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Pag1 1 ~1he Dilly SUI!*

Friday,

FebruarY 19. 1988

r---l..ncal news briefs---. Rain brings flood waminp in south today
Driver charged following wreck
An Albany woman wu charged In an acck)ent Thursday, at
8: 20 p.m.; In Scipio Township on Chase Road, about a quarter of
a mile west of T,oWIISiilp Road 234, accordlnato theGallla-Melgs
Post of the State Hllfhway P'trol.
·
·
DeltaS. Braun, 28, wu charged with DWI after she, traveling
eut,lost control of her 1~ Oldsmobile Omega, went offthe left
side of the road and Into a ditch.

Pomeroy Village finances listed

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Pomeroy Clerk-Treasurer Jane Walton reports a balance of
$156,597.66 In the village treasury as of Jan. 31.
Receipts, disbursements and end-of-the-month balances,
respectively, In each ol the funds making up the total budget
Include; general fund , $10,102.83, $20.832.01, $22.197.44; safety,
no receipts, $108, $8,803.42; street, $7,9ai.73, $12,767.78,
$4,994.20; state highway, $134.80, no disbursements, $1,449.38;
lire, $2,617.06, $2,121.13, $702.21; cemetery, $167.45, $667.65,
$434.59; water, $20,329.08, $21,485.92, $46,087.90; sewer,
$7,551.03, $4,714.56, $3,034.89; guaranty. meter, $550, $600,
$12,835.87; utility, no receipts, $2,783.73, $10,651.70; sale of
building, $382.45, $382.45, $.19; perpetual care, $100, no
disbursements, $4,969.77; cemetery endowment, no receipts, no
disbursements, $17.825.11; pollee pension, no receipts, no
disbursements, $637.33; bulldlnlf fund, $117.55, no dlsbursements,".$1,275.40; recreation, $70, no disbursements, $1,275.40;
. permissive tax, no receipts, $830.05, $783.14; bond retirement,
no receipts, no disbursements, $3,610.06; fire truck, no receipts,
no disbursements, $27,939.52.
Total receipts for the month amounted to $50,027.98 while
disbursements totaled $67,293.28.

Some stolen Items have been recovered In the breaking and
entering which took place just before midnight last night at
F.ber's Gul1 Station In Racine.
Sheriff Howard Frank reports that Deputies Brian Bissell,
Kenny Klein and Harry Lyons, together ·with Racine Marshal
Keith Harter, responded to the telephone call reporting the
i:l&amp;E . A second phone ·call revealed that a car, driven by a
female, had been seen about a block away -from the station
letting two male subjects out.
Shortly after, officials arrested Karen M. King, of Ripley,
w. Va. , In Racine, and charged her with complicity. The vehicle
she was driving was Impounded. King was brought to the Meigs
County Jail pending an appearance sometime today In Meigs
County Court.
Officials con tlnued their search for the two males who had
been seen leaving the vehicle. The two males were taken Into
custody this morning In Ripley by the Jackson County Sheriff's
Department and were being held this morning at the Jackson
County Jail for questioning by authorities fl'om Meigs County.
Several items were reported' missing from the_station, and an
Inventory Is being taken bY the owner, Eber Pickens. Some
1terns have been recovered the sheriff reported.
The Bureau of Criminal Investigation, London, Ohio, has been
called.In to assist with the Investigation.

Man sentenced~on charges
Meigs resident sentenced to prison on drug charges In federal
court
.
Marshall Slater, 42, of· Snowville In Meigs County, was
sentenced to seven-year prison term on narcotics charges when
he appeared Thursday In Federal Court, Southern District of
· west VIrginia, Charleston, before Judge John T. Kopenhaver
Jr. Slater's prison term Is to be follow~ by a special parole
term of 10-years, according to a report from Nancy Hill, of the
U.S. District Attorney's office, Charleston, ·•.
Slater was arrested In October on a 20-count Indictment
charging him with complicity and with distribution of natcotlcs
~ rcocalne and marijuana) In West VIrginia lind Ohio.
Slater's Snowville farm was raided In July of 1987, at which
time 469 marijuana plants were seized by authorities.
His arrest In October culminated approximately a fourmonth Investigation Involving the West VIrginia State Pollee,
the FBI, the Ohio Liquor Control Board and local law
enforcement officers In both West VIrginia and Ohio, Including
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
· Slater was found to be a danger to the public at the time of his
October arrest, and has been held since then at the Kanawha
County Jallln Charleston. He Is ~till In jallln Kanawha County,
pending transfer to a federal facility .
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EMS has six calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Thursday; Racine at 7:13 a.m. transported Trlna Young to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 8:52a.m. to Pomeroy Pike
ior Sally Yates to flolzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 9:28a.m.
took Allee Brown to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
6:49 p.m. to General Hartinger Parkway for Irene Artis to
Pleasant Valiey Hospital; Pomeroy at 8:24p.m. to Forest Run
Road for Janet Sue Grueser to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
at 11: 19 p.m. to Kerr St. for Shannon Partlow to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

GOp has three... continued from page 1
McAngus; Pomeroy Second
Ward, VIncent Edward Knight;
Pomeroy Third Ward, Rebecca
Triplett; Pomeroy Fourth Ward,
Catherine L. Welsh; Laurel CUff,
Gregory Eblin; Rock Springs,
Carol Ohlinger; Harr isonville,
Danny B. Howard; Syracuse
V!Uage.. Wpo.:!row T. Zwilling;
Minersville, John Ihle, and Racine Precinct, Edwin S. Cozart.
Tax Levies On BaDot
Three tax levies will face
voters In that many subdivisions
of Meigs County at the May
primaries, the - Meigs County
Board of Elections reports.
In the Eastern Local School
District, voters will decide on a
12.4 mills continuing current

Public Notic$

expense levy while In the Meigs
Local School District voters will
decide on a 5 mills continuing tax
levy for current expenses. The
third levy will be voled upon will
be In Rutland VIUage and that Is
an 8 mill, five year levy, to
provide fun~Js for pollee
protection.

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admissions - Walter Bentz, ·Pomeroy; Richard
Rlllng, Pomeroy; Allee Brown,
Pomeroy; Carrie Kennedy ,
Pomeroy.
Thursday Discharges George Greene, Hershel LeMaster, Dennis Musser.

Public Notice

·
eat
S
Area d h

Council dlocu- ot '-"'
the nMCI for eotoblllhlng the
VHiege politlon of ltrMt
lu.-rinteeeclln1.

Att. d.,. conoldeootlo.o,

Racine council meets
Racine VIllage Council, pre- Stewart, Rutland, Colmcll had
sided over by Mayor Frank offered the truck for sale at the
Cleland, conducted the following regular meeting, but because of a
business during a recessed ses- technical error, had the truck
slon on Monday.
·
readvertlsed.
Approved a recommendation
Authorized the partitioning off
from Fire Chief Robert Johnson of sections of.the annex building
to accept a bid from the Dlls Co., to be used as offices for the
Ravenswood, W.Va., for the mayor and clerk.
purchase of coats, bunker pants,
Authorized Street Comrnlshelmets and boots for the' rtre stoner Glenn Rizer to stockpile
department,atacostof$2,740.50, four loads of crusher llmestolle
plus shipping.
and to purchase other necessary
Heard Chief Johnson report materials.
·
that the department has made
Heard lh!! VIllage Park Board
application lor a matching grant report they will be meeting
with the Ohio Division of Fore· Monday, Feb. 29, 7 p.m., to
stry for the purchase of add!· ·discuss the summer program
tiona I pagers for !he department. schedule of free entertainment,
Approved the second reading as well as other projects at the
of an ordinance authorizing the village's parks .
In attendance at the meeting
Board of Public Affairs to spend
over $1,000 to have the water were Councllmembers Robert
system · storage tank Interior Beegle, Duke,· Bentz, Carroll
cleaned and recoated to extend '!'eaford, Larry Wo11e and Scott
the 10-year warranty .
Wol1e; Clerk Jane Beegle, Mayor
Accepted the only sealed bid Cleland, Rizer and Johnson. ·
Council will meet again at 7
for the village's dump truck In
the amount of $501.01 from Tom
p.m. on Monday; March 7.

" " " - Vlllge

Council
"""" to ..ullllllli the potltloa of
StrMt Supwlo.-dent lhet
. llid poeltlon

_

Pw••• v-...
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...lion of ..........
_. ..........
.,_..
.,..... ..,••o, ..

ncornody -'loog • labor·
... on the et-. ltuld~
ond-prap1rtyunclef

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------Weather----Soulh Cenlrial Ohio
Occasional rain today, with
hlgha between 45 and 50. Rain or
drizzle likely tonight, with a low
In the
mid 30s.
.
. Mostly .cloudy

Stocks

GRAVELY
"or A-""-,_..
In addition,
he acts as
legal ra;nd;;e;ve;n;·;h~and;;ed;;nes;;s;th;a;t;h~e;h;U;:~;;;;~III.~9ft~-20~1t;
used throughout his career.
sought
and ultimately
ordered.
' ;•;9ft;·~57;J;,l~~~~~~~~~~~~~

advisor to all the other county
agencies, departments and offices, township trustees, the vii·
lages, .pollce and sheriff's depart·
ments and several political .

Financial Aid is ·•
Available from a
Variety of Sources

Announcements
NameSpe~er

Rev. Sam Clay will be speaking ·
at the old Bethel Church, located
behind Gilbert's ~rvice Station,
two miles north of the Chester
railroad tracks, on Story's Run
Road, Feb. 23 at 7:30p.m. Pastor
Bob Grubb Invites the public.

Villge Counol
......, Ill
VH- ....... pMIIDhlly ..
lege p 11111.• of 81lwt lu· b'( OMII, .t ...., .,lriy 130)
...,..,... dint; 10 ... "'. ' ....,. poJor to .... explodon
duly QUIIIIIlld ...,_ ....... of IIHIII ,_,
encilcllnlhl...tD,._of
le It f u - IIEeOLVID
-11141 ,-..,,
,..tr,
bo F'lng..,... lhet
of Yllllge
...,.,..; light llld' atr.t e
nMndrnt lllil
.._,. . . ...... llld toe eight
••••1101 ...
atpJMIIng of
lllbor hour, ,.,cbl,c In ..........,.

v..-

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WJ!lATRER MAP - Rain wiD be widespread from tile middle
Ml•lulppl Valley aci'OA tbe TeaneS&amp;ee aild Oblo valleys Into the
Middle Atlaatlc 1tales · and the CaroiiDal. Showers Uld
lllundentol'IIUI wiD extend from the central GuU of Mexico Coaat
•~ Geol'lla aad nortbenFiol'lda. SnowwiUfalloversoulhwest
lower Mlchlpa aad aortbem eectlona of Illlnob and Jadlaaa. Rain
llhowers aad moua&amp;aln uow silowen wiD reach &amp;erMa 10ulheut
Arizona aad soalhem New Mexico.

e.

lllldof
the flrlt 01 MY IUU II ling
yMr, b'( ....... 110t1oe In
wallll• to ... paalllola

the=

Map shows l!linimum temperatures. At least SO% or any shaded area is forecast . •
lo receive precipitation indi~ated
UPI

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

· Public Notice

c-••••n
Pr..- ,

Atltllt

Tri.C-'J Y.atillll

ty-ol• 1281= .........
otocla; In ..
to w....
Vllage of Pon•or wttt

the ................. . . . .
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AtllllrtOJt. yee; lniee II...,

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....... ,_...,..,
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ATTI.r: .IIMWallolo. C....

, _ , ,..._. Couooal
Meilll County, Ohio
f2J fl. ze,_JtD .

Alto ~ina a

Schell
Atltllt Elluadlea C..tar
I J ltullun I I a Nt.ZS
Cal 753·3511 bt. 14

1300 hn.) In Won laa 1 1111nl

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.....

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c.u 751·3511 bt. 14 . . . . .

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A •aa Of TIIIIULYH WE IUM
' • JUS1' 11 WilD
'
Til ADULT 1115111 ASSITANT/OIIEBY

oond to tiM mulloiollldf

AHention Cosmttologistsl
12..... c-..

......

PIOGIII IS NOW ACCIPIM APPliCATIONS.
,. ritlht• ... ...,. .......... cell ...

AIWt lll11rtlon Cantw/Trle:County

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Voa~lktllll

Sdlaol

7Sl·IJ11 lxt. 14

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Along lhe River ........ B-1-8
Blllllness ...................... D-1
Comics-TV .............. Iasert
Cluslfleds ................ D-2-7
Deaths ........................ A-3
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sports .••......•..•.• •...••. C-1·6

Area reader voices opinion on i88ue

Page 8---1

A-2

Cloudy. High betweel) 20
25. Chance of rain neu zero.

•tmes VoL 23 No.2

c .......... ,_

9 Soctiono, 48 Pogo•
A' Multimedia Inc. NewePaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, February ·21, 1988

Report cites deteriorating world environment
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In·
vestments of $150 billion a year,
raised by trimming global milltary spending by one-sixth, are
needed to nurse the deteriorating
world environment back to
health, researchers reported
Saturday.
The Worldwatch Institute, located In Washington, ls'sued the
fifth of Its annual State of the
· World books that have giVen
Earth annual physical examlnalions to check Its vital signs.
The checkups record progresslvely worsening shrinking of
Earth's forests , expanding of Its
deserts, eroding of soils, loss of

plant and animal species, thinnlng of the upper atmosphere's
ozone layer that protects Earth
from ultraviolet radiation and
apparent rising of Earth •s
temperature.
In 1983, for example, a survey
showed that 8 percent of West
German forests were damaged,
possibly from air pollution and
acid rain . Now more than half of
West German forests · are·
'd amaged.
·
The 1988 edition of State of the
World concluded that modest
adjustments will be Insufficient
to stem environmental decline.
"It will take a wholesale

reordering of priorities, a basic billion a year on giobai military
restructuring of the global econ·
expenditures.
omy and a quantum leap · in
Another barrier to restoring
International cooperation," said
environmental balance, the book
Lester R. Brown, president of the
said, Is the $1 trillion debt owed
Worldwatch Institute and lead · by Third World countries. Interauthor of the book.
est payments siphOn off their
Without change In direction,
resources while economic and
the book said, " our grandchildsocial progress that . usually
ren will Inherit a less healthy , lowers birth rates has given way
blologl ~ ally Impoverished
to falling Incomes, Brown said.
planet,. one. lacking In aesthetic
Worldwatch · estimated · tl)at
pleasute as well as economic
reducing
$900 billion a year In
opportunities.':
military
spending
by just one- .
The book said £ast-West consixth
and
Investing
$150
billion In
frontatlon spawned an arms race
Earth's future would go a long
that causes nations to mlsallocate capita:! by spending $900 way to protect topsoil on cro·

pland, reforest the land, slow
population growth, Improve
energy efficiency, develop renewable energy supplies and
retire Third World debt.
Shifting military spending to
environmental projects makes
se nse as national security Is
Increasingly defined In environmental and economic terms
rather than than militarily, the
book said.
· .·
It said current problems must
be addressed wltll global accords, s·uch as a 24-natlon agree·
ment signed In Montreal to cut
use of ozone-threatening gaseschlorofluorocarbons- by half by

the end of the century.
Brown singled out China as an
example of progress accomplished by shifting resources out of
the military sec lor . China has
nearly cut In half the military's
share of Its gross national product, while cutting its birth rate
and dramatically Increasing Its
food productiOl\.
The institute said State of the
Wor ld has become one of the
most popular college textbooks
In the United States and, translated Into several languages, it
"may be tlie most widely read
work of public policy research In
the world today ."

Benefit fund being establisbed.......- A long night's work-------.
By LEE ANN WELCH
the patients and their families. ,
Tlmes-8entlael8taff
·All proceeds from the game,
GALLIPOLIS- .Being Ill Is whlchwlllbeplayedonMarch25
enough to worry a.b out, wltllout at Lyne Center on th,e Rio Grande .
wondering how to pay the m~l- . College ~jnd Community College
campus, will go to those patients
cal bllis that mount up. There Is a
high number of cancer patients and families to 1\elp ease the
In the trl-county area, and they financial burden .
quickly bec9me financially
An HRCC spokesman sald·lOO
strapped.
percent of the money will be
The' Holzer Regional Cancer
given to area cancer organlzaCenter wants to address more
lions, stipulated for the patients
and their families.
than the physical and emotional
needs of cancer patlepts. It has
A fund Is being established
been looking for a \"BY to assist through this game, and will be
llnaJICialty, . ·~.
, . , called·tl\f1 Scott Connelley Mel)'l,
.ln toeklng ,fo_r lli~1 met,bod, the .ortal 'FUnd, Connelley was , an
I«Jea of • be~Utttf ll!iOMhlg eirent , jl~hl!i!le : at . Kyger Creek High
. nthrr*F··•"~~~•-~~- , oCIIII!IIIOAtl BCil,oOlwlii)ci.l edlastDec.6,fronl
Benaals traV'ellpg basketl!all cancer.
team will be In the county In
Connelley, who was 18-yearsMarch to ,h!;!li! raise money. for old, _g raduated from KCHS In
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BRENT A. SAUNDERS

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1987 and had received the SVAC
award In football.
The evening will feature two
ev~nts, a college all-star battle
against the Bengals, then a
Gallla versus Mason cqunty high
school.all-star game.
Schools making participation
commitments so far are Rio
Grande College, Ohio University,
Morehead State University. the
University of Charleston, Pikeville College, Cedarville College,
Mt. Vernon Nazarene College
and Ohio Dominican, In addition
to Point fleasant, Wahama and
Hannan ~lgh school$·. Ohio 'v alley Christian .- S&lt;:hool, Gallla
Academy, Hannan . Trace,
Southwestern, North Gallia ,
Kyger Creek and 'SOtltherri, high
schools.
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Saunders ril~s .for post
GALLIPOLIS - Brent A. soclatlon, Ohio State Bar Associ Saunders, 20 Wlllow Dr., filed his . atlon and the Gallla County Bar
petltlon as a Democratic candl- Association.
.
date for Gallla County Prosecutsaunders Is a graduate of
lng Attorney.
·.
· Marshall University and 'reSaunders was appolnted .prose- celved his Jaw degree from
cuting attorney In Januaryl988. capital university. He Is , a
Prior to his appointment, he member of the law firm of
served as assistant prosecuting Halliday , Sheets &amp; Saunders .
attorney for three years and as
A native of Gallla County, he Is
assistant Gallllpolls City Sollcl- the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Leon
tor lor one year.
Saunders of Gallipolis. He Is a
He Is currently serving as member and past president of
village solicitor for Centerville, the Gallipolis Rotary Club. He
Cheshire, Crown City and VInton. resides In Gallipolis Township
He Is a member of the National with his wife, ·Shawn. and their
District Attorneys Association , son, Clarke.
Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys As-

walker files for commission .
GALLIPOLIS - Donald L.
Walker flied his petition as a
Democrat' for the Jan . 3 Gallla
County Commissioners term at
the Gallla County BOard of
~lectlons.

Walker, a resident of Gallla
County for 36 years, Is the son of
the late Estill fCiirls) Walker and
Mrs. Maggie Walker Underwood·. He was raised on a farm In
Greenfield Township.
He and his · wife, Linda,' h'ave
been married for l8 years and
have three children, Mike, Missy
and Shelley. Andy Ha tsiop, a Rio
Grande College and Community
College freshman , also resides In

the Walker home where they
have lived since 1979.
Walker served as Rio Grande
mayor fr.om January 1983 to
December 1987. He attended
Centerville :Jj:lementary School
and Is a graduate of-Southwestern High-School and Rio Grande
College and Community College.
He Is employed at the Gallipolis . Developmental Center as
. administrator In labor relations ·
and staff development.
,
"I will work hard to 1brlrig to
counly management a common
sense approach In providing
services to area reslden ts ,"
Walker sa ld.

· Eason files for engineer

A ProlcuioNICosmctolasist

lflin• •• for thl

Inside:

Beat of ttie Bend, By Bob Hoeflich
B-3

You.
Too, C•nh

1-bloMdon-.

=t.c::o:.::
the- . _._,. . . . NI_.,.,._,.....,..

I··-.. .

tW

cage races ·heat up- Sports.C-

Max Tawney ·
describes
• to
trip

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Public Notice

le It REiOLVED lhet tile

...,._,..,

IZ2J

f!:qSNOW
-RAIN
SHOWERS
:
FRONTS: "
Warm "Cold . . . Static
Occluded ;

A tty. Fred..

VHIIge SIIWt lupc:lntwr- . . . to veer .......... ,..
dent llld In pert8Mirog ...,. t11ot Cow,.. -,. • ·
eo, MrL ....,llcio • onl-thepr 11101ooof8-

Ina:

0

Saturday, with highs between 35:
and 40.
The probability of preclplta-:
lion Is near 100 percent today, 70
percent tonight and 20' percent
Saturday.'
'Winds will be from the southeast near 10 mph today, becomIng westerly near 10 mph tonight.
Dally
llock
price&amp;
Extended f'Oftltlul
' Continued from page 1
(As of 11:30 a.m.)
Sunday tbrotap Tllemay
Bryce and Mark Smllh
Is a former VIllage Solicitor for subdivisions.
A chance of snow Sunday, with
Syracuse VIllage.
Crow Is a member of the of Blunl Ellll 8o: Loewl
fair weather Monday and a
Crow has been Prosecuting Na tiona I District Attorneys
chance of snow again Tuesday .
Attorney for Meigs County since Assn., and the Ohio Prosecuting
Am Electric Power ............. 28'h
Highs wtll range fro111 the 30s to
January, 1977, after he defeated Attorneys Assn. He Is a member
AT&amp;T ....... ........ .... ...... .... ~ .. 29%
the low 40s Sunday and Monday,
then Incumbent Prosecuting At- of Grace Episcopal Church,
Ashland Oil 1...................... . 59% ,aiUng Into tile 20s Tuesday.
torney Bernard Fultz for the Pom~roy; Racine Lodge 461,
Bob Evans .......... ...... .......... 14% · Overnight lows will be between
position. In just over 11 years lri F&amp;AM; Aladdin Temple Shrine
Charming Shoppes .............. . 14 . 25 and 35 e~rly Sunday
that ofllce Crowhasattalnedone Club, the Fraternal Order of
City t{oldlng Co .,; ................ . 34 r;::::::;.;;~;;;;;:::::~
of the highest conviction rates of Eagles, Pomeroy, and was ·a · Federal Mogul.. ..................36'h
any prosecutor In the state, Ills reclplentln · 1987 of the Spirit of
MRS. ABLE
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................57)l
reported.
'87, an award for contributions on
PALM at CARD READING
Heck's Inc .......... .... ...... ....... 1%
Crow Initiated the first federal the category of "Liberty
Key Centurion .... ................40'h
Tells Paal, Prallnt &amp; Future ·
forfeiture of property In a drug, Through Law" sponsored by the
Lands' End ................ ,......... 19
$5.IIOOFF AI Readlnas With This lvJ.
ma'rljuana, case In Southern Northwest Ordinance and United
Limited Inc ........ "" ............18
OPEN 9 A.M.. 10 PA EVERYDAY
Ohio as a part of the very States Constitution Bicentennial
(301) 67&amp;-7889
Multimedia lnc........... ........55'h
Rax Restaurants ............... ... 3~
2211- Avo.
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successful Series of drug prose- Commission.
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. .9
cutlons. Related to those drug
Public service Is a tradition of
Shoney's Inc. .: .... ................ 22'h
prosecutions Crow Initiated the the Crow family. Fred W. Crow.,
Meigs CountY Drug Enforcement Sr., the candidate's grandfather,
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6'h
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Worlhtngton Ind .. ...... .......... 18~
Trust Fund to receive fines and was a common pleas judge In
SALES &amp; SERVICE
restitution. That money then will Meigs County; Fred W. Crow,
204 Condor St.
be used In further drug enforce- Jr., the . candidate's father'
Pomaray, OH .
' ment efforts.
served In the Federal Bureau of
llaw Fsll &amp; Witter Hn,.
As legal counsel for the county Investigation, has been active In
Crow has annually prosecuted the community and has a dlstln·
To oond 0 be•dlully
Clollld Monday
approximately a thousand mls- qulshed private law practice.
d................
Tueoclay thru Frldr( 9 a .m.-&amp; p.m.
demeanorr cases and 30 to 40
In seeking to become common
.-ron,.m..,t, Juot ..n
Saturd1y 9 a.m,-1 p.m.
. felony cases. Among those have pleas,judge, Crow will draw upon
.
PO•ME••IIRIIOY
~THE
beeq two major murder and rape his years of law enforcement
caseS' In which convictions were experiences and pledges to apply
FLOWER SHOP
obtained and life sentences were the same principles of fairness
"Th•

gonerol control ot thto Vllloge
of Pomeroy.

motlan tD odopt

see

..

- n t l : t11at ·Mid jiOIItlon
At the regulor ~Meting of
wtl be lllld 0011 pln·
Whlo-.tlle"-oiYI- -loooedono11M_.
the Pomeroy Vllloge Councll
1llho 11th day of Februory, lege Councl deoiNito- -""' " - 11M ZOllo ~My of
1881, the Pomeroy Vlllege lloh tile p a - of~ ~ellruery. 1. . ., llld from
RESOLUTION 1888-2

region.
Flash riood wa~bes were In
effect for aouthealt Mlsslaslppl,
parta of Alabama and the Florida
Panllandle.
Powerful Santa Ana winds
developed Thui-sday over South·
ern California, gusting to 50 mph
near I.,os ADifeles, San Bernardino and Ontario.
,
.
The winds were expected to
Intensify early today with 80 mph
gusts poaslble In the Cajon Pass
ol the San Bernardino . Moun·
talns, and a high wind warning
was In effect through inldday.
Scattered power outages were
reporled Thursday evening
along the Southern Ca111ornla
foothllla near the communities of

-·

Probe breaking and entering

'

La cailada, Altadena Sierra northern Florida, the weatM~
Madre and Into San Bernardino ~rvice said.
·County. AB of mldniibt Thurs·
Unseaaonably high temperaday, ofllclalJ reported 3,000 area tures In the 40s and 50s were
homes find businesses without forecast for much of the nation,
power.
with readlnga In the 30s expected
The seasonal winds gusled to 90 from the Dakotas through the
mpb Wednesday, contributing to upper Mississippi Valley to the
four deaths, knocking out power 'Great Lakes states to Maine.
to some 500,000 resldenl!l and
Afternoon temperatures ·
causing extensive property dam· Thursday hit 51 degrees In New ·
age In several comml!nltles In · York City and 54 In Washington, :
the Los Angeles area.
· 1· and highs reached the 60s In •
High winds over the Southern southern VIrginia. .
·
California ·de:terts prompted
Heavy morning -fog ThursdaY·.
sand storm warnlnga In the shrouded milch of central and ·
Antelope VaDey, t"e Mojave northern Indiana and was
Desert and neser"t Valley.
blamed on at least three traffic
Widespread rain was forecast deaths.
today from the middle Mlssls~all and heavy rain pelted
sippi Valley across the TeMeS· pattsofnortheaslernandcentral
.r~-----------------------,
and Ohio Valleys and to the Texas.
.
mid-Atlantic Coast. Showers and
The storm spit marble-s~
thunderstorms were expected hall In San Antonio. Quarter-Inch ·,
over Dixie from the Gulf of hall was reported In Rollnd Rock; •
Mexico through Georgia and and pel\;slzed hall near Athens. ·
Plgg and Andrew,. Plgg, also ol
Earl Kibble
Newark.
·,.
"-'TIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2·20.S8 ~
Besides
his
parents,
he
was
Former Reedsville resident
Earl Anderson (Whiskers) Kib- preceded In desth by a daughter,
ble, 81, died Wednesday evening Barbara Jean Plgg; a grandson,
at the Arcadia Nursing Home In . Richard Jeffrey Lewis; and an
Infant brother, Roy Kibble.
Coolville whete he had been a
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturresident for three. years.
day
at White Funeral Home In
'
Born June 3, 1906 In Meigs
County, be was a son of the late Coolville with Rev. Robert Sand'
ers offlcla tlng. Burial will be In
Ira and Eliza Reed Kibble.
Survivors InClude a daughter Eden Cemetery at Reedsville.
and son-In-law, Mar)' and RI- Friends may call at the funeral
chard Lewis, Newark; and three home from 2 lo 4 and 7 to 9 today
~~~:andchlldren, Beth Lewis, Earl (Friday).
By United Preei Iaterulloul
Heavy rain and thunderstorms
rol!IDif across Dixie this morning
prompted flood warnings In
parts of Louisiana, while hot
Santa Ana winds gained strength
over Southern California with 80
mph gusts possible.
Almost 5.5 Inches of rain
drenched Apalachicola, Fla.,
over a 24-hour period ending
early .this morning, and 4.6
Inches were reported at Talla·
hassee, Fla., during the same
period.
· Flood warnings were In effect
today for·the Ttchefuncta, Tang!pahoa, and Bogue Falaya Rivers
of southeast Louisiana, following
3 til 4 Inches of rain that fell
Thursday across much of the

He Is a member of the'
-American Congress of Surveying
and Mapplqg and has also been
affiliated with 'the Professional
Land Surveyers of Ohio. Curren Uy he serves as a member of
the Carleton School Board, and Is
a member of the United Metho-.
djst Church.
Eason and his wife, Nora, have
four children, Angela, at hollle,
Robert R., who lives at Dayton
with hla wl1e, Krista, Hubert
"Huey" of Smithfield, Va.; and
Linda and her l!n•b•nil, Jeff
Warner. Pomeroy. .
The candidate II the IOD of Mn.
Luellla Euon aDd tlla lata
Ku~rt ~. a tawyw, wbo
_ . . .. p&amp;'OieCIItlqat111meyiD
Gt,lll CoUDt,y, N.C. Ha Iii t1ll

~or~, RJal,

.Sf~~~c:: -

DONM.D L. WALKER

City malnleaJUice crews were called out around
11 p.m. Friday to repair a broken fire hydranlln
fronl of 22'7 Tblrd Ave. Workers were still on lhe
job at 5: 55 a.m. Saturday when tb~ photo was
taken. "Mack" McCormick said apparently
somebody hacked Into the fire hydraoil sometime
last evening, leering II loose from lis foundation.

One clly waterworks spokesman said approximately 200,000 gallons ol water were lost before
the bydranl wu repaired. Several lire hygrants
along lower Third Avenue, Court and and VIne
Streets were turned on to ease the water pressure
during repair work. (Times-Senllnel photo)

Central committee contests
·a ssured. in May 3 primary
GALLIPOLIS- Some contests
exist In the May 3 primary
central committee races of both
parties while other seats are not
being challenged. Three GOP
vacancies and six Democrat
slots will have to be filled by
executive committeemen since
no one flied a candidate's petition
prior' to Thursday's 4 p.m.
deadline, according to Charlotte
Seamon, dlrector of the Gallla
County Board of Elections.
· Irt .the Democratic central
committee race, vacancies remain City 1-B, City 4-A, City 4-C,
Kaunaga Precinct, Centerville
Precinct and Bidwell Precinct.
The Republican seats lacking
candidates IDI;lude Kanauga ,
Centerville and Bidwell preclnts.
In the Democratic · central
committee race, the following
,people filed.
City 1-A, Warren F . Sheets,120
First Ave.; City 2-A, Joseph E; .
Stiles, 450 Firat Ave.-;, Clly t-B,
Dottle M. Chestnut, 633 Second
· Ave. ; Clty3-A , JosephE . Fenderbosch, 4 Hillcrest Dr.; Clly 3-B,
Floyd E. Wright, 920 Fourth ·
Ave.; Cltyt-B, C. Sue While, 2000
Chestnut.
~diNa Towublp, Barbara E.
Ruslll!ll, Rt. 4; Ad•lloa Preeblct,
Claude B .. Burnett, 620 Burnett

Rd.; Ch,..lalre 'l'oWlllldp, Sandra
.Willa, lU. 1, at•htre; Ch•
Rife,
'Je ~·
11" ,.,.
__

Pr......

..tW11tt
emaa. "1"'-:
At.
a.;
E Paldaf,
'

..

Gallipolis Towuhlp, James L. .
Holley. 169 Portsmouth Rd., and
Clyde D. Burnett, 452 Fifth Ave.;
Greea Preclncll, Ruth Gillespie,
Rt. 3; Green Precinct!, Thomas
E. Pasquale, Rt. 2; Green
Precinct 3, Dorothy L. Condee,
434 Lorlat Dr.; Green Towll8hlp,
Conard E. Hudson Sr., PSR.
Greenfield Towaahlp, Ro.b ert
E. Dunlap, Rt. 2, Patriot; Guyan
Towaahlp, Jeffery J . Fowler, Rt.
I Crc;&gt;wn City; GuyJUI Precinct,
Paul B. Stanley, Rt. 1, Crown
City; Ilarrllon Towll8hlp, Jack
W. Slone, Rl'. 1, Crown City;
Hantlncton Preclact, Kathryn.
Rece, VInton; Huntlnpon Township, Roger D. Meade, Rt. 3,
Bidwell.
,_
Morsan Towilioh!p, Johnnie E.
· Russell, Rt, 1, Bidwell; Oblo .
. ToWIIIIblp, Juanita Craig, Rt. 2,
Crown City, and Bette S. Meadows, Rt. 2, Crown Cl,ly; Perry
Tonalllp: Edward Lynch, Rt. l,
thurman; Raccooa ToWIIIIblp,
Frank H. Rilff, Thurman: Rio
Grude PreclacJt, Raymond R.
Pope, Rio Grande; 8prhllfleld
Tow.tdp, Holzer Gregory, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, and Thomas E .
Sprague, Rt . 1 Bidwell; and
Walaut ·Towaablp, Dolores
Baker, Rt. 2, Patriot.
In the Republican central
committee race, the following
Pl!l&gt;t&gt;le nk!d.
· ·
Qly l·A, D. Kenneth Morgan,
102 Firat Ave.; atr l·B, John J.
AIIIIOD, l82 Portlmouth Rd; ~
1-A. Suzb~e MoUttoD, Third
Ave.; atr 1-B, Warner HaDey,

m
)

644 Third Ave.; Clly :1-A, Raymond C. Hawk, 541 Fourth Ave. ;
City 3-8, Gwendolynn B.G. Ca rter , 99 Pine St. ; City 4-A, Robert
R. Saunders 815 Second Ave. ;
City 4-B , Willard Blankenship, 44
Bell Ave.; City 4-B , Russ V.
Moore. 1924 East Ave.; City 4-C,
Sylvan H. Gardner, llO ' Kineon
Dr.
Addison Township, Osca r C.
Baird, Rt. 1; Addison Precinct,
G. Goedon Fisher, Rt. 1; Cheshire Township, Rodney E.
Spires, Rt.l , Cheshire; Cheshire ·
Precinct. James R. Neal, Cheshire; Clay Township, Con nie
Hemphill, ES R; Clay Precinct,
VIrginia Jo Huffman, Clay
Chapel Rd.; Gallipolis Township,
Betty J. Finney, 155 Woodla nd
Dr., Larry M. Beiz, ESR, and
Norman L. Stewart, 181 Greenbrier Ave.
Green Precinct I, Denise A. '
Shockley, Rt. 3; Gr~en Precinct
! , David T. Evans, 370 Debby
Dr.; Green Preclncl3, Jeffrey L,
Sudaher, 402 Jackson Pike;
Greea Towublp, Carlos P.
Wood, PSR; , Greenfield Town~
llllp, Charles E. Chambers , Rt. 2,
Patriot; Guyan f&gt;r-eclncl, Don
Rankin, Crown City; Guyaa
ToWIIalr.,, Jeffery A: Halley,
Crown City; Harrlaoa Towlalllp,
Wayae 0. Jividen, Rt. 2, and
Kt11118th Swain, ESR; Hdalln1·
tea Tonlhlp, Harry Pollley, Rt.
1, Ewllllton; .............. Pr•

cilia&amp;, Billy J. ,.eCarlay,
Vlaton.

'

ClCIIdlnH to i\-4
~

~t.

r,

�:~(:ommentary
.. ,.,

Februwy 21' 1988

and perspective

Page A-2

r----~--~r;; ___,Anchor

February 21' 1988

Polls wrong, voters right ----.-hey-red_efl_~h-:re-he-~a-~-~-a.~--~1125 Thltd Ave., Galllpoli~. Ohio 111 Court . St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 446-2342
·,

.

(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
' .HOBART WILSON JR.
' Executive Editor

:•

PAT WHITEHEAD ·
Assistant Publisher-Controller

.

N. MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Da~.Jly Press Associa-~

tion ud the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Li.Tl"ERS OF OPINION are weloome. They should be leSs than 300 words
lona. All letters are subJEct to editing and must beslgned wtth name, address and
telephone number. No uJl.slgned letters wUl be published. Letters should be In
., IOOd taste, 'a ddressinalssues, not persma)lties.

'

~ Today

in history;

•

.
By United Press International
TOday Is Sunday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day of 1988 with 314 to follow _
' The moon is Wlixlng, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
• The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
; Those born on this .day are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
• Mexican revohilionary and military commander Antonio Lopez de
, Santa-Anna in 1794; Roman Catholic Cardinal ,John Henry Newman
- In' 1801; educator Alice Freeman Palmer in 1855; German
bacteriologist August von Wasserm4n, who ·developed the blood test
for syphilis, in- 1866; Romanian scculptor Constantin Brancusl In
1876; poet and author W,H. Auden In 1907; actress Ann Sheridan in
1915; filmmaker Sam Peckinpah in 1925; humorist Erma Bombeck in
1927 (age 61); and Tricla Nixon Cox, daughter of President Richard
Nixon, in 1946 (age 42).

:.;

.

On this date In history:
In 182!!, a printing press later used to print the first newspaper for
American Indians in the United States arrived In at the Cherokee
Council In Echola, Ga.
· In 1878, the New Raven; Conn., Telephone Co. published the first
phone directory. It listed 50 subscribers.
'
In 1885, the Washington Monument was dedicated, 37 years after
construction began.
·
In 1934, Nicaraguan guerrilla leader Cesar Augusto Sandlno was
murdered by members of the Nicaraguan Natfonal Guard and
became a martyr.
·
·
In 1975, Judge John Slrlca sentenced former Nixon administration
officials John Mitchell, H. R. Haldeman a nd John Ehrlichman to
prison for their roles in the Wa
tergate cover'up. .
(

Letters to the editor

•
PJl

437 Sttond Awenue, Gallipolis
Opposite the Post Office
0

zardous waste and the emissions
as the people of Mason· County.
Please won't you get Involved to
help your neighbors.
· Pat Harris
Skinner Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

.. . .

LJA1L Y

SIERRA

HOMEOWNERS .

&amp;FARM

...

.

AUTO

GROUP

Mon.-T~es.-Wad.-Fri: -8:30 till 4:30
Thursday &amp; Saturday- B:t30 till 12 Noon
JOHN H. SAUNDERS - BETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
HOWARD BAKER SAUNDERS -CONNIE
HEMPHILL
. .
'

Factory Rebates are still in effl!!:t and we're having a Winter
White Sale, You'll find special savings on GMC Trucks of every
style and color that we have in stock. Walk in arid you just might
walk our with- a great deal on a GMC Truck. Save from ,
$500.00-S750.00, depending on model. We'll put you in the truck
you've always wanted.
.

! .

Just ask for Herb Smith

Located at. 133 Pine street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 448-2632

(USP-1

,4

No subscriptions by mall permitted in
a,reas where motor cartier service is
avaOable. .
·

"

AnORNEY D. MICHAEL MULLEN

~~==~~~~~~1
HOLZER CLil\TIC

URGENT
CARE
CENTER
WHEN IT'S NOT AN EMERGENCY,
BUT YOU JUST CAN'T WAIT ...
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 5:00PM TO 9 :00PM
WEEKENDS &amp; HOLIDAYS 1:00PM TO 9 :00PM
Located At

HOLZER CLINIC
On Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

books to record that A~thony
Kennedy was concerned abQut
justice and equality for a,)l, that
he did his best to be sensitive to
'the needs of the downtrOdden, the
dispossessed, the unpopular In
our society," Jones said.
~
As a judge In the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ln
California, Kennedy gained · a
reputation as a conservative
because of his rulings on school
desegregatlnn, comparable
worth and voting rights.

PHONE .
446-5287

Matn Facility
'
NO APPT .
NECESSARY

••

lallde c•• aty
13-Weeks ............... ................... $17.29
26 Weeks ... ,.......... .. ........... .. ..... $34.06
52 Weekl .. ... . :... . ;........ ........·...... $66.56
au.. oaulde Coulf
13 Weeks ... , ........................... ,. P8.20
26 Weeks ....... ............. :...... ...... $35.10
52 Weeks ................................ t67.60

..
'

.

SINTU
htr40
51 •• d

SENTRA

........

GROUP MEN'S

'•'

310 AYE. DOWNTOWN HUN11NGTON
Acron from tho Ci•ic· '"""

•

•

MEN'S WINTER

SUITS &amp;
;SPORT COATS

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

...... FROM

$1'·

-

19°0*

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

IMil '

·
..
Per Mo.

Vtltl. . II

w.a..

•

•

50°/o OFF 50°/o OFF
KNIT SHIRTS &amp;
SPORT SHIRTS

68°/o OFF

GIOUP MEN'S

SWEATERS

$1 O

OOvALursro
sss.oo
IICH

.·-

'
To all you Chevy buyers who bought a new Cavalier with options like power steerinf!, clotH
bucket seats, intermittent wipers Blld tinted glass, we'd just like to say we're sorry we d•dn't get
this message out sooner. Because, for CNer $900 lass, you could hiNe gotten a comparablyequipped Dodge Aries America. And not only would you have gotren the same equipment on an
exciting Dodge car. bul you'd have better protection with Dodge's famous 7170 protectiOn plan.'
So, if you pe;d mom tor thai other car because we didn't get this out soon enough, our
heart goes out to you.
AND AlliES SI'ARIS AT
If you tJ1M1D1 boug~t a new car yet, you'll be hB/JPf to know
that you can get a new Arias America for ~s lillie. as $7424." So
come on In and get the nght car and the nght prrce, at your
• ,
· Dodge dealer today.
·::
•comparably equipped sticker price comparison. •• Base sticker price excluding tax and optio':'s, tSee a
copy of 1his limitS~ warranly on powertra1n and outer botly rusl -through al your dealer. Restrictions OPPJY·
••

•'
••

AT YOUR DODGE DEALBl,

.

~·

.WE FEB. CHARGING MORE IS,
WilL ••• HEARTLESS.

•

•
•

Mike Northup, Pete Somerville, Tommy-Sprague or Dale Hill

.

.... .
OHN

Man.

a Frt.

tl a.m. eo I-'·'"·

--·Will.-'"""'·.

..

I 1.111. eo I p.m. ·

W~

_, .. - ....

LESS THAN A COMPARABLY-EQUIPPED
CHEVY CAVALIER SEDAN.*

JACKETS

GROUP . .'$

htTIIII

~

I

•,.

ON GAIIflElD AVL, PAIIEISIUIG
AND

II

LOCAL CONSULTATION
in Pomeroy 992-6417
in Gallia County 246-9691
In Pomeroy, with

1988. NISSAN

•

Po1rd P'P.t~&lt;~

•

SINGLE COPY

•

WALLPAPER
SUPEIMARID
APPIOACH

k',CHI Av~\

•

336 S. High St. Col,umbus, OH.

Dally oad Sunday
MAIL lltJBSCBIPTIONS

IIIIIOIW -GE

11

ATTORNEY AT LAW

•

$4t9

C.JII 675-788g

l. W, CENNAMO

MAIL SVIIIICRIPTIONS
'
SomdayOaly
One Year·.......................... ....... $32.24
Sb: months .......... ....... ~ ··· • · .. , ..... $16.90

ll~l'&gt; All K MA~l ( (l l,l l l l fn'

,.

614-221-0888

•

(....... loll)
AI Flr.ot Chlallty, llo Stconds or
foctory lojects.

I

EPA as flammable hazardous
wastes which must be disposed of
at a landfill with a special
permit.
Willlams' landfill
doesn't require a license under
stale law to accept only construelion ma terials, and beca use the
landfill isn't licensed, it Isn 't
clear who has oversight
authority.

'

IN·STOCI IMPEIIAL
WALLPAPER PAnEINS

.

LOGJ\N - Morris K. "Kirk"
Hardman, boys' head basketball
coach at Logan High School,
entered written not' guilty pleas
In Hocking County Common
Pleas Co!lrl last' Tuesday In two
cases Involving 10 sex-related
·
charges.
Hardrnan, suspended without
pay from his cpachlng and
teadlllllt ..dulies by the LoganHocking School Board, faces
seven counts of attempted Illegal
use or a minor In nudity-oriented'
material In connection with a
January 6 Incident at the high
school.
The Incident Involved the discovery of a video camera in a
locker In the boys' locker room.
Tl)e other counts Involved
alleged gross sexual Imposition

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The action.
"The benzene could be coming
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency says a smoldering land· off paint cans and ae\osol cans,"
he said. "II could be anything
fill fire In western Hamilton
burning down there that has a
County Is giving off toxic fumes.
Tesls of air samples taken Feb. benzene product In II. In fact, It
3 and 5 showed more than twice could be varnish."
Landfill owner Wayne Willithe level of benzene, a known
ams said the benzene Is found In
carcinogen, than allowed by
federal standards. The highly roofing shingles and his dump
flammable liquid attacks mu- handles a lot of construction
cous' membranes and can cause debris. He alsO said that as far as
respiratory failure and death he knows, there have been ·no.
hazardous materials put into ihe
when Inhaled or Ingested.
The samples taken by the . landfill.
The · fire started In sawdust
Hamilton County Air Poilutlon
Control Agency also found the dumped last sumrper, Williams
presence of toluene and ethyl ben- 'said, adding that he complied
zene, both less toxic than benzene with health offiflal orders to stop
but capable of Irritating skin and accepting woOd products until
the fire Is out.
mucous membranes.
The benzene, toluene and ethyl"Obviously these are wastes
benzene
are listed by the Ohio
that need to be disposed of in a
proper manner. They don't belong In this landfill," Jim Sumner
of the ·Ohio EPA's southwest
district office said Friday.
Hamilton County Health Commissioner Thomas Manley said
· the source of the benzene must be
determined before he can take

BANKRUPTCY

The Sunday Times-Sentinel wiJl not be .
responsible for advance payments
made to carriers.

qu,n:mleed wallcovennqs

..

By (larrler er Motor RM&amp;e

One Week .:....................... : .• 60 Cents
One Year ............ ........ ............. $31.20
PBICE
Sunday ................. .... ,.......... 50 Cents

..,'

imperial

I

SUNDAY ONLY
SVIIIICRIPl'ION llATI!8

•

(Offer Good thru Fob. 291

STARTING AT

not guilty

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) - A
Miami University political
scientist says no one really ·
knows how the Supreme Court"s
newest justice will vote on highly
controversial issues.
Justice Anthony Kennedy,
· sworn in Thursday, Is known as a
. conservative because of his appellate court rulings, but he
seemed to hint of a more liberal
outlook In his Senate conflrmatlon hearings, said Augustus
Jones Jr.
"He may

·- Publlslied each &amp;lnday, '11211 Third Ave.,
GaUipotls, Ohio, by lheOhlo Valleyi'Ub. llahlni Compony/Multlmedla, Inc. se- .
CODd • - pootaae DOkl at Gallipolis,
Oh1o e631. Entered •• leCOnd class
rnatllnt matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Poll
ortlce.
Member: United Press Intematlonal,
Inland Dally Presa Alloclatlon and the
Ohio NewJpa~ Alloclatlon, Nattona. I
Advertlllnl
resentattve, Branham
Newspaper sa es, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

ANYMORE.

OFF
IMPERIAL WALL
COVERINGS ON
ALL SELECTIONS
FROM OUR
IMPERIAL
WALLPAPER
BOOKS.

1\ I &lt;1

CHARLESTON, W.Va. !UPI)
-The state and Anchor Hocking
have agreed to begin talks on
reopening a . Harrison County
glass plant closed by the firm last
year and eliminating 940 jobs.
The order signed Friday In
Harrison County Circuit Court
also says Anchor Hocking will be
allowed to remove certain equipment and molds from the plant,
and pay $1 million to ease
economic losses suffered by the
displaced workers.
"We feel pretty goOd," Moore
said of the order.
"The significance about the
agreeg~ent Is they are coming to
the table and we haven't had
them at the table to talk."
Under the order, the state and

Anchor Hocking will sit down for from removing any equipment
the next 30· days to discuss from the plant.
several Issues, Including:
The ruling issued Friday by
- The reopening of the plant Harrison County Circuit Judge
for the production of a "new
1anl!!l McCarthy delays for 30
product."
'•JYJ the state's request to
Whether the company continue the ban on other equipshould&gt; provide more than the S1 ment in the plant.
million II has already pledged.
Although Moore has fought the
- The possibility of transfer~ removal of any equipment from
ring some laldoff workers to the plant, he said the tempering would be rehired .
other Anchor Hocking plants.
lines and molds listed in the order
"That would be difflcuit til
AnchQr Hocking's parent firm. were not important to reopening shoot for ," he said, adding that 4
Newell Co., decided to close the the plant.
" large porllon " could be
Clarksburg plant last November
"We don't have any use for recalled.
and move the prOduction lines to them," Moore said. "OurwlllingMoore said the $1 million In aid
a sister plant In Lancaster, Ohio. ness to allow Anchor Hocking to for the laid -off workers will be
Moore reacted to the decision have access to the tempering ·transferred to the state next
by suing, the company for $614 equipment shows the state's good week. Under the terms of the '
million, claiming an oral con- will in this ma Iter."
·court order, Moore wlll deter:
tract had been broken by the
If the plant .Is reopened, Moore mine how the money .will be
closure. Moore also received a · sa id It Is unlikely all 940 people spent.
coUrt order banning th0 comp.:!ny

Professor predicts ·Ketmedy .
concerned for justice, equality

CSIMC:TRUCK
rrs N&lt;Yr JUST ATRUCK

30°/o

By BRIAN FARKAS

•

Filing for the Jan. 3 term of
Gallla Cou nty Commissioners
at the Gallla County Board of
Elections were Republican •
George E . Pope, and Demo- :
crats Incumbent J.E. (Dick) ·
Cremeens, Donald L. Walker :
and Flem Meade.
.
Cremeens was incorrectly ·
reported as filing as a Republl- : . .
can In Friday's edition of the :
Gallipolis Dally Tribune. He
flied as a Democrat.

Landfill fire gives off toxic fumes
Coach pleads

HUNKER, Pa. - King David
Thorne, 72, of RD 1 Hunker, Pa.,
died Thursday In MI. Pleasant,
Pa. H~ was a retired coal miner.
Born April 7, 1915 in Wert
County, W.Va., he was a son of
thelateofthelateAivaWandand
Ruth Howard Thorne.
He was preceded In death by
two brothers, Everette and Mi_.
nor Thorne.
-Surviving are his wife, WinIfred Betz Thorne; three daugh- · In the last week of November,
iers, Mrs. Joseph (Dixie) Seve[ 1987.
of West Newton, Pa. , Mrs.

(ALSO AVAILABLE IN
MANY OYHEI COLOIS.) .

446-0404

Charles (Betzy) Leeper, of
Acme, Pa. and ZaneAnnDuffyof ·
Hunker, Pa.; iwo sons, David T.
Thorne Sr., of thinker, Pa., and
Bing D. Thqrrie of Waldorf, Md.;
12 gr~ndchlldren and 7 great
grandchildren; four brothers,
Frederick Thorne of Wellston,
Merchant Thorne · of Canton,
Hubert Thorne of ·Akron and
Ernest Thorne of Thurman; Ada
Phillips of Columbus, Goldie
Davis of Rio Grande, Edna
Ropeter of Ohio and Ruth .Perry
of Athens.
Friends may call at C. Richard
McCauley Funeral Home In
Youngwood, Pa., 2 to 4 p.m . and 7
to 9 p.m. Sunday, where services
will be conducted at 1 p.m . on
Monday, Rev. Charles W. Evans •
officiating. Burial .follows in
Twin Valley Memorial Park,
Delmont, Pa.

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GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.VA.
- James Arnold Hatfield, 79,
Gallipolis Ferry, died Thursday,
Feb. 18, In Holzer Medical
Center, 'Gallipolis, after a short
Illness.
He was born Feb. 8,. 1909 in
Alhalia, Ohio, a son of the tale J .L.
Hatfield and Manha Jane Trent
Hatfield.
· He attended lhe Jordan B~~Ptist
Ch)I!Ch, Gallipolis Feny. He was
an U.S. Army veu:ran of WW II -a
rivennan and a farmer.
'
~ is survived· by two sons,
James Edward Hatfield, Chillicothe, Ohio, and Richard Hatfield,
Kentucky; three brolhers, Drury L.
Hatfield, Gallipolis Ferry, George
"Pele" Forest Hatfield, Gallipolis
Feny, and the Rev. WiUiam "Bud"
Hatfield, GaUipolis Feny and seven
grandsons.
· f!e was preceded by one
daoghler, oile son and one sister.
Funeral services will be held
· Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Jordan Baptist Church with the Rev. Charles
.w. Moses and the Rev. William
"Bud," Hatfield officiating. Burial
will foUow in lhe Beale Chapel
Cemecery, AJIP!e Grove.
·
The body wiU be taken II) the
church one hour prior II) services.
Friends may caU at the Wilcoxen
'Funeral Home, Saturday;. from 2
p.m. Ill 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

•
: King D. Thome

'

...... OMit

.:.

James -A. Hatfield

battle strategy with gimmick•.
Richard Gephardt's amoral
change of tactics Is a classic case
In point. Three weeks before tbe
Iowa caucuses, , the polls reJ
vealed that he was sUpping. He
.poured In massive amounts of
television money, came up with a
couple of mindless, quick-fix
solutions, and Iowans bought it.
Gephardt had not undergone
any moral or Intellectual change
of heart on his personal road to
Damascus. He simply read the
polls.
As Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
warned Americans last November In his landmark Harvard
speech, potential dangers are
built Into our statistical obsession. "Poll,s have ,become the
quintessential pseudo-:events of
the pre-primary Cllmpalgn," he
declared. "It Is the statistical
analogue of false consciousness.
It Is false objectivity."
.
It Is also the consummate con '
job. The voters know It, but they
don't care. Like Columbus' Indians, they are going t~ be
"discovered" every time there Is
an " upset." Voters enjoy being
played for suckers. It means.
somebody cares aboul'lhem.

'We Manage Your Risk,,

COMMERCIAL &amp; PERSONAL

)

•

gambler. After New Hampshire
andJJOing Into the South's " Super
Tuesday," we can expect more
.u psets.
A series of events, moving
Irresistibly toward a foreordained end, wUI be labeled an
upset, because. the experts didn't
see II coming.
Tolstoy called It "fatalism In
history. ;, When something
happens, explained Tolstoy, "at
a certain moment In time," It
"becomes Irrevocable and Is the ·
property of history, In · which It
has a significance, predestined
and not subject to free choice."
You know, que sera, sera· and all
that jazz.
· · i
Ever since 1948 when all the
n&lt;~,tional ~listers predicted Dewey would defea I Truman, they
have continued to make erroneous predictions In state and local
elections. But national polls In
our national quadrennial town
meeting do an awesome disservice to the political process.
They become a subst11111e for
national debate. They replaced
r!ltlonal discussion. They
weaken personal analysis. They
lure the unsuspecting Into an
uneasy alliance with trends. And

HOWARD BAIER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.

HEALTH

Let's be concerned now!
Letter to th~ Editor:
It is of vital ·Importance that
the citizens of Meigs County
Involve themselves In the hazardous waste controversy to ensure
the safety and welfare of our
famllles. Once a facility of this
nature Is built and In operation, It
will be' impossible to deal with the
problems it creates .
In the past, the residents have
closed their eyes and let the
politicians, elected officials, and
community leaders do as they
please with their . lives. The
people ha ve accepted their
views, let them ·vote In their
behalf, and lived with the situation, right or wrong.
Now the tables have turned,
the people have decided to stand
up for their rights as Individuals.
The polltlclans are enraged, and
the business leaders are calling
people communist because they
refuse to he dictated to In this
matter. When In fact, the people
have always been dictated to, by
having issues. shoved In their
faces .
When health and safe ty are the
Issue, the people will not remain
the sllent majority. It Is lime the
leaders of our community rea lize
that public opinion Is ·their first
responslblllty.
We have the right to strong
laws controlling toxic waste and
vigorous enforcement of those
laws. Lei's all band together to
show them what public opinion
really means.
If you are avallble to have
organization meetings In your
area, please contact Paul Wa shington, a t 304-882-2572.
Anyone unable to a Itend meetlngs who would l'lke to contribute
please mall your donations to
MACE, Inc, P .0 . Box 142, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.
MACE needs the help from all
their neighbors In the surroundIng areas. Meigs and Gallla
counties wlU be as much affected
from the transportation of ha-

Pollsters who pontificate about
an election upset sound like Flip
Wllson doing his routine on
Columbus discovering America.
"We came here to discover
y'all," WilSon's Columbus tells
the Indians.
"S'pose we don't want to be
discovered," the Indians reply.
"How you gon' discover us when
we been here all the time?"
So It Is· with the voters In
· presidential election 1988.
They have been there all the
time. They have ·decided on
candidates. T~e problem Is the
pollsters don't know which voters
feel the strongest. That's known
as 1ntenslty, and pollsters don't
know how to measure it. Nor are
pollsters able to assess how
many are likely to .make last. minute switches.
Five-and-a half years ago, a
dramatic last-mlnuteswltch happened when Mario Cuomo scored
an "upset" win over Ed Koch In
New York's Democratic gubernatorial primary. But II was no
upset. The voters simply
switched sides before the pollsters don 't know how to measure
11. Nor are pollsters able to assess
how many
likely to ma~e

last-minute switches.
Five-and-a half years ago, a
dramatic last-mln.ute switch happened when Mario Cuomo scored
an "upset" Win over Ed Koch In
New York's Democratic gubernatorial primary. But It was no
upset . · The voters simply
· switched sides before the pollsters caught on.
In Iowa, Pat Robertson's
second-place victory also was no
upset. His supporters were there
all along. But, · like America's
Indians, they were not waiting to
be "discovered."
The pollsters - and even
worse, Iowa's political expertsthought 'their predictive equations had . ruled out any new
. discoveries. But nobody pre,dlcted . the · ILQ (Intensity of
loyalty quotient).
·
Going Into the remaining primaries, pollsters' will continue ·to
survey, and TV networks will
hustle to predict the outcome
before the polls close. (II helps
their ratings and Increases ad
revenue. ) And voters will continue to show these "experts" the
error of their ways .
Upsets exist onty In the eye of
the beholder. Or In the Odds of the

Hocking, state agree to talk " Correetion
on reopening Harrison County plant

Area deaths.
0

A Division of

Sunday Tmes-Santinel Page A-3

Pomeroy-Middleport-GalliPolis, Ohio--Point Pleaunt, W.Va.

:.

Norris-Nort.hup Dodaa Inc. ~

Ht liJID AYI. .

446·0142

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Psta•

Pomeroy-Midcla~Galllpolis,

A 4 S&amp;ntav Thlae Sentinel

·----

.

....

FebruarY 21, 1988 .

Ohio Point P111unt. W.Va. . -

-Area news briefs.---.

Arrested by patrol, sheriff
GALLIPOLIS - Richard Wlillam Whaley, 25, of Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was arrested by the State Highway Patrol Friday
night .and sent to the county Jail, accQrding to the sheriff's
department. He was charged with OWL He was .released
Saturday morning.
Gregory Allen Northup, 35, of Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was arrested
by the sheriff's department Saturday morning. He was charged
with domestic violence.

POMEROY - Veteran's Memorial Hospital released its
Friday admissions and discharges.
.
Friday admissions were Helen Jeffers, Syracuse; Paul
Montgomery, Langsvllle.
_
Friday discharges were Gladys Cuckler, Gary Cremeans,
Ervin Phillips, Carrie Kennedy, Charles Payne, Mary Eblin,
Patricia Logan, Richard Riling.

EMS answers emergency calls
POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
reports five calls Friday; Scipio Township Fire Department at
1:56 a.m. to a st ructure fire at a house owned by Granvllle
Reeves on Scipio Township· Road 97; Middleport at 1:26 p.m.
was called for James R. Reeves who was treated but not
transported; Syracuse at 3:47p.m. to an auto accident on Route
124; no injuries: Racine at 7:18p.m. transported Heath Hlll to
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 7' 55 p.m . to Silver
Rldg~&gt; Road for Ollie Rivers to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Fire destroys home
ALBANY -The Albany Area and Scipio Township Volunteer
Fire Departments responded to a fire early Ftiday morning
that destroyed a residence on Scipio Township Road 97.
Scipio Township Fire Chief Bob Jewell _reported that his
department was called at 1:56 a.m. Friday to aid the Alpany
Department which had already arrived on the scene and found
the two-story fra me home engulfed in flames .
The house was a total loss and Jewell estimated damages at
about $25,000. Origin of the fire was undetermined.
Jewell sa id a family named Steelllved In the house which was
owned by Granville Reeves.
There were no Injuries. 'Firemen were on the scene two to
three hours.

Couples app(y for licenses
GALLIPOLIS - Several COllples haYe recently applied for
marriage licenses in Ga llla County Probate Court.
Applications were flied by Jody Lee Viars. 20, Rt. I, Bidwell,
and Kathryn Marie Nelson , 18, Rt. 1, Bidwell; Elbie .Eugene
Burgess , 35, 842 First Ave., and Sharon Lee _Henry, 33. Rt. Q,
Bidwell: Gera ld Eugene Campbell, 50, Rt. 1, Gallipolis , and
Marrl Anne Darst, 24, Rt. I , Galllpolis; Keith Herbert Petrie, 32,
237 Second Ave., and Connie Leigh Barnett, 21, 237Second Ave.;
Ernest Ray Meadows, 22, Rt. 2, Crown City, and Usa Gail
Rankin. 22. Rt. 1, Crow n City; Leslie James McCombs, 18,
Eureka Sta r Route. Gallipolis, and Sara Jean Anderson, 18,
Eureka Star Route, Gallipolis; and James Lee Shaver, 38, Rt . l,
Ga llipolis. and Coletta Jean Poole, 40, Rt. I . Gallipolis.

Dissolution, divorce granted

J

GALLIPOLIS- Shar lotte M. Neal, of 5 Edgemont Dr .. and
Jeff Neal. of Gallipolis, received a decree of dissolution In Galli a
Co unty Common Pleas Court Thursday.
John J. Johnston, of 109'h Second Ave .. and Juiia B, Otter
Johnson. of Kolonia, Ponape, were given a decree of divorce
Wednesday in Gallla County Common Pleas Court.

L-----------------------~
-

lmpa~t ,stu~y

HOUSTON tUPi l - A subsidiary of Resource Engineering
Inc. has been awarded a contract
to assess the environmental
Impact of a massive January oil
spill at Ashland Oil Co. in western
Pennsylvania.
The subsid lary, ERT. Is pro-,
viding a broad range of engineering environmental and other
technical services to develop a
detailed natural resources assessment for the area , the
company said Friday.
"BOth sliort-term and longterm ettvlroilmental issues are
being ... res sed. said a state· .
men! tuued by Resource Engineering. "If necessary, ERT will
subsequently develop plans for
remediation efforts."
on Jan. 2. a 4 million gallon
Ashland
011 tank ruptured,
spil,
\
0
00

)

of' slick planned
ling its contents of 3.85 million
gallons .Pf diesel fuel , lncludli\g
770,000 /:allons that went Into the
Monongahela River in Jefferson,
Pa., near Pittsburgh.
The splll moved down the
Monongahela Into the Ohio
River, forcing ~ownriver water
systems lri Pennsylvania, Ohio,
West Virginia and Kentucky
temporarily to stop taking water
from the rivers.
Residents a long the two rivers
were forced to conserve water,
and -thousands of people In the
Pittsburgh area had no tap
walter for several days while the
Intake valves had to be closed.
The cause of the accident
remains under Investigation by
federal, state and local author!·
ties and th_e company.

GALLIPOLIS - In Galllpolls Thomas P. · weyer, 48, New _
Municipal Court Friday, Ken· Concord, $41; Arthur G. Davis,
44, Roxboro, N.C., $37; Terry D.
.neth E. Sowards, 33, of Rt. 2,
27, Ravenswood,
Markham,
Crown City, was fined $100 for
driving without a license.
Rex Darst, 32, of Pomeroy, was
fined $20 for !allure to control.
PhillipS. Milam, 47, of Kenna,
w.v·a ., forfeited a $41 bond for
By ALISON GRANT
not having a highway use tax
decal on his truck.
OXFORD, Ohio (GPI) -'- The
Speeding bonds were forfeited American presil)ency Is In flux,
by WalterS. Smith, 26, of Mason, with an increasing emphasis on •
W.Va., $41; Calvin D. Ferguson, ·direct appeals to the public and
20, Bexley, $41; James Blake. White House management style,
Godley, 36, Mineral, Va., $46;
according to a Miami University
Jeffrey A. Fraley, 21, 513 Magno- political scientist.
lia Dr., $43; RandaiP. Moorman,
"The Nixon presidency is sort ·37, Coldwater, $39; Tammy L:. · of the climax of ttw modern
Bevan, 19, Rt. 2, Crown C!ty,$43; presidency," said Ryan Baril·
Arlee E. Curtis, 18, Rt. 1, leaux, who argues In ' his forthCheshlte, $42; Larry R. Fox, 25, coming book "The Post-Modern
Middleport, $42; Mark D. Griffin, Presidency' ' that a new preslden·
29, 2145 Eastern Ave., $41; David tlal era began In the mid-1970s.
L, Noel, , 36, Lucasville, $37; The book, published by Praeger

TAKING OATH - -Sherrod Brown, lefl, Ohio's
Secr~tary of .State, gave the oath of office to two
members of the Meigs County Board of Elections
when he visited In Pomeroy with his "traveling
office" Friday aflernoon. With lJrown are Mrs.
Evelyn Clark, chairman of the Meigs Board of
Elections who has been reappointed to another

four year-term, and Henry Hunter, new lour year
term board member who replaces 'BID Cozart.
'During Jits visit here, Brown conducted a training
session for eledlon board officials, not only from
Meigs County, but also from VInton, Washington,
Perry, Morgan, and Hocking Counties. (Times·
Sentinel photo)
· ·

OVB names program _assis
program, which provides a broad
' .
.,
range of services to senior
citizens. She will assist the
program's co-ordinator Sue Ann
Bostic.
.
,
Mrs, Fowler will be available
to help customers in the areas of
Rio Grande, Oak Hill, Bidwell
and Porter on' a regular basis.
She will also be in the Main Bank
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) In Gallipolis every Friday and at
Gov. Richard Celeste and two the beginning of each month
other governors are to be guests when government checks · are
on the national Larry King radio mailed.
show Monday night, Celeste
Mrs. Fowler is marrlelj to
aides said Friday.
Harold R. -Fowler apd Is a
Celeste, Govs. Tommy Thomp- graduate of Gallla Academy
son of Wisconsin and Terry High School. She previously was
Brans tad ·of Iowa will discuss the employed by Holzer Medical
economic resurgence of the Center for five years.
Midwest. They will be InterThe Golden Opportunities proviewed by King for one hour and gram offers a wide range of
answer questions from listeners benefits to senior citizens such as
during a second hour.
REDAFOWLER
providing "House Calls" to the .
The program, scheduled to - those who are unable to get to the
Mrs. Fowler can be contacted
begin at 11 p.m. , will be carried bank, helping balance checkat
the Rio Grande branch of Ohio
on Ohio stations in Columbus, books, keeping seniors up to date
Valley
Bank at (6i4) 245-5373 or
Akron, Toledo, Dayton, Cleve- on issues important to them, plus
at
the
Main Bank with Mrs.
land, Youngstown, Cinclnnail, many other banking related
at·
(614) 446·2631.
Bostic
Steubenvllle, Mansfield. Spring- · services.
field, Newark, Marion and rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iJ
Sandusky.
GALLIPOLIS - Reda K.
Fowler, a teller at Ohio Valley
Bank, has been given additional
responsibility as a representa·
live for the Golden Opportunites

Celeste on radio
with King _Monday

University boanl
•
approvestncreases
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
!UP]) - Bowling Green State
University's Board of Trustees
approved -a 5 percent increase in
room and board fees.
The increase approved Friday
will become effective for the
summer semester.

JOIN
TODAY
BE A SHAREHOLDER

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - '
· Evangelist and faith healer Le- , :
roy Jenkins Is planning to take a
crusade to Europe, now that he's
off probation, he says. . ·
Jenkins, who has a church In
Delaware, Ohio, told the Colum-.
bus Dispatch Friday he wants to
preach In Europe for ·a week.

I

462 SECOND AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS
TELEPHONE 446·1 820

We Han Sotnethl•g For E•ery~dy
LOANS -SAYINGS - CERnFICATES OF DEPOSIT I.R.A. ACCOUNTS ..._ MONEY ORDERS - TRAVELERS
CHECKS - CHRISTMAS CLUBS - VACAnON CLUBS
- SHARE DRAn (CHECKING ACCOUNTS)

1'HINGS ARE LOOKING UP - Workers of
Hopkins Canvas are on top of their van putting up an aunlng at the original Bob Evans Steakhouse.

Plans for the :building have not yet been made
public.
'

Meigs County Court

- POME~OY Thirty-one
cases were processed in the
Meigs County Court by Judge
Patrick O'Brien.
Forfeiting· bonds on speeding
charges were Christopher Moon,
Westerville~ $55; Benjamin Ew·
lng, Pomeroy, $55;· Jerry Eads,
Rl9 Gr,ande, $55; G. Chad Gaus.
Rutland, $55; Darwin Caltrldge,
Columbus, $55; Carolyn S. Slidram, West Portsmouth, all
posted on speeding charges, and
Raymond H. Maxwell, ·Ames·
ville, assured clear distance, $50.
Fined on speeding charges
were Timothy Graham, Athens,
$28 and costs; Paul D. Hawk,
Long Bottom, $24 and costs;
Kimberly Stewart, Middleport,
$23 and costs; Bonnie Wisner,
Laurel, ,Md., $22 and costs;
William Osborne, Long Bottom,
$25 and· costs, and Freddie L.
Lewis, Parkersburg, W. Va., $18
and costs.
Other cases heard included:
PA·trlriA A, Boyles, ·Middleport,
1~~~~~=~~!repass, 30 days Jail
:s
to time served, $50
suspended, one year proba·
and costs; Walter Haggy,
cRu,tland. petty theft, six months

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resUtutlon and costs; receiving
stolen property, six months jail
SUSPended, .one year probation,
restitution, costs;
Bruce H. Bissell, Long Bottom,
dtlvlng . while intoxicated, $250,
60 day Ohio license suspension;
three days In )all or $225 fine
applied to three day residential
treatment progra111, alld costs;
Craig C. Foley, Reedsville, two
charges of assault, 30days in Jail
suspended, six . rrionths proba-·

.,

-

·----th-re_e_d_a-ys_J_a_u-su_s_pe-nd-ed-.-s-tx

lion, costs on each charge;
Anthony Reeves, Pagevllle, no
valid registration, $10 and costs; ·
Jeffrey Basham, Coolvi1le, expired license pia tes, $10 and
costs; MichaelS. Miller, Racine,
passing on yeUow line, $10 and
costs; Jamie · Wolfe, Racine,
failure to conttol, $35 and costs,
$15 of fine suspended; Michael
Conley, Portland, left of center,
$35 and costs;
Anthony Reeves; Pagevllle, no
valid driver's license, $100 and
costs, seven days In jail, $50 of
fine and seven days in Jail
suspended if valid operator's
license Is obtained within 60
days; Betty Mankin , Pomeroy,
pit bull attacked goat and killed
rabbits, restitution, $50 and
costs; Michael Norton, Racine, failure to license dogs, attacked
goats and kllled rabbits, $100
fine, suspended $50, restitution,
costs;
Barbara Krautter, Pomeroy,
seven charges of disorderly
conduct; $100 fine suspended, six
months probation, costs on each; .
Tommy Krautter, Pomeroy, four
charges of disorderly conduct,
$100 fine suspended, stx months
probation and costs on each
charge;
. Tracy Klall5er, Chester, four ·
·charges of contrib'4tlng of unrull·
ness of a minor, six months Jail
sentence suspended, one year ,
probation, costs; Keith Pickens, ·
Racine, driving while Intoxicated, $250, six months Jail
sentence suspended to 60 days;
two years probation, two years
. suspension of Ohio license, costs;
Gregory Hicks, Pomeroy, no
motorcycle endorsement, $75,

months probation, costs; unsafe
vehicle, $10 and costs; Terry W.
Johnson, Lakewood, shooting
and attempting to take a deer
from across a public road, . $50
and costs.
A media · report from the
county court recently errone·
ously a 'defendant as Richard B.
Campbell. The name should have
been Robert B. Campbell, Ra·
cine, charged with theft of utility
service.

30°/oOFFON

All DIAMONDS &amp;
WEDDING BANDS
· GOOD UNTIL MARCH 1ST

Tawney Jewellrs
422 ~ND AVE.
C3ALLIPOLIS, OH.

NEll MOlliSON
'· 0.... 361
·Rio Grandt&lt; OH, 45674
' Pltoat: 1614] 245-9319

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MOO&lt;AN WOODMEN
Of AMUICA

sN:£

1883

A ffiME.RNAlliF~ INSUI:AIII(( !.OCttTY
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Sayre's outstanding performance
paced a motivated Gallipolis sales team
into six out of the top ten places. Following Sayre. are Rob Detty at .#2, ~oger
Balser at #3, Tiger Sayre at #5, Gerald
Jividen at #8, and Warren Holley at #10.

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YOur child

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Competing against more than sixty professional sales representatives, Guy Sayre of Turnpike of Gallipolis has em~rged as #1 in the
entire Turnpike organization for the month of January, 1988. The Tu{npike Family of Dealerships is comprised of seven stores, located in.
four different states, and repres~nting ten different aut9motive manufact oru""

We understand how Important your child's
health Is to you. because It's also Important to
us.
And we know the special health care needs
your child has, because children • from Infants
to adolescents • are the only patients we see. ·
Our sta!T of profc;sstonals have the special
training and expertise that ts needed to care for .
chUdren and the types of medical
problems they're likely to encounter. And because we understand that sometimes a smile
and a hug can make ali the 'diJTerence In your ,
chlld's acceptance of medical treatment, we offer
that too.
Health care geared toward your child's needs.
That's what we're here for, and we'll make every
effort to schedule your child's appointment to fit
your busy life.
·
br. William C. Calllhan II IS certified by the
Amertcan Board of Pedtatrtcs and completed
both his internship and reSidency In pediatrics
at Chfldren's Hospital MediCal Center In Akron.
Ohio. He earned his medical (Iegree from the
West VIrginia UniVersity School of Medicine, and
has been In private practice, specializing In
general pediatriC~ and the treatment of
adolescent acne, since 1979.

OJllce Houra: 9 a.m. • noon and 1 • 5 p.m.

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Please join all seven Turnpike Family Dealers In recognizing our
January Salesperson of the Month -Guy Sayre, Turnpike of GaDIpolls.

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HOCKING VALLEY
CREDIT UNIO'N

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IOOJo OFF A VARIETY OF
FABRICS; 1O"'e OFF .LABOR.

NOT JUST ANOTHER NUMBER
CHECK OUT THE

Publishers, is due out in April.
"There will be much greater
attention to budgeting and regulation, there will be much greater
demands on the president as a
manager of the White House and
much greater demands on the
president as a figure In the public
eye, Barilleaux said.
Whereas the chief executive
used to be gauged by his ability to
work with Congress and create
legislative programs, future
presidents will tend to exercise
their "perogaUve powers' ~ to -do
things on their own authority. he
said. -

,
•

0

CROWN CITY
UPHOLSTERY
C1111d Op'"'"l S•l•

A gift that grows in value
and encourages a young
person to think about the
future, that's life Insurance. Let's make plans for
future.

W.Va., $42; Michael L: Wickllne,
19, Rt. 2, Bidwell, and Dale M.
Rice, 26, Huntington, W.Va., $45 .

Presidency ·changing

Evangelist takes
crusade to Europe

Patrol responds to accidents

Sunday nmes-Sentinei-Page-A-6' _-

Municipal court.- -------___;..-- :

continued !rom A·l
Morgan Township, George E.
Pope, S.R. 160, Bidwell; Ohio
ToWDAhlp, Mary Lou Greene, Rt .
2, Crown City; Perry Township,
Alma Stauffer, Rt . 2, Patriot and·
Donald E. Col', PSR; Raccoon
Township, Kathryn Bennett, Rt . ,
2, Vinton, and Kevin Pu111ns, Rt.
2, Bidwell; Rio Grande Town·
ship, Earl G. Morgan, Rio
Grande; Springfield Township,
Carroll C. Brown, Rt 1, Bidwell,
and Patrick D. Stout, Rt. 1,
Bidwell; and Walnut Township, ,
J. Merrill Carter, Rt.), Northup.

GALLIPOLIS- Robin A. O'Connor, 33, of Rt. 1; Ewlngton,
was Issued a warrant by the Gallipolis Pollee Department
Friday afternoon. She was charged with theft.

Veterans Hospital makes report

Pomeroy-Midclaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleaunt. W. Va.

Central Committees

Police issue warrant

GALLIPOLIS - A Galllpolls area man was charged in an
accident Friday, at 6:25 p.m., in Gallla County's Raccoon
Township on U.S. 35, one mile east of the Gallia-Jackson County
line, according to the Gallia-Melgs Post of th'e State Highway
Patrol.
Wayne E _Flint, 20, of Rt.1 , Gallipolis, was charged with DWI
after he, driving east, lost control of his 1985 Chevrolet S-10
pickup truck and Went off the left side of the road. He then hit
construction barricades and crossed the median before
crossing the westbound lanes and ending his travels offtherlght
·side of U.S. 35 west.
A Por-tland woman was cited in an accident Friday, at 3:25
p.m., in Meigs County's Sutton Township, on S.R. 124.
Virginia M. Hendricks, 62, was cited for tailgating after she
rear-ended a 1986 Ford Escort driven by Violet G. Ritchie, 67,
also of Portland.
Ritchie was driving east when she stopped for a westbound
school bus that was discharging children. Hendricks could not
stop In time to avoid bumper contact with Rltchie's·car.
A Vinton area man was cited In an accident_Friday, at 1:45
· p.m., in Meigs County's Salisbury Town.ship on S.R. 7, at the
Junction of County Road 5.
William F . Greenllee, 77, of Rt. 2, Vinton, was ~!ted for failure
to yield after his· 1977 Chevrolet C-10 pickup truck hit a 1981
Oldsmobile Delta 88 driven by Florence M. Richards, 70, of 609
Pearl St., Middleport.
Richards , driving north on S.R. 7, was hit by the truck when
Greenlee, who was heading_west on County Road 5. pulled from
the stop sign and hit the car.

Februrt 21, 1988

Monday through Friday Suite 13 In the Pleasant
Valley Hospital Medical Office Buildl.ng.

hr.,,.........

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caD (804) 875-7800•

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buri~

hospital; heavy rains ·continue to flood

B~ BRIAN NICHOLSoN

tualiy they were flown In by
turned downtown streets Into similar situations In the past. .
helicopters and worked through raging torrents reports said
In many areas of downtown
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil the night aided by
army today. Flooding earlier this and suburban Rio, a city of 7
(UPI) - A mammoth boulder, searchlights.
month killed more than 200 million people, drivers watched
loosened from 1ts moorings by
' helplessly as their cars floated
Rio Health Secretary Jose people
two days of torrential rains, Assad visited the hospital In
Am~ng the first bodies reco- . along streets and smashed Into
careened down a hill and Into a Rio's Santa Teresa district and
vered
fromwere
the second
hospital, burying as many as 100 said he could give no final figures
of
rain
those onslaught
of lout ·
patients and medical staff under lor victims.
children killed In the Rio Com·
tons of ,rubble. officials said
Asked If the figure of "roughly prldo district when their slum
today.
houses collapsed.
100" given by firemen and other
The dlsas ter late Friday raised rescue workers was accurate,
At least 14 people were burled
Rio's unofficial c!ltywlde toll of Assad said, ''This Is the approxi- In the Formlga hillside shantymissing and dead In two days of mate forecast."
town when 10 shacks collapsed
heavy rains and floods to about
under tons of sliding mud.
The Santa Teresa dls.trlct Is
150, according to Radio Jornal do built over steep hUis near the .
The Red Cross summoned an·
Brasil.
·
center of Rio de Janeiro. It
of Its volunteers In a television
The Santa Genoveva Hospital contains many fine old colonial
appeal and civil defense officials ·
was struck as the rains under- buildings and Is a Bohemian and
asked the navy for amphibious
mined a giant )loulder high on the · artistic tenter.
vehicles to reach accident sites In
hillside and sent It crashing
M~teorologlsts said the latest
the 'flat northern areas of the city.
: through part of the building. One downpour was caused by an
The rains Friday halted traffic
' . wing of the hospital was Antarctic cold front and was on Rl 's major freeway lor seven
demolished.
likely to contlnuf: through the hours:
Civil Defense, and fire depart- weekend.
Pollee deployed three companment rescue teams were delayed
The second attack of rain on Ies of troops to prevent looting
for hours In reaching the scene Rio de Janeiro this month un- and the mugging of stranded
because of roads blocked by leashed mudslides that killed
motorists, which l)as happened In
landslides on the hlllslde. Even: from 24 to 50 other people and

Some drivers tied their cars to
trees and posts.
The flooding came only days
after the close of Rio's annual
Carnival
which brought
hundreds of thousands of tourists

•
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E arlier this month
· at leastand
207
landslides
1
people died n
t
flooding In Rio de.Janelro s~=~
The worst hit are~! the~ty 30 •
Petropolts, a moun n c
t'
mUes north of Rio, where at leas ·

February 21, 1988

Max Tawney in Mexico: culture, customs
interesting to Gallipolis' r~sident traveler

r;la=m=ppo=s=ts~.:;:::;:::;:::::;::=====to:t:h:e:c:a:p:lta=l.========l=70::d:led=l=n=la:n:d:s:li:d:es:.====,

Drag, Push or Pull

(Editor's note: · The following
written by Max
account
Tawney of GaUipollll alter his
return from Mexico City, Taw·
ney previously visited Mexico
loD!IWI!IK an earthquake which
left Mexico City In rubble.)
By MAX TAWNEY
for the Times-sentinel
I hav@'just returned from a trip
to Mexico, a country of 80 million
people. Twenty million of them
live In Mexico City which Is
supPQSed to be the largest city In
the world and also the smoggieSt.
They still use leaded gas and the
streets . are bumper to bumper
with over t"'o million cars, .
trucks, and buses. They have an
ozone level of 290 points In the
southwestern area of the city, but
are finally doing something
al!Jlut It by reversing the adverse
effects · of 5 million tons of
pollutants spewed annually Into
Mexico City's air by ,the ·two
million cars and 35,000 Industrial
and comriierclal facilities.
This year .they plan to Install
anti .· pollution mechanjsms on
trucks and automobiles to reduce
the lead content.
Many people die ol cancer and
- respiratory problems every year
In Mexico City because of
pollution.
Although pollution Is a problem
In Mexico City, :some medical
supplles are easy to obtain, and
Inexpensive.
During my visit I lost my eye
drops, which I have to use very
day for glaucoma, and I did not .
think I could find a bottle In
Mexico City. But I went to a drug
.store and asked the druggist It he
carried It, ~e said "yes," so I
asked for one bottle. He told me
that would be $1.83.
For that price I thought It
would be generic or out dated,
but It was made by the Merck
Company. It was the same as I
normaily used. When I looked at
th~ date, .which was 1990, I asked
for two more bottles. I pay $20for
the same thing here In Galllpolls
.and l· c.annot .get It without a '
'pr-eac~lptlon.. .. ,
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' A:man l!i'lrorit
me:tlad just
bought a large amount of some
· kind . o', medicine. I asked him
. -. h~lv much he lllld saved,' and he
told me h~ saved enougb to pay
his air fare down and back from
St. Louis. You can buy most any
medicine In Mexico without a ·
prescription, and a:t a fraction of
the price In United States unbelievable!
On the first night In Mexico
City I stayed In the Queen Isabel

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:Two planes crash·in foggy weather
By United Press International
Jasmine Bltts of Garden Grove
The National Weather Service
Wet weather hung over the said rain showers stretched was crushed to death In Yosemite
Atlantic Coast today and aviation Saturday from northern Florida National Park Thursday night
officials In North Carolina and across parts of Alabama and when a wind-toppled tree fell
New Jersey Investigated the Georgia, and along the Atlantic through the roof of the cabin she
crashes of two planes that went Coast to southern Maine. Rain shared with her mother.
down In fog, while a California also fell In Pennsylvania and
Park spokeswoman Mallory
Windstorm that killed a child and
much of New York state.
'
· Smith S&lt;\ltl the winds reac)jed as
caused more thari $1.5 mllllon In
Minor flooding was reported In high as 60 mph, and · worried
. damage began to weaken.
northern Florida, and nearly an officials evacuated several
In North Carolina, al112 people Inch of rain caused flooding on hundred campers.
aboard a twin-engine commuter the Christina River near WilA windstorm packing gusts as
plane were kllled when the plane mington, Del.
high as 90 mph passed ihrough
crashed In a wooded area on
Snow fell in eastern New York the area Tuesday night and
takeoff from the Raleigh- state and Inland New England, Wednesday morning, leaving a
Durham Airport Friday night.
with Montpelier, Vt., reporting 4 half-mllllon people temporarlly
' "The plane Is In several small Inches. Snow also dusted parts of without power. Four deaths were
pieces," said airport spokeswo- Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois and · blamed on that storm, and rescue
man Teresa Damiano. "My the Dakotas.
boats were searching for one
Information Is this Is the largest
In Callfornla, a violent wind- man repor.t ed missing at sea.
loss of life In the last 14 years at
storm ripped through the central
this airport."
I'
and southern part of the state
V.H. Steed, spokesman for the :I'hursday night .and Friday,
Federal Aviation Admlnlstral
toppllng a tree that kllled a
tlon's regional office In Atlanta, . 9-year-old girl. The windstorm
;, o.s.,.. ..,Mbt~~~~~~SNP... Ovawty
said weather may have been a
also Injured at least 12 people,
factor In the crash, but other forced dozens of residents to flee
offlclals · discounted that
their homes and caused more
possibility.
than $1.5 million In damage.
"It was foggy up there, but you
The National Weather Service
know we have no Idea what said the second bout of gale-1orce
caused the crash," Steed sal d.
Santa Ana winds this week would
"They won't know until they look taper off to less ihan 30 mpl:l by
at the crash site."
Saturday morning.
Another small plane crashed
The gales also downed power
..,. ............ C.C.•IFriday night near Pomona· lines, sparking several fires and
Atlantic City International Air- cutting electr.lclty to more than
"" , ·, .... "' Ia.
port In New Jersey, kllllng all six 112,000 Southern Californians be0...
"U PI
people abo~rd. The crash oc- fore subsiding Friday evening.
curred as the plane was making a
No new damage was reported
landing approach In fog and Friday night. ~
C~tdft'TIIIRS ~- .
heavy rain.
"It's really calmed down," a
The cause of the crash was not sheriff's dispatcher In hard-hit
We CarTY Our Own Accounts.
known.
San Bernardino County said.

LEAP YEAR BmTBDAY - Bom on Feb. Z8, BettY llem's
. birthday coines but once every four yean. This WiD .be the 16th
lime around lor Betty who was bom In 1124.
1

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Leap Year is special
Jot 'Sweet 16'~ birthday

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OSHAKATI, Namibia (UP!)Pollee t~ay investigated the
explosion of a suspected terrorist
bomb In a crowded bank at
lunchtime that kllled at least 15
people and injured 40, with the
death toll expected to rise.
Pollee Sgt. Leon Rust said the
bomb exploded about 12:45 p.m.
Friday in the lobby of the First.
National Bank in Oshakati, an
administrative and mllltary center In the north of the South
African-controlled territory.
Pollee sealed o(f the burning
building as . hospital personl)el
removed · bol!ies from the site
where at least i5 people died and
40 others were injured. It was the
worst blast in the 22-year guerrllla war waged by the Southwest
Africa People's Organization
against South. African administration of Namibia .
Sources In Oshakati, 250 mlles
north of the capital of Windhoek,
said the bank was jammed with
customers F'rlday - payday for
government employees - and
security 3!flclals had closed the
doors because of overcrowding.
. A spokesrpan at the pollee
morgue. where the bodies were
taken, said, "We can be sureofl5
dead."
Rust said, '"We can be sure of
between 12 and 15, but we were
told' that could doubJ( .because
there were lots of very serious
Injuries. "
·'The original reports said up to
30 dead," Rust told United Press
International by telephOne from
Windhoek, capital of the former
German colony also known, as
South West Africa.
An Oshakatl hospital spokesman said, "The death toll is sure
to rise appreciably over the next
tew days," while a government
source In Windhoek said at least
30 people died In the blast and
dozens were badly Injured.
"It looked horrible," a reporter tor South West Africa Broad·
casting Corporation said. "There
were dead and Injured people
lying all around."
Rust sa ld pollee suspected
SWAPO ot planting the 55 pounds
o! explosives In the bank IOI)by ·
But Hlblpo liamutenya, a spokes.mAn for SWAPO's poll tical wing,

denied ' the group wa$
responsible.
"The bomb Is part of South
Africa's dirty propaganda campaign to smear the name of
SWAPO," be said In a statement
from Windhoek.
The same bank was bombed In
January 1987, when a child was
killed, newspaper and television
reports said.
Rust said exiled SWAPO
leader Sam Nujoma said recenllY the movement will take Its
war Into the heart of N amlbla,
which has about 1.1 million
Inhabitants.

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• • • ~ COUPON ••• • •

L11on Mo••••nt Co.
LOgin. Ohio
1; Pie- send me FREE booklela
showing memorials printed In IIIII
color with lites and prlceallstMI.
~~ Kindly hove an author1Md Logan
Monumanl Co. repre~f''ltatlvl call
atmyllome.
:. · Pte- send me dttalla aiiOut

'

he knew the city llke a pro. We
would get off and walk a mlle or
two then ride 5 or 10 mlles.
It was a real pleasure to be wllh
this student and I told him It was
worth more than ·$4 per hour., I
offered him my watch but he said
he needed the money. He already
had a watch· and was going to get
married March 12.
The next day I took a trip to
Cuernavaca where a lot of
Americans llve. Many rich Mexl·
cans also have summer homes
there. In Mexico you are rich If
you own your home and have a
car. There are many rich people
In Mexico, but there are lots
more poor ones than rich ones.
I asked at least 10 or 12 natives
what they thought of their
president and the way he was
running the country - not one
had a good word for him. Most
told me the president was a
crook, and that all of his cabinet
members, Including his cronies,
stole money while In office.
The past president bought a
mllllon -dollar yacht, owns land
In Switzerland, Japan, and the
U.S.A. Sq how could he do this on
$100,000 a year salary?
Presidents are appointed.' for
6-year terms so they feather their
nest whlle they are In office.
The Mexicans will get a new
president this year, but he Is
selected by the out -going
president.
In my opinion they wlll never ·
pay their debt to the U.S.A. or
any other country as long as this
(See TAWNEY, 85)

Max Tawney in downtown Mexico City

Hotels want ro ·wow vacationers .t:his season ·

I,

plete with waterfalls, aquatic
· By BOB WEBSTER.
and even rentable
playgrounds
UPI Business Writer
Islands.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The
In Puerto Rico, for example,
natjon's leading hotel chains are
Hyatt
created a 1,776-foot "riverspending bllllons of dollars to
pool."
In Arizona, a water
lure living room legumes and
sofa spuds from the cozy COrn· playground has been created
forts. of home to mind-boggling based on the design of the
H~nglng Gardens of Babylon.
fantasy resort destinations.
"People want escape, but with
Despite the trend-setting talk
dual
careers and hectic scheof social demographers who say
dules,
they can't afford to take
the latest fashionable thing to.do
the
time
for a six-week trlpdown
Is stay at home, hotel executives
...
the
Amazon
OF a trek across
are banking on the notion ' that
India,"
said
AI
Kelly, Hyatt's today's travelers want to be
senior
vice
president
of resorts.
wowed more than ever.
'
Along
with
such
competitors
as
"At the same time, people
want to Indulge In the fantasy of a Westin Hotel Co. and Marriott
little bit of decadence," said Corp., Hyatt Is carving a niche In
Darryl Hartley-Leonard, pres!· the resort market, which accounts for about 30 percent of
dent of Hyatt Hotel Corp.
"I think the reason for staying hotel industry revenue.
As the competition heats fo.r
at home Is exhaustion from the
this·
travel segment, hotel com·
· pace of life," Hartley-Leonard
are bulldlng fantasy re·
panles
said. "We talk to this Issue.
sorts
highlighted by elaborate
. ' "When you travel you don't
pools,
hanging
gar(jens, waterwant to be hassi~ anymore. For
'
ways
and
spas.
.
·a . brief period of time, people
Hyatt
now
operates
11
resorts,
want to be removed from
ranging from the Hyatt Regency
reality.••
,. .The Chicago hotel company Is Waikoloa In Haw all to the $35
1 . IT'S YOUR TIME, LADIES - .Just as 111111 anUque Leap Year ' In tile midst of a five-year $3 million renovation of tbe Hyatt
card from tile co11ee&amp;t0it of Fred'and Franca Goegleln Implies, It's
billion spending plan to build a Cerromar ' Beach Resort in
l~ ~~~. to , _ . ladles.
string of fantasy resorts com· Puerto Rico.
The company Is pursuing plans

I Street or Route _ _ __
or Town------

••••••••• ••••• •
..:ll.ujoj N~UI:I:IIaE,NTS ARE OUA ONLY
NOT A SIDELINE , . ,

11
LOGAN MONU.ENT
CO., INC.
VINTON, OHIO
W.MtlnSbMt

;Auto ·dealers travel a ~
B~l_OIIN M. LEIGHTY

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Fight The Bug With .. ~

ura Feature Wrltel'
~

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Sl\1'1 FRANCISCO (UPI) -'A "ltrellcl!nlc" tor

• . the nation's auto dealers rouncl that a big
•
percentage or tl50ie In tiM! occupation are riding a
roeJcy ~ k!W~ poqr~.....,...
••
Hlp lllo6G prtM111tt, -. . 1tOd.Y tat an4:
inCI
ob'HI ..acll . . . ••AI tilt blalth
• rlaka IIored
1,1110 peropJe felted at lilt ~National
' A~ llealen AllllclaUoit eGIIVelltlciD ·In

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•••• ~A~to~':.--=:rl.=.:
•
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:, atten~blc•• t11111t 1lkiGt ;a atl:tf wu over
&gt;

••••
•
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in Mexico City

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Mallaol'euma without obligetlon . .

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Sl\eraton which cost over $100 per
night. The next day I went one
block down the street at the Del
Angela and got a beautiful room
lor $22. Quite a difference . .
I called my friend Enrique
Araya whom I met at a Lions
Club meeting last year and told
him I was In town. He said that he
was glad that I ·was In Mexico
City, and said he would pick me
up at 8 p.m. and take me to the
prize fights. There was a tournament of eight fights that night
and we ha~ good seats. What a
great night. ·
·
The 'first two fights were fair,
but the third one was ?lgged, and
we could clearly see that there
was a lot ot money bet. The
referee stopped the fight In the
third round. He had to be In on It
too. When he stopped the fight, It
Center of activity
was plain to see that It was fixed
because the young boxer fell with
just a llttle tap on 'the head.
The only thing that . fs a real
Then a fight broke out among bargain Is transportation. Buses
the fans- just one row behind us . and subways all over Mexico City
Enrique said "let's get over to .only charge a nickel - they
the other side," and It was a good. advertise they have the cheapest .
thiiig because the fights were transportation In the' world.
right where we had been sitting.
I met a college student by the
Finally the pollee broke them name ol Aaron Albarran who
up and we got our "bloody" seats worked at an outside cafe. I
back. The other five prize fights asked him how much he made
were very good.
and he told me $4.50 per day plus
Our dollar Is equal to $2,165 of lips. Then I asked him how he
theirs. I cashed a $20 traveler's would like to make $4 an hour to
check and got over $40,000 In take me around the clly.
pesos. I saw many $50,000 and
He agreed to meet me at my
$100,000 denominations, but don't hotel at 7 a.m. the following .
be fooled,. things are not cheap In morning. We rode the subway
Mexico.
and buses all over Mexico City as

or

'

Comenlent

Terrorists suspected
of bo~ing bank

•

1

•

.,

:100," llld Ttr-. Baa • \ 411...,•• GISt. Selina

tunctlolll.

::m
•li'ell

free to ~Jeaatea a51d their
NADA becallle the hllh
billy ,ICbedulea of car
keep tbem from11tldD&amp; annual

.

are better auto' dealers ..
'

lliiiW1Id tblt 211 peiCftt of thole
pl'lll'!lre, or
of
lJ pereeat ofAattrloaltl

.--.t

blood

...-w-e

Ia tile llfillal

"My blood pressure Is up a little from last year,
but It's nothm. to .worry about," said Key as he
took off a shoe and sock so a probe could be
attached to his root ror a body fat check. "If! find
I've aot a problem, then .I can iO to a physician
when I get home. It's a Jfl!at llttle checkup."
H8111en said the average choleilterol level of
thoae tested feU~ 210 and 220, hllher tban
the optimum ror 11111!1 health. This ra~ a
wandna flag, be aald, becaUJe It means an above
average rllk of heart disease,· the nation's No. 1
killer.
On other testa, the averaae body fat of men was
20 pereeat alld It should be 1&amp;; for women It
ave.-qed 21 pereent and It should be 23. These
multi, said Rauen, were tied to dl~ and fitness

ciHierfrom Lu Crucel, N.M., qjd
tie felts, wblcb have t:een attaed . routblel.
·
·
OOIMIJltlou, ben. . be iii¥W
cat Wible, wbo 1'11111 a dealenblp In Medina,
Oblo, qld llewaaCIIIIcldDIOII hlscholtaterollevel
becallle Ill Jl8d bJJ I II 001\1 Ill')' IUI'Ifl')' 18

.......

a

Growth expectations were Jo:
wered about 5 percent for last .
year for the lodging Industry,
stemming from the 1986 Tax
Reform Act that reduced tax
Incentives for new construction
and an oversupply of rooms In
several markets.
"In general the growth of new
rooms Is slowing after tlie - ·
tax-law changes" Sheckler said.
"But we're looking at a slightly
more positive outlook for the
lodging Industry ."
Moreover, analysts are unsure
how profitable the new fantasy
resorts will be.
"I think thercould fly. but that
type of thing Is going to be much
more expensive to build.''
Sheckler said. "it could be a
draw but I can 'I say dollarwlse
how they wlll do.
Although fantasy resorts are
expensive to operate, customers
pay for their •pleasure. Jl, typl&lt;;lit ·
room costs about $220 a dri/1
compared with about $90 for a
conventional Hyatt room.
The high prices are not keeping
customers away. Hyatt's J{awallan fantasy In Maul, for •
example, operates at about 90
percent occupancy.

road during hfalth test

have checks oti !hell,.·blood preaa11re, chol~terol
Ieveii, · body tat •. bl&amp;d auear, alld pulmonary
HaDMnsald
Wives, wu

to bulld fantasy resorts on the
Caribbean Islands of Aruba, St.
John, St. Croix and Barbados.
Within five years, Hyatt plans to
have 26 fantasy resorts
worldwide.
Hyatt also has targeted Hawall
as a fantasy destination, al·
though Hartley-Leonard said be
favors Australia and the deserts
of the United States as prime
fantasy centers.
"Australia Is like going back In
time to what the best of Amerlta
was," he said. "The Pacific Rim
Is just perfect for fantasy."
Hyatt International, the subs!·
diary responsible for developing
International properties for the
company, Is bulldlng five resorts
In Australia.
Analysts said the willingness of
the hotel giant to,push ahead with
plans tor new resort construction
Is a sign of lndustrv maturity and
an Indication that hoteliers are
having to hustle more to generate.
revenue.
·
"These lodging companies are
segmenting the ma.rket by tar·
geting a specific point. Each type
has a different prospect," said
Sarah Sheckler,
lodging and
leisure analyst with Duff &amp;
Phelps Inc. In Chicago.

months earlier. He a'so had a blood pressure test
which showed a normal reading.
"There's no quesllon we're In a high-stress · ·
occupatiOn," said Wible. "When I sta.·ted In the :
business 30 years ago, you could fly by the seat of · ·
your pants. Now there's computeru11tion, com- ·
plexlty and Intense competition.
"Only the efficient wiD suryive. You'veaotto be
strong and you've aot to be smart." .
Han!ll!n said the mobile testtng team was able to ;
check 1, '100 people Ia 23 houn With the mults ·
being posted within a half·bour of the exams.
~·
'11's an art and aiCieneeto be abletosetupalld : :
handle aucb 1 large IJ'Iiup of people," said - ",
Hansen, addlna that the GTX.aervlce Ia available .
to bullnes!ll!l, con\l•l,tklt• at otber ptherlJiil.
"Our coal Ia to llelp ldellttry health·related
problema," said Bannn. ''lt'a a v.ey 111mp1e
premise - ~u can't cbaqe wbat you 4on't
kllOW'. ,,,

'

"

�I

Pea•

B-2-Sunct.y Tm11 Sanlinel

James Sands:

~21.1988

Pomarov-Midcleport-G811ipolis. Ohio-Point Plnrnt. W.Va.

Gallia's intersting, prominent blacks

BYJAMESS~

. rights. We find ·his name con·
nected with a nurnbei of cases
In 1870 there were more blacks
that threw Armistead Into the
living In Gallla County than In
fires of controversy. In 1897
Franklin, Lucas or Cuyahola. In Charles Armistead became the
factln 1870 when
only Gallla Countlan that we
somj! 2802
know of to run for Atiorney
black~ called
General of the State of Ohio.
Gallla County
Armistead was one of the
home, Gallla
organizers of the Negro Protec·
ranked fourth
tive party whloh ran a full slate of
&lt;~mong all Ohio
candidates In 1897. This party
cuuntles In the
had been organized as a protest
total number of blacks. The black
against the ·. high number of
population In Gallla County grew . lynchings In America. Between
fr~m a handful In the 1820's to 522
1890 and 1900 over 1000 blacks
ln·1830 to 2802 following the Civil · were lynched IJI the u.s. In 1897
Wjlr. However, after 1870 we find · there had been a lynching In
thj! black population In the
Urbana, Ohio by a mob.· Armis·
county declining. It was 2281 in
lead and others were outraged at
1900.
the lack of protection offered by
'The occupational opportunities
the governor In this case.
of. these blacks coming Into
Armistead received only 453
G$llla County wete fairly broad
votes In the state and only 7.In his
ranged In the middle and late
home county. Blacks In 1897 were
19th century. Living In Gallipolis
still. staunchly Republican. The
wf;&gt;re black doctors,' lawyers,
Negro Protective Party . was
secretly funded by the Demo·
grocers, educators, and other
blislness ,and professional pee·
cratic Party with the notion that
plj!. The house we feature. today
lf the Democrats could not get
was the doctor's office for two
blacks to vote Democratic, at
bli1ck doctors ln. the 1890's and
least they would not vote
early 1900's. They were Dr.
Republi~an.
Newsome and Dr. Jordan.
· In the 1870's there were at! east
Probably the first black doctor 3 black owned grocery stores·
In Galllpolts history was Dr.
Cousins, M!ller, and Young's.
Noah Elliott who came from New Washington Viney ran a feed
York to the Old French City grinding operation on Olive
about 1866.
Street and there were four or five
J)ne black lawyer who stands owned blacksmith shops and a
ou.t In Galllpolls history in the last
number of cabinetmaking·
century was Charles Armistead,
carpenter shops.·
wllo made a ll!e pursuit of
Some of the most highly
Protecting blacks In southern . educated people . In Galllpolts
Ohio and West VIrginia when could often be found in the black
th:ey had been denied the! civil

Who and what are
the senior citizens?
..

:DEA&amp; READE.RS: For at least
ti!t last five years variow versions
o~ "Senior Citiuns" has crossed my
desk. Dozens of people have
claimed authorship. I tuive no idea
who wrote the first one, but if I had
tctbet my life I'd go with the Vassar
graduate who read her composition
at. a class reunion.
· . Here is one of the snappier
yersions. I hope you enjoy it as
much as I did.
PROFILE OF A SENIOR
: WHO is a senior citizen? WHAT
is one? A senior citizen is one who
here before the Pill and the
population explosion: We were
J:tere before TV, penicillin, polio
shots, antibiotics. open·heart sur·
gery and hair transplants. Before
(rozen food, nylon, Dacron, Xerox.
Kinsey, radar, fluorescent lights,
credit cards, ball·point pens and
Frisbees.
For us, time-sharing meant togetherness, not computers or con·
dos. Co-eds never wore slacks. We
were before panty hose and driP'
dry clothes, before ice makers and
dishwashers, clothes dryers, freezers
a.nd electric blankets. Before Hawaii
and Alaska became states. Before
men wore long hair and earrings
.and before women wore tuxedos.
We were before Leonard llernstein and Ann Landers, plastic, the
40-hour week and minimum wages.
We got married first and then lived
together. How quaint!
Oosets were for cllJt·hes - not for

was

Pomeroy- Theannuallncome
tax ritual is In full swing, and the
OVAL bookmobiles have added
some titles to help users understand the new tax laws.
For those with new tax forms in
mind OVAL has added the
ofttclal 1988 IRS T~x Guide and
the Essential Guide to Wills,
Estates, Trusts. and Death
·Taxes. The popular J.K. Lasser
. titles: 1988Qulck and Easy Taxes
and Official Tax Guide for Small
Business - 1988. ;
The bookmobll~ staff are not
trained lax consultants, and
cannot provide information to
individuals on what may or may
not be deducted. F.alllng short of
· that they can provide service
users with the forms they need
for the annual ritual.
Bookmobile Service Is provided In Meigs County by the
Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries (OVAL) .
Monday: Dexter, 2:30-3 p.m;
Danville (Church), 3: 35·4: 05
p.m.; Rutland (Civic Center),
4:45-5:15 p.m.
. Tuesday: Portland (Post Of·

coming out of. We were before
Grandma Moses, 'The White Shad·
ow," Frank Sinatra, Battnan, Her·
block and Miss Peach. Girls wore
Peter Pan collars and thought
cleavage was what butchern did.
We were before vitamins, dispos·
able diapers, Jeeps, pizza, lilce-lifts,
Cheerios, instant coffee, decaffeinat·
ed anything, and McDonald's. We
thought fast food was what you ate
during lent. We were before Boy
George and Chiquita Banana. J!e.
fore FM radios, tape rrtorders,
electric typewriter&amp;; boom boxes,
word processors, electronic mwic
and disco dancing.
In our day; cigarette smoking
was fashionable; gnm was for
mowing. Coke was a refreshing
drink, and pot was something you
cooked in. If we had been asked to
explain CIA. NATO, UFO, VCR,
GNP, MBA, BMW, HMO, SOl,
NFL, JFK and MS - we'd have said
"alphabet soup."
We are today's senior citizens, a
hardy bunch when you think of
how our world has changed and the
adjustments we have had to make.
I'm pretty proud of w. - A.A.R.P.,
GIAPTER 2889, ELMHURST. N.Y.
DEAR ELMHURST: SO am' I. The
next letter should be of interest to
you.
Dear Ann Landers: For several
years I have authored a weekly
column, "Retirement Road," for
the Hammond Times in Indiana. In
appreciation of the inspiration and

Communitr calendar

Between 1916 and 1919 some 1!50

churches and schools In town.
Just as an example the principal a'u(os were made by the Patter·
of Lincoln School from 1908 to sons were unable to get funding
1913 (Edward Bouchet) ws the ·for mass production and so In
time the company got Into the
first black graduate of Yale.
business of building custom
Bouchet also' became the first
American back to earn a docto- bodies for specialty trucks like
milk delivery vehicles.
rate from an American unlver.
In due time, Patterson began
slty as well as the first black ever
the
manu!acturlrig of school
to be nominated for Phi Beta
buses
and bouse trailers. The
Kappa.
firm
strapped
for operating
In the more modern age we
captlal
during
the
Great Depres·
find SI1Ch buslne~s and professlon
was
cobvlnced
by Dr.
sional people In the black com·
Charles
Holzer
Sr.,
to
move
to
munlty as Dr. Jeanette Emerson
·
Gallipolis
where
on
Sycamore
who was probably the first doctor
of chiropody In Gallla county as Street lrt 1938 . and 1939 school
buses were bUilt. ·
well as such successful bus!·
Unfortunately what was proba·
nesses as Robinson's Electrlce
bly
the largest black owned·
·Service which has been In operabusiness
In Gallla history lasted
tion for a half of ~ century.
in Gallipolis only briefly due to
Perhaps the most Interesting
competition from the Superior
TillS 1840's era house serveda 1 the office for Dr. Newsome IIDd
black owned business In Galllpo·
Bus
Company
of
Indiana.
But
In
Dr.
Jordan. throughout Ita hlalory, GaiUa County bas hlid a
Us history was shortllved here
the
1930's
Patterson
school
buses
number
of lntereetlng black persons lb the business and
but had a rich history prior to
In
every
state
east
could
be
found
professional
world, lnclndlng a family that aold school busses In 25
coming to town. That was the
of
the
Mississippi
River.
states.
·
Patterson Auto Body Works
which was brought t&lt;&gt;" Gallipolis
from Greenfield, Ohio In 1938 by
the Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce. Patterson's lasted
POMEROY - Tbe MeigS Coun· . The Senior Center Is sponsor· wlch, oven browned potatoes,
here but a few years.
ty Senior Citizens Center, Mull!- lng a trip to New York City and cole slaw, cake.
Patterson Auto Body Works
erry Heights, Pomeroy, Invites all the Pennsylvania Dutch Country
Thursday - Turkey slice,
had Its orlgtns In the 1870's when
elderly of the county to participate for April 26-30. Included In the mashed potatoes, broccoli, fruit.
C.R. Patterson began bUilding
In activities. The schedule for the trip will be a three-hour cruise
Friday- New England boiled
buggies In Greenfield. C.R.'s son
week of Feb. 22-26 Is:
around Manhattan Island, visit dinner, peach half with cottage
Fred became tbe .first black
Monday - Round and square the Empire State buldlng, the cheese, cornbread, fruit.
graduate of Greenfield High
dance 1·3, exercise class 3:15.
.Statue of Liberty, a Broadway
Choice of beverage available
School and later earned a degree
Tuesday- Chorus to America· Show, tour the Amish country, with meal.
from Ohio State. By the 1910's
re-Pomeroy for birthday party stop at Chocolate World In HerFred began experimenting with
at 1:15, physical fitness 11: 1~.
shey, Penn. Contact the Center
the production of ail automobile: .
Wednesday
Socllll
Security
for further Information or to
In 1916 the first Patterson·
Representative 10-12, knitting clr' make reservations as soon as
Greenfield automobile rolled out
cle 10-12, physlclll , fitness 11:15, possible.
of the plant.
bingo 1·2, bowling 1:30, bridge 1·3,
The Senior Nutrition Program
exercise class 3: 15.
menu for the week Is:
Thursday - Physical fitness
Monday - Creamed chicken on
11: 15, ql!llting, cards, games, biscuit, mashed potatoes, mixed
vegetables, sliced peaches.
bingo 1-2.
Friday - Quilting, games,
Tuesday - Ham loaf sweet
round and square dance 8-11 with potat~s, lima beans, ~kJe, ·
music by True Country~ admls·
Wednesday - Beef BBQ sandston $1.50 per person.

Senior Citizen Center plarzs activities.. . .

r--------,..---

Ann
Landers
.._ ....

_

ANN IANDEIIM

'Jinalb

c.e.ane,

,

Maternity Foshions F,rom Lingerie To Finer
Dresses For SpeCial Occasions.
Infant Clothing 0·24 Month.

0

The Maternity Orchard
230 Broadway, JackSOn • 286·2569
Open Tueo.-Wed.-Thuro-Sot 9:30-6:30 ·
Mon. &amp; Fri. till 8:00
'

Family Hair Care Canter

4:40.5: 35; Addison (Townhouse),
218, 2:20-2: 35; Church's store
5:45-6: 00; Georges Creek (Kelly
(218), 2: 45·3: 15; Mercervllle
Drive), 6:10-6:40; Kanauga 5th · (church), 3: 20·3: 45; Swain's
Ave., 6: 50·7: 10; Foster's Mobile
store, 4:00-4: 15; supper 4: 30·
home park rt. 7, 7:15-7: 40i K&amp;K
5:00; Crown City, . 5:05·6:05;
Trailer Park Rt. 7, 7:45-8:05;
Grace Shafer (Hannan Trace
Thursday, Feb. 25- Mudsock,
Rd), 6: 20-6: 35; Ohio Townhouse,
6: 45· 7: 10; Kenny's Carryout,
GALLIPOLIS- Dr. Samuel L. ' 3: 15·4: 00; Patriot Post Ottlce,
7:25·7:50; Teen's Run, ~:00-8:25;
Bossard Memorial Library, 4:15-4: 40; Cadmus (old school),
Saturday, Feb. 27 - CrouseBookmobile Schedule Is as fol· 5:00-5:30, Gallla (old school),
5: 45-6: 10; Centerpoint, 6: 25beck, 10:00-10: 30; Gallla
lows for the week of Feb. 22-27:
METRO Estates - two loca·
Monday, Feb. 22 - Geiger 6: 50; C.entervllle, 7: 00· 7: 45; Mea·
dowbrook, 8: 05-8: 30;
lions, Office, 10: 45·11: 15; Hill,
(160), 10:00-10: 15; Ewlngton
Friday, Feb. 26 - Fast Stop, 11: 20·12: 00; Lunch 12: 00·12: 30;
10:20-10: 50; VInton, 11: 00·11: 30;'
1:00-1: 15; Banes, 1: 20-~: 30;
Dyer (VInton), 11 : 35-11 : 45;
Allee, 1: 00·1: 30; Vinton, 1: 45·
lunch 11: 45·12: 15; Gallla Chris- Youngs, 1:35-1: 45; Frankllns 2: 15; Morgan Center road, 2:20(Clay l!hapel), 1:55·2: 10; Myers
2: 50; Morgan Center, 3:00-4:00.
tian School, 1:00-2: 30; Kerr
(P.O.), 4: 15·4:35; BIDWELL 4
stops: Old school 4: 45-5: 10; Nolaos, 5: 15-5: 35; Carl Phillips,
5: 45·6: 00; William Henry, 6: 02,
6: 15; Cochrans (Adamsville),
6:20·6: 45; Deer Creek, 6:55-7: 10;
Deer Creek Church, 7:15-7: 30;
Rio Grande Estates, 7: 45·8: ·30;
Tuesday, Feb. 23 - Porter,
1:30-1:50; Eno. 2:00-2:20; Africa
Road, 2: 25·2: 40; Kyger ,(Sisson),
2:45-2: 55; Kyger (Rupe), 2: 57.3: 07; · Roush Lane, 3: 15·3: 30;
Roush Lane II, 3: 35-~: 00; supper
4: 00-4: 30; Cheshire (old school),
flee). 4:00·4:30 p.m.; Letart
Falls (Effie's Restauranl), 5: 00·
5: 45p.m.; Racine (Bank), 6:307:30 p.m.; Syracuse (BallField),
7:45-8:30 p.m.

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I,

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30°/o to 70°/o On AH Wall

30% OFF On ALL. Levelor Blinds
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SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

448·3131

.'

REVIEW PROCESS- ~r. Donna Stahl, rlcbt, repreieat1n1 the
American Cf!Hege of Surieon&amp; during the recent silrvey of Ro'-er
¥e~ Center, reviews !lrlterla .for approval of the b011pltal
ciiiiCer program with Charles). AdklnsJr.,chlefexecattve oftleer.

HMC cancer program

•

'I

I

ti

~

G ALLIPOLIS~

Gallja County
torlcal Society meets Sun·
day; board meeting at 1 p.m.,
general meeting 2:30 p.m.
&amp;peaker Betty Kratz on Maybelle
Mcintyre. Meeting at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church.

' u l

GALLIPOLIS - Tite1 Com·
mlttee .o n Approvals of the ComlJllsslon on Cancer of the Amerl·
can College of Surgeons has
again grante&lt;j a three-year ap·
proval to the f!blzer Medlc.al
Center's cancer program, according to Charles I. Adkins, Jr.,
chief executive officer.
Dr. Donna Stahl, representing
the American College of Sur.·
geons, came to Holzer Medical
Center to survey the Tumor Re·
glstry and the cancer program
for approval.
..
· An approved .ca:ncer program
must provide an. educational,
multidisciplinary exchange on
cancer patient mangement. en·
·courage quality control and audits, and monitor the success of
primary and secondary treat·
ment through long term followup. The Approvals Program was
established by the American Cotlege of Surgeons In 1956 to encourage the best in cancer ther·
apy.

'

Two Meigs County fire depart·
!llents have benefited through
the Rural Community Fire Protecllon grant program.
.
They are the Rutland Volunleer Fire D!,!partment and the
Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department, Tuppers Plains.
The program Is administered
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of
Forestry, and the program meney can be used only for the
purchase of fire related . equip·
men I and protective clothing. It
Is. also. a · 50·50 matching fund
·program so that fire department
must Invest Its own money to
taKE part.
The Orange Township Fire
Department, with Roger Wilford
as chief, received a $3,000 grant
and matched that' figure lor a
$6,000 expenditure and pur·
chased 17 coats, 2 pairs of pants,
two pairs of boots, a 6,000 watt
generator an~ four rechargeable
lights.
·
The Rutland . Volunteer f!re
Department, with Bill William·
son as chief, spent $5,000 provld·
ing $2,850 of the total with Its
grant amounting to $2,150. The
department received six pagers
and chargers and relocated the
siren with· the purchase of wire
and two 30-foot steel poles so that
the relocation could be carried
out.
J.M. Milliron, forest manager
of Shade River State, Park,
delivered the grant portion for
the expenditures to both depart·
ments recently.

MIDLEPORT- OH KAN Coin
Club will meet Monday evening
at the Burkett Barber Shop in
.Middleport to comple,te plan11lng
for Its 25th annual coin show to be
1 held on March 20 at the Holiday
Inn tn· Gallla County. Following
the meeting, there will be a coin
auction and refreshments.
TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro ·
tary meets Tuesday, ·6 p.m ..
Dqwn Under.
·

---

VINTON - American LegiQn
post 161 meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m.
KYGER - Cheshire Township
Trustees meet Tuesday, 5:30
p.m., Township Building In
Kyger .

Let me rurt that -past you one
m!]re time. Iva Slsson ..and not
Iva Powell.. ls one of the plaintiffs
In a class action suit filed against
the Meigs Local School District
. Board of Education and Dan E.
Morris, district superlntendet.
Iva ..slsson. that ls .. was named a
plaintiff along with Max Whl·
!latch by virtue of her position
with the Unified Citizens for
Education in Meigs Local.
i Iva is vice president and Max,
the other plaintiff, Is president.
Motions to hire. Mark Foley as
. ~ttorney · for the ·group and to
proceed with the class action
lawsuit were made from the floor
at a recent meeting of the group
and were not made by the
pf!lcers.
.
The suit on behalf of members
.f the organization deals with
~bjectlons to the district's
• 't tendance-·makeup policy.
l!orry .about that Incorrect last
hameon Iva.
·

·The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment Is looking for your support
on March 12 when It will stage a
Captain D's "allyoucaneat" fish
dinner to be. served at the fire
station from 4 to 8 p.m.
·
Proceeds from the dlrtner will
be used towards the purchase of
additional equipment for the new
fire truck, which , Incidentally, Is
scheduled to be delivered In the
near future.
Price of the dinner Is $4.50 for
aqults and $2,50 for children, 12
and under. Advance tickets are
available from any Pomeroy
firemen or at the' G. ,&amp; J. Auto
Parts or Farmers Bank and
Savings· Co.
I still can't believe that Meigs
County has only one Democrat
who was willing to tile a petition
of candidacy for a count'- level
position In the May pi:1mary
elections. Whatever happened to
~e two-party system? Do keep

tt.est.T

's

DOWIITOWJI GAWPOUS
446·4446

DISCOUNTS ON
PHOTO FINISHING
BY ICODAI ONLI ·

SIE THE DIFFDENCE
13.00 DISCOUNr ON 36 EXP.
'2.00 DISCOUNT ON 24 EXP.
s1.00 DISCOUNT ON 12 EXP~ .

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424 2«.0 AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

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I

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tax preparation assistance call

Lynn ~· ~gell. .
_Certified Public Accountant
73~

Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-8677
.

Open 9-5 weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by Appointment

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"ACROSS FROM THE C

Guest Books,' Memory
~ks,, and Mlich More.

SIST~ft'S

CHESHIRE- Rev. Sam Clay
will be at Old Bethel Chu rch on
Story's Run Road , north of

RIO GRANDE - Ope n Gate '· '
Garden Club meets Tuesday ,-'·
7:30 p.m ., home of Barbara ' c
Allen. Plant auc ti on.

1VSURANCE

........00
... $2940

•

Ch es hire
CHE SHIRE
Chapeter OE S meets Tuesd ay , ·'
7: 30p.m ., Masonic Ha ll.
"-

AGENCY INC.

IPECW.IIH •

Sets

GALLIPOLIS - Senior Citizen
Lenten service, Tuesday, 11 : 15
a .m ., followed by lunche on.
Speaker Rev . Blll Myers. St .
Louis Catholic Church .

•

GALLIPOLIS' ACademic
Boosters club meets Tuesday, 7

RACINE- The parent meet·
lng of ·the Everybody Counts
Program will be held at Southern
High School at 7 p.m . on Wednes·
day evening.

MIDDLEPORT ~ A special
meeting of Middleport Masonic
Lodge will be held Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m.. for practice In ·the MM
degree, All members who helped
wl th the Fe Ilowcraft team are
asked . to attend . .The regular
lodge meeting will be held at 7:30
p.m. on March 1. Inspection will
be on March 4, with dinner at 6:30
p.m., followed by a meeting at
7:30.

Cheshire ra ilroad trac ks, Tuesday, 7:30p.m .

RACINE - Southern Junior
High Athletic Boosters will meet
Monday, 7 p.m., at the school.
Everyone welcome.

Meigs County

Lodge to meet

p.m .; speaker, John Lester on
education In Japan.

MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education wlll meet 7
p.m. Monday In regular session.
at the high school.

EHS soph · P(lrent meeting

By BOB HOEFLICH
Now that's nice!
Susan Wolf, !laughter of Gary
and Rat Wolfe,
and a sopho·
more at Eastern
. High Sc hoot,
was honored as
the phino soloist
performer ai
Capital Unl'&lt;ersity Honors Festival.
,.
Susan attended the festival,
held ' at Capital Unlyerslty In
Columbus, as an accompanist .
and'whlle there attended a c)lnlc
for accompanists. Each student
attending was given the oppor·
tunlty to audition for the solQ
performance to be performed
during the festival concert.
The ·honor was announced
during the concert and Miss Wolf
was chosen to play her solo. ·
Susan was accompanied to Jhe
Capital festival by Eastern High
School's vocal Instructor, Val- ,
erie Ransbottom.
. Susan has studied plano fo~
five years under Jennifer Machlr
and Is currently a plano student
of Teresa Davis.
'
Susan has to be busy. She is a
member of the marching, con·
cert and pep bands; the women's
chorus, the show choir, women's
quartet, and the medrlgals at
Eastern. She is also a member of
the Ohio Wesleyan Festival ~ho·
rus, a member and officer of
Tri·M, a seven year 4·H club
member and IS' a member of the
Chester United Methodist
Church.

.-

Flatwoods Unl·

led ·Methodist Ctlurch will lea·
ture singing by· Mr. and Mrs.
. Eddie Way11e, · of Canton, at
Sunday 2 p.m. services. Everyone welcome.

CROWN CITY - Crown City ,
United Methodist Church will
have special singing by Willard
In addition to having a clinical Taylor and Harbor Lights, Sunprogram which meets the requl· day, 6 p.m.
rements of 1he Commission on
CROWN CITY King's
Cancer; Holzer Medical Center
Chapel
Church
will
have
Family
also met the criteria of having a
well·fu'nctlonlng tumor registry. Night Sunday, 7 p.m.; HarmoThe Hospital's Tumor Registry nalres wl\1 be singing.
Is a cancer data system designed
MORGAN CENTER - Morto provide a lifetime follow-up of
gan Center Wesleyan Church will
cancer patients.
This allows the medical staff to have Marl! and Crystal Hash
retrieve data to use In analyzing Becker, missionaries from St.
treatment results and the .types Francis, S.D., Sunday, 7:30p.m.
of treatment patients have re·
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
celved. It also makes .available
Eddie
Wayne, of Canton, will be
current Information to the medl·
cal staff for the contlnuallmpro· featured singers at · the Flat·
vemlmt of · patient cate. Special woods United Methodist Church
stl!dles of cancer cause · and on Sunday, Feb. 21, at 2 p.m. The
treatment are possible through church Is located on Flatwoods
Road, orie mile from Five Points ·
the registry.
1
Chairing the Tumor Committee and Route 7.
and serving as cancer liaison physi·
HARRISONVILLE - A mls·
clan Is Dr. Lewis A. Schmidt, ill,
slonary
service will be held 7:30
FACS, member of the hosPttlil's
p.m.
Sunday
at Harrisonville
statf. Tammy Mitchell, ART, CTR,
Holiness Chapel. Speakers will
Is the Tumor Registrar.
be Rev. Lawrence Gray and
family, serving In New Guinea.
POMEROY -

~

POMEROY

receives accreditation

( Por&lt;elain or China)

, P~a

"y

Covtrlngi In Stodcl(OIIIf

-·- -

ADDISON - Addison Freewi1t
Baptist Church wllf have Rev.
Lafe Waller In services, Sunday,
~:30 p.m.
.

t

The Mother· To-Be

LANGSVILLE - The Stevens ,
Family Singers, St. Albans ,
W.Va., will be featured at Sunday
· morning services at the Langs·
ville Christian Church.

CROWN CITY - Rev . Russell
' Taylor will Speak at Big Four
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m.

Sol~ist . is

A Shop To Mee( The Needs of

Genealogical Society will meet ·
.Sunday, 2p.m .• ~t themuseumon
Butternut Ave . .

,---

Beat of the bend

9 ..

r

. SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS
Heaven
Bound Four will be at Prospect
Baptist Church, Sunday, 7:30
p.m . .

•.

446-1171 Wttpolla, Ohio

.

(,

'.

..

..

�I
•

·Ohio-Point Plnunt, W.Va.

!

PebnBy 21, 1888

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

'Red Brush' revival, on Schedule for March ·'..
RIO GRANDE - "Out of the lind 5. Show times WIU oo ll p.m. · the No. 3 spot on the national
The play has been adapted by bestseller list In 1954. ·
Red Brush," the acclaimed
Miller's play was .first staged
chronicle or life In turn or the · Greg Miller, Ph.D-; director of
century Appalachian Ohio, the Floe and Performing Arts In October 1987 at Rio ·Grande
maltes a return engagement Ill Center at Rio Grande. from the With M!Uer starring as the
the Floe and Performing Arts novel· by Jac~oo County native narrator and central character,
Center of Rio Grande Colle&amp;e- I(erll)lt Daugherty that reached . BID Brennan. Since then, the
show has · been scheduled ·for
IConununlty Colleae.!?'! M~h 4
performances In different sec;·
J
tlons of Ohio.
'J ·
Miller has keptthe theme oft he
. AUGUSTA, \'ftalne (UPI) .preparing to make a movie.
· novel Intact by telUng the story
Tl!e J&lt;ennebec County sheriff,
"We called that one 'USA through the remlntscence5 of Blil
who once ordered his officers to . Cable Co.,'" Hackett said: "The Brennan, a native of the Red

Sheriff .stin:gs the bad gu11.

JAMES and BARBARA (STEWART) NEWMAN

Newman-Stewart

a film crew
as part
of a
pose asoperation,
.sting
~~&amp;ys
deputies
Ibis week donned · brown wor~
jackets and posed . as Insect
exterminators In a ruse to nab 26
fugitives.
,
Sheriff. Frank .Hackett said
Friday the deputies spent sev·
. eral days this week finding the
addresses of'people named In old
court warrants, then gaining
entry by offerlnl! free .Insect
extermination.
"One kid, Michael . Sterling,
had been ol1lered sent to jallln
1985.'' Hackett said. "We went to
his mother's house at 6 a.m., told
her that her son had entered her
name In a drawing at tbe Augusta
Home Show and that she bad won
free extermination services. '·
"She took us Into his room and
we arrested him right In his
bed," he said.
Hackett said when he was
elected sheriff In 1985, he found
several hundred unserved warrants, some a decade . old. His .
first "sting" operation Involved
. deputies serving as a film crew.

RUTLAND - A special missionary meeting will be held
Thursday, 7:30 p.m .. at Hysell
Run Holiness Church, Mark and
Cr·ystal Becker will speak about
their work on q South Dakota ·
Indian Reservation.

r;jiDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Baseball Association wll.l be
holding an organizational meet·
lng Thursday evening, 6:30p.m.,
at tile Middleport Village Hall.
All interested parents are urged
to attend.

.

/

'

.

.

.

.

.

l

.

.. .

.

..

!Tawney...

· ~~
..Jvle

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per

WITH APPROVED CREDIT ....................,........;.........A.P.R. 10°/o

FREE: Bench, .,Tuning, and Deliver·y.
COIIHI liiiiD &amp; COifU

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the warmth. .
.
.
.
That's because, with a modern gas furnace: you getthe benefit ofa very energy-stingy heating system, combined with low
gas costs. So you save on heating bills.
Compared to a heat pump system, a high-efficiency gas furnace will actually cut your utility billS. You 'II spend less, and get
the cozy warmth of gas heat in the bargain . .
For all of the facts and figures, ask a heating dealer. Not only
will you feel more comfortable with gas heat, you'll 'also feel
more comfortable about your budget.

,\

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..•

50%
50%
SAVE

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i

RIO GRANDE - Two Rio
brande College/Community College mathematics Instructors
'attended and participated In a
recent statew.l de fllel!thlg fOCIJS·
tlng on curriculum and evalu,atlon
standards for elementary and
rhlgh school mathematics..
'
! Attending the .forum, hlgnetj
~o discuss and react to a repprt
(prepared by the National Council
1for .Teachers of Mathematl~;s
;(NCTM), from Rio Grande were
'·T. Michael Rhodes, Ph.D., assist·
·1an:t professor of mathematics,
:an4 ·Leslie Chambers, M.Ed.,
iasslstant professor of education. ,

Natural Sciences an4 Compute~
Science, while l;hambers rep.res·
ented Rio Grande's School of
Education, Health and Physical ,
Education.
The Feb. 13 forum lnclud~
dlscus~lons and ,reports oil cur·
rlcular standards, evaluations
and review for mathematics
lnstrU&lt;:tlon from kindergarten
through high school.
Rhodes served on the planning
committee for the forum.
The forum was hosted by Kent
State University, with supp«)rt
from the Ohio Council .tor
Teachers of Mathematics, the
Center for Higher Education at
Ohio 'University, and · the Ohio
Department of Education.

.Sale price .Includes shampoo.
cut and style. Long hair slightly ·
higher. Participating stylists only.
Appointments are not always .
necesSary. Sale price good
through March 5. 1988.
(Not valid with onv ott'IEM' otlef)

,~~~.~.

VARY BY LOCATION

~ L-----'
1100111&lt;1'1 . ...
I'Grtlllle Clllltaler

• i6 foot power cord

MAXIM'S

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IJMI---:::::::::l • Includes allochmtnb

PLAZA
PH. 446-3353

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SAVE
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$188
YD.

M 99

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Com!*e at $399.98

!

The 10 motlll~nt

:the

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front drop-ln bObbin, f!we •
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.......................

; CLEVELAND (UPl) - The
• Cleveland Museum of Art Is
; asseml:JIIng a display of 'more
: than 200 o~jects the · f!lCIIIty
&lt;acquired In 1987, Including cell. ~ turles old European classical
: paintings; ancient Oriental art!·
' facts .and contempolrary Amei-1· .
•' can works.
~ ·Among the most slgn.lficlint
' purchases last year was a
l 16tb-Century portrait of a proml·
. ~ nent Dlitch woman. The artist,
\' Maerten van Heemskerck (1498·
t 1574); ·combines realistic detail
, With Italian art of the Renal&amp;·
I saoce and IIJiages· from Roma.n
·
antiquity.
.
' Museum officials said the
: painting probably had ·beeilln a
·1private collection since It was
. commissioned and was therefore
I unknown until It appeared at a
'l farlll auction one year ago..
.
'l'he work 'was Immediately ·
accepted by art scholars as· a
superior example or Heems·
kerck's work. ·.
• Another significant artifact In
display Is .a terra-cotta
• pOrtrait bust of landscape pain: ter Hubert 'Robert; executed In
' ~ til!! late .1700s by AUgi!StiD Pajou, ·
: a sculptor of the French mo·
•llarchy durin&amp; Its last ye-..
t At least tbree other busts of
• Rebert are k,JIOwn, alld one
11111 exhibited at the
: P.lrtl SaJon In 1789.
·. · .
'

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NOW
I'KG. ·

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• Tbe 11JIIIftm alsQ acqllirecllast

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i· yural4th-ceati!I'Yiiculptll~ofa

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These pocket-size4
booklets, which
you 'II receive at
weekly meetings. also fea- .
ture a handy
food diary·to
help you be
successful!

Here it is, the fastest.
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ReiL, tratiun fee . .•.
First Mec:ling Fee .. .
R,ea.ulll' Price Total .

-•.,.,...IDol..
.....- ·--

.•'IIt:.::'::;
'
CIIIIIIt

.YOU SAVE ........ $11.00

.......
----

1988.

Ofter EndS March

nearest you.

tO

.~

N.EW ~EMBERS: PirEASE ARRIVE 45 MlNtJTEs EARJ.V FOR RFXItsrRAT10N' AND WEIGtliN.
'

POMEROY ··

CI1IIBtS CEIIlER.
Mulf!lny _..
Wetf 5:00p.m. .

It ltnn B'IIQihiL CHURCH
541 Second Awnut
1111:1:00 p.m., Wed: 10:00 a m.

,•

deity, carved from. •
• alqla IIIOc;k of WOOd ud ab
. ·. : 0. ..... lll'tiNilW... tomb • ·
I riDe, ~~ Lady lloJ«&lt;II Pli!DI
' •
F'lll," wllole plump ele1
I
aa klellllf Deauty

• OW!

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OAWPOLIS

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WORKSLIKEWElGHTWA'ICHERS!
. :.i~(800)

C.reflecltl

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• Full-lime edge
cleaning

1988

! Buddbllt

Silva.r Bridge Plaza

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• Standard n11
dl-bltbog
• 16 toot eorc;l wtth wrap

:...men ·

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llfOI'M, Paw a

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regularly $35 or ·
higher. . . ,

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99
overlocks. Compare·at $16.99
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;Cleveland
:museum
ishows
i acquisitions

'

, ASHLEY CHINTZ Potyl cotton monotonee. 45", · $199
Compare at $3.49 yd; SAVE 42%
NOW
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Guests
Welcome

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Compare at $2.99 yd. SAVE 37%,..__ _ NOW

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Compare $2.69 panel - $5.99 yd.
Now S1 .34.panel- $2.99 yd. - - - - - S A V E

C:(Jiitp8ill0f• wflh

8:00P.M.
Refreshments

.HELENE CURTIS PERM SALE

Compare $5.99 yd. Now $2.99 yd, - - -

Sovl....

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FLOSS CADDY Handy organizer holds
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AT THE

N•

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I MUSIC
.
INC.
.o.

. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27

¥

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS

.i

. S6470down &amp; $4411
.

•

(From TAWNEY, Bl)

.

'

"Party Nite"

Young people in downtown Mexico City

of government . rules the · told the clerk In their native heck out'of them. It reminded me
~ntry.
·
. ·
tongue that the contras came to of the lsralles beating up on the
, : Mexico's economy Is bad. It Is
th(!lr farm In Nlcarl!lgua and PLOs . .
1
) !nation of 80 million ~pie with
killed four of their cattle, burned
I was standing there. taking
)!gross national product of less · tlielr barn, kidnapped their 18- · pictures as fast as the cllc.Jter
(~an '$20(1 billion. At the same
year-old son, and accused them . would click when all at once a
lime It Is burdened by $105 billion
of' being Sand!nlsta syrnpathlz· · pallceman grabbed me . by . the
Paint-A•Sweatshirt
foreign .debt · and had 159 ers. They had then come Into the shoulder and jerked my came·ra
ijrcent Inflation last year. There 'ell~ of Guatemala tolive with .the .. !rom me. He opened my camera, ·
.Cl-.sses ·
.11 no way that they w!U ever get 'wife's cousins, I went .back Into took the film out arid kept It, then
·'
Sign up now for· March
,{ijlt.of
that condl lion.
.
the hotel and cashed two Amerl· handed back my camera and
·:f~ater I fiew over to Guatemala
'can Express travelers checks . said "no photos:"
.
classes. ·
'~ thought that I would go from
I U\oughi he was going to ta\te
and gave the' C!!sh to t!lem "- a
Tole/Decorating .Paint
pjere to Belize. I had read all
sad case Indeed.
me In but he saw that I was a
~ut this little country and It
I recently read In the Wall tourist. He did rough up one man
Class
-atunded too good not to visit. I
Street Journal that a group of standing beside me . and .hand
Paint a bunny for Easter.
'tound that I could get there, but It
Sandlnlsta soldiers went to a cuffed .him. I ·never did find out
ClaiMs In March
iilght be some time before I
large dairy farm In Nicaragua what
going on and did not
~uld get back as the flights were
Make
Raeervations Now
and. machine gunned 140 of the · hang around to find o'ut. I made a
~ry uncertain - so I went to the
dairy herd because the S!!ndlnls- beeline io get on the plane tbat
128 MULBERRY AVE.
·~par\ to make ·reservations to
tas accused the owners of helping soon left to go back to Mexico
POMEROY, OH.
·RJ! back to ~exlco City.
the contras; That's what Is going City; ·
992-2312
~ • When I was In Guatemala at
In Central America every day. ~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;rl
11111 Ritz Hotel, I saw a· man a.nd on
It .looks as though there
be lr
\~(oman sitting on a bench near
killings going on there for a long
llle· hotel and they were both
time. ·
.
~fYing. I went back lnio the hotel
As I was gplng out to board the ·
ahd asked the clerk to come out to
plane a demonstratlqil was tak·
.'a!!k them . about their trouble. lng place. The policemen were
,They could not speak English but · clubbing people with billy clubs,
and I mean they were ~atlng the

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a:oo (Hn

Wurlitzer Piano ·. SALE
. $60()oo Off

TUPPERS PLAINS - A youth ·
boys and girls In grades three to six, . Inclusive, of the
Alfred, Tuppers Plains, . and
Orange Churches will be organ·
Ized on Sunday, Feb. 28; with the
meeting to be held from 2 to 3: 30 .
p.m.
g~oup fot

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigman Phi
Sorority will meet 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Grace Episcopal
· Church parish house. Election of
officers will be held .

lnsplfed .to commit the
the region to.paper I" the!Win~r;
of 1953-~ While servhig

Monday
Feb.
22nd, 9:30 om ~to
..
.

Brunicardi Music
named Wurlitzer
representa ttve

Missionary meeting

.childhood ldve Vlnnlee!~totl~~~~~~
man: Bill' eventually 1M
With .a "goOd girl,
.Along the way, , the
learns . about the ·
t1!1!1ble life. tbe Red
lndlyldual .
reveal
gQOd and evil .
DaughertY. a ac;hool
ttrohem
. RedRioBGrusrandhwehlon

0

Youth group

Sorority meeting
is planned

r~U~SA~~st;ood!:~fo:r~·Y~o:u~S:ho:u~Id~':ve:_jB~r~u~sh!iarEe!a~l~n~s~ou~t~he~rn~
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of his

ZANESVILLE. Ohio - Dr.
of Zanesville and Charles SteBarbara A. Stewart. and Jamrs wart of Gallipolis, t:Jrother of the .
R. Newman, both or Zanesville, . bride.
.
Ohio, exchanged wedding vows
A reception was · held In the
In a ceremony Jan. 23, at Trinity church meeting hall, with Dr.
United Presbyterian Church.
·Joan Wetta of Logan, O!llo and ,-----~---,.....---'---1
She Is the daughter of Paul and Dr. Kit fleming of Lakewood,
Betty Stewart or Patriot, and he Ohio.
is the son of James B. and Miona
The bride received a Bachelor
of Science and a Doctor of
Newman of Marietta.
The weqdlng was performed Optometry from Ohio State Unl·
by Dr. Kenneth Kettlewell.
verslty. She Is associated with
'
The bride wore a silver blue Dr. Rol1ert C. E;nglaod, Inc. She
lace dress over a blue sheath, and Is a member of Soroptomlsts
The Wurlitzer Plano Co. has
carried a bouquet of white roses International of Zanesville, Be·
announced
the appolhtmenl of
with baby's breath and blue lace thesda Junior Assembly, the
the
Brunlcard!
Mu~lc Co. of Gal- ·
with greenery.
Ohio and American. Optometric ·
lipolis.
as
their
dealer repre·
Maid of honor was Becky Association and Trinity United
sentatlve
for
the
Tri·State
area.
Stewart of Columbus, sister· of PreSbyterian Church: · ·
Bru~tlcardl
Music
Co.
has
been
the bride, She wore a silver gray
The groom received a Bache·
silk dress.
lor of Science In communication serving the . Trl·State for' O"&lt;er
Best man was Mark Newman from Ohio University ·and Is an twenty years.
of Elkins, W.Va., brother of the account executive for WHIZ-TV.
grooom. Ushers were Tom Stock He Is a member of Trinity United
of Zanesville, Ohio, Todd turner Presbyterian Church.
·

Organization
meeting

Sunday nmes-Sentinei-Pag&amp;-B-6

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~DI~g~e~B-~I~S.~UI~w:-'~or~'I~Ti~•~m~a~I~S~e~n~ti~nei~=======~P~OI~m~I8~10~'1~-~M~il~dcl~~~p~-CI~II1~-~G~el~li~p~-CI~IIi~a,~O~hto~·~p~01~·~nt~PI~a~1~1a~nt~,~W~-~V~·~·;:;;,===========~F~ebl:"~liiY~-~2~1~,~1~9:88~: · '·
Mills-Dill
Foster-Weaks
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
John S. Foster, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Stamm,
Chico, Calif., announce the en·
gagement of their daughter, Joy
Lorraine Foster, to Andrew
Mlrhael Weaks, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin D. Weaks, Crystal
River, Fla.
Miss Foster Is a graduate of
Oroville High School, Oroville,
Calif. She Ia the granddaughter of
Mrs ..J. Edward Fo.s ter and Mrs.
Theo L. Smith, both of Pomeroy .
Weaks Is a graduate of Crystal
River High School, Crystal
. River, Fla.
Both Miss Foster and Weaks
are security specialists with the
United States· Air Force, statl·
oned at Nellis' Air Force Base In
Nevada.

\

RACINE - Brian and Nancy
Mills of Greer, S.C., and Jerry
and Irene Dill, Racine, are
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
children, Genevieve Denise, to
, DeWayne Davit!.
She Is a graduate of Blue Ridge
High School and Is employed by
BMG Home of RCA Music,
Duncan, S.C.
He L~ a graduate of Southern
High School, Is employed by
Savage Electrical Co. at Taylors,

s. c.

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''*i-'

. '"""' .' .,,

.

. '•. ~- ' ' '

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The wedding will be on March.
24 at St. Mary's Catholic Church,
Greenville, S.C.

_,

•I

,~

·'

·'-'

••

,.

DEWAYNE DILL
GENEVIVE MiJL'g

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GLADYS and JOHN CASEY

Casey anniversary to be observed
COLuMBUS - Gladys and
John Casey of 4438 East VIew
Court, Columbus, will celebrate
their 53rd wedding anniversary
on Feb. 25.
They are the parents of Grace

of Gahanna; Geraldine of Galllpolls; James of Middleport;
Sylvia of Texas , Ronald of Rio
Grande, Gary and Clara, both of
Columbus . They have 34 grandchildr e n and 27 gr e at
grandchildren.

mentary on Saturdays from 9
a.m. to 12 noon beginning March
12th through Aprll 30, Galllpolls
Developmental Center on Saturdays·from lp.m. to 4 p.m. March
12 through Aprll 30, and Southwestern Elementary on Wednesday evenings from 6 p.m. to 9
p.m . March 16 through May 4.
Fee for the eight week class Is ·
$18. ·Instructors are Dianna Forgey, Leigh Ann Layne, Terri
Tawney, and Lovell Forgey.
The Park District's Annual
Easter Egg Hunt will be Satur-

day, Aprll 2 at the Raccoon Creek
County Park. The hunt wlll begin
promptly at 10 a.m. Age catego~
rles are 1·3 years old, 4-6 years,
7-9 years, and 10-12 years. The
Easter Bunny wlll be on hand to
give treats to all participants.
Youth Soccer registration will
begin Monday, March 7. There
will be four soccer leagues: 6-8
years old, 9-11 years, 12-14 years,
and 15-18 years. Forms wlll be

JOY L. FOSTER
ANDBEWM. WEAKS

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distributed to an county and city::,;
schools. Cut-off date for age limit . :
will be Sept. 30, 1987. Fee for the , .
league will be $9 per participant.: ;
Deadline for registration will l:l,e, ';
Friday, March 25 at 4:00p.m. ·. · ·
To obtain, more Information on '
any of the programs mentioned·
or to pre-register, contact the ;
office Monday through Friday, 8 ,• .
a.m. to noon or 12: 30 to 4 p.m. at :
446-4612, ext. 256.
' ,•

• •

Quirks in the ·news
19 club members sue 20th for
Lotto prize: GROSSE POINTE
FARMS, Mich. (UP! ) - Nineteen members of the Dietary
Lotto Club at Cottage Hospital
a r e suing the 20th club member,
clairrllng she is holding a Super
Lotto ticket worth $2.3 milllon.
Mark Granzotto, a la.Vyer .
re presenting the 19 members,
sa id Thursday eac h member
ga \'e Norma Bruq1m $4 at the
beginning of January to play the
sa me · 20 numbers e a c h
Wednesday.
One of those tickets matc hed ·
the six numbers drawn Jan. 27,
earning ha lf of the $4.6-milllon
jackpot, Granzotto said. Now the r - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
club members want to claim
their prize.
But Ca rl Weide man, who is
Br umm 's lawyer, said the ticket
Is in a safe place until a judge
decides which members are
e ntitled to a share. He said the
problem arose because club
m embers dec ided to play a
Saturday night dra wing when the
Super Lotto hit a record $28
million, but only 14 members
contributed the extra dollar to
buy the tickets.
" Some paid before the Satur·
d ay night drawing and some pa id
a fter, " Weideman said. He conte nds tha t Brumm notified club
me mbers after the Saturday
· drawi ng that they had used up
their monthly $4 and had to pay
aga in to play the Wednesday or Jan. 27 - game .
'Ballad ol Gary Hart' hits the
'
airwaves: NEW YORK (UPI ) Jo hn De nve r stopped singing
The Stihl 028AVSEQ fits the
about Colorado's mountains long
way you work with its special
e nough to poke fun at the state's
flush-cut
design . Ideal for
m ost emba ttled politicia n or cuttin~
limbing
operations
for mer Sen. Ga ry Ha rt - In a
firewood.
Features
electrontc
song that hit the a irwaves
ignition,
Quickstop"'lnertla
• nationwide.
chain brake, anti-vibration
"The Ballad of Gary Ha rt ,"
and a 3.12 cu. in.
system
which was distributed by ABC
engine.
Radio to its 2.000 affiliates,
wa xes sarcas tic about Hart's
re la tionship with Miami model
Donna Rice and re ports of hi s
involvement in other extrama riCHESTER
ta l affairs.
985-3308
,J.
Writte n by songwriter Tom
P axto n a nd fi rst sung by Denver
several weeks ago at a fund ra iser In La ke Tahoe, Ca lif .. the
ba ilad was aired F riday by
commerc ial radio stations from
'
Atlanta to Detroit , said Nancy
Abramson , manager of ABC
ne twork progra mming in New
York.
Listene r s tapped their toes to

I

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STORE HOURS :
A.M .-10 P.M. MON. thru
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JOHN J. JACKSON
Army National Guard Pvt.
John J. Jackson, son of John C.

TROY M. STEWART

Pvt. Troy M. . Stewart, son of

Delores M. Turley and Stepson of
Larry Turley of Hartford , W.Va .,
has completed the OH-58 hellcopJAMES S. NANCE
Army National Guard. Private . ter repair course at the U.S.
James S. Nance, son of James F . Army Aviation School, Fort
'
and Jerreal Nance of Rural Rucker, Ala.
Subjects personnel studied
Route 2, Crown City, Ohio, has
completed l!aslc training at Fort through academics and hands -on
training Included the OH-58 turDI;K, N.J .
During the training, students bine engine, transmission, elecreceived Instruction In,drlll and trical systems, filght controls,
ceremonies, weapons, map read- main and tall rotor systems; and
Ing, tactics, · military courtesy, the aircraft 's hydraulic system.
He Is a 1987 graduate of
military justice, first aid, and
Wahama High School 1 Mason,
Army history and traditions .
W.Va.
NED. E. STAPLETON
Airman 1st Class Nell ' E.
ALBERT S. VICKERS
Stapleton, son ot retired Air
· Airman Albert S. VIckers, son
Force Chief Master Sgt. lind Mrs.
Clyde Noble of Rural Route 1, of Mr. and Mrs. Albert VIckers of
. Chesapeake, OH, has graduated Chesapeake, has graduated from
from Air Force.basic training at the U.S. Air Force telephone
swllchlng equipment repair
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
course at Sheppard Air Force
During the six weeks of train- ·
lng the airman studied the Air Base, Texas.
During the course, students
Force mission, organization and
were taught to test, maintain and
repair telephone swllchlng

_.;.;--People in the news· --,-

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

following emergency surgery," the children seeing him per,By WO.LIAM C. TRO'IT
said ·a spokesman for New York form ," said Principal Marge
United Press lntematlonal
Hospital-Cornell Medical Center. Anderson. The Jackson camp
CORY LIKES SINGLE LIFE:
Paley founded CBS In 1928 and arranged for the kids to come to
Philippine President Corazon was Its chairman untll1983 when the Civic Center and Anderson
Aquino says she , will never he stepped aside. He later promised to keep It quiet, telling
re marry. "To this day I have not resumed the job as partofa team parents only that their chlldren
met anybody else whom I would with Laurence Tisch, the corpo- were going on a field trip to the
llk'l to share my life with," said ration's largest stockholder .. . Civic Center. The kids came
A q~ino , . whose husband, Ferdl·
Bandleader Xavier Cugat Is away mightily Impressed.
"I had a student say, 'He really
nand Marcos foe Benigno, was hospitalized in Barcelona with
assassinated when he returned to lung problems again . Cugat, 88, is real. I dldn 'I know he was real
the Philippines In 1983. ·
has swelling of the lungs and Is in person , "~ Anderson said.
TO THE PENN!: Two17-yearIn a n Interview In the debut satisfactory condition. He has
issue of Lear's magazine, Aquino been hospitalized five times with olds collared by Sean Penn were
says she enjoys her freedom.
severe lung aliments since 1982. convicted ottrespasslng at the
".Mter becoming president, I
KIDS SEE JACKSON SHOW: Malibu home where Penn and
don 't think I could ever take Mlcbael laekson gave some wife Madanita live. One of the
orders from another man ," she · Pensacola, Fla., school kids a teenagers, whose. names were
sajd . '.'I think I would be giving preview of his new act. Jackson not released, also was found
the orders. Also weighing the has been In town practicing for a gullty of tampering with the
advantages and disadvantages, tou~ that starts Tuesday Iii couple's mall and they could end
· ·
what do I hope to get from
Kansas City, Mo., and he Invited up In a juvenlle home.
Penn niade citizen's arrest of
another marriage? Companion- 450 students from Hallmark
s hl~J? I have enough to do. Having
Elementary to. a rehearsal after the teenagers and Richard
b~n president. maybe I need a
a thlrd·gr&lt;\de class sent him a Barcelo, 20, In January after
tlndlng them prowling around In
king or someone like that ,"
video of their new rap song.
·
tear'swasfoundedbyFrances
"I wrote a letter, expressing his yard . . ·
J..&lt;)ir, ex-wife of television pro- bow much I thought It would help
duc er Nonnan Lear, and Is r-------=-----....:..---~~--~-..;_---J
aimed at women over 40 years
o!l!,
•Ford
~0 LOMBARD PARifl?'"'City
·•Mercury
leaders ·tn Fort Wayne. Ind.,
won 't be honoring native daugh•Lincoln
ter . Carole Lombard with a
namesake park afte r all. The
·Fort Wayne Women 's Club
wanted to rename Orff Park for
·the actress and place a statue of
her In It bu t the parks board voted
against' the proposal at Its
NOW$4495.
WAS $5495
Thursday night meeting.
City Parks Director Bob ArnoJd told the board he had
· Sloorl whool lliiM, 6 cyl. std. trans., AM ra•
received numerous calls from
dlo. r-.r step bumper, running boar• . full
people opposed to the change,
whttl co,• ., lltdliMr.
·
saying they considered the Orff
Park rich In history and deserv·
lng to keep its current name. The
women' s Club also has considered turning Lombard's former
Lilli lltll. With T....-. 302 ong. •to. with
home Into a museum with the
owtrdrlwt,
roar step bunlptr, ·1,000 actual
rooms decorated to represent
llliln.
scenes from her movies.
Lombard was born In Fort
Wayne in 1913 and died at age 29
i ri 1942 In a pla ne crash near Las
STATION WAGON
Vegas .
NOW $2 .1 95
SICK LIST: WIUiam Paley, 86,
4 cyl. 4 .... 1 owner. Lew mit...
'
· th ~ founder and chairman of
CBS, was In critical condition lri a
SEE 101 lOSS FOI THE lEST DEAL IN IHE AIEAI
New York 1\ospltal Friday. eight
· days aiter undergoing emerSTATE IT. 93
OAK HILL, OHIO
gency gall bladder surgery." Mr.
614·682-7731
Paley is In thelntenslve·careunlt
with lung and kldne:; !allure

Feb. 21-Fib. 27

BURRITO DELUXE
O.NLY

$1l9

_. MICHAEL S. ALLENSWORTH
Navy Seaman Recruit Michael
S. Allensworth , son ot Char les R.
a nd Carolyn s: Allenswor th of

A Me.u age From Th e Bible . . .
REPENTANCE
William B. Kugltn
It is stated that " Repentance as a condition of salvation does not deny
the teachi,ng of'saved by faith ,' and is not a separate act of the siliner, but
a part of the same decision. It is true that God does teach te_pentance as
. the ·plap ofsalvation. (Notice I did not say as one plan of salvat1on, but it is
the plan{ ol salvation, the same plan .as fait~.)" After listing various passages p scnpture where repentance IS mentioned and not faith (Mt. 3:2;
4:17; Luke 13:3-5: 16:30; Acts 2:38; 17:30; 2 Pet. 3:9), the advocate of
"faith only" says, "B~t . as many, many scriptures tell us, believina or
trusting in Christ is the way to be saved. Then, God must mean that repen·
tance and fait~ are together, that they are inseparable, that one who
repents has beheved, and one who believes has repented, understanding
always that we mean what the Bible means by hear: repentance and heart
trust in, Christ. Since 'He that believeth on the Son hath life everlasting;
then evidently h~ has repent~d." We ~re also told by this teacher, " Repen·
ll!nce and fa1th s1mply descnbe two vtews ofthe heart attitude a sinner has
wh en he tum~ to Christ for salvati,on ... The one great ~eart tuming, the
one great dec1s1on that took place mvolved repentance, 1f you mean one's
atti t~de toward his sin and God; it was faith, if you mean his reliance 0n
Christ, for forgiveness. So, faith and repentance are called 'inseparable
graces.' and so they ought to be called. And, what God hath joined together
let no man put asunder. To try to.make these plain· statements· of scri11·
t~re contradict each qther is not only twistin~ the word of God, but it IS
Wickedly wrong, and no one ought to do it.' The above statements are
made to prove that repentance is essential to salvation although
re~ent a nce is not always mentioned along with faith in various passaj!OS of
scnpture. lt repentance 11 not nullified because it does not apl,le8r 10 the
same scripture with faith , neither II baptilm nlllllfled because 11 does not
appear in the same scripture with faltb.
'
Repentance Doeo Not NaUlfy Baptilm
Because noth ing was said in the passa11es about baptism, it was implied
by the advocate of "faith only" that bapttsm was not essential , only beJiey.
lng. Now . the very references used to prove that npontance is essential to
salvatt on do not mentton faith . Yet, we are told that repentance is essential.
Why ? Because it is a part of the same decision; it is the plan of salvation:
people are commanded to repent; r~~pontan"" and faith are inseparable
(together): and when one repents, he has'belleved; when one be..... he
ha s rcponted: Nov.:. if all this is tr~e about re(!"ntance, which is not always
· mentto.ned wtth fatth , why would 11 not be so tn regard to baptism? To say
that It "so wtth repentance but not so with baptism, is to do exactly what
the auth or of "faith'only" says we should not do, and I quote, "To try to
m~k~ these platn statements of ~cripture contradict each other is not only
!"'.',sllng !he word of God, bultt IS wtckedly wrong; and no one ought to do
11. I agree that thlo muot not be done; therefore, we do not twist the scriptures when bapthtm lo Included In the plan of 1ahadon; you have to twiSt
the scriptur~ to rcmove baptlom fmm the plan.
For Fne Bible Cornspondencr Course, Write •.•

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
aos

Bulavill Road • P.O . Box

Ren...-: Wednesday &amp;Sa·
turday ~s after 4 p.m.
l8rge Pepperllf!i Pizza for
Only SS.OO

Gallipoli•,Ohio 45631
~ 1.1nda~~· Mornln~ :

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BRADFORD I. SMITH
Airman Bradford I. Smith, son
of Tondalaya D. and Richard I.
Smith of 403 21st St., Point
Pleasant, W. Va ., has graduated
from Air Force basic training at
Lac_kland Air Force Base, Texas.

customs and received special
training In human relations.
. In addition, ·a irmen who complete basic training earn credits
toward · !ln associ ate degree
through the communit y college
of the Air Force.
.He Is a 1987 graduate of Sou th
Point High School.

and Carol E . Jackson of Gallipolis, has gr~duatedfrom a helicopter repair course at the U.S.
Army Transportation School,
Fort Eustis, Va.
During the course, students
learned to perform direct and
general support ma.l ntenance on
be!lcopters. Also Included was
Instruction In safety practices,
usage of ground support equlpnieilt and spec4al and precision
tools.

Mason, WV; recently returned
ttom a tour·month deployment to
the Western Pacific aboard the
battleship USS Missouri, homeported in Long Beach, CA.
Dqrlng the deployment, Alienswort!! enjoyed port visits In
SydQey, Australia and Pearl
Ha rbor, HI.
A 1986 graduate of Wahama
High School, he Joined the Navy
In June 1987.

$

.

WHY WAIT
FOR YOUR

JOSEPH BAY RIFE
Pvt. Joseph Ray Rite has
completed Basic Training In the
U.S. Army at Fort Jackson, S.C.
He Is stationed at the Aberdeen
Improving Grounds, Aberdeen,
Maryland.
He Is studlng welldlng and
metal work. Rife Is a 1987
. graduate of Kyger Creek High
School. He Is the son of Merch
and Glenda Rite of Cheshire. ,

JOSEPH K RAnDOX
Airman · lst Class Joseph . K.
Haddox, so.n of George K. Had·
dox of Rural Route 2, Minster
and Linda K; Young of Racine:
Ohio, has graduated from the
aircraft armament systems specialist course at Lowry Air Force
Base, Colo.
The · course provides Instruction for students to load nuclear
and non·nuclear munitions, explosives and propellant devices
on aircraft.
During the 13-week course,
students were also· Instructed to
maintain, lnsta'li, modify and
repair aircraft bombs and
rockets.
He Is a 1987 graduate of Fort
Loramie High School, Ohio.

the service .- - - -

equipme nt to var ious telephone
systems. They also earned cred·
Its toward an a ssociate degree
thr ough the Community College
·
of t he Air Force.
He Is a 1986 gr aduate of
Chesa pea ke High School.

Tlmes·Senti~-Page-B-7

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STIHL qualtrf

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Sunday

Pomerov- Middleport- Gallipolii, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

During the six weeks of train·
lng the.. alrman studied the Air
Force mission, organlzatjon and
~ustoms and received special
training In human relations.
.
In addition, airmen who com·
plete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree
through .the community college
ot the Air Force.
H.e Is a. 1987 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.

·OOMPD plans gymnastics, Easter event
'
GALLIPOLIS - The 0 .0 . ·
Mcintyre Park District will be
offering the following programs.
this Spring. Registration Is now
being . accepted .f or , thes·e
programs .
A Women's Dance Aerobic
Class will be held · at. BidwellPorter Elementary on Monday
and Thursday evenings from 6: 30
p.m . to 7:30 p·.m. March 21-May
12. Fee for the eight week class Is .
$24. Instructor Is Karen Brad'·.
Youth Gymnastic Classes ;Ill
be held at Bidwell-Porter Ele-

February 21, 1988

oz.

99(

' ' 1101.

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•
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UP!)Vernon Maxwell scored 23 of his
32 points In the second half
Sat11rday, leading Florida to an
83-76 triumph over nlnth-ran~ed
Kentucky that tightened the
Southeastern Conference race. ·
In beating the Wildcats for the
third straight time, the Gators
Improved to 19-8 .overall and 9-5
ln ·the SEC, just a half-game
behind Kentucky. The Wildcats,
18-5 overall and 1(1-5 ln, the
conference, trailed 37-30 at th~
half.
Maxwell, who has scored In
double-figures In 100 consecutive
games, outplayed Rex Chapman
In a matchup between two of the
premier guards ln the nation. ·

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After Ed Davender's 3-polnt'
shot pulled Kentucky to within
53-49 with 12: 41 left, Maxwell
stole a Chapman pass at mid·
court and drove In for a bj~sket as
Chapman fouled him. Maxwell
complet~d the 3-point play to
Ignite an 11-2 run that also
Included two other bask~ts by the
6-foot-5 senior guard.
A layup l!y freshman Livingston Chatman put the Gators
ahead 64-51 with 9: 05 remaining·
and the Wildcats couldn't get
closer tl!an 7 points the restofthe
way .
Chapman reeled off 11 straight
J&lt;entu~ky points down
the
stretch, Including three &lt;;pnsecutlve 3-polnt shots, to finish with 24

.

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Twins open '88 spring
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LOS ANGELES (UPI) -No.2
Arizona reacted to clinching the
Paclflc-10 Conference title with .
words about unfinished business.
"We knew we were going to win
this thing," senior Steve Kerr
said Saturday after Sean EIUot
scored 24 points and sent the
game Into overtime with a
baseline jumper, helping the
Wl)dcats to a 78-76 victory over
UCLA. "Obviously, I'm happy.
but I've got mixed emotions.
"I wanted to come In and rout
them. They're a tough team. We
just did a better job on the
offensive end when It rna ttered."
The Wildcats, 25-2 overall and
14·1 In the conference, needed
Elliot's 12-footer with three se·
conds remalnl~:~g In regulation
for a 73-73 tie.
Arizona tobk a 78-74 lead In
overtime, but missed four
straight free throws as the
Bruins tried to claw back. Kelvin
Butler's layup closed the score to
78-76 with 61 seconds to go, and
UCLA got the ball back when
Craig McMillen missed the first
of a 1-and-1 with 12 seconds
remaining.
UCLA's • Pooh . Richardson
drove down the lane, then was too
strong on an 8-foot shot as time
expired.
"It was a great effort from our
team," said UCLA Coach Walt
Hazzard. "We had all kinds of
opportunities to win the game. It
was a great basketball game for
the Pac-10 - hard-fought, well·

LA JOLLA, Calif. (UP!) -Dan
Forsman shot four birdies on the
front nine SaturdaY, to jump from
fo11rth place Into a share of the
lead midway through the third
round of the $650,000 Andy
Williams Open.
. Forsman turned In a 32 at the
turn to go 13-under for the
tournament. tied for first place
with Hal Sutton, Gary Koch, Tom
Kite and Brad Faxon .
Second-round leader Don Pooley disappeared from the leader
board along with Bob Tway, who
started the day In second place a
stroke back. Pooley doublebogeyed the first hole while Tway
and Kite left with bogeys.
Kite rebOunded v.:lth a birdie on
the second, fifth and sixth holes
to go to 13-under.
Faxon·, Sutton and Koch

== ". . _
. ._.
nJMl'l to&amp;IO'f -

w• O•a 'WJ'I
MartaaiDelllllllllfl fv
.. llle _ . . , , ......_ at

~~- ~ ~

'

I

JlllaUte Oertll ~

'

NEW CONCORD, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio Northern, led by Stan
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI)- The year. Last year felt great.
Reineke who scored 13 of his 20 .
· ~It can be a hindrance for us
Minnesota Twins begin their 1988
campaign with nearby , Disney this year," the World Series MVP points ln t~e second half, overtook Musklngum down the
World and a fairy-tale season added. "Or lt'CO!lld be a help. It's
stretch
for a 47-42 win over the
looming behind them.
all in how you approach lt.''
Mtiskles
Saturday afternoon ln a
"It would be great lf the press ·
Every player due arrived ln
IItle
showdown
'between the two
and media would leave us camp on time. Kelly excused
Ohio
Athletic
Conference
alone," Tom Kelly; manager of pitcher Bert Blyleven, who apschools.
the defending World Series peared Friday an'd got In his
The two teams had gone Into ·
champions, said Saturday after throwing, to fulflU a 'commitputting his pitchers and catchers tment with the company that the final game of the regular
season deadlocked for the league
th~ough their second workout of
supplies h,l s gloves .
the'spring.
Minnesota has brought In a lead with 12·3 records.
Musklngum, which finished
"But we're constantly re- number of non-roster pitchers In
18-7
overall, took the lead 3-2 on a
minded of It," Kelly said of the an effort to bolster a staff that
3-polnt
play by Jeff Ball 90
title Minnesota won by sweeping had a combined 4.63 earned run
seeoqds
Into
the contest and built
all four world Series games at average last season.
home. "It's just another thing for
Included Is left· handed re- It to 29·22 at the break.
Musklngum, led In scoring by
them to think abf)ut. It's just IW!ver Tippy Martinez, wh.o has
another distraction.
Impressed coaches with his Brett Steele with 11 points and
"It would be a ·lot .easler If throwingthuilfar.Otherslnclude Bob Ludwig with 10, was still on
people just left us alone so we left-bander Bryan Clark and · top "42-38 after Sieele's basket.
But the Muskles lost their shootcould go about our work, try to Charlie Lea.
"Basically, we're going to do Ing touch and went scoreless the
get · our Jobs done. But I know
that's not going to happen.
· the same things this spring we final ~: 42 of the game.
A 3-polnt goal by Rick Ballweg
"I've never been through (a did last year," Kelly said. "Oh,
got
the Polar Bears to within
sprbli) being a defendlnl cham- we'll change a few thtnis, but
42-41
and a layup by Re~ke at '
ploD before, 10 I do'n't know how ballcally, we'll just worry about
to deal with that."
the MIMesota Twins. I'm not the 3:44 mark put Northern
· "It'a not 1101111 to bother me amart enollih to worry about the ahead to stay,
Toay Ghollon added 14 points
either way," Rid Minnesota other teama. We'll jll8t try to get
·left-bander Frank VIola, winner outiii!Ivel ready, play Olll' ,game for Ohlb Northern, wblth fin·
of the fll'ltand laatgames ofthe · and, llqpeflllly, In September lshed 18-7 overall and 13-3 In the
.
World SerleJ apiDit the St. we'll be In a ~lloll to·make a conference.
The losa dropped MuakiJ1111111
'.oula Cardinali. "It'a a •new • run at lt."

\.

~

I

started the day in third place
with seven othe r players. Koch
also bogeyed the first hole.
Making the turn in second
place at 12-under were Roger
Maltbie, Steve Pate, and Mike
Hulbert.
It was revealed Saturday that a
rule · violation had led to the
ouster of Mac O'Grady a day
earlier. O'Grady and defending
champion George Burns played
each others ball during Friday's
round and were each given a
two-stroke penalty.
The penalty and the bogey that
O'Grady recorded on the hole the par-5 13th on the South
Course - caused him to miss the
cut by three strokes.
Burns made the cut but fell
from fourth to sixth. place
Friday .

Ohio Northern edges
Muskingum five, 4 7-42

.a-u.

JoJ 111• .,....., &amp;lie pl4 medal

played and very tough for us to
lose."
Tom Tolbert scored 17 points
and Anthony Cook added 15 for
Arizona . Butler had 19 and
Wilson 15 for UCLA, 12-13 overall
and 8-6 In the conference.
"We have a lot of players from
·California, so It was special for
them to come in here and clinch
the title," said Arizona Coach
Lute Olson.
Elliot capped a 9-0 spree with a
jumper from the left corner to
put the Wildcats ahead 60-54
midway through the second half.
Arizona was up 65-58 before
Charles Rochelin hit three consecutive 3-polnter to get the
Bruins within 69-67 with four
minutes to play in regulation.
After Dave Immel'tied it With a•
bank shot, Elliot put the Wildcats
up 71-69 with two free throws with
3:04 to go. Richardson's driving
shot and Kevin Butler's scoop
pushed the Bruins ahead 73-71
with 35 seconds remaining, but
Elliot put down a baseline
jumper with three seconds left to
send the game Into overtime.
Down ,44-31, lJCLA scored the
last 9 points of the first half to get
back Into the game.
Arizona took Its first lead seven
minutes into the game when
Elliot na!led.a 3-pointer from the
top of the key to make it 13-10.
The Bruins were within 25-22 with
8 1-2 minutes to play before the
Wildcats scorched them In a 19-9
run that put Arizona up 44-31.

Forsman moves up in Williams Open

•

DISH Dh'laGINT
3LL

Jerome Lane and the Hoyas' of Mark Tillmon and Charles
Perry McDonald.
Smith, who combined for 21
Both benches emptied and first -half points.
several oth!!r skirmishes bro)&lt;e
Georgetown, 17·7 overall and
out before security guards res- . ·7-6 ln the conference, was led by
tored order. OffiCials ended the . Tillmon's 21 points and Smith's
game at that point with four 17.
seconds remaining.
Pitt started slowly in the
The brawl was the second
second half, falling behind 41-35
between the two teams this
with 16:12 remaining. But the
sea~on. Lane was also Involved In
Panthers' Smith started to domlnate Inside, scoring 16 of his
a fight In Pitt's 62-57 loss to the
Hoyas In January . The Big
points In the final 20 minutes.
East-leading Panthers Improved
Smith made 10 of 11 free throws
In the final 11 mliJUtes of the
to 9-2 In the conference and 19-3
·
overall.
.game·.
Lane finished with 15 points, ·
The Panthers opened up a 21-14
while Demetreus Gore added 12
lead In the first half. but
for the Panthers ,
Georgetown tled It 33-3.3 at
halftime on the outside shooting

Arizona cops title
with overtime win

Release procedures for
1988 All-Star tick.ets

, . .·

.

l

. CALGARY, Alberta (UPI) .good position. I'm looking for a
· Blathlete Josh Thompson ex- medal," said Schneider, the
tended a weeklong run of Amerl- World Cup slalom leader this
can disappointments at the Win- . season and seventh In the cornIer Games Saturday by finishing blned downhilL
,
far out of contention In the
Oertll, the downhill sliver
20-klhmeter competition.
medalist on Friday, was 11th ln
I
.
\
Thompson, the top blathlete on the combined downhill. "It's not
'
\, \
' ,I
the l,;.S. squad, wasconsl&lt;!ered to over yet. I think now we have
have a fairchance at a medal and many favorites to wln," said
/
"fair chances" are becoming Oertll who has won both of this
precious for an American teams year's combined events on the
that has managed only one World Cup circuit.
bronzemedalwlthelghldaysleft
A week 'of failure, llops and
In the Games.
tragedy for the United States
With a few athletes still on the could be tempered !)aturday at
c.o urse, Thompson, 26, of Gunnlthe figure skating arena aqd the
son, .Colo., wasassuredof'placlng speedskatlng ovaL
..
: no better than. 22nd In the
Barring a true calamity, the
: biathlon, a competition combln- · Americans were virtually gualng skiing and shooting skills. ranteed a medal from Brian
. : Frank-Peter Roetsch, of East
Boitano . In figure skating at
: Germany, sliver medalist at the night. Eric Flaim was amo.n g the
1984 Olympics, won the gold
top contenders In the 1,500-meter
· medal.
speedskate.
In the day's only alpine event,
The Winter Games reach their
halfway point following SaiurCarole Merle of France . a.nd
Marla Walllser of Switzerland day's competition, and after
finished 1-2 in the downhlll seven· days the Soviet Union was
\.
portion of the WOII!en's com. the team leader with 14 medals, ••
' · ' biDed, then dismissed dismissed ' litcludlng ·five gold. East Ger- . · .. '·,'
&gt;!!
· their chances to win a ·medal:
m"a'ny ·"WBS" l'unner.up Ill -both·''' \ '\ \
~
· "I'm riot thinking of a medal, cat.egorles with. five gold and a1 ·· \
.
just skiing as well .as possible," total o~ nine medals.
. .
·· .
Merle said after speeding down ·· . Ten countries had won more
SHARE A LAUGH- Yankee manager Billy Marlin (L) and 1st
the 1.2-mlle course In I minute,
medals than the United States.
.&gt; base coach Mike Ferraro (R) share a laugh at spring training
16.46 seconds ln 45-degree sunBoitano, the 1986 world chamSaturday. Yankee pitchers and catchers worked out for about 3
shine. The slalom portion of the pion from Sunnyvale, Calif., held
hours Saturday. The remaining players wiD report Tuesday. UPI
twin-discipline event wlll be a sUm lead over reigning world
'
completed Sunday .
champion Brian Orser of Canada
The 24-year-old Merle, who entering the free skating portion
began the ski season In a hospital of their competition. · The two
• : bed following gynecological Brlans are the best free skaters
surgery, had never raced In ·a In 'the world, putting them In
major slalom event, and ls ·not excell~nt position to stave off. a
, considered a strong contender challenge from another former
world champion, Alexander Fafor the coml!lned title.
CJN:CINNATI (UPI)- The .Cincln!llltl Reds have announced
. Though Walllser Is one of'the · deev of the SOviet U nlon, who was
procedures to enter a random dr11wlng for purchase of tickets to
world's premier skiers, slalomis In third place.
the 1988 baseball All-Star game, to be played July 12 In
her weakest discipline and she
Whether Boitano could hold off
Cincinnati.
stated flatly, "I will never win Orser and give the United States
People wishing to apply for tickets should send a
tomorrow, I can promise you a gold medal was more
self·addres!IO)d, slam ped, business-size envelope ( approxl·
· that." Her Ume for the downhill debatable.
·
mately 4 by 9 Inches) to: AII.Siar Game, P .0. Box 2000,
was 1:16.98.
. ''There's really no room beCincinnati, Ohio 45201.
Anita Wachter of Austria, who tween Brian Boitano and myNo money should be sent with the application. There Is a limit
Is a slalom specialist, was third self," Orser said after his victory
of one application per household. Any duplicate applications
In 1:17.14, putting her In excellent. In the sh9rt program left him
will be dlsquaiHied. Applications may not be p!IStmarked prior
position entering the slalom. Also trailing Boitano by a score of 2.0
to· Fe!l. 21 and must be received by March 7.
,
with good medal chances were factored places to ·2.2. "We knew
A random drawing will be conducted to delennlne winners of
Swiss team rna tes V,renl coming ln here It would come
opportunity to' buy tickets. There wlll be a llinlt of two tickets
down to a long program coll)petiSchneider and Brigitte Oertll.
per winner at $30 each.
"For tomorrow I am ln a very tlon. We're ready for lt."
Winning applications wiD receive an AII.Siar ticket order
lonn Indicating procedure and deadline for submitting
payment. Applications hot chosen In the drawing will be nollfled
by return mall by April 15.
·

I PREMIUM SALTINES
11-LI.
101
":'f
1

Pltt 70 Georgetown 65
PITI'SBURGH ( UPI) - Charles Smith scored 25 points
Saturday to lead No.8 Pittsburgh
to a 7(1-65 victory over No. 15
Georgetown In a Blg East game
stopped four seconds early be.cause of a benches-clearing
brawl that brought security
guards onto the court.
After Georgetown's Sam Jefrerson missed a free throw, a
fight b.r oke f)Ut between Pitt's

cont~tnues

I POWELL'S COUPON •

I

15-3 run late In the half that
erased Kentucky's (Ina! lead.
The Wildcats did not hit a field
goal In the first half following
Chapman's 3-p!)lnter with 5: 44
remaining. ·

'

-----.ar--"'"t'"---,

I

points. Davender added 17forthe
Wildcats, who were beaten 58-56
by Florida a month a
In
Lexington.
Chatman scored 18. points for
the Gators and Dwayne Schlntzlus, plagued by first-half foul
troul)le, added 14.
Chatman hit on all tour of his
!l!!ld goal attempts In the opening
half. Winston Bennett, averaging
15 points for Kentucky, scored
just 2 of his 8 points before
ntermlsslon.
·Maxwell's driving baseline
dunk with 4:05left In the halt put
the Gators ahead 30-26 and
brought a crowd of 11,921 to Its
feet.
·
'Chatman scored 8 points In a

.poor shoWing in
Winter Olympics

'
(

'l

February 21, 1988

. ·AMI

·GRANULATED SUGAR
4LL

I
I

r~-~

Section

Florida stops ninth-ranked Kentucky, 83-76 '

With These

FRESH PORK BUTT

.

February 21. 1988 •

Plllant. W. Va.

to' 12-4 In the OAC and into a
second place tie with Witte nberg.
ONU finished 13-3 In the conference and also was 18-7 overalL

Tigers rip Cards
SPRINGFIELD . Ohio (liP!)Rodney Littlefield scored 17
points to pace Wittenberg to a
convincing 88-58 Ohio Athletic
Conference wln over Otterbein
Saturday afternoon.
The loss was the 25th in a row
for the Cardinals, tying an NCAA
Dlvlslon Ill mark for consecutive
loss In a season set In 1985-Bb by
Clarkson (N.Y.) .

Cap tops Mt.' Union
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP)) Tom Lapier scored 15 points,
Alan Caslin 14 and Tim Mueller·
13 Saturday afternoon to lead
Capital to a 58-42 Ohio Atletlc
Conference victory over Mount
Union.
,
· Capital, which finished the
regular season 18-7 overall and
1().6 In the OAC, led 27-15 at tile
lntennlaalon, with Caslin acorlitg'
10 of hlllf points, and stretchlicl
the niargln tb 46-27 with 7: 35 ll!ft
.In the tame.

�Dig I C-2-Sundll~ Tlm11 Se tliniel

PoiNIIOf Midcleport-o.llipolla, Ohio

FebnJary 21, 1988 .

Febnay 21. 1888

Point Plnnnt. W. Ve.

~lldcats end se&amp;son with lith loop win

•

By GEOFF OSBORNE
see that night, as Wildcat senior o!! the glass.
'ftmee-8enllael Slafl
point guard Mark Jenkins con- .
It took only 62 seconds tor
MERCERVILLE ..:. Hannan nected on a long Jumper with 5: 58 Swain, who scored 14 points In the
tlrst ~all, to Increase Hannan
Trace ended the 1987-88 reeular to 110 to tie the game at six.
Then senior forward Scott Trace s lead to 10, at40.30. From ·
hardwood season with a 75-64 win
over North GaiUa Friday night, Rankin .Jotted a long shot Inside that point forward the Wildcats
its 11th conference win ln14 tries. the three-point line to put the began to sharpen Its tools, such
The Wildcats (16-4 overall), ·cfits back on top, at8-6. Though . as precise long passes downcourt
who will play Patriot Southwest- Pirate senior forward Blaine and some elements of hal!court
ern In the Chesapeake tourna- Gilmore, who started the game, · play. In preparation tor tournament Wednesday, at 7 p.m., used his only two points on the ment action. However, the PIstarted the game with an attack night to tie the contest at eight rates, who picked . up a quick
that saw less of their trademark . with 5: 09 to go, the Bucs let It slip thrill in the middle of the fourth
fast -break offense and more away when Swain began his quarter when Denney . took a
challenging of the larger Pirates assault under the basket, start- short pass downcourt and lelfped
in the paint. Rick Swain, one of lng with a short jumper that put in for a straightforward dunk
seven Wildcats playing their last the Wildcats ahead 10-8 a,nd ga\11! that cut the Wildcat lead to 11, at
game on the Mercerville floor , them a lead that they expanded ' 63-52, showed ·some promise as
took a number of sharp passes for the rest of the match.
they worked outthe bugs tor their
from the perimeter and con- · Ending the first quarter with a upcoming tournl!ment action.
verted them into most or his 23-16 lead, the Wildcats stepped The VInton five wiD be at Meigs
on the gas, allowing the Pirates High School·Thursday, at 7 p.m.,
team-high 23 points.
"Rick Swain may not have the to get five points or closer twice, to take on the winner of the
prettiest shot you've seen, but the first when Burnette dropped Crooksville-Reedsville Eastern
he's consistent," said Pirate his· jast regular-season ICBM game, which will be Tuesday, at
assistant coach Ron Twyman. from behind the 19'9" line 20 · 6:30p.m.
.

Wilson said that "we had a bad
third quarter and got behind too
far," the Bucs seemed to have
shaken the one-and-one blues
that have plagued them In the
last few' games. The Bucs
downed seven or 11 one-and-one
shots In the fOurth quarter, and
they played more ru.ll-court press
in the second halt than in ~e first
halt. ,
·
North Gallla ends the regular
season at 10-10 overall and 6-8 In
the SVAC. ,
HANNAN TRACE (7G) Swain 9-0-5-23; Brumfield 6-1-1Continue'd on page C-3

nHe
gets the
Job done."
seconds
second
quarter. :f~W;h~l;le~Pl;r;a;te~m~.;en;t;o;v;l3;r~u;c;e~~==========~
Swain
wasn't
the only one That
cutinto
the the
Wildcat
advantage
getting the Jpb done, as fellow . to 23·19. The second time was
senior Chris Petro, who did not when Dennney broke 'away from
~ score and fouled out' early In the
Swain and his . frontcourt
~ fourth quarter, "dished ott well partners long en9;ugh to sll)k a
and caused us to score better 10-foot sky hook, pushing the
.
when he was on the floor ," saiq Bucs to within five, at32-27, with
ATI'EMPTS PASS - North GaUia's Sieve George, with ball,
Wildcat mentor Mike Jenkins . . . 2:31 to go before halftime.
attempts to pass the ball Inside as Hannan Trace's Mark Jenkins
Petro.
had four assists and was a
However, when Wildcat junior
(12) tries to slop hbn In Friday nirht's SV AC finale Ia Mercerville.
on
theboards,rackingup12
guard
Tim Brumfield took a
force
The Wlkh:ats picked up their lltb conference win at the expense of
44
rebounds.
deflection
from Mark Jenkins
of
the
hosts'
the PirateS, beating them 74-GS. (Times-sentinel photo by G.
The
first
quarter
was
the
only
and
scored
with his heels inside
. ..
·
' Spencer Osborne)
quarter · in which both teams the three-poll)! line with 2:10 to '
looked evenly matched, as the go, the Pirates would not get
Pirate.s put the first points on the close enough to. challenge again
ATHENS_;_TheSEOALcham·
Doug Skinner's 20 points Jed board on a short j11mper from the rest of the way. The deflec2.8 million IMIItbers strong, who dedicate the11111hr11
pion Logan Chieftains, with the Ath~ns while Doug Stiverson junlor center Rusty Denney 21 lion came when Mark Jenkins
to God and countrt, tradltlllllll. Amerla.. v•lues,
league title locked up, failed to scored 22 for the Chieftains, seconds Into the game. Swain . reacted to a missed 'shot coming
security for our nation, cencll'll •nd support for our
complete a perfect loop season including a pair or three point returned more than the favor, as
he scored on a short jumper of his
veterans and their famHies, guidance ta our country's
Friday night as they dropped a goals. ·
own
18
seconds
later
and
hit
a
·
yout•
and 11rvlce to our co-unity.
55-52 decision to the Athens
The Bulldogs connected. on 20
pair
of
free
throws
at
the
7:06
Bulldogs.
of 41flelders, 13ofl7free throws,
·Logan thus finished with a 9-1 and grabbed 24 rebounds witl]. mark in round one, giving. the
league mark while Athens and Skinner getting ll.
.
' Wildcats a 4·2 lead.
Then senior guard/ forward
Marietta tied for third place with
Logan was 22 ol 53 from the
Keith
Burnette gave the Bucs
5-5 records.
floor, four of eight at the line, and ·
back
the
lead with one of his two
FEENEY·BENNm POST #128Although the Chieftains out· collected 30 rebounds with Jon
three-point
shots, putting the
scored Athens in three of the four Tompkins getting nine.
_
AMEIICAN LEGION-MIDDLEPOn, OHIO ·
quarters it was a second period
. In the preliminary jayvee visitors ahead 5-4 at the 6: 47 .
21-7 blitz by the Bulldogs !hat game LogandewnedAthens46-39 mark. Denney added to the lead
FOR FUnHEIINFOIMAIION CONTACT
• ~pelled the difference.
to gain a tie with Warren Local 3d seconds later when he hit the
-ADJ. -IY CUTWOITHY
The teams battled through four for the championship at 7-3, after ,second of two free throws, after ·
992·2434
deadlocks in the first two quar- Warren dropped a 50-46 decision 'missing the first. That 6-4 Pirate
(6141 992-6~06
lead was the last lead they would
'
: • •• 'ters before Corey Corrigan's goal to Marietta.
·
•• with 2: 28Jeft In the second stanza
The Box Score:
•• gave AHS the lead for good at
LOGAN (52) - Jerry Gabriel
:· 18-16.
4-2-10; Doug Stiverson 8-2·1-22;
:- : With just over one minute Sam Eggleston 1·1·0-5; Jon
•: 1'ertialning the Chieftains had Tompkins 1-1-3; Randy Kuhn
::. closed to within five points, but 3-0-6; Tim Moore 1-1-1-6. TO'• Scott Stricklin, Scott Decamin- TAI.S 18-H-52.
·: ada, and Corrigan all converted ' ATHENS (55)- Doug Skinner
one and one free throws to assure 7-1-3-20; Scott Stricklin 2-2-6;
.• the Jlpset victory.
Continued on C-5

VETERANS

YOU AlE INVITED TO JOIN THE LARGEST
VmiANS OIGANIZATON IN THE UNmD
STATES.

AMERICAN LEGION

Athens defeats Logan, 55•52

OPTOMORY
SERVICES ON
PREMISES

WE CORDIALLY 'INVITE QUALIFIED
VmRANS TO JOIN US.

Americare-Pomeroy
· Nursing and ·

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· By JIM SOULSBY
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Lancer's Tom Dutiel burned the
nets tor 33 points, more than half
,' his team's total output, but it was
-, to no avail as the Meigs Maraud. · ers fought off a late fourth
. quarter comeback bid by the
; Miller five to post their 11th win
· of a rather troubled season. It
had to be a sweet victory for the
locals, however, as they avenged
the loss they suifered on the
Lancer court In the opening
·game of the year.
The Marauder five jumpe!l out
to a 16-3lead after five minutes of
play in their69-61triumph as four
different players figured in the
• scoring for the .winners during
that time. At the end of the first
period, the Marauders had build
: • a nine point spread.
At the sixteen minute mark,
playing near errorless bail,
. Meigs had widened their lead to
'· 16. During the first two quarters
of play, ·the Marauders con• trolled the offensive glass getting
• three and four follow-up shots on
• the miss. They ·committed only

.-

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•Wide Vinyl Bodyalde Molding•
•AM/FM 4 Speaker Stereo Radio
•Digital Clock w/Overhead Console
•Tinted Glen
•Power Steering
•Interval Wlndahiald Wipera
•Front and Rear Bumper Guarda
•Bumper Rub Stripa •
•Rear Window Defroater
•lnltrumentation Group
•Ught/Sacurlty Group
•Dual Electric Mlrrora
•Trim Ringa/Center Huba
•1.9L EFI 4 Cyl. Engine
•Rear Window Wiper/Waaher
•4-Spd. Manual 0/D Trannxle
•P186XBORX13 BSW Tiret

(20· roll purchase required fo r
R·ll 50 sq. ft. mini·roll). Add
52.00 for postage and handling.
Easy· to· use

$69 95

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Total Vehicle Price ...........S8660.00
Option Package Savings ..... 694.00
Pa.t Hill's Discount.,............ 341.00
Manufacturer's Rellate ....... 400.00
Total Savings ..................$'1,435.00

Offer ends March I. 1988.

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•Power Lock Group
•AM/FM Elect. Stereo Cassetta
•Speed Control
•Styled Road .Wheale .
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. •2.3L EFI OHC 1-4 Engine
•6-Speed Manual 0/D Trans
•P196/76RX14 BSW Tires
•Tilt Steering Wheel

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pink Fiberglas·)\ insulation

camera features
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KODAKK400
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Total Price Delivered

$7 2 2 5

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Attic Size Insulat ion Needed Attic Blanket/ R-25 Project Cost

20'.x 40' = 800 Sq. Ft. x $.32/Sq. Ft.
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••

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FACtORY CAR

FACTORY CAl

. 19.84 ..
Ford LTD

'•

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CAROLINA LUMBER
AND SUPPLY COMAPNY

.:•.=·
•

2-1987
Mercurt Topaz

1987.
Mercury Cougar

•

•

• ~ stakes on the first uppper-hand.

.~ Jumping to a 6-2 start Eastetn

It .managed at least a six point lead
to lead 17-ll after the first
go-round .
Playing to the tune of a faster
tempo, Eastern allowed Symmes
to narro": the gap, but again
jumped aboard their offensive
horsestowidenltslead to41-34at
the half.
Managing to keep fresh troops
on the court at all time, Coach
Dennis Eichinger's Eagles alternated freely between Its veteran
starting llne·up and some of
Eastern's talented new blood.

·:
•
,•
·:
;:

&gt;

~:. Wildcats:~.
'•
'

Continued from page C-2
'•
•• 16; Rankin 4-0-7·15; Jenkins
•

.·...· 2-0-0-4;
5-0-0-10; Cremeens l'-1-0-5; Stitt
· G. Johnson 1-0-0-2, TO'.
• TALS- 28·%-13-75

:·

·:

.·:·
·•
:;
:·
•:

Point Pleasant, wv. ·

1984
Ford
Bronco II

NORTH GALUA (64) - Denney 13-0-3-29; Burnette 3-2-4-16;
Mays 3-0-1-7; Blackburn 2-0.0-4;
George 1-0·1·3; Glassburn 1·0·1·
3; Gilmore 1-0-0-2. TOTAlS 24-2-10-64
Score by quarters

:: Reserve rame
'
NorthGallia58,HannanTrace
.• 50

•

1987
Ford ·
Taurus LX
1984
'ford f-.250
4X2

1985
Ford
Thunderbird
1986
Ford F~lSO

•

::· scoring kings: Chris Tackett
;. (North Gallia) - 21 points. Bill
•. Bailey (Hannan Trace) - 19

;.;:

..
.•••.
•

'

I

)

~~!~~io~~f~':..:~s;ft~:naJ:~~~

ble TV stars Bobby Fulton and
,,
,.,.
.
·r
""''' ' .
to
EHS'
s
271ed
by
Schneider's
11.
Tommy
Rogers
headline
an
Tony Hendrix smoked the net
High
jumping
Mike
Martin
skied
evening
of
entertainment
atLyne
throughout the evening, launchCenter on the campus of Rio
ing six three painters from the for 7. .,
·
Eastern
had
.17
turnovers,l7
Gran!le College/ Community
twilight zone, while also playing
1
steals,21 fouls ; compared to 32 . College . .
a steady .floor game.E;aster11
The match Is being sponsored
.mainstay, Steve ·Homer, who costly turnovers, 16 steals, and 22
fouls for · Symmes.Hendrlx's by the Rio Grande Athletic
missed last cage season.is having
an all-star year, and again quick hands · grabbed 6 EHS ' Boosters Club as a fund-raiser,
according · to a boosters
proved to be both effective Inside ' steals.
In
the
reserve
contest
the
little
spokesman.
arid out.
Other matches have been
Meanwhile, EHS had Its hands Eagles fell to a 52-45 defeat.
to the card, including one
Kenny
Caldwell
led
the
crew
with
added
lull with Schneider, who was on a
12,
while
Paul
Hayes
netted
featuring
lady wrestlers Candy
shooting spree·of his ~wn.
20
for
SV.
Devine
and
Bambi. '
game-high
honors
of
With various strategies put
Eastern meets Crooksville,
Doors will open at 6:30 p.m.
Into motion at halftime, EichinW heel Horse Lawn and Garden nacrors never leave you out in the cold.
Visit us tod ay. Ask to set Whfi'l HOI~ snow handlin g attachments.
ger gambled on playing a game 4-14, in the 7 p.m. tournament and the matches get under way at
Wheel Horst' Power Works For You.
of 'last straw', putting into contest for Division IV schools 7 p.m. Tickets are $8 for a
OPEN
ringside seat and $6 for general
motion an upbeat fullcourt game Tuesday at Meigs High.
MON.·F·I. 7:30·5:00
Box score:
.
admission. Rio Grande students
that 'broke the camels back'.
SAT. 7:30-4:00
EASTERN . (82) Steve will be admitted for $4 with their
Eastern outscored Symmes 24-14
in the third stretch and put to rest Horner 6-5-17,Mark Griffin 5-0- ID card.
Tickets are now on sale at l,.yne
for 'the fourth quart~r. the score lO,Tony Hendrix 3-6-3-24,Ailen
Tripp
·
0·2·2,Mike
Martin
0·2·
.
Center
and will be avallal:!le at .
66-48.
.
915-3301 .'
CHESnR
·2,Jef!
Johnson
l-0-2,Scott
Fitch
.off.campus
locations, the spokesThe finale was written to a
heavy beat, but was slowed to a ~-2-10, Chad Sinclair 1-0-2,and man said.
waltzing pace In · the latter
Reynold 8 2-0' 4· TOTAI.S . fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..
24-13·82.
stages, much of which was spent JaY
SYMMES VALLEY (62) at the charity stripe. The final
Dallas' Tibbs 3-l-7,Tony White
ending at 82-67.
Easlern,now 8-11 overall, H-6,Duane McCarty 5·2·12,0oug
played its final regular season Cade 1-3·5,Doug Nelson 1-0game last night at Federal 2,Larry, , Pernesetti 0-2-2,Tony
Hocking. EHS hit 24-65 for 39 · SchneiDer 3-7-29,Brad Mootz 2-0percent, while clinching 13 of 22 4. TOTALS !0-18-!17.
Score by q11ar~rs:
at the line.SV managed 20-54 !.or .
38 percent and 18-34 !rom the line. Eastern ............. 17 24 24 17-82
Symmes grabbed 32 rebounds Symmes ............ ll 23 14 19-62

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Total Vehicle Price ....... 510,632.00
Option Packe~ge' Savings,_.. 793.00
. Pat Hill's Discount ......... ~ .....444.00
Manufacturer's Rebate ....;.. 400.00
Total Savings ..................51,637.00

nasl um starting at 5: 30PM. Par·
ents of cheerleaders, th e
wrestling team and basketball
players will be recognized and
honored.
Tri-Champlonship
Belpre threw the TVC race into
a three way tie lor firs t place and
shares top honors with the
Tr imble· Tomca ts and Wellston
Golden Rockets as they downed
the Vinton Counly Vikings 52-47
Friday night.
'
Each of the top three teams
finis h with 12 and 3 records in
league play for the season .

Plan
·event on March 11

·- North Gallla ...... 16 14 11 23-64
.

try that bounced off Ihe rlm a t the
buzzer, and two fr ee throws .
Scoring for Meigs were Cary
Betzing with 16,' Doug Stewart
and Randy Hawley who had 6
each, Eddie Crooks and Chris
Stewart who canned 5 apiece,
Scott Barton who accounted for 4
and Jay Humphreys wqo added
3.
.
Tom Fulk, of .th e La ncers , led
ali scorers with 20.
Meigs will close out regular
season play in a ma ke-up game
aga inst Vinton County on Monday at Larry R. Morrison Gym-

~

By SCOTT WOLFE
WILLOW WOOD- Utilizing a
complete team effort and bal.'
anced attack, the high flying
Eastern Eagles 'combined both
"old and new" blood to handily
defeat .the, Symmes Valley Vlk- .
ings 82-62 on their own battlefield
bere Friday evening in boys •
SVAC cage action.
Leading the way for the Eagles
was veteran point guard Tony
Hendrix, who combined twisting
drives and radar range three
pointers to claim a team-high 24
points. Following closely tn his
footsteps was fellow senior Steve
'Johnny' Horner with 17, junior
postman Mike 'Bones' Marlin
with ll,speedster Mark Griffin
10, and sophomore Scott ritch
with 10.
·
, Jay Reynolds,Chad Sincl!iir,Jeff Johnson, and All.en Tripp
also contributed with excellent
passes and rebounding efforts.
For Symmes Valley, ace Tony
Schneider ripped the nets tor a
game-high 29 points, Duane
McCarty added 12, and Dallas
Tibbs 7.
Initially, both clubs started out
slow, but gradually picked up the
pace with Eastern claiming

:i

.

lour turnovers during the first below their a~erage In other Betzing had two more from
two periods.
outings . ·
outside the semi-circle during
The victorious Marauders held
Miller hit 24 of 68 field goals (35 the evening.
their biggest lead of the night, percent) and sank 13 of 21 from
·The younger Marauders fell
51-29, with just over three min- the charity stripe.
·
behind 6-7 with 2:25 remaining In
utes remaining in the third
Bartrum took rebounding ho- quarter one in a close encou nter
stanza. From that point, with nors.on the night as he grabbed 16 with the Falcons. Trailing by five
more pressure from the Lancer of Meigs' 48 caroms and Tom after six minutes of play. the
defense and perhaps Jess concen- Dulle! snagged 14 for the losers . hosts stayed close and were only
!ration on the part of the home Meigs was whistled for 13 per- down by siX at the hallway mark.
team, Meigs committed eight of sonal fouls and the Lancers for
During period three, the ·Ma .their thirteen game miscues nine.
rauders overcame that defici t
allowing the Miller squad to get
Box score:
and led 36-34 with another six
within six near the game's end.
MEIGS - Bartrum 7-l-0-17; 'minutes left. During that final ..
Mike Bartrum was the top Burdette 3-0-0-6; Smith 7-0-0-14;
period the lead changed hands
point getter tor Meigs with 17. Bissell 6-0-0·12; · Durst 3·0.0-6; · three times and the scored was
Bissell canned 12 for the winners Brothers 3-0-1-7; Snyder 0-0-l-4;
knotted•, an equal amount of
and Chris Smith, from his guard' Powell · 0-0-1-1; Sisson 0-0-0-0; times.
spot, produced 14 tallies. The Baker 1-0.0-2.
Two unanswered lield goals by
guards, as a group, accounted for
MILLER - Newman 2-0-0-4;
the Falcons gave them a 47-45
26 of the Marauder points. As In T.Dutielll-1-8-33; Dishon 1-0-Q-2;
lead with 23 seconds on the clock.
most of · their past wins, ihe Edwards 4-0-3-11; C. Dutiel2-1-2- This proved to be the margin of
performance of those at the 9; Stickdorn 1-0-0-2.
viCtory as the little Marauders
guard swts proved instrumental
Score by quarters:
failed to connect on three field
In claiming the victory.
Meigs ...................... 23 39 56 69 goal attempts, one a three point
Meigs shot a 44 percent aver- Miller ...................... 14 23 39 61
age from the floor as they canned
Coach Cliff Kennedy's reserve
~stling
32of72fleldgoalattempts.Golng squad opened the scoring in tile
to the foul line only eight limes', first game of the night on a three
the Marauders hit on 3 of 8, far point goal by Cary Betzlng.
RIO GRANDE - Big-time
wrestling comes to the area on

•: .Eas.
.
Vikin
. tert.l ro11s over . . gs

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Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei-Page- C-3

:.Marauders grab huge lead early, defeat. Lancers, 69-61

Rehabilitation Center

1988 FOlD ESCORT GL

· Pomeroy-MiddlePort-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. VB.

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Pag1 C-4-Sundey Tine• Sentinel

Fllbr\ay 21. 1988

C)

=F=ab=.n=wy==2=1i;,;;;198=8===:;======~P;;;om:;I8;;101:
. 41::::;M:;:iddlet==::;P:;:o-;;rt:::;;;Gal;;li:='pol;;;l•~·O~hlo-~=Poi~·nt~PI;;;•;;;••;;nt=:':·W~.V;;:•;;;·=======S=:undav;;:=Tu;;;me;;;;•;:;-Senti==::;;::.nei=:::-;Pa:::::::::;;ge=::C:~;;;Z6~:

•
Blue Devils defense shines Friday in 78-54 cage VIctory
.
JACKSON - . Gallipolis
jumped out In front 13-0 during
the tint six and one-half minutes
ot play Friday night enroute to a
78-54 Southeastern Ohio League
basketball victory over Coach
Glen . Gillespie's Jackson
Ironmen.
The triumph left Coach Jim
Osborne's Blue Devils 14·5 over·

all and 8·2 Inside the SEOAL. one
game behind conference cham·
pion Logan. The Chiefs lost their
league finale at Athens Friday
night, 55-52.
Tolll'lley S&amp;arts WNIDesday
· Jackson finished regUlar season play 3-17 and 0-10.
Gallipolis played Pt. Pleasant
In Its final regular-season game
ot the season Saturday night.

The 1988 Division II Sectional
Tournament begins Wednesday
at Rio Grande College. Meigs
battles Jackson at 6:30 In Lyne
Center and Gallipolis takes on
VInton· County around 8: 15. The
winners clash at 7 p.m. on Feb. 26
at Rio Grande for a berth In the
Athens district.
'
The Rio sectional winner will
face the winner of the Shawnee

SVAC standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Southern .......... .l7 3 1716 1245
Oak Hill ........... 17 3 1378 1212
Hannan Trace .. 16 4 1534 1315
North Gallla .. ... 10 10 1292 1477
Kyger Creek .... . 8 .,12 1246 1227
Eastern .. .. .... .... 7 11 1245 1354
Symmes Valley 4 16 1201 1533
Southwestern .... 2 18 1131 1459
SVAC ONLY
(Varsity)
TEAM
WL
POP
Southern ........... 13 1 1224 830
Oak Hill ......... ..12 2 998 826
Hannan Trace ..11 3 1065 978
Eastern .... ........ 6 8 1005 1070
North Gallla ..... 6 8 929 1017
Kyger Creek ..... 4 10 853 908
Symmes Valley 3 11 887 1097
Southwestern .... 1 13 812 1047
TOTALS
56 56 1773 ma
SVAC
(Reserves)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern .. ....... .. 14 0 828 5~
Hannan Trace . .11 3 714 574
Oak Hill .... ..... .. 8 6 552 598
North Gallia ..... 7 7 663 629
Southwestern .... 7 7 637 622
Symmes Valley 6 8 604 613
Eastern .... .. ...... 2 12 .· 531 712
Kyger Creek ..... 1 13 494 691
TOTALS
56 56 5023 11023
Friday's 1ames
Hannan Trace 75, North Gall Ia 64
Oak Hill 78, Kyger Creek 62
Southern 81, Southwestern 71
Eastern 82, Symmes Valley 67
Monday's tournament
Ironton St. Joe vs. Symmes
Valley at Chesapeake H.S .. 7
p.m .
·
Tuesday's tournaments
Kyger Creek vs. Racine Southern
at Meigs H.S. , 8:15p.m .
South Webster vs. Oak · Hill at
Rock Hill H.S. , 8:15p.m.

Sectional. expected to be either
Jackson was 18 of 50 from the
the 19·1 Portsmouth Trojans, qr field for 36 Iiercent. The Ironmen
the 16-4 Ironton Tigers at OU on bit 18 of 28 charity shots (64
March 3.
percent) and had 29 rebounds, stx
Thomas Nels 30
by Kldd. JHS committed .23
Gallipolis placed 12 players In turnovers.
the scoring column Friday, led
Jm~ Lose Tou1hle
by Jason Thomas' 30 markers.
Jackson won the · reserve
Mark Berklch added 10.
game, 52·50, coming from behind
Chuck Oliver and Doug Kldd In the flnal45 seconds .
paced the Ironmen with 10 points
The Blue Imps railed 14·8 after
apiece.
one period, but rallied to take1a
GAHS led 15-4 after one period, 25-24 halftime leal;!. The seore
38-19 durlnng the halftime Inter· was tied 38-illl going Into the final
mission and 59·30 going Into the stanza.
'
final quarter before a large · JHS led by three before the
Jac'kson Patents Night crowd.
Imps forged ahead 45-44 on a
The )31ue Devils connected on· steal by Josh Williams and a
28 of 49 field goal attemptS for 57 · short Jumper by Williams.
percent. At the line, GAHS was 21 ·
With the score 4948 and 45
of 32 (65 percent) . The Galllans seconds left, Jackson'sBIII White
were whistled for 28 personals hit a three pointer. Mike Moore
and Jackson 23 In the lengthy canned a free throw w1 th 12
contest . Gallla collected 33 re· seconds left to make It 5249 .
bounds, 10 by Berklch and had t6 Following a se~les of time outs,
turnovers.
missed foul shots and turnovers.
Jackson was 18 ol 50 !rom the GAHS got a rebound and had a
fleldJ.(or 36 percent. The Iron men chance to either tleorwin Itat the
hit i~ of 28 ,charity shots (64 .buzzer, but a desperation shot
l&gt;ercent) andhad29rehounds,slx missed Its target.
by Ktdd. JHS commlited 23
Williams led the Galllans with

nine. White and Moore .led
Jackson's attack with 15 points
apiece.
VarsitY.Box:
GALLIPOLIS (78) - Berklch,
4·2·10; Neville, 2·04; Thomas,
12·6-30; Todd, 2-1-5; Evans, 3·0-6;
Kimble, 0·1·0-3; Strait, . 044;
McGuire, 1-1-3; Casey, 1·24;
Anderson, 0·2-2; Owens, 2-2-6;
Cornett, 0·1-1. TOTAL.'i !'7·1-2178.
JACKSON (114)- Ervin, 2·2·6;
Walburn, 0·0-0; Oltver, 34·10;
Moyer. 0-2:2; Abrams, 2·2·6;
James, 2·3-7; Moore, 0-0-0; Smal·
ley, 1·1-3; Serrahlma, 1-0-2;
Harris, 3-2-8; Kldd, 4-2·10; White,
0·0-0. ToTAL.'i 18-50-18-114.
By Quarters:
·
Galllpolts ........... 15 23 21 19-78
·Jackson ............. 4 15 11 24-54
Reserves - Jackson 52 Galli·
polls 50

~~et'!ug~ ~~::~~!':a~lbo~? Rio Grande Redwomen top ·Wilmingto~:

·'

,.
,
,

,
, ..
•
'.
. •'

SEO standi

'\
··
:

F
,
riday 8 scores

,..,..,..,, Mh••n!"

,..,..T,.,.n,o........ Faln&lt;•"''
:::~":';.:;..":::-:.;:.':.. ....

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_.,

senior, swished two tree throws
with two seconds remaining
Friday n(aht to lift the Marietta
Tigers to ah51·49 SEOAL victory
o~er the ost Warren Local
Warriors.
·
Bentz, wbo Is being recruited
by several midwest colleges, was
the hero {or the Tigers as he
scored 17 points, pulled down 20
. &lt;· .
•
.
nOR
·
-~SEO, OPPONENTS
(All Gamea)
TEAM
W L P OP
Wheelersburg .... 19 0 p77 1055
PortSmouth ....... 19 1 1522 1184
Chesapeake ....... 18 ·2 1417 1134
Logan ................ 17 3 1146 1004
Southern ............ 17 3 1716 1250
Galllpolls ....... c... 14 5 1139 994
Waverly ~ ... :...... 14 5 ·12041026
Marietta ............ 11 9 1360 12~1
Meigs ................ 11 7 1209 1186
South Polnt ...... ;.JO 10 1388 1418
Athens ............... 10 9 1307 1198
Pt.Pleasartt ... . .. 6 12 l251 1341
West.. ....... ........ ' 7 12 1778 1298
Greenfield ...... : .. 6 14 1065 1159
Warren .... :, ........ 5 14 1083 1213
VInton...... ......... 3 15 988 1093
Jackson ....,. ....... 3 17 1050 1352

'

blocked four shots, and dished
out five assists.
Warren had led througho.ut
most ot the game, played be(ore
a packed house, as they posted
quaf!er Scores of 12·11, 24·20, and
33-32.
A Bentz tleld goal e~N'IY In the
final period gave the Tigers a
brief lead that was quickly
ereased by the Warriors, until
With 38$econds left, a three point
goal by Mike Roach knotted the
score at 49-49.
Following a Warrior timeout,
Warren got the ball to th.elr long
rangeshooter,BenjiFull,buthls
shot glanced off the glass and
wasreboundedbyteamateKevln
Clem.
,
Clem's apparent winning goal
was blocked by Bentz, followed
by a scramble for the loose ball.
Bentz came up w!th It and was

WILMINGTON- With four ol offense with a total of 22 points
the!" starte;s scoring In ~ouble and 15 rebounds. In one of her
figUres , the ~to Grande ~edwo· best games of the season·, fresh·
men defeated Wilmington sLady man Beth Coli supplied 19 points,
Quakers 81-74 Thursday.
2 rebounds and 5 assists.
The , win Improved Rio
Senior co-captain Renee HalGrande s overall record to 18-8. ley was credited with 14 points, 4
The Redwomen were to play rebounds and 5 assists against
their final game of the season theLadyQuakers,whlleLeaAnn
Saturday at horne against Dyke. · Mullins, the district and Mid·
Holly Hastings, the 5·9 junior · Ohio .Conterence player of the
forward who ranked first 1n week, serv.ed up 12 points, ·9
District. 22 this week In avera,11 rebounds and ·5 assists.
rebounding, led Rio Grande s
The Re&lt;!women dominated the

Miller· D'lll"
· • I8
~

~0p

SOUth em

game statistically with 49 per- teams posted 15 turnovers.
cent (32 of 65 attempts ) on field
This win, coupled with last
goals and 85 percent (12 of 14 week's victories over Malone and
tries) on free throws. Wilmington Mount Vernon Nazarene.
(7·16) whose junior forward boosted Rio Grande to tourth
Annte' Kerregan rated fourth In place In the district. District
district scoring and second In playoffs are set for the first week
rebounding behind Hastings. net· of March.
ted33ot70trlesfromthefleldfor
47 percent. From the foul line the . - -...:..._______________
Lady Quakers sanll . 6 ~f 8
attempts for 75 percent. Both

.
·

Center closed

•

'MODELS

Wanted for several

RIO GRANDE - All facilities
In Lyne Center at Rio Grande
ROCK SPRINGS - Breaking agressfon and also a bit nervous, · College (gym, pool, handball
open a close garne, the Miller looseneduplnthelatterstagesof
Lady Falcons outscored the the frame.
court and weight room) will be
closed to the public during Spring
So uthdern Tornadoettes1841nthe
Southern utilized a meticulous
Break (Feb. 12. 29, 1988). A new
secon round to score a 70-32 pace offensively and capitalized
schedule will be published when
Div Ison
I IV tournament victory on Falcon turnovers to lead 8-4
classes resume on Tuesday,
in girls' basketball play at Meigs · after one round.
March 1, 1988_

fouled,
setting foul
the shots.
stage for his evening.
High School here · Thursday
game.wlnntng
Marlfitta tied Athens for third
Cheryl Doughty combined with
place In league stan&lt;l!ngs with a teammate Michelle Stiles for 16
5·5 mark while Warren took fifth points_ each to lead the Lady
with a 3-7 record,
Falcons of Coach Craig AxlineThe Tigers were victorious ,while Shelly Simons tossed In 15,
despite a 39.5 shooting effort (17 and Leslie Lytle 10.
ot 43) but the Warriors were
TalentedCrystaiHillledSouthwoi'Se as they hit only 19 of 52 tor ern with 10 polnts,Debble Great·
a 36.5 night.
.house added el,ght,Dawn Johnson
(SEOAL VARSITY)
Warren
I:'ocal's
ace,
Brett
4, Becky Winebrenner 4, and
(FJnal)
Rauch,
led
his
team
.
with
16
Becky
Evans 4.
Tnm
W L P OP
points
and
grabbed
eight
of
the
33
In
a
somewhat tenatlve first
Logan .. : ............. 9 1 . 586 515
team
rebounds.
period
Southern grabbed an
Galllpoljs ........... 8 2 , 598 494
Marietta will take an 11·9 early lead. Both clubs, lacking
· Marietta ............ 5 · 5 623 607 ·
record
against Chillicothe (5·15)
Athens ........... ,... 5 5 · 631 5~
Wednesday
at Ath.ens highschool ,
Warren .............. 3 7 545 598
In
the
opening
round of the
Jackson ...... ....... 0 10 521 . 707
Continued from C-2
tournaments
while
Warren (5·15)
ToTALS
SO SO 35M 3104
Corrigan 4·1-4·15; Thaden
tangles with Sheridan a i Crooks· Corey
4'0.8; Scott Decamlnada
Brient
vllle · high school Wednesday 1·4·6. TOTALS
(1!1ul)
18-2-13-1$.
night.
(SEOAL Reserves)
·Score by Quarten:
The Box Score:
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan12 7 16 17-52
MAKIETI'A (51) - Eric Erb
Warren ............... 7 3 456 411
Athens
8 2112 14-55
Logan .............. : ... 7 3 456 429 1·4·6; Justin Herb 1-1.().5; Brent
Reaerve
score:
Logan 46,
Marietta .............. 6' 4 448 435 McKenna 3-0-6; Mike Wharff Athens 39
A:thel\5 ............ , .... 4 6 432 436 '3-3-9; Doug Bentz 6-5-17; ·Mike
Roach 0-2·2-8; TOTAL.'i 14-3-14Oalllpolls .... , ....... 3 7 414 448 51.
.
Jackson :.............. 3 7 414 466
~REEBOI
.WARREN (49)- Brett Rauch
'tOTALS
30' SO ~ 2344
7:2·16;.Jeff
Nicholson
t·0-2;
Benjl
Prtdey's non-SEO results
Full 3·1-4·13; Bob Hughey 1·0-2;
sOuthern 81 Southwestgern 71
•4800
Kevin
Clem 5·2·12;"Doug Blddln·
. Wheelersburg 89 Valley 69
•5000
ger ,0-2-2; Kevin Fausnaugh
Waverly 62 M\ntord 58
1·0-2; TOTAL.'i 18-1-10.48.
Chesapeake 76 SOuth Point 59
Score by Quarters:
·Qreenfleld 67 Washington CH 61
Marlettall
9 12 19-51
West 67 Northwest 56
Warren
12 12 916-49
... ;:..
¥elgs 69 MIDer 61
Reserve
score:
Marietta·
50,
Belpre 52 VInton County 47,
Warren 46.
J• l,,,,,... u, e.,.
: Tuesday's gam~!&amp;: ·
I
('roumaments)
CHILDR£N'S BASKETBALL
Roclc Hill vs. South Polntat
scores
ShaWnee
·
•White/White
Whftol 1Wl'a) Park n, MariiM
. Ftrr~
Greenfield vs. Washington CHat
•
fl. Norwalk &amp;I
Ch.UUcolhe
·
· _ Wllln
"1............. 1&amp;. Betllel Ta&amp;e n
'WibnlnctoG II, Miami Trace M
· Southern .vs. Kyger Creek at
Worthlqton Cbr • New Alllu)' II
Meigs
W)ltftiN,14, River Valley 1.1
• '
D.OWJITOWN OAUIPOUS
Yo .. p MOOMJ 1'7, Yo~mp Ursllll•ll
·•
(·Replar season)
~ Vol.ap Sou&amp;h H. Cle &amp;sc Teeh 11
U6-C2JJ
Pt. Pleasant at Parkersburg
ZA111!11YIIko 74, Ft ndla)' 82
South

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'
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r:r:::~'~C~on~t~ln~u~edgo.n~C~-6~==~;;;;;====;:=~==t:=~=::=~=~~

At·hens ..·•

TODD GRABS REBOUND- Gallipolis Center David Todd (30)
picks off one of Gallla Academy's 33 rebounds In Friday's 78·54
Blue Devil victory over the host lronmen. JUS defender Is Mike
. Abrams (40) who was limited to six markers by the Galllans'
sparkling defensive play.
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--~·Pegs C-6-&amp;.nfay Tin11 Sentinel

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,.
Febr\BY 21. 1988 :

Pomeroy-Midclsport- Gallipolia. Ohio-,-Point PI&amp;&amp;ISnt, W. Va.

~·~· Southem -defeats SW five to finish season ·with
that close. Walker, a junior · Kyger Creek In the Meigs tourna·
forward, led all SCOfers With 28 ment at Meigs ·_ High School
points, while McNeal dropped In · Tuesday, at : ~: 15 p.m. The
Highlanders (2-18, 1·la) will
18 points.
travel soulh to Chesapeake I'IIgh
Southern senior center J\elll!Y · School to play Hannan Trace In
Turley led the Tornadoes·with 21 the Chesapeake . ·tournament
points and was witness to doul)le· · Wednesday, at 7 p.m . .
figure offense .from fellow se·
SOUTHERN (81) - Turley
nlors Jeff Caldwell ' (15 pOints) 10-0-1-21; Caldwell' 4-1-4.15; Am·
and Dave Amburgey (11 points). burgey 4-0·3-11; Cunningham 1·2·
The R,aclhe ·squad · will meet 1-9; Riffle 3-0-2-~; Diddle 3-0-1:7; .

PATRIOT Southern
•·' " cllnclled the SVAC title Friday
' night by slipping past South~est·
ern 8t.71.
Tile Tornadoes, finishing the
·. year at17-3 overalland13-llnthe
SVAC,' got past the Hlghland~rs
to register a 33-31 lead · at
halftime, as Highlanders Mike
· Walk~r and Shawn McNeal used
a portion of their double-figure
•
scoring efforts to keep the game
.

Stout 3-0-1-7: Amos 1-0.0·2;
McPhail 0-0-1-1. TOTALS 29·3-14-81 . ·..
SOUTHWESTERN (n) Walker 11-0-6-28; McNeal 9-0.0·
18; Mershon 0-3-0-9; Whlfu 3-1·0·
9; Darnell2-0.0~;. Hively 1-0.0-2;
Bryant 0-0·1-1. TOTALS- Zll-4-7·
71
Team fouls
Southern 19; Southwestern 17
Scor4;' by qUarters

•

17-3 mark

· top·Kyger Creek
OAK HILL - Junior· center
Jedd .Rawlins led all scorers with ·
· 19 paints while grabbing .13
rebounds and blocking seven
· shots In taking Oak Hill to a 78-62
victory over Kyger Creek Friday
· night.
·
'
Rawlins, scoring more than In
his past few games, was able to
have a little bit more room Inside
: to work, as his only serious ·
· competition in the paint was 6-6 •
' center Bill Loveday, the Bobcats'
only senior on the floor that night.
Loveday, who led the Bobcats
with 18 points and grabbed 12 of
his team's 29 rebounds, was all
the height the Bobcats had, as
fellow senior Mike Bradbury,
' ' regularly a -starter, a lid senior
. ·Theron Hodge, usually the ·nrst
off the bench, did not play&lt;
· · , Senior · Richard Clagg had
reason to celebrate his last home
· game In an Oak Hill uniform, as
he connected on a foul Shot to
register his first point of tile
season.
·
The Oaks were 31 of 61 from the
field (50.8 pet.) and 13 for 21from
the foul line (61.9 pet.), while the
Bobcats sho! 23 ,for 52 from the
floor (44.2 pet.) and 14for19from

·Miller. t.

· the charity stripe (73.7 pet.) .
Oak Hlll, finishing theregular
season at 15-.5 overall and 12·2 In
the SVAC, will !ace south Webs· ·
ter's Jeeps at the . Rock Hill
tournament Tuesday, . at 8:15
p.m. Kyger Creek (8·12, 4·10) will .
"go up against Racine Southern
Tuesday, at. 8:)5 p.m. , In the .
. Mejgs tournament at Meigs High
School in Pomeroy.
. OAK HILL (78) -.,. Rawlins .
9-0-1-19; Howell 6-1·2·17;· Faye ·
7-0-1-15; Hafe 2·2·3-13; Morgan
2-0-1·5: Copas 1-0-2-4; Miller
1·0·0-2; Brown 0-0-1-1; Clagg
0-0-1-1; Ccion 0·0-1-1. TOTALS 2~·13-78

KYGER CREEK (82)- Loveday ·· 5,0-8-18; Leach 4-1-0-11;
Johnson 3-1·1·10; Denney 3-0-1-7;
Reese · 3-0+ 7; Gilmore 1-0-2'4;
Perry 1-0.0-2; Price 1-0-0-2; VIlla'
nueva 0-0·1-1. TOTALS- 21.2,14·
62
.
· Score by quarters . ·
Kyger Creek.... .. 6 11 19 26-62
OakH!ll ............ 15 20 21 22'-78
Reserve game
Oak Hill 57, Kyger Creek 31
Marks.l!l~n: Shane · Maynard
(Oak HIU) .. 13 points. Denney
(Kyger Creek) - 11 points.

•' :

'"Start

'

.

'

'

OFFERS ·

to·Finish'' Dining

A Glass of Selected House Wine.
Cup of French Onion Soup Au Gratin
· · l'o~s.ed ' Garden Salad
Choice of Roasr Prime Rib or
Filler of Sole Almot:tdine
Baked Poiaro ·
Freshly Baked Rolls
.Chocolate Mousse

.Ask one of ~hem, then give me a c~ll.
CA~OLL SNOWDEN
Cor"" of Third Avt. &amp; Stat• St.
Gallipolis, OH.

miDE:NiiiNiOiftiED- Slxth·crader Allee

Phane 446-4290
Homt 446-4511

Ye~ey

leBa fellow elaMmates about 10me of the
attributes Of BOUnd 118 part of a special Cll!M
. proJeet funded .by Southern Ohio Coal Compllll)''s
.

ITAU PAUl

A

·

Horne Office: Bloomington,:uunols

. Monday, February 22 rhru Thursday; February 25
·
Rese~varions Suggested ,
··

i

·\
•. ; :. '
•

:= ~ ·

: ';
;;
•, ·
:; .
:-:
.: · ·
::::
;••

&gt;,

:;&lt;:

· ;- ~·

.{··!

the ..vlnga on

~~1

.~, :
:, .,

Church.
But
Is no' .·
~1 . petheopwlearellfSetrreetot
they ask,
"&lt;4
,i 1 "How !joes;wall Street work?" or
~1:
·" What does Wall Street say?"
That Wall Street Is . a market
,e; pl&lt;~ce.
,
·
•''
Specifically, It Is a ·marketplace where the me.:cbants,
:~
!·~ agents and customers ·of finance
•::·•., m~t ·to buy and sell stocks and
~:: : bonds. It Is composed of aiLth~
: •: ' lndlvld~al~YJarkEltPlaces and the
••• , total community ·of · Interests
:::; which maintain them and Is
.;;.:- regulated closely by the .Securl::: : ties and Exchange Commission
•
:;.· (SEC).
".
•. ·;
Thus, thenameWal)Streetlsa
i ·~ ' short; convenient reference to
~~;:. the .exchanges where stocks are
·:-: . traded In a two-way auction
. :[ process: -the New York Stock
•
Am
··•·;
Exchange (N:YSE), the . er1·
~~can Stqck Exchange (AkMEX)
, , ·and the regional stoc ex·
·~·
changes Also lricluded are· the
• I
·
·
•t• . nationwide
network of. broker·
;.;
/dealers known as the Over-The, 111
,•.
Counter Market (OTC), thebrok·
I~
erage firms and their employees;
'
and a variety of Investors both
'~:. Dindelvnldtuaallanhead
lnstllttuhtional.
'

COOLANT

88

.•.t

"Lighting Fixtures Make The Best Of Gifts"

GAS LIE

Am

All Sales Final

No lefunds - No leturns

•''

"SPICIAl OIDIIS lf!)T Ill EFFECT"

'
• '
,

•

..

3

9

.11

1

39

!

~f;·1 SeaIants

EACH
LIMIT 2

POWER,

SIEERING
NOWCIII.Y

15

,.

17

1a

lb.

·388

21

u

23

2.

25

21

29

20

46
(26%)
(20%)
6%)

21

. HOUIS:
Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 8
Saturday I to 6
.Sunday 9 to 5 ·

~------------~ ·

t'

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
'

PH. 446-9335
DAYI .CRAIL :.._ MAIAGD

wan Streetcanalsobedeflned
with added precision according.
to Its two niajor functions: to
provi!le .a primary market and a
secondary market. Through tl\e
market corporations
s~~ks aii!J. · lil&gt;l\11.1
_;bt:alnJn'g tlie •pul!lli; 'thereby
u
.the money needed for.
expansion. Tile process' of bring·
lng a stock Issue to the marketfor
the first time Is called "gqlng
public.'?
After a company has gone
public, Its shares are traded In
the secondary . market which
•proVides . the lnve~tor with an
adequate number of bids to buy
· and offer~ to sell. a~ ~ell as an
opportunity to seli.shares at any
• time. In the secondary market
stock prlc_e s rJse or fall according
to supply and demand.
·
Eacn P,erson using the Wall
Street marketplace has one objectlve: to make money. 'I'he
· buyer Is seeking to obtain an
adequate Investment return
from a higher stC~=k price or
. through dividend payments or
both. The seller, on the other
hand, may alreadyhaveacapltal
gain or loss and would like to free
the money for Investment else-'
where. Their efforts, In total,
form a fundamental ·e conomic
. process that creates new Industries, new · jobs and
higher
standard of living,
(Mr. Evans Is aa lnvesl"'ei1t
broker for The Olllo Company 111
their (laWpolfa Office.) ~ .

a

a
....- au
;~~-==

~

... "

'"'·"-.:--

··r'

Farm flashes

·

Pesticide
•
. meetmg
· ·Set

this wee·k _

.Jij Edwatd M. vonlio.;,
county Ext'en.olon Arent.
, Agriculture II CNRD ·

GALLlPbLIS - Pesticide re·
certification classes-will be con·
du~ted this week. Those needing
re-certlftcatlon this' year or next
year may attend and get credit .
for completion of class time.
Due to the limited number of
people· needing re-certification
this year the classes will be held
In the work room at the County .
Extension Office: '
Minimum requlremen.t s are:
· one .1\our of core training (safety,
labels, etc.) and one-half hour
segments for · each other category certification.
A minimum of three hours Is
ed
requlr · '
Private Applicators may at·
tend either a 7 p.m. celass on
.Wednesday, Feb. 24, or .a 1 p.m.
class on Thursday, Feb. 25, at the
County Extension Office in Galli- ,
. polls. No testing , takes place

Corporailon. Since no · declslcinhas been made, the 1988 pri&lt;'e
level will be announced at a later
date.·
.
Notices shoWing the 1988 qUo·
tas and ·a llotments for Individual
producers will be mailed soon by
the county Agricultural Sta~ill'
zatlon and Con.s ervation Service
committees.
Burley tobacco is grown primarily In Kentucky and Tennessee,
with smaller amounts grown also
In Alabama, Arkansas , Illinois,
Indiana, Kansas, Missouri
North Carolina, Ohio, South
Carolina, VIrginia and West
VIrginia.

..

ot

- -''

during the re-,certJ.flcatlon class.
ate allOWed to run out,
one must_start over again by
being tested. If your card reads
3/88, plaino be In one o(the Feb.
24 or. .F eb. 25 classes. _If your card

.If cards

SeciJnd in a series

,

~

I

,'-'---··-.-."'-

million pounds above the 1987
effective quota.
J'he price support level Is
computed using a formula in the
Agricultural Act of 1949, as
amended, based on changes Ill
the five-year moving averages of
ma·r ket · prices and cost-of·
production Indexes. However,
the Agricultural Reconciliation
Act of 1987 amended the 1949 Act
as It applies to the 1988 crop to
provide that the support level be
reduced by .1.4 percent from the
level establl~hed or that an
assessment be imposed on pro·
ducers. and purchasers in order
to ach.l eve' an equal reduction in
outlays by the Commodity Credit

When plantlpg thes~ . you go a edge of the root zone, They also
long way toward achieving a require a pH range of 6.5 to 6.8.
'l:he Montmorency pie cher~y
healthy productive tree.' Plant·
Is the most popular and best
GALLIPOLIS - A red deil" lilg other than virus-free trees Is
known. It Is a tart, bright ·red
clous, ,Yellow delicious apple and risky. Several better-known vir·
a montmorency cherry, 11r~ the · uses and virus-like diseases show
fruit which has a very-pleasant
tangy flavor when ripe. Its
fruit trees offered In the packet visible symptoms and threaten
tbls year, The Redchlef Is the red the life and fruit production. It
picking season Is In late June, lt
delicious In the packet. It Is one of : should be-emphasized that once
Is said to make. the best cherry
pie and Is -a favorite for per,
the top quality varieties ln"tlavor Infected, a virus cannot be
and tlesli colqr, The Redchle! has , . removed from the tree, .
serves. The Montmorency trees
ape propagated .with virus-free
. ihe added benefits of the !Ieavy
One thing to take Into considerproducing semi-dwarf spiH'·type atlon Is that the spur-type Red . buds on Mahala b Is a hardier
tree. When the trees begin to l)are · Delicious requires higher levels
rootstock and makes a smaller
fruit the picking season would be of calcium and · nltro.gen than
tree. It is more tolerant to
around the first ot ·September non-spurs. J:iecommended Is two );!rough!. and sandy soils, but h;ss
The Golden· Delicious Is. an · or three light applications of tolerant of wet conditions.
all-purpose apple. These apples quickly available nitrogen, such
The fruit packet contains one
are great eaten fresh or In salads as·calclum nitrate, the first year
each of the three fruit trees
and no applesauce Is complete using 2 ois. per iiPPllcatlon for
mentioned. For details conlact
each tree-. Be sure to apply the
without them In tbe blend.
the Gallla SWCD office at {46These trees are · virus-free, . ·nitrogen fertilizer at the outer . 8887 or stop by 529 Jacksol) Pike,
•·,
Roo m 308-C

i •'
•f!

13

19

.The Dow has gained about 100
·points In the past eight sessions.
Desp!te the gains, AI Goldman,
market. strategist with A.G .
Edwards &amp; Sons in St. Louis,
remained cautious about the
market's near-.t erm outlook and
questioned the underlying
strength !)f the market's recent

a

IACH

12

time."

runup.
.
After Thursday's pullbacK, ,
triggered in part by Ford Motor
Co. earnings that were strong bu.t
below market expectation![,
Goldman said the decline ·lndi·
cated that "the recent rally was
technically weak"· and the
market lacked leadership.
"I'd say the next 100 points Is
down, not up,'' Goldman said .. .
· Volume . . was moderate again
Ibis week bill did pick up on
· Friday. Analysts said thedeclfue
· Inn volume reflected the curtailment of program trading andlhe
absence of high-volume dividend
plays. In addition, many investors were sidelined fearing a
correction
was at hand In light' of
·
the recent ·advance.

Articles 9f. Conferation: Not enouglt

2~
3,000

points below the formid·
able barrier on Thursday before
the Friday . recovery to the
2000,pius side.
"The · 2000 level is purely
psyci)Oioglcal, " said Gall Dudack, ·a market analyst with S.G .
Warburg .~Co , In ' New York. "I
think we'll get ariother 100 pOints
after (the market breaks.) 2050,
but that will take a little more

Fruit trees improve landscape

_ · d.
D'S dental hea.lth._·

,VALYOUIE
FLUID

abou~ 15

reads and
3/89,beyou
can .attend
this
year
credited
· for next
.
4
.
years' renewal.
·
owned
by
Kenneth
Wisniewski.
At
Acom
Prodl(cts
·
APPLYING
DIEIR
SKILU!
Cliff
Spires,
,
Attention people who need to be
these students are applying skills they have
Darin Watson and James Buttrick are three
~
certified for the first time! Each
received In lbe two year lndusirlal Maintenance
Buckeye
Hills
s&amp;udenls
who
are
working
part
time
swegu~
year more pesticides become
program at Buckeye Hills. .
'1
at
Acom
Products,
a
VInton-baaed
machine
shop
•-1&lt;
·
.
restricted . Recently "Methyl
'
:~~ Cht•t.J
. ~
Bromide", a widely used plant
•••
~
bed fumigant, ·became res!•:
GALLIPOLIS , - (Editor's
particle~ collect in these "pits· trlcted. Last year "Biadex" and
: ~; Note-)- '11tll ·mopth of Febnary
and fissures," and are difficult to several .of the ion Insecticides
,·1 · 1988 marks the 40th observance rem011e even with conscientious · became restricted. Next year
t! of-the National Cfllldren's Dental
brushing: As a result, more than "Lasso" will be restricted.
;:: · ..ealth Month \"'th the natlonal
80 percent Qf decay In children's ' Farmers can becpme certified to
from . the new public domain: '
enormous amounts ot land, ac·
17'78-1787
.;, theme; "i\ Healthy smne Shows
teeth occurs In these areas. .
use Restricted Use Pesticides by
'
number of "republican'~ staie"s
qulred earlier With sea-to-sea
::; \'our Style."
Using the · same pr.:ocedures passing a series of multiple
' that would be ~dmlttect to the
Toward a United Slues ConatJtu. charter grants.
• •· ·
Through this annual obser·
implemented In ·c osmetic bond· choice te!!t. The Private Pl!stl·
Union on an equal basis to the
The six states without western
tloa
lng, dentists apply sealants to the clde Applicators are certified io ,
: ' ' vance, slate aad Iilcal soc;leties
other
states. That pledge was
land
argued
that
they
has
also
AR'l'JCLES
OF
'CONFEDERA·
: ': focus atlitaUoa oa the ··impor- · tooth surface, creating a hard, ., .use Restrlcted"Use Pesticides on
later
kept in the Northwest
TION:
NOT
ENOUGH
.
the
land
that
the
seven
fought
for
~: ; . lance of dea&amp;al health thi'OIIIII a
long-luting piiYslcal ljarrler be- their own propertY. In Ohio, the·
'
Ordinance
of 1787.
states
possessed.
•:· ,\Jar'lety of Clllmmualty-baeed protween tile tooth and the cavity· Ohio ,l)epartment o~ 1\grtculture
The
•
Northwest
Ordhiance
·of
.
RIO
GRANDE
The
Articles
Beyond
the
ownership
of
land,
:·~ · gram.aad acllvltles. Tbla Ia the
causing bacteria. This procedure regulates the Sllle of Restricted·
1787
said
that
"when
the
(new
of
Confederation,
,
deslped
to
'
.
ihe
.
six
states
without
land
•: ~ ~ ·Rellwiakel Dental S.elety'a flnt • hwi lieen ·found most effective Use Pts,tlcldes to ·only certified
western territories) - had 60,000
prpvlde a constitution for a new complained that tbe land-blessed
;.{ ~ l~elllla a Nl'l• af dea&amp;al . w111m the. sealant Is .applied to . appllca!Qrs. '
'
people, It might be admitted by
:.; healtll artolee fer cltQclrea In
first and second permanentmo, · Therelanocoattothefarmerto natiQn, was nQt accejlted imiJle' . slate!! could sell their trans·
Congress
as a state, with all tbe
dlately, or overwlielmlngly.
Mlegbeny tracts to pay oft
~z:·l obaervanee of National Child·
Iars slion alter ·they erupt, become certified other than the
privileges
of !be thirteen charter
•:
ren'K Dental Healtll Month.
usually when a child Is between time to prepare for the test. , Shortly before declaring lnd!!· pensions and other debts lnmembers."
The Ordinance also
: &lt; ,•
__
the ages of six and ten.
Training 9Iassea will be held on
pendence In 1'176, the Congress curred Ia the common causeappolilted a committee to draft.a ·the Revolutionary War. That forbade slavery In the Old
A siQlple, palnlessofflceproce- • Teeth can' be sealed II) Just a March 8 and March 15 at 7:00
du~e has been proven effective lit few minutes, without drilling or · p.m. at the Hannan Trace Vo. Ag. written conltltutlon. The result ·. would leave the ltates Wttbout Northwest, constituting an ea~ly
. 1, •• preventing tooth clecaytn child; ani!ltheala, and the sealant usu- room. The O.D.A. tester will be wu the Articles of Contedera- land to bave tQ tax tbemselves sign of freedom for eve..Yontj, .
The transfer of tertUe pllbllc
heavily. to defray financial
tion.
:: '• ~n. reports the Rehwlnkel Den- alb' remaina ~~ fl1l8d to .the on band atappl'&lt;Qdmately 8 p.m;
lands
to the central pwemm~t
The
document
was
adbpted
by
obllptlona.
··
.
~
tal Society, ·tootb'scbeWiqllllt'faeeformall:( Oil March 15 to live the teat. It Is
provided
a bond amona all otlhl!
Congreas
In
1717,
but
was
not
·
l.andleu
Maryland
held
out
This breakthroUgh Iii preven· years. ·
.
.
. · I¥IDid: lllat attendlll&amp;' the classes
states.
adopted
by
all
·thirteen
.
states
the
lontlelt
and
did
not·
approve
tiVe clentlatry Ia. known u "pit
Foodandbacterlaarenotable Wtll~fiU,IIila'lhetesteuler.
Altboligh the Articles of Carl·
untU 1'181 when It became effec· the Artlclfil uatlll781. Maryland
and fiasure . sealanla." Tooth to pe118trate the boaded aurtace. For llMi new appllca~ thete Is
federation
solved some pro~Rifl
only aave In when New . York
tlve. .
ttalnts - toi!Bh actryllc resins AI Ioiii u the plaatkl.matertal · 110 ClaQ atteaclaiiCe policy, lUll
In the new· country, It wa• QOt
The main reason for the delay surrendered her western claims,
. bcntle.l to the tootll sul'faee ..... rernallla In place, the 'tootb'a the reqUirement for paulq the
comprehenalve enough to solve
In !IJIPI'OVinl t)le Artlclu ot and Vlrllnla waa readY to do so.
may &amp;Qnleday eradleate tooth
che\VIng surface ts protected test. We •ve had MVetal call
decay In chtldren.
~1::,~d~:ecay-caua1n1 a,enta. from potential claas partlelpanta Coapc1enttcia wu dllcord con· To encourqe Maryland to ap- some ot the blger probltma
faced b)' the new nation.
•,
H
11
or clue · to the Methyl Bromide . ceralalr t1te Wlltei a lalllls.
prove tbe Artlclu, Cqreu
. It proVed to be ..-lltillll
Sl&amp;iltie--.atata had no pledpd todllpoleofthelaadlfor
the reatrlc!tloa.
more ltJI'I I .,.,... ·
'• !)
blfoi.'IUtlolt, Itcallyou
~aeecl
Eldelllloll
AJI=eny the "commoa beaeflt." Cqreu becaUIM! 1t hampered OWJtj \.
fllrtber said tllat It would "carve,
Coal . . . .,
• '
.
Oi.trll I BUll D..
-

~

,.

-

AVOIDFUELLIIE
FREEZE-4JP

CA.PACITY

•

,,

10

REQUIREMENTS

FREEZE

SAL~

o;QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED- ALL SUBJECT TO PRIOR •SALE

1

MEETS NEW CAR
WARRANTY

.

wan Street
'

DAILY .DISCOUNT
FIXTURE SALE.

.

USDA approves burley·· tobacco ,quot_a

GALLIPOLIS - The u.s.
Department of Agriculture an· ·
Munced a 19.88 burley tobacco
'
.
.
natlopal marketing quota of 473.4
ALBANY - Students at AI· Sakadales, TAG (talented and teacher has to go through," said
million pound~.
bany • Elementary School re'· · gifted) coordinator, Wbo applied Jilsh Collins, a sixth . grade ·
Each producer's basic · quota
will be about two percent greater
cently. took part In a "sound" · forandwona$300grantfrom the' student. "I also learned how to
·project thanks to a mini-grant coal company. '.' It's more than run through the.pllrtso!theear."
for the 1988 crop than for the 1987
provided by Southern Ohio Coal ·learning about sound," Saka·
"It's difficult being the · crop, Farmers who produce·less
Company's Meigs Division.
dales s'ald. "It's learning how to teacher," said sixth-grader Trathan their quota of tobacco In one
Talented and glftedchlldrenln give a preilentatlon."
year are allowed to -overmarket
vis Waggoner, "but It's also fun
Although she primarily works · because yoa get to stand up and
the amount of the shortfall the
·grades four through six visited
the Center of Science and Indus- with the TAG students, S;lka· talk In front of your friends."
folloWing year.
_ try In Columbus In October to dales favors thls project because
The project was one .·or 12
Since last season's undermar~ take part in the_Young Expert.
allthechlldrenllecomelnvolved. funded ' through Southern Ohio
ketlngs .are estimated to exceed
mental Scientist program.
.
The TAG students seemed to Coal's mini-grant program· this overmarketlngs by 80 million
pounds, the 1988 etfective ·quotl!
'· The 16 students brought what
appreciate the QPP9rtunlty .to school year. The grants applied
,they _learned back to. the school . present Information on sound to toward new and unique learning · which could be marketed woul(l
and explalnec;t some of the . the others, aDd most of them projects In six schools In the . be about 553 million pounds, or 28 ·
' attributes · of · s()un!l . to their
realized that the project was Meigs Local, Alexander Local
classmates .In a small workshop. partially designed to hflp them and Vinton CoUnty - School
format.
· develop their speaking skills.
Districts.
The Idea originated with Susan
"We're learning whljt our
By Conataace S. White
GalUaSWCD .

f~ :l Money Ideas

1885 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

,.

•

'

·SUPPtY COMPANY .

EVERY FIXTURE IN STOCK IS INCLUDED WITH THIS

'

Melp Dlvbloa.
the talentlld aad gifted.
prop:am at the Albaay Elemelltary School look
trlp8 to the Center of ·8cjenee and lndiultry In
Columbllll to learn about subjeels .t hai they C\IUld
later leaeb to lbelr cluamales.

By DONALD GALLAGHER ·
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK; (UP~) - The
stock market extended Its early
. February rally with a strong
·finale this week, pushing the Dow
Jones Industrial average back
above •the 2000 level !or the first
time since the first week of the
new year.
The Dow rose 28.18 Frfday to
·close the week at 2014.59. For the
week, the index added 31.33
points, or 1.6 percent.
.·
The Dow regained . the 2000 .
level Tuesday for the first time· ·
since Jan, 1; when lt closed at
2051.89, -Its highest level this
year. It held on by less than a
point Wednesday and then fell

Albany pupils
take part -in project
.

Continued from C·5

FROM MONDAY, FEB. 22 THROUGH FRIDAY,
FEB. 26 we will discount the price of each fixture in our stock by an additional 5% each day
off marked price. The percentage off grows
daily for 1 week. 5% off.on Monday, 10% off on
Tuesday, 15% off on Wednesday, 20% ofton
Thursday and 25% off on Friday. Come in and
begin browsing BUT DON'T WAIT TOO LONG TO
BUY! Only in-stock merchandise is available
and none will be replaced. Many items are oneof-a-kind · so you'll have to decide how· much
you want to save! Count the days as you count
the savings. You can save more by waiting
another day, but will the items you want still be
there? Don't miss this great chance to save!

•

.

5:00 p.in.-~0:00 p.m.

.

D
".- .,

.

The Down -Under Restaurant' -

'

S.t"'te Ftm'l Mutual
. AutCH'OOblle Insurance Company

~entinel Section

'

.

W.Va. Electric

i

'

JwWav 'irima-

Stock market extends
rally ·with strong finale

Whyclo so
nuany ·or your
. neighb()rs·insure
their cars with
State Farm?

boards 32·29 as Doughty posted
Miller thundered up the floor In
19, and 'Hill6 for Southern.
round two and thus the ceiling
Southern shot 15-50 for ~0
caved in on Southern's lead. The·
percent from the floor and hit i -8
Falconettes outdistanced the
at the line for a meager 25
helpless Tornadoes 18-4 in 'the
percent, while harvesting 2Q
streak, then never let up to lead
rebounds,
having 20 turnovers,
22-12 at the half.
and~~ fouls . Miller hit 31-76 for a
. , Although Southern still main·
warm 41 percent, hit 8-18 ·from
· tained its pride and hustle, Miller
the line,had 32 'bounds,l8 as ·• ·muscled tl!elr way to consecutive
slsts,25 turnovers, and 13 fouls.
,·. twenty point quarters and a 70-32
Also at Coal Grove, I~onton St.
. finale.
Joseph
outlasted the local HanMIUer . advances· to second
nan Trace Wildklttens 66-41 in a.
· round plaY to face North Gallia
Division IV girls' tournament
- Friday at 6:30 in . the upper
. bracket championship game. game.
St. Joe· took a surprising 18-1
. , , Kyger Creek meets Eastern in
lead In the first frame,theri clung .
• the upper bracket title game at
to a 31-17 halftime lead.
.. ·.8: l5 ti\e same night.
Michelle Unroe had 29 points '
Southern of Coach Kim Phil·
lips, boWS from tournament play for Hannan in a great offensive
effort, while Marshall arid Tracy
with a 5-16 record.
Miller won the battle of the Jenkins each added 4.

'

Business/Fat*ln

•

Scoring leaders: Brad MI!Y· ~
Southern.: .......... 17 16 25 23-81 .
nard
(Southern) . - 14 points. ·:
Southwestern ..... 14 17 20 20-71
Justin Fallon (sOuthwestern) - ·~
-Reserve game
18 points.
-.; i
Southern 55, Southwestern 50

'

_, .Oak Hill Oaks

.

'

,,.

.,

--"!.. I,

_.,.r.;._ __

aa.
» ,.......... .let

�'

·~ ·

-

..... ..

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

···--~

/
Peu• 0-2-Sundey·llmll Sentinel

BRIDGE ·

Pomeroy-Midcllport-G..Ipolis,

Ohio

Fabruary 21, 1988

February 21, 1988

Point Prsunt, W.Va.

...

Meigs Soil, Water District has .crown vetch for sale

junbaJI -~imts• ientintl

Early spring Is the time of year nate growth produces numerous
Lime and fertilizer - lor best
Work lime and fertilizer Into to get started. For · further
when
bare,
eroding
areas
are
clusters
of
flowers
on
long
stalks
results
take
a
soil
test.
soli.
Information on ground cover
.AJU
quite
evident
around
the
home
or
from
June
until
September.
Each
Instead
of
a
soli
test
you
can
Plant
ground
cover
plants
plants or tree seedlings avail a.AKS
on
the
farm
.
cluster
of
flowers
produces
a
use
J.5!)
pounds
per
1000
square
according
to
planting
guide.
ble,
contact the Meigs Soil and
tAIOit
Bare areas of soil along lanes group of ftngers like pods,
.!(7
foot agricultural (ground) limesThe deadline for ordering the Water Conservation District Laand
roads
contribute
high
containing
one
to
many
seeds.
tone
or
equlvelent:
and
apply
a
crown
vetch or Engl!,sh Ivy Is dies Auxiliary at 992-6647 or stop
WEST
EAST
amounts
of
sediment
Into
road
·
Crown
vetch
reproc!uces
by
minimum
oll5
to
20
pound
per
March
18. If you would like· to by the · second floor of the
.KQB
•7u
ditches and streams. Getting both underground roots and
1000 square loot of 12-12-12 · estsbllsb hardy, lasting plants Farmers Bank building In
•• 15
tts
these eroding areas covered with seeds. Roots. spread under the
fertll~r or equivalent.
around the home, now Is the time Pomeroy,
tKQ
• AJI ts
.Q 108 62
some type of vegetation not only sojl to place and start new plants.
adds to the appearance but also Seed Is produced each year In
Q1lQD'lng
lf
SOUTH
helps to keep ditches and water pods which mature about three
~"'
.
·
.
.
.10 8
I
courses open.
.
weeks alter bloom. Crown vetch
IRONTON - "Managing a lo- bigger trees and less obvious lm· · tlve means of achieving diverse
.• QJ 1062
tJ7652
This year, the Meigs Soil and chokes out , weeds, resists
restlnvolvesalotmorelbanplant- pacts of human activities!' Yet · habitat for wildlife Is by timber
Water Conservation District drought, disease and Insects.
!ng and cuttlllgtrees. With the new otber parts of the Forest will be
harvesting. "People put a high
Vulnerable: North-South
(SWCD) Ladles Auxiliary has
English Ivy Is a close clinging
Wayne Manqement Plan, we've managed by harvesting them at
value on Wudllfe ·associated reQealer: East
avallable for sale crown vetch vine. It deve!Qps dense covering
trledtoprovldeaeveraltypesollo- a younger age, since this Is blo- creailon and on visual factors
and English Ivy ground cover on rocky areas. It Is green year
rest and many dlflerent ways of logically and economlcilly more
wh!cb can be obtained most easWtol
Norllo Eul
Sou Ill
plants
that
arespeclllcallysulted
round.
It
works
well
under
managing~
trees
and
other
veadvantageous.
Younger
forests
Uy and eronomlcillly by comPass
to
plant
In
the
small
hard
to
shrubbery,
grows
well
In
sbade
gelation
within
the
forest,"
exare
illso.prelerred
by
many
wild·
mercia!
timber sales," explains
Obi.
manage
areas.
or
sun.
plains
Frank
Voytas,
Forest
Sulife
species,
Including
deer
and
Voytaas.
Pass
Pass
4•
Pass
Pass
The Crown Vetch Is a perennial
If you are considering planting
pervlsor fqr the Wayne and Hoc- ruffed grouse.
The Forest will ·be manl'ged
legume with dark green foliage some ground cover plants on a
sler National Forests. .
In order to.meet the diverse reunder both even-aged and )IDeOpening lead: • 3
and pinkish lavender to white bare area, some site preparation
Voytas expects to see the Fo- qulrements of the many animals
ven-aged systems. Even-aged
cluster of flowers. Each growing . will be necessary.
rest using a variety of harvesting who use the Forest, the Plan promanagement means that lndlseason 11ew foliage shoots from
FoiiQWing are the steps to take
practices In the future. "Over vldes for many different types ot
vidual areas of trees are essenthe multi-branch creeping root for planting:
.
time," he speculates, "thfi char- habitat, Including . old growth,
ttslly the same
at~d harvestsystem. Plants obtain a hel~ht of
Prepare a . l!rm seedbed and
acter -of much of the Forest will open areas, ponds, small lakes · · lng Is done by cutting 11\0St of the
By James Jacoby
·
evolve Into an older forest with , and marshes. In some parts of
trees In one stand at' the same ,,
Strategy and tactics are as much at 1~ to 18 Inches. The lndeterml- work to a depth of 31nches.
home at the bridge table as they are on
the Forest, the most, cost eftectime.
Public Notice
Public Notice ·
the battlefield. In today's bidding batPublic Notice
Public N'o tice
tle, East opened one club and was
raise&lt;! to two clubs. What should he
•
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
one sat of dra-ga ond thet tho RuiN ond RegulaPUBLIC NOTICE
think when North makes a takeout
S..tod lido wiH be ,... -lfiCIItlono, ond o.,...haH tions on E-1 Employment
NO"nCEiot**fgiwnthot
double? Obviously he will think that on~ceivod bylh18EPTAC111ter, of tho tZO.OO depollit of Mid 0-rtunlty lllall be made a
Februory 26111.
South is going to bid hearts and that it at 10:00 o.m., 1 public .... wll (Southoaotorn Probotlon will be returned to blddert pert of thlo contract.
is time to make a tactical bid to get his be held at Tho Fa.... Treatment Alternative). P. upon Ntum of drawlngo and
No bidder may wlthdi'IIW
partner off to the best lead. So East ll1d Sovinga Co., 211 Weot 0. Box 728. 1001 Eaot -lficltlonoln good condl· hlo bid within lliaty {110) deys
bid two spades with an eye to getting a Second, Pomeroy. Ohio. to State Stre•t, Suite 4. tlon within ten (10) doyo after tho - · • dote of .t ha
apsnlng thereof.
1011 for ceoh tho following col- Atheno, Ohta, 41701, until lfl• bid openlng,dorte.
spade lead from West.
4:00 p.rri. on Morch 1, 19B8
Bldo for . tho obovo dooloterol:
H In the opinion of the
Now it was South's turn. Since South
867 VCR Topeo (will not ond opo,.d lmmodlototy cribod work muot be mode Owner. or his delegortod
lacks high cards and defensive be oold oeporotely)
thorufter for fumllhlng the Qn .b lank• to bo turnllhed by repraentltive, the accep·
strength, but has attractive distribunecnury l1bar and mate- thor Archllect/Englrwer ho- IInce of thel-oat bid lo not
1660 Clur Ceoea
, rlolo, tooto, .m achinery and relnbefol'll n1med.
tion, his three-heart bid should· mean
.
3 VCR Machines
In the beat lntoreot of all
appliances r'ICiulred for the
Bide muot be edd.....ed tO canCIImod. the Owner nuiy
1-13' Color TV
·"Hey, partner, if you have an opening
n - SEPTA Cllltlr Site tho SEPTA Cantor of Sou- lctept. . with the concur·
2 "x8 lighted aigns .
:
bid with support for hearts, maybe we
STATE STREET
Dowtopment Wort., Fectory thNatem Probetion Trut- ronco of tha Director or his
Tha
F1rmara
Benk
and
can' make nine tricks, and I'd rather Saving• Company, Pome- StiMI,
Neloo..-, Ohta, mlnt Alterrietive on the delqated representative.
not let East play in three clubs." The roy. Ohio. reaervee the right 41784. IICCOrdlng to tha outlkle of tho envetape tha
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
FASHION ACCESSORIES
· - propoMI SO openod
bid works out fine, with North having to bid at this sale. and to · drewlngo ond lpiCificldono !Umo of work bid upon.
or rejiCt all propoMio and
the world's fair and an easy raise to withdraw the ebova col- on flo In tha offici of Ponlch
Each bid muat conteln the advertl11 for other bldo. Tha
game. Although East-West can save ataral prior to Mia. Further, and Noel Archltech, 1107 full ..me of....., - n o r Owner -rves tho right to
•nv lnformattllea.
points by sacrificing at five clubs, nei- The Farmers Bank and S•v· Richland Avenue, Athans, compeny I n - In the
Ohio. 41701 .
Mme. ohatl ltllte the prtce
Approved by SEPTA Con·
ther player can judge this action to be ings Comp8ny reaervn the Contrect
..........~ En. of Coat for lobor ·•nd moterielo, and ter Jucllclol Contor Board:
right to reject any or all bids
correct. And the defenders have lllbmitted.
1. Stlo work. ....,-.... U7.000 mult be .-mpenlod by 1 Hon. L. Alon Botdabeny,
enough strength to make playing lour
Copios of Mid drowlngo BID . GUARANTY meeting Athano County; Hon. Jomeo
Further, tho abovi colt•·
•
hearts touch and go, particularly with teral will be sold in the con· and I)IICifiCIIIIono may be tho 1'8qulremonto of Section E. Stilwell, Hocklng·County;
a spade lead. In fact, it takes the spade dition it is in with no ex- obtelned by prime blddore 163.54 of .the Ohio Rovlasd Hon. Charleo H. Knight,
ANY PURCHASE
Moigo County; Hon. William
lead to hold declarer to 10 tricks. With presaed or . Implied warren- from Panlch ond Nool Archh Codo.
Blddera oholl note thot the H. Safranttk, Morgan
tecta. 107 Rlchlond Avenue,
glv~n .
any other lead, South can manage to tie•
EXCEPT SALE MERCHANDISE
Att&gt;ono, Ohio, 41701 upon . Pre\foltlng Woge Rete1 pub- County; Hon. Qoorge W.
12)
21.
22,
23.
24,
4tc
pitch his spade loser on dummy's king
, tho depoolt with them of llohed by tho Depertmont of Floutt, ·Pony County; Hon.
of clubs. After the spade lead, declarer
twenty dollora 1*20.00) In lndultrilol Rllotlono ore to be Michut A. Bromo. VInton
should have no trouble making game,
cull' or chack for - h HI of compllod with throughout County: Hon. Su1an E.
since the diamond honors behave
drawing• ond I)IICifications. thlo project.
Boyer, Wa•hlngton County.
FEB. 22nd - 1 DAY ONL
Tho full t20.00 dopoolt on
BlddOH' ohatl etso note 12) 10, 1~. 21,, 3tc
nicely.
NOin'll

Z.%1-11

•u

M

.

z•

3 Announcements
Where can you 11.. the belt
hlircare at the
pric•7

.,._t
FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS, lho

.tfordable aalon. 322 2nd. Ave .•
' ac:rou from park. e14· 4419152.
Kupkl'e Nelt end Connections
Oetini Service of Hunti"CCton
loi!'ll. togelhlf' 1h1ring profll11.
For 1nformetlan , write: Kupld's
Nelt, P.O. Box 1519, Ironton,

, Oh\i&gt; 45838.·

Chuter. Bowhuntlrl hosting 30
target 3· D 1hoot February 27th.
For d.Uill Qn rulel, CIIIHI,
fiH, end PlY beck, cell Brown's
Taxidermy end Archery at 614·
986· 3384 from 9:00a.m. -6:00

pm.

MARINES; Wl're looking for 1
few good men. For more lnformetlon. cell Sergeant Mike Abell

'ot 304-420-1018 aoi!Mt.

4

$16,440

·-2,014

7147.

$1 s, 100

lllpRt.

Facto~y Sticker

Sale Price

•

I

DIAMONDS
Lucy Smith Gaul,
dalilh.ter of .the late Josith L. and Ella Kimes
Smith was born April25,
1896, in M8iiS County.
She spent her entire life
in ~community whore
she was born; only a
mile and a half fro111 her
birth place. She passad
away Februaty 5, 1988,
at tlle Pomeroy Hnlth
Care Center.
She was ·preceded in
death by her father and
mother, J.L. and Ella
Smith. six sisters and
two brothers. ItS. SaRiuel '(Ida) Eastman.
Iff• Joseph (Myrtle)
Bowles, Mrs. Porter (Elsie) Midkiff, Mrs. Harley
(Jessie) Midkiff, Mrs.
Frank (Daisy) Gaul, Mrs.
Ernest (Orma) BetziiiJ,
Mr. James (Dell) ·Smith
and Mrs. Harbert (Bart)
Smith.
She was united in
mlrriap to Jacob (Otis)
Gaul, Januaty 4, 1916,
who also pracedes liar in
death alon1 with thtee
dau1hters, infant Maty
Faith Gaul. Mrs. James
(Dorris) Spenc,er, Mrs.
Kenneth (Alvis) Hartley,
Ont son, Leverett Cacll
Gaul: Ont ~r~nddaqll­
ter. J,ackie Spencer
Btidles, and one sonin-llti; James Spencer.
Sill is suiVivld by two

'

$14,000

1987 OLDS 98
factory Stitkor
117,59B
Discounts
-3,759
Salt$-:---_;:::..:....
Price

White with ccr01ine doth
intlf'ior.

13~800

Factory Sticker
120,521
__
Discountsc:......__ _ -4021

1'NEW"

$16,500

Oiscountl

~:.

"NEW"

dluPters and sons-in-

•

1111, lr. and Its. PHI

Garnet red with rnatdting
custom cloth inttrlor.

Factory Stiilcer

(llaane) Hoffman. Mr.
and ·llri. Howanl (liar-

'

120,870
-,-4,070

nne) Caldwell. Dalllhttrin-lnl Barbara Gaul SlrPiit, SOn-in-law Kenneth
W. Hartley. Also, 1811111 in
lhl home Ropr and Rodney Gaul and toretta (Sis)
llulphr. Also sutvivilll.

$16,800
"NEW"

tllirtlen

pidchHdrtll,

hi!MdY • etht

&amp;r~~~dchildrel

''

Chev.~O-Ids.
CARS
446-3672
'

·~·f·f'~

OUAU1Y COMitfiTitffNT.PIAN

'

446-2000

Wanted boet IT'Oior 111 to 128

HP. 304-178-182&amp;.

phont 814-.WI-8841 .

Yard Sale

11

"The ,Ohio Val.le
·--

-----

...

'

304-671-1&gt;129.

GET PAID 10&lt; reodlng bookll
t100.00 por title. Wrlto: Pi!-SE·

117h. 111 1. Uncolnwey, N.
Aurora. II 101542.

'

8

OET PAID for roadlng booka\
0100.00 por thlo. Wflto; PASE·'
331. 111 S. ,Uncolnwev. N.

lionel Guerd. 304·1715·39150 Of'

9857.

12

fii:Nih ~

.

I

I

.

2 8A . houl8 with flreplac.. 3
mHee from Gellipolla. e1000
dvwn. p.eymenu- n .• s monthty
indudea tax • inaurance. Total
price e22•.-oo. Call 81 ..·oMI·

I

TEKELT

I

6

hom•.

Situations
Wanted

LAWGEN

NASL AN

Need • girl td 1tay with able
bodied women· 15 d•yl &amp;. n.,hto.
Uglit work. Sel•ry. Call 14·

Have room In ~~ home for 2
elderfy ladl11. ThdM not wiahlng
to be in nul'llng home. S.d f_.
will be coneldered. Will hiYII
. Call anytime. 814·

1

I
•r;.. . r r 1· r r I' r r• -1· r· r 1

=·=·=·~- ....... ---"

~~

C0 0 L E

Td

. I II 0 I I
L.-L-_.L._.L._.1.-

=--~~--.....,~· -la-

Aultic cect• home with oak
floon, two-Way tlrePIICI. Pelle
Colonl•l wlndowa. cullom
woodwork. study. 3000 pluaiiQ.
ft. 1ppro1t. 8 WOOded IICfll In
Sutton Twp. Coumryslde. Ap-

"'"latd
at 1112.000. Sell for
en;ooo. 1:o11 014-948-2830.

11

.

.

G)

Co mplete the chuckl e q uofed
by fill ing In the rni ssln g bwords
you deve lo p fro m step No . 3 elow.
·

Coil 614-817-

, .N31\3 !&gt;Nil..l.39

Ol

Complete houl8hokls of fumi~,. ·a antiques. Alto wood a
COlli heetefl. Sweln'a Furniture

loU·GeHipolia

Commerci•l property end house
Ferrv. C.ll 304·

Olivo,

871-1808.

1 acre land. 3 miln from town.
Herd I'08d rudy for mobile home
or good building · aile. Call

Cell us for your mq.blla home
lnauranci ; Miller ln1ur1nce.

~14-.WI-1,56 .

304·882·2145. Also : euto,
hOme, IHe, h..tth.

Would like to buy ·junk cWt,
wrecked a.. and motorcyeles.
c.n 114-379-2110 or 379·
2423:

18 Wanted

Pay TOP DOLLAR . I or more. Excellent ret.,.,..,
Coli Lorry Stricidand Logging.
814·02-7823.
plno.

Do

10

Renlals

tr.e aologne · SeU

Avon.

Mak'o big bucko. Ctllll 4-4441·

,33sa.

_A_LA_II_M-~TE_C_H-IC_I_A_N--_Bu_rl_o-r-

FI,., CCTV

*m IVIt8m. Local

ttl...... ...,..,_
company. 'Paat

llectrtc.l

or

hoipful.
Good ,.... Good ~. compony vtlrlcla. Coil 814-.W88~11.

GOOD NEW81 MERR~MAC'o
nowSPRINOCATALOGio.-y

CAID OF THANKS
The (ucy Gaul family
would like to tllenk all
the fiiends and nejpbors who supported and
collfottld .. dllrina the

extended illness and
dtath of oar lather,

32 Mobila Homes
for Sala

41

olom. 114-387-7751attor 5pm.

nowl Home Deoor. Gifta. end

""''·
lloap ...... ......
..........
inwllhournewH
IM'OIN"I
and Demonlllator program. No
"'vettment.; d..Mring or collectioN. Car end phoM nMded.

Coli PIIEE NOW- 1-100-1921072.

HouM~

1101 tor aurr•nt Federal

Service- Don't

379-2112. 1nytlmo.
Wll do houHGI-Ing. CoU
814-.WI-1622 oltof e,rM.

tholr homo. "'"'- nlghta. Coli
114-379-2149.
'· .
' 1870 12•70 ,3 1111, 1 • \\
baths. gH hut.

poeldo.. aal'-ble in your......

UGO.·UOO. &lt;&gt;&lt; t400. wHidy.
Ctll 114-1143-12118. 114-9814171, 014-1182-3031. or 114·
371-11412.
- : 011ture lody 10 livo In
....... tor .....- chid and
do lilhl houtolteaping In ...
for tnd boord,

nomfftll wage. Pr•f•r nonamokor. Moy h ... ono child.
Reply 10 Tho Dally-' P.O .
Ia• 721 1 1 Porwaor. Ohio

Henson• Comput• Con.,ltlng
&amp;.viae-Let us Ht up the .dght

742-3080.

New 1 981' Country Villa .

Mottt. of 3 Y~Nr old will baby alt
In my home, Rt . 2, Lion •••·

after &amp;p.m.

304-191-3424.

f llldlll:ldl

Opportuno'ty
'

INOnCEI
.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUSLIIH-

_,...,.,hooHsrlng.

John A. Rhodes would
like to upriSS 011' llilnks
anc~·· lfllitude to our

friends, Nlatives, nei&amp;ll,bon, Rev. Geiser, Wlil

8292 .
1CM10 l ..nHda, Tonlni ·TabMI.•
Sun••~Wolff Tanning

tluri~

304-171-1806·dll'fa, 114-.W02or3 BR. home in city. Na pets.

Rot. roqulrod. Cali 814-.W61118.

3 1Ft. full b11ement, ceport,
central air. No pets. •276 • mo.
plus depollt. CeU &amp;14-4410901.
.
:

'

Schuha

14•10 rnol&gt;llo

pm.

l-:c=-:-:-:c---:-c--:--'1878. IZ.IO goa. A·1 ohapo.
fvmiehld except Mvingroom . Air
In kitchen, wuher end dryer.
Coiii14·848-2U3 altor tlvo.
1973 Toronaclo 12x80, nlc. 2

~ roam mobil• hom .. p.ertllllly

furnlah_.., 13,100.00. 304·
418-1901
1:00.

1 ·1~1::1::1-two--'bod--roo-m--m-o-:-bi::-lt

&amp;14-.W~ -1354 ..

Qulrod. Coli 114-1182-5053.

Smell houH. Jeffereon Ave,
reference end deposit, phon•

446-8558.
2 BR houM with - stove &amp;
refrigerltor . $226 mo. deposit

1--------_,.1917 Cltyton mobllt . homo.
14•10. complttoly lumlahod

wtltt w...._lftd dryer, takeover
PI¥1M411t*, 304•178·2t01.

SBrvicee

, , . 1hll Klltnwood. good
- · Kltoll., tu.-ort. now
..... 2 porclloa, ...........Inti •

our time

2 BA . mobile home fully lui'·
niahed. Eastern Ave. Water and
sewer paid . $225 . ·Adults only.
No peta. References &amp; Deposit
required . Call 614·446-3671 .
Near Waterloo . 2 BR . $125 a
mo. Adulta. Garden spot. Ref. &amp;
dep. Call 814· 448'-7764 or

843-2644 .
2 Br. Mobile Home tor rent on
prlvete lot. Aduhs only. Ref. &amp;
dep. No peta. Cell 814-3677743 .
2 bedroom mobile home in
Mlddlepon, Ohio. Referenca
and Security deposit required.

304-882-3207 or 304-7735024.-

44

2 BR . apts . 6 closets , kitchen•ppl. furnished, Washer-Dryer
tlook -up, ww carpet; newly
painted, deck. Regency , Inc.
Apls. Call 304·676-7738 or

875-6104.
New completely furnished
apanment I&amp; mobile home In
cily. Adults onty. Perking. Call

6t4-446-0338.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. !536 Jackson

Pike from e183 • mo . Walk to
mavin. 814·448·

ahop end

2568. E.O.H.

Newly -remodeled apartment•.
unfurnished , one · bedroom ,

Avalleble Merch 1st New H111en,
nice cl11n 2 bedroom houn,
ba rnent,
woodbumer.
no g•ta, e1 00.00 deposit
•21 .00 month . 30• ·882 -

stove and refrig~r~~tor. water
included. 1200. · e226 . per
month. References and deposh
rttqulred. M..lmum occupency :
2 eduhs, 1 child. Cell 61 4-446·
42•9. •46·2326 or 4~6-4425 .

..-.e•·

~202

or 082-2882 .

{19881
Nl.,. 3 Mdfoom home, bu•

m.m, g.,.... 304-171-3030 or

871·3431 .

'

42 Mobile Home•
for Rent
2 BR .• Wflter.eew.-tumlshld.
llooutlful ..__ No city

IIIIH.

F_....,

Mobile Home

Portr. eon 814-4441-1602 .

Nice 2 BR . 4 1h mil" from
GIHipolla. Stove. refrlg. &amp; Water
furnlehed. No peta. e2HI • mo.

Call 814-446-8038.

11 Court St .· 2 Bedroom, 2
· baths, kltcheri lurnlshed, w / w
carpet, e325 a mo. plua utilitie1.
No pets, depoah &amp; ref.
238 First Aw.· 1 Bedroom,
khchen tumlshld, river view,
e t 71 1 mo. plue utllltln. Single
or couple. Oeposit &amp; ref. No

--....;.

. ..

~

·•

..

'.. ~·

179N'IM
~1/N91
~9'11.011

'

..

,..

44

...

-··

Apartment
for Rent

..

-------------------:.:!
Ni ce 1 SR . apt . near HMC . .,......_
Stove, refrig . &amp; drapes. Call _.,.$
614-446-47S2 .
.....
·• Ji'"'
-..ol&gt;"'

'

Modern One SR. apenment. Call .l!r""'

614-446-0390.
-~
----~------------~
c
'
--~
.

:;:~~~:•. A!~~~:~~!: k1tc~:~~

:J
.and laUndry room with washer· "''"' :t1

dryer hookup. AU eleCh'ic . Call"..~:'!'
614-446-1932 .

:.f

Nice 2 BR apt. Water,

-

Nice 3 rooms &amp; bath-furnished . -:_.
Utiliti81 pakl. 8230 a mo. Call :.0•
614 - 446 - 761~ .
;: ...'
New brick, 2 BR.,

equipped ~~

kitchen, laundry room . Private ~
parking. No pets. Ret. &amp; dep.-.!!.
Call614·446·1260.
:';;?

...:

Grsoious living . 1 and 2 bed- r 1
room epartme!'ts et Village •:!
Menor ~nd ~•verslde Apert· .r...
ments 1n Middleport. From ·• "i
$216. Including utilities. Call ..- ..
614·992·7787 . EOH .
- =~

306 N. SECOND ST.

01 HIS lllrHiiAY.

apts, call 304-676-3900.

left

Buildings , .

EFFECBVE MAICH 1I 1911

'

..

·:.,

oc---..---~~----~~ ~

5

Happy Ads

.-.

;:::.=====:·-~
:;
February 22nd
...... .
~.

~ ·

Guess who is sweet
'~­
(Sixty-two) 627
.
.
__
HAROLD SAUNDERS
'
That is who. ·
Signed: The Best ::
~

....

-

.,.

.

.

·~

""
~

Mrs. Nma S. Burks eel- ~
. ebrated her 80th birthdoy ;;, ,
w1th lam1ly, fnends, neieh- ·;:;
bors and relatives February ;,...
18, 1988.
-!:
Mrs. Burts was well re- -r,
membered with gifts of flow- ·_,
ers, candy. cards, misc. . ,
items, telephone calls and ,••
dining out with her son,
Michael and family and her ·!; ·
husband in Huntington. Mrs.
Burks, a native of Gallipolis, · -"'
Oh. now lives a short disl&lt;!nce from the place where
was born. She thanks every ~
one who in any way made it
so joyful.
Nina S. Burks

i!
r

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-3333 ·
OFFICE OF DR. DAYO
REVISED OFFICE HOURS

FEB. 20TH

~~

"T'"w-.-.-n7d -.n-e"'"b-oa-ro_o_m_r_u_'"_" __
nea : :

. MIDDLEPORT
FAMILY PRACTICE CENTER

FRANK OUEEN

--

garbage -~ ::

3 Announcements

IIIEIORY Of

·

' paid . Stove &amp; ref rig. ft.nnilhed . ~-:·
Cell 61 4·448· 7026.
·~

- - 3(14,171-7277.

2

,,,

·'

pota. Coiii14-.WI-4921.

9 A.M.·1 P.M. and 2 P·.M.-5 P.M.
WEDNESDAY-3:30·7:30 P~lt
y
- ~
,I I ·

.~

.... 1

6639 or 614·992-3489 .

Apartment
for Rent

MON.·TUES.-THURS.-FRI.

,
- ---

~71..1.~)1

2 bedroom apartment on lincoln ::..~
Hill. Pomeroy. Call 614· 992- ... ;..

304-178-1128.

home, 14x70, cell 304-891-

3812 oftor 1:00.

23 Profeulonal

County E.S. and lcCo,
Ftlllllll H01111 for 1111111

31R. hounfOrrentorrentwith
optlon to buy· on 141. e360 •
mo. Oep. • ref. required. C.ll

1 HI 1 2a611i mobile home In
Pomeroy. 1 bedroom, ttova,
refrft.,.tor and wuhiJ. UIOO.

1983

leda.

Siend- PtNivo E-aen. C.ltar ,,.. aoiDr o.......e.
1 ... 1010_.... 1-100-:f211212.

2 a.droom brldl. in town. No
Meurlty
depoail required. e300 month.
*'••m•n Real E1tete. 446.3144.

p«a. A.-.ncea •

1 4Jl72. all etectric. nt up on
riverfront lot. et•-992·33418

home. 2 bedroom. central eir.
Cell 814-112-1303 att.r 1:00

·

SJendtnauett ,._.. Exerela" '· Cd lor FftE! Cotor C•te·
loout. lftOtoiOll, 1-100-228-

...... Coil 614-.W8-0338.

1Ni4 tOxiO Eloono Houu 2 bedroom hau•. Nice. Fully
Trailti' wtth ••PindO ... Nltw fur· aerpeted. good tocetion. Cell
nace. new ·hot water tank. fulty ' 814-992-1868.
carpeted,. fumllhed, porch end Very nioe. NCerrtty remodetltd.
window ewninga. E.:etlent con· new carpM, 2 bedroom 011
dltil&gt;n. Altar 1:00 814-882- Uncoln Helfhtl. e221. with
7102. 816-182-1072 anytime.
discount. Security depoett re-

Bueinesa

lNG CO. ttoOmm.,.da thet you
do bull'- with people you
know. and NOT to lend money
throuah 1ht moll untn you havo

fumlahed smell house.

Adults onty . Ref. required. No

3 BA .• Hving room. kitchen •
blth. •221 rent, et&amp;O d~ . Call

Coil 513-253-8622.

-,,.,::---:---:--_..:..___

21

2 SR ., utiliti.. paid-except electric. furnished / unfurnished. Sec.
dep. required. Convenient to~;a ­
tion. Cell 614-tW6-4766 or

8210 even. • weekdays.

Collll4-24&amp;-1214.

1 Card of Thanks

Tl1e wife and fllmily of

•esoo. c.n 81-4-

1187 t•x70 F•irmont . All
ll.atl'lc·hul pump. Furnished.

Write 3 and PageMaker. Call

41761

1tJ111101t

.WI-017&amp;.

Extra nice

equipment for your buaiMis.
Wll install, lit up, tNCh Ull •
opereu on PfOOrlltnl· auch 11 0
Ill. Lotvt 123. dlaplay.

1000 8UNIEDS
TONING TABLES
Suniii·\V()LPI Tinning lecla,

pandllot........,..
elate lilt ct1t and .atte•
tlon liwn Mr ., ....
,uti of ~lct!n-Po­
Mor HMIIII Clra Ctater tH Dr. Wltlltrtll.
It I 11110111
!Nnt·JOII to
friend,
Rev. HlriMrt
fer
hil
end

through oUt.

u...

I.Afdltt: pori limo tnd fuN tlmo

~IRdiJIIt·

Eotata. 814-388-8826.

Wll cere far elderly pwson on

orta. 1-801-187-11000 bt. R-

Homes for Rent

N~

1172 Cestle Mobile Home
1•x86, 2 8A ., 2 Blilhl. 2
expendo nne. Lovety hi.. raom
w/wooAurrw, lqe ktt••,...,
2 otorogo bldga., TV.
....,.I lot or move. Will tmcl• far
1 home. Vlrglrue. L. lmtth. Reel

fuoo- Coli Ua. 614·379·2880.,

Government Jobt. •11.040·
fll.%30 Y'l•· Now hiring. YoUJ

42 Mobile Homes ·
for Rent

required. Vinton. OH Call 614-

Moth• of 4 year old &amp; baby will
babyaltln my heme, WHkdaya&amp;.
eftlt' achool. Ctote to AddiVWie

0.1 1

....------t

....

STo'NN'I

S~3MSNY

388"8121 .

Went to buy ltlnding timb.; •

CARD Of THANKS ,
The family of Emma E.
Waulh wislles to express
their sincore cratitude to
all our relatives, friends
and 11eilhbors for all the
cards, flowers, food, etc.
and Iovin( support.
·
We especially want to
thank. the entire staff of
~nic .• Hills
Nursin&amp;
Ho•e. Holzer Medical
Ctnter, Dr. Evans; Dr.
Levert, Mrs. Sharon Shlf·
fer, nch one of tilt pillbearers and Rtv. C1rf111n
and Rev. Bowers for their
kind words. Also for tile
tint SIIYicts from Willis
Funetal ·Home:
Emma E. Waup &amp;
Family

,.
-r.'

Sliii7·W'II/CIS

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

1 Card of Thanks

••

N~kiJ 9N/J...L~ 9
107~ :JQ

ISU!Bfie asO~l aJe PiJOM a~1 U! sppo
IS86UOI 9~i'IB4l pauJ891 BA,I OW!jBI!I
ilw Ul, :e~!•Pe S!41 91\86 kep~IJ!G
PUC:6 S!4 . 6U!I'eJqOIB~ IUB6 OLU

Avo., Oolllpolia. Col 114-.WI2282.
'

8176.

\.

"\, '

'81'\-4441·3172

OrO choirs. CoU14-441-

.

woodbumer.

·We PlY caah for late mod.. clean
u.-ct cars.
Jini Mink ChiV.-Oide In~.
Bill Gene Johnaon

w~h 4

.

...,

...

t -l la ,.........,., ~ .• ~ ....

•ern at Tupper~

Wanted To Buy

Wanted to buy- WDOd.dlnMteHt

'·

~- .

~

full fln c• gerage,

Coil 0 I 4-448-0494.

, con 614"37t-Z7BI.

··'

ta Moiilo High. Coil 11:4·982·
3214.

Ne.e d lingle Penon to shere
expena• in l~ge houH In ctty.

· wom ,"' buv ' miHilng t t -.

.,.

1

Coi1614-448-3074.

6 Auction. Thitd 6
814-.WI-3158 . .

i .,

2 bed~m. 2 b_.h,, 2 car
garage, level lot on Rt . 33.
Swimming _pool, uteltte, clo•

1

.

'

--,;,;-;;,I
,..:-r-;__:,I.....:..TI-1
8
9

1--

Aurora. ll 80162 .

&lt;'

The gent celebrating his
92nd birthday .gave this adI vice : "In my lifetime I've
learned that the longest odd s
in the world are those against

,...

2914.

Have room for pereon In private
home tor thDH who with nat ta
be in nursing home. Reuoneble.

•'

I~;;1;~~:;1:~~;;;1'~

7881 .

Nellie Ford h• room for 2lldiel·
room, boerd, laundry, who..
houH Drivlleg•. Re110n11ble.

9

..

Rent-Sale: Secluded c;ountry
good hunting. 8 mil•
from Locka • Dam. 128.800.
. Glenwood, W.Va. C.ll814· 446·

Call 014-261-8109.

.WI-1023.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Bllevel declc. Brick end
et end of
quiet •drive. One plul: KJI . •
O.rden . space: Cily schools.
Heel pump-centl'lll elr. Outdoor
ttor~ge ' eree. Cell 114-441·

~·

Paint end body men. must
fumiah own tools, appty In
.....,n. Pt. Pl....nt Autos.....
3rd • Viand. Pt. PIHunt. WV.

•pu•

I

3 BR., t%btith,form.. DR.brlek

twMn 10:00 .mend 8:00pm.

Help Wanted

GAVEYO

~~tiru~ijj~

flrepl~ee.

MONEY FOR COLLEGE! Parttime jobs. Join the Armv Nt·

841-0081 Eat. 2987. Opon 7
doya. CALL NOWI

Ger~ge S•l• Saturd1y. 10:0015:00. 3305 Monman Ave.
BellemNdl Addition.

cotho Rd. Col 814-.WI-2183
.
.
9-1 dally.

'

I

GAM!

Rea rran ge tMe 6 scrambled
words below to make 6
simp le word s. Print let! e rs of

I

hOUH twith lt&amp;achtd 1--o•
centr11l elr· NO PETS· ~potit &amp;
r.terenae required . 38 Chllll-

'

WORD

0

ea ch in its li ne ol sq uores.

FOR ,SALE OR RENT: 3 aR .

Avon etl ..... Shirley lp..rl,

cook. Call 304-787-8317 b•

EXCELLENT WAGES for
tJme 1uambly work; electronIcs. crafts. Othen . Into. 1-110•1

==

--- --

304-182-21145.

-

Coil Doya-814-448-1811. oltor
5:00. .W6-, 2.W.

AVON .. All IIHI. Call MarUyn

304-175-1918.

-------P1 "Pteiiiiiiii"t------

48Ft, fireplece, fullbai.m.nt. 3
mi. 10. Df O.lllpolit. •21.100.

PMny TruckStop R..... At. '38 .
Now accepting appiiCitlonl for

Sl'/1/ I \.1",

304-1185-3083.

Rot.._ roqulrod. 814-'742·
23114oflot4:30.

-

r:~~;~;~' S©~ot\~-JG£~S"
_ _ _ __:::.._= fd;red by CLAY R. POLLAN

31 Homes for Sale

1-800-142-3119.

1 llliii11VIIII'IIi

Lo.t -One chow-like dog, fawn
colored on Gill Ridge RHCI.

7

.

llbylinlf' In my ho,. In lAngi.tlo - . Ught 'h_..HIIi"ll·

r- ==~--

·OF
TRUCKS

pi·

and two
pt · 1,111t - pidchHdlll... tnd IMrlll nilcll
ll'ttll!lfllltl
Sill tM btr llelrt lo
lhl Lard wty,in lift IIIII
. . . . . .. of ..
Alfred lethodist Chun:ll.
Lltlr ,..,. attiRdld the
Clllstlr Chun:h of,.. ..
l'lllllt. Site llttllll Sun- School II Alhtlltld
also II, Cltlsllr llijiltlllr
bllttr tlan falttflw

'-

1616 EASTERN AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

.Pieeunt Feb.tlth. REWARD .

luyl"ll junk bottorleo. Coil e 14742-2411.
'

11 · Help Wanted

TOP CASH peid for '83 model
and MWif' used c... Smith
Bulck~ Pomlac. 1911 &amp;e..ern

'

REGENCY
BROUGHAM

/

LIKE

1987 OLDSMOBILE
98 REGENCY
BROUGHAM

LOST brown billfold containing
•400.00 cuh on Meln St. Point

ltandintl timbor. Colll\4-7422328.

..

WANT ADS GET

SJ6,830
-2,830

Discounts

"NEW"

"NEW"

F.b. 12. loth hunting dago.
R-rd. Coli II 4-1182-1381 "'
114-982-1277:

- · Ed l..un Ill- &amp;hap.
2nd. Avo. Mldd'-&lt;t. Oh. 814.1182-3478.

To give a"'!!-Y puppies, approa. 8
months OIG, mixed breed. part
BMgl• &amp; Benji type. Call 3G4·
876·17771after 2:00p.m:

'

Dark blue, full power - aN tho optlens you would

lolt dogl: 1 rMII ...... and 1
m11e mixed bfeed, on Short
Fourth St. 1re1 In Middleport.

'

2 smell puppin to giveaway to
good - home. Cell 81•· 992·

•

17,184

·

Qld. Coii81~.W8-3398 .

'

1987 CHEVROLET (:APIICE CLASSIC
· BROUGHAM

FOUND: In Foodland par,lcing

lot· Ford cor koy. Cai181A-.W82B78.
: - - : - - - - - - -lc-

Milt. dog to giveaway. · Halt
Bfi8gle, helf Dachshund. 4 moe.

JIM M·I NK CHEV. OLDS.
''DEMO CLEARANCE SALE''
Blue and sll~or two-tone, fuly ~~p~lpped, CL. Mod...

Pi'g with ••t· ups.

. 814-446-2171 .

Fatten V011 waaet
With awant f\d •

1988 CHEVROLET ASTIO PASS. VAN

luylng doily gold, olhlor colna,
rtnga. jowolry. atorllng wore. old
coins, larae cutTeney. Top pri·

Friendly Shepherd. Male. Cell

22°/o OFF

'

258· 1882.

Giveaway

1 b!Kk Guinea

W.m ta lluy Slandlng nmber.

Coil , 614-248-1411 "' 3888480.

&amp;Vicinity

Call 304-875,2295.

Wanted To Buy .

9

~08T: Brown mare wtth biHk
man••ua11 . Hannin Tree. a.....

. Rew1nt. c.;u 11ol-211·1818 01

\

·sTUDIO 39

-lv•

8 Lost and Fo.und

Ann D11111;e 111 enl :;

WASHINSTON'S
BIRTHDAY
SALE/I

Sole Price

.,
••

age

Dark burgundy with whito landau roof.
foctory Sticker
520,480
Discounts
-4,040

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

} Orest ha rder . t han • looks
.

•

Tactical bidding .

1987 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY ·
BROUGHAM 2 DR. COUPE

/

.-

·'

•

s•

"

'

,.

·r

.$

I.z.

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-0 -3

Pomeroy-Middlaport-G.. Iipolia, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

c......

8111 &amp; ....1.

Dry Your Tears.

You're not tilt first
To ruch .40 rtllrtl

�...

'.

- ---· ·-

'

·•

.• Pllgl 0.4-Sunday Tinu S11dinel
44

Apertment
for Rent

Ohio Point P'uAnt, W. Va.

51 HouMhold Good1

Cotwge efficiency, total electric. refriJgrntor. etove. nice.
. , HUO a_.....t, 2215 Mt. Ve&lt;...,. non Ave .• pt, Pleulnt. 114-

992-5858.
: Nic. 2 bedroom -..t. in Middle• port . ., 85 .............. Dopoalt
• end Nfwence r..-red. O.y

· 114-892-2381 . Weot.- 814·, 992-2&amp;09.·

..•, 1

ta.droom ep.nm.nta. Fur: niah.ct end unfurnished.
t22S . per mont:!'~ . UtiHti• h.lrnlahad. Ca11814-112.5724.

•zoo.-

2 b.clroom apt, for rent. Stove
'· end nrftig•Mor: •• fumlahed.
Cer.,.ted. Nice ..uing . Cell
814-992-3711 E.O.H.
..

Nice epartment in nice neighborhood on Third Ave . in Glllipoli1.
t 220. pw marith. C.ll11"-. .1 ·
1478.
APARTMENTS, mobile

hom...

houHt - Pt. Plnuntend Glllipo814·«6·822:1 .

lia.

Z b.droom fumiud epl, rwf Md
deposit. New He'tlen,

w.

Ve .•

304-882-3287 or 304-773-

&amp;024.
.:.. Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,

•• 2 bedroom furnished ept, utllilieaplid, refwencet end depoail,
304-882-2588.
l.llurel1nd Apartmentl, ~roe
St., New Haven. W.Va. 2

bedrooms, cerpeted, elle'-:tric.
for more intormltion. Call 304·
882-3716 .

45 Furnished Rooms
Rooms for rent dey. week.
month. Gatlla Hotel. C.ll tt1.4-

T-

LAYNE'S FURNFFURE
Sof• end chlirt

na&amp; 1o ona.

lllriced from

no .,...

up to e121. Hk»-•Mda fliO
to 0191. R - 0221 11&gt;

U7&amp;. Lampo 021 ,. •121.
Oinot1M 0108 and up 10 0481.
Wood tablo w-1.....,. 0281 11&gt;
079&amp;. Doak 0100 up 10 0375.
Hutchel f400 Mel up. lunk
b.de oompl..t W· mattreuea
Ulland up ta 03tl.llolloj -

' eno. Ma"'"-orbo"iorinu
full ar twtn eaa. firm . ,• • aftcl
t88. OuMn aau 0221, King

rn.

ma--

1350. 4 dftwercMet e11 . Gun
abineta •
Gel Of' electric
rango 037 , Baby
031 • o45. Bod ITornoa 020,
t30 • King frlme •so. Good
..a.ctlon of bed oom autt.a,
mo101 oal&gt;inou, haadboanla o30
lnd up to 111.

90 · Dav• Amt 11 ceeh wtth
3 Mtl• ovi
lulaviNt Rd. Open hm to &amp;pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114--1\410322.
·pp owed credit.

Valley Fumtture

New and UMd ·furnltu,. end
appllcenc .. : Cell 114·441·
7572. Hours 1-a.

~ • s FURNITURE
(Formally Panon' t Fumh:ura)
1411 E11tem Aw.
LNing room tuitH from 1171 •
up. ledroam IUIItea *418.11 •

up. Complete micrv.,.w nan•
*39.95 • up.
·
Come In and mMt the new
Owners.

440-9l580. Rent as low u *120

T-.
51

Hou~ehold Good1

54 MiiC. Merchandlee

cllaln UII.OO up: - - - 0 1 0.00 "'" ............
11.00 up; ewhigeoltota. .......
tiO.OO ... - - ~Furni­
holt milo out Jonklo Rd ..
--·~ 1 4110.
Couch llndc.._.rHkeMW t271.;
~- 021. : Oaa olryaf Ul.:
-2 01&amp;.: old
- uo.. 304-4811-1713.

63

t7" ao1
v.
•
• metchlna ohlir, e100.
Cal
114-4441-4111.
Sa1r1 ..ectrlc ~writer. Exael.
cond. tiO, Calll14-448-1743.
u C -: •~~

buncle. Coedlluint .,....• . 1~
- · POl. Ohio , _ C..
Qhla. l14-112-1411 .

Dollw..,.d. Callt14-14Z·Z-.

ro11 top dtoll. oma11. II•·
ml170 llke
~-·
ZO
ga. lhotvun,
.new. •211
· Col 814-148-2101 .
ro-upholaltrad aola bod,
NW Cf•lone. hMvV·dulv caaWn. flOO. U"*'uuoad Eleotric
Ty-ltor. noo. 114-ltZ·
231S
Fora...:·Ferlu.,. TfiCfor, Itt.
• .... Hog. ,.,. " - · 714
Motorcycl•. Cell 114-742Z41t.

HA ~Mt11f
"I'm sorry we evf!r moved to this artificial
satellite. Just look at this gravity bill."

FEBRUARY AUCTION

~

fHt, corner Second and Pine.
Ample parking In ,.. ,. Cell

3 pc. IMng room tuit. with 4
chrome &amp; gllu tablet. Exc~ .

cond. Call14-241-5101.

Whirlpool Frost-tree Al......... tor. Good cond. Cell after I PM814· 441-7441.
Space for small trailen; All

~

hook-ups. Cable. Alao efficiency

rooms. air and cable. Meson.
w.v•. c.n 304-773-6651.

~

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
. ·.. AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
.... Olive St .• GI!Mlpolia.
· • NEW- 6 pc. wood group- *399.

Uving room suites- 8199-t599 .
Bunk beds with bedding- t199.
Full si1e meHreiS &amp; foundation
atuting- •99 . Recliners
atertlng- t99 .
USED- Bed a, dre11en, bedroom
sulte1 , S199 - t299 . Oeaka,
wringer washer, a complete line
. of used furniture.
·
· .• NEW· w•stem boots- •ao.
WorkbDOtS ., a • up. {~eel •
soft toe) . Clll 614-446-31 59·.

.
;

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV Htl.
Open BAM t o 6PM . Mon thru
Set. 614-448-1899. 627 3rd .
Avo. Gallipolis, OH .

FEBRUARY AUCTION:

ION

Th1,1rsday, February 25, 1988

· Located in Pomeroy, Ohio It 10 Uncoln Street
WATCH FOI SALE SIGll
This is the personal property of Eloise White
&amp;the late Din White.

Nice manrHMI Included. ea&amp;.
per aet. Clll.l14-742- 3033.
New electric Hotpolnt dryer for
II!'•·
304-1715-2130.

Cash

3 pc. lMng room lulte, bcal.
cond. 117&amp;. Cell 114-4412390.

74e7.

Uvlng roo1t1 suite. Couch. 2
ch1it1 , coffaatlble, 2 endtebl•.
Brown in color with flonll

dealgn . 1 v-•r old. *2&amp;0. 080 .
814-992-7431 '
WMtinghoYM eltctric range. an

upright piano , chut ~ tvpe
freuer. Kenmore dishwaaher.
Good condl1ion. no. Cal 814992-2678.
6 bunkbed Hts, all hawy duty.

PICKENS USEO FURNITURE .
Beds. dresHfl, ch•t. dlnnena,

couchs, ch1ln. odd chairs, refrigeraton, stov11, • misc.
304-875-1450.

OWNER: ELOISE WHITE
Positive I•.D.
Elts
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER
Ohio License
West Vireinia License
m-68-1344
· *515
Accidents

01

1111... ,. ....

7-7/'il•••• preflniahed

-

'

'

.•

briCk

,. .....,..:n.

'

14-Color oammodel ·
.. ; t41.11. White cammod••·
o-;

···"·

111-C.. t-ilatal ia...Orlto·
.:' •••·"·
a for .,oo,
·

No.w Taking Applications For:·:
•Waitresses
•Hostesses/ Cashiers
•Prep Cooks/ Grill Cooks/
Broiler Cooks
•Bus Personnel

;

~

'

111-.,a;llo ' _ , bath tube-

t&amp;l.t• aacft, 2 for 0100, color

• t79.N-.
.. : . 1 7-Whlrlpool tuba• libor!iiooo; Corilplata plumbing·
• ........ 11381.
11·1 pc. -~~~- tub •
etana;;.f11t.lluch, white or

-·

1 1-llright and antiquo b&lt;au
Md chrome wnity 1ncl tub a
• .... •511'
11.wh ...
' 20-2-.
gal. lluclcot
off
• ,.....,... wall poln1- 04.11. rog.

"·"·

'
~
~1-1 gat. •aklm6num
flbered
, rooi_,.,..U0.95.
,
ZZ·K·Luuoh... brlcU aq.l1,
.. alft, •• , .10. .
'
"
23· Eproxy COiled atell
olowleitdcloorMtfwlng.Swato
• 78'11.
•
~4-Wood. ·• lurr.lnum and

APPLY IN PERSON TO:
The Steakhouse, 1530 Eastern Aw111ue,
Gallipolis, Oh. From 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. ·
Feb. 23 and 24.

1

--

• ~ vinyl . clttd .,.Miau~ llowal,

lloyol. ICo-ontl. IDoublo....,.•. ..,.. ot - l o and

AIR FORCE
TECHNOLOGY
N~EDS YOU. -

PLAN TO ATTEND THIS AUCTION
AS A BUYER -SELLER-VISITOR

TRACTORS: J.D., l.lt., C•oe. M.f_, Ford, E.t c.
Assonod Makes 6 Models to choooe from-25to 1 50 H.P.
Industrial Equipment and salvage tractors ·

l;ield c;ultivators. Packers. Etc .. Grinder· Mixer.s:
Combines, Corn P1ckers. Gravity Bed Wagons.'
Round &amp; Square Balers . Rakes &amp; Mowers of all k1 nds .
Toole • EquiprTIIInt to auit e..ryanu needo.

e

Tri-Green
Interstate Equipment, Inc.
1499 U.S. Route 42 N.E.

London, Ohio 43140

(614) 879.7731 - 879-J732 - 879-76491Ponol

.

2 1·% Temp•red thermal
- penola. 132a78•21 . 11). 134•7•·
•111.001.147a71-t48.001. Ful
- 21-21"
-·5.00
....... · Ocotgon thermal
-....._wl...._a-tl9.95,
far
27-72" W•lnut lhrtlr
- - inclucllnt 12· 1B"woll).
11 ·7Z"troaol. 11-72" pc. taplt1N.H.
'
28·2 gal, peM K·Lux , wh.,.
-

z

."

Technology is changing ·
rapidly. Tl\e Air Force puts you .
on lhe frontier of technology
wilh technical and on-the-job
training. You also gel:
• Greal pay. .
* c_omplete medical/dental
core.
Conlact your Air Force recruiler
lodoy! AIM HIGH. Call

. Tillage Equipment. ·Piows 1 to 7 botto.ms. discs.

Judy Green Con~·lie G. Ballah

J'OCik or

66
GE POI'tlble dilhW81her. green
formica top. be. Condition. Uke
Now. 0200. 304-875-1111.

Gener11 Electric refrigerator
13.9 cu. 11. EIIC. Cond. 304875-811&amp;.

.6 4 Mi110. Merchandise

Pats for Sele

Groom end Supply Shop-Pet

Oroomint . All breedt ... AII
~· lam• Pel Food Deater.
Julia w- Ph . • 14-4441·0231 '

P..-

IURPLIJS OENIM . Carhon,
Aentel Caothing. Heavy new
work dotNng, boola ell winter et

0-nwynd
Canary - and·
CFA Himalayan,
Blame~~~ klttena. AkC Chow
......... Call 814-448-3e44
attor7PII,

-'!""11
· - - Old
......
~!!'.,~_....-n.·o.
Rt.- 21 -.

On• Pwking~M, fetMia, 3 yra.
old end one D1chthUfHI. male. 1
year old. CaN 114-248-9138.

"IIOnebll prioea, PDIItlcll Ad·

Independence Road.
E11t FIIIIVINWOod, Frh Stt. Sun;

JUDOIOUOf'l

noon-1 :00pm. 304-273·5155.
ltNpltM, teal--h: liae i
eeo.oo,Phone

~-~~$~~:-~~·~=
Firewood. tapquality, MIIOiled:
apllt, hardwood, dallv1red,
025.00 - t o n , 304-8751724
'
Duab, golta. ent~ue O.k t.bli;
•nd pot, belly lltove, cell 304-

Auatr•llan

Shepherd

A .Home For
u_..der $25,000*

uu.oo.

'

-- ·~-···

Zl-1!1!\0 Louvorod lmorlor
ahuttera. lelow Wholeaale

-·

prlcM.

t

puppiat

from working pa....u. l~e
mere'• • W.ak • whltaa.·4wke.
old . • 75. Call t14-311·883&amp;.

..... ~-~~·~~~

3 Dachahund puppi... Call
114-24&amp;-1138.

Concrete blocks all 1lHI yard or
deltv.ry. M1110n und. Gallipolit
lloc:k Co., 1231h Pine St.,
Oallloolla. Ohio Call 114-44112713.
Ralldy mix concrete 1nd 111
c:oncreta IUppiiH. C.l ue Valley
Brook Cement and Suppllaa,

304-n3-B234.

CLRSSIFIED RDS

OFFICE SPACES
RENT OR LEASE

o12t.tl.

31-lntarlor doora,
- a n d unflniahad'. Cholco
ai-028.N-.
32-E- . - lnau1010d
ponol doon-071.9&amp;
and ............
33-AII of door · and
WIINiow trim. FlniMed and untinlahed. Pintle 1nd wood ·

ALSO EASTERII AVE. SALES

ROOI DR OFFICE SPACES.
FOR INFORMATION PH.
44&amp;-7699 DAY - 44&amp;-

9539 EVEliiNGS.

Somerset Complete•

jldee ....,, liCtul pllee

P.O. Box 8484

PRICE REDUCED TO $39.900! - GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - This home offers a large
LR wilh fireplace, kilchen, dining area, 3 BRs,
bath, full basement.! car garage, deck, fenced
yard 1ust minutes to town on Rt. 141. Call lor
an appo1htment.
YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOY THIS HOllE - 4
BRs, 2 baths, equipped kitchen, LR, attached
garage, heat pump/cent. air, air, whirlpool in
master bath, above ground pool. Shown by
appointment.
RIO GRANDE AREA - 20 acres, m/ 1, very
nice home has been remodeled and oHers 3
BRs, 1\1 baths, kitchen with oven, range,
woodburner. family room / dining combo, LR.
heat pump/centair, 30x30 garage, laundry
rm ., 12x65 mobile home on property. SW
school district. Call for appoinlment.

IF YOU'VE BEEN THINKING OF LISTING YOUR
HOUSE AND YOU WANT TO GET IT
.
US OR STOP IN OUR OFFICE
.-.c::
AND LET US HELP YOU.

S-0-L-D

'

514 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-0008

....... ,....._,-------...1

'::"::'::':':::'::::':~~~~-~-THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOI YOU :.... Ranch
style home and appro•.
• ha"" an acre. 3BRs, LR
kilchen, LR, bath, fireplace, WB satove, 2 car
attached garage, 1Gx32 pool, chain link fence.

LOTS OF POTENTIAL HER£' _ 2 000 sq ft
building with frontige on St. Rt. i60. 12
walk-in cooler. 12 fl. dairy case. Call lor more
HOllE AND ONE HALF ACRE FOR SALE details.
1050 sq. tt. of living space. LR, kitchen , dining
rm., bath, $10,900. Call for more information.
Ml' EXCEniOIALLY liCE PIECE OF LANDRACCOON TWP. - 6 ACRES MIL - Plus a 12.43 actes: m/1; all flat. Sprinelield twp.
nice home. 4 BRs, balh, kilchen, LR, dining
rm., c11pet, county water and well, cellar
house. garage, tobacco shed. Call for an
29.1 ACRES 1/L VACANT LAND - Fronts on
appoinlment.
Rt. 160. Build ·or put a mobile horne here.
COMMERCIAL SITE FOR SALE - Located al $16,900.
2206 Eastern AVe. All utilities available.

;20

GRAHAIIi SCHOOL lOAD - Very nice ranch
· OW • d'1sp· 1.,
offers k"..chen w1ran ... refriJI,.
microwave, LR, FR, dinette, 3 BRs 1 bath, ·
cent. air, carpelint 2 metal utility bldgs.
Shown by appointment. ·
TEll ACRES 11 THE COUITRY _ 3 bedroom
home wrth 2 baths, kitchln, ranee and refria.,
t.R, carpet, woodburning stove, several firm
buildnp. Call lor an appt.
·

DUPLEX 4 SALE - Great investmenl for the
buyer. L,ocated on G~aham School Rd. Each
umt offers 2 BRs, llvmg room, bath, kitchen
and stove, relrig., DW and displ.,laundry,large
carport, cenlral air and storage well.

25 ACIES, 1/L. 011 STATE IT. 160- Old
bam and concrete block garaee on property.
Rural watpr available. Call today.

BEAUTIFUl OHIO RIY£1 VIEW - 40 icres,'
· more or less, home sites, city schools.
QIEEI TWP. - 2.5acres m/1, vert nice home
offera .511Rs, 2 bllhs, kitchen, din1n1 rm:, LA,
carpel arid .h«dllllllll, woodbllrner, new
furnece. Call lor an apPOintment.
&gt;

GREEJI TOWIISHIP - $38,0110 ~- Ranch
style home offers 3 BAs, bath, kijchen, LA,
carpet I car attached garage, close to Glasn
Elementary.
CHAIIOLAIS HILLS- 3.24acres more or Ins.
Owner finanoln&amp; available. ·

• I

IUTUID - 2 bedroom
horne on 1 level lot. Renlal
investment as it is now
rented or a nice cozy home.
walkinj 'distlnce to , shoppin&amp;- $13,900.00.
·
IIACIIE - -Approx. 3\! acres
of land wll 1 3-4 bedroom
home. Also tndudel I small
mobile home far lelllll in~ ASIUNG $24,000.00.
.
•
'I'OMEioY- Beautiful view
· of the Ohio River. 2 story
home w/3 bedrooms. nice
livln&amp; room, lull basement,
I W bathS and allic aru.
MAKE OFFER $19,900.00.

"

COIIYEJIIEflnY lOCATED - 211,edrm.. "starter horne",
sttuated near swimminl pool and pll COIIrse. l'liced lo
sellll $25,000.00.
.
NICE BUIUIIIG LOT in Mils SO•.~r Holzer . 1. City
water and sewer. Price $12.500.
·
TWO BUILDING LOTS Ill IODliEY II SD. I lor $4 300
and other $5,000.
'
11.3 ACRES near,Portat. $11,500.00.

IIDIIUPOIT - Here

is I

culllale Olllfloor plan 3bed1110111

far

PRICES

ESTIMATES

RESI DEN TIAL INVESTMENTS · COMMERCIAL · FARMS

450 2nd AYE.
446-6806

' 84 Lumber Nearesi You? _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

Name ____~--~--~-----------

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER. 388-8821
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR, 379-2128
OIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 261· 5261
BRENDA WRIGHT, SALES. 388-8214

Address -------~-----~--State _ _ Zip _ _ __
City
Reel Estate General

Real Elltete General

I~

JUDY DEWITT
J. Merrill Carter
Becky Lane
Phylli1 Loveday
Petrick Cochran
·Liz Long
Sonny Garnes
Chl!ryl Lemlt~V

BROKER
REAlTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR

388-8155
379-2184
446-0458
446-2230
448-8655
676-3968
446-~707

742-3171

446-6610

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY

SPECIAL!__; Owner moving away, doesn'l wan! to
leave this home empty, so to promote the sale they
are willing lo cui the price. Big kitc~en, living
room, rec. &amp; family room, and more on double
si2ed lot Reduced to $55,000.00.

N2485

NEW LISTING• .. HOlE IN CITY- Older home in
good ~ondilion with 2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen
w~h brukfast nook, formal dining, living room,
small den, large pantry, utility room, yrt.
basement, lots of closet space, front porch. Ytar
garage and deep lot Priced in $30s.

112560

VACANT LAND, , .19.6 acres m/1 of partially
wooded land with 2 mobile home sites, septic and
electric. Small pond, caH· for more lnformalion.

112516
549 4TH AV!NUE - I\; slory home with 4

bedrooms, living room, dining and family rooms,
newer gas furnace. Call for an appointment today.

'

112522

ODER WAIITS A COITRACnl - Lei's make
contlct to see this lovely 4 bedroom home. Living
room. family and rec. rooms, lo1mal dinint lots of
stance space. hcellent neiJ.hborhood of nice
homes and professional families. Wants to sell
now! Call to see today.

112512

IIEW LlmfiG - TAKE- THE TilE TO VIEW this
low maifllenance ran.ch. Featuring areal-room
will! fireplace, equipped krtchen, formal dining
room, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths~. deck, 2 car garage.
Storep buillling. 2 acres. $5l,500.00.

OIIE FLOOR. I or
.
Really neal home. Would mske anice first home or
reliremenl home. In Pomeroy. Sells lor $18,000.

.2536

$25,000- Lovely 2 bedroom, 2 slory home with
'II! baths, full basement. I car garage and more.

112470

OVERLOOKING RIVER - Lovely Victorian style 5
BR home, den, I~ balhs, 2 fireplaces and ,much
more.

12547

BRICK RANCH WITH 3 BEDROOMS- I ll baths,
krtchen, dining srea, living room with beauliful
brick fireplace, lulrbasemenl with finished family
room and 4th bedroom, utility room and cellar. 2
car garap. Nice view ol river. Priced in the $50s.

'112411

PRICE IEDUCEDI THREE BEDROOM RAICH on
Bleden Road. 10'120' storage building, wood·
burner. Needs some worll but priced accordin&amp;IY.
Loan assumable. $27,500. Immediate possession.

CAlli I ACIES I ACIESI PRICE IEDUCEDII
Now nltin1 $9,900.00. Huntina cabin appro~. 5
,..,. old, well insullted. Secluded and nestled in ·
the wood. Rural available.
AffOIDAILE S20a - 3 or 4 bedroom home with.
app101. 5 acres. Bie eat-in kitchen, living room.
blth, sllllll barn and more.

112524
· 2 LOTI, 15.0110 - Includes septic llld rural
Willi. Call ..lor mDra delails.

fi2513

112495

12415
QUjET COUll~ smiiG•• .Trailer located on
l)lved 10811. Owner will sell on land contrad With
small down payment.
•

fi2!103

.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

......,

"

.
• .UNIQUE RUSTIC home and .
acreage that you thought would never be for sale!
Cedar and stone exlerior and interior of quality
wood we seldom see in homes. 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, great room wilh open fireplace, formal
dining and living rooms. The fealures in this home
are so many and unique we suggest you call to our
office.

.

borhclllll2 sluly home with 3
bedlco115, I car prlllll. W.B.
~~-.tun besement
MIJal MUIItJ Call lor yaur Ill'
poinlmlnt. S54.!KIO.OO.

SHIP

FREE

Eighty Four, PA 15384

1'011£101 ...,. Here rt ~! A·
frame with over 3200 sq. ft of

AFFOIDABILITY PRICED AT JUST u~.:ow .
- Close to cily on Rl. 141 this home oHers
kitchen, LR, family room, dining room and full
basement. Large unaHached block garage. Call
for an appointment.

OIIE YEAR OLD RANCH style home oHers 3
BRs, I\;. baths, kilchen w/refrig., range, OW,
formal dmmg, LR, carpet. heal pump, cent. air
utility bldg., nice neighborhood. Call today for
an appointment
EXCELLENT STA
RTER
Ranch style home
JUStH!I.
5 I E· - t $39,900
f
1mmu es rom own
offers 2 BRs, bath, krtchen wrth stove and
side-by-side refrig., LR, carpet and hardwood,
carport and covered patio. Trailer pad on lol
nellt to house. City school district. Calllilday.

.

Lot Owned? _ _ _ _ Phons No._ _ _ _ __

CALL: 388·9031 (Evenings)

#2558

IIIJIII.(POIT- Grell neillh-

LOW

A2

iPioau prln1 c:ltarly)

...

RANNY BLACKBURN

WORKMAN·

FOR SALE

SOUTiEIN HILLS I.E., INC.

REALTY

LOW,

Real Elltate General

1975 Ford {9000) semi. 1975 lntenlltional (4200)
semi, 1974 liCk tri-axle with 1983 F90 Prentice
loader, 1978 Chevy lalibu Classic, 198&amp; Pitt loa
trailer, 1973 Fruahauf flat lo&amp;tl'lilar, 1968 LICrosse
Lowboy (25) ton, KentuckJ pup loa tl'liler, 1917
Prantica 1808 knuckle boom loader mounted on
tlndem frame, 1987 F.E.C. saw buck, 1983 240A
Timberjack skidder, 1979 44C John Dter1 skidder.
1979 5408 John Dasrt skidder, 1980 350 J.D. do·
zer-wencb, (1985 250 8ia Red Honda, 3 wheeler),
(1984 70 Honda, 3 wheelar), laraeair compressor- 4
cylindar, approx. 500 locust posts.

l .,

spice. 4-5bedrooms. 2 bath~
1i. ~ room &amp; sU!ed on 211
acres ol·fliiiUIId. 2 car garage
wt-.ee- Mlny leatures.
Only senous buyers should inqUire. •

QUALITY

Double~~~~ ConstruCtion

I oelected.

Gpll

"AnENTION LOGGERS"

REALTOR®

.
R
.
.
N
BLACKBU
Broker

wiD..., IIJ

See 84 Lumber Arod•te for cletalll.

\

YOU'LL LOVE COMING HOlE TO THIS - A RODNEY-CORA RD.- Beauliful hOme on 12
YOU ARE GOING TO LOVE THIS HOME! beauliful log addition has been added to this acres m/1. This lovely house is surrounded by THIS HOlE OFFERS A VIEW OF THE 01110
Localed on Jay Onve th•s bi-level home oHers
RIVER THAT JUST Dj)ESN'T QUIT!! - The
home and it is lovely. 3 BRs, bath, formal trees and oHers a unique floor plan. Living
everything you want lor your family'scomfort.
room
features
woodburner,
open
ceiling
Iron!
of this home faces the river and the
dining. kitchen, family rm. w/ loft, wood- ,
Kitchen w/ DW, displ, range, refrig., living
design,
kijchen,
formal
dining,
3
BR,
2\1
balhs
owners
have used glass to ils full advantage,
burner, stone chimney. This home is situated
room, lamily rm.. dining rm., carpet. gas heat.
lg.
patio
oH
dininK
a1ea,
26x40
barn
and
Beautilul
living room with mirrored wall
on 10 acres m/1, with quiet surroundings.
cent. alf and wood and coal burning stove, 2
15x24
garage.
Call
for
an
appointment.
reflecting
the
river ·view, beamed ceilings,
car garage. 12x16 storage buiding. City
.--.
~
-------------.;;..;;.
_
_
_
..;,;.;;,;.,.;;;;,;;;,;
_
_
•stone
fireplace,
dinette, rquiplled kilchen, 3or
schools. Call today and make an appointmenl
4bedrOOITIS,Iamilyroom,rec.aoom,3baths,2
to see this n•ce home.
car garage, central air.

Local Sales
Representative
Donna Crisenbary
E.S.R., Box 166
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph. 614·25~·6518

Storage
Buildings
Veol Calf
Barns

You supply the land, labor and foundatiOn. We11 provide the
.~ Including: electric, heating, phnnbing, kitchen cabinets,
- carpet, paint, appliances and IM!n the light bulbs!
~

PENII'S WAREHOUSE
w-.Ohlo
114-384·3145

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
TERMS : C11h or check w/proper I. D .

2295.00
3195.00

1
1

Gara9es

DDWNTOWN NEAR COURT·
HOUSE &amp;CITY IUILDIIIG.

., .oo,. 03.00 ......

1-800-423-USAF TOLL FREE

1795.00

1

11995.00

30~40x10

Read the Best SellerI
Read the

-46 Spece for Rent

tva', Rio Grende, 0 . Cell 81424&amp;-5121 .

20x24x8
24x24x8
24x30x8

100/447·7436

l 148.

l'!ilding t.t!1terials
Block, brick• ..war piJ*i, .win·
dowa. llntela, m;. Claude Win-

Package Specials

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

AKC Gorman Shapltard . le&lt;ntla.

NEW LISTING. , .THAT WONDERFUL FARM LIFE ·
IS HERE! In this 128 acre farm with a3 bedroom,
2 bath·brick ranch with full basement, a 40x50
and a36x84 barn, extra income 2 bedroom rental
apartmenl over milkhouse, 2 pl)nds and large
lobacco base and more.
#2552

YOU'LL WANT THIS ONE FOR YOURSELF Lovely home just minutes from town on Lower
Rt. 7, beauliful river View, 3 bedrm s., 2 baths,
LR, equipped kitchen, family rm .. dineHe, 2
lireplaces, game rm ,laundry rm., city schools.
Call today.

fOil FUEL (ffiCIEHC'

,10 moe. AeMfy to brMd. lntllliant, -11hrl. CaN e14-38S-

Madison c;:o . Airport &amp; Motels nearby

'

THI ENEI'Gf' l'(flfORWA•.

175-nn.

66 Building Supplies

sizeChoide of
colors.
FREE ESTIMATE on post
bides. and packaee deals.
Save hundreds, even thousands of dollars.

n.U AIIOUNO CONSTR UCT~

30-1 pO. pale temon color
comn. odie. reg.-t211.11. now

L1censed &amp; Bonded 1n favo r of I he sl&lt;ite of Ohio

Loss of Property"

llo'Afi£MOUS£S •tEll!~ ~ SlQAAG£
SriOWAOOMS' OfHCI.S • SHO~

11)-1111.91,

The Steakhouse

Consignments f.rom sevc;Ci : Local Farm s and Dealers .
·
M any 1tems at Absolute Auct ion .

Dick Green

....

aldlng-

fl-CNM end r.wtM round
: • enrd OWl .venitY Mw11- whl.. aNI

New • UNci F•rm 6 lnduotrilll Equipment Of All Kinde

LUNCH SERVED

I M11 I

-

,..,I.H-.

E,O.E.

SEE REVERSE SIDE.OF THIS FLYER FOR SALE DATE LIST

e

. . , ..
ttl.:n-.

• , unflnllhed p•nallnt 1AIIC•xe.
1-Aiitlbe florlh enc1 lace
,• paneUng
n.:n-.
.
. 'ttx4xl-f7
.11 and
tl.ll eteh.
10.\\JC4al All wood penellng
M11MIIIIilloandblrcll-o1&amp;.9l
I
1 1 alllh room paneling,
aluecl till lftCI amooth petcem·
II.Htat12.H
1 2·Whlle 41''k22" bath
room venldee with m.rble top

I

FUTURE SALE : Thursday, March· 31, 1 988

or 614-949·2033

"Not

.-:_ lfttvlfO""' 110 ... 11.
1-Calan&amp;.l....._ maeonhe
lop - . . •21 ..... zo aq. hrl

Sale begins at 9:00a.m. sharpll

"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Large GraceS. Putman Bie-lo Doll made in Germanr. small &amp;
large flat trunks, child's wicker chair &amp; table, childs roli-top
desk, corner chair, picture frames, cape &amp; hal from Middleport band, miscellaneous Pomeroy school items, old post·
cards &amp; newspaper clippings, Classic comic books, some
Beatles magazmes, tin decoraled Nabisco 'boxes, lots of old
·books, miscellaneous qui~s. Well's &amp; Son Builders Plate .Middleport, Ohio, Germany, Hull, Roseville cut glass, amber
&amp; pink depression, bee basket, Hiesey type bear, F1esta Ware
dishes, Cambridge, Cranberry, Carnival spooner &amp; bowl
Easllake organ. large Cambridge punch bowl set, small hen
on nest &amp; chicken, dining room suije, lots of 78 R.P.M. records, handmade babv quitt, elc .
1
'HOUSEHOLD"
Table &amp;c.hairs, couch, rockers, cedar chesl. color TV, lois of
nice handmade linens, record player, baby chest of drawers
lots of new sewing items, miscellaneous dolls, porch chair:
miscellaneous pots, pans &amp; dishes, padded loy chest,
hamper, rugs, bed, sweeper. wall clocks, Chnstmas decora·
lions, miscellaneous men's/wo!llen's clothes.

Queen llzthide·a-act. Eacellem
condition. UOO. C•ll 014-912-

M e r c h andise

~

7 m11es nortt) of London, Oh 10 at 1ntersecl10n of I· 70 l e.o&lt;lt#79)
and U.S. Route42 , 1 2 m1 le'swes t of Columbus. 19 m1l es eas t or
Springfield and 40 m1les east ol Dayton

Sat., February 27, 1988
10:00 A.M.

Comm•clal space, 1400 aquare

•

Tri-Gre~m

Interstate Equipment, Inc.

PUBLIC A

Help Wanted

P.O. Box 136
Marietta, OH. 467&amp;0

No

doll•-·

~Auction -

4-ROUih uw Cider boerd•
~U"lQf"-2 far tl:oo.
I·NO.Z·r·- barn ald-

with at least 3 References to:

8-.

Public Sele

···"-·

1·'4l14' ....' ...... plywood-

Send Resume or Letter of Application'.'

SWIMMING POOLS • oll9
Moell , . _ •blo. tiD. - . 1
Now loft """ 1117 Model
Poolo. Hugh 1tx24 11. aw1nt ....... tiO• ...., good condl·
..... 4 11 . ~- I n " ' - - - 11on. CaR Haroy
114- I'--~-----------------1
fenqe. fttt.r • werrenty. lnltllla- 112-3311.
tion • financing ........... C.l .
24 hro.: 1·100·MI·OMt.
For ·111•. ~hyta1 wringer
waaher. Excellent condition.
8
Public Sale •
Big 3 IR , form ho,_ bull1 on
0110. 114-387-0322.
&amp;Auction
ycur lot. 015,185 and up, CaH
1-114-118-7311 .
Flo·ataclorl,
ua.oo.M-Countv. OalllpoGun ct~binetl for 11t. 2 hlltcl 111. Ohio • .,_ wlttlin
made, MWty fiftiiMd cablnetl
rMtOn, our diiCI'Mdon, 304for .... 1 wolnu1. 1 chorry. lodl 881-3441.
hew 11 gun cepactty. Aakinl
tiiiO aacft, CaM 81 4-4441·4041. Curlil
25 Inch TV, oolle
wood. NmOt8 oantrol, cable
·EM• cotlection for Mle. •1eoo: roody. 0210 .00. 304·175·
s .. ., 241 ,.., Jacbon PMte.
311f,

Ma-

Z·T·!11 vOiow plno aiding
·
.....4'111'-tU.N -

_w____.______

MUST IE WIWNG TO IELOCATIAND
WOIK EVENING$ AND WDDII$.

~

Cal-'o UaodTirolhop. o1.000-. tl-12, 13, 14. 11.
11. 11.1 . I mlloo out lit. 211.
CaHa14-2111-IZ11 ,

, •.:n......-........15.

f t -.

PIOJECf. .

oa

64 MiiC. Merchendlee

IUILDING BUI'I'UES
SAVE 10'11 10 75'11
1-Wafw boan17118x4'x8'·

U Haul trucld and traM.,. tor
-~17" -7421 '
·-· .. .,_.. ..::
Oall
Col - .•,..
2717 ..._ 4 :30p.m. Aa for
-·

NEED E.IGmc SIIGLI PilSON
01 MAIIIED COUPLI tO UYE •
AND MANAGE ILDRI.Y HOUS..G

Flt"ewood for .... •31. lergl
..-... toed. AN Mldwssd,

Sunday Times-sentinel-Page-D-&amp;

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

:·ill Building Supplle• . 64 MiiC. Merchandise

•

'=·==··

An....... buy or ... 11Antiquoo. 1124 Eaat Moln lt ..
Pometov . Hourt: Mon .• TUM.,
and Wad. 10:00a.m.-8:00p.m .•
Sun. 1 :QC1 p.m, ·I :OO p.m. ly·
chence or appolntmerrt. Ph•
MooN. a14-. .2-2121.

top,

11

- - - --•1z,.

Antique•

8

«6-4249, 4415-2325 or 448442&amp;.

64 Mite. MerchandiM

LAFF·A·DAY

month.

:

·,fiiii41Pf 21, 1988

EXCELLENT BUYI - On this 2 story country
home. Clean, quiet. comfortable and renovated.
Like new alum. siding, st~r windows, modern
eat-in kilchen and bath. Fr trees, grape arbor
and approx. 4 acrR'pas re and wooded ' land.
Listed al $24,900.
#2472
NEW LISTING • . .LOVELY HOME - Start with
double fronl doors to enlr~. tri-level home with 3-4
bedrooms. open living and dining room, kitchen
with breakfast nook, large family room, 3 balhs, 2
cargarage, all newer carpel. Avery nice home in
good localion. convenient to shopping and
hospitar
' #2559
EXCELLENT LOCATION - Brick ranch close to
hospital, 3 bedrooms, 11; baths, eat-in kilchen,
living room with fireplace, lovely hardwood floors,
partial basement. I car attached garage. Nice flal
lawn. Priced iri $60s.

112521

ESTABLISHED RESTAURANT Operatina
Prelllltfy ....: Includes furnishings and equipmen!. Buildina leased. Dl &amp; 02 liquor license.
Excellent location. SR 35. Owner retiring. Call for
more details.
112533
WHAT ELSE DO YOU NEED7 - This 2 year old
ranch has it all. C&amp;thedral ceiling and fireplace in
living room, 3 bedroOms, 2 balhs. formal dinint
equipped llilchen, utility, attached '2 car garage. ·
Low maintenance. Flallawn. City schools.
112525
162 FIRST AVENUE .- 2 story Victorian style
home with character and style. 4 bedrooms. I \l
baths, large Ioyer, nice woodwork. Nice corner lot.
Lovely view ol river. Attic could be firiished lor
additional space. Call for complete listing!

112543

OPPORTUNITY KIOCKING ••• To own your own
business, be your own boss...sound 1(1011? You get
lullltlventory.t building, land and equipment and
lois more. uwners are willing to help with
financlna.
112493

'

�Ohio-Point
151

Peti for Sele

R1gl1 ... ed . . . . pupt~forula.
lhota. \litO~-- •Wttt. Plf*l.

Call 114-112-2712.

81 Farm Equipment

GNvely tNIOIOf'. Electric ...rt. 8
IPd. whh rotary plow, oultfwtor
• oull!y. ~M 114·-MI-414.1.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT·

I AKC ,. ... od - . .110.110 ...... 304-171·
4130o.l7..2471.
CROll. SONS
U.S. 36 Weot. Ja-. Ohio.
AKC14•oclllloorionH..- 114-281-1411
.
UOO.Oll. .-,. 10 ool. 304- MUIIIY Fefvueon, Nftf HoU.nd.
871-1100.
lulh Hog Ia... a ~«vice. OV•
_::__ _ _ _--:-- ·IC40 UNCI trac1G4'1 to ChoON from
f0&lt;_2_old .... • COti;pk .. line of new • uMd
Pek in~.. . 0101. 304-875·
equipment, le'9ett Mlectkan In

.....
57

.

Musical
Instruments

Currl• piano. Good cond. C.ll

114·311·11045..., 1:30PM .

I

jl :·•

~IIIJ;illl:

. _\ L1Vr",tock
81 Farm Equipment

I .E. Ohio.

830 ~- -

t....O&lt;. Wida

front wtlh 3 bonom P~l,
trln-.»&gt;rt d • • • I~ - bulh hog.

03750. Calll14·281·1522.

11ft. wido. ~11814-992 · 337&amp;.

446·8m

3 Pt. hitch, f•tUIIft tpreader
with PTO theft. t111 while th.y
lut.
•
M ....,. Fergueon 110 ot...l,
New rubber on,..,, All weedier
cab with h....-, PS, tilt wMel,
dual NmOte hydravlc llnat.
1Pont we1Qht1. New Hoft.nd 273
Haytiner, Hay Bal., wifh super
.weep pickuP. Cal .14-948-

2237.

Call 114-H9-3891.

f'llke. late model NH mpwing
machine. •e750. Owner will
fiMnaa.· Call 11•·281-8522.

~int .

vators; grader blade. mowing
machine • btltf, t4750. C.ll

114-288·1122.

1400 round btler.
11 ,295. 198811tt. hNvyduty
atock tr~~iler. 12495. C.H 61.t·

288·1522.

City Fann Supply, 814·&lt;M8·
2915.
W~~nt tO buy. Y.-ow

locult

pootod, . .u 304·175-2130.

Wlf'lt locun poltl, 7 ft lonG, elM

aft• 1 :00, 304-175-1111.

'

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

100 -

71 Auto's For Sale

of oondltlonod

c.u 114-&lt;MI-4344.

hay.

~ound . of mlaod hay.
R. . IOMblt. C1ll 114-3712871 .

1184 ~liec lunbJnl. 2· toned,

71 Auto;a For Sale

4 ,dr..tunroof.
I opd .. AC. 4 .._ rociiNIiii
t1ree.
E.ctl. conct. • ·

1113 Chwy. Cltotlon. Am rHio,

Call 814·258·1271.

· tr...... Pl. Pl. 89,0Q0
milea. 11110. Cenbe...,.atthe

1117 Chav .. 4 dr., llalotl•. -

Lo ... -IMINof"-'IOfljllo. Galllpallo Dally T~loune or for
., •• bolo.~~~ 114·&lt;MI·1511 MOre lnformMlon cllf 11 4-441·
2M2 .
, p) .

SMHnt. No rult. Tejttl oar. NMdt

or---·

- - - 1 work.
-...

7141.

1171 M-119· - ·
-oflao.Coi-4PM·I14·
•
8117
24
v·
.
1874 Novti. 1114 lyro•. 1183
Citttion. 1882 KIWI•kl 110 ·
Ltd. S.llor,...do. ~11114 ·216•
1210.

of ml•ocl hoy, 01 .25
- · 300"o f · -· .1 .50
...... Col 114-311·1413 Of
311-1110.
300 -

83

Uvestock

1918 Ptvmouth Voy1ger minl-

v.n, fully loaded, running
.....,,..,. 21.000 rniH.

•nooo.

.

C~III14·&lt;MI· 7137 eftor

Co11114·&lt;M6·

5 PM.

19i3 cil ..otto. UOOG.
8U-258-1U1 .

~I L

1912 Old•· Cut!Mt 8tiiiT•l1. .2
•· 2.u
• . ....
• -1.,
oll10•• P8, Pl. otlr,
,

uo ..

.

71 Auto's For Sale

-

19800odgeltorilon. Auto. AC ,
front whHI drive. Grett 1hape.

'
1 •

UOO. ~II 814-982·5848.

O&lt;Uioo control, tiH. AM-FM- · ~
eaoo, 11,000 mlloo. t3411. ~II

114-446-H97.

· 1981 Toyott Calloa. Auto., 4
cyl.. PI, PI , eunroof, • lr,
AM-FM ractio. Exc..fent cond it ion. -'Ctll 114-881~ 3198 or

&lt;

I.
~ed HotloorQoiNI DN8d.....' "•"
cera. ~ • .,..... repa'd, lur- " · .,
p1u1 Your Aru. Buyen Guide- .,

614-182·7151 .

11JU&amp;·II7·1000 Ellt. 8·1101~ .;,
, . ·•· · '
IOPondtclunblrd. 73.0001~. ,, '~,
. -. IU1oma11c.
cond. 02,000. 304-tt -2883: - •
~
1ii81MuotangOT,I-mll...... . , .
•8.5oo.oo. 304·17&amp;-3134. . • .. ~-.

Ooverftmlftt Hoi"MM from 11 . CU
rtpllir), Delinquent tlx property.
Atpauualon•. C.l1 ·801· 1175000 Ext. OH-9808 tor cunent
repo lilt.

pl&gt;.t•· ...._.. •

~lnnetpollt• Mollne Ul 48 \H.P.

lguollnoi. P.T.O.;

•eo Int. trector ¥1!'/ plowt, culti·

Now buying ahell com or ..,
oom. Call for lm:Ht quo.._, Rtver

21.19811

Hay &amp; Gr~ln

84

Far mall Supw M for ua.. Rebulh
angina In '84. Oood condition.

3100 Ford tractor With NH b1ler.

HeNton

AC Ditk HtrJow. MCKW 2311 .

82 Wanted to Buy

81 Farm Equipment

••nt. w. Va.

N

1979 lulok LoSabre. VtfV goOd

conditlpn. High m lletge. 11800.

614-985·310&amp;.

.-

bolt pull..,;
Nl'l1ott hyd. ; fWr rubber; ·naw

.

{985 D~ge Dtytont Turbo Z-15
spaed. , 34.000 m iln. Blue an~
til\ler, Trt~nsfarable cuttom w•r-

"

Phone: 114-148-2183
ttwnlnga.

.

l'lntf o~ l.Md41d. Muat tM to
appt'eei.U. Excell.m condition.
Celt 814-742· 2979 OJ 814742, 2143., 0 . Web.,.

5 111~1 WIQOnt. 1972 ford four
wh~ drive pick up. 304-e?t-

2588.

'

19H'EICOrt L Stltion W-uon. I
tpeeil. · ~ . 000 milts. PS, PI,
lugg)et rtck, retr wiper end

lntarnttionell 1050 grinder
mi•'er. New Hohnd 487 hat
bind. ftirtutOn six b..- hay rake.
New Holland707 fortge hftrYet·
ter. 304-273-4215.

del-. 114·.148·2410.
1988~

Buick Century. • door.
UOO, mll••· 114-992~ 5293 or

814,182·6331 .
'
.

Real ·

. 1982J Ford · tptluttang. Good
condition. , Nl'w 4 Cyl., air.
U&amp;OD .. Call 114·982·2n2.
1977 Monte Clirlo. Swival
sNt1. Good cOndition. Ctll

·STRETCH YOUR FAMilY, OUT in this spacious lazy
"l" ranch in Green Township. It's easy to see you
and your family in this 4 to 5 bedroom home once
you walk through. large eat·in kitchen with
ad1acent TV room , formal dining. sunken living
room with attractive flagstone firepla ce. Lots of
windows ovedook the beautiful rolling country·
side plus wood deck along entire back of house. 3
full baths. 2 car garage, partial basement with
family room and rec. room that only need a few
finishing touches. Call us, you'll love itl Low $100s.

614·986-4141.

1981

Ford Escort Stetion
Wtgon. No rust trent. and flntl
drive recenttv over-htuled. 814-

949-2179.

·-

198Y Olds Cutltu Slt)reme.
Very good condition . Ctll 114-

·

· 1986 Chwen• . 4 cyl., IUIO, 4
door. PS. PB. tlr. new tlre1. r1lly

•

· whoolo. U500.

.••

~

~II

614·992·

32691

'80 Chfl11tr Cordove, therp.

.• 1.~00.00.

GREAT FAMILY ROOM W/ CONTEIIPORARY WOODEN CEILINGS ANO DESIGNEO
WALLS - PELLA WlfolDOWS ~ LOT GLIMMERING GLASS - LIVING ROOM- SIZ·
ZLING FIREPLACE- FORMAL DINING - COMPLETE KITCHEN - 3 BEDROOMS -2
BATHS- FULL BASEMENT - 2 CAR GARAGE- FLAT 20 ACRES- CATTLE-HORSE
BARN - NEW FENCES - CITY SCHOOLS.

1979 Ctl.vn...t 1 Ch'!lllte. I
1p..d.. ·. t door. ciNn, 1876.00.

304-171-448lt.

3,000 SQ.

".

NOT TOO :iiiiiiLL,

BUBBLING - BRICK - BEAUTY.

I

PRICE REDUCED . FROM $47,000 to
·
- 8 acres m/1, with quality built home good .
condition. Nice basement area d1v1ded along w1th
woodstove and utility area. Home. has. 3 to 4
bedrooms, 2 .baths, family room w1th fireplace,
step-saving kitchen, enclosed porches. N1ce v1ew
surrounded by beautiful trees. Hili area smtable
for home sites, livestock and garden area.
Additional building joinsgarage suitable lor off1ce,
hobby or potential rental as apartment. Land lOinS
Bob Evans Farms, ·near Sausage Shop. Short walk
to Rio Grande College.

NEW LISTING!!I THREE BLOCKS FROM TOWN But surrounded by 5 acres of woods. Family
oriented neighborhood, 4-5 bedrooms, 3. full
baths, large living room with fireplace, formal
dining. eat·in kitchen with lots of .windows, family
room with fireplace, large deck overlooking yard.
Large 2 car garage. Much, much more. $72,900,
DON'T HESITATE!!
·
·
#200

FORMAL ENTRY - LIVING ROOM - DINING ROOM- CHAN DEL·
IER - 4 BEDROOMS, 2~ BATHS- KITCHEN W/ COMPLETE HANDMADE CABINETS
· -FINISHED BASEMENT - FIREPLACE - SCREENED PORCH- 2 CAR GARAGE 3.61 ACRES - POND - CITY SCHOOLS.

1988 Pontiac: F'itro, • unroof: I
tpMCI, like new, 18,400.00.

304-f75·&lt;M80.

the average
.
this 2 story home offers
living room with corner .
dining room and mce ..1.
central air. Easy on ubhbes.
$48,500.

pricot,

1977 T·bird . Tr•naportetion.

79 F~rd F'tirmont ttetlon wagen
with air. Exc. Cond. Call 304-

773-11509 afttr 5 .

(

:•

lETS MAKE A DEAL! - On this 2 story home
overlooking the river. Includes 3·4 bedtooms,
living room, dining room, family room, I\\ baths.
New roof, new furnace, new wiring. Asking
$32,500. Wants an offer. Would. help with down
payment to qu'aiified'buyer. Great deal fo1 a big
fam1ly with a small budget. C1ty schools.
#215

;.•

-''

NO OBLIGATION FOR A
FREE MARKET ANALYSIS

'

.'
A WORTHY REWARD .... for those who have
achieved success, we offer . this supremely
spacious (5,280 square feet) and beautifully
handcrafted home of timeless elegance . on 2
acres. A new feature are 5 bedrooms, 3 baths,
1amily room, lotmal dining, full basement wilh rec.
room, 3 fireplaces, 2 car garage, plus lots more.
For those who have earned it...$149,500.

. ._,.

~1-ltvtliN

THE WOODS- Atractive home with
I
potential. 3 bedrooms, 1 b.ath, living room,
eat-in kitchen, full basement. Large wooded lot.
Kyger Creek schools. $49,900.

2 BEDROOM - 1 BATH - LIVING
NEW GLEAMING KITCHEN - FORMAL - KITCHEN - ~ ACRE LOT - HANINAN
LIVING ROOM- DINING- CHAIRBOARD TRACE SCHOOLS - $26,600.00.
- CLOSED SCREENED PORCH - OPEN
DECK - 3 BEDROOMS - 2 ~ BATHS COUNTRY- QUIET - CONVENIENT
INVITING FAMILY ROOM. ALMOST EVER·
YTHING IS NEW - KYGER SCHOOLS.
LAND - ROLLING - WOODED - 5
ACRES- MORE OR LESS -.,HIGH CLASS
AREA - WASHINGTON ELEmENTARY .
COMTEMPORARY - CALIFORNIA
FLAT 1.4 ACRES - UNATIACHED 2
GARAGE - 1500 SQ. Fl RAN CH BEDROOMS- .MODERN LIVING ROOM
2 WARM WOODBURNERS - COMFORT·
lNG FAMILY ROOM.
RIVER VIEW - BALCONY - 2 COZY FIRE·
PLACES - 3 EXCITING BEDROOMSROOMY RECJDEN - HEARTY HARD·
WOOO FLOORS ...: CARPET - 2 ~ BATHS
SPACIOUS LIVING ROOM- WARM FIRE- - FULL 2 CAR GARAGE ~ OPULENT OAK
PLACE - WOODEN FLOORS- COMPLETE TRIM - GRATIFYING - PRIME - 3
COMPACT ~ITC HEN - SUNNY FAMILY ACRES.
ROOM - PATIO- B·DRY BASEMENT SLENDER 1 CAR GARAGE 2 MILES FROM • CARRY OUT- BAIT BUSINESS . GT
.EMENTARY
THROUGH - AlSO - CLEAr. NEW
CITY - WASHIN ON EL
·
- LIVING ROOM - FIREPLACE SHADY- WOODED - LOT - .3UCRES FAMILY ROOM - 3 BEDROOMS -SURVEYED- WATER TAP - 2 MILES BATHS - EVERYTHING KITCHEN FROM CITY :..... $2,500.00.
KYGER SCHOOLS.

We have other quality homes of .
high c:a~iber c:onstruc:tion with beau·
tiful settings. Give us a c:all for more
information••••

446·42o6IB

#222
BEST HOllE . FOR THE MONEY!! - Good
condition, well built home. New plumbing, new
water heater. Located on St. Rt. 35. Rio Grande
Grade School, Gallipolis high school. 3 bedrooms, ·
good storage space in closets, attic, garage, shop.
Patio doors to large deck in back of house. Cable
TV. County water. Chain link fence-part of back
yard. Good buy at $49,900.

#313
DESIGNED TO DELIGHT, BUILT TO ENDURE This custom brick gives you that feeling of quality
and beauty. 4 bedrooms. 11h baths, formal dining,
lull basem ent. 2 fireplace. Hardwood floors.
Garage Value worth seeing...$72,000.

#321

#111
83 ACRE FARM - 20 acres very good bottom

crop area not subject to llooding. 30 acres hill
pasture, balance wooded. Tobacco base. 7 room
home, partial basement with furnace, bath, 4
bedrooms, living and dining room. 2 large barns,
crip and garage. Home and farm buildings could
be sold separate, subject to owners' approval. This
is a good, quiet location to live along with a
productive farm unit: located near Patriot. Asking
$44,000 for all.

Jl307
BE SMART . •. QUIT RENTING - Invest in your
own future. Darling 3 bedrooms at 1821 Chatham
Avenue with 1 car garage. $28,500. Kiss your
landlord good-bye!!

#311

25 ACRES OF PRIIIE WOODLAND- Located 1h ·
mile off ol St. Rt. 554. EKcellent homes1te..Very
private, secluded. $15,000.

NEED A LOT IN TOWN? - Cali me about this
$1,500 50•90 just 6 blocks from city park.
#126
GREAT OPPORTUNITY staring you right in the
lace. 40x60 concrete block building for
automobile shop or a thousand other uses. 1
bedroom rental above shop pius 1971 mobile
home in excellent shape. Income will make
payments. Easy to rent in Rio Grande. $28,000.
#241
140 ACRE GENERAL FARM - Includes appro!.
3,000 lb. tobacco base, 2 large barns, eqmpment
shed and several sturdy outbmldmgs. Very mce
country home offers 4 bedrooms, living mom,
family room and large eat·m kitchen. Home 1s well
insulated. 3 car garage and aoove ground pool.
located in Guyan Twp. on dead-end road. N1ce
view. $84,500.
#227

#125

RETIRE TO .THE COUNTRY - Maintain' areimd,
but active lifestyle in this 1,riendly 1\\ story home.
3 bedrooms (upstairs could be finished :nto 4th),
dining 10om, new vinyl sidi~g , garage and several
outbuildin gs. 17 acres wrth 10-12 crop land.
$40,000.
#250
BEAUTIFUL VIE\¥ of Ohio River valley and West
Virginia hills free with the purchase ol this 5 room
home with full basement. Nice kitchen, bath, fuel
oil forced air furnace, lireplace and hardwood
tloors. 3 acres, m/1, of land. Extra lot to sell or use
as garden space or some livestock. Holdmg at ,
$39,900.
#303
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING LOT - :harolais Hills
Lake Estates offer peaceful surroundi~gs and
scenic landscapes. 1.5 acre woO&lt;(ed lot wrth small
meadow. Very nice spot lor your building plans.
$B,OOO.
.

WI.TH A VIEW .TO THE FUTURE- And ariver v1e•·
for the present. Excellent starter home in
Middleport at Cole and first Streets. $25.000.
FAMILY ORIENTED HOllE'- Quality home offers
family room with fireplace, livmg room, d1mng
room, 3 bedrooms, large basement ar~a w1th
utility room and dry storage ~rea. Inside and
outside entrance. Storage bulidmg. tree shaded
back lawn area. Inside· reCently redecorated m .,
good taste New carpet. Asking $42,500.

.

#312

OVERLOOIUNG GALLIPOLIS -:- Beautiful view of
town quiet family oriented neighborhood, walk1ng
distance to town, laree quality buiH home. Sound
nice? Your whole lamily will love _this 1~ story
stone and brick home. Sunken hvmg. room w1th
beautiful Hoors, large . screened-In. pprch,
solarium den tormal dmmg room, large lam1ly
room and much more. MOst see to_appreciate ali
the amenrtjes that ore featured m th1s home.
$149,900.

#211

ABIT OUT OF THE ORDINARY! :_look forward to
coming home to this 2 year old, 1\\ story cedat
home with full basement. 3 roomy badtooms,
generous dininlllld kitchen atea. 78x2411ot in
Rio Grande, Just teduced from $49,900 lo
$45,900.
•

1101
IMPROVE YOUI VIEW - This rustic ranch
overlooks llle city·and the river. Home boa~ 2
• bedrooms, 2 bllhs,, spacious living room wilh
fire!IIP: deli (could be 3rd bedroom) and all
parquetfloorinc; PluSh Cltpeting. 2 carcarport:ln
town ,location. $87,500.
·

11114

'

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
M. Wiseman, Broker

Loretta McDade, 446-n29

·B. J. Hairston,

4_.6·424~

Auto Repair

..... 1178. 13041 372·
1857. Nina to five. ·

82

0

1984 ford Tempo, 4s,oo0
mlltt, t lnttd wlndawt, 5 lpeed,
new rtdltlt, 12,800 .00. 304-

0

1877 F'o.rel Mewerick. AC , Pl.
PS, radio &amp; '-PI ptayet, DQOd
tlr., , 11 ,000 .00. lO.t-458-

81

Home
Improvements

1918,

72

·-•

1987 Ford RM!gor S . I opd.,
AM -FM·C.1s. 8 ,000 mil". C. II
614·441·2323 after 4 PM.
1979 Dodgo 050. 70,000
mll11. NO rult . C.ll lt.t-441·
9128 "'448·7879.

73

1987 Dodge Fl•m-BO. AM-FM·

Cau, tinted window.. •1210.

Calll14-446-2687, .,_onlngo.

Vans

a. 4 W.O.

74

114·949-2801 .

1880 Ford F110 fpr ule. 4
whMI dr.lve. ehort be:d. good

Lold .ster. 446 g" 'motor. II
apeed main trtntmluion, 4
tpeed •uxlllary traumlllion.

cond. UBOO. 311\1·815·3811 . ·

U.oi oxoia, 14 1t. dump body.

Motorcycles

I.

87&amp;-1281.

1983 Dfl(tge heH ton pick up.
AT. PS, PB, .AM-FM,.,.utt ... to

opprecloto, 304·175-&amp;281 .

114-992·.

1982 Hertey.". full drat, 'bttt
drtvt • stereo. C.ll 814-3782421 eftar 5 PM .
1983 Hondt XL 100 A. heel.
cond . Call 114-441-4473 tfter

5PM .

1987 4 wheeler. Ntw. Excel.
cond. Only bHn rldtn 3 tinles.
Still. und..-, service lgrt~ement .

Colll14-317-7634.

....... RON EVANS ENTER·
PAISES, Ja-. Ohio. 114-

· 30 fJ;. Owen a C. bin CNiHI'.
t250l) or bell offer . C.l 114-

Roofing. ren:odtling. tddlttons.
tleclritl, drywell, palntlnt~. &amp;.
plumbiftt . Cell Gary 114-388·

Hou• caHo on RCA, a..ur,
QE . 8-'iillng In ZonHh. Call
304-&amp;71-2388 or 814-4412414 .

Uted • .rabuilt trene"'luiona.
Uted are Internally Ins~

Fetty Trli• Trimming, atump
ramonl. Call304-171- 1331 .

wtrranty, Cwhlch•v• oaaura
ctrry3000 mllet or3pdaye

~ii~:r.r.::~.:o.~~~··w

U1ed- Starling •t t9t, tx c:h~gt, lito-rebuilt trllntmla·
tiona. chtng•over kl1a tor OM
overdrive to 310 Twrbo, 2 wheel
• 4 wheal drlw. cuetom built
lOCk-up OM torques. Ouaren·
teed up toontyetr. Calh &amp; cany
or lnat.IU. Ctl1114-371-2220 or

304-67&amp;·4230.

U1td rebuilt rtptlred

tr~~nlrrillc

alono. Call 814·448·3834.

ACROSS
1 Ske1ched
7 Moccasin
tO Artiflcal crown for
teeth
13 Things ihat
film
20 SpJingfield is its
cap.
21 Mature
22 Yearly
publicalions

24 Downy duck .
25 Acll&gt;r Marshall
27 Tellu.rium symbol
28 ·Fulfill
29 Roman gods
30 AllUring

woman

· 31 Regretted
32 Quarrel
34 Consumed

36
38
39
40
41

Young salmon
Fork prong
Rooms: abbr.
Near

An assigned area

44 Printer's measure

commune

-

~

•••

"EALro_.

·,•

L!.l .

446-3636~

,.,.

"'' .

47 N-0 linkup
48' Tallahassee 's St.
49 Actor Wallach
50 Footlike part
51 Room 10 53 Teutonic deity
54 Rhodium symbol
55 Canadian
pro•ince: abbr.
57 Base
59 Pigpen
60 Phi - Kappa
61 Rupees: abbr.
62 Cooks under a
flame
64 Binds
66 Wild man
68 Golf mound
70 Fees
72 Q-U linkup
73 Conspiracy
74 Circuli
77 Torrid
78 Pried abou1
sneakingly
80 Beginn!ngs
82 - Marie Saini
83 Heraldry; grafted
85 Sabers
86 Denver

'

~­

""••
'•
.;..·

.•;

..1 ·

,

Upholstery

245-8285.

Mowrey'• UphOiaterlng MMns
tfl county,,... 22 ~"'· The belt
In tu·r nlture upt\ollttring. C.l
304 · 171 - 4114 for' free
tttlm.....

DONl MISS SEEIN8 .THIS GEM AT ONLY $69,000- 'JUST
MOVE IN ANO ENJOY THIS 3 BEDROOM 2 STORY HOME.
BEAUTIFUL WOODWORK, NICE ENTRY WITH OPEN STAIR·
WAY_, FORMAl DINING, FAMILY ROOM. VINYl SIDING, PlUS
NICt INCOM£ FROM 3 BEDROOM GARAGE APT. WITH FAM·
ILY ROOM. CONVENIENT lOCATION, IN CITY.
WATCHJDI BOAlS 011 TilE OHIO FROM .THE FRONT PORCH
OF THIS REMODEL£0 Bl·lEVEL. BRICK AND FRAME EXTE·
RIOR, lARGE EAT·IN KITCHEN, 3 BEDROOMS. BETTER CAll
SOON, THE PRICE IS $44,000.
SPIING VALLEY AIEA .- SPACIOUS BRICK RANCH, COZY
FAMILY ROOI!I WITH FIREPLACE OFF FUUY EQUIPPED
KITCHEN, 3 BEDROOMS; I o,; BATHS, EXTRA LARGE MASTER
BEDROOM HAS Ta,EVISION VIEWIHG AREA CALL NQW.
•

•

!IlLES liD£ VIEW - ONE.Jlf·A-IUND CUSTOM HOitlE DE·
SIGNED FOR THIS SITE. FOUR LEVEL CATHEDRAL CEILINGS
ARE HIGHLIGHTS IN FAMILY ROOM AND UVING AREA. 4 ·

BEDROOMS. 2!4 BATHS, NEAR CITY. S55,000,

AND FlAME RANCH~,.~ B£0.

,.,.... IN RESIDENTIAL. FARMS • COMMERCIAL

r~~1nERMO
I•

I
- l

,

SUND
, AY. PUZZLER

refract light
19 Lemmon/ Benson

"

2S LOCUST STREET. GAlliPOUS.OHIO

87

poolt, clsttfns, wells. Ph. 614-

~========:1--========-----..:._--------------,

1I

Budget Trensm1ttion1

'

m ·-~
1...13

J 6 J Water Servica. Swimming

304-871·3110.

AON'S Television Service .

Auto Parte
• A Ce ••orl·ea
C
·

Raal Estate Generel

• ' AUDREY f . CANADAY. Rt:ALTDR
~RTGOROON, RfALTOR. 446,62t6

Oumptruck htuling tii'Yic•·
Coal, elone, 11nd, gre~ttl , dirt.

;:28~8::-5:5::4;8·=:::;;;==== 1•8;.:84..;2:.·_ _ _ __ __

:!.t

.

Dllltrd Wet• Service: Pool,,
Citt.rnt, W.Ua. Delivery Any·
time. C. II 114--441· 7404-No
Sundty calli.

281-S830.

Real Estate General

Real Estate Gener•l

•

..

pools, well. etc. cen 304·17•

gil .• 1 1!100 gal. tnd Jet Aeration
eynem. Ftetory trained reptlr

Motors for Sale

tnd

work. Clll 1 - - - - - - - - -

Pickup bedt ChiVroltt, Ford,
Dodge. ahort or long. no rult.
Cell enydmt 304·1~5- 2215 or

~II

I~~==;::===:;:==
75
Boats end

78

1911 Ford Cuttomlled Van .

Call 814-112·1&amp;37 or 114·
&lt;MI·21.18. 01000.

2.000 gotllon diillvooy, 2919.

General Hauling

85

up and deuvery. Dtvis Vecuum
C ..tner, one htlf milt up
&lt;lo1!'9N C - Rd. ~II , 114·

CDrHH'm. Septic Tank•· 1000

1972 Ford V-8, tuto.. ""'flat
bod.
•1 200.drive.
1976 •1000.
Chovy V. ton,
2 wheal
Call

1987 NiuanTruck. Tan, BaM E,

Wttt41:rson ' s Weter Heullng.
rMtoneblt rtttt, immediMe

,..,..,, PBt•. •nd .uppll• . Pick

6i303 efttr 15:00.

1H1 Toyoto pick-up. Utility Looclocl. 27.100 mllu. Call
becl, ctmp• top~ IMidlar rack. 114 992 7183
Coli oltor 5:00 114·192·35U.
• · •
·

Ideal tor hot mhc
814-982-2187.

441-31 71.

SWEEPER tnd MWI"CJ machln•

Motorcycle•

event. a weektndl.

74

671·1786. .

Paul Aupe, Jr. Water leMae.
Pools, c.,terns. weflt. C.l 114--

furnithMI.

&lt;MI·OZ94.

1692.

1977 InternatiOnal Tendem

reference~

1981 KIWIAkl Teiatte 21!10
thrn wh"ler. Fltt' trick tlrea,

AM·FM-~oo . Coli 114•448·

:ood·
01100. c.u 14·112·2311.

Locet

1182 Dodge 250 Ram. Cuttom
convel'lkNI: Trtll., ' rHdy. C.ll

-·out

19n Chtvy Y.r ton pidlup, 301,
good tlrll, etmper topper tnd
f'llck . Aunt
.body good.

Aalidentitl or comm•clal wir·
lng. New ttrVict or reptirt .
U~ electricltn. Ettknlte
fr... Aldtnour EIKtric:tl, 304-

F- . .~ma~oo. Coli ooMoot
1·114-237-0488. dtY or night.
Rogers8a1ement
Wtteopaooflng.

1978 Ford lronCo. Excel. cond.
lock·ln
hubo. PS. PB,

1976 Chev . Silverado-red •
lilver, Duley. L11rtopper, crul••·
t ih:, tlr. 4!4 tng.. running
boardt, Aa... hitch, TA br.alttt
&amp; mort. 26,000 mil". Good

Electrical

a. Refrigeration

tincondttlonll Mtetime gutr•n·
tH.

114-441-4383 d..,.. 446-0139 halmot, booto.

1974 FOrd pickup. Oood cond.
UOO. ~II 114·24&amp;·9284.

a.

84

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

,.....

Trucks for Sale

Plumbing
Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pjne
GaHipollo. Ohio
Phont 81.t-.UI-3888 or 11•448-4477

6711·7431.

"" ,,..-4

-:

Sterkl Tr• snd Lawn Strviet,
ltwn cere. ltndteaping, ttump
remoYtl . 304-671-2842 or

&amp;78-2903.

0

•••

''
•

Rotary or ctblt tool 4rlllng.
Mott weHs complatedsi medl'f.
Pump talu and service. 304-

Jim'•

lmPQft Auto Service,
Alptey, WMI Vlrglnit. S~elia ­
lng In Honda ptrta tnd HrVh:~e

1882 Pontitc FirHird, ch•rcotl,
Auto, AM -FM J:llllttl, cruiH
control, •lr cond , 14,10().00,
Phont 304-178-2748. ·

CHOICE LOCAnOI - JusUIINUTES FROM CITY. BRICK
AND FRAME WITH VIIIYI. SIDING. LARGE FAMILY ROOM
WITH FIREPLAct 3 B£DROOMS, GAS fORCED AIR FUR·
NACE'nPATIO, FEI«:EO BACKYARD, AnACHED GARAGE. A
BEAU FUL .HOME FOR.$52,000.

(614) 446-3644

David Wiseman, 446-9666
Clyde B. Walker, 246-6276

77

:'

#445

#243

~-

1886 Chry- Pori _.i
m~eniOII coneS, IJ.c work c.r,
1220.00. 304·17&amp;-&lt;M3&amp; oft•
5;00,

•.;.:

-

eu ...

Home
Improvements

895·3802

46 Ne1herlands

BIG - BUSTLING- BUSINESS - BUILDING - 40X100 SQ. FT. - 9X18 FT. OF·
FICE - .5 GARAGE DOORS - CLAY TOWNSHIP.
•
CUTE - COZY - WARM COTIAGE ·

2H-1243.

892·5141.

FOR SALE BY OWNERS: Large split-level and tennis
court.
4·5 BEDROOMS: 3 b~th s, formal living and dining
room s, gourmet kitchen , lamily room, game room ,
study., mud / laundry room, mdoor slorage room With
addition al laundry facilities. 2 car garage, 2 fireplaces ,
ce1 ling fans, wooden deck. fullleng1h of house. Many
extra s.
. BREATHTAKiNG VIEW of Gallipolis and Ohio River, full
length ·windows lor maximum ~iew. Secluded for total
privacy. City school district. Located, l !h rJ!IIes lrom .
d~wntown Gallipolis. Only 8 m1les from Locks and
Oafll . .
··
·EXCEllENT home and grounds for family and/ or en·
tertain ing. Must see to appreciale Quality.
HOUSE, TENNIS COURT and 25 ACRES- $173.000
Will consider house. court 1nd 5acres for $155,000
Call for Appointment - 614-446-3386
;
•
Serious

'

.·.

LIVING ROOM - FORMAl DINING
- MA~iNE'R:LYV'~TCfiEr
BATHS- SWIRLING SPIRAL STAIR·
CASE - 3 BEOROOMS - MUSCI.E ROOM - SNOW COVERED PINES- 12 ACRES.
OWNER SAYS TO SELL! ONLY - $83.000.

origlntl mlJH. eaoo. CaM 114-

•
• ~••

)OK5~H_EL'~~SIIN_

Elton 181 ,.., end. Call

Real Estate General

't

HOW MANY TIMES HAVE
YOU WONDERED WHAT
YOUR HQME IS WORTH?

304-171-3029.

uoo. 304-1711-7!111.

,.

YOUR QUEST FOR
will lead you to this 3
year old brick ranch. 1,762 sq. ft. features 3
bedroom s, equipped eat-in kHchen, family room
with cozy fireplace, formal dining and 2 car
garage. 2 lots. Convenient location. $95,900.
#112

tut o, tront wh.al! drive. 43.000.

FM -AM CIIMfte. 25 ,000 mll11.

1977 Uncoln Continental, tx c
cond, lolded. very retton•blt

#318

n.-

CUTE - MOD - BI·LEVEL

30~· 671 - 2&amp;63.

81

a. Acce11orie1

1810 Chovy Citation. 2 door,

cond. Colll14-2&amp;1·1038.

. 742·2384 oltor 4:30.

11200

71 Auto 's For Sale

baskelballer
87 Level
88 Bitter velch
90 Health resort
91 Ro·man bronze

92 Guido's high not.e
93 Out-and-oul
96 Lament over
99 Carter's
predecessor

10 1 Squandered
104 Hawaiian

r001S10Ck
105 Swiss river
107 Born
108 E1hiopian ti11e
109 Possesses
110 Be in debt
111 Decade
112 Entrea1y
114 Go in·
116 Clue
117 Female ruff
118 Proceed
120 Mr. Reiner

122 Temporary bed
123 Peel ·
124 Exists
125 Early mom
127 "- Law"
129 Fragment
13 t Shoulder wrap
133 Equally
134 "Let It - "
1&gt;36 Tantalum symbol ·
137 Obscure •
139 Collection of fac1s
140 Decay
141 Edge
142 - garde
143 Southern
blackbird
145 Scot1ish cap
147 Referee
151 Alcoholic
beverage
152 - - carle
153 Prohibi1s
155 Measure of
weight
157 Pari of flower'
158 Electrified
particle

159 Fluent
160 Sliver symbol
161 Behold!
163 Carries

165
167
168
169
17 t

Jargon
Babylonian doily
Spanish arlicle
Citrus frull
Related on

mother's side

17:1
173
175
176
177

Trace
Hand covering
Evaluate
Smalles1 number
Chemical
compound
178 Ac1or Hackman

DOWN
1 Vic1ory
2 Is borne
3 In bed
4 Mongrel
5 Latin conjunction
6 Pro1ound
7 Thomas Magnum,

e.g.

a In music, high
9 Lucid
10 Mlll1ai y student
11 Time gone by
12 Hebrew letter
13 Couple
14 Hosp. a1tendant
15 Those holding
office

16 Garmen1
17 An Osmond
18 Slim
19 " Experimen1 in

..

23 Scoffs ,
26 " Heaven's - "
·29 Doris and Dennis
32 Pos1s
33 Narrate
35 Agave plant
36 Comml1
depredations
37 Germane
40 Apporlions
42 Disturbance

43
45
48
52
56
58
59
60
62
63
65
66
67
68
69
71

Chooses
Substances
Distant
Child's game
Permits
Sections of
hospl1al
Surgical thread
Infants
Improving
Sailing vessels
Hymn: abbr.
Sank in middle
In England. lifts
"- Cosby Show"
Vast age
Sudde~

overstrain

73 S1ogles •

75
76
79
81

Hall!
"Peter -"
Revised; abbr.
Rutherlum
symbol
84 Baseball slat.
87 Overhead
railways
89 Cold spell
92 Drien1
93 Suitable
.94 Fish eggs
95 Powdered
pumice
97 Command to
horse
98 Thus
99 Pari ol violin: pl.
tOO Paddle
' 101 Diminish
102 Female sheep
103 River In Scotland
106 Harvest
109 Lease
113 Solo
115 - and fro
116 Stop
119 Ancient
121 River in Siberia
123 lndigen1
124 Doctrine
125 Ket11edrum
126 Billy Martin or
Roger Craig
128 River Island
130 Rugs '
132 Arbor
133 Direct at target
134 Accept as true
135 Empower
138 Prln11ng mold ;
colloq.
141 Hurry
144 At home
146 Roadside hotel
148 Perplex
149 Thatlhlng
150 Experience
151 Ac1or Moore
152 Baseballleag.
154 Narrow opening
156 Not one
158 Author of
" Plcnlc"

159 Strong wind
162 Individual
164 Chinese pagoda
166 Emmel
167 Urge on
170 Mother

�T11 u Se 1tinel ·

Articles... ___....;c:.:o;::n.::t1n::;u:.:ed:::...::fr:.:o::.m:..:D::..":..1_ _ _ _. -

Ohio-Point
attempts to protect their lands.
This led to chaos In the United
States, and a need for a stront~tlr
central (lovernment became
more apparent.
However, the Artloles of Con·
federation, . even though they
were weak, proved to . be a
landmark In government ac·
lions. Thomas Jefferson said that

W.Va.

the new structure was the belt

~~~st::~xlsttng or tl!at ever did

All bUll dealing with specified help Coni!'eSS. ·
Because . the Articles were
All Of thiS po wer· fl g htln•a ell·
aubjects of Importance required
weak, they became a stepping
at least a two--thirds vote ..-. and maxed when Sbays's rebe!Uon
stone toward the present
Constitution.
AllY amendment of the Articles flared up 1n 1786. Farmers ~an
The Articles had outlined the
required a unantrnouse vote. losln(l tbelr farms through mort·
gage
forec;Josures
and
tax
deltn·
general
powers that were to be
Tbat would have taken the
"""
quencles
Hundreds
an
Of
unanimous agreement of all
·
.
..,. •
exercised by the central govern·
thirteen states which was men se!zed thelr mus ket s In
ment, and kept alive the Idea of a
Impossible.
-,...---!:---=C.:.on:::t:::ln::.:ued:;:::.:.fr:..::o:::m:.:...::D:.:;·l:_____ union by holding the states
Congress was handicapped 111
~
to(lether.
·
at least two ways. One way ,was Office (614-446-7007) .
ship as the keynote topic. Some40
Despite their weaknesses, the
that Congress had no power to
WJiat's the beef s~t~:~::~r\ break-out sessions ranging from
Articles served as a transition.
reaulate commerce,. leaving Several of the Ohio State
" House Cleaning for Others" to They represented a great sur·
each state the right to design Its slty Agricultural Econo
Low Investment Dairy" will be render to the states that had
own, different laws Including. -'!steel Gallla County this week to 'featured. The workshop will be' before controlled their own gotariffs and navigation.
discuss farm policy. The pro· held at the Hocking Technical vernments. The Articles pre·
Commerce between states gram leader was Dr. Dennis Colleg~ In Nelsonville on Satur· pared the states for a jump from
gave rise to disputes. Since J{endersQn. In a recent economic day, March 12, starting at 9 a.m.
the old boycott association ofl774
Congress. lacked the power to commentary Dr. Henderson says \E•~rollment forms are available to the Constitution of the United
regulate trade, each state was . the cattle herd decreased In size
the County Extension Office.
States In 1787 . .
· free to control the entry ol goods
duringthat
1987,
continuing
thetotal
de· r~~;;;;;d;e;ad;l;ln;e;l:s:M;a;r;ch;;l.;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;::;j~
began
In 1982. The
Into Its territory. Many states cline
lmp!lSfd tariff laws that applied Inventory of cattle and calves on
to other states as well as to Jan. 1, 1988, was just shy of 99
million head, down from 102
foreign nations.
New Jersy, for example, ex· million a·year earlier, 25 percent
ported Its goods directly, but below the pea)&lt; reached In 1975,
Imported . foreign products and the smallest since 1961.
through tbe ports o! Philadelphia Henderson says declines during
..
WITH REMOTE '
the
past,
year
were·
In
every
and New York. To protect Its
·. merchants, New Jersey put a tax category except heifers desigon foreign goods enter(ng by way nated as beef cow replacements,
&amp;
of other states. New York retal· which remained level with a year
lated by Imposing heavy duties ago, and 'feeder steers up 3
on New Jersey ships that entered percent and heifers up 2 percent.
CHESTER
915-3307
The number of both beef and
her harbor. In the south, VIrginia
passed a law providing for the dairy cows was down 2 percent,
seizure and prosecution of any with dairy reflecting heavy cui·
ship that failed to pay duties; It ling II\ light of lower milk prices
was aimed not at Europe, but at and the beef downturn suggest·
Maryland, Pennsylvania, ·and lng that -the strength In feeder
cattle prices over the past year
Massachusetts.
·
M a result, America as a unit and a half did not yet build ·
could not control Its own ship· cow-calf operator margins sliffl·
ping, ·!lavlgatlon, commerce, or clently to terminate cow llq~lda·
lion.
. Its Individual states.
·
The 1987 calf crop was off three
Congress was alsq. hampered
SECTIONAL
when It established a tax quota percent. With beef replacement
W
/RECLINER-PEACH
for each _of the states - asking heifers holding even, It appears
REG. '1799.95
that each state contribute that that the downturn .tn beef cow
amount voluntarily. Congress numbers is coming to an end and
was lucky to r'l&lt;'eive quotas from may stabilize during 1988. With
only one-fourth of the states. ~t 1987's small call crop and some
. could not force the states to pay. heifer hold-back, beef slaughter
Economic clouds began to looks to be somewhat smaller
form. The system of raising this year than expected earlier,
money for the government was despite the somewhat larger
not effective. When the states supply of feeder ca.ttle. Slaughter .
•
I
.
refused to pay the amount prices will probably top last
BED, D.. ESSU, JEWELRY BOX, MIIIOR,
Congress requested, · they. cried year's $65 · average for · choice
. CHEST, NIGHT TA,BLE
about the tyranny of "King steers at Omaha.
BASSETT CHERRY FINISH
A workshop abol!t alternative
Congress." This left Congress
lEG. $2699.95
with no funds to pay the Interest enterprises for people In rural
DRESUR W/WING MIRROR
on the public debt, seriously areas will feature entrepreneur·
RfG. S799.95
affecting the nation's credit with
other countries.
SALE
Individual states were fighting
Continued from D·l
with each other over boundaries, are about the same as If the tooth
and the levying of duties on goods has never been sealed.
from the dlffer!!nt staies.
The Rehwlnkel Dental Society
The weak national federal recommends pit and fissure
government In Philadelphia sealants for children as part of a
could only advise, recommend total dental care program that
and request. . .
Includes dally , use or fluorides,
It could not command,' cberce dally br~shing and flossing,
RIVERSIDE
or enforce anything. It could not regular dental checkups, and a
act directly upon citizens, and diet that limits snacks. Working
CURIO
could not protect Itself against together, these positive mea·
REG. '349.95
gross Indignities If the states did s ures can result in a lifetime of
not support Congress. And many s trong, healthy teeth for all of our
.times the · ~tales did nothing to children.

·: Ohio. Lottery

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S99

waggart . admits wrongdoing

William 0. Smeltzet_

CEmFIED I'UiliC ACCOUNT AN'f

BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI)Jimmy Swaggart, the Louisiana
ffrebrand who helped topple PTL
founder Jim Bakker, has further
marred the soiled reputation of
television evangelists with his
admission that he also Is guilty of
moral wrongdoing, experts and
church officials say.
Swaggart, 52, told his Baton
Rouge congregation Sunday he
would step down from his $150
million-a-year ministry IIi light
of a "moral failure" for which he
gave no details.
Tl\·e !Ire-and-brimstone
preacher who · helped · oust
Bakker and New Orleans televl·
slon evangelist Marvin Gorman
from their ministries on grounds
of adultery asked fellow evangelists to "forgive me for sinning

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Gallipolia, Ohio
. 446-4471

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United Press lnlernatlonal
· .Sen: Robert Dole has shar· pened his criticism · of Republl·
. can rival George Bush, accusing
· the vice presl~ent of Ignoring the ·
"heartland" states where most
of the 10 major White House
candidates are seeking their next
round of votes.
.
· Still more than two weeks
away from the Super Tuesday
elections In 20 mostly Southern

IIEG. '2199.95

S109997
BLUE COnON

SOFA
REG, '999.95

$499 97

\ B&amp;E'solved by l~men

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

Two young men !rom the Ripley area of Jackson County-,
W•.Va., Ronnie Casto and Barry Glen Thompson, were arrested
_Friday morning by the Jackson County, W.Va. Sheriff's
Department In connection with a breaking and entering at .
:
Eber's Gulf Station In Racine. The B&amp;E: occurred just before
mldnlgh! Thursday. Karen E. King, 19, also of Ripley, who
accompanied the two men, was arrested In Racine shortly after
tile rpbbery occurred.
·
Casto and Thompspn are currently being held at the Jackson
County Jail. Both are expected to waive extradition to Ohio
when they appear Tuesday morning before a Jackson County
magistrate. They will then be transferred .to Meigs County to
appear before Judge Charles Knight on a bill of Information . .
' King, charged with complicity. appeared Friday before
J"dge Patrick O'Brien In Meigs County Court and was released
on bond.
Neatly all of the Items taken In the B&amp;E have been recovered
the.Meigs County Sheriff's Department reports.
·

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

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tlal aspirants are turning to
South Dakota. Minnesota and a
few other places that .wlll vote as
early as Tuesday.
'
.
Most of the candidates admit·
tedly are more concerned with
the "super ballot" March 8, hut
some stand to gain from the
Immediate round of voting more
than others, such as Bush, who
are stronger and more confident
Continued on page 5

-Local news briefs---

•Sliding fee scale. No one refused services because of
inability to pay.

POMEROY
GALLIPOLIS
236 E. Main St.
414 Second Ave., ·2nd floor
Open 10:00 to 5:00
Monday-friday
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Also: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillicothe, Logan

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'

Sheriff probes incident . ·
S~eriff

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..

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industries up and down the river
about where It Ithe spill) was
located," said Peter Tennant, a
water quality exp~rt with the
Ohio River Valley Water Sa nita·
lion Commission.
"We thought they were worrled about their (water)
Intakes."
. The collapse of an i\shland Oil
Co. storage tank at Jefferson,
Pa., spilled 770,000 gallons of
diesel fuel into the Monongahela
River and later the Ohio River,
f
orclng scores of cities In four
states, including Ohio, to close
fresh Water Intake valves.
. ~~•
~ ~,..... • .
The Ohio River Valley Sanlta·
. lion Commission, or ORSANCO,
did tests along a 15-mlle stretch
of the river between Wheeling

and Moundsville, W.Va ., Tennant said.
Higher tev!!IS of chloroform
and methylene chloride - both
cancer-causing agents - were
found In the water, the news·
paper said.
"Offhand, I'd estimate these
concentrations at about ten times
more than what we normally
might see," Tennant said.
Tennant told the newspaper
that the chemicals, at those
levels "significantly exceed" the
federal cancer risk level criteria
for rivers and streams.
"What we have ·Mre Is a good
lndl&lt;:atlo .u.a. ·
• ..m.e..,. ot,.
Industries rriay have taken ad·
vantage o! the spill' to unload
some of their own problems and
unwanted material," said Edgar

Berkey of the University of
Pittsburgh, which has also re,
viewed water samples,
"They dumped during the spill
because dumping them In the
river without the spill would have
made them easter to detect,"
Berkey said. II was not known
which companies might have
engaged In the alleged dumping.
"There's no question that lf
someone wants to do this type of
thing, that was the time to do It,"
said Ray George, a regional field
. agent for the Environmental
Protection Agency.
"But with the new technology,
lt!•BOt-•lly l\lillciMl We do bave
some tools and resources avalla"ble to us and If we find s01ne
Industry doing It, we'll come
down hard on them."

applied to the ODNR, Division of
Reclamation for a long-wal min·
lngpermltwhlchwouldallowthe
company to use that mining
technique In the area.
Residents became worried
abOut how the mining would
affect their property. OU offl·
clals became concerned because
themlnlngcameclosetotheedge
of the 10-year buffer zone that
surrounds Dysart Woods.
Burns said North American
has also filed for a room-and·
pillar permit that woudl allow
mining not only to the end, but
within the buffer zone.
"We were a little surprised.
they didn't recognize It (buffer
zone)," Burns said. "The other
coal companies have."
The legal director said the
buffer zone was created 10 years
ago when It became apparent
strip mining may threaten the
woods.
"Surface miners have all rec·
ognlzedlt. Thepermltswereflled
and then they backed off from
those permits," Burns ·said.
"This Is the first time they have
not agreed with tt." .

weeks, but no agreement has
been reached. Burns talked with
North American's Loulse Wat·
son, an environmental consul·
tan t, throughout the
· negotiations.
Watson could not be reached
for comment, the Martins Ferry
Times-Leader reported Sunday.
A citizens group, POW (Pro·
teet Our World) has objected to.
North American's long-wall per·
mit for four months . Those
opposed to the permit offered
comment to the Division of
Reclamation for 51-2 hours last
month during an Informal
. hearing.
Long-wall Is a mining method
where coal Is cut from the coal
seam and sent to the surface on a
conveyour belt. As the machine
moves forward, the supports
move forward along the room to
cave ln. When the roof caves In,
subsidence occurrs, which ian·
downers say will greatly affect
their surface water and also
damage building.
With room·and·plolar" .mlnlng,
large pillars of coal, which hold
up the roof, are left uitmlned.
Where long-wall subsidence occurs Immediately. room-and·
pillar subsidence may occur
d.;.zens of years later, If at all.
Both coal mining methods
concern university officials but
the loss of groundwater poses the

greatest threat to theforeststhey
said.
"The trees have a great
demand for wter because they
are so big ," said Wlstendahl. "If
the t.rees, can't produce enough
food for the roots and the rest of
the tree, they're going to die."
During lmes of great stress to
the trees, such as during a
drought, "there will be a great
danger of losing them ," Wlstendahl said.
The university recel11ed the
woods from the National Conser·
vancyofWashlngtonln the1960s.
Dysart Woods has been placed on
the Department of Interior's
National Register of Historical
places.
·
''There's so little of our natural
heritage left It's good a few of us
are concerned about It," Wlstendahl said.
·
"The burden of proof to show ·
the woods would be affected by
mining Is on the school," Burns
said.
.
If the coal company Is granted
thepermltwlthoutrespectlngthe
buffer zone, Burns said, the
university will appeal to tbe
Reclamation Board of Review
and then lake the case to court If
necessary.
The legal director said the
room-and-pillar permit will be
decided on before the long-wat'l
permit.

The buffer zone extends from a
half mile to a mile and a half
around Dysart Woods, he said,
ou and North American have
negotiated a settlement to the
buffer zone question for several

wili&lt;·vote .··on,nurse·law ·;rewrite

:s·.•

~

.._ - - - · - ... .._

-.1.

- lo.o- ~

-·

~- _.

...

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

•

By LEE LEONARD
VPI Sl.atehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
State senat.ors will vote this week
. on a long-awaited overhaul of the
law goverplng the licensing and
regulation of nursing . .
The heavily-sponsored bill,
which has already been passed ·
by the House, will be first on the
calendar when the senate recon·
venes Tuesday at 1: 30 p.m.
Tenns of ihe controversial
rewrite have been pushed and
pulled for several years 'l,by
various factions of the nursing
prot-ton, a 1 well as the Ohio
State Medical Alaoc:lallon.
Spontorecl. by Rep. . Judy
Sbeertr, [).Shaker Heights, the
bW m111e1 requln!rnenta for

, .

u

&amp;VIA

MARTINS FERRY. Ohio
(UPI) - A dispute between the
North American Coal Co. and
.Ohio University concerning min·
lng' II) Belmont County Is
Intensifying.
At Issue Is mining close to a
buffer zone around a wooded
area that holds some that some
unt~sual trees.
"The coal company and the
university have disagreed on the
buffer zone," said Ohlo Unlverslty legal director John Burns,
' 'We are preparing documenta·
tion to the Ohio Department of
·Natural Resources to explain
why the buffer zone Is
lmporaitt."
.The wooded area Is the Dysart
Woods laboratory that covers 455
acres In Belmont County.
OU Botanty Professor Phillip
Canttno says two areas that
cover·50 acres Is the only area of
untouched virgin forest In sou·
theast Ohio.
Warren Wlstendahl, a retired ·
OU botany professor and former
director of the laboratory, said
that In addition to the state's
oldest tulip tree, there are while ·
oak there, some of which are 400
years old and four feet In
diameter. He says beech, sugar
maple, hickory and black gum
· trees can also be found In the
forest.
· · Last fall ·North American

·. Sen~tors

·Meigs., County
Howard E. Frank's
r:ecetvEid a
. call abOut 1 a.m. Sunday mornlngtrortJJackBon COuilty General'~)Hospital; Ripley, W.Va., to Investigate the p()sstble rape.of a
female minor from Meigs County. Evidence received at
Jackson Generalis being transported to the Bureau of Criminal
Investigation, London, Ohio, by Meigs Sheriff's deputies.
The sheriff's department also reports that Terry Watson, 37,
of Parkersburg, W.Va., was arrested In Coolville, In Athens
· County, with the assists nee of Meigs County officers. Meigs
County has outstanding ~arr11nts on Watson for aggravated
·•· burglary, escape and disorderly conduct: while. Intoxicated.
Watson was to appear MOnday morning In Meigs County Court

Approve change of venue

WE TAD IIAS1'II CAID

may have dumped illegally

education requirements six ye- harm to the public.
dumped In Ohio. It also requires
ars after the bill becomes law.
The bill also puts nurse- more careful long-range plan·
Under the bill, the board midwives pnder the jurisdiction nlng for the disposal of trash.
governing nursing would ·be of the Board of Nursing rather
Legislation diverting a small
Increased from eight to 13, ihan under the state Medical percentage of capital Improveadding three r!!gls tered nurses, Board.
ments money to the arts ·IS
one licensed practical nurse and
The senate also will vote expected to be approved Tu.esday
one r!!presentative of health care . Tuesday on controverslall!!glsla- morning In the Senate Finance
consumers.
tlon permanently banning ·j:Or· ~ommlttee so It can be taken to
Nurses would still be · prohl· poral punishment In sc hoots the senate floor Wednesday . .
blted ·rrom practicing medicine, ~1. 1,1989, unless a local school
The Senate Health, Human
A $5 million court case has been transferred from Cuyahoga
m~lng diagnoses or prescribing
bOard specifies otherwise before servtcea and Aging Committee
· County to Meigs County on a change. of' venue. The case Is
medicine under the bill.
that date.
will continue to study a bill on
Robert. M. Sheley ·and Ada Ruth Sheley, Middleport, against
The bill Is sponsored by Sen
pro~tlon and treatment proEagle· Picher Industries Ine., Cincinnati, OWens-DHnols Inc.,
In 1994, If the bill · passes, Richard Schafrath, R ! grams for AIDS "&lt;lctlms WednesToledo, and Garloek Inc.• Clev!!land. .
nurses will have to complete the Loudonville.
day afternoon.
The plalntlffa are clalmlna damages from the defendants for
equivalent of 24 hours of ap·
The House Energy and Envir·
The House Economic Develop·
the lllnels and dllabUlty of RObert Sheley. Shei!!Y worked for
proved education for license onml!nt Committee lse~ted to · ment aJKt Small Bualneu Com:
years
a.
and during the course ol hll
renewal every two years.
vote 'I\uisday evening on longrillttee will meet Thursday mornemp~nt, w
• .
l!.roJtlmlty. to. albestos materi8I.s,
The bill stipulates detailed awaited legislation regutatlna
Ing to continue hearings on a bill
callllna hlJp,. • ·
. d6\tt!lop dlle&amp;H, related to · ~
offense~ whleh are grounda for the disposal of trash In landfills.
liuthorlzing casino sambllng In
1 ~11 asblltol~
" , · .' :.. ~: .. ,t;. ·
· · · ': ,.,.
llc!eiiiiU11111'1H,rede•l'elll· dllc:lpUne,andprovldeaforauto· ·The legislation, supported by Lorain.
1be plalJitlffl 'charp· tbat the~~)*. put !he asbls~ , I"' tenif· ~ill« · llaitiiecl f1UUea1 , matlc: lleeniM! auspenslon If the the admlnlltraUon of Gov. · Rl: · The House will nounee\ In'full
· Co'"'"
:---- •
' ..
mu.t; Jltll''*liiiliCipUaaey . BoarCt of Nursing .de_!erml~ 1!. chard Celeste, Ia ~·atcuttlnl v eesalon until Wednesday. • ~. •
· · ' ' ...-ued llii.1101P "
"' · actlaaad .,._,.. CIOJitlnulng ·. danpr of linlrledtate and serious. · down on olit.of•etate traah belli¥
•
. . :,
.i
'
.
.
•
. . .. ' '
'
~
._......,.._..._.._
I
1

AVAUKE .
FlEE DEUVDY

Gorman denied any se1eua!"
transgressions but lOst his televi· ·
slon program and his position as
the head of New Orleans' largest
Assembly of God Church and
started a storefront ministry in a
city suburb. His $90 million
defamation suit against Swag:
gart was dismissed last
September.
.
Gorman said he still consf..
dered Swaggart a friend but
declined coniment · on his
announcement.
Assemblies of God officials
have refused comment on re- .
ports Gorman was the source of
the evidence - an alleged
photograph of Swaggart entering
a motel witt\ a prostitute - that
led the church last week to
confront Swaggart.

By=~:~~at~~~~~~den- Coal firnt, Ohio University in dispute

GREY

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IJO e .teU mg

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•Services ·include:
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against you."
"I'm not sure how the whole
''To my fellow televlslo!l minis- religious broadcasting establish·
ters and evangelists, you that are ment can live with this wiihout
already bearing an almost un- really very devastating lmpllca·
bearable burden, I have made · lions for all of them."
your load heavier and I have hurt
you," Swaggart said at his
In Lancaster, Calif., Bakker
Family Worship Center.
responded to Swaggart's an·
Jeffrey Hadden, a sociologist nouncement by saying, "I think
with the University of VIrginia the .only comment Tammy and I
and author of "Prime-Time would have Is the words of Jesus:
Evangelism" and the forthcom· ..' Ye who are without sin cast the
ing "Televangelism, Power and first stone."'
Pqlltics," said the Swaggart
His wife, Tammy Faye, said
scandal could have a11 even more she cried when she heard the
1
devastating effect on television . news.
evangelism thari did the Bakker
Bakker. now writing and doing
case.
pay-telephone broadcasts, left
"The Implication and the rush his PTL post In Charlotte, N.C. ,
to judgment that people will after admitted his sexual encoun·
make Is that they're all a bunch ter with church secretary Jes·
of scoundrels," Hadden sal&lt;!. sica Hahn.

~dustries

PITISBURGH (UP!)-: Environmental officials say some
Industrial companies may have
tried to take · advantage of a
massive Jan. 2 oil spill · by
clan(jestlnely dumping extra
chemical wastes Into the Ohio
River, The Pittsburgh Press
reported.
River water samples taken the
week after the spill near Wheel·
ing, W.Va., showed higher than
·
normal concentrations of. harm,
SWAGGART CONFESSES - Tele11talon evan&amp;eUsl llmmy
. ful chemicals, suggesting that
Swaiprl, ·whoee lavolvemenl In lite expilaure of PTL preacher
h
"I
. Jim Bakker's ·aexual encounter wllh Jeulca Hahn helped lopple
some industries may . ave fl S·
.
,
· .,
charged wastes becaU!if! they
lha&amp;evqeJIIRirom po'Jl!er, conf-.edto,'!:.T'CII'l'ltallure Su!'d!LY ·
knew th'e oil spill would mak~ It
81111 ~·~ -~~;fro!'-~~ .,..pi~. ' :1 ~~e P.h~_to&gt;_ · . . dlfflc~lt .t.!l· ~-e~ect ~lllegal ~ump·
i'l ~
ing, . the newspaper reported
Sunday
1 ' . ·•·· ,,
, ,
.
"At the time of tlie spill, we
'
•
were getting calls from lots of

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___

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