for .delivery in
1962, the Agriculture Department
says.

'

FORT I&lt;NOX, Ky. -The U. S. Ar·
my bas awarded Major David Uoyd
Porter the Anny Achievement
Medal for his work as co-author of a
manual oo tank warfare.
Major Porter, a 1961 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and a
1968 graduate of South Dakota State
University at Brookings, received
the medal for -

Deparclmenl, Uni~ Slates Ann)· Armor
School, Fort Kno~~; , Kentuck y, from 13 July ~981

'

H

average.

iL

Army Achievement Medal

New record high prices were
received on the southern flue-cured
markets this _,..., with a praeo
tical top of $190 per 100 in Eastern
Nortli carolina. For the season that
marketing area averaged $169.98.

GALUPOI.JS - The slatei of
GUYAN :_ Garetl Campbell, Bob- Stewart, Ellis Thornton.
receive a secret ballot iJ1 the mail
nominees for the upcoming ASc by Clary, John C. Fulks, Everett
The candidates were petitioned for with instructions on how to vote for
committee election have been Montgomery, Jim Swain.
by farmers. Producers are com- candidates of their choice and return
developed, Foster Lewis, Chainnan
HUNTINGTON-MORGAN
mended for their particlatipation In the ballot.to the county ASC:S office.
of the Gallia County Agricultural Howard Childers, William Eggleton, making nominations.
Participation in · ASC elections is
Stabilization and Conservation com- Walter Neal, Bill Peirie, Thomas
The ASC, committee electlon will open 'to all farmers regardle!!s of
mittee, announced.
Ragan.
be conducted by mail from Nov. 'l:l race, religioo,.sex:, color, or national
The candidates lor each ASC comomo - Charles (Pete) Martin, until Dec. 7. Eligible ASC voters will origin.
munity in Gallia colinty are · as David Mills, Norman Swindler, Ranfo~~~N-CHESHIRE _ T. F. dall (Mack) Wallace, Clmrles Lee Glass conference scheduled in U.S.
.
Burleson, Claude Burnett, Carol Waugh.
CORNING, N.Y. (AP) - An In· and Toledo, as well as in Corning,
Clonch, Wayne Russell, Anthony w. W~CCOON - Lawrence Burdell, ternational Glali" Conference will be according to Dwight P. Lanmon, :
Williamson.
i ard Call, John Evans, James held in the United Sta.tes neJ!i June 7- director of the Corning Museum of '
CLAY-HARRISON _ Joe Collins, Howard, George Miller.
12. It is sponsored jointly by the Cor- Glass and conference coordinator.
·
SPRINGFIELD
Robert
Casto,
nlng
of Glass, the The gathering, he said, is exected to
J . E . Cremeens, P aut Martin, Robert L. Green, Jack Pickens, M tr Museum
lila · M
•--hola
HaroldSaunders,PauiWalter.
. e opo n useumofArtandtbe atlract g..... .se
rs, collectors
ToledoMus
umofArt
·
nd
d
1
·
t
HaskeUSaunders;HennanSprague.
GALUPOUs.GREENo - Conard
e
.
a
ea er 10 eres ted · in the
Hudson, Noel Massie, Harry PitWALNUT- John R. Brown, C. W.
Working sessions and related aeo historical, archeological, and archford, Alden Wedemeyer; Tom Bush, Russell Notter, Dan H. livities will be beld in New·York City listicstudy of glass.
Woodward.
~----------~------------------------------------------------------GREENFIELD-PERRY
William E. Carter, Don Evans,
Harold Hill, Ray Jeffers, Billy Starcher.
"

the average of 87 percent.
Sorghum harvesting "lagged
behind nonnal in all states except
South Dakota," the report said.
About 78 percent of the acreage was
harvested as of mid-November,
compared with the average of 92
percent.
Cotton harvesting was reported 56
percent complete, compared with 70
percent a year ago and :i9 percent on

v. \

Major David L. ·Porter awarded

Predict record corn harvest
WASIDNGTON (API - Favored
by generally gOOd weather the past
couple of weeks, farmers are well on
their way to winding up a record
corn harvest, according to the
government's latest progress
report.
The Joint Agricultural Weather
Facility said Tuesday that as of midNovember, the corn harvest was 84
percfnl complete in the major
producing states, not far behind the
normal pace of 88 percent for this
time of year. Much of the gain came
in the past week.
"Mild, dry weather lowered the
moisture content of grain and
provided excellent harvesting conditions over most of the nation," the
report said. "Farmers had four to
seven days for field work in all areas
except Kansas, where muddy, fields
limited the available days to three."
The facility reported on crop and
weather conditions during the week
of Nov. 9-15.
"Michigan and Wisconsin fanners
harvested 25 percent of their

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JEWILRY DEPT.

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on Dec. 3 thru Dec. 6. Coil the Gallipolis store at
4-16-7070 for specific appearance
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Novh:i, 1981

T imcs- ~cntinct

ALL WRAPPED UP FOR LUNCH - This White
HeroD pauses in his attempt to eat a water snake in the
Evergiadeti National Park near homestead, Fla. The
reason lor the pause might be apparent in that his meal
isn't quite Nady to be eaten yet as he curls around the

statue-like as they creep through water looking for
their prey, which includes fish , frogs, lizards and

almost anything ·else that swims or crawls and is smaU
enough lor its long beak to grab or spear. CAP Laserphoto)

CYRUS EATON ESTATE- The oncelorest.-like
properly of the late industrialist Cyrus Eaton in
. Sagamora Hills Twp., Ohio is being stripped to provide
lumber for furniture and other products. Sale of the

death iu lt79 at age 95, Eaton sued Clevelaud Electric
Dlumlnating Co. iu Clevelaud lor $750,oot when 450
trees on the property were felled to provide a path lor
au electric power line. His home and farm are lor sale
iu&gt;w lor $4.5 mlllioa. IAP Laserpboto)

timber was approved by Eaton's heirs. Prior to his

large wading birds beak. Herons can be seen almost

Acute viral infections

meeting here by scientists at the
Harvard Medical School and its affiliate, Beth Israel Hospital. They
studied nine bear! attack patients
who averaged 24 years of age and
who not had a prior heart attack nor
shown any of the usual risk factors
for heart disease.
'The research finding is sur·
prising," the Heart Association said,
1

"because most heart attacks•oceur
in middle-aged men already at risk
because of their high blood pressure,
cigarette smoking or high blood
levels of cholesterol.''
The nine patients, seven men arid
' two women aged 18 to 39, were all
sick with the traditional signs of
viral infection - fever, fatigue, sore
throat, diarrhea, rash and muscle
pain.
Their symptoms had persisted for
an average of 15 days before either
crushing chest pain or difficulty in
breathing led them to seek medical
care.
Electrocardiograms aQd blood
chemistry tests confirmed that
heart attacks had OCCWTed. Further

ma.
The definition of a small Iarin can
be confusing, he said. ·
"The problem is that a farm considered small under given circumstances is perceived as large in
another," Kerr said, "A large farm
in the Eaatem United States, for
eumple, might be small in the
western ,.n Of the country."
,
Kerr defined a small farm as
"self-tufllcient ,In labor and
management, with Income below the
non-metropolitan average for Its
state." ()flen, he uld, the 1111811
fann ll family operated and at leut

one member Ill. the family hu an off.
fannjob.

-

evidence of impaired heart functions
came from radiation scans of the
heart.
other blood studi es led to evidence
of the presence of a virus in three of
the nine cases, in addition to the obvious clinical signs of viral infection.

•

A guide to area entertainment
Includes complete

Two of the viruses were identified as

Echo virus, a third was an EpsteinBarr virus, both familiar to
physicians.
The researchers concluded: " An
acute viral infection may play an as-

yet-poorly-d efined
pathogenic
I disease-causing) role in the production of acute myocardial infarction
I heart attack) ."
According to one of the researchers, Dr. Walter H. Abelmann, the
study suggests it may be important
for doctors to be alert to the

•

listings

Fame,

possibility of vira l illnesses affecting
the heart muscle.
·

"The virus may not have been the
exclusive cause, " Abelmann said,
but it ma y have contributed to the
attacks studied. In addition , he said,
people with an existing heart condition may suffer a worsening of
their disease because of a virus.
Most heart attacks are the result

page 14
Soap Opera Review,
page9

of what the Boston l'esearchers call

"obstructive atherosclerosis," the
thickening and hardening of the inside of a blood vessel with materials
rich in fats.
The material, called plaque,
reduces the oxygen supply to the
heart muscle. When the blood vessel
is completely obstructed , a heart attack occurs.
In the latest study, however,
Abelmann and Dr. Candace L.
Miklozek said there was no obstruction of the blood vessels.

Small farms 'bouncing back'
WASHINGTON CAP) - An
Agriculture Department official
said today that the nwnber of small
farms is bouncing back alter
declining during the 1950s and 1960s.
Howard W. Kerr of the department's Agricultural Research Ser·
vice said substantial increases in
small farms are expected during the
19tl0s. Kerr said his appraisal was
based oo surveys he took in the Northeast in 1979 and again in 1981.
"There is a growing realization
that small farms are not a declining
backwater
of
American
agriculture," Kerr said. "In fact,
small farms in 1tbe Northeast are
gaining an incrtoasingiy important
role in the region's agriculture."
Kerr's remarks were prepared for
a meeting on research lor small far-

activities and events,
November 22 thru 28

may cause heart attacks
DALLAS CAP) - Acute viral inlectiO!l$ like those that bring on bad
colds may contribute to heart attacks, scientists said Monday in
what was called a "surprising" lin·
ding.
The study does not establish a
direct cause-and-effect relationship
between virus infection and heart at·
tack, the scientists said. But it does
suggest that an acute infection may
cause either inflarrunation of the
heart muscle or severe coronary
damage leading to a heart attack.
The report was presented to the
Amer:ican Heart Association annual

A schedule of areJ~ programming,

· Area Happenings,
page6

TV Mailbag,
page 15

1

'Hobbit' puppetry, page8

Forty-two percent of the fanns in
the 12-state area from West Virginia
to Maine were classified as small
fanns, Kerr s~id. Some crops have
better potential than others for
small farmers, he said,
"Northeast small-scale farmers
grow vegetables, sweet corn
tomatoes, berries, apples: ·
strawberries, beef cattle, sheep
goats, hay forage crops and others,"
Kerr said. ''Strawberry prOduction
is especially prevalent and will continue to gain importance.''

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties
Play around. All work can make you a
dull fellow. And whether your game
is tennis or track, football or fishing,
bowling or baseball, you'll find
plenty of good r~ading in our sports
~ pages. And if you're a spectator
.
sportsman, our in-depth coverage will
help you relive the game and
understand the fine points. Know the
score. Subscribe today.

Jazz back home
DETROIT CAP) - The motor
capital of tbe world may be edging
up on New Orleans as the jazz.
festival center of the nation.
The second Monlreux·Detroit International Jazz Festival drew more
than 350,000 fans to its 82 concerts
despite a soggy start. The 700
musicians participating in It in·
eluded such headliners as Cleo
Laine, Sarah Vaughan, Herbie Hancock, and Earl "Falha" Hines.
"We were abaolutely delighted
!hat in our second year the Detroit
Festival hu become eatablllhed a:o
one d tbe lwlinl jazz feltivals In
the world," said Robert E. McCabe,
rnsfdent Ill. Detroit Renaluance, .
the festival's principal sponsor.

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