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10-The Daily Sentinel

Friday. April 17.1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ·.

Sunday

DECLARES

50 cents·

Middleport
-Pomeroy
egg hunt set
2 p.m. today

HIGH .PRICE
DEAlERS!

$6,888.00

Your
Price

1987 OLDS
DELTA 88

CAVALIER

·cavalltr CS 2-dr. Coope

4-Door, Auto. Trans., A.C.
Retail $10,112.00

'87 CAVALIER RS COUPE

Retail $16,336,00

Retail S10,621.oo

$13,747

Yeur
Price

Y~ur
Pnce

S8i49s.oo

$8 39500
1

r-J:.---.:COIJPON
~--···-t
I
.
I

JIM COBB

For Bend Area Residents:

I
I

.

IS Gallons of ~REE GAS or a I
1 Ferry Ticket if you drive to 1
IJim Cobb. We'll buy your gas 1
1or ferry ticket with this I

Chev .•Oids•Cadillac
lOCATED AlONG THE RIVER IN-POMEROY

Hours: Monday-Wednesday-Friday 8:30
a.m.-8:00 p.m., Tuesday-Thursday 8:30
a.m.-5:00 p.m., Saturday 9:00 a.m.-4:00
p.m.; CLOSED EASTER!

1coupon!

.

Ill
•••

Get your Key Number hy
Purchasing One Of The
Following Procter &amp; 8a~nble
Products:
.
•Pampetl •Tide
•Cha1111in •Bounfg
•Follflt
•Ctm
~

~

JIM
COBB

By DAVID BUTTS
WASHINGTON (UP!&gt;
American electronics industry
leaders are prai sing Presiden t
R&lt;w:an 's trade sanctions as a
necessa ry art ion, but their Japa·
ncsc counterparts say the deri·
sian .~defies logic ."
Reaga n imposed $.10tlmillion i,n
·tariffs Friday to punish the
.Japanese for allegedly failing to
abide by an agr eement on
compu ter chip trade.
The sanctions. the first puni ·
live taril!s since Wor ld War II.
will add a JOOpNcent tax to a host
of .Japanese products - lnclud·
ing certain small co mput ers.
CNiain power tools and rotor
telev ision sets with !8-. 19-and
20-lnrh screens.
The .J apanese government said
In an embassy statement It is
" deeply disappointed" by the
action, but stopped short of
say ing any retaliatory trade
sanctions will be tak en.
"This was th e shot across the
bow," sa id Ralph Thom so n. a
spokesma n for th e American
Electronics Associatio n, which
represents rlectro nirs produc·
crs. "We arc now getting move·
men t from the Japanese govern·
ment, some a.ss urance they are
going to buy some of our
product s."
But Thomson said an escala l·
lng exchange of trade sa nctions
"could bring bot h houses down ."
" What I'm afraid of Is how
close we ca n go without going
over the edge," he sa id . " lf they
move to retaliatory action. I
think the Congress will go
bonkers."
" History teaches us tha t retail ·
atory trade restrictions of th is
tyfl(' wilt surely ha ve negative
repercussio ns on international
,trade and the global economy,"
said H . William Tanaka. spokes·
man for the E lcctro nir Indus·
tries Association of Japan, which
_opposed th e sa nction s.
The tariffs "w ilt neither sol ve
these ttradrt problems nor improve the broader U.S.-.lapan
trade relatio nship," he said .
"The U.S. decision defies log ic
br&lt;'ause I he 're t alia lion' Imposes
draco nian 'punitive' tariffs on
J,apanese produ cts other than
se miconductors." said Sholchi

IN
LOCATED AL01111'111
Hours: Mon. Wed., Fri. 1:30-1:00 p.m., Tw,s., 11lurs.,
308 W. MAlt SIREEI

~

~

1

&amp; CLOSED ON EASTER SHAYI

~
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•

8:30.5:00 p.m., Satunlay 9:00-4:00 p.m.

~ -

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ir

Appeals hy the new Meigs Alumni group
have paid off, Boh Hoeflirh disrowrs _.:. B-8

Sunny today, with a high .
'
near 75. Fair on Monday.

Middleport-Pomeroy-.Gallipolis- Point Pleasant, April 19, 1987

Saba, chairma n of the Elec tronic
Industries Association of Ja pan.
Reaga'n ·said he avoid ed plac·
ing the sa nctions directly on
se micondutor s because of tile
damage It would do to U.S.
companies dependent on Japa ·
n!'se chips.
" The utmost effor ts should be
made to avoid the poss ibility to
stir up protectionism and nation·
alism In both nations wh ich
might lead to a trade war
between the United States and
...
. apan,
ab a sat'd .
"It is not in their interest to
r etaliate," Shei la Sandow, spo·
keswoma n for the Semiconduc·
tor Industry Associatio n In Cu·
pertlno. Calif., said of the
tContinued on A -~1

'

'

Senate
to study

OliO

~.
l

biennial ·.-~'

budget

l&lt;~r ,

Manager Dah• lmun addrestl('d
crow d
gathered lor the "Eash•r In tht• Park" cclrhrat ion
Saturday from tht• park's · KaZ&lt;•IJo as Pch·r
Cottontail tos.ed candy lo •·hlldren heloll'. Th&lt;•
Easier Cl(~ hunl, which followed shortly lh&lt;•reaf·

was J»trl

co·

sponsored hy G11ilipoll• Elks Lodge No. IOi, lht•
Gallipolis Emhlem C!uh and tht• Gallipolis
Rt•creatlon Department. (Timt·s-ScnUncJ photo
hy G •~o rr Oshorne.)

to compete in 'The' Marathon
;s

two hours.
minutes . But that
wa s slill good enough t o qualify
for THE marathon. the mara·
thon of all mara thon s, now in It s
91s1 year
Only runn i ng for the past six
years. Haft said the sport givrs
him a lot of personal sa tisfaction
and enjoyment . Running rrcates
a "feeling l ca n't get from
11nything r ise," hr sa id .
F:veryonr has something that
will bring about that exhilarat ion
- for hlrri , It's running. for
another It may be building, art.

or some ot her act ivi t y.
It's the anticipation and the
satis fa ct ion afler the run that's
makes II a worthwiiP event lor
Haft . He first knew thnt " high"
ba rk In hl~h sr hool In F:rlr, Pa ..
when he pla:yed foo tba II.
ThreP years aft er graduati ng
from high sc hool, Haf't entered
college, but didn't play sports,
concen trating on his studies at
Ml'l'r yhurst College In Eric.
When hr was 26 years old , hr
discovered ru hnlng, ut first to
tContlnued on i\ -:11

Richard Hult

Study: vo-ed provides better-paying jobs
CO LUMBUS iUP t t - Gradu ates of Ohio vocational edu ca tion
programs earn 21 percent more
money than high sc hool gradu ·
ates without vO&lt;·ational training,
according tothcrrsullsofa st ud y
released Friday by Ohio
University.
The study, c'o nducted by OU
economist Ismail Chaza lah, also
revealed that unemployment is
l ower among voeatlonally
trained prop te. and that lhe)·
trnd to remain In Ohio aftrr
graduation.
The survey , o~ing slatlstirs

,,

0

COLUMBUS iUP!t · - The; ,
Ohio Senate will begin Its study of;
the $22.1 billion two. yea r ~14te ;
budgN this we~k. · hopln11; toflnlsh•
up In early .June.
·
·;:
William ..1 . Shku rtl, dlrccto( ol·
th ~ sta te Offlre of Rud~:et a.rid'
Manu~em~nt, and .Joanne P~l&gt;- :
ac h, Stnl~ IIIX rommission&lt;•r, WIO•
outline the Cci&lt;'sl&lt;• udmlnlstru :
l ion's 1~AA-89 budget an~
packa ge befal'&lt;• the Si'nate f ..
nunc•) Co mmittee Mondu·~;
·~
even in g.
• • •· .
" We plan to hold hearings o~a]:
Jpus t 17 days over six wcrRs: :
said Sen. Stan ley .1. Aro~olf.
R·Cinclnnatl, c·ommittec rhalrman. "During the hearln~: process, we w ill ~lvr concerned
parties an opportunity to m~ke
their rases before the !lenate
Finance ('ommlttrc.
Additional hcur ln ~s art' ~rhe •
dulcd for Tuesday mor·ning,
when the LcglslatiVI" Fludj!r!
Office will present Its own
reve nue and \lfci!&lt;Jre eascload
estimates, and Tuesday unci
Wedesday afternoons . when
there wilttx• public t estlm~ ny on
the tax portion.
The Amf'rlra n TC'II'phon&lt;' &amp;
Telegraph Co. IS CXp&lt;'CI Cd IO be
joined by other phone co mpanjr.~
and business usc·rs in tryln~' To
rllml natr a tax on lntrrstute
telephone scrvlm much ofwhjr,ll
Involves e lect t·o ni r data
transmission.
• .
Thr House dl•pcndrd on th&lt;'
$1()() million item to balance th()
tight Sfl('ndlng plan.
Ma)orlt.v Republican lcudrrs
In thr Senate huvr lndlcat~d th ey
wa nt to add more money to
cducailon If t hry ran II ml ways io
cut elsewhere.
The• S&lt;&gt;nat&lt;' rrmulns ln rrrr.1s
this wee k. but thr Housr returns
TuPsday from Eas tcv v11ratlnn to
\'ate on IC'glslntlon grant ing limit ed mrrgcnt·y s••n iC'nre rrduction s when an OVC'rrrowding
emergency Is dC'CIHrd In Ohio
prisons or rrformator tcs.
T he legislation changes thr
exlsti n~
mel hod of Jilruntlnl[
t"mcrgl'nry sl'n trnrc reduc ti ons.
'l'hr dctrrml nat ion wou ld ·hi'
mutlc• by lhi' Corrrrlionullnsll,tu·
lion tnsprr t lnn Committr.•,
which lnrlud&lt;•s sta t&lt;• legis lators,
lnstrad of by thr Adult Purol!•
Authority.

.

G:~llia County resident ready
By LEE 1\NN WELCH
Tlme!l-Sentlnel Staff
R IO GRANDE - One In 6.000
- that's the rhanrc a Thurman
man ha s of winning the Boston
Marathon on Monday .
Well. not really, according to
Richard Haft , who will be running In the marathon. " The top
200. that's my go·al ," he sai d
Friday before leavi ng for Roston .
Haft qualified for the event by
rompict lng thr Col'umbus Mara·
than last November under th ree
hou rs- just barely, finishing In

'

.uv&lt;:

"s

RUTLAN D - Although the slon In the Meigs County
Rutland Fuel Co. flied Mon- Common Pleas Court.
day for bankrupt cy. the Pub·
According to PUCO official
lie Utilities Commis sion of Colleen Mooney's opinion. it is
Ohio is monitoring 'the com · reportPd that Rutland Fuel
pany to ensure that its 22;, failed to collect from its
customers continue to receive customers, showing that 62
gas service.
percent of the arcounts were
According to reports, court uncollect ible In 1982 and that
records show that the rom · the company cou ld have reco·
pany, which buys nalural gas vcred the cos t of Ras leaks by ·
from the Columbia Gas Trans - charging Its customers .
mission Co.. has assets total·
Owher Julian Neal had
inR $90,708 and debts of , testified before the PUCO that
$468.462- $.191,8Sl of which is the company's debt to Columowed to Columbia .
bia grew because Columbia
The utillti!'S commission charged for unused gas lost
became involved because co._, through leaks In the syslem. It
lumbla Cas Transmission re· Is reported that Neal, of
quested tha.t thP Feder 'II · Huntlnglon, W.Va., who has
Energy Re!(Uialory Comm ls· owned the company since
slon give permission lor Co- 1979, drew a sa lary of'between
lumbia to stop providing gas $20,000 and $22,000 a year
to Rutland. A suit has been starling In 1981. considering
flied against Rutland Fuel by Rutland Fuel to be a part-time
the Columbia Gas Transmls-. job.

WINS APRIZE/II

0

Along llw Rivl'r ........ B-1-X
Busint•-. ............... .. ..... D-1
Com its ... ... .............. lnst•rt
Classifi••ds ...... ll·2·:H-5-6· i
Deaths .................... .... 1\ -i
Editorial ................ ..... A-2
Sports .................. ; ... C+X

•

PUCO eyes activity
by Rutland fuel firm ·

BtlnR gout k81J in lot valldlflon and atell dlive•...
Ere~gone

ln ~ ide

Churk Stone• believes TV should lw allowed
to broadcasi all kinds of viewpoints ,;.... A-2

.Jndusttialists
hail imposition
of sanctions

1t

GREA AMERICAN KEY HUNT

1t 1t

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·-----------------~

COBB

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C-1

tmtsVol. 22 No. 11

0
• ° CASH

~otary Relays .results

'.

Copvrighted 1987

with· A.C.
and Manual Trans.

.

'

fr om the inter nal Revenue Scr·
vier and the U.S. Bureau of the
Census, Involved the 198.1 earnlogs, employ ment. and gcogra·
phic mobility of 1;,oo;, workers
who graduated fr om vocatio nal
programs in 1979. and their
counterparts with no voca tional
training .
"Beyond a doubt, th e study
shows that vocationJI edu cation
Is important to the eco nomy of
this state and to employment
sta bllll y," Oam·ll L. Park s.
dlr('('tOr of voca tional edu&lt;·ation
for the Ohio Department of

Edu cation. told a pres s•
con fcre nc&lt;-.
"Voc ational education ha.,
bern a success story," added
William L. Phillis. assistant state
supNintrndcnt of publl r (ns trur·
l ion . "This will provide uddi·
ti ona! tmp~t u s for ,·oc·atiom&gt;l
educa ti on."
Phillis sai d the stat e furnishes
about $225 million a yrar for
voca tional Pduratlon , and that
the department hoped to fund an
additlonat4:&gt;0unttsandpurr·ha sr
more equipment.
'
He said the House· passed $2~ . I

billion stall' CtfJ~1 · u ~n u11u n :-o t·un ·
tuins "l'arrvover" funding for
voca tional r'duratlon In the next
two yrar·s.
Phillis sa id hP [PI'Is th&lt;' OU
'urvry "w ill help vocational
education get Its plccco of th&lt;'
&lt;&gt;etlon. " t1u1 th r dPpartmcnt will
not a' k thr Scna'w to rai'i!' \'O·rd
funding at the rxfl('nsc of haste
sw te uss (stanrr for sc hools.
Ohaza la sa id his study showed
that unemploy ment Is up to Gfi
i)('rccnt trss for vora tlonal gra d·
uatrs 1han for those in the
tCo nt lnu cd on A-:11

Area man gets second
chance with new heart
By NANCY VOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Staff
COOLVILLE - Little did 4;.
y(.ar-old Francis Thompson
know In Februarv when he made
his wa y to the Middleport office
o( Dr. R.R. Pickens that within
Just' a few more weeks, he would
become Ohio State University
Hospitals' llth heart transplant
recipient.
According to Pickens. Thompson, of Ski Run Road, Coolville.
was away from this area working
co nstruction when be became ill
and was diagnosed In an emergency room with pneumonia.
When Thompson finally came
to Picj&lt;ens, "he was so weak' ' the
doctor said. "he had to almost be
carried Into my office." Although
Plekens had not examined
. Thompson in several years, he
was very suspicious of Thomp·
son's condition and Immediately
had him admllled to Veterans
Memorial Hospital 's cardiac Intensive care unit under consulta·
tlon with Dr. Michael Furlong. a
VMH stall member.

At VMH. Thompson was again
diagnosed with pneumon ia . "But
he had drve ioped the pneumonia
because hi s hea rt was worn ou t."
explained Pickens.
Thompson remained In VMB a
few more da ys for stahllzatton ,
before he and Furlong d~clded he
should be transferred to Mount
Carmel Hospllalln Columbus. At
Mount Carmel, the ex tent or his
cardiac problem was found . In
fact. said Pickens. hi s prognosis
at that time was " ex tremely poor
to nil. "
When it was deter mined that
Thompson's only hOpe for survival was a transplant, he was
taken to University Hospitals
where the walt for an acceptable
heart donor began .
The walt ended In the early
morning hours of Sunday, March
29 - over a month later - in a
4~ - hour operation headed by Or.
Timothy Galbraith. In that r ela·
tlvely's hort time s·pan Thompson
was given a new heart, and a
second chanc(' for a normal life.
!Continued on A -3)

RECUPERI\TING - Francis 111omp&amp;OII, a Coolville r~ldt•nt
Jutd a recent heart transplant recipient, ROC!&lt; lhrouKh a hrk•l
workout on aaexercille bike while hill pbyolcllltheraplttl, Valt•rk'
Brown, monitors his progresA. Thompt10n recrlved t1 new hearl
March 29 during surgery at Ohio Stale Unlwr•lty HO!Iplltlls in
Columbus. His physicians say he Is maklnK a ROOd r etoov;•ry . ,

,,

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{Commentary and perspective

Aprill9, 1987

&lt;

A Division of

'

~- Tlllrd Ave., GaWpolls, Ohio IJI Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 99Z-ZU6

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Exeeutlve Edllor

PAT WHlTEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher·ControUer

A MEMBER or The Unltf.'d Pren Intern ational, Inland Dally Pr ess

A~socla­

tlori and the Ameri ca n NeWspap('l' Publishers Association .
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcomeo . They shoukJ be le-ss than

.m words

long. All let ters ares u bj ec tt oed ltlng and rru st be signed w it h name, address and
telephone number . No unslgnOO lellers will 00 pu b:Ushed. L etters should be In

good laste, addressing Issues , not

~Backstairs

~rsonalltles.

An open lellcr to Jerry
Falwell :
Dear Pastor :
Th ere is som elh ing in lhe
paper that prompt s me to wrile
yo u. Th e articl e headlined
"Bakkers Stay on PTL Payr oll "
quoles you as saying the PTL
board " fell sl rongly thai the
Ba kkpr s should cont inue lo dra w
sala ries and beneflls . it wou ld
nol be Chr istia n to cut off Ihe life
supply to the eouple responsible
for this min is try."
Well , I am not lor cul l ing off
anybody' s l if0 supply. But on th e,
same p~g&lt;• wit h a .~l ory is a
co lumn by Haynes Johnson or I he
Washinglon Pos l in which he
gives a dif!er enl slant on th e
likel ihood of th e Bakkers ' " life
supply" giving ou l:

" T ammy markets a line of
cos melics whl ie she and her
husband have lavish homes In
Florida and Cali fornia , romplel e
wil h gold plumbing !ixlu res. a
Roll s- Royce, i.l M ercedes-Ben z
and much morE'."
So I guess you werr kidding ,
werpn' t you, when you expressed
yo ur anxiety about Jim and
Ta mmy's ll!e supply.
Before their abundan t resour·
res run out ISiOO,O(lO in rea l
es l a t e and cars alone. according
to ano ther it em !, co uldn' l Jim
find another job 10 supporl
himself and his wlfp? Thai is
whal the resI of us do when we're
out o f work.
When you speak of the
Bakker s' right to "conlinu e lo
draw ... benefil s." I hal "benrf·

at the White House

Ci\N'T,
ACIDPAIN

'

~ Value-free

education
~ to blame for scandal
~

KllUD 4U..
qJR fc4iC:6\§ .J

our read er s by re mln~ing lherrj
that clergy are not immuneip the
pressures and perversions lhaf
besel olhcrs .
:
Maybe so. · Bul as spjril ual
mode.ls. we have a righllo!"xped
more from lhem lhan fro111
"ol her mor tal s."
Th e same ' may be lrue of
j udges. A Chrislian Science Monilor rolumn . "Judges on Trial."
slal!'d thai "Although we rna)·
deplore examples of moral lurpi·
tude .in olher res peeled professions ... I hal corruplion does nol
smile us wilh I he imparl we !rei
on learn ing of lhe misdoings of
· j udges."
Like any olher dcfenda nl , an
accused judge is presumed. innocenl. lhe aulhor ackn ow ledges.
Y el. he said, we r ighlly im pose
on lhe j udge a higher norm :
avoidanC'c C'ven of accusa tion.
This is a high, hard standard.
bul it oughl nol be loo much for a
judge oi· clergy man l o aceepl. If
CAW'T ...
he find he i s not living up l o il , he
~CI\l 0\lfi
ha s lhe duty l o sl ep dow n from '
his
(X'desl al.
,
~
This .lames Bakker did nol do.
T\IEM A~ ...
Wor se per haps lha n his one· night
.
slartd in a mole! wilh a 1!0-yea rold chu rch serrelary wa s th r
seven-year roverup thai fo l·
lowed. during which l ime Bakker
was payin g hu sh mo ney l o thr

./

.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON iUPil - President Reagan Is on a campaign
:· a~aln s t what he cal ls "va lue-free educa tion."
; . He I old the Los Angeles World Affal rsCounclllasl week when asked
;aboullhe brea kdown In security and spylnl( and fra lernlzal ion on I he
·pan of lhP Mar ini' guards at I he U.S. Embassy in Moscow:
: "It's hard lo explain . I ca n' t believe It 's widespread , and yel I'm
l ;,.;olng lo sharr wllh you a co ncern that I ha ve. I've been ver y ,
!·concerned and we've been lrylng lo do something abou l va lue-free
•:educallon. And I ca n'l help bu t wonder. are we now seeing I he frull of
:;educa11on l hat predomtnanlly throughou l our counlry has slopped
; .making any - or p&lt;&gt;rformlng any l eaching on lhe basi s of moral
r,prlnrlples or wh al is r ll(hl or whal Is wrong?"
~ He wenl on l o say, " ll l hlnk il's high 11mr we I(OI ba ck 10 sayin g
~lh rre arr lhlngs I hat are wrong, there is a righ t and wrong."
•
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woman .
This enabled him and Ta mm.v
to conlinue l o ronlinu e to li ve in
the lifestyle of lhe rich and
fa mous lo which lhrv were
addicted.
This is not a rase of momen·
tary yiel ding lo lh&lt;' l c-mpla tions
of lhr flesh . It wa s a calculated
and arroga nl allempl to keep a
dark secret from being exposed
lest a fall from grarr bring a
co nsequent fa ll from the high
livi ng thrse lwo people enjoy .
To "cui off I he life supply" of
such a dece plion would nol havr
been un-Chrisl ia n, as Fa lwel l
· said. The prophcl s of thr Bib lr
would ha ve ca lled II juslice.

---

·.

;: And in thr evcryonN i ocs.il syndrome the presldenl proles l ed In hi s
:.reePnl radi o address th at the Soviels had gone beyond "reasonable
&lt;;bounds" in their sp,l 'ing .
.;. Reaga n refu sed to •·ommr·nl on Sol'iel charl(es thai U.S .
~lnlelllge nrr had plant ed bugs In their embassy . He noled I hal he had
}r hararl rrlzcd lhr Sov lel Invasion "of our premises as oulrageous "
1:and said, "I ca n' t ser iously believe I ha t the Soviel s are charging us
~wllh lmmom llt y In thr tigh t of wha l happened."
.
.j Hr also noted lhal U .S. Intelligence acli vlllrs arc subjl'rlrd to
::.rigorous OVI'rslght, addi ng, "Wl' have Jaws and exccu tivl' orders 1hal
;h•gulaiP them ."
"Th&lt;:'y an • subj ect to dose .scrul i ny b;· I he Congress through seierl
.~mm lll ees on lnlelligcnce and lhrough I he appropriations."
•' Th!' president app!'ars 10 have fori(OIIen I hal he did nol Inform
1rongress of lh e sa le of wea pon s lo Iran, a cover t operation, In a
;--umely fa shion" as prescr ibed by law .
&lt;
,j FurlhermorP. he sa id lhal Adm .. John Poi ndexter, his nallonal
:~ec urlly affairs adviser. and Marine Lt . Col. Oliver Norlh, an NSC
;&lt;Jcpuly, " dldn ' l toll me what was going on" when money from
·~weapons sa les wa s allegedly funneled l o lhr Ni caraguan rebels,

f.

~mown

:r

as ro ntra!-i.

So much for overslghl of c·ov0r 1ac1lvl!les if Whil e House personnel

·i:lo nol inform th e president of whal Is going on.

~·

;: El ai ne Crls(X'n. I he first lady's press serrl'1ary, ha s been In Europe
:);•·oullng acl ivl lles lor Na nc)· Reaga n when Mrs. Reaga n lravels 10
~Haly and t.&lt;'rma ny wil11 her hu sband In early June.
;. The Reagan s will be on a state visit lo llaly and afl erward th e
!):&gt;r es ldenl will at lend the r-:ronomir Su m mil mrellngwll h the leaders
1of six other Western i ndu sl rial lzed nallons In Venire.
.r, Reagan also will pay anolhN vlslllo the Vallcan , I he second of his
lrrsldenry, and al lhrr• nd of his IO·day I rip he will slop In Wesl fler lln
,401 C!'rcmon les crlr•bratin g Cc•rmany's 7~01h anniversary .

,..•.
f Prrs ldenl Reagan Is begi nning to be· more ac-eesslblea nd Is fieldi ng
•ljuesllons along the wa)·. And his ai! Pmpt at a new openness has

1mprowd the relallonshlp belween thr pres s and lhe presidency.
• T~ e co mmand decis ion lo have a higher profi le apparently was
lnsl lgalc'&lt;l by White Housr chief of sta ff Howard Ba ker. Reaga n has
n talkin g lo r~p·o rtrr·s und~ r thr wing of Air Force Onr. stopping to
I during his comi ngs and go in gs, and he has given a couplr of
er v lews In r·ec·r nt days. Onr of t he lnt rrvlews showed up in a Milan
~ewspa per. The other was glvc'n to I he New Hampshire Sunda ,1· News
end Union l.radN In which he conrurrrd wll h I he NP.w .lersey court
tll'&lt;'lslon awarding rus lody of "Baby M " to hrr fat her. Will iam Sl crn.

•
#

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• Baker 's polll tca l profile also has be~n given a li ft sl n&lt;'r h&lt;• mol'l'd
·1nto lhr Whil e House. possibly reviving hi s presidentia l ambitions.
~ Baker los I a powerful polillral base when hcga vr uphlsSenateseat
•nd I he r·nie of Republ lra n majortly leader. Bull hal did nol help his
~es lrc to run for lhr prrsldr nry stnre he fadrd lnnlo the background.
• Now h ~ hus ull lhc exposure he wanl s. He could be on ca mera
!vrryday If lwwajltrd to and his name ha s become a household word .

•

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l,euer to the Editor
I
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I

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Fallen preachers must pay___G~e__,org"'--e_R_.P_lag:""-'-e_nz_

JunbllJ? 'limes- Jtntintl

E:rplaining a need

- Th&lt;' purpose of thi s lr ller Is lo drlrrioral e. rausln ~ :1 serious
'xplaln ;r need, not to crra lr a hrJI!h hazard .
Wr wa nl 10 rrm01·e thE' asbes·
~nlc. On Ma.v '•l hC' voiNs of lhr
los
before this happens. All of Ihe
ljoulhern Loca l Schoo l . Dlslrlrl
asbeslos
in our sehool s has bern
Ifill be askl'd lo approvl' a A mill
tvy for lhP purpose of removing in place for al IE'asl 26 years.
some for over :&gt;0 yea r s. The
ll);beslos from I heir schools.
;, Basro on Informa tion r!'&lt;'ri,·l'd Southern Local School Distrirlls
; workshops. we haw• bl&gt;en lry tng 10 secure monies from
va rious sour·ces lhal would help
~anaglng I he Dislrlr l' · asbl&gt;s tos
1.11 pf'('vent 11 from becoming a . puy for thP. cost of aslx&gt;slos
~alth hazard and up to now we removal. Blil these polenllal
sources arl' not available In lhe
IJink we hav(' been successful.
;. However, managing asbestos near future and lhey may nPver
~s a few problems. One, It Is a be available. If I he Dlslrl cl dors
llnuallask which Is subjerllo r eeelve any asbeslos removal
arcldenl lhal could relcasP monies from grants and/ or lrusl
rs lnlo I he air. Anolher Is I hal funds. II will be placro In the
re1!1Jiallon s for asbeslos Bond Rellremenl Fund for lhe
rltanallemenl are becomlnll vPry purpose of reduclnR the' .4 mil!llrlcl, making 11 more dlfflcull lage rate . A check wllh M r .
Wickline, rounly auditor, re~ costly 10 manage.
tj And, perhaps I he mosl lmpor· vea led that this Is nollheonly use
~nl Is thai asbestos and the I hal can be mad!' of any money
tllllerlal used lo contain It have a rerelvro for asbestos removal.
Bobby J . Ord
limited life expectancy, which
Superlnlendenl
means thai bol~ wlll eventually

ENTERTi\INER DIES
Comedian Dick Shawn, seen
in this 1962 photo, died after
delivering a punch line Fri·
day. Hr• was 37. !UPI)

SAN PIECO !UPJt- Come·
d)an Dick Shawn collapsed on a
college campus stage and died of
an apparenl h&lt;:'a rl allack, au thor·
l1les said. He was 57.
A wilness said e!forls lorev ive
Shawn Friday rilghl were de·
Jayed lot many minutes because,
" peoplrHhoughl il was pari oflhe
act." After dpJivering a punch·
line, Shawn fell forward and
sl riJ('k his hPad on the sl age.
· "There was la ughler for a
while but after aboul lhrE'&lt;'
·
minutes 11 wa sn 'l funn y,"
another witness sai d. "Then a
slage hand came oul and shook
him."
Several more minul es passed
beforeadocl orcameonlhe.slage
and lried .lo revive him . h&lt;' said .
" We per formed CPR. on
Shawn. I hen lranspor ted him 10
thehospi,(a lw here hp lal erdied, "

LEXI JI:t.TON, Kv. IUP i r Seve ral coal slate lawmakers
fro m Capilol Hill lold coal
i ndus!l')' leaders Frida y lha l
acid-ra in legislalion is unlikley to
be adopt ed by lhr lotl th Congress.
bul predirl ed a prol raclro fighl
on th e issu0.

" I doub t that II will 1be
pa sse d!," Se nat e M aj oril y
Lr&lt;1dcr Rober t Rvnl. D-W.Va ..
told a news co nfer'ener' following
his address to abou't 400 coa l
indusl r y rep•·esenl at ives at Coal
Summil II.
" Bul I don'l th ink WC' have
roo m for relaxalion," Byrd
added. " I l hink thNC' is a

moun ling efforl in the Sena l e."
Byrd's prroiclion wa s in ron·
ce rt with I hose made earlier by
Sen. Wend ell Ford, D -Ky .. Mi tch
McConnell, R·K y.. Rep . . Hal
Rogers. R-Ky., Rep . Jim Trafl·
ca nt, D·Ohio. and Rep. Nick
Ra hal·], D·W.Va.
Rah all and Roger s bolh pre·
dirled I he curren t makeup of lhr
House and SenaiP would prevenl
legislalion further resl rirling
sulfur diox ide em issions from
being adopled in thi s Congr ess.
Roger s, Ra hal! and Ford said
th&lt;" advent of clPan coa l lerhnolo·
gies are br.•ginn ing to convince
bolh proponen l s of 11cid rain

Celestes awaiting tax refund
COLUMBUS tUP i t - Ohio 's
First Famil y arr among the
man)· Ohiu ns wailing for u
refund on their fedem l income
t'ax forms.
Cov. and Mrs. Ric· han l ~'.
C'riC'"e's 198ti frdcr;~l income tax
ret urn . r·eleasrd F r ida.1·. shows
lhc•1· exper·t to gl'l ;1 refu nd of
$1547. The joint retu r n showed
thl')' pi!id $!11.16i i n tuxes on a

Study:

total taxabl e inco mC' of $1il ..'l07.
They rC'porl cd wages of
$o9.:\6~; i nlcrPst inco me of S2R9;
and olher la xa bl e inl'om c· of
S2.2o :, f rom rc nl s and
parlnrrships.
C'rlesle's salar)· as gov..r nor Is
Sti'i,IIOII. but his l aXabir incoml'
was reduced by his $'i,li.1i dC'd ur t itrlr conlri hulio n lo lhe s1a1r
rPtirf'menl fund .

Thr ro uplr rerrivl'd $6,1100
from rrnl;tl of lhei r Lu kr wood
home las t yrm. Th r.1· repor ted
deduetiblr ex(X'nsC's of $:1.n8.
Celeste al so rcporled a n~t loss of
$7 from Terra No\'a lm·C's l mrnts ,
a parlner shi p wi l h his brolh.-r
and sister.

A hanging offense._----:-_..::....;Ja_ck_A_n_d_er_.~o_n_&amp;_·D_a_le_V&lt;_an_A_t_t·a
WASHI NGTON - Pmlde nl
Reaga n may ha ve shifled his
priori lies in call ing AIDS 1he
nation's No. 1 heal lh problr m.
bu i . drug addiction is still a top
Whil e House pri orll.v. and th e
question for lhea dministralion 's
anli·drug ca mpaign rema ins:
Would a dea th penalt .v fo r dope
tra f!l rke•·s be an rf fl'cl ive
dr ll'rren!?
One coun ln· hus tr'ir'd 1hedeJ 1h

Industrialists hail

))(lna l t~· mutr. ;;m (l ih pr ime
m in isiC'r is stil l C'nthu sia st iC'
about lhr policy, Cl'l'n lhoug h
proof of its effect ivrncss is.
pr r hap s und crs t a nd abi .v .
larking.
The coun lrv is M;llays ia, and
thr form&lt;'• Rritish co lonv i n
Sou lheas t Asia drrlared , four

)'!'ars ago that drug abusr

wa~

the No . I lhreat l o nationa l
srcurlt y . For a ro u nt rl' I hat faces
rommu ni sl Virt nam and Cnmbo·
dia just across the Culf of Siam.
!hil l w;.s quite a dt'rlurulion.
Tht' Milla)·sia n governme nt
follow&lt;'d up it s derision with a

lhir Mohama d.
Laos and B ur ma. ma ke up thP
Asked how effective 1he deal h dope-producing Golden Tr iangle.
p0nalty ha s bee n. Mahathir was
" We don'l prod uce drugs," l hc
ca ndid . " We ca nnel rea lly say, " prime m inister polnled out. "Bul
he acknowlpdged. "But we think unforlunalely. lhe route to lhr
that olhNwisr lhe usc of drugs out side world from I his so -ca lled
would have been more wid rs · Colden Triangle - rC'a ll)·, it Is
prea d. Beca use of lhe ,·r ry not golden, i1 is a dealh l r lungle
s~1we penalties. w0 have been
- movr s dow n th is peninsula in
able to slow down the spr0ad order to ex pori It el sewhere. And
not aelual ly sl op it or rPwrsr• it. of course. as I hey pass through,
But we thi nk we have- slowed il
there ar·r some people who will
down."
buy ."
,
AmNic-an experts agrre lha t
And tha t. of co urSC', was wtJat
ava ilable stalislirs don't supporl led Malaysia 's leadC'rs to get
lhl' M alaysian govrrnm C'nl' s serious uboul clopr• l ra ffi e. In a.
hopr' thai ca pil al puni shment counll'~' thf' sizC' of New Mexico
would make major i nroads in l hr
wi lh a populalion of Hi m illion,
drug problem. flul thr)· do there arc a·s many as 4(](J,IK!Odrug
believe thu l had It'd to. serious addi rls. And where lhe drug
second lhoughl s by non-Asian " probl&lt;'m has his torically bC'rn
foreigners who mlghl ha vC' been ronfinrd largely l o I he 'opium·
l empted to grl involvl'd In smoking ha bil s of lhe elder]\'
Mal aysian dope deali ng.
Chinese population. hrroln is nail·
The counlr),.S basic problrm
lhC' drug of choice in Mil l aysia,
wi! h th r inlernatlona l drug lraf· and addicts tend l o' be those
fie Is one of geogra ph y. Mala ysiu
under :«1. drawn from al l Clhnir ,
shares a long northern bord0r segmenls- Ma l ~v. Chinese and
wi lh Thailand. which. along wll h
Indian.
·
'

Let TV QOver diverse ideas.. ._____c_hu_ck_S_to_ne
You'rr rrading this co lumn
and )'OU don' l even know lhal
you're already on the losin g side.

No \V;lrning . .Just a slJ (\nf
lakeover th&lt;ll r r·ept over our
mind s like Ca rl Sandburg's fog
on "ll ft le ra t fre t. "
The nex1 step Is for a modern ·
day Edward Gibbon to sl art
chronicling " The Decline and
Fall of the America n Empire ...
Our decl inC' wa s announced
wi th I he recen t revelation that ;,o
pr•r-rrnl of Amcrirups say lhry
usr trlf.:-,·tsion as their only
source of nr ws and informa tion.
The ho rrifyi ng word is "only."
Accord in g to a pol l rrleasl'd by
- who rise - lhr N;i!lona I
Assodalion of Broadcasters. a
maj orll)• of Amer ica ns don'l use
newspaprr·s or· any orher media
as1a S('('Ondary sourcE' of news.
Th e coloring book i ndustr.v is
PCsl allc.
Sehool sys tems ar e gloomy,
We're in a cullural Armaged·
don whl'n a nallon 's majorit y
·bel ieves II ca n besl formulal e
crltlral opinions and decisions
from a screen 's flicker ing lm ·
agcs. described in fleeilng seeonds by fl awlessly rol ffed Bar·
ble dolls· covered in pancake
makeup.
Bul I his "vldlocy" gels worse.
In a reeen 1 poll, 1,000 high
school sludenl s responded lhal
lhry_ admired lrlevlslon and
movie s1ars more lhan thPir
parenls and relallves .
Ignora nce takes no prisoners.
For Ieday 's students. Vanna
While Is more lmpor1a n1 1han Ihe
While House.
YPI. there's an ouiSlde chanee
lhal we ca n keep America

bustling in the murkrtplacr of
idea~.

F:mancipate l elevision from
I he sl avery of so -called " fat r ness
doctri ne."
I .confess that was a sneaky
way 10 bar k Into I his co nl rover·
slai issue. Bu t if a majorlly of
AmPr lea ns arr dead set on
Plcc·l ronir genoridC', Ihey should
at leasl enjoy the widest diver·
sit)• of l h oug h l · provo~i n g
opllon s.
Th e fairness doctr ine, a
govcrnmenl ·mandal ed rlghl of
· reply. di scourages opt ions by
making broadcasters afraid of
airing lhe broa desl range · of
opinions. Thai's why a co lumn
·like I his could never be aired on
television.
Occades ago , when the !edgral
gove.-n ment wa s slruggllng wllh
a reg ulatory pollry for lelev lslon
and radio, lh!' fair ness docl rlne
may have had so me merll as a
l ransllory phase.
~ul read lhe landmark 1969
decision rea ffirming I he fairness
doctrine - Red Lion Broadcaslingvs . lheFCC-a nd see howout
or I ouch 11 fs wll h loday's world.
Governmenl regulation of TV'
and radio has no more l o do wllh
rlghl of reply lhan governmenl
regulallon ol jolnl operallng
agreemenls between newspapers has 10 do with ll mlllng their
FirsI A mendment rlghllo deny a
reply.
Wllh the cable TV explosion,
i ,208 t elevision st a lions a~d 9,766
radio slations, America ns have
more polential access to dlverslly through electronic media
than they do through 1,688 dally
newspapers.
·
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Yet, i f .vou ru m on your
IC'Ievision sel or r adio, yo u ra n
mu lllply your acrc.~s to in fo r ma lion 211 limes - limllrd inl r lll·
gence and alt.
Unforlu nal el,v. members of 1he
Bou se and. Senale who fear the
unlrammel ed discussion of Ideas
' want to lcgislale lhr fair ness
docl rlne's lhoughl co nlrol.

· Celebrate l hc Const ilulion's
2001 h ann iversary by dissenting.
Wr il e lo .vour representa tlvl' in
Congrr" and to .I'Our senalor.
Remi nd lhPm Ihal "l hr besllrs l
of lrulh Is lhe power of lhe
I hough! l o get llself arcrpled in
Ihe com(X' t ilion or 1he mar kl'l " rvcn H thr markf' t is surroun&lt;JPd
by a gian t l elr·vision srTcen.

Berry~s World

•

STAti\P
OUT

Sf&gt;l\ING
CLE~N\~
•

saldCapi..JeffFrazlerol lheSan
To gel oul of lhe repair unil,
Diei(O Fire DPp~rlmenl.
Shawn auditioned lor a par i In a
Shawn, who appearro In 10
mllllary eniPrta lnmPnl group
lllms lncludlnl(' " ll's a Mad. Mad,
and was reassigned IOI he I ravelMad, M~d World," "The Producing show "Operation USA."
ers " and " Love a1 Flrsl Bite."
Shawn Pnrolled al l he Unlver·
was pronounced dead al 9:55 sily of Miami alter lPavlng thp
p.m. a1 Scripps Memorial Hospl service . Surress in a college
tal in La Jolla. where he was
Ia len I show won him a I rip Ia New
rushed by paramedics afler
York and an appearance on lhe
co llapsing during a one-man
"Arthur
Codfrpy Ta lenl Seouts"
,
show at the University of Califor· · show.
nia al San Diego.
All hough he didn 'l win , he
"He was doing a skil on slage
decided l o stay in New York.
b
·
and h!' I old us. ' Imagine every •
Director Harry WagStaff Crib·
ody oulslde is dead and on ly yo u ble saw him on Godfrey's show
are alive In herr .' He sa id. 'Now and gavl' him his flrsl profes·
I'm I he leader.· and allhal poinl
slonal job, a part in I he play "F'or
he fell forward on I he Sl age and Heaven 's Sake. Mol her~" Wi,lh ·
hit hi s head .""
Nancy Car roll an&lt;t Molly Pico n.
Shawn began his career i n Shawn rel urned 10 uniform fo r
comedy nea r· thl" end of World his flrsl motion piclure. " Wake
War II whileasslgnro to an Army Me Wh en ll's Over."
l ank repair unll.
In thE' fa ll of 195:\, Shawn
co-starred wit h Belly Hullon for
.

Lawmakers .believe acid rain legislation will fail

tCo nllnued from A· I I
general work forcr who are the
same Dgr and had I he same
amount of sc hooling.

law m aking rapil al punishment
mandalory fot· anyo ne raught
dealing in drugs. And dea l ing
1vas defined as possess ion of just
over half an ounc0 of heroin abou t a tablespoon - or 7.1
ounces of marl jua n;J.
Ev0n before I he dea th penalt y
beca m e mandatory, Malaysia
twc!" o fl en been tou gh on dope
tra ffi cker s. In lhe last dc•radc.
1:12 drug draiNs have been
&lt;c•n lcflled to clea lh and 41 have
bPrn hanged Worldw ide publ ic·
it,\' a11e nd ed thr hanging last. July
· of lwo Austra l ia ns - lhr first
non-As ians to br execu ted bv
Malaysiil. Last -m inute app0als
h.\· /\ usl rnlia n Prime Minislcr
Boll H awke and Brilish Primr
Min Is l&lt;'r Mar·ga rel Thal chrr
were unavuiling.
On a rec ent visit to Kuala
l.ampur: Dale Van t\t l a fou~cl
so lid supporl for lhe govern·
mr nl ' s war on "dadah" - the
Mala ysia n word for a ny narcot iC'.
Ancl suppon begins r ight al thr
top. w ith Primr Min Isl er Maha·

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April19. 1987 !
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(614) 446-1!:142

Heart attack kills versatile entertainer Dick Shawy

Page A-2 ;
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The Su'!day Times:Se~tinei-Page-A-3

· Pomeroy-Middleport.:...Gal~polis. Ohio- Point Plea~nt, W. Va.

Japancsr. " The ar tlon was
nerded to make l hem comply
·.
wilh lhe ag reem ent ."
' Andrew Prora ssini, presi dent
of 1h1 • a.ssorialion. said thr
Silicon Val lry wa s ,plea sed wll h
I he sanctions.
· "We fully support the presi·
dcnl's decision l o pul Ia riffs on
SC'iccted .Japanesr· export s to l hP
Uniled Sl ates," he said .
Reagan ordered lhe tariffs
Marrh 27 1n rcsponsr l owhat U.S.
officials drsct·ibrd as a clea t·
viola llon by .Japan of lhr agre~­

rronlinued from A·li

lhe U.S. ma r kets. IBM 's PC
Converlible is like!)' to signlfi·
canlly Im prove Hs markPI sharr
as a res ult .

Area man gets
1Continued from A ·II
As Is rou tine after an)· ll';t ns·
plant surgery. Thompson was in
rrilicai co ndillon In lni C' nsivr
rare fo r lhr l lr sl few days. On
Friday fol lowi ng surgery. he was
moved from i nlenslvr care IO a
regular room on lhe hospllal' s
lransplanl floor. Thi s pas I Thur~­
dav. according 10 David Cra wlord. a Unlverslly Hospllals'
spokesman , Thompson's rondl·
lion was listed as fair. By Ieday,
his condition may have been
upgra ded furlher.
Since I he surgery, Pickens has
vlslled Thompson twice in Co·
Jumbus where he says he f ound
him " looking 10 years younger"
with a strong gr ip, good color and
an allltude of euphoria.
And as for Pickens' own
feelin gs when h!' vlslll'd Thompson and found him 10 be steadily
Improving afler th e still ·
uncommon surgery, " I was eu·
phorlr loo," he said.

stampeded In to believing I here Is
an arid rain · legisl al ion. Ihen I
believe we will have the lime we
need."
·
The tech nologiC's Byrd ancl
olher lawmakers speC'lfiea lly
look lo uddrrss lhe probl &lt;'m
would reduce emissions by pro·
cess ln gcoa l bl"fore i1 is burned to
red uce pollulanl s.

MEN'S AND
LADIES'

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wl¥!

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Build Your Dream House

This

'

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Ye~tr

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JIM BARN4
LOG HOME
- B•autv-StrangthtEconomy

,.I•
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- Hoot EfflcltncyoRuotlc Charm
- Affordoblllly
3 bdrm. log kit oolow 10 tl,121
" Modtt Home ohown by appointment"
The Lo~~; Home Connection '
150 Comer C.moltrflld.
OM 'Hill, otrlo 45656

\

(3 llilts IHI o Oak Hill Off Sl. tr. 21!1

hi'ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jjjjjjii

River Front Honda;;
U3 PINE ST.
GALLIPOUS, OH. 45~3l

~J

Come in and See Our Spring Stief

CLEVE LAND I UP I I - Fri·
day' s winning Ohio LOI IPI'Y
numbC' rs:
Dally Numher

LAWN &amp; GARDEN TIME IS HEREI '

924
PlfK-1
'i48(i

Gallia County man

t Coni in ur'&lt;l fro m A -I I

keep his wet.ghl down. lhr n lo run, bu l I he PliC~ of prepa r a·
lion Is gell ing a It tile old.
because he enjoys I he sport.
Sit ling In the snack bitr at Rio
Now ~2. Haft has a bachelor's
degree In busi ness . is l h&lt;' f ood Grande, several student s leaving
servlc!' mana ger al Rio Ct·a nde for the Eastft' holiday weekend
College and Communll .l ' Colleg e, Frldav afternoo n sl oppPd by IO
an advisor 10 the Tau Kappa sav , ,;Good luck , wl''lllx• walc h·
E psilon fraler nily lhere and is lng for you."
·
The mar athon will br broad·
running in the Boston Maral hon.
Aller 19 weeks of training, Hafl rasl live on ESPN. begi nn ing al
said BasiOn is foremosl i n his noo n, and if someone appears on
mind , and afler Monday, lhln gs ca mera wilh a Rio Gra nde
C'ollege-TKE shirt. it shou ld be
ca n gel back 10 norma l.
He's been running aboul 6'i Richard Hafl .
mil es weekly and working ou l on . - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,
I he Na utilus. Afler Monday , he'll
ease dow n lo aboul :Ut miles (X'r
wrek, "take some llmr off .
" I probably began I raining loo
Sin 2
soon. (afler quali fyin g)," he
Chil*tt~'t
conceded . adding I hal he's n'ady

.'
WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF:
LAWN .&amp; GARDEN TRACTORS
RIDING LAWN MOWERS
PUSH MOWERS
GENERATORS

'

.

to Si11 13
Mtn's

Publ lshNI &lt;'ach Su nday , 825 Third Av('.,
Ga llipolis. Ohio, by 1h&lt;' 0hlo Vall('f Publlshlnli!' Co mpan ~ n.tu lt lmlldla. Inc. Sc.&gt;·
cond cl ass postali!'t' paid at Gallipolis.
Oh io ~!)631. Eni N t'd as S('COnd cl ass

CLUSTERS

wllhJam!'sCoburn.
·•
Shawn rocked I he en terlaln·
mrnl boa I when he spoofed
F rank Sinat ra a~d his "clan: ·
agalnsl th e advlrP of frlerl{ls
warned him against il. He WC'~!
aro~nd lhe counl r)'· r·r ac klnij
jokes aboul D&lt;'an !Vfarllrjl
Sammy Davis .J r .. and saved h~,
harshes t jokes l or Pel
•
1.aw ror d .
1
"People 1hou gh I 1 was offend;
lng them." Shawn sa id. " If 1 hart
If d'
1o~rya bo u 1 oe
nr qw~
.
body, I 'd bt&gt; In troublea fler ! saki
'Hello. " '
·

(1114,182·11417

Ohio Lottery

IUSP 52i&gt;MOOI

mailln!1 mali N at Pomf'roy. Ohio. Post
Offh'(&gt;.
Member: Unlt l'd Prf'ss lnt f'rMtlonal.
Inland Dal ly Prf'Ss As socla tlon and I hP
Ohi o Npw spa pf'r Associat ion. National
Advert tslnR RepresPntat lvP. Bran ham
NE'Wsp,&amp;pM' SHi ftS, 7.13 Third AV('nu ~.
NPW York . NPWYork 10017.

mrnt on semirondur tors .
The adminislralion co nlr' nds
.Iapan has faiiC'd lo fulfill obliga ·
lions to ope n its own markets l o
sail's of U.S.· chips and 10 slop
" pred alo ry pri ci ng" in whic·h
.Japa nesr sr•mkondur lors arc
" dum(X'd" at bC'Iow- markel
priers in lhird co untries. for
inlrgra ll on int o assem bled
produr i s.
Thr ,la pan rs&lt;' ma intain l hC'y
have nol violated th e.lapan- U.S.
Semicondu f'lor Agn'Cm cnl and
~ay lhe)• will appeal Reagan 's
aclion 10 the of fi re of the Ceneral
Agrl'eme nl on Tariffs anrl Trade.
an in l r rnalional body In Ceneva
lhat governs world l rade.
The tari ffs arc rspeel ed lo
have a major Impact In the
hig hl y rompl'lilivr per sonal
romputrr markel in lhe Uniled
States . .J apa nese manufaclurrrs
ro nlrol aboul 10 pcrccnl of lhls
ma rkel .
If 1hr tariffs remain In cffPcl
for more lha n three or fo ur
monlh s, lhry would effee tlvely
price producl s like Toshiba' s
1100 and Nf.C"s Multlsjl('Cd out of

l egislallon and sOme environ·
menlallsl s that arid rain legisla ·
lion is lhe wrong dlrecllon lo
lake.
Byrd said he believl'd lhr
recent switch by lhe Reagan
Admlnlsl ration to endorse cl ean
coal l ec hnolol(ies wil l help i n the
fight '
" I hope lhal has boughl some
lime," Byrd sa id. "!I lakes time
f o d evelo p l hesr n ew
l echnologl('S. · ·
Byrd sa id I he danger was thai
lhe public would become co n·
v inced lhC're was "an acid rai n
emergency" and dem an d imme·
diale rrdu c11ons in emmisslons.
" I lhlnk if lhr people under·
sland lhe issue and will not br

a IWO·a·day srhedule of va ude·
ville all he Palare Theatre.
His vaudevl ll&lt;:' p&lt;&gt;r(ormances
madr• hi m a star. Thi&gt; ~er·sa lile
s l nger -danrer-actor-co medlan
appeared on " The Ed Sulliva n
Show" and he made lelevlsed
appearances wilh Sieve Allen.
E ddie Fis her· and Dinah Show
Shawn laler played Adolf
Hiller in " The Producer s," and
hPid leading roles in "It 's a Mad,
Mad. Mad, Mad World," " WII)'
Wa.v Ouf.'' wl lh .Jer ry Lewis and
in Blake Edwards' film " Whal
Did You Oo In The Wm· Dadd~ ?"

II 41100

The
Shoe
Cafe
300 S.CHtllwt..

SliNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRII'TION KATES
By Carrier or Motor Rou&amp;e

HONDA

River Front Honda

One WeC&gt;k .... .. .... ...... ............ 60 Crnt s

Onr Yrar ... ..... .. .. ..................... $.11 .20
SINGLE COPY
Sund a~

PARTS AND SERVICE IS AVAILABLE ON ALL
HONDA POWER PRODUCTS.
SALES: 446-2240
SERVICE: 446-2648
OPEN M·F 9 AM.-6 P.M. SAT. 9 A.M.·S P.M.

•II

433 PIKE ST.
GALUPOLIS, ON. 45631

PRICE

........................... :.... 00 Cl"nts

..;

No subs rrt piiMs by mall pl'rmlttl'd In

areas wh('re motor rarrl&lt;'r sCI'rvtC4' Is
availa bl e.

The- Sunday Tlm£1'S·S£1n llne1 wU 1not bE'
rHpon.'ltbiP for adva nCf' paymr.nt s
madr lo carriE'rll .
·

Rock in' Rebates Are Here! ·:

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIO NS
S.nday Only
Onf' V('ar .... .................... ........ . $..12 .24
Six months .......... ..................... $1 6.90

Tawney Jewelers
42 2 !tcond Avt.

D&amp;tly and Sunday
MAIL SUBSC RIPTIO NS
lnakle County
13 W•eks ., .. .... .......................... $11 .29
26 Wetks .................................. $34 .06
~2

W••""Ratew
". ....Out.'
",.'' l............
''......
ldr County

13

WN~k:o~

$66, :;6

....... .... ............... ...... .$18.20

26 W4'eks ....... .
~2

Gallipolis

.............. $35.10
w"""" ...............................
$01.60

Mali€ Memorial Day - ~~'tr•'lr Day

of Remembrance

Prepar&lt; now ro choose a bC'au riful Ba rre
G~ild M onum ent to memorialize your
departed loved one on Memorial D~y .
We have a wide choice of

WITH REBATES AS MUCH AS 5300
1986
TIX250
TRX200SX

1987
TRX250
TRX!SOX
TEX125

'•

1986
¥1'1100-SHADOW
VT700-SHADOW
CMX450-REIEL
CMX250-REIEL

monumtnts ~ u aa·antccd

1986
11600
11250
IL600
1L250
•TR200

by the Ba rr·e Guild .

BARRE
GUILD

Honda's Rock in' Rebates are HOT!

Monuments

DON'T MISS OUT!

Logan Monument Co., Inc.
POMEIOY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY YAID NEAl
POIIIOY·MASON BGE
l£0 L VAUGHAN, MGI.
PHONE "2·2511

VIIRON, OHIO
GAWA COUNTY
DISPLAY YAID
JAMES 0. lUSH, MGI.
PHONE 311-1603

SALES: 446-2240
SERVICE: 446-2648
OPEN: MON.·FII. 9 A.M.·6 P.M.
SAT. 9 A.M.·S P.M.

,\

j,

[j i

'11"'1

~ - --~..,..----;;....,.__--..:.:..:..

�.. .
;April 19, 1987

Page-A·4- The Sunday Times-Sentinet

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

•

•

• r'

Pleasant. W. Va.

I

•

f:entral · Bancorporation quarterly earnings up -30.4 percent :
:: MAR lET'!'A - . C'enl ra l Ba n··
rorporatlon Inc. reponed r£&gt;cord
~lrst quarter ear nin gs or SH .:IIi l
, fnlllion for the period e nded
! f-1arrh .11. 1987, up :!() .4 pr-rcenl
:~er~us $11.009 million for Ihe firs!
·~uart er or 1986.
;. This Includes an after-lax gai n
lbf $2.222 mil lion res ulting from
•t he reve rsion or 1he corpora lion 's
!ret irement plan . F.xe luding !h is
jf:ain , -earnings were $12.1:!9 mil·
, lion, a 10.3 perce nt in crraM· ovf'l'
!fhe fir st quarter of 198fi.
•' All figures have been res tat ed
Inc lude Cit izens Nalional
,~ank , Ke nt on County , Ky .. an d
j?.berlln Bancsharrs In c •. Ober·
jlln , Ohia, whie h wcr(' acqu ired In
!]986 and acco unl ed for as poo l•'l'gs of lnr ~rcs l.
: ; Net ea rnin gs per s han• for the

r

tl?

q·u~rwr

firs!
or 1987 wer"r re·
ported a1 $1.1l2 1B6 cents exr lud ing !he aflcr· lax gain ) versus 78
r en ts for thr same period in 1986,
a :10.8pcrcent Increase. Earnings
per share have been rcrro_ar·
livdy adjusted 10 reflerl a ppropr ialr s lock spills and dividends.
Ce ntral Ba ncorpora lion 's firs t
quarlf•r 1987 ea rnings bene fited
from subs lantlal growlh in loa ns
and increase, up 2:1 percent over
rhe com pa rabl!' 1986 quart er. as
wr ll as in creases In lee in come
genera led by such areas as
elec tronic banking, credil card,
dala processi ng, International
banking, trus t and brokr r·dealcr
opera tions.
Total assets as of March :\1.
1987 w&lt;'re $4.4 billion , and Incrrose or $:l3~ millio n over first
.

quarter 1,986. Tolal d&lt;•pos lts
reac hed $,1.4 bll.llon. up $."14.1
million over 1986. Cap it a l fund s
rose 17.!\ perrenl or $42 million to
rrach a record $284 million , with
return on ca pi_ta l at 20.2 perrC'nt.

and 17.] percent. exc.luslve of.thc
a ft er· tax gain rrsultmg from the
retire menl plan revers ion.
The Central Bancorporatlon
includes 11 alfillales a nd ope'r ·
ales 12!\ branch offices through -

out Ohio and northern Kenlucky.
In addition to traditional banking
services, !hE' corporation is Involv.ed in specia lty co ns! ruction.
rea lty and r einsura nce activi tie~. Locally, Cenl ral Bancorpo·

.'
I

- Meigs , Vinton
t,i nd Athe ns C' ou nly fa rmers a rc
~lnvlled to become nomi nees fo r
S!he Fa r mers Hom e Admlnls lra ·
~ io n Coun ty Com mittee. F'mH/\
!Co unt y Superv isor Arc hie Ste·
~~all announ ees.
": As

&lt;J r Ps ulf

of lht• 198.1 Farm

• two ul Ihe th rep members ol
f!JIII.
;FmHA co unt y ro mm ill rr mu s t
e eleclcd.
/
The third membe r Is dcs lg.flated bv FmHA . Th e Me igs,
liYi nt on, AIhens County Commll·
: tee assis ts the FmHA co unt y
:offi ce In d&lt;•INm lnlng lhccllglbil•ltv Of applic•a nts for CCr lain tyjX'S
••
• or FmHA loans.

~

' : Grnl'rally, ft.trmers who

~~·sidf'nts

FrriHA bor rowers are eligible to
bceome nomi nees for Ihe I' m HI\
eounty com mit ICc.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

ing on thP romm il!ee pla y an
lmport a nl role by assis tin g in !he
procpss or loa n a pplicalio ns a nd
rev lc·w ." S! ega II remarked .
Nomina ll ng pel ili ons mu st be
rel urned 10 lhe FmHI\ MPigs,
Vinton ond 1\ lh&lt;•ns Co unt y olt ic&lt;'.
loca ted Df IOo Flutternul Ave ..
Pomeroy. hy Ma y 2ti. Add itiona l
Infor mation an d o pplieallon
form s for rhos e• in tcn•sted In

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

bccomin,:: nominPPs arc ava i !a·

Chuck Roast ..• ~~.S) S~
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

hi P a t rhe P omeroy of lire or may
be oblai ncd by calling 992.1i(iH .

#1
#1
#1
#1

With America's #1 Tire- GC)ODYEAR!
In Tire Knowledge And Experience!
In Service!
'
With tile Largest lilventorr of
Goodyear Tires In Tile Region! .
#1 In Goodrear Tire Sales In The Region!

&lt;HP

of lhr co un ly but no!

OIJ'I'U~'I'

nn ou n ct·d

()u rin g I hP pas I few ,VfiC:J t' S ,
lhrns Hnd Vinton ('Ounl ll's ha\'C

TIEl\/! PO
ALL SEASON
STEEL RADIAL

ba tTr&lt;l O DOT fr om
lng hl'r hl,.lck s for Wl'('d ro n·
· I. Th e 1\ppuluchiun· o hl o Pub·
· lntPrf'st C'ampaign !AOP ICI
kl br lnt pn•SII'd In worki ng
c·onc·•' rnPd C'ilizf'ns In olh f'r

ARRIVA
ALL SEASON
STEEL RADIAL

Chuck Roast ...!'·$119
. FRESH PORK BUTT
Steaks/Roast •• ~. $)19

GOODYEAR
TAKE
ME HOME

'

$)49
Sausage
•••••••••••
'
·
49
(
Chicken
•••••••••••••
TURKEY .
Drumsticks
••.••
L~ 39(
HORMEL SLICED
Pepperoni
.•••
~i:~ •• 99(
COLUMBIA
Bacon •••••••••••••••• 79(

VECTOR ALL SEASON
RADIAL

ODOT _hils co nlrac tl'd with
""''""'"'·'"' ' S('l'\'[l'('s Co . ~prlng10 a~p l ,v th(' hr t•bir ldcs
nul&lt;~c t ured h)' Mo nsa nto Co.
nd DuPonl in lh&lt;' fo ll owln ~:
!Irs : Ga llla. M&lt;'igs. Law·
'lil'lne·r· .. J;u ·ksun. ,\lla m.s. Brown,
'll!ICnl and. Harkin g. Monroe.
!Mrn'nan No iJI&lt;•, PikP, Hoss. Sl'i·
and Was hlnglon, Sprayi ng Is

12 OZ PKG.

1akr plact • lw!Wl'Pn M ay 4 and

Mr'SSII~r· 1-'mm 1'h1• Hibh•.,

NF~I'

THE
C'n' ii ~o.illl~ .

a

CUSTOM
POLYSTEEL

In oltwr ro un t i('s .

ciL' \'OUI

EAGLE ST

•

EAGLE GT

'

.,

FISHER
VIDEO
CASSETTE .
RECORDER·.
.

'

'

BIRTH DEMONSTRATED
Willium 8. K uglm
Comelluo

nwn (Act!i 10:2). wa s in st ructed by "em angel of

"·" "''""· "Nn w tlwn'}Un' Clri' '"" "" hl!ft' prele"t before God. to hear all
that "'" '""""""d••d tht•t• &lt;~(Go t/" (Acts 10:33). The gospel teacher
)latHin g 1hc see d, "Th"" Peu•r ope•ncd his mora h." speaking unto
V!•thcm 1\1c word of God. and "prn 1clriug pct1ce by JeJus Chrisr" who "is
1!•-ilortJ of ill/" (/\cis 10:.14·.lh). Here is another exceptio n. the com ing of the
Spirit . :111d it dncs not occur in any ot her conversion. ·'While Peter yet
IJo;sJw•l••&lt;lws.• words. &lt;lu• Hoi)' Ghost fr/1 on a/11hrm which heard the word"
. 10:44). God had IO show Peter something !'rom heaven in order to .
ilmnvinec him and !he Jewish brethren thallhe Gentiles were being ea_lled
God 10 pcu&lt;·cful fcllowshil' by Jesus Chris!, the Lord of both Jew •,nd
~\.ie11111·11 e (/l ets IO:Jb). It wuull have to be so meth111~ Peter could recogmze
· hci ug of Gocl; !hcrcfore, God se nt the Holy Sp11it upon the Gentiles.
• rccng ni1.l'd the Holy Spirit as being of God. for it was the same as
wh id1 hnct fallen on !he apoSIIes at lh~beginning . or Pe~tecost (Acts
1: 1 ~). Tht•rc w;os no doub1 abo\11 !he gilt of the Holy Sprnt !hat was
~i!~::;::~~~~-r.(IU I upon the Ge ntiles, because "tht•y he.urd thrm Jpeuk with
!II!
. ami mel)lii ;B• God " (A cts 10:46). Being convinced, Peter "'com·
~""''"' ' ,•d tht•m m b•• h{lpri:.••tJ ;, t1w mm1 r of the. Lord" " (Acts 10:48). The
~::~~~~:':'~~~of ''" Hoi)' Spiril upon Cornelius and his household did not have
0
t
' o dtl wnh Cornelius' conversion and salvation. His conversion
IJI;:.uHI "ilvution were made poss ible by the words spoken by Peter. The
~"""""· ofl hencwbirth :
·
1. The
Corne lius and his household were begotten by the
(Jij!Spiril
the word Ihal Pcler preached.
eonL-.pllon: Cornelius and his household. believing. received the

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

EAGLE VR

.Potatoes •••••••••• $)59
HANGING ROCK GRADE A

large Eggs .••••o:i. 59&lt;
KRAFT PARKA Y
Margarine .....~ 3/Sl

dtlllfry: T hey completed !heir new bin h. bei ng "baptized irt the

llii"''"'''"' ufth&lt;' Lord... bei ng delivered from the lost state to the saved state

Your Chok:t

The Jailor

2 WH£H fRONt DIS C

Paul unswcn•d the jailor's question, "Sirs. what must / do to be .saved? "
snying. "Be•/inc em the~ Lord Jesul Chrilt, a"d thou .shalt be .saved. and
huusr .. (Acts 1b:31 ). Pau l "spol&lt; ermto him the word of rhe Lord, and
t/1(1/ .,.,.,,. in his house .. (Acts I 6:32). Why? So !hal they might rece.'ve
ll&lt;':'th •• fa it h that comes by hea ring !he word of God (Rm. tO: 17). After heanng
believ ing the ~·ord , the jnilor " wlls "baptized. he Ufld all hi&amp;.
:Srr·"i~l'r t"'''Y .. (Acts lo:JJ). The process of the new binh:
1.
·
, The Spiril. through Paul. had begonen the "incor·
u•~rumrble
· in hean of the jailor and his household .
, .~;..~~:ib~~~:Jt!l:~; When the jailor and his household believed , the "in•
r,.,
. .was conceived in their hearts.
J,
dellvel')'r The jailor and his hou sehold comp,leted their new. binh
wa1cr nnd ol' the Spirit in baptism, and were delivered from thclf lost
~:!\l ai C to the stu te of salvatinn .-Continued
For f"nt,Biblt Cormpo•dt•rt CoMrst, Writt .. .

ne ..-.

lr ,Jtl\

hlll ~ f

\:I ll! liS~ 5ellts •
• ll!lJ'~ •
bo!ot"n'l~

f'IIOIICI ftiUR AUIOIUTIC TUIIMIIIIOI!

lr.~t d ~

UBih

8nll

Fluu• l ~ t e

hunT

LUBE OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

R~ p d ( ~ I!Ofl! .,. tl! l!l

•

lu~~ ~~~~

'- " '' llfl'~

Potato Chips •••• 79( Ice Cream •••• :2.G:~. 99c
MAXWELL HOUSE
BANQUET
Fried Chicken ••• $229
Coffee •••••••••3.~~~.

11111.1 t!'rtl•&amp;•~'t ~~51~m • Ad (J

c;h1nge

w he~IS I

4 WHEU ORUM lnST.tll ne "'
lo nong ti l 10 1.1 1 w ne~" •
New l•unl !J!U!I! U.-11 • Ae
Sutlo'Cf' d•um1 • Repo1c • f,urn
tif,•r u.,gs • ln, oe cl hycl• • ul•(

1)11 -1!

1.5

• CI'!Utl luD,tatTO'l and rnl

11uod l t1 D~i 11(11 •nr l ud~ r~~·

•

lncluOet hgn1

Ull('$

• Please u• lo • .., 1ppo•m

•a au

bu!f!I OI o

mtnt
'omt tmOOits

a. sOI"II! ,

Lay-A-Way

r.o. Do• 308
Galllpoli•, Ohio 45631

-.. :

Blbk Slo~ 9&gt;30

Wonhlp IOolO

s...,Eno!ot•
Wonlolp 6.00

" :.- ''I
-.
...: :..~ll': .- -:r-::
.~
:.:,
.
'· .&gt;.t: 'I .:{ ·I
~ .· ··a.~.
. ~· ~ ~

......

IJ •

••

426 VIAND ST.
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
'
674-3.930

PEAK

SUNHINE

FLAVOIITE

ARMOUR

PINTO BEANS

DOG FOOD

SUGAR

.TREET LUNCH MEAT

4 Ll.

99&lt;

Unoit I Pw C.t-

Gwll

011J AI ,...., s r •"'' ·

Ofhr 1M11 1ln Ill. April IS, lta7

'

.I

20LI~ $229
lAG

Sll.
lAG

$119

Liloit I Ptr Customer
GeM Only AI '"""'' Slpor.-llol
Offor a..4 Tin Ill. April 25, 1917 \

'.

oz.

Cash

Bufa•·lll• Rood •

SUN KIST
SPORTS
JACKET

oz.

32

Most us cat• t.

SYstem • AOlllhnd

Moll uS carl

DAIRY LANE

MIKE SELLS

Transmission
Service

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
·s.....,Mo..lna•

G. E.
CLOTHES
)DRYER

10 LB.

M.l'flrd in their heart s .

II : 1.1.14).

Reimbursement ,
Of Your ,,"
Purchase

.

'{AL'I \ W:J) lil " semi me" r O Jopp~: and C(Jl/for Sinwn ... Peter . ·: hr
x·~.,h nllt t•ll rlu•t• wlm l thtw m~ghti~S I tu do (Arts 10:5,6). When Peter arrt\·ed
!he hm~&lt;c of Corneli us. he informed Peter why he had sent for him

.l. Th•

Daily Drawing
· For

LB. ROll OR
12 OZ. LINKS

••

nnrr.

17 . AOI'I (' is I'U IH'nti y
IJ&gt;:tlltr l'lll Q Inform al ion on pro·

Drawing April.:
26, 1987 ..

LB.

ies w ho wunt 10 l'l iminut f'

spr;~ .v ln g

BALLARDS_PORK

GRADE A WHOLE

usr or hrrblride' In !his

:nn,«•rl

SIGN UP ·FOR
·A CHANCE
TO WIN:

President
Appalachian Tire Products

ol Transporta tion !OOOTi
plans lo spray herbl ·
ldl's a long slate highways In
\lppalachi&lt;Jn Ohio to e liminat e
•"'gPtallon :wound gua rdrails.
1

•

WALTER B. DIAL, JR.

~rnl

•

. PRICES -EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., APRIL 25, 198'7

Appalachian Tire is #1 in Goodyear Tire sales in the
fegion. We want to stay #1 and providing you with
the very finest in tires and automobile service is the
best - the only - way to do it . It's a company-wide
commitment .

" F'o1rmc-rs i n lhC' C'O unl y sC'rv -

rl:hemical spraying
~slated for region
:l•' ATHENS - ' The Oh io Depart-

~

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

'

AT APPALACHIAN
'
!FmHA seeks nominees . TIRE YOU-THE
~for , tri-county panel · ' CUSTOMER-ARE #1
:1POMEROY

·Help Us ·
Celebrate ,.
The 13th .
Anniversary ·
of
Powell's
Super ~alu

ration Is repr£&gt;senl!'d by th;
central Trust Co. or Southeas'·
ern Ohio, N.A., hradquarteredl~
Marietta with seven
.offices In Marl~!la , _o...aulpDII~.
a nd Mlddieport.

12 oz.
CAN

99(

limit I Ptr Cull-r
Gootl o.ty At Powell's S.,.rmarkot
Offtr GoH n.u Sit. April n. 19t7

120

SE.COND
SHOPPING
SPREE

�\ .
Page- A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

.-. . . ---Local Briefs:-----.
Rio Gr:ande slates clean-(lp week
1\10 CRt.NDE- Cit'an·up wee k In the village of Rio Grande
has been schedu led for t.pril 27 through May 2. according to
Vi lla ge Clerk Angie Scag"ravcs.
..,

Forml'r.~

urged to use caution .

Panel selects May's gran&lt;J, petit jurors
POMEROY - · Thr Meigs
Count y Jury Commission has
selected names of residents for
May lerm grand and peti t juries.
Those sel()('ted for possible
grand jury dut y in the drawing
held In th e office of Meigs Count y
Clerk of Court Larry Spencer

are:

POMEROY ~ The Meigs . Count y Farm Burea u Is urging
larm l·rs throughout the county- to us&lt;' particular care while
wo rking in their field s thi s sprin g.
" TI1 is is one of the bu sies t times for farmer s," sa id Rex
Shr·nf"fiold . presiden t of tht• Meigs Count y Farm Bureau. " The
lo nuPr daylight hours anrJ thP desire to take advan tage of what
~nod wr-;ll hcr we migh t.have ra n pu t fa r mers In an extremely
i;, t igut'd Sl&lt;llr· ."
Surh tong hour s ca n br· 1iring, Shenefi eld sa id . no ting that
plowing and plan t ing can I)(' repetitive and fos ters fatigue,
in (' rr•iJ sing lhl' chancf's for acr iclent s.
Sht•nofir•ld s;dd B" s impor tant for fa rmers to ta ke breaks to
kPf'P from fH'Iling ovPr ly tlrf'd .
" 1\'hpn one gets ti n•d there 's a t&lt;' ndenry to tak e shortcut s to
suvt' a ft-w seco nd s of time. Oft en th is is when a&lt;'&lt;'ident s occur.
l·'r &lt;mkl y. ther e j ust isn't an&gt;' r oom for shortcuts if you arc

Ru th Ann Smith. Racine;
Sharon M . Roseberry. Pom eroy;
Fra nces M, Moxley. Poemroy;
William ,lames Ritc hie. Reeds·
v ille; Brenda .Jea n Haggy, Mid·
dleport; Robert Wayne Sm ith.
Po'm croy; Barbara J . Thomas ,
Ches hi re; Raymond Hen ry
Lander s, Poemroy; Paul .1. Ja·
ney, Langsvill e; M ichael Rin g,
..
Raci ne; Eli zabeth Most. Pome·
roy; Shirley Lambert, Rutland:
Margaret Bolinger. Pomeroy;
Kathryn L. Felter, Middleport ;
Debra Gerl ac h. Middl eport:
Lloyd M . Moore, Po meroy: L ut·
•
11
Chic
Ril(gs. Pomeroy; William D.
work ing- safrly . he said . ·
I
Durst, Reedsvil le: ·Jam• Fick .
Stlenctlcld said tha t knowin g one's e&lt;ruipmcnt , tak ing
I
Long Bottom; Mildred A. Wo lfe,
.fn·quen t breaks and plan nin g the work load carefully are good
•' wa y' to reduee th e ri sk of fat igue-relalrd accident s on the farm.
' M iddleport ( Clara Gi lkey . Pome,
roy; Ma111ie Headley. Reeds·
" T his is the iHT ident seaso n for the fa r min g l ndu str.v," said
•
' Shcnl.'fic-ld . '" I t comes &lt;~round agai n with the harves t. but the
v ill e: Ro beH D. Haggy. Pom e·
roy ; Robert M . Smith. S)Tacuse.
samP rule-s and co ncept .\ apply the n too ."
KennPth Lawson. Syracu se; Har'
riPtt Sin clair, Syracuse ; Even• tl
P. Smi th. Rutland; Ji:rnest Ward .
Middleport ; .l amPs Robel'l
ticket.~
Bauer. Long Bollom; 11and1·
.J(lwc ll, Pomerov : C' hris1lna
(;A 1.1. 11'01./S - ThNr was an accidr·n 1 in Cheshire Town .ship
MeCher•. Rutland.; 1\nna ;John on Count y 11oad :t Frida y at 9: ~ II p.m.. according Jo th e
C&lt;lilia ·MPigs i'ost of lh&lt;' Sta rr Hi ghway Patrol.
son, Haeine; Lind a Thoma. Long
Bott om ; .lo Ann Fr:wris. R(•eds·
· l·: lmr•r 1. . Spau ld i ng .Jr. l i. Rt. 1. Bidwell. was charged with
ville; Denn is Lee f(ou sh. Porl lWI and eitcd for fallurP to con t rol after. accordi ng lo
tland . .Judy A . Riggs, Hced svillp;
Spau ld ing. try ing to uvoid a dPer . lie hit •a ronrrr• tr pnrch after
running off th&lt;' road.
l.arr-_y I.Pmle). Rutland; flretl
F
ri end, Long Bottom; David W.
In C rcpn Tow nship f riday a t 1: J:l p.m .·. thP patrol reported
nra nd t. Coolv ille; :nmolhy
that Shrrll.. Sa under s, ~2. Rt. .1, Ga llipolis, was westbou nd on
SpirPs, Hutland; Donna .1 . Will i·
U.S. :1;; whr ·n &gt;he stoppt'd to turn left on Count y Road :1. Her rar
amson. Rutla nd ; Haro ld K.
wa .• , truck in th e IPft si de by a tr uck driven by Roy Yauger, 79,
Snur hsidr•. W.Va.
Grate. Langsville; Hi lt on N.
Woll"e Sr .. Racine ; Joa n Wolfe.
Y:rugPr was r iled for assured clear dista nce .
Ra cin e; l.ro nard .Jewrll. PomeIn l(ar·roo n Town ship F'rida y at :J: oOa.m .. 1he vatrol sai d that
rov : P&lt;tmcla Sue Chaney. Reeds·
I Ia r old /)_ 1\rgo, 2:1. Char lot tr. N.C .. was driving west on U .S. :1;,
ville; .Julia Vaughan , Rut land ;
hall a mile r•ast of Ohio :l2fi. when an un identified va n cu t in front
ot a c;r r drl vl.'n by Kcli)" L. Hodge, l R. Columbu s. Hodge's car
Pamela K . Mees. Pomeroy;
sldr •s wipcd ncgo"s car .
Larry Hoffman . Rulland . . and
llndgc wa s l"it l'd fo r bri ng IPft of centr·r.
Ca rol F . Picr er . l.angsv ill f'.
Na med for possibl e pelli t jur.v
dut)· were Rrtt y McDonald.
Tuppers Plains; Cheryl r :umpf.
Reedsvi iiP; Roberta Mu rphv.
RHed sv il h-; Florence Coif.
I :A I.I. IPUI. IS- Ralph D. F'ranklln , 27. 2007 Chestnut St., was
T uppers Pl&lt;tin s; Jeffrey Miller,
c/t; rrged rcrida .v night wit h mcnaeing. accordin g to Ca ll ipolis
Middleport : George Hawley.
l"lt 1
_ Po ll("(•.
M idrllrpo rt ; ShPi la Carst'V. -Mid·
Tomm y Moss. 17117 Chestnu t Si .. was cha rged wit h assault
dleport; .Ja m es Sisson. MiddiP
!·' ridll .\ ' jJ rh'rnoon.
'
port ; Opal R. Hollon . Clw stcr:
nohin ,\ . Mar i nski . ~II. Hio Gra nd~. was cited Frida)· night for
Donov;m Rou sh, Middleport;
\ pt'N iin g. Dwa;&gt;nP H. l·:vans. 18. of nt. :r. Ga llipolis, was cit ed
David Jt·nkins. Middlepor t; Elza
l•" r ida y nig trl for not h11vlng a va lid registra tion sticker.
Gi lmore, Pom ero.v : Ronald L.
Bi r t. Pome roy : Paula .1.
Butcher. Pomeroy; Thomas A.
Caspers. 'T upper s Pla ins; Susan
mu..~e-~
D . Nutter. Reeds v i lip; He len
Miller . Langsvlll~; Michael Da ·
r ;AI.I. I POI. IS - Th• • Calli J)O IJ s Vo lunteer· Fire Depa rtment
venport , Mi&lt;idleport ; Cary G.
l"i ·portrd a pi ckup t ruck fire at Holzer Medieal Cent er Fri day
Basham. Coolv lllt:'; fa yoC"Iifford .
morning .
Pomcrov ; Tamm v J . Foster.
Onr • tr uck anrl nin&lt;' fl rrnwn wer e se nt to the hospit al parking
Shade; ·vivan Gaston, t.lbany;
1&lt;&gt;1 to " l!IH~ Toyo ta ow ned by Walt er A. Sa unders. Rt. :J.
Veda Davis. Pom ct·oy; De•an na
&lt;;, llipolis. The fire stnrlr&lt;lln I hr cab. behind the driver's seat . A
"Davis. Langsvil le; Joel K ev in
pillow. some• paper and some upholstery were burned, creat ing
K itrhen. Middl port ; Ferra Bar·
o111 l'Slim ;II N I $'200 Joss .
ringt:'r, HPedsvi ll (•: I rene
Till· l"aiiSI'
thr fire Is at 111iS limr undetermined.
C' hrl sl y, Midcllcport; Va lerie
Hobbs, Rutland ; Vickie ll arrl s.
Middl eport; An dr ew .Jordan,
Reedsvil le; Thelma Ha.VC'S. Long
l't&gt; f,vin.~ .~late
Bottom: Sheila Spencer, Cool·
v ille; Kenneth Cu ndiff. Syra 1: ,\I.I.I I'OI.IS- Cal l lpolis nafl,·p Bell y Sti ver son hu s been
cuse: DPnise Manuel. Raci ne;
;tppo ill i Pd 1'.'\('C' tl l lvt• ass i slt~nl l o S.' ci'C' Iarv of St aff' ShPrrod
Mi chaPI J . F'urlong. Middleport;
Hro\'&gt;'11
·
·
'
Mark Caddis. Reedsville; Betty
Sh r· n ' p l a l· t ·~ 1\rislirH' l&lt; i ng. w ho was ;lppo inl (l(i Brown's
Jane• Gaul. Chester ; Erir
p&lt;· r son nd direct or.
Gryszkn Jr .. -Pomeroy; John
r\ .., 1'\t•c ul ht· ass islanl, SliVC't'son. lh(1 do1ughtC'r of Mr. a nd
David Roush. Racine; Opal
M ~' ·"· 1\ t•i t h SuiH·r. will prrform ad m inl stm t ive duties and s~rv~
Dvr•·. Bidwell ; Ada Sheley, Mid·
a" 1\ rown ·.., 1i;1ison with oliWl' sta ff' agencies.
dlcpo•·t: Kenneth R. Searles.
Stil·t•rsnn sturliP&lt;I pub lir· administmtlon at the AmC'rlcan
Pomero.v : Wi lm a L . Harrison, ·
t !ni\'('1'!-0 il.\' in Wal\h ingt on. n.r .. and i.IU!ho r cd SC'Vrral
Pomeroy; .Jacalyn L. Ring. Vln·
puUiic.1tions whllt· t~IIP! H lin~ C:C'or grtown Uni\·prsit y and the ,
ton; Donna M . Da virlson. Middle·
l i. S. llnp;ll "tlllr nt of Ag r il"rllture ~ra clu utt• sc hool. Shr wa s
port : . rl:m1 Noami Ohlinger.
l orn wr l~· w~ 1 s ('ITlplO.\ 'l'(l by th!' Ohio SuprPmC' Court an(l
Pomcro)·: Kimlx•rly R. J10tish . ·
prr·1·1oush· hrld sevrr:r l positi ons \\"llh frcleral and rongres Pomcro)·; Violet Parker. Long
" i\111. 11 o ffi t· t ·~ i n Wa!-ihlngto n.
Bottom; Claud!' Fit chpatrlck.
Rutland; Ethel Eu ler. Racine:
F.arle L.. Wood. Pomeroy : Henry
Hill. Racine: David Sa)•re. Par·
I
tland ; Denise Gad&lt;li s, Heeds' I'( l M l·: ltOY - Mr·igs l·:mrr · Street for .tames A. Hose to
ville; Barbara l.. Krautler,
g t&gt;ll t '.\ l\1t•diea l Sl'l'\' ic t•s rrports
VetNa ns MPmorla l Hosp lia l. ·
Pomcro)•; Bobby Rupr. Rael ne:
!111 • •·:r ll s F r ida)·:

'

l

•

,

•
I Patrol

area man

City police i.~su.e four citations

damal{e to truck

Fir('

April19. 1987

Rlt_
a S. M athews. Rac ine; Jcf.
frey Lambert, Rutland; E lza W.
Bir·rh. Racine; Leo F. Young,
Jr. , Pomeroy :·
Erhcst Ned Swindell. Shade;
Clair Zeigl er, Pomeroy; Ruby A.
Davis, Pomeroy: Thomas N.
Swan, Rutland ; Sharon). Tuitle.
Reedsville; Tony L. Barri nger,
Reedsville : Vera Buchanan.
Pomer oy;
Kimberly Nel son,
Pomeroy; Michael A. Willford,
Middleport : Mari lyn Sue Wilcox,
Middleport ; Al ice Riffle. Syra·
cuse; Mary E. Roush, Pomeroy;
Marjorie Ann Fett y. Middleport;
Steven Reed, Reedsvil le; James
Kiser , Ra cine: Susa n CIE'Iand.
Chester; Alpha F. Ba iley. Pom e·
r oy; Linda Eas tman, Coolville:
.lamps Spatm J r .. Racine; Karen
K. Rupe. Pomeroy ; Dona ld A.
Lando n. Tu.ppers Pl ain s; Lori
Roush, Pomeroy; Alt a Ann
Rupe. Pomeroy ; Alberta M .
Edwards, Reedsvi ll e; Howa r d
Sha nk. Pomeroy; Emily Faye
Ma nl ey, Middlepor t ; Jean
Weaver. Snac u se: Sharon
Baker, Racine; Ear lene Stobart,
.Rac in e: Donna .1. McCloud,
M iddleport; Robrrt Fife, Middle. por t: M ichael 1\sh, Syracuse:
Perry David Cur tis, Jac k B raley .
Reed svi lle; Pau la Fitch. Lo ng
flollom ; Foster Niday, Reeds,
ville: Gail M . Davenport. Middl e·
pon : .Judith Cowa n, Middl epor t:
Hcrmella Hy sell. Raci ne: James
F.step, Pome r oy ; Harry Tipton.
Middleport; James R. /\dams.
Syra ucse: Anna K . Wiles. PomP·
r oy: Char lotte L yo ns. Racine ;
Yvo nne Scally. M idd leport ;
Cry stal Richmond, Ru tl nnd:
Marvin L. Kelly, Middleport;
Paul McEiro)· .Jr ., Pomt:'roy;
Violet Lois Bush . Ra cine: Wilma
Marie Rizer. Rac ine: James
Blanrl . l~ac ine; Pearl L. Russell.
Raci ne: Judith A . Su ms, Reeds·
vi l le; Peggy S. Smith. Racine ;
Brent .1. finlaw. Po meroy; Wll·
llam Hobstettcr. Rut land; Phy llis Hudnal l. Mi ddleport; Perme1ia
Cox, Middl eport ; Ev a
Chapma n. Dexter: Sandra K.
Sargent . DPx ler ; M argaret Nee I.
Pomrroy; Ruby Brewer, Long
llotlom:
Au dr ey Cr emea ns.
Coo lvil le ; Victor Bahr, Long
Rollom; Roma Sayre. Racine:
G l ady ~ F. Tay lor , Tuppers
Pl ains; Co ra Wolfe. R e~dssv ill e;
I rene Baxter, Pomeroy; Jo hn D.
Zurcher. Pomeroy; Joe Lan tz.
Reedsv il le; Cleo K er ns. Middle·
por t: Donal d Stobart. Pomeroy ;
Myrt is Kay ParkPr. Pomeroy;
LPttie E . Young, M iddleport ;
Benny Sl awter. Middleport;
Pa mela L. Roso. Porll&lt;md; .John

•,

'.

OTISVILLE, N.Y. !UP() -A
manhunt has begun for an
lnma.t e who apparently dug. his
way out of the prison where he
was serving a life term for
hijacking and the murder ot a
New York City pollee officer.
· ZvonkoBuslr. 41. was reported
missing at7: SO a.m . Friday from
the Otisville Federal Correc·
tiona! Facilit y in Orange Count y,
said. prison spokesman Greg
Bogdan .
Busic wa s considered missing
after piison guards found a
dummy shaped with the inm ate" s
clothJng, including a j acket.
pants and a shirt rolled up and
placed in the bunk to make It
appear someonr wa s lal!J.n_g
"'I
there, Bogdan sai d.
Busic shared his cell with
another inm ate, who was bring
qu estioned by authorities F'ri·
day . Officials have not det erREADY To GO - Parents and children assemble he hind a line
marklnlf: the Easter egg hunt area In Gallipolis !!;aturday for
children 5 yearS old and .younger. Scores of children waited for
about an hour befort• the start of the Easter Egg Hunt •. which
started shortly after noon Saturday during Easter In The Park,
sponsored by the Elks Lodge 107, the Emblem &lt;;Juh and the CJty
Recreation Department.

.

ItS Allin 1!Je WADAtJl

Hotel officials trying
to stem viral
infection
'

JAVCEE

·Re&lt;;ycle

WEEK

AT JAYCEE BUILDING

THIS WEEK ONLY
PAYING
PER POUN.D
MONDAY 8 P.M. Til 10 P.M.
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
. 6 P.M. TIL 8 P.M.

23C

infection.

As many as 1211 rases of
susperted food poi soning have
been repor ted to thP Montgomery Coun ty Health Di strict and
at least three peopl e wrre hospi ·
talized with severe . flu-like
symptoms.
.
Hralth officials th ink a vi ral
infection is th e probOJble rausr of
the illness . Marriott employees
who may havr been exposed to
the virus through handling food
were given the weekend off so
they wouldn't sprea d the v iru s.

JOHN HUDSON

The hotel bro ught inemploy&lt;'es
from ot her Marr iott hot el s to
work the limited food operations
for the weekend.
"We feel the public hea l th Is
bei ng protected by thP steps
implementPd by the Marriott
Corporation," said Ht•alth rom·
missioner Morton Nel son . "Thi s
Is a very complcx lnves[ii"itatlon

• : accident In Bedford Township
;: Friday at 2::1.5 p.m .• on ?hlo 681.
• about a mile and a quar ter east of·
• U.S. 33. according to the Gallla·
•, Meigs Post of the Stat e Highway
~ Patrol.

.,

!

Floyd T . t.vls, 6fi, of Coolvl/)e,
, wa s eastbound on Ohio 681 when

•

.:
~;

;:
POMEROY - Meigs County
..; Emer[ii"ency Medical Services
' will sponsor Its second annual
' Regional EMS School on Sunday,
1
May .1, at Meigs High School.
This year's school is in need of
~ no-longer used farm equipment
•' such as corn pickers. tractors.
:!: etc . The equipment wilt" be used
~ during the farm E:"x tr lea tion cla ss
.., and will be rut apart by the
• ~ Various tools used to fref' somC'~ •¢ne from a farm accident.
;1; M el ~s Counl y fire and EMS

., .

•

~~

•

45769.
Ther p will be a S5 charge to
M eigs Coun ty personnel If they
wish to eat al the sc hool. Lunch Is
bei ng provided by the Meigs
i\thletlr Booster s. All rescrva ·
lions must be In by April 22.
Costs for the school for out-of·
count y personn el will be $15,
which also Includes lun ch.

THE DOWN UNDER RESTAURANT
MAKE YOUR .RESERVATIONS TODAY TO
ASSURE SEATING

MONDAY THROUGH SATVRDA Y
'

M•·morial

en. You'll also become an
expert shopper and meal
planner. It's a delicious w.rt
ro protect )OUr hean.
~ FIGHTII\G Fm

'

'ICU"lUFE

American lteatl
Association
FGa INFOIMAnON CAll 446-5210
HOLZER CLINIC

URGENT

CARE .

CENTER

PO I NT PLEASANT- Viola F .
Bonecutter Cast';;, 98. Gallipolis
Fe tT~ . died Saturda)' momin g in
Plr•asa nt Valley Hospital afiPr a
brief illn ess.
She wa s bern · Oct. 1. lllliK. in
Henderson to thr lat e Rlrharrl
Bonerutter and C\ nth ia "Sie&lt;'d
RonPr u Iter.
She was a lifel ong rt 's idrnt of
M aso n Count)".
Her hushand , PPrcy K . Case&gt;··
pi-rrPdPd her in death In 19:12. Shr

URGENT

was also preceded in death by
three sisters and four brothPr s.
Survil'ing arc a riaughtl'r,
Wilda Schu lt z of Point Pleasant ;
two sons. lrlr Case~ of l.orkford.
Ill.. and DewanP Casey. Calllpo·
lis Ferry; six grandchildren and
six great,grandrhllc,lren.
St&gt;rvircs will be Tuesday at
l:.lO p.m . at the WllroxPn Fun·
era I Homr with the RH . William
" flud"" Hatfield officia ting. Buri al will br in Lon~&gt; OakCemciC'r)·.
Frirnds mav rail at thr funeral
home on Monda y from ~ - ~ and 7-9
p.m .

CARECENTE~
Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

446-5287
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
-Monci11¥·Frlday

Weekend• It Holldap

5:00P.M. to 9:00P.M.

1.:00 P.M. to 9:00P.M.

BEST SELECTION OF LUNCH
MEAT AMD
CHEESE INP.M.TOWNI
HIS.t MON.·SAT. I
~.M.·9

NEW

NOW OPEN SIIIIIAY 10 A.M. 11 7 P.M. fOI Y!M SIIOPPIIG CONVI..f!CE

WillOW

~1111

WE NOW SELL
LOnElY .liCIOS

CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY

T~PES

YIQEO

110

·

PUICM~~·

=. . "''

BOLOGNA
11

oz.

II.

PIG.

SAUSAGE

$149

Ll

$149 .

YAWY .ll

BUnERMILK

89C

~.-.t1.~:u..

RUTLAND
TIRE SALES
Main St,
Rutland, Oh.
PH . 742-3088

REDS BASEBALL
Brought to you by Mitro 2S
on Channel 23 WVAH

&amp;4-

RIO TIRE
EXCHANGE

.1204 Nonh Atwood
· Rio Grenda, Oh.

PH. 246-6131

BrillJi your tecretary to lunch or reward her with a
Down Under Gift Certificate.

•. WEDNESDAY EVENING (i n the
• SECRETARY 'S NIGHT
: Door Prize!
: Gamer
: HorJ d' dellt 'rer
·
: Drink Specialtip

rio uu~.&lt; i

PEPSI COlA

:z." $159
-

-vu.SKMAIMIIIGfl

$249
YAWY Mll

CHILLY POPS.

24P~ $199

MARGARINE

21 LI.QTt$1 00

SAUSAGE

OFF !.AIEL

2:.:· 99C
Ill 101m

PUDDING CUPS

,_ $119

99C

I
Ulll

wnmvuu

tJOZ.$119

....

COCA· COLA

l:o~'· $149

OL$119

(in the lounge)

. T.G.I..F P.rty
: Celebrate th e end of the week in the Down Under
: Local Tri~ia Game 111 6:00 P.M.
'
: Horr d' detwrer

I•AnPUIAY

POTATO CHIPS

SHEUS &amp; CIIESE

·

$189

II.

'

DILL PICKlES

THURSdAY EVENING ( in the lounge)·

FRIDAY EVENING

SPARE RIBS

MlllllS .

.

TACO PARTY- BUILD YOUR OWN TACO
: Free Dinner to th e Bou that brin[!,!
the moJt employees
: MarRarita Speciaii

MOilYWOOO

TIP STEAKS

,~.,

99C

II.

IOIIIIISS SlllOIN

IT'S NATIONAL SECRETARY'S
WEEK
CELEBRATE WITH US

'

Oj-l&lt;' tl .

personnel are urged to send their
rescrvat Ions In prior to Aprll22 to
Insure desired clas ses. Reserva ,
tlon s should be sent to the E MS
headquarters. Box 748, Pomeroy

AT

Fishing dt-rby plannl'd

Viola Ca&gt;Wv.

''•GAL

Mc•mor ial Hospltul :
[hlll.lllri &lt;11 ;,: :•7 &lt;Lill . to M£' igs
Mirll' No. I for· Charl(•s La mlJrrt
~q Pi'' " ·' ""' Val/cv Hosp ital ;
ft'vmero)· at .J: OH p.m . to Second
!';fr, ·pt for .tuhn Cunis to \'etc·
Jl:.1ns Memori:rl Hos plial; 11U ·
!J11llll 11 t !i: II~ p.m . to Hampton
Hoi/oil' for Hurl B/pvlns to
Vd l'l'.tll!" M&lt;•nwri;ll
Hospital :
Rutland at 7::12 p.m . to Main

Theso are just a few of
the heart-healthy recipe&lt;
)OU can leam tO prepare at
the Culinary Hearts Kitch·

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

Area deaths

Flf!ll IIOIIMADf .

'

v.:rc·n1ns

m&lt;at! and vegetables. Even
cook delicious desserts.

Correction

We want you to know that
we are here ... for YOUt

into the palh of James W. Smith,
19, of Albany, as Smilh· was
drivin g east on Ohio 681 . Smith
could not slow down In time,
hitting Avis' vehicle, the patrol
said.
Avis wa s cited for failure to
y ield when turning lefl .the palrol
said.

Service plans 2nd annual EMS school

/ 'l'i m·inP ''' 12: 2:l il.m . 10 Bashttn
for r;:ll ~a l·:lvu"rudo to

Serve up s6me steaming
lasagna. Stir fry )')Ur fuvorite

Bogdan.
Authorities later discovered
Busic dug a hole under the inner
perimeter fence of the prison and
work~ his way through security
wire, cleared a fence and ran to a
wooded area next to the prison.
Busic was serving a life sent·
ence handed down Jul)· 20. 1977.

for air piracy and murder. The boar&lt;\ were in jured.
inmate was a citize n of Yugosla·.
via and wa s Identified as an
"anti, Yugoslav terrorist," BogGALLIPOLIS. "'odet·l· "k
dan said.
"
,
The hijacking Busir was con· Allen Pennington. ·19. Rt. l.
vir ted for occurred &amp;&gt;pt. 10. 1976. Ga llipolis, was · not r harged
when he an(! four others pirated a Thursd ax night with attempted
h."
plane from, L aGuardla Airport in th•ft
~
..- tha
' G.·r l li·,., ("ounry· Shn·.
,
New Yor~ Cit,- that was bound
riff s Department . as wa s re··
for Ch!~ago. but ultimat e!~ hops· · ported irt Friday·~ Ca lllpolls
cotrhed across two continents.
Daily Tribune.
After refueling in Ca nada, the
Pennin gton is servin g a on!'·
' m.m ltm"n!
,
plane was d jvert ed to P ar ls. weekend -a- month "o
where I he hijackers wer e ra p· for the offt; nsc for which he is
charaed. which is attempted
lured . None of the passengers on theft~

~.. POMEROY - Th ere wa s an · he slowed io turn left . He turned

Road

l: rid a.' · 1\clmb sio ns - Eva
L.all" so n. l!a clnr; Marie Hobin·
'\O n. Ponwrq)·.
•; F r ida.\" Disrharges - .lona ·
than ( : rrl'n . Ma.1·mr Manning.
Aller Pull ins. M11rir Thomas,
Floyn Cummi ns. Maudic Wood.
f'"lbrt"·zH'f' McWilliams.

mined whether the cellmate
aided In the ~scape, Bogdan said.
Federal, state and local au ""I t 1 1 n h-•
th • itl 1
a, es mm"' a e Y au c "' 8
manhunt for lhe escapee, who
Bogdan said is considered dun·
gerous. It was nm known. how,
·t B
1f
h
1
evE'r,
Uslc e ·t t e pr son
armed.I
OtJsville Is about 70 miles
northwest of New York City,
Busic apparently broke
h
bo d
1 1
throug a plaster ar cei ing. n
lh
i
1 Th d
. e pr son gymnas urn urs ay
night atld gained entrance to a
recreation yard, according to

f Highway Pat~l tickets Coolville man.

position

RF:F:D VILLE - Forked Run
Sta te Park 's third annual fis hing
derby wi ll be held Sa lurd ay. May
9, from~ a.m . to 2 p.m.
•
Angl ers of all ages are wei·
rom&lt;' to p;rr tlcl pate and various
prl zr s will be awarded. Fishing
llcrn ses may be purchased at the
P.&lt;n·k. ThP i&gt;Hk"s boat rental and
ron c~s slon stand will also be

and it will ta ke time for us to get
co mplete results ."
The Center s for Di sra sc Co ntrol in Atlanta said It will hPip
ln vestiga l c the outbreak b.v ana·
!)'zing blood sa mpl es of patrons
a nd emp l oyer s for viru l
infect ion .
Illness was reported among
people who attended a wedding
banquet and a compuler &lt;'onwn·
lion las t Saturday night, al·
though at least one pPrson who
ate at the hotel as late as Tuesda y
got sick, sa id Nelso n.
Nelso n sa id the Norwal k Virus.
first discovered in Norwalk.
Ohio. about 10 yea rs ago, may
have ca used the ou tbrea k .
The v irus is "hea.rty ... and ca n
survive in situations that are
unusual. such as on dry lettuce.
he sai d.
In a food-poiso ning incident in
J9R5 at the formPr Ramada Jnn In
Dayton. about 120 people:became
ill after ca tlng dry lettuce .
Investigators are also check·
ing the possibility that the
ou tbrea k was caused by salmonella . a bac terial poisoning.

DAYTON 1UP! I -Officials of
a Da yton hotPl gavp food
handlers ihP F-aster weekend off
and canceled th e holiday brunch
as thpy try to stem a v iral

LOCATED ON RT . 35 BYPAS.S NEAR AIRPORT.
WEEK OF APRIL 18 THRU 25 .

FOR MORE

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-7

Authorities launch manhunt for fugitive

•

s:.

Emt•rgt&gt;n&lt;'y runs

V•·h·run~

Pomeroy-Middlepor:t-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

•

James Jr .. Poemroy; Shirley
Pom eroy; George Hud sorn
HubHard, Pomeroy; Tammy
Po.emroy; Jeffrey Schultz, Ra,
Milliron, Middleport; Pauline H . cine; John Tillis. Middleport :
Atkin s. Rutland ; JaekD.Sorden, Debra McGuffin, Middl eport;
Rutland; Lewis E. Pulver, Long · Roger William Hysell. P om eroy~:
Bottom: Howard W. Newl and.
Sharon Griffin, Pomeroy; Paul
Racine: M ar ie Norris; Racine;
D. Michael, Pomer oy: Lora f!..
Robert [',1anley , Middleport ; Ro· Ci rcle, Racine; Martha
bert Na kam ot o. Rutland;
Mu r ph )·, Racine; Cla r ence
Yvonne S. Young, Pomeroy;
Li ghtfoot. Racine; JcnniferL)rnJ:l
Tina M . Story, Pomeroy; Id a .Jac kson, Reedsvi lle, Ernest Jun~
Whaley, Shade; Cher yl MJIIiron.
ior Rood, RPcdsville; Elizabeth
Racine; Janice Davis, Pomeroy;
Beaumont. Reedsville; Ma lj:
Da lla s D. Jarrell, Racine; Mike Putman. Coolville: Jeffrey Ntt-'
L. Triplett .' Poem roy; Virgie well. Long Bottom: Sharon If,
Fetty, Langsville ; T ammy Hud· Henderson. Guysvlllle: Scott Ef:
son. Reedsvill e; Robert H . Roush chinger, Rac ine: John H. M a n·~
Sr.. Rac ine: Julia Norris, Ra· ley, Pomel"oyp; Doris S. Cardetlr lne; Rober t Eblin. Middleport;
Middleport : Jeffrey Snowden:
Beulah Ran som, Rarlne; Lind a , Rutland: Mary K. ·Smith. Ra"':·
Darnell, Pomeroy; Eldon Saul .. cine: M ary Alire Sa mu el ~.
ers, Pomeroy; Arthur Slusher. Pomeroy; Artie f{e ut ~r. Pome'=
Pomeroy; Lori Harr is, _ Reeds- roy: Ron ald Haning. Rutland;
ville; George David Buskirk. Debra M arie K rautter, Pome·
Syracu se: Sharon Rinehart. Ra · roy; Gc:ne D . Lyons, Ra cine.
cine; T er ri Lynn Smi th , Shad&lt;':
Goldi e Pickens, Portl and; Robyn . . - - - - - - - - - - : - - J. Pitzer. Long Bottom; Mace!
Ba rton , Reedsville: James Ran ·
dolph. 'R ee d svi ll e; Louise
Heines. Middleport ; Sa nd ra
Mitch. Pomeroy; Norman Va n·
Mai re. Middleport: William A.
Young. Rutland ; Shelby Davis,

or

A rea nat i

April19, 1987

DAWN
LIQUID
31C OFF !.AIEL '
110%.

10• Off Lilli

S1 09

uoz.

99C

VAN
CAMP
1'0111 llANS

VAll UMP

BEANEE WEENEE

&amp;

..

2'm 99C

:~or$129

UN!

.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY EVENING
(in the

dinin,~;

room)

: S1/taed SpecUtlt Each E11ening

: Cor~lempor•ry Piano Entertainment
: RIIIrt'IJiioru SMggestetl

. . JillOW

Onions

111.

SJ29

FBSH TINDE•

Carrots
)

4

Ill.

uos•

$

�I

'

·'

••

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•

Page-A-S- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Apri119. ' 1ft~.

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

'

•

By DAVID R. SCHWEISBERG
decided against la king any lm··
TOKYO fUPI)- Japan, stung mediate retaliatory moves."
by U.S. trad e san,(·l ions, said
Officla Is said I he governrrien t
· Saturday It wil l challenge the
measures because they violate was also · moving ahead with
.International trade ru les but will mea sures to soothe the Uniled
. hold back count er-reta li ation to States Into a reconciliation.
avert a trade war.
On Friday, form er. Foreign
The move ca me shortly aft er Min ister Shintaro Abe said To. Pres ident Reagan slapped puni - kyo teared a "chain reaction" of
tive tariffs on selected .Japanesf' ret alia tory measures th at could
Imports Friday as retatiall on turn in to a tra de war.
over unfa ir J apanese prac tices "' Abe, who fli es to Washington
Jn the computer chip I rud e.
today for ta lks with Pres ident
"Japa n find s it dee ply regrPt·
table that the United Sta tes
government ha s put int o effect month by Prime Minisler'Yasu· the unila tera l meas ures agai nst hlro Na ~a sone, sa id Japan still
.Japan." said Foreign Mi nis ter hoped I he sa nc·tions eould be
Tadashi ,Kur anar l.
wi thdra wn.
\"
Ministe r Of I ntcrna l ion a I
" We would like to avo'ld this at
Trade and Indu stry Ha jime a ll cos ts ," sa id Abe, the ruling
Tamura sa id !he meas ures wer e l.ihl'ra l Democratic Part y's ex "In clear violat ion" 0f thP GPn - f'ruli vr cou ncil chairman .
llu t Abe sa id that whil e .Ja pan
cral Agreement on Ta r iffs and
Trade a 92-natlon intr•r nation ul · was ready to di scuss Washingtrade forum ba sed in Geneva. ton's demands. such as the ca ll.
due to prev ious accords on
tariffs.
: H es ald.Jar ~ n . undPJ·!I rt ic iP 2:1
·ot GA1-r. hud reques ted ta lks them for a llltingofthe sa nctions.
Nakasone gave Abe a personal
, wllh the United Slalr-s on F riday
· through It s embassy in Was hin g- lptter lor Reagan , Japanese
: ton to demand the,' sa ncti ons be offi cials said . Although its con
' lilted. Ofll r lals havl' said they tents were not disclosed ..Japa·
)'night ask for emerg ency co nsld· ncsc media reported Nakasone
'!!ra tion from Gi\'IT or present a wa rned that a trad e war could
.Complaint at the next rc·gular ca usP a global recessio n.
In his a nn oun cement, Reaga n
'GATT council ml'r&gt;ll ng Ma y 14 .
But Tamura said th e govern· said the tari ff.s wPrc prompted by
ment had back&lt;•d orr on ea rlier J a pan' s " inability to enforce" a
threats of cou nter-reta liation September 1~86 agreement onagainst-U.S. Imports- a t leas t
for the lime IJP ing- to uv (&gt;id a 1ra de.
Washington rharges Japan viofrat.JP Will'.
"The .Japa nf'S l' gove rnment is l ut ~d an accord sig ned last year
anxiou s to sec· I hal Ihi' issue docs by rontinuin'g to "dump" sPmi not t 'a USC' S('v r rr dama ge to the conduclors ove t·seas at prices
world 's free lmding systc•m as a below production cos t and failing
whole. " T(;lm ur~t said. " F'rom to li ve up to its commitment to
this larger pr•rspcrt ivc, Wf' ha ve Increasing chip imports from the

~;:::r~ ·~~/t:e~f;l;)('~::~~nfh~~

United States.
Japan has denied the charges

the United States, $59 billion last
year, ruling party leaders Friday

~r~ ~= i~~~~:;. h~~~re~i~~:t ~~ir~;

~~~~~sedpa::ag':t~'ra ~~as~~;

International Trade and Industry has Imposed cutbacks on
Japanese chip production and
urged Washington to wail un til
they take efft;ct on prices
overseas.
In a n attempt to ease concern
over .Japan's trade surplus with

designed to stimulate the domestic economy and boost Imports..
The measures include increased public works spending.
ta x cuts and a government-led
buying spree of big· ticket Items
suc h as supercomputers, but fell
,short of ca lling lor a temporary

shelving of the government's necessary if the measures are to :
austerity program, viewed as· be meaningful.
::::

Y011'RE /NV/_TED

r;:=======================:;i

Annou'.nctn'g mon·ey-sa"'r:ng

dri
news tOr State Farm. 'vers
50 and OVer,
•1' ll.l

e_

Bl
iiii

~;£~~~:g~ ~H~fF~:~~l~~Jl~i~ ~~y!fu~~·~i~~!!J~~~~t~~::d o~e~~;
you quality.

_./ .//
;.J'
'

~-

·

.-·-.·"
~ '~

·

;i::

I

·

0 PEN HOUSE

..
;;:;

:;:;

s;~~~:;,·AA:,:;12~~·/:a~7

,~,

1:00 P.M. until 4:00 P.M.

:;i;

1\\l

PilON 446-4290
Home: 446-4511

·

'7~cor~:,.ate;ewl h
1 d

;:;:

CAIOIL SNJWDEN
Cor. Third 1 51011
Gallipolis

&amp;L

',,"_:,!_i

··

i:i:

:;:;

41G6aSlell'cpoonldl's,A vehn__ ue.

0

(

10

_:,i _f,:•_

i:::

State F!lfin Mutu• Automobile ln1uranc:e Company
H'pme Office: Bloomington, Illinois

wmkooductororcom~terrh~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~§~~§§~~~~~~~~~

Argentine government
acts to stop 2nd revolt
BUF:NOS AII11·:S. ill'gPnt ln a
IUP II - Dlsg ru ntl cd officers
demanding an end to human
rights trials end ed a thrcP·day
rPvolt

at

an army

ba se

in

Cordoba Frida y, but a serond
r·ebelllon brok(' out ncar Buc·nos
Aires and the govt•r nmr nl threatened to use force to quc•ll the
uprising.
A milit ary spokesman sa id the
estimated oil 10 XO Offi CI'I'S wh o
seized lh&lt;' l41hAIJ·bornc Infantry
~asr In Cordoba Wedn('sday gave
up Friday aft ern oon and agreed
to take orders fro m base ro m·
mander Lt. Col. Luis Polo . TherP
was no word tl n whet her 1he rebel
officers wou ld he punished for
their Insur rection.
i\ federal jurlgl', c;ustuvo Rr C'flTH Fl'ITcr. vis i! cd lht. . of ficers
for two hours C'a rlit •r in I he da y in

an allempt to mrrllal r• a n end to
the revolt.
The army clllllOUII CI'd the rPn&lt;•·
g11dr ma jor wl10 spurkPd lhP
Cordoba rebellion ril·d Int o hid ing

i\ band of a bout liJOofficcrs IPd
by l.t. Cot. !lido Rico ousted the
comm a ndin g off icer and seized
lh(• Infa ntry school at Campo de
Mo yo to press dema nds for an
end to proserullon of officers
accused or human rights abuses
during a period of militar y rule in
the 1970s.
l.aiP F r iday afternoon. the
re bel s Issued a statement saying
their ranks had swelled to 200
olflccr·s. and they vowed to
ignore any orders '~ss ued by the
army general starr. which re·
ma incd loya l to civilian Pr·esldent Rau l i\lfonsi n.
· Anya lt cmplloretakc the base
by force would · be " the str.lcl
,·esponsibillt.v of the l(enrrals
who ordered . it, " the rebel s'
sta tement warn ed.
Ea rli er in the da y, GPn . HPclor
Rios E renu, arm)· chi ef of staff,
announced 1\lfonsln authorized .
thr usc of lorcr lo rec apture both

po liti ru l

As the• fo rrloll:1 co nfron tation

lntr r ior Min lstf' r 1\ ntonto'T'roc·
co li lu tcr sa id troops had been

to

~ torm the basr.
Former M;,1i. l·:rnc"o Bar re iro
tourhrd off the cr isb WNinesd;1v
night by h0lll1g u'p insidr th 0 ba sr•
and drfyin g a rmH t su mm ons to
tcstlfl' about churgps of tnn urr

u nci

mur clt ·r

of

prisoners .
ended . Iher&lt;'
that

0:1

II 'Prr·

ind ica Iions

srro ncl r0hP ili on that brok&lt;'

out F'rlda .v near lh r ca pll ul wn s
spreadi ng.

&gt;

THRU APRIL 30TH

an automa tic· tim er.

Aller· 10 yea rs the origina l
wooden cross becamr un sa ft~ and
the church repla ced it with a
stee l cross buill bv lhe Jatp
Cha r les Ne uma n in the ya rd of
the Newman home in Syracuse.
ft wa s :16 feet high and 14 fePt
wide. and was li ghted with 2:\0
bulbs.
The new steel cross replari ng

the original wooden one was
dedicated on Ma y 10. 19:~1 during
the pa storal e of th e Rev. Robert
L. Heg naurr at Trinil v.
In th e lat e 1970's the Shu ster
properly was sold to Dr. and Mrs.
No rman F. hlingcr. The old house
was razed and the Ehlingcrs
planned for th e construction of a
new one on the silr .' The cross
was located too close to the
planned new struct ure so it
became necessary lo r thHhur&lt;"h
to move II.
ln·the summer ol 1980 1he cross
was taken from the or igi nal site.
refurbished, and the electrical
work and lll(hling changed. One
problem alter anot her was encou nt ered in gett ing the cross
ready and arranging lo ha ve It
set in the new location.
Month after month passed and
the late Rev . W.H . Perrin, then
pasiOI' of Trinit y, became more
and more- anxious. lt was a real
concern to hlm 1hat t hr cross be
In plac·c and lt ghled for th&lt;'
Christmas season. His conta cts
led him to th&lt;' Thompsons of
Associated Fabricators . Inc. who
moved equipment to the site to
raise th e cross and put It In the

new location.
Si nee i1s relocal ion the cross
an automatic timer, burns
night from dusk unUJ
midnight. Paul Nease Is
ket!per of the cross and
Easter season has r~f~"~::~~~
bulbs and looks to the
repair of the cross.
Through the years, w(j~qh's
ci rcles · of. the church
projects to pa)' the re1*Var1d
electric bills. The cra',S~~Jf~t,~ ~~~~
Is now a . part of
church budget. :~~1:,~~.~~~~;
co ntinue to come In
who appreciate thf'
on Li ncoln Hill and
the CLUSTE~OF
Christian la~lt~h~.,~~~~~sses
The three
standing on the
ow ned by Bill J nd
Dorcas are a
opNatrd and ;,h,M-\JvrittPn
Un ited Met
layman.

The three
at
Dorcas, jusll ft~t~-~Raclnr on
State Route I~
Portland .
Is ju st one of
which have
txoen
EastPrn and
Southern
by Bernard L.
his family of
who made his
manufactu re of
mineral used In
, haq a deep spirit ·
~Xjle~'ienre, after heart
""""o'cJtr, lillliPil'hc co nfirmed an
ra riir•r/CotJth•en;lo~ and received
'proclaim, proclaim,
Gospel."
;p~:~l::~~s•~lh~~e
I
Ihe mlns try
Cast Thy Bread, and
1he lrm:s•• of Mercy program
,began setting the cross
In the fall of 1984.
I'unJOse of Ihe crosses, accord·
the Cofflndalfer who uses
own money for their construe·

.,

·~)'wlml.r

of Cbri.rti,mity
the Cl'l1.t.l. crrnm cmd llaif.,·
lion, Is to remind Pvr rvonc who
them that ,Jes us was cru{'l·
fled on a cross at Calvary .
Thr crosses are made of HY,
Inch dlameti'r Douglas fir from
California and stand 20 to 25 teet
high. In ear h c lusl~r. tworrossPs
painted white or· eggshell blue
flan~ a taller wooden cross of
Jerusalem Gold. Thr rrossPs.
treated so that thrv will lust a
hall-century or so. · arc put 2Y,
feet Into the ~round on sli Ps
provided by landowners.
WCS

Mos t ott he cross r lu sters sl and
on thP rim of u hill so pa ssPt's~y
will need. appropria tely, to look
up to sec them. ~omr are located
along busy freeways, ol hers In
crmrterlcs. oprn hillsides. an~
woodlands.

1,

Th1• cluster on the• Cornell
propert y Is uppan'nliy the onl~·
sit&lt;• fo r Cofllnd all&lt;'r' s ministry In
Meigs County . Another cluster ot
r rosses. however, may b&lt;• sect\
wht•n &lt;:rosslng Ihe Ritchie Brldl{ ·
Into Ravrnswood, W.Va.
•

PAT HILL
FORD
•

\

1987 TEMPO

1987 ESCORTS

F-150 &amp; F-250

mobilized. and he predi cted the
lhi"N'·dav ·old erls is would be
sotvrd :.In an other 2•1 to 48
hou r·s. "

The Cl'o.r.re.r of Mcigr CrnmiJ'• .t)'1111mlr of Cbri.rtiauity

'•'

We ·Have An Open Door
Policy- 24 Hours A Day!

EMERGENCY
CARE CENTER

l!MIIIIIIIIUM
•''ol"l 'o •I"•

• '-"'•l,t

r

J!Flt Pir\1... l'l' \V\

....,

· ~======================F=========~====================··
··=

1985 CHEV.
BlAZER 4X4

1985 FORD
BRONCO II 4X4

30 5 V-8, auto. overdrive,
Silverado Package. Loaded,
one owner.

V-6, S speed, air cond.,
AM/ FM cassette, tilt wh~elr
speed control. One owner.

· 1983 CROWN
VICTORIA 2 DR.

· 1984 CROWN
VICTORIA 4 DR.

Power windows, locks, seat,
AM/FM, local owner, speed,
tilt. .

Power windows, seat, locks,
speed, tilt, wire wheel covers.
Local owner.

1986 MERCURY
TOPAZ 4 DR. LS

I, 0 otlt • ' •' 1'"

600 CASH BACK

become Trinity Church .(
In the early yea rs, lheShusters
went outside, regardl ess of 1he
weather, to tu rn the lights on and
off. ,La ter a switch was placed
inside the home to make th eir
dedicated service a lillie eas ier.
And finally the cross-was put on

b:. 1ses . Th C' gPncr al vowed the

garTiso ns w({uld be rr taken
" with all the me&lt;ins nl our
di sposa t. "
' Un forlun a trl.v. there will be
wound s." Rios F:re nu told reporters aft er meeting for al most two
hours wtt h .\I fon sln a nd 1op uldl'S
at thr Casa Rosada. th e pi nk·
c·olurPd president ial pa lace.

ufl&lt;'r th e gov t'r nnwnt th rru tr n('d

By CHARI.ENE HOEFLICH
Is dead, dreams without enthu·
. Times-Sentinel Staff
slain and effort go unfulfilled.
POMEROY- "In the Cross of But Kuether was not only IdealisChrist I Glory" - one hymn often tic, but realistic. ·
sung during the Easter season
So in the basement of the
parsonage located at that ' time
_. expresses I he Christian faith.
Symbolizing Christ' s crucifix · next door to I he ch urch on Second
ion, the cross. in essence. Is a Street'. constru ction on a cross
portrait of life through death . txogan.
That first cross was of wood,
" For God so loved the world that
he gave his only begotten Son and several :-·oung men of the
' that wh osoever believeth in Him church, one being the late Olin
should no t pc•rlsh but have Goodwin, assisting in making II .
everla sting life ," (John .1:16 Heading the co mmittee ro place
K.!Vi .
the cross was the late Everelt
Churches a nd concerned Chris- Dailey . The location was on the
tians th rough. the years have property of the late Nolan and
di splay M crosses -in high and Clara Shuster. a point on the hill
prominent places as a witness to which co uld be seen for miles and
the world that Christ died that all miles up and down both si&lt;jes of
the river.
might live. .
T)le Ohio Power Co. placed lh&lt;'
For nea rly a half ce ntury, a
lighted cross on Lincoln Hill cross on the Shu ster propl'rt y
overlooking I he bend oft he Ohio just before Christmas, 1940 and
has been a beamn in the night for for the first two years supplied
miles up and down the river. the electricit v lor its operation
inspiring a nd encouraging without charge.
thou sands.
In those early days. the li ght on
More recently through the I he cro ss was turned on and off at
ministry known as Cast Thv regular intervals bv the lat e
Rread .Inc., operated ·and un- Frank Carson and Louis Reibel.
der-written by a Un ited Methodist but soon Mr. and Mrs. Shustrr
layman . a cluster of crosses on beca me the "keepers of the
the rim of a hill near Racine ("fOSS.' '
They faithfully tended to the
sNves as a reminder tha i Christ
. · .was crucified on a cross at lighting of the cross. every
' Ca J,·ary.
weekend throughout the year a nd
each evenin g during religious
• , LINCOLN HILL CROSS
The world was in turmoil, the holida y periods, lor many, many
• country wa s coming out of a vrar ~ .
Among the lrC'usures of a
·: severe depressio n and the Bend
neighbor,
Mrs. Waller Grueser,
area was recovering from a
-: devas ting flood in the rate l9.10' s is a book rn!llled " The Short
•. when th e Rei'. Ralph Kuether Bible" Inscribed In gold letters
ca me to Pomeroy to pa stor wha t on the front: "Nolan Shu ster"
wllh another inscription on the
:: is now Trinif~' church.
• An idea listic man, the min ister fly leaf. "Marcl],, 1942. presr nt ed
: • had a dream - to place a cross on in recognition of the faithful
·: a hilt whi ch would be a witness to service as 'Keeper of the Cross'
' he Chr istian faith of a by the Federated Church, Pome·:t
:- com munltv.
roy . Rev. Ralph Kueth er ." 1The
· And ju st as faith without words Federated Church has since

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APR OR

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P ease to announc·e t e •
formal opening of our new
Jf'
o ICe
Bryce :Smith &amp; Mark Smith
Investment Brokers
Invite you to join them Jo,r an

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State Farm Mutual policyholders 50
and over who ' have no unmarried
drivers under 25 in their household

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Section. B

The crofs.··symbol of a life through .death

r:::;:;::::::::::::::::::.::::::;&lt;:::;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t

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·: AI on the river

.Japanese will hold punches to avert trade ·war .with ·-_ U.S.

-.

A11to. trans., speed, .tilt, locks,
power windows.
FOlD FACTORY CAl

l986 FORD LTD 4
DR. BROUGHAM
V-6, auto. trans., tilt whitl,
AM/FM cassette, spttd control,
power windows.
FOlD FACTORY CAl

1986 TAURUS lX
V-6, auto. trans., loaded,
6,000 miles.

1984 MERCURY
GRAND ·MARQUIS
4 DR.

Power windows, locks, seat,
tilt, cruise. Local owner.
(2)

1986 MERCURY
COUGARS
Y-6, auto. trans., power
windows, tilt, uuise.
FOlD FAaOIY SALE CAIS

ON THE SPOT FINANCING

SEE: liCK TOLLIVER, BILL HAAS or PAT HILL

PAT HILL FORD I C.
461 S. 31D

992·2196

MIDDLEPORT

~T~'i~~mto s::~m,awake, ~~~.~.n~ ~.r~~~~. ~~~~~g:~,~~~ ,:~:. ~~~~~~:,r~·-·:

UPI SC:Ience Writer
;. BOSTON t UP I) - Gerald
~ No lan used to routinely fall
· asleep while on guard duty In the
, Army reserves. A woman who
livcs _jn another -Boston suburb
gets anxious many days, wonderr lrlgwhelhE"r shc' llbeabl e to sleep .
• at ni ght.
: , All hough one person has trou·
: ble staying awake and the other
;, oft en can't slet!p, both suffer
•: from afflictions experts es timate
:: affect as many as 20 percent of
: · the adult population - chronic
.; sleep disorders.
: "It's an extraordinary number
;. of people," said Dr. Daniel
.: Krlpke , a sleep researcher at the
:· tJniverslty, of Ca lifornia in San
•: Diego.
;• As many as half of all adults
:: probably has periodic trouble
•:sleeping. Sleep can be disrupted
t• by a variety of things, but the
:: most common are stress, erratic
,• schedules, drugs such as cal: ~ felne, nicotine and alcohol a nd
: ~ breathing abnormalities.
, Everyone's slet!p needs vary
: but most people requiTe between
• 1 seven and nine hours each day.
I Several nights of Inadequate
} sleep will cause sleepiness dur•' Ing the day- or at night If that 's
;I when you work.
~~ About one-third of the Amerl·
tl can work force - or 30 million
i' people - Is on rotating shift
~schedules that often change
: every ' week. Changing work
' schedules can throw the sleep'
• cycle out of sync with 1he ~y ;s
•'blologleal clock which controls
:the sleep-wake ~cle.
'
! Surveys have found that 55
!perrent of the workforce admits
to falling .as~ on the Job ·at
I

Dr. Charles Czeis!er of the apnea ca n ca,lfle high blood
Bngham and Women s Hospital pressure and h~rt problems due
In Boston has shown lhat rotating to lack of ad at e ox ygen. In
shifts clockwise Instead of coun- some patients, • elr hearts actu terclockwlse and chan_glng shifts ally siop bea,lfg momentaril y
less frequently make t! easier to untlllhclr bre~hlng resumes .
adjust.
Doctors try!lo get patients to
Certain ly.pes of bright light Jose weight IWld s top drinking,
can also mim ic sunlight and especially bebre bed . If that
reset the biological clock, ac- doesn 't work,lurgery can some·
cording to Czelsler. This may ~ . limes be, perflrmed to actua lly
able to help the ~sllmated 60 remove tls~te cau sin g the
million people who get jet lag · blockage.
each year·and p~rh~ps someday
For lrisom~ , doctors usuai!Y
be used,·ln factorlef to help shift
try altel-lng a cts of a persons
workers adjust l,o their new lifestyle. sue s reduci ng collre
schedules, he said. '
consumption, nicotin e or drugs
A condition known as sleep that may
interfering with
apnea Is often cljed by sleep slet!p 'and , bllshlng a more
expertsasaleadlngcauseofpoor ·regular sleeP,paltern.
slet!p. Up to 10 per~nt of adults
"It's terri~ , horribl e," said
-and perhaps 65 percent.ol the . the woman who first began
elderly- may suller from sleep having lrou sleeping In 1969.
apnea.
"I'm alway~appre he nsive dur·
Victims' breath[ng passage- lng the dayJs to what kind or
. ways become blllfked, choking night I'm g{jhg to have. But you
off air-and lofclng the patient to do learn to J.!'e on less sleep."
awaken momentarily to clear
Insomnia often also ca used
their breathing p~ssage. Suffer- by emo!lofi4 problems, which
ers often do not realize they are can sometlpe5 be alleviated
waking up perhap~ hundreds of through co'lio;ellng and therapy
times each night. But they or simply ~ses with time.
experience 'sometlt:nes debliltatSome 20 Ilion prescriptions
lng sleepiness during the day.
are written ch year .Cor sle'epIn addition to da.r,ttme sleep I· lng pills, wJch can help some
ness, snoring Is another common people fall sleep . But sleeping
symptom. Although all snorers pills can acpally worsen sleep,do not have sleep apnea, nearly lng problrr. In -many cases,
all sleep apnea patients snore- experts say
and often very loudly.
The sleep g disease known as
The condition Is caused by a narcolepsf.lflects about 250,000
narrow throat. 'nte most rom- people In t United States. The
mon vlctlml BJ;e obese men. genetic
rder Involves a
Premenopau .. l .'women appear chemical balance In the brain
to be proteete\1 agaiDJt, the that contrtuleep.
condition ~bOw . Obesity and · "In tht ~ nny, I'd dose oft on
alcobol cona~ton BPPfar to guard dull\" said Nolan, 45, a
awavate the d1Ra1e. .
narcolep rom Everett, Mass.

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cause you can't stay awake."
Narco leptlcs suddenly tall as lcepwlthouJ warning. There is no
cure. But as In Nolan's case, the
condition can sometimes be
contro lled with stimulant s.
Man y sleep disorders In the
elderly are caused by other
lll~esses thai become aggravaled al night , often simply
because th ey are lying down for a
long time. Adjusting the slet!p
position or alleviating the co ndl·
lion Itself can help.

The Chernobyl and Thrre Mile
Island nuclear power plant accl ·
dents occurred at nl~ht , and the
~x~loslon of the space shuttle
Cha llenger was blamed In part
on decisions made by people who
ha'd not slept enough. The Peach
Bottom nuclear power plant In
Pennsylvania was recently shut
down because workers wetc
falling asleep on the job.
The growing realization of the
Importance or sleep and the
scope or sleep problems has
spurred a variety of research
Into dlagno~rflg and . \n:~Uog
slet!p ll,ls,orders.
·
· Doctors have discovered many
slet!p disorders can be treated by
alleviating breathing problems,
establishing strict sleep schedules and . even per,haps by
re-setting an Individuals blologl·
cal clock by exposing them to
certain types of bright light.
Numerous areas of the brain
havebeenshowntobelnvolvedln
causing sleep, Including an area
In the front of the brain called the
basallorebraln and the thalamus
In the center of the brain. Also
involved are the pons and the
medulla In the brain stem -the

The ascending retlrular ac t I·
vall n)l sys tem In the brain stem
and the hypothalamus at th e
bol!om of the brain regulat e
waking. A small part of the
hypo(halamu s- the s uperchla~ ;
malic nucleus - Is the "clock
tttal regulates the bod y's blolo£1 ·
cal rhythm , Including the sleeP.·
wake cycle.
Brain chemicals Inc luding sr·
rotonln, catecholamlnesanda cctylchollnes, are believed to lnte·
ract to balance these area s.
Scientists have divided slee p
Into two types - rapid eye
movement or REM s leep and
non-rapid eye movement or
non -REM s leep. Non-REM' sleep
Js further divided Into stages 1
through 4 based on the size and
speed of brain wavc&gt;s.
Most . attention has been fo.
cused on REM sleep, which Is
associated with dreaming, and
s tages 3 and 4 of non -REM sleep ,
which are also known as deep
s leep because they are the most
dil!lcult to awaken someone
from .
When we !all asleep, we
usually go Into the llght sleep of
stage 1 for between 10 and :«)
minutes. Then we drift Into stage
2 for about 30 minutes before
en tering the deep sleep or stages
3 and 4 lor about another :m
minutes.
· In these stages, our heart rat e
and blood pressure are low,
breathing Is slow and steady and
there Is redu ced level of brain
actlvltv .
Deep sleep Is most associated
with · restoration ~f the body,
primarily because Ihe pituitary
.gland 'pllmps out up to 10 times
greater levels of a hormone

Growth hormone Is crucial fp
cells to form.
In REM s leep, ac tivity In
creases first In the pons and 1 ~
medulla. This sets off response
In many other parts or the brain
In cluding the part that control
the eyes. That . triggers Ill
phenomenon or rapid eye mov
ment. Thr thou~~:ht centers In th
cortex try 10 make sense out of!'
the stim ulati on, producln~
dreaming.
~
One theory Is Ihal thr !&gt;rain 1_~
running lhrough a sor t of ea lc•s!¥
thenlcs, perhaps for paris of th '
brain that ar•• underusM, to k&lt;'l'~
th em tn .~hapc.
•,
.. ·
,
. ; ""'
We ..thlnk _that In R~~ ~ ~~~~
~
the . bra in Is _txolng 1 _x• rc isrd l
~c rtaln ~ oto; and sensory _rune
lions ~hat oc cur In· the. Wakln.
state are IX'Ing trlggctcd off,""
sa id Dr. ~award Roflwarg, ·
sleep resc·?~r~f•r lr~m the Unl
vers lt y of I_Pxus ,Hc&gt;alth Scl~nr
Center In Dai.Ja_s and presldC'nt
th e Sleep Resea rch Soc iety . •
_ Although the ·hea rt rate, br~a
thing and c•yr movement~ h('
come erra tic during drca
sleep, they appear to correspon
to this braIn activity ·
The body's Int ernal tempera
ture r~ulat Jng system 'I,
switched off for somr unknow '
reason and many muscles are.;;
virt ually paraly1.ed- perhap~
sa fety device built In by evolullo
to keep us. from acting out · o
dreams .
For more Information abo•;
sleep contact the A~latlon .•
S
0
Jeep
Jsordc~ WCentf!l's,
~~~:.dsfg)frt, · ·• Rochest

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GALLIA COUNTY
GALLIPOLIS - Tile Dr. sa:
mu el L. Bossard Memorial Ll·
brary announces Its bookmobile
schedule for the week of April
20-26.
Monday: Geiger. 10-10:20:
Ewlngton, 10:25-10:45; Vinton
; !Dyer), 10:55-11:05: Kyger I,
'11:35·11: 45; Kyger 11, 11:5111oon: Ca llia Chris tian School,
:e: 45-1: 45; Cheshire iThomasJ.
205-2:35. · Ga llla Metro, 4-5;
K'!'r, 5: 15-!Y. 35; Bidwell, 5: 50·
6: 0; Cochra ns, 6: 20·6: 45; Deer
Criek, 6: 5~- 7:15: Valley View,
7: 2', 7: 511; Rio Gra nde Estates,
7:558:30.
T~day: Eno Store, 1:30-1: 55;
Afrlo Road. 2·2: 15; Roush·Lane,
3-3: 15 Roush Lane, 3: 1'5-3: 30;
Cheshre. 3:35-4:05: Addison.

Dianna Lynn Lee
David L. Roush ,Jr.

Greene-Smith

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Manclark-Hart

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· RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Ma nclar k of Manor. Pa.
arr announcing the engagement
and approaching marTiage of
t-heir daughiN', Ma r·cl Manclar k,
tp BrirP Hart, son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Robert Har t, f\&lt;rclne.
: The w!'dding will be hrld on
()ct. 10 at 4 p.m at St. .John ' s
bu theran Church In Nort h Vcr·
sall ies. Pa . with the Rev. Rober!
C. Schloltrr pNformJng the l'l'·
r&lt;•mony. A reception wil l follow
qt the l.ak~vlew LoungP In
GI'Pensbu rg, Pa .
·
: The br' lclc·(•iect Is a grad ual POt'
t)lP UnlvNs lty of P,M.tsburgh and
Is f'mp loyed as a mathrmntlrian
for Vitro C'urp. in Silvl'r Springs,
Mel.
Hart gra&lt;lu a lcd fr om Soulhcr n
Hlgh .Srhool in Racine and Oh io
Sla t&lt;• tlnl
vNsl tv
a nd wor·ks as a
'
.
softwm·e engl nCN fo r Hadron
C:orp. in L.aur&lt;.'i, Md.

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Carla .Jean Janw!l
Wlllhun K . Swlsh&lt;•r

James-Swisher
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'lavld E. Wells
Marlne'Pvt. David E. Wells,
son of F'raiJdln 0. and Shirley L.
Wells of L&lt;ng Bottom, recently
completed l.he Motor Vehicle
Operator Co1rse.
During the'~ve-week course a I
Marine C9rpo Base, Camp Le·
jeune, NC, Wets received class·
room and ·behnd-the-wheel In·
structlon on 111: operations and
ca pabilities '&gt; of Marine Corps
vehicles, defens!Te driving tech·
nlques, "rules oftlle road" and
u se r - l evel preventive
maintenance.
A 1986 gradual£ of Eastern
High School, Re&lt;dsvllle, he
joined the Mat lnE Corps In
August 1986. ·

military traini ng at Lackland Air
Force Base, near. San Antonio,
Texas, he is scheduled to receive
technical training In the Air
Ca rgo Specialist career field .
Michael, a 1985 graduate of
Southern High Scllool, will · be
earning credits toward an asso·
elate degree In a pplle&lt;l sciences
through the Comm un ity College
of the Air Force whil e attend ing
basic and technical trai ning
schools.
Charles T. Stanley
Charles T. Stanley, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Stanley of Patriot,
enlisted in th e Air Force's
Delayed Enlistment Program.
Stan,ley, a 1987 grad uate of
Southwestern High School, is
sc heduled for enlistment In tile
· Gregory J. Mll!!ael
Gregory J . Mlch~el,son of Mr. Regular Air Force on December
and Mrs. Everett Mchael of 1987. Upon grad uation from the
Syracuse, enlisted In the Air Air Force's six-week basic train·
lng course near San Antonio.
F'orce .
Texas,
Stanley Is sc hedul ed to
Upon successfull y COI:lpletlng
receive
technical trainin g In the
the Air Force's slx·we&amp; basic
Mechanical career fie ld.

Kindergarten,sfated at OVCS

· Debra Renee Spencer
.Jame8 Michael Stapleton

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio ' Vd iey tMMR) .. Each clllld should also
Christia n School Is acceptng have a TV Skin Test from their doc·
kindergarten registration , or tor or the Gallla County Health De·
1987·88. Parents should call be .partment after Jan. 1.
school at 446-0.174 to make -:n
Ohio Valley Christia n School is
a ppointment to bri ng their c'hiH located In Frlst Baptist Church
In for an Interview an) at Third and Locust In Gallipolis .
registration.
' The office Is open from 8:30a .m.
Early regis tralon Is lmporta'tll\ to 3:30 p.m. The kindergarten
because It ena bles the school t.o r .program Is a lull day , ev~ry &lt;fay
Insure all supplies will beavalla,' program which Is known for
ble nex t year.
teaching kindergarten sludents
~ , Children must be live years old
to read. Ca!l for more In! orbefore Sept. 30 for enrollment In
kindergarten and six years old
by the sa me date to enroll In the ~=========;;;;;;ii
first grade.
11
Parents must provide a birth cer·
tlflcate and an Immunization record for their chUd. Immunizations
are required for dlptherla, whooP'
lng cough, and tetanus tpPI"s);
polio; rubeola, rubella, and mumps

HEARING

COUECtltl

COtOI!S

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

Maret Manclark
Rrlco· Hurl

By : •
David
·:.' •
.
Tawney ·• ,
EARLy !PRIM~ FLOWIRI .

The fint spring flo- have a Jt*ial

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, CfWWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl E. James ann ounee the
imgagcmen t and ,approat•hing
rnarrlagc of Jhcir daughter .
Car la JNrn James. 10 William K .
Swisher. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon H. Swisher of Cheshire.
· A May 29 wedding is bei ng
plan ned .
Norlh Korea
The Democratic People's Republic
of Korea was founded on May 1, 1948.
In the zone occupied by Russian
troops alter World War II. In 19$0. its
armies tried to cooquer the South. Af·
l~r three years of war, which involved
both U.N. and Chinese intervention, a
~se-flre at the original border was
'OOIIcluded.
·
Pyramid Lake in Nevada covers an
area of 168 Jquare ,miles.

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ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and Mrs. Forest (Ruby)
.Crawford, Rt. I, VInton, will observe their l!Oih wedding
,anniversary on Wednesday, Aprll22. A reception will he held at the
i ~amada Inn, Grove City, Ohio, on Sunday, Aprll2fl. They married
, r prll 22, 1937, In Bidwell, Rev. Ruben Denny officiating and have
~ . hree children, Max Crawford, Phyllis . ,Jean Taylor and John
• ;trawlord. They also have six grandchildren and tbree great
. zrandchlldren. Crawford retired from the Suburban Propane &lt;lliS
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, Grove City, with 18 years service.

The Sunda_y Times-Sentinei-Page- 8 ·3.
I

Dre.r.red for
The• best -groomc.(l celebrities
range from singer· Placi do Do·
mingo to C. EvNctt l)oop, the
surg&lt;'On general with thrstr·iklng
mustache-Jess b&lt;&gt;ard. according ·
to the Neighborhood Clea ners'
Association.
In Issuing iiS bcst ·&gt;:room!'d Jist, '
the associa tion pointed out that ·
· betn~: well groomed involves
mar&lt;' than expensive clothes.
Domingo was &lt;'hosen b&lt;•rause of
his ~ op hi s lirat rd. elegant dlr and •
Koop was s lng l~d out for rio thing
that's " as solid and substa ntial ·
· as hi s rh£u·ar1er ."
Also well groomed are CBS's
Dan Ra lh&lt;•r for "well-made.
s0nsihl&lt;' and honest" clot hes,
aulhor Danielle Steel. .Joan Rlv ·
ers. first lad)' NanC)' Reaga n: ~
New Yo rk Mets star l&lt;elth ~
Hernandez, Atla nta Mavor An· ~
dn•w Youn g. actress ' Linda _..
Eva ns and economist Louis •Rukeyser.
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NORTHWOOD, Ohio - Mr.
and Mrs. David F . Wilson, 2128
Drouillard Rd.. Northwood,
Ohio, will c.elebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary on April 26
with a reception hosted by their
children.
·
Wilson and the form er Maggie
Inez Sht'!'ts were.. married Apr il
17. 1937 I~ Gallipolis. He was
employed lor .14 years by theC&amp;O
Railway, retiring In 1975. Mrs.
Wilson worked for 12 years a 1
Rowe Industries, retiring in 1980.
They have five .child ren , Waf,
son Wilson. Washington Court ·
house; Harry ·Wilson, Tyler,
Texas, . 'Mrs. Marlene Paugh,
Columbus. Mrs. Da rlene E nyart.
Reynoldsburg a nd Theresa
· Boyle, Northwood. Tiley have 17
grandch ildren and I great grandchild.

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The tallest American chestnut tree ~
in the world is 82 feet high. It can be •
found in Oregon City, Ore.
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On March 5, 1770, British troops

fired on a Boston mob, killing five
people, including Crispus Attucks, a
black man who reportedly led the · George Bush is the '4~'r&lt;l vice presi·
group.
denl of the United States.
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QUIZ

FACTS

Are

yo~r

Oalll"" 011 451:11

ALL SERVICES ARE CONFIDENTIAL!

•lit!., I '-"P •lel ·lll Ytnfl Ltl'le!
•SIMI •ICHot o'ooi l .....
•Mute 111!1 DKk •SIIttr f....:el SII Ht

DNo

•ffiU VACUUM CLEAIIIII

Money Market rates uncompetitive?

D~

Ata~•• • P.o. 11u 4la •

Screening an.d . Evaluation
Individual and Family Couns1ling
Consultations
Presentations to Community Groups
Books, Films, Tap11, Pamphlets

Are your CD' s renewing at lower rates than yoU: .
want?
. · :.
DYes

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neatne.r:r

IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW HAS AN
ALCOHOL AND/OR DIUG PROBLEM•••
CALL US FOR:

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Do you still want to shelter income from current
taxes? ·
DYes
DNa

24'•15'SWIM AREA

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j:S;~:345':(;'94•6&lt;oo} ~=~::;a~~

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Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 1:30·4:30
Phone: 446·7166
FO~E!tLY
GALLIA COUNTY ATOHOLISM PROGRAM

Gern'f.:e and F.li-: ;abeth Horak

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florak a·nniversary i.r celebrated

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' POMEROY - George and Monsignor Donald E. Horak
Horak celebrated their Athens. anci th ree daughters:
!ijlth wedding anniversa ry ~on Ruth A. Lewis, Bellefontaine;
Mar ch 29 at their home . .'i:l4 W. Rose M. Denison , Pittsburgh.
l'llai n St. Pomeroy.
Pa., and Barbara J. Smith.
=Mrs. Horak is the daught er of Pome'roy; and two ado pted
tf.le lat e Andrew and Leora daughters, Janet Zwilling Si mp·
::W, illing of Pomerov. He Is is the son, Pomeroy, and Carolyn Zwll·
. ""n of thr late George and Anna ling Lewis, Wht'!'ling, W.Va.
ijorak of Youngstown.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Horak have 16
••
gra
ndchildren and ·one J&lt;rea t·
~ :" Th e ~o uple have one son. .:tandchlld.

Are you looking for alternatives to help you make
your money grow faster?·
DYes
DNo

~Iizabeth

If you answered YES to any of these questions, you
need to attend a free seminar discussing ways to
help make the new tax laws work to your advan·
tage.

to

Remember"
Let Haskins-Tanner s"are in your '
special prom evening. Stop by and .
see our Prom Window Display and
make your tuxedo selection now.
PRICES STAll AT

S2995

TURKE¥

~x-tobacco

Dat e: MayS, 1987
. Time: 6:30 P.M.
Place: Holiday Inn
Sponsored by:
Jim Morrison
Integrated Resources Equity Corporation
530 Second Avenue, Suite (
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

io
•

salesman says forced
smoke two cartons a week

; ' SAN FRANCISCO 1UPI1- A Co., and Liggett and Myers
, 6:2'-ye~r- old ex·C'Igarettc sales· Tobacco Co.. the attor ney said.
:.r)liin who says hr was forced to
&lt;sllJokc two cartons a week flied
:"'tAr., nation•s first
worker's rom'
.
:'il&lt;'l\satlon claim for chronic lung
.;d!S'&lt;&gt;ase allegedl )' caused by
&gt;srtroklng.
&lt; ~iames McEvoy, 62, " had to
·:Smoke" the two cartons a week
:pn the job a nd his employers
:·"Checked lo make sure you were
· ,"t)o~l n g the sa mples," he said .
• ~cEvoy's al!orney, • Victoria
lin l$-YUILIIlEIIMum
:r.a1ses, sa id Friday ' that McE ·
, Q.v's worker's compensation
.r lllim seeking dlsablllt)' pay·111l'nt s and demanding th at to·
)~(O companies pay Ills medl·
Beauty, Qudtr, Price
cal bills was thr first of its kind In
Wt, If WIIIPIPII' Super·
· the nation.
muket, carry tmper iol
:'lis part of his work," she said,
Wtltptper In 1tock at Dis·
count Prices. Ptus a large
~!' was req uired to smoke
of tmperiat
sotectton
~garettrs on the job. He was
WtltPiper Bookl ol Groot
~tt'·en approximately two cartons
Savlf191.
~)lleck to do this with.".
·
D1cEvoy was required to
smoke while setting up cou nter
displays and making sales
1)1khes to customers , a common
· fll'!ictlrc before smoki ng was
: ~¢oJ&lt;nlzed as a health haza rd.
,_.ltAIIcanuuwt
:lie attorney sa id.
: -:~cEvoy worked from 1952
· · · ru
" 110211:-4132
· ~1111961 as a tobacco sa lesman
AVE.
:;will again briefly In 1961 lor
DGINIOWM llllmiiOTOM
· ~eral comoanles lnrludlng
Acrtll fnlll lilt
C..r
: )'iilnlp Morris Co.. Unit ed States
:,.dbacco Co .. the Loris Co.: ?llllb

HUNTERS' SPECIALS

•.. .

"

IMPERIAL WALLPAPER
HAS IT ALL!

·8 97our

•
10.97
Nitro MCIIfiUIII'" IMIII

Extended range but*ld

139.97

magnum&amp;.

Sale Price
stevena~ Savogee 67 Pump Shotgun
· Full choke pump.acllon shotgun wllh
3" chamber, vent rib. Available In 12 gauge. Save now!

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

Our t0.97, t2 IJQIIIJI,
~:

Our tur. t2 aaue-.

1", .......... ......... ' ·''

279.97
Pump

Our t2.t7, t2 gaue.,
, .. , 4 -

Sale Price

.... ......... 9.97

Our 9.97, 20.gouge,
2llo",4 - ........... 7.97

lltlmingtone 870 Vent-Rib
Action lttotgun
Pump.acflOn shotgun Is chambered tor 3" magnum shells.
Available in 12 or 20 gauge. Right hand only. Shop nowt

COlE .. TODAY!
WALLPAPER
SUPER MARKET
AND lUND SHOP

12-gauge,

214", 2 &amp;hot. Save now!

Hunting Licenses Sold In Our Sporting Goods Dept.

2.97

OUr 3.47
Cholca Of Dloptwame
Chooaa either "Big Tom"
or "WOOdsman". Savel

5.97

OUr 6.97

Sloltlcrotch Turkey Coli
300% more slate. Loud.

..

9.97 Our

11.97
DtluM Gobblt IOK

Double tone chamber.

WE ARE HERE FOR YOU

URGENT CARE·
CENTER
---EMERGENCY RO

lrllwhlt willie WIIMDy 16. Me purchase
...., Hf

STAmD IY DOCTOIS
24 Noun A Day-7 lap A Week

VOEIANS
- - - MEMOIIAL HOSPITAL ·
llrfn. P1

PH. 991-t1M

I

•f

10.97

•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds

Our12.97
Simple llrlller loll
'sJmpllciJy In ute. Savel

•Lift Chairs
•Wheel Chairs
•Diabetic Supplies
•Ostomy

•Decubitia Care
•Walkers

•Beside Commodes
•StethOICOptl

•Underpad1
•Adult Briefl

MCe~sary.

1M pran•t to win.

446-7213
SIIVIIG SOW.ASJEiftl

rM)\

115 hat lUll ltJII

Regiyer to Win one of
these three prize$ for your
Prom Night:
1st Prize: FREE. TUXEDO RENTAL
·2nd Prize: Fm D..NER FOR TWO
3rd Prize: FREE CORSAGE FOR YOUR DATE

PIORSSIOIALlY STAFFED
7 Days A Wetk - 9 a.111. to 9 p.m.

~

w. Va .

41? 112 -

$40

RIO GRANDE - A "Stop
Smoking Workshop," to be he ld
May 4, 7. 11 and 14. Is being
sponso red by the Counseling
Center at Rio Grande College and
Communi I)' College.
The workshop, which will mt'!'t
from 3: 30 (l.m. until~ p.m., will
be held In the board room In the
James A. Rhodes Student Cen·
rrr . All participants should ar·
ranJ&lt;e to be present for all four

.-

fAMILY .ADD101'101f COiaGHili TDA'DID'riiDIC. . DfC.

SNlti ,..,1,
llo&lt;k.

Stop smoking
clinic scheduled

i

about thotn. 1hly
notda
...
and a
bOard to ad '
sor. A til reflector is
to ""'""'· •i&gt;ri.·
li!lrt imo the sllado&lt;l · at the~- h
wffl also bJod&lt; sqmo of tllo wind.
·
toot. tor side f9mng for 1soot oiled.
frumt wilh tllo imago, timg tllo
,
,... diaganal....,...;tiool Try lao: a dart. •
undut~e&lt;od bad&lt;9'- The sky. ~ ~.
is bettor 11m • distroding bad&lt;9'111111L
l toom lens ton be a good mocrofocusing
lens. Aset of dose"p lens fillers will work
well with any lens to get you deser.
Jhe basit (onctrn is to uSt the I"'!OIIisf
operture which will allow 1/itOth or (as.
ter shutter spttd. lkt a firm rest for the
camera at any shutter speed. Wait for
the flower to stop moving in te wind.

:.

MF;WS COUN.TY
POMERO\'- Bookmob ii&lt;.•ser- .
vice In Meigs County is by
conlracl wit h Ohio Valley Area
Libraries.
Monday : Carpenter, Laura's
Store. 2: 55·3: 40; Dexter church,
4: 10·4: 40; Danville church. 5: 1.16: Rutland Civic Center. 6:457:45.
Tuesday: Porta nd post office.
~ .1; Letart Pa lls, Effie' s Resta urant,:!: :ro-4: :lO: Racine ba nk,
5: 15-6: 15; Syracuse across from
ball field, 6: 30· 7: .10.
Wednesday: Keno. north sidr
of bridge, 2: 20·,1: 05; Lo ng Bottom post offl~e . .1: 20·4: 05: Reeds·
ville, Reed 's Store; 4: 15·5:
Tupper's Plains. Lodwick' s, 6·7:
Chester fire station. &lt;'Or ner
across front. 7: 15·8.

.

..

Wilson
. .
anntversary
'
reception set

Your
Photos

Please call 446-1986 to reserve your seat.

Th&lt;• WOJ'kshop will be free to all
who are interesled In "kiCking
the habit ." Registration Is li mited to a maximum of 15
participants. To regis ter. Interested Individuals are urged to
cont act the Counseling Center
Immedia tely by ca lling 1614)
245·5353. or toll-free In Ohio
1·800·282·7201, e~t. 279 .

•'

•

In the service__~--

Pike Jet .. 4: 20-4:40; Surd 's,
5·5: 15; Crow n Ci ty, 5: .'l0-6: 05;
Roma Myers. 6: 15-6: 30; Ohio
Townhouse. 6: 45· 7: 10; Kenny's
Carryout, 7: 25·7: 50; Teens Run,
&gt;·8: 25.
'
Satu rday: Legrande, 9: .10-JO;
Raccoon Trailer Ct .. 10: 15-10: 30;
Cora. 10:35-10: 50; Quail Creek,
11 :05·11:35; Rodney Village,
12: 20·12: 50: Ch ildren's Home.
1·1:20; CRTP, 1:25·1: :.0; Alice.
2: 15·2: 45 ; Vim on. 3-.1:30: Mor·
gan Cenler. 3: 45·4: 15.

sPsslons .

I

•

RACINE - Mrs. Reba . D.
Greene an nounces the engage·
men t and approach ing marriage
of her daughter, Dawn Roberta
Greene, lo Timmy .Joe Smith, son
of Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert E. Smith
of Syracu se. She is Is also the
daught er of the late Do nald E.
Crcenf'.
f he open church wedding will
take place on June 6 at 2:.'!() p.m .
at th e Bethany Methodist
Church, Racine.
The brlde·el.ert Is a graduate of
Sout hern Hi gh School and is
employed at Vaughan 's Cardi nal
of Mlddleporl.
Smith attends Sout hern High
School. and Is em ployed at
Whaley's Auto Parts of Shade.

4: 15·4: 30; Addavllle Scllooi,4: 405: 05; R&amp;R Trailer Ct., 5:15-5: 45;
Georges Creek, 5:45-6: 15;
Georges Creek , 6:20-6: 40; Ka ·
nauga 5th Ave., 6: 50·7: 10; Fos·
t.ers Trailer Cr., 7: 15·7:40; K&amp;K
Trailer Ct., 7:45-8:05.
Wednesday: No route. mainte"
nance day._
Thursday: Imogene Church's
Store, 1:30-3: 30; Mudsock, 3: 45·
4; Palr)ot, 4: 15·4: 40; Cj!dmus,
4'.50-5: 15; Gall!a , 5: 30-6; Cen terpoint. 6:15-6:30: Centerville.
6: 45· 7: 15; Copley's, 7:35-7:45:
T,horne's, 7: 45·8.
Friday: Eureka, 1·1: 15; Huf·
fman's, 1:25-1: 40; Ki ngery's,
1:45-2; Myers.2: 25·2:40; Mercer·
ville, 3:25-3: 40; 790 Small. 3: 50·4:
790 Halley, 4-4: io; 790 Lincoln

.

Pomeroy-· Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

''

Gal(ia, Meigs bookmobile routes ~nnounced

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence R. Lee are an nou ncing
the engagement and approach·
lng marriage of their daughler;
Dianna Lynn Lee, lo David L.
Roush Jr .. son of Mrs. Mary M.
Roush , a nd lh&lt;' la te David L.
Roush Sr .. Lei art, W.Va .
The wpdding wilt take place
.July 18 al 6: :lO p.m. at the First
Church of God. New Haven,
W.Va.
The bride·elect is a gradualeol
Meigs High School and the
Buckeye Hi lls Schoo l &lt;Jf Nursing.
Roush graduated from Wa·
ham a Hi gh School and served six
years In I he U.S. Marine Coros.

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs .
Gilbert Spen&lt;'er, Chester, an·
nounce the ap'proac hing mar·
rlagc of their dau ght er. Debra
Renee Spencer, lo .Jam(•s Ml ·
chael StaplPton. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Stapleton, West ·
&lt;·heste r, Il l.
. Th&lt;• W&lt;'ddlng will lake plaee
May 16 at the First Assemblv of
God, Whea ton, lll.
·
: The bride-elect Is a grad uate of
Eastern High School and Is
employed as a sa les correspo nd·
~nt with the .James River Cor'po·
ration. Oak Brook, Ill.
· Stapleton graduated from Proviso West High School in Hills ide,
Ill., and Northern Illinois Univer·
slty. He Is employed as a
communications lechnlrian with
AT&amp;T In &lt;;'hlcago, Ill.

.,

-.

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

Lee- Roush

SpencerStapleton

.

..

April19, 1987·

Page~ B-2-The Sunday

Dawn Roberta &lt;lreene
Timmy .Joe Smith

;;;

.97

Sole Price '
Dtnlll 2-JIIIoe CMUulagllull
Ful cul2-pleet COlton comouftoge suds In
.U.
medium, lorgeond extro-l.a1ge.

•l

....... ... ..... 1.11

... 14t1

o•o &amp; W.VA.

4.97

OUr
6.97
CGIIIO Headnel

Shields toce, maakl
• hunter. Shop now!

2.97
~~;.4, 47 3.97 ~~;
c-lfY!e
Hall
Baseball or roll-up.
Our 1.97, .ron.. 11Y1t. U7

s Homecare
..

•

CcnoMok•upKH
Black. brown. g(een
face rnok•up In COlt.

�THE CORNER OF GENERAL HARTINGER
PARKWAY AND PEARL STREET IN MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

TELEPHONe: 992·3471

STORE HOURS ARE:
8 A.M. to 10 P.M.-7 DAYS A WEEK

,

AD EFFEaiVE'SUNDAYt APRIL 19 THRU SATURDAY, APRIL 25
~ALLEY

U.S.
. GRADE AFRYER

BELL

·Rc
COLA
RC 100, DIET :RITE

2"/o OR

THRIFTY PAC

FRVER PARTS

.Whole .Milk

VALLEY

BELL

BU~

MILK

8/16 OZ. RET. CTN.

BU~

1, GET 1

1, GET 1

1ft 8AL.
~ALLEY

PER LB.

PER LB.

U.S. GRADE APORK LOIN

YOUR CHOICE

·

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEf CHUCK

IXED
.BONELES-S
PORK CHOPS CHUCK·STEAK ·

49

" PER LB.

~1EAT

VALUES

OSCAR MAYER

::.~:~t . \~~M~A· $169
OSCAR MAYER
CHEESE, BACON , CHEDDAR or
NACHO STYLE

'

Hot Dogs .... Jt.v.

. Boneless
. en~gllsh Roasts

Beef
Cubed Steak

Par Lb.

+

Box

Steak or
$229
Roasts .... ml~.

VAIJOHAM'S IIOMEMAOE

Chicken Salad

Ptr Lb.

VAIJOHAM'S EXCLUSIVE

fer c•·~· or
W•e•ttlilu

Pet U.

$269

~AUOIIAM'S

$16'9

CO-JACK

PerL~.

OLAZED, BAKEO

Sweet Potatoee

"'

PerL~.

Cheese

P•r L~.

99+
89+

*2''

.

Juioe
Sl•tl•• Chilli ....... MHo ...

$269
Lo•thor• Chien ..... .t.~ ...
KRAFT llltuttellt, Mllj " s._, ..,u., $119
KRAFT MILD

Mtrgarlne
s ,•.

. $129

PILLDHY lit C.lilt'f, ltt4 '• llfhry er
etletfhr~ Style
2/$109

Bltellft......................
Re11 Cret•

·

To'' •t '·"\'"· $109
$119

,,.
...
0•1••
.,,
.....
\t,\'r, ..
FLEISGIIIIUI'S CORN OIL
9
9.
nra o.Lnao .
$109
••, ••,,............t.t.llk"""
lltttlllll~ ..............., ••.
Shr..~ .. Ch11m ...JANo ...

VOIBI

Oo.ltl u " ·
IUV I
o Noodlu ............. OET 1 FREE
MUILLERI RE8., Tlllll t ••·

FREE

S hattl ...................... FREE
$ 99

CORN, GREEN BEANS or
PEAS

$ 99

1t·14Vt
OZ. CAMS

Snack Paek Pddl• ..... $129

....................~.,,... *1 59
. '
$249
Furniture Polieh .... Jt.Y..

BIRDSEYE aer. ct•.

BIRDSEYE tt oz.

Cool Whip

Awake

BUY 1, GET 1

BUf 1, lET 1

FRESH 8REEN

$299

.. tf.v.

$449

Towell .....llttiAtJI.

s·9•

lt. 811eh

2" ·

es

rw~ ••
c••,.,..... 11••$169 Ora fruit

,,.

..•.

JIICV SWEET

Qt.
B.ltkat

S Etrt

FLORIDA WHITE OR PIMK

89t
9t
39
19
69

Michigan
. Apples

Ida Re•
'Rome Baa~ .
or _ lnesap

,.,

s 1~.

.

IIIOW WHITE

Mae~roo••

7
.:;:

1

TIIOROFAaE

Fro•eh frlet ............u .... ·
U'(\Hh

29 . Ma~ei . Oraa

WICK'S Pll. OI.AZI
.

79•
WIE
$279 PIUSIUY
Teaster Str..oi ....UYsn...... *1 Sf
Fro• C•l•kt• .......M~.n• ...
IINIJ
••,.•• D, ••.,......... . $149 I&amp;W
Mill PIDII •••••••••,•.••••• S/*100
.
IIOiorMI
00
....... s!•1oo
Cer•
" Pt~a ........tt.K-.. ~/*1
~
ORE·IM toLNIIItiiiiCLES

•

8et•ro011 Tltaua ,~,,,u,'.\o, 89+

CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS

.·

. FREE

W/C

·

PRODUCE VALUES

.

FREE .

IUf t

FRESH LIKE

SUPER DIP ~ANILLA

Br.occoli .
TENDER SWEET
Strawberries Carrots

·or-nge

$12 9

TOMATOES
t6 OZ. CAN
BUY 1, GET 1

FREE
lOll
CARTON

CALIFORNIA
RED RIPE SWE.ET

GOLD

KRAFT SLICED AMDICAII

PORK 'N BEANS
40 OZ. CAN
·BUY 1, CET 1

Mackarel ..........lt,,".. .- 69

FlORIDA

64 oz. Ctn. .

SNOW FLOSS

IJAR·tiiiT

.

$149·

W/C

SNOW FLOSt.

Top Round

Brllltl, Or11111, Thlth

BUY.1,_CET 1

ICE CREAM

USDA CHOICE BEEF ROUND

DELI SPE[L\LS
HOMEMADE
49
PetLb. $2
Cole Slaw

Hatrt Salad

Dill Dip

$149
Meatc •••• J.Ii.,h••

$ 19

1LB.STICKS

[()()KIN~

~AUOHAM'S ·HOMEMADE

S111ck

. Pia Flllln ,,,,,... *119

Lunch

Pick of the Chicken·
· Per Lb.

r=.::....:.M=u•=tard="-=8E:.:....:T1:...::...:FR:..:.=E~E ' ,

SUPERIOR ~ARIETV

U.S. GRADE AFR1ER

$499

BUV t

SER~E
99~
Bacon •••• J.Ihl~...
. ·

$229

ARGARI E
W/C

CRISPY

'

Boneless
Riheye Steak

II()J\IIE

Broasted Chfekin

Per Lb. '

.
IJSOA CIIOICE BEEF RIB

KAHN'S

~AUOHAN'S

,$199 .

BLUE BONNET

CHICKEN OF THE SEA
OIL OR WATER - 6112 OZ.

BUY 1, GET 1

THOROFARE to.s ...

LEAN, TENDER '

$189

Big Red
$229
Smokies .J~~~.w.

PER LB.

W/C

W/C

TUNA

59

IJSOA CHOICE BEEF CIIUCK

Per Lb. .

&amp;ELL

Ort•l• J1i11 ...........1111o ...

.

.

tl OZ. PICI.

f~E'ItUL.

2~

SliCED AMERICAN

or Wlttlt Milk

SIMILES CHEESE

v.......

ant, en'

*129

r

I

.

�- ,.

•

I

APiil19, 1987
SUNDAY
Sun rise services :
6 a.m ., King' s Chapel Church.
6: 30 a .m.. Flrsr Baptist
Chu rc h, at Fortification Hill.
Chcs nlre Charge ' of United
Melhodls l Church at Kanauga
Fair Haven, 6:30 a .m.
. 6 a .m.. Silver Memori al
Church.
6:30 a.m.. Nor th up Baptist
Church.
6: .1() a .m.. Ha r ris Baptist
Chu rch, breakfast at 8.
6· a.m., Faith Temple lode·
pe ndent Church .
6: 30 a .m .. Ce nt e nary Uni ted
·Methodist s Church; .re fr es h·
menls at 9:.111 a.m.
6:30 a. m., E li zabeth Chapel
•·Church.
·
6:30 a .m.,' VI ctory Baptist
Church : light breakfasl follows.
6 a.m .. Springfi eld Baplisl
Church.
6 a.m .. Deer Creek Freewil l
Baptlsl Church.
6:.10 a .m., first Chu rc h of God,
back parking lot .
6: :lO a .m., Poplar . Hld gc
Church .
6:30 a.m .. Bidwell Mcthodisl
Church .
aud Mn . MidM:I L He11tfJhill
7 a.m. , Good Hope United
Bapl ist Church: refres hm ent s
foll ow .
6 a .m ., Prospert Baptist
Church.
6 a.m . . Addison Freewill Ba p·
lis t Chu rch.
6::10 a .m., Vallcy Freewill
RODNEY - Cha rl rnr Ham· brother, Oa viu Ha mm ond , the
Baptisl
Ch urch.
mons and Mi chat' l Lcl' Hemphill hridr worf' a sat in, pear h·rolored
G:.30a .m., MI. Pleasant Baplist
were&gt; unll cd in marriage• Nov. 2~. gown , rrimmPd with beige. pro·
1986 al the Rodney Church of vldrd by a spr·cial friend . She Church.
6::10
God . Their parents' arc Glen and wore a strand ol' pea r ls, given by
the
~ro
o
m
's
mothrr
a
nd
thr'
Eileen Hammons of Rodnt•y and
bride's Mi ss Ca Ilia County crown
Le~ and Bett y Hemphill of
hrld her bridal vr il. Shr carr ied
Northup.
The Rrv . Bill CannouP prr· falkolorcd ea rnar io ns with one
form t'&lt;l the n·rrmo ny. Mu sh· was yellow tulip .
Paul and Hobe rl il Duncan
provided b ~· SuP Murra y,
wr re bes t ma n a nd matron of
orga nist.
honor.
Given in marriage by ht•r
The couple rc•s ld r in Crow n
parenls, and '' scor red by hPr Ci ty M I he Hemphill Farm.

Mr.

Charlene Hammons exchanges
vows with Michael L. Hemphill

Cha pel. .
Silver Run Baptist Church,
7: 30a.m.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
143. 6:30a.m .
Chester Uniled Melhodlsl, 6: 30
a.m .
Hysell Run Holiness &amp; a .m.
First Southern Baptist Church,
6: .10 a .m. at Rock Spri ngs Fair·
grounds: moved to church in
event of rain: refreshmenls
follow .
Mount Union Baptlsl, 6:30a.m .
Wes leya n Bi ble Holi nes s
Church, 6:.10 a.m.
EVERGREEN - Easter program by youth and ca nt ata by
adult choir, Sunday, 7:.10 p.m ..
West erman Methodist Church.
CAt:LIP6LIS - Lighthouse
Assembly of God services. Sun·
day : breakfasl and fellowsh(p.
9: :lll a .m.; worship, 10:30.
MERCERVILLE - Revival
begins Sunday at Good Hope
Bapt isl Church, co ntinuin g
th rough April 24 with Richard
S! ecle.
CROWN CITY - Bride of
Chr is t singers wi ll be at Liberty
Chapel, 10 a .m . Sunday; egg
hun t.
CROWN CITY ·- Specia l ser·
vice at Mina Chape l Church.
Sund ay. 9:45 a. m. No sunda y
Sc hool.
CROWN CITY - Spelcal ser·
. Zion Missionary

Baptist Chu rch, Sunday , 10 a.m.
CENTENARY - Sunday ser·
vtce at Centenary United Christian Chu rch, 10 a .m. wilh Chris·
tlan Messengets and Rev .
Richard Lowell; Heaven Bound
Four a nd Rev . Donnie Johnson at
7p.m.
LECTA - Services al Wai nut
Ridge Chu rch. Sunday, 7 p.m..
with Rev. Jack Berry. ~
MONDAY
GALI,.JPOLIS - Job's Daugh·
ter s meet Monday, 7 p.m..
Masonic Temple.

&lt;

VINTON - Vinlon Fricndship
Carden Cl ub meets TuE'Sday, 1 ,
p.m .. at the home of Opal Dunn . •

ELEGANTLY
TRADITIONAL

GA l.LIPOLIS - St. Peter' s
Episcopal Churchwome n meet
Mond ay, noon. Holy Land -presentation by Nancy Reed of Grace
Episcopal. Pomeroy.
KANAUGA - Neig hbo r hood
Walch meers Monday ,·7: 30p.m .,
Holiday Inn. ,

GALLIPOLIS - River by Wri·
trrs meet Monda y, 7-8: .10 p.m.
Bring manuscrip ts.
RACINE- Ra cine Merchan ts'
Association meet Monday, 7
p.m ., fir ehouse annex.

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

,......
· · -Science notebook.·-- Activist says raising PG kids not easy task

CHESHIRE - Cheshi re Town·
ship Trustees meeting, 5:30p.m ..
township building in Kyger.

GALLIPOLIS
Ga llipolis
Busi ness and Professiona l
Women meel Monda)'. 6:30p.m ..
Dow n Under.

CA LLJPOLJ S - Ca th olic
Women Club of St . Louis Ch urch
meets Monday, 6:30 p.m ., co·
vercd dish dinner.

$8995

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. $29·5

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TAWNEY
JEWELERS

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422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

TUESDAY

·"'
The Sunday Times· S~ntinel-Page-B· 7

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'For
Spri

By United Press International ·
·
V.DT complalnlji : Many of lhe he.a lth complain ls associated
, with Ihe use of video display terminals are caused by where and
.h.ow the scr eens are placed and not the devices themselves Ihe
~ · American Medical Associal!on says. ,
·
'
.• Bul with 15 million VDTs In use In the United States a nd 100
' ~illlon projected by the year. 2000, it is imporlan t to continue to
rnvestlgate whelher the terminals are causing birth defects or
any olher health problems, lhe AMA 's Council on Sclenlific
Affa irs concluded recently.
.
The AMA reporl was prompted by public concern over til~
widespread use of VDTS. whi ch emit radiation.
However, lhe AMA, afler reviewing all of lhe available
research, concluded "No assoclalion has been fou nd thus far ,
; between radiation emiss ions from VDTS and reported
, spo nlaneou s aborllons, birth defecls, catara cts a nd ot her
.; in juries:"
..
-; ~The council concluded many of the headaches, backac hes and
olher problems associated wilh VDT use cou ld be allributed to
:; Improperly pla ced equipment or incorrect Jighlin g. The AMA
;, re~ommended measures be taken il)'lmmedlalely to correct
•. lhese problems.
"For the moment. It is essential to realize thallhe nalureof
Ihe task may be more responsible for workers symp toms !han
Ihe equlpmenl, " they said.
Soviet heart dlsea•e: A 10-year sludy of heart di sease
sufferers under lhe age of 30 has found thai truck drivers.
welders, foundry worker s and farm machine operators are the
mo sl like.ly to suffer from cardiovascular diseases because of
high ex posure to lead and mercury. the Tass news agency says.
Professor Dmllry Zerbino of th e University of Lvov in th e
Ukraine was quoled by Tass as saying the study showed " that
.• viriUally all the young people with heart condilions have a
: highrr content of lead in their blood Ihan the norm ."
·: "The !bodies ofr young people who di ed from hea r! a ll arks
' also contain higher lead concen trat ions," Ze rblno said.
·
; The study was condurled in five Ukrainian cit ies over a pe riod
, of 10 years and Included lhousa nds of sampl es.
• Zerblno said a com parison of hospita l records showed !hal
; serious heart diseases a'mong young people under Ihe agr of 30
; was ra re 20 years ago.
"Now there are quite a'!ew rases, affecti ng most allen certain
occ upations , such as drivers , welders, fo undry men and fa r m
• machin e operators ha ndling poisonous c hem icals," he said .
"Onr of l he main ca uses of grave llearl cond itions Is the
accumulation in the body of allen subslan ces , predomlna lefy
: heavy metals, including lead a nd mercury," he sa id.
Zerbino sa id Soviel srienlists were working on " special
• absorbants"lhat would clean Ihe bloodstream of heavy metals.

•

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By SUE ALLISON
NASHVILLE, Tenn. tUPI) Tipper Gore says few parent s
whose children were at a Beastie
Boys. concert lasl month · In
Memphis. Tenn., knew the show
Included a huge inflatable male
sex organ. And the appalled wife
of a Tennessee senato r has issued
a rail to arms for America n
parents.
" I want to offer them a very
rea l hope !hal we can re.asser t
some control over the cullural
environment in which our child ·
ren are rai sed." Gore, Ihe wife of
Democratic Sen. AI Gore Jr.,
says in a p;Jrents' guidebook she
ha s wrillen.
The mother of four said most
parcnl s have no idea what kinds
of lyrics th eir children are
hearing In many of the popula r
rock songs - those she calls
"porn rock ."
Gore believes young Ameri·
cans are being ruined by a sleady
diet of violence a nd sex- and she
is at th e forefront of a campaign
to make parents aware.
She sa id she is no! advoc:Jiing
cen sor~hip, as so me of her critics
have claimed, b~t believes par·
ents should take a more direct
inlerest In whal their children
see and hear at movies. on
televisio n and In songs.
"You have compani es selling
sex and vio lence to young kids.
They a re strip-min ing our cultu r~ a nd not payln~ allenl ion ro
the scars they leave," Gore sa id.
Those inc·lude CBS Records ,.
whi ch handles !he Beast I!' Boys,
and NBC television, which ha s
"Miami Vice," Gore said In an .
lnlervie w.
"Look at compa nies lhal pro·
duce a ny of lhe ra un chy acts, "
she said . ·
Gore hera me &lt;'oncer ncd about
violence on IC'Iev lsion when her
oldest daughter, now 13. was a
toddler. Go re and t h ~ Congres·

slonal Wives Task Force con·
el uded it Is a serious problem .
"Never before have so many
children been exposed to such
violence. 11 Is desenslllzing us.
We are a very vlolenl society and
we need to do somet hing ," she
said.
Gore also wa s a founding
member of Ihe Parenls' Music
Resource Center - a group
trying to et up a ralln~ syslem
for records and ta pes such as Ihe
ratings give n to movies.
Now. Gore has wrille n a
parents' guidebook,· 'Raising PC
Ki ds In An X· Raled Society"
tAblngdon Press, 219 pp. $12.95 ).
Book stores bough! up the Initial
run of 00,000 and Abingdon
ordered a second printing even
before the book was officially
reieased April 1.
The book gives stra lght!Or·
ward advice, sa id Core, who
holds a Masters Degree In
psychology from Peabod y Co l·
lege In Nashvllle. 11 will help
parent s "navt~:ate our media·
based cult ure by offering very
specific advice and solutions."
"Raising PC Kids In An
X·Ra ted Society'' includes lyrics
of so me songs Core finds offt•n·
slvr or d a n~erou s . She cit es
"Suicide Solution" by Ozzy Os·
bourne a nd " Relax" by I he band
Frank ie Goes to Hollywood as
exa mples .
The book end s with a list of
orga nizations a nd companies
where parents ca n write 10
&lt;'O mpluin or receive more Jnf01··
mat ion about music, Jele&gt;vlslon
and
Gormovies.
e acknow leged shr feels a
lillie like the biblical David

'•

motivated by the bonom·lin e things l'vp br&lt;•n f~eli n g. They'rr• ;;;
profit. This is a media minefield l'&lt;' ady fot n hook li kf' ! his. I want "'~·
we have lo negotlale. I wa nt ro moliva1(' purrnt s 10 br .mo rp·:;
people to feel connected again. invo iV('d and gi V(' thrir f0C&gt;dbark : ·
~
They can do something a bo utlt. " to those inclu striP.s." s hr said.
Gore, whose hu sband is seek·
lng the Democrats' 1988 presi·
Zippers
.....
denllal nom ln ullon. said shr Is
...
not won·ied aboul hclng depicted
According to "The Twentieth Ccn·:
by her critics as a prude.
tury: An Almanac," Gideon Sundbac k~
" II'S definitely worth it. l'm of Hoboken , N.J., obtained a patent:
very comfort able wilh mysrlf." for a "separable fa stener" - mesh e~ c'
she said.
teeth on parallel tapes ~ in ' 19 1 3 .~·
The Gores pay rlose allen lion · Sondback 's device wa s soon manula q~
to !heir r hlldl'en - rhrre girls lu red by the Talon Slide ·~:~d~:·~~~
ages J:l. 9 a nd ~ a nd u son. 4. They Company. In 1922, the B.F, G
monlt.or !heir TV and movie company coined the word "zi. nne,..;~,
viewing a nd listen to the n'&lt;'ord s lor the slide ra slener~ of their rublbe•·
boots.
they buy .
" Kids rea lly wan t you ro be
The Hindenburg zeppelin
more a pari of their world, " sht• from Lakehurst, N.J ., to Fr.mkl'uri '
said.
Germany, in 42 hours, 53 mi1nut1e~
"We deplorr• the levels of from Aug. 9 to Aug. 11 , 1936.
violence on TV. We have VCI')' rt:==========~
stricl rules about that. I don' t let
them w.alch too mu ch TV - evr n
th e benign shows , alt hougt1we all
watch lht• Cosby Show together.
That 's sort of a·rllual. "
Pl'KAl.U)t
9n5776
She said the nelworks ure
Now Open for Spring Season
gullly of " reckless disregard "
lrldgo Closing Special
for the mental and physical
VEGETABLE PLANTS .
health of chlldr·en. Th r Holly·
$1 PER DOZ_IN PACK
•
wood violence spawns rra l vio·
'
lr nce. Includin g a J'eCOI'd number
S71D PER FLAT
of tee nage homicides nnd s ui·
FLOWERING PLANTS
r id es. she said.
SJ PEl SQ. PK:
Gore said she fr&gt;els duly-bo und
to cont inue her bailie llf:!a lnsl the
S7 10 PEl FLAT
corruption of America ' s child·
Shrubbery or fruit Trees, ' "
rcn . She sai d too l)'la ny roe krrs
many v~Jrieties; Easter
are singing the praises of drugs.
Potted Flowers in many
abnormal srx nnd violence.
varieties; Geraniums,
"Ot her parrots ar·r telling ml·
Violets. &amp;
Baskets.

.

HUBBARD$

GREENHOUSE·

r~lh~e:y_·v=f'...:br~e~n~fe~r~l~ln:g~lh~e-s=·a~n~wJ~::::::::::::::::~::l:·S:::!

taking on Go liath.
"This Industry is extremely
powerful," she said of the e nter·
lal nm ent business . " And ll 's

••••'!'!fllllll!'~~----•••••••••••

" '

SYLVANIA 20 , SUPERSET
NOW
ONLY

from

The
Shoe
Cafe
300 Second

ls~:-:r~ru;~~[~~
MARRIED APRIL 4 murrled hy Nyle Borden, Aprll4, at 1934 Chatham Ave.,
A retepUon lollowcd the wedding and lhe hrlde's luhle featured u
seven·ller take.
MEMBERS EMERGENCY
SERVICE

NEW LISTING

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Auto Center

M1·. and Mrr. Michar:l R. Ste/l'cnt

PHONE: Day- 992·3053

Night- 742-2048

Deborah Anne Whiteley
bride of Michael R. Stewart
GALLIPOL IS - llr. and Mrs .
Daniel Whlll'ley of r;allipolis
a nnoun!'r rhr marrl:1gr• of th Pir
da ul(htrr. Dr bor:~ h Ann r Whl tr
try, to Mlt•ha el R. Si •' ll':trr . so n of
Mr. a nd Mrs. Hl"h"rd Sl&lt;•warr of
C h~s hl l'l'.

Th(• wedd ing rook pl :~r·,.. March
lO at St. Prll'r·, l ·: pt sro p:~ I
Church . Hl'l', 1\lb&lt;'l'l Ma r' Kf'llZh·
offi ciatin g. Musi l' wa s provl rlrl l

b~ ·

.lun

Automobile Club of Southeastern ·Ohio

360 Second ht.

nr.tz. org ani st , and S:JIH.h '

•

Burrhrr il nd C' lwr.vl W"lrr rs,
s l.s h'rs or 1h&lt;' grodm , voc alist s .
Sisrrrs or thr bride. Sheil" a nd
S" ncly WhiiP IPy wrrc al lrndant s.
Hi ck St r warl, brorhr• r of lhr
. groom. w:1s hf's t man .
A wt•dding dlnm•r fo llow!'d in
I hr P" ri.sh ha II.
Th!' t'ouplt• rPsldrs ar Hr. I. Jlo.,
:llr,, Chrshlw

THE TOP
FOR YOUR
CROP.

Senior Centers plan
activities for week
GAL LI PO LI S - 1\ctlvi ll••' anll
menu s for lh r w&lt;'l'k or ,\pri1 20·14
al thP Senior Clll1.r n CP nl•'r. 110
.rarkson Plkt• . ( ;allipolis. :m •:
Monday : Cr•ramtrs. ~J : :Ul·nntH1 :
chOrus , J.:t p.m.
Tlu.,.day : STOP ph)'Sical fir
nl'sS. 10::«1 ". m.
W&lt;·dnesduy: Ca rd g. rnws. 1 :1
p.m.
Thursday : Blblr stud)·. II·
noon: Herb;illsl s. 11: :ul p.m.
Frldny : Art class , 1-:l p.m.:
rrafl min l·roursr. 1·:1 p.m.
Me nu s cons lsl of:
Mondu,v : Bnrbi'Qll&lt;' . h us h
brown potat o pal l)' . rot&lt;' sla w
with green pcppcr. bun , sli ced
J&gt;('aches.
Tuesday: Brans and ham.
spinach. ruJTOI and r~r ls ln salt~d .
cornbread . Jeli ·O with lopping .
Wednesduy: Beer and JlOod lt&gt;s.
broccoli, c1·a nbrrry sauce. whPal
bread. rice' puddlnK.
Thursday:- 'Bakrd stea k with
gravy, mashrd polal oes. green
beans and corn, wheat bread.
pineapple rrls p.
Frlduy : Tuna or salmon patty
with c hresP sauce, bunered
~rsley polaloes, s liced carrots.
wheai bread. fruit cup a nd
grapefruit secllons.
ChOice ot oeverage w11 nmeats.

&lt; 't&gt;u nt ~·

PQMEORY

The Mlegs

largest gardens. Features Include:.

•· Powerful 5 hp engine with recoil start
• Cast Iron gear case
• 19"- 24" adjustable tilling
width
• Both forward and reve rse
speeds
• Local service and parts

P o m('O r~ · . ha ~

lht• followin g aetl l' ir il•s sr h('.
ll ulrd for rlw ll't'l'k of April ~11- 24 :
Monday: fl ound a nd square
dant'1'. 1.:1 p.m.
Tuesdny : Ch01·us. 1 · ~ p.m .:
bridg!' class. 1·1 p.m.
Wt• thwsd n~· :
11Jood prt•ssuJ'l'
clin ic, !t:.1(J. 1J ::\O n.m .: knllllng
r lu ss. 11l·noon: bingo. 1·2 p.m.:
bow lin ~ . 1:.111 p.m.: dance class.
2&lt;1 p.m.
Thursday: Ccr:Hnlcs. '10-noon.
Frid11y: Hound and squarl'
dunrr. 8 11 p.m .. music b)' True
Countr)·. adm iss ion Sl..'&gt;O per
person.
Menu s ro nsi&gt;r or:
Momlu~· : Crctllncd chicken on
biscuit. mas hed potatoes. r ar·
ro ts. ra ke.
Tuesduy : Cheese burger ,
mixc•d l' rg rtables , pears .
brown 1£\.
Wt•dnesduy: &amp; ef and noodles.
wax beans. orunge and grape·
Crull secllons, rookie.
Thursduy : New Enj! lan d
boiled dinne r. pearh and collage
rheese. pudding.
Friday : Roast beef sandwich,
mashl'&lt;l potalors. lima beans,
frull.
Cho ice of beverage wllh eac h
meal.

Buy now and save money on Arlens 5 hp tiller.
built to break up hard-packed soli In even the

Sf' ni or C' itlzrn C'l'nt er .

Mulbt•rry Ht'i gh ls.

GaiHpolis, OH.

CHI CAGO tUPit - Comic
arior Bill Murray go ! ro pinch hit
at Chicago 's Wrigley Field Frl·
dal' . Murrav was in lhc broad·
casti ng booih t o fill in for Cubs
announcer Har ry Caray , who Is
recovering ·from a heart att ack.
and hc!ore thai he look balling
practice. Mur ray even ma naged
to hit a co uplr of balls our of the
infield.
. Murray. who grew up In lhe
C'hicago suburbs. is a Jongllme
d ubs fan and lrics lokeepup wllh
tbem b;· watching their games on
ra ble television . "You find il tthe
Gubs on cable! In the stra ngest
places," sa id Murra1·. who
~atched two games wh ile In
South Caroli na th is wrek. " It 's
been harder lh e last co uple of
y:fars because I've been sleeping
ialel'. "
: He still do~sn ' t wa nt the Cubs
rp forsake their traditional da y
~ m rs . howe\'cr. " I don't \\'ani
tllem to change," h ~said . "Whcn
t;wake up and Ihe ~a me Is still on.
l•frel ~Dod . II gives me that ·reel
JiOod all da y' feelin g. "

Gallipolis

When the Sky ...
is
your
Ceiling
Imagine. A
soft Spring
morning. A
cup of hot
coffee. And
the sky as
your ceiling.
Sounds
inviting,
doesn't it?
Well, at
lyon-Show
we know you
~njoy

-

•••
•

~~} '(II/

•

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\/Jr/1{'

••

spending time , ·
outdoors.
And we know you want your outdoor furniture
to be as durable as it is beautiful..lyon-Show is
both. We also take exra care with finishing
wrought iron, coating with a corwbination of zinc
primer undercoating and three coats of enamel
to coat far
protection
against the
elements.

~

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•
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filter

OOorklltoltat •quare black motrl•
pktu,. tubo
•'u•h butlon electronic

Ridenour

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MOBILE 'HOME REPLACEMENT

BATH TUBS S9900

MEIGS MOBILE
HOME PARTS

900 EAST MAIN

WATERBEDS

POMEIOY

AFTER EASTER

992-5587

S*A*L*E

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RUNNING

TIME
IS

OUT

Pick an egg

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for a Fl&amp;
accessory with
bed purchase. .
I '&lt;./.:. r.l01,
I

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985-3307

CHESTER

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An
Out Of The Basket
For AFREE
Accestory. Accessories
Include: Sheets,
Mattrete Pad, Rail Caps
Set-Up &amp;
COMPLETE WATERBED

'

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And, of course, you haYI a choice of exciting
frame colors to choose from.

915·3-

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THil BA8Y OBOICB
FOR 'fOUOH CUSTOMEBB.

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NO STATE, NO STOll, NO WAIEHOUSE CAN MATCH APPAlACHIAN VALUE. YOU'Ll
Corti TO AJIPAlAOIAN WAIEAaDS FOR QUAliTY. YOU'Ll BUY FoR THE PRICE.

POINT NASANT

POMEIOY

992-2174

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COMPLETE WA TERBEDS .......... s169.00

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rtchecl mirror. Storoqt drow ~n optioool.

GOOD SELECTION

500 EAST MAIN
efrtt
Parking

logulcr ISff. Aruslo Iring '" """" tiled bod
witll 71 " hH;&gt;li..tl, heodboord w~h to.. ty

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TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

lv,. .

7416 JACKSON AYE.
675·4500

Kanawha City

Teays Valey

4910 MacColldt AYI•

Rt. 34 &amp; Putnam Vllagt

975-2573

m.ma
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*layaways

fiancing Available

Ripley
2511 S. Chunh Slreet
372·5937

•

�.,

••

Page- B-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Beat of the bend ·

There is school spirit
By BOB HOEFLICH
-Tlmes-Senllm•l Staff
Well, I declare. the s~ h ool
spirit Is beginnln~ to s how
through from
gradua res of
Meigs High
S!'hool.
Twent y grads
attl'nded th e
Tuesday , nigh t meeting of thr
new alumni associatio n - that' s
twice lh r number that has
attende.d previous mePtings and It looks like thP .June 27
reunion will get off the ground . II
will be a dance with music bv
Omega So unds a nd adva nc:,.
r11servat1ons arc $o but thl'
charge Is $7 a p1•rson at the door .
The assocla l lon wi ll rf'eei vr

reserva tions a1 P,O. Box 2o,
Middleport .
Here are some indi vidual s to
contact to get Involved In 1he new
organization : Bob Wcrrv , !Hl!;.196; .Jim Birchfield, 992-264fi or
992-2121: .Jan Davis, 992-62o:t;
Shelly Wood, 992-:!Hili. and .Ioyer·
Dill. 992-!\820.
.
The next mrr t ing of 1hP assoria!lon will be hl'ld at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at th&lt;• Main St. Pizz;J in
Pomeroy .
The group ne!'Cls your help and your n•se rvatlo n.
The Mlddleport -PomProy llola ry Cl ub sponso red IO:a.s tl'r &lt;'g~
hunt will be at 2 p.m. th is
afternoon at Grnc•ral Hart ingc·r
Park In Middleport.
Do want lo clarity onr thin g
abOut the hunt. Some of 1111 · s(lll
-eggs will ha ve slips in !lwm
lndlcatinl' thai prizes an· beingawarded by Gene Riggs, .John
Hancock lnsu ranrl' Agrnt. Com·
Is located In Tuppers Plains these
days and II will be mul'h morP
convPnienl for youngsters · find ·
lng those purtlrular eggs to take
the enclosed s lips to RogN H.vsP II
al The Farm&lt;'rs Ha nk . Rage•;. wi ll
redeem them for you and for
Gene.
·
Mlddleporl' s Rhonda Rou sh of
Elm Street wa s drlight1•d when
her coworkers al Imperial F:lrC'trl~ pr('sented her with a largr
Easter bouqu ~t or roses on
Thursday, Rhondu has be1•n
thrOUJ&lt;h some bad times with

some heallh problems but ha s
been s u~h a jewel over th e years
10 her co-workers doing special
th ings for them. No wonder they
r&lt;&gt;sponded so wel l...a nire ges1un• for a deservi ng person.
With su mmer vacation coming
on f&lt;Jsl for studen ts, .I udge
Robert Buck, Meigs County
.J uvenile .ludge, has a re minder
fot· parents and it goes like I his :
Motorcycles and their opPra tors must be lieensed to op&lt;"ratc
on any sta te, county or towns hip
rou d. Dirt bikes and the A.T. V. 's
a re not pcrmilled on these road s
without lice ns es. The judge
w&lt;J rn s .that willful destruction
don r· bv wrongful aels of minors
opera ting these vehicles ran bP
imposed against lht' minor's
parent s ha vi ng custody up to
$:t,IKXI plus the cos ts of the co urt
&lt;.~ c ti n n .

Jo'on 'wu rncd is foreCJr med

- thP judg&lt;' didn 't say that, I did .
Aml t rFcnu nl .\ ' r'l·sidenl s a f('
advi.1!'d !hut thr· Meigs Count)'
Chapter ol Alc·oho lics Anonymou s :u1d /\! -Anon will ml'el a1 7

Thursdu.v cvcninr: ut th!' Sacrl'd
ll ra rt Church, Mulber ry AV&lt;'. in
Porn (, roy.

----C'o ngra tulotions 10 Strvcn /\ .

LUBBOCK, Te'xas iUP l i- At
leas\ 900 Texas Tech University
studen ts came·fo r\l'ard during
amnesty period to confess to
unaulhor!zed use ol· MC! Tel&lt;'communications long-dista nce
access codes and promlsp restitu tion, a company spokesman
said.
MCI s pokesman 'Ja ck Polson
said from Hou ston Frld.ay \hal
aboul 900 st.udeqts ha ve talked
with MCI investigators In the
eight days of an am nesty progra m designed to allow student s
who used the codes illegally to
confess and make restitution .
Polson said that he did not
know if any more arrests would.
br made In the case, bu t said that
MCI lnvesllgalors will sll down
with police and Lubbock Cou nt y
district attorney's representat ivcs

st udent s th at cost MCI at least

'J&gt; n 000
,,b,
.

Chiefs, Tigers
repeat in 21st
.Rotary Relays .

At Jim Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile

SHOP &amp;COMPA:RE S.L·E
1987 Pontiac Bonne~ille

1987 Chev. Celebrity

4 DR. SEDAN

Fully ••ulppd with air, cruise, lilt,
power wl .. ow•, power seat, power
door loekt, AM·FM 1ltt1o ud MORE.
fletory alntlau• wheelt and uly
3,407 1111111.
Built In January 1987
Shop &amp; CoMpare

.

STATION WAGON
Tilt, tluise, rack, rallya -heals,
air. Priced to sell.
Sho~ &amp; Com~are

*12,500

*14, 500

1987 Chev. Celebrity · 1983 Chev. Chevette
Eurosport .4 Or.
4 DR.
Onlf 38,020 miles, air, aulo.,
power steering. Bellm it this car
Is NEW insl•• ud out.

)

Oald In ealor, tilt, AM-FM stereo, ·
rallye wheel•, onlf 4, 904mlles. Seelt
•ow.

Shop &amp; CoMpare

SPRING RETURNS - t\flpr an absence the pas't few days,
spflng returned to the area Saturday, Here, Iau attending the Zlsl

Shop &amp;Compare

*11 1500

GA LLI POL IS - RP vlva I Sl'l'\' 1-

ces arc planned at F' n•nch Cit)·
Baptist Ch ureh, loca!Pd north of
Holzer Mrdleal C~ nt rr on SR IIHI.
beginning Monda;·. con tinuin g
through April 26. Evang!'list will
be Rev. R"nd)' WoOd, pastor ot
Fir·s t Aaplisl Church in Logan .
Ohio. He Is the son of FrcnC'h Cil\'
pastor Rrv . .John Wood a nd hls
wife Ruth.

Wood hu s a mu ster oftl i\' inil v

degrl'&lt;' fl·om Southl'l'n Baptist
ThC'OIO!liral Se minar~ and is
working toward a doc tom te of
mlnls tr~ from Trlnlt .\' Lutheran
Seminary . Hr aiiPnded Rio
Grandr College and gradu atr d
from Ohio Unl\'et·slly with a
degree· in businPss
adm lnlst rallon .
He was also pa stor of Friend·
ship Bapllst Clturch In Coa lton
a nd Centra l Baptist Church In
Williamsburg, Ohio.
Wood has been Baptist Student
Union director at Rio Grand
College and Sunday School Dlr~c ·
tor and Moderator for the Souther n Hills Baptist 1\ssoclallon. he
was chosen one of the OutstandIng Young Men in America in

Z-28

Fulory Offlcltl ~ehlcle
fully loded with options like lilt, crulce,
AM-FM with cusette, power wln4owe,
power 4eor lockt, rack, spacial two·tone
re4 end lllver. s.~. the ••eke here.

Thle ur was just traded. Only 3,496
lew •II••· Every optlo• fou ean 1!1119·
lu. Bltek T-top wllh Ctrllllu bueht
mh. It'1 thowroo111 ln1lde and out.

Shop &amp;Compare

Shop &amp;Compare
FACTORY
PROGRAM
CARS

PRICE OF 1.

even though you ha vr ••gg-o n your
fa&lt;'e , do kt•t•p smilin g.

424 Second; Gallipolis'

DOSS WINS DISCUS THROW- Point Peasant's Kurt Doss, with
a toss of 143-6, edg~d Logan'.s Sowers (139-6) In the discus throw
during Saturday's 21st annual Galllpolls Rotary Relays.

1986 QLDS CUTLASS SUPREMES
All have air, auto., power steering, tilt, AM·FM stereo. Mileage ra11ga
13,000 to 19,08~. We hue sold 4 units this wuk. Only 5 left at thlt
1p11lal price.
It

SHOP &amp; COMPARE

9.5°/o
10.5°/o

: CINCINNATI tUPil - Eric
Davis drove In three runs with a
homer and triple and Bill Gullickson pitched a four-hitter Saturday, pacing the Cincinnati Reds
to an 8-0 victory over !he Hou ston
Astros.
. Houston startl'l' Nolan Ryan,
·1-2. the major leagues' career
strikeout leader with , 4,302,
abruptly left the game In the filth
Inning beca use of a possible leg
muscle stra in.
Gullickson, ~-0, struck out four
and walkC'd none In pitching the
Reds' first complete game thi s
season.
Davis, enjoying his eighth
multiple·hlt game this season,
cracked a solo homer In the
second off Ryan and ripped a
two-run triple off Charlie Kcrfeld
to highlight a live-run slxlh.
· With Cincinnati leading 1-0 in
the sixth, Kal Daniels opened

FACTORY
PROGRAM
CARS

J98.l

Ostomy group
changes meetin&amp;
GALLIPOLIS - The Ga llipolis
Area Ostomy Group will meet
Sunday, April 26 at 2:30p.m. In
the Ff&lt;'nch 500 room at Holz/&gt;r
Medical Center. The dat e has
been changed due 10 the Easter
holiday on Aprll19.
Bob Graves, sou theas t Ohio
United Ostomy Assoclalion representallve will be Ihe speaker,
and discuss national news or the
UOA. ,
'

9.0°/o

Single Premium Whole Ufe

(A TAX SHELTER)

Do You Quality?

1986 CHE~ROLET CAVALIERS

Call MeMel Craft

"4" to Choose From

All have air, 111a. tra•a., soad eolou ••• eqalp111ent.

SAUNDERS INS. AGENCY

437 Second Ave.

·$7995

Gallipolis

Call 446-0404

THIS WEEIC OtnY

with a homer, his third of the
year, off Jim Deshalps. Terry
Francona and Dave Parker drew
walks from Deshaies, who was
relieved by Kerleld.
Davis greeted Kerfeld wllh a
triple off center fielder Billy
Hatcher's glove near !he walllo
score Franeona and Parker.
Buddy Bell then delivered his
!,OOOth career RBI. a double to
left , to score Davis. Bo Dlaz
singled In Bell.
'The R&lt;'ds added two runs In the
eighth . Bo Dlaz doubled home
one run and Oester singled home
the other.
Ryan. with two out In the !lith
inning and a J.l count on Ron
Oester, walkedoffthE&gt;moundand
took himself out of the game.
Club officials announced that
Ryan departed because or a ·
"possible strain of the left
hamstrlnlt muscle."

WITH •1000 CASH REBATE

he. 446-2706
FACTOR~

Spring Craft Festival
... ";,.... ~ ... ~ ..:.....

PROORAM
CARS

Frertrh Arl Colonv
F.i•ervone Welcome
Free A dmis$i.on

Saturday, May 2 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sunday, May 3 12-5 p.m.
•46 Craf1 Boot h .~
•Flower &amp; Garden Platt/.~
• $500 Cash Door Prize Drowin~
•Demottsfruliotts- Music &amp; Dance
•Cou tt try A ucr ion:
Bud McGhee &amp; Lee Johnson
A!Lction.eers
•Suttduy Dinner $4.00 12-2 p.m.
· Chicken &amp; Noodles ·
•Meef Rorwld McDonald-Sunday
•Pet. I inj( Zoo-Chicks Hatching

.

'

-

1986 PONTIAC

.!

BIRD-"2 to Choose From

1-R••· 1-BI~t. A•to., air, •••r~ lu"• ••• 01t. Prlu•Jatf like our
Ce•allert.

t7995 WITH •1000 CASH REBATE

Spnn&lt;orvd by:
VlrDmrold:,. Gnllipoli.&lt;. OH. &amp; HPndPr.ton. WV

Riverby- 530 1st Ave.
Gallipolis. Ohio

TOP SCORER - Gallipolis'
scoring honor• ol the 21st annual Gallipolis Rotary Rcluy~
Saturday, llnlshlnl! with 211% point.•. He won two hurdle~cvcnls lor
GAHS, and Will! third In the triple .tump.
·

Red·s hand Astros, Ryan, 8-0 setback

S
O
O
"9

(lAX SHELTERED ANNUITY)

.·-f::;;t..

annual Gallipolis Rotary Relays watch finals of the long jump and
high jump at Stanle~ L. Evans Field, Rio Grandr.

1987 Chev.• S-10
Blazer

1987 Chev. IROC

(ONLY FOR EMPLOYEES Of NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS)

Revival .ret
at French City

April19, 1987

PRINTS FOR THE

Tawney Studios

TSA

.

CAN'T LOSE

GET 2 SETS OF
KODAK COLOR

'
ill' no l di smayed - those• ha rd
boiiN:l f:'\~gs ca n' I Ia sI forPv~r . So

IRA

_,

',

on Monday .

Last week . David Douglas
Da.v, 23. a former stude nt at
Tech. was charged with trafficking in unauthorized long-distance
codes. Day wa &amp; described by
St'crer SNvice agents as a
compute·r hacker who provided a
minimum of 10 to 15 codes to

MussPr, Ml•igs High Senior and
Polson said that he could not
ol DolliP and .John Musso't'. place a cost on the amoun t of
Mulherr.v Heig ht s. Pomcro.v.
long-distance calls involved beStrven has bern In vi ted to bP in cause of the co mplex nature of
Ihl' C'O Jll'iand Sctt olars Program the sc heme.
at Ohio Uni vrrs ity bPginnlng in
" It seems th is guy go t hold of a
S&lt;•pt••mber ·
lot of cod&lt;'s that were not
The C'oprluml program is in- assigned to cus tomers and no
nov at ivP "nd hig h!)' sriPe t ivr. bills went out," Polson said.
Thl'rr are lo . such sc hol~rs "Thai ma kes It rough to co me up
c h ~s:n topan tc tpar_r _and d~rmg
with a dollar figure.
the It frPshm~n Y~'".' · the) a~rrAlleasl 60 different codes were
a_ssoc1atr&lt;i wrt~ busmes ~ cxec u- · cntificd as being used illega lly,
t! VPS through (Ope land ( OliOQ . authorities said. The illegal USC
urns. In addition, Stevr·n will be was uncover&lt;'d by Lubbock
ass lgnPd to work wilh one of Count y Justice of the Peace L.. J.
professors In the progra m as a Blalac·k who discovered th at a
re sPa !Th assistant for which h•• large n~mber of ca lls he never
wi ll receive a sizeable sltpend.
made were charged to his MCI
----bill.
GwP n Hall. Chester, is thr
The ancient birthstone lor the
winner ol the Apri l 12 Timesmonth
ol September was Chrysolite,
Sent inel M.vs tL'ry Farm rontPs t.
and
the
modern stone is a sapphire.
l·:ight rcsld&lt;•nls !'O !Te~ tly identlfircl the fat·m HS that of Arvll
Holtrr. Bashan. Gwen wil l recelvr the $o prlzr offered in the
co ntrs t . . . . .

WEEK~ YOU

THIS

an

so n

I don't know how it works.
I'm ta lking about th e spi nning
lop In thr Clark J pwelry Storewindow. ll's the prope·rty of
David Goodwi n and was started
spinning by Da vr on ~' riday,
Apri l HI, and wa s still spinn ingthat' s 24 hours a day- at 4 p.m.
nn Frida\·, April 17.

R..v , R11ndy Wood

'900 admit
using ccxies
_illegally

Jmro~ ~intts-ientind Section (

ports

April 19. 1987.

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

•

I

DWCAUGift'IN atJNDOWN-0.1 .. ~'aloDiulllalled
out by H-1• plleller Nolaa Ryu Ia flftlllulq of s.&amp;uday'a
~ 1i RIYetftual. OacltlaliiWIIII, H. (VPI)

Ryan, who has struck out 25
batters In his first three games
this year, pitched 4 and 2-3
Innings Saturday, giving up one
run and two hil s while strlklnl'
out six and walking two.
Expos 4, Cubs 2·
CHICAGO (UPI)- Tom Foley
highlighted a four·run second
Inning with a two-run single and
Bob Sebra allowed three hils
over seven Innings · Saturday,
carrying the Montreal Expos to a
4-2 victory over the Chicago
Cubs.
Sebra , 1-1, outdueled Chicago
starter Greg Maddux. 0-1, by
striking out two and walking
three lhrough seven innings.
Randy St. Cia Ire pitched two
Innings for his second save.
The Cubs look a 1-0 lead In the
first Inning. Chico Walker led off
with a walk, stole second and
went to third on a throwing error
by catcher Jeff Reed and scored
on a groundout by Ryne
Sandberg.
.
The Expos scored lour runs ln.
lhe second. A leadoff single b.V·
Tlln Wallach, a walk to Reed and
a single just out of shortstop
Shawon Dunston's reach by
Vance Law loaded the bases .
Alonzo Powell grounded out to
tie the score J.l, then Foley
singled to the opposlle lleld to
drive In lwo more for a3-1 lead .
·· Sebra singled Foley to third and
Casey Candaele delivered a
fielder' s choice.
Leon Durham hit his second
home run of !he season In the
second Inning, cutting Mont ·
real's lead to 4·2.
Phlls 8, Pirates 6
PI'M'SBURGH tUPil- Mike
Schmidt delivered his 500th ca. reer horne run, a three- run shot
In the top of the ninth Inning
saturday. rallying the Phlladel·
phla Phlllles to an 8-6 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
With Pittsburgh leading 6-5 In
the ninth, Juan Samuel reached
on a Helder's choice and Von
Hayes walked. S!'hmldt hit a 3·0
pitch from Don Robinson, ~- 1,
over the left field wall. Kent
Tekulve, 1-41, was the winner.
Johnny Ray had given the
Pirates a 6-5 lead in the elghlh,
folll;)"!lnll Andy Van Slyke's sac-

rlflre nv with a three-run homer .
Yankees 7, Royals 6
NEW YORK iUPJJ - MlkC'
Pagliarulo ;val ked wilh the bases
loaded In .the ninth Inning Sa tu rday, forcing In Ihe winning run
and giving the New York Yan ·
kees a 7-6 vlclory over the
Kansas Cily Royals.
Wllh one our, Dave Wlnlleld
reached on a throwing error by
shorlstop Buddy Bl~nralana .
Gary Ward singled and look
seco nd on the throw 10 third by Bo
Jackson. Bud Hlack relieved
Steve Farr , 0-1, and walked
pinch-hitter Dan Pasqua lnten·
llonaliy. Pagliarulo t.hen look a
3-2 pll€h low and lnsldP for a balL
The winner was Dave Rlghetll,
2-0, who had blown a lead In the
top of the Inning.
·
·Red Sox 6, Blucjays 4
TORONTO !UPII - Rooklr
Danny Sheaffer wen t 2 lor 4 and
drovp In two runs Saturday,
helping the Boston Red Sox lake
adva nta ge ol a shaky Toronto
defense for a 6-4 victory over !he
BluC' Jays.
Winning pllrher Jeff St'llers,
1-0, worked' six Innings and
allowed four runs on nine hits.
Calvin Schiraldi pltchcd 2 1·.1
Innings for his second save. It
was Boston' s llrst road victory ol
the year In six anempts.
Loser Jim Clancy. 1-2, laslrd
four Innings and surrPndered
seven hils and five run s, two
earned . Clancy has lost 15 of his
20 career decisions agalnsl the
Red Sox.

Haye!! maintains lead
HILTON HEAD ISLAND . S.C.
(UPI) - Mark Hayes main ·
talned his one-stroke lead over
Steve Jones while · two-time
champions Fuzzy Zoeller and
Hale Irwin made front side
charges Saturday midway
through !he third round of the
$650,000 Herllage Classic.
Hayes entered the third round
at lO.under·par 132, one shot
ahead ol Jones. Hayes went up by
two shots wllh ,a bltllle at No . •1
and he maintained that margin
as both golfers birdied ihe second
hole, dropplng Hayes to 12-un!ler.

RIO GRANDE - 1\s expected,
Logan's Chieft ains and the. Ma ·
rietta Tiger girls r·epealed as
champions of the Gallipolis Ro·
tary Relays during Sat urday's
21st a~tnual event on thr Stanley
L. :Evans Track. Rio Grande
College.
CiiSsady Top Scor1•r
. The Chiertains finished with
142 poln&lt;s for top honors In lhr
boys division . Gallipolis' Tom
Cassady· was the mert's top
scorr1· with 28 ~ point s. Marlena
won !he girls crow n with J:!l \1,
points. The Tigers' Misty Singer
was top scorer with :10y, points .
Logan ·picked up flvr firsts In
the l7·rvrnl boys session . Gal lipolis had t hrec - two bY Tom
('assady- whllr runneru.p Ironton had two; Miami Truer onr,
and Point Pleasant one- Kurt
Doss outdlstancPd Sowers In the
discus evrnl. 14:1-li to 13~ - li . ·
Iron ton had R3 points. Ga llipolis finished in a thi rd plarr tie
with 1\thens with oR; Marlrt ta
had 49 ; Po in! Pil'asant46; Miami
Trace .17; Nelsonville· York :l2;
,Jac kson nand HannunTraee 10.
Logan's girls finished seco nd
with 107 points , followed by
Miam i Tracl' with 79. Alh!'ns had
oR: G" illpolls ~6; Point Pleasant
40\.11 ; Nelsonville-York 22; .lar kson 10 and Hannan Traer 0.
Girls Set Records
ln the girls . division, three
records fell in th e In-eve nt me
Misty Si n!(er seta new mark by
winning th e 200 mrtl'r dash In
: 26.4. The old reco rd was held bv
Kyger Creek's Vickie Stroud , srt
in 197R.
· Marirtta's Leigh Ann Moran
set a new reeord In Ihe 1600 metrr
run, finishing In o: 18.1. the old
mark was held by Ch••sapeake's
Tammy Walls, set In 19R1 .
Log"n 's lliOO mt' IN rl'lav
sq uad broke last yea,·'s Ga illpo·
lis mark of 4:2:1.:1 b.l' finishing
that ew•nt In :t: :lil.6.
Following the day-long m!'el,
trophies ~ nd ribbons WNP
awarded to various winners ..
Hrrr• 's fir st plarl' n•suil s ol
Saturda,v's lll·tea m boy and nine
team girls &lt;•vents:
I ndlvldual Result•
(Girls Division)
DJSC::US -Ma ther, Athens, 97-

200mDASSH Rrin• ..
Iron ton. : 2:H
,
~OOmDASH Robinson ,
Athens, : 52.4 .
)lOOm RUN - Morton . L.ogun:.
1:1112.
l600mRUN - CoiL Marietta .

.4::19,

110M HIOH III,IRDI,£8 Cassady, Galllpolls, : If), 7,
:r2oomRUN - Coil. Ma r ietta ,
10:21.6.
:roor'mHURDI.ES - Cassady,
Cuillpolls, : 41.1 , !New rvrntl
tOOmRELA \' - Ga lllpoll ~ .
: ~."i . O .

:1200rnRELA \' -Loga n, H: 21U.

New three-point
rule will change
high school ball
By GENE CADI)ES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPli
Whether you like It or not. lh&lt;' ·
new :t-polnl field ~oa l rui&lt;',
adopted by the Ohio High School
Athletic 1\ssoclallon for the 1987RB ba sketball seaso n, figures to
put added spice In the ~arne and
more pressure on the poor old
roach .
"I 'd say two years ugo, I reully
wasn 't In fa vor of It ," said
ve t&lt;'ran Willard Coach Bob Haas.
"But. after watching lhl' coll ege
gamPS1 last seaso n. I \ ·p n 'Vl'l'
bt'en more exeiled .
"As a high sc hoo l eoach. I'Vl'
got some rcservallons," sold
Haas, "b\Jt I'm going to Ill' a fan a
lot more yC'a rs than I'm going to
be a coach.
·
"It 's great lor th(' fans and lh&lt;'
kids. It will rom plicate coachlnq,
but the go ; J coaches wHI adaptlo
it. It' s goi ng to be one rulcrhan ge
that will be good for the game."
The new ;~poi nt rul e - at 19ll'Ct , 9-ln ches- is the sa me as thr
colie~&lt;es used la st season .
"For the high sehool level, I
th ink thai's just about right,"
said Haas, who ha s an outsta ndIng outside shooter returnlng In
6-foot guard Joel Guth. " But , I
don' t think you'll s~c loo many
high schools build an offense
around th e ~- polnlcr .
"For most kids, II wil l be a low
perce ntage shot, " co ncluded
Haas. "Not lor Joel Guth , but
. we' ll have to convince the others
Its nor fo r them, except lor the
desperallon portion of th e
game.
New Concord John Glenn's
Ron Hoyt ligures the rule came
about lhree years too late.
"! could have used It when I
had Jay," Hoyt said In reference
to Jay Burson, Ohio's all-time
leading scorer 12.958 points) and
now a startmg guard at Ohio
State.
"1 think It changes coaching as
much as anything," said Hoyt.
It

•

'

: 1l.li.

!i.

'

I

SHOT PlJT - Burns, Miami
Trace, .10-10.
HIGH ,JUMP - While, Marietta, 4-10.
LONG ,JUMP - White, Marietta, 14-5\1,.
lOOmDASH - Singer, Mar lella, 12.8.
200mDASH - Slngel', Marietta, : 26.4 1N~w Record 1
400mDASH
Tawana
Pittman - Logan-1: 00.4
IIUOmRUN - Angl&lt;' Holley,
Ga llipolis, 2:32.6.
1600mRUN - J.,&lt;oigh . Ann Mora n, Marlrlla. !\:18.1.tNcw
record 1.
:1200mRUN
Leigh
Moran-MariNia-11 ; .'i:l.
IOOmHIGH HURDLES Don'na Hussell, Point Pleasant,
: 17.2
.
300mLOW HURDI.ES - Hus·
sell. Point Pleasant, : !ifl.l.
~OOmRELAY - Lo~an, 517 .'
~OOmRELAY MurlC'tla _.,
1: !iO.l
1600mRELAY - Logan,:r: :10.6. t New Record 1
3200mRELAV Athens,
]() : ,')(), 71.
(Boys Division)
DISCliS - Kurt Doss, Po.lnt
Pl&lt;•usanl, 143-6.
.
SHOT PUT- Skinner. Logan.
oO'll y,.
.
IIIGII ,Jl!MP - .Janes. Miami.
Trace-. 6-2.
LONG ,JUMP - Bil•sk, Logan,,
20- "'
TR LE ·JUMI' - F~rg-uson,
Ironton, 41 -6\11 .
·
POLE VAULT - Walker,
Logan, 11 -6.
IOOmDA..;;II - Brie&lt;', Ironton,

"You·r~ going to ha ve to ploy
more man defense lute In the
!lame. II' S going 10 be rnor~ ol an
adjustment lor thl' coaches than
the kids."
'
Hoyt said he, roo, didn 't llkelhc
:1-polnt at fir st ~lanrc.
"''mIn favor of It and I wasn'!
origi nally," he said. " We will usc
11 . I think 11 ran bcsomethlngllkc
the dunk s hot and the home run,
ha ve a psychological effect.
Another cnach wllh "a personal reason" for liking the new
rul&lt;' Is Woosl(•r's Mark Alberts.
whosc son Mark Jr., llgun•s lobe
hclprtl ncxl scaso n by the 3-polnl
shot .
',:My s!ln wil l be happ,v,"
Albert s said when told of lhl'
ru le's adoption . "Wc'Yt' ~ "' a
co uple of othNs whn run shO&lt;ll It ,
also."
In la&lt;'l, ,\lhr •r ts dopsn't plan lo
walt until th&lt;• nPwJi nc Is painiP&lt;t
on the Woostl'l' gym floor .
•
" II Isn't' going to be donc until
this summf'r." hr said. "but wc.'ll
have a line down n&lt;·x l wl.'ek with
tape or so ml'th ln~. Our kid s, ,,~
In for open gym (•very nh:hr. '
Alberts sai d hr and his"" '"
ant n•rcntl,v discussed the• possibility that lh• · rul&lt;· would hr· In
effect next ~C'ason .
" He said som1• of our piu)'••rs
would want toshootthr :l- poinl&lt;'l'
when thl'y ran'! hit from 111 to 12
feet,' ' relat&lt;•d 1\lbcrts. " ! sa id,
'maybe we'rr going to ha,.,, to
.
coach a llttl&lt;' bc•ttcr.'
" J've got a 12-year -old daugh -,
Jer who can shoot It tfrom 19-91
conslstem ly ," sOld Alberts . "Nqt.
because shP's strong, but be·
ca use or her form ."
. .•
One dissenter to the ru le waS:
Columbu s Brlgg's Paul Pennell,
whose Bruins ml~&lt;hl as w!•li' nQ ~
waste their tfmcworklngon "t)le
shot" this summer.
•
" I'm not realpleasedabouJii,' 1
said PennelL "I'm dlsappolnt\)Cj
there was no ronsultalion with•
the coaches bc'fore the derision
was made."

'

�'..

April19, 1987

"Page C-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 19, 1987

Pomeroy MiddlePort....:.Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W.Va.

.

.

Mize falls in
·_lferitage Classic
•-:'•" • By IRA KAUFMA.N
~
UPI Sports Writer
•~ HILTON HEAD I SLAN D, S.C.
f.i UPI I - The second round of the
~ ·$6.'JO,OOO Herit age Classic left
~.St eve Jon!'S and Larry Mtze one
:·st ro.ke short .
~ So w hy Is Jones ~ miling and
l ze snarling"
Jones a PGA Tour va gabond
ho has' never placed beller than
~~lxth . fi red a second-round 66
~Frid ay to pull within on.e stroke
jlot leader Mark Hayes midway
~thro u g h the Her itage. Although
.~Ml zc followed a 76 wit h a 70. the
,~n ew Masl ers champion failed by
one shot to ma ke th e :l-over-par
~W• cut.
.!; Hayrs, seekin g his fi rst PGA
\'t r i umph in a decade. followed an
~nln~· round 64 wit h a 68 to
!Wand at 10-under -par J:l2 .. Iones.
.. ~bega n his second rou nd with
~lght consecutive pars before
J'?l fllcklng th e challenging 6,6&gt;7·
~ard Harbour Tow n Golf Li nks.
. f:•Piaylng In his first tourna mr nt
l " err, lhe Phoenix, Ari z.• native
::'"!!ank six birdies and backed up an
•:OJX'nlng-round 67 to st an d at 1~ :1
~·- In prime position for the
top prize.
1: "") had three or lour car lv
"'Oppor tun ities to make birdies.
" "utI just tried to s t.~y patient,""
!;sa id .Jones, who i·ame Into 19R7
,: .with career PGA ear nings of
•!,"$97 ,625. " The btrd iP at No. 9
:,-eally go t m&lt;' r olling ··
~ .Jones added a 12- foot bird!&lt;• at
1:10 and a J().footcr at 11 for three
•:s tra ight . After a blrd lra t 1&gt; and a
:•bogey·o at 16 kept him at 7-under
~ fo r thr l ournamPnl . Jones blr ·
:::died lh&lt;' fi nal two holes
.,..Including a 20-foo ter at 18.

;=sm.ooo

•

Thre&lt;:&gt; shots behind Ha yes at
13!i wer&lt;&gt; Howard Twitly and
&amp;ott Hoch, who each followed a
66 with a 69 Friday . Gene Sauers
and Ma"tk Wiebe fired 67s to
stand another shot back at 136.
Fle rnhard Langer, the 19&amp;1 Herll ·
age champion. wa s In a group of
!lye at !i- under ~ It e r a par -71
m arred by five bog&lt;•y s.
DefPndlng champion Fuzzy
Zoeller , iooklng for his lblrd
Heritag e Iitle In fi ve years, shot a
71 to rema in :t-under at J:l9.
Master s runnerup Greg Norman
stood 10 strokes back at l4 2 aft er
a 70.
H~ yPs, who se t a Herit age
record T~ursd ay with a G-under
:10 on the front side, used birdi es
at No. 2 and No. 5 to make the
tu rn In -~4 . Bi rdies at 12 and 18
sa ndwiched around a bogey at 16
ga ve him a liS.
" ! wa s a little ra gged s-ta rling
out and 11 took" while for me to
loosen up... Hayes said. ""I made
all the pu tt s I had to make. In
fart, I puit ed very sol id all day : ·
Unli ke Thursda y' s blustery
r ondltlons. wea ther for the se·
cond round was more conducive
to low scores for the 11 9 entra nis.
Tempera tures warmed to the low
70s and -wi nds di minished as the
thC" fi eld wa s cut to the low 70
scor es. plu s lies. It took a score of
145 or lower toadvancet 0 toda y' s
third rou nd and 74 golfer s
survived .
.Jeff Sluman. -who barely
m issed wi nni ng the Tournam ent
Pl ayers Championship thr ee
weeks ago. fo llowed a 7:, wllh"
second -round 65. tying the tour ·
nament record wi th a;,. under .10
on the ba ck nlnr .

~~~.~r,~e"~~! .§~!.a}l~~~.. f?~"'~.?...Jead

! UP I) - Despite bemg absent two days. Sandpiper . at 6.311
from the leader _board. Ayako yardsabout60 yard s longerthan
Okamoto, Val Skmner and four La Pu r lsima. will be the site for
ot her s m ay hold the advanta ge Sund ay's final round.
entering today"s second round of
M cGeorge. a Denton. Texas.
the maugural Santa Bar bara resident seeking her first victory
LPGA Open.
. aft er almost four yea r s as a pro.
Ok amoto, who won last week at co llected seven bi rdies and just
Sa n Diego, and Sk inner . ra nked one bogey. Eggellng carded a 68
241&lt;1 on lhe money list . trail and was two strokes bark after
Miss ie McGeor ge by. six strokes holing a 125-yard . S-Iron shot for
aft er f"rlday "s openin g round . eagle on No. 17.
M cGeorge. who failed to make
.Jane Geddes. second on this
th &lt;· cut in . half of her eight year ' s money list, stood three
tournaments thi s year, mat ched strokes off the pace while Aus·
a car eer-best with a 6· under -par lr alian Susan Tonkin and Sher r !
66 togra ba two· strokredgeover Tur ner had 70s. The top eight
Date Eggeiing in _the $300. 000 scor es . in fact • .were all regi.s·
ter!'d at Sandpiper .
eve nt .
But while McCeorgc and the
M cGeorge ha s al so finished
other leaders were pla&gt;·ing on th e l oth. 22nd twlre and 62nd this
sea side Sa ndpiper Gol f Course. year. Yet she got off to a good
Okamoto. Skmner . Am y Benz, star t F riday. posting birdies on
M ar et Bozarth, Bar b Thomas Nos. 10, 12, 1.1 and 15 in beginning
and Laur a Hurlbut wer e parrl ng her round on the back nine.
th e tougher La Purisim a l ayout .
" i feel good, 1 feel r eiax!'d this
·
And today, Friday 's leaders
mu st tour the va lley course near r------'------,- _;_--1
Lompoc, Calif. . wher e the fai r·
wa ys are lighter . the greens are
sma ller and the wi nd is more of a
factor than at Sandpiper .
Carr~-Out
""The scores will be much
On Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy
higher 1at La Purlslma 1beca use
the greens are very hard to hit ,"
ADDED
sa id Skinner . .. !The f airwa ys 1
PRO TENNIS SHOP
are long an d nar row. Par is a
Custom
Stringing, Tennis &amp;
good score on La Puri sima. T he
Aerobic Shou, logs, Grips, etc.
play ers from Sandpiper will
SALE-WILSON PIO ·
come acr oss th£' same probl em s
tomorrow."
·
STAFF SHOES
99
The 54 -hole event. the first
·.
"2·3756
LPGA tournament in Sant a Bar·
bara since 1964. i s using the two

whose tx&gt;st -career finish is a tie
forfourthin0rlando, Fla .• in1984
_ when she also IE'd after a
fi rst-round 66. · ·1 went out there
and told my self 10 enj oy myse lf ·

LOOK ·

McGeorge mtsse~ a .fi ve-foot
pull for par on No.7. but ~a mE"
bark on the next. hole by hltltn ~
an R-iron withi n six inches. then
t apping In for birdie.

O'DELLS LAWN AND GARDEN

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owm·rs arc- a ll ow l n ~
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41o~Mirm se l v es·

...- ,.,,,., nd wo rk of bi kr t r;d is and
Z•&lt;'V&lt;•n offN ing bik e ll'alls of th&lt;'lr
n.
lllr yr lr r amping b a lot llkr
,,.;!bar·kp;w King In thai ~·o u mu st be
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e..:.- xt•'rt to need ror a comror ti•bir
;.:,wrm lr:ht·. In fa&lt;&gt;~, bkyr h• r amp·

ISLA ND. F"la. I UPII
Top·SC&lt;'cir d St effl (; r a f dis·
sPv•·nlh· sf'('(l&lt;•d

Manu-

Ma lro&lt;'\"a li· l. ti·fl In ~J minu tes
"":l~ lcl ay to win her :lflth eonsrr u·
m atr n and acl vanrr to thr
:-:,,~ mdflr1: 1 l s of lht• $:UHf.!XHI WIT!\
Championships.
In oth1•r S&lt;'mlflnal mutc· ~ cs .
srcond·s&lt;'c•dcd Ha n a Mandllkova
und flfth·sN•&lt;h'd (; abrlr la Sa ba·
tlnl ;~ d v a n c&lt;'d In till' sc•mifinul s
with v lc lo l'iPs OV(' I' unsCC'dr d
opponr nts.
Su b;~ tin I. who fac-ed Gn• f !n on•·
of Sutu rd a;··s srmifln als.
~·• t,.,, ~~: l(•d pasr Hrl &lt;·n Kctcs l of

holes. held a . six-stroke lead
!Wing Into Sa turday's second
round of . the 19th annual KepJer
lnlercollegiate .golf tour riam e4t .

•••

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,JAMES EDWARDS ·

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SO,OOO·MIIe Treadwear Limited Warranty •
( Plus radial performance and

~Tourney concludes play in R-D league
: GALI.IPOLI S- Sou th wester n
•fliddlr Rail basket ball ended
:!\'larch 27 wit h int ramu ral

:t.ournamr nt s.
'( The opening game saw 1h&lt;'
:~I ris" Btu!' team defeat the Red
:tr am 12·10. Leading the AIUl' S
·~· a s .Jenn ifer Donie with six
:point s, while the top scorer for
:Che Reds was Laura Ehm an. wi th
.(our poin ts.
: • T he first boys" gum &lt;'. whi r h
:Was mur h clost•r than I he scorc•
•ihdi r at r d. saw the White team
;def eat thr B lue team 41·20. Aaron
•Mcl'arl y wa s the top scorer for
;(he Whites wit h l i points. Ge ne
")Jail lrd the -Blues wit h nine

lng and backpacking oft en are
combi ned In a single jaunt.
Str ap the overnight ;:ear tn "lis
ba ckpack onto the bik e. peda l as
far as you rar e to go or as far as
the bike will take vou from the
mad, lash the machi ne to a tree
and start walk ing. You ra n cover
more ground bu t stil l haw the
&lt;' ff&lt;'c·t of a pri mit ive experience.
Add fishing rod s so you ca n
provide .vour own evening meal
and you're camping as prlm l·
1lvely as any Indian ever did. It's
a lor more convenient, and It's
cer tOJi nly less likely to rost you
your scal p, but It's still fu n.
Campers who' 1·r become jaded
fro m loading the family wagon
evC"ry wrekr nd and heading Off to
a park should give some thought
to trying oddba ll !"Om btn atio n
trips. Ren1 a r anoc and ra mp on
sandba rs or paddle the boa t to a
predeterm ined campsit e.
There's no r&lt;'ason 10 do ev&lt;:'rY·
thi ng the ~arne way rvery tl m r . ·I f
var i&lt;•lv is the• spice of IIIP. It is the
Ps sr nce of thr ou t· of-doors.

points.
The second boys " gam e saw the
Whil es bea t the Blues In a close.
&lt;•xcil ing 14·12 game. Leading the
wa y for the Whites were .Jared
Ellioll and Jerry La mbert , each
wit h four points. Jason Dunl ap
led thr Blues with six points.,
The Bi ddle Ball Association
extends its th anks to Princi pal
L.L. Myer s, Coaches Mike Kinnaird and Tanya McNeal , M r.
Salyers. referees Melyi n Ca rt er
and Randy La y ton , and all
pa 1·en1 s and other coaches who
hPip('d to make the bas ketball "
season for our children a success.

RIVIERA

Dayton

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Canada. li-4. 4-6. 6-J: while
Mandllkova ('iiminatrd Terry
Ph('ips. 7-li ,7.:11 . 6·2.
In lhr othr r Sa turda y scmifl·
nul , Mand llkova lac!'d thi rd·
sC'Pdrd Zlna Ga rrison, who
ousted No. li Kll thv Rinaldi. 6·4,
~-·1 . In a F t·tda y night ba seline
dupl.
Gn 1f. undl'fca tP&lt;i in 1987, los t
her scr vr in lhr srr ond ~ a m &lt;' of
thP matr h thc•n n •clr d off II
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f inal.&lt; of the Family Clrrtr.
Magazi ne I"' up. Ma teevll......eX·
tended I he 17-year·old WQs t q&gt;r·
m a n to lhr cf' SP1s .

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Tur~tnt

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~.1\. MJ•; J . I I\

Colangelo, in a later news
conference. called for manda·
tory random drug testin g: The
cur rent NBA agr~men t wit h the
players association allow s test·
ing only when probabl e cause
exists.
Phoenix Polire Chief Ruben
Ort ega sai d the Investigation
began in mid-February when
detectives develop&lt;'(! informa·
lion " that NBA player s wC"re
frequenting a !oral esta blish·
men! and obt aining coc ainefrom
an Individual who was beli evrd to
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COLUMBUS 1UPI I :_ Host
Ohio Sta te. paced by Peter
Hamm:ar and Ted Tryba' s one· .
over-par ns In Friday 's flrst. 18

Jeff's

~ampgrounds make effort

i\m&lt;•rlcu Dl•lrlhut•d..hl' l iPI
. .: Growing num ber s l5f camp·
~ r oun ds , publir an&lt;l priva te. arr
,:,.making an rfforl to ineorpora te a
~ar lrt &gt;· of camping alt ernatives
• rlor their custom('r s. For those of
r:us who us&lt;' t·hesr far lll tlcs, that
~·tr a n s l a l cs In to more options as
..; fur as try ing new things Is
,.~ ro n&lt;"'t'f ned.
Alryr le camping. for exam ple,
t• ls llecom tng incrcastngl.v popu·
t: lar as more llnd more fa mil ies
'' "' n •&lt;·ognlze that form of tra nspor·
tat ion as a good wa y 10 exPI"Cise
~: " ' w&lt;"il as gel from one place to
~-J noth N .
Enl ight ened c·a mp·

Maricopa Coun t;·, Attorney .
Tom Collins said the profess ional
at hletes are not " typlra l crlm l·
nals." but the players "ma de bad

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•• •

;~

1980. but authorit ies said th~ dialely without pay and general
evJdE"nce was only uncovered In a ma nager Jerry. Col angelo sai d
probe that began two months Davis would re-enter the· Adult
ago. Some of the a ll~ed crimes Substance Abuse Progra m at
occurred as late as Apr il I of this Vq n Nuys. Calif.• on M onday. He
year .
was previously treated for co·
Edwards. Humphries and Gon· caine an d alco hol abu.se from
drPzlc k face suspen sion fr om the Dec. 12, 1985, to Ja n. 11. 1986.
NBA lor at lcasl twoyears if dru g ·
The indictments indicate!~ thai _
tes ts order ed "Friday by thP Davis had possessed cocaine as
league are posit ive. Resu)4_are recently as December.
to be announced Monday. -~-suns planned no imme·
T he players al so could be dlale action against E dwards.
dismissed trom the l eague If they who Is on the injured list. or
arecon"vict&lt;'(l of or plead guilty to Gondrezlck and Humphries .
the c harges,
"Indictments are not convic·
Davis, .a five-tim e all· star who lions and these Individuals ar e
w;~s namoo In the indictment s Innocent until proven guilty ,"
but not char g£&gt;d. admitted within Col angel o said.
an hour aft er the Indictment s
He sa id there Is no reason
were rel~ asoo that , for the Gondrezl ck and Humphrl£'5
second time In 18 months. he has could not play In tonight's season
a drug problem.
final e, but that he would l eave the
Davis was suspended lmme- decision up to them .

with pressurized lubrication

.
•:Ohio Outdoor.~

~ By ,JE RRY PICKIIE LI.
ct; Outdoor Writ erN Assuctutton of

-PHOEN iX ! UP II -The stat us
of four Phoenix Suns players is in
doubt aft er three of I hem were
·Ind icted on drug charges by a
grand jury and Ali·Star guard
Walter Davis admit ted having
rela psed into cocaine addiCtion.
Phoenix. pl ayers James Ed ·
_wards , Jay Humphries a.nd
I." Grant Gondrez ick and former ·
; _ p lay~rs Mike Bratz and Garfield ··
·. Hea rd were char ged in Indict·
~ ments outlining seven years of
·. Involvement with marijuana and
~ coca in e ))y some Suns players.
· Al so charged "In the Indict·: men ts were the team ph o·~ gra pher, the roommate of a Sun s'
: player and three nightclub fig• ures. The indictment s were
: handed up Thursday , but were
• not made public until F r iday.
: The indictm ents listoo alleged
: drug deals dating to Janua r v

OSU has lead·in Kepler Tourney .

•6 speed or hydrostatic direct

'••

~o

Sun playe~· status in doubt ..after bust

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-3
• &gt;

•1 8 H.P. Twin Magnum Kohler

~o •

~

~

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Saturday I to 6'
Sunday 9 to S

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�Ohio- Point

Plea~nt.

April19, 1

W. Va .

.

.Er-ving as 3.6;· hits 30,000-point level
By GE.nn¥ MONIGAN
P~c er s were equally as ple"s'ed.
. "I 'm happy for him that he got
UPI Sports Writer
With the fifth s po.t in the h1s 30,000 points," Indiana Pac·
Eastern Conference playoffs er s coach _Ja ck Ramsey said.
guaran teed, the PhJiadelphia "The win Is very lmP!Jrtant for
76ers could afford to devote the franchise. We've won 40
Friday night 's ga me against the games. I don' t think before the
Indiana Pacers to Juli~ Erv· season that anybody would ha ve
expected us to get 40 wi ns and
ing's personal goa l.
. Needing . 36 point s to joi n now we have a chance for 41."
If Indiana wins Sa turday
Kareem Abdul-.labbar and Wilt
Chamberla in as the only players against New Jersey , the Parers
to score at least .10.000 ca r eer will clinch the seventh spot in the
poi nts, Ervin g became the !ora l Eas tern Conference playoffs.
point of Ph iladelphia ·s offense. il head of thP Chicago Bulls.
He finished wi th .18 po int s - 2
"! was nervous at the beginmore than he nN•ded for th e ning of the game." sa id Philadelmilcstone8 ina ll !l-11lloss tot hc phia's Cliff Robinson. who had 17
Pacers.
po'int s. " Hut after everything
"Dur ing the ceremony and th e• sell led down, it was .fun watching
· wa r mups. I made up m y mind I Doc get his paints. "
wou ld go for it and try to put it
In other action, Ros ton edged
behind me," sa id Ervi ng, who is Chi cago 108-105, ·washington
retirin g at the end of tht • sc·aso n ripped New York 142-110, Detroit
and wa s honored before• the• pounded New Jersey lJ0-117,
gamC'. " M y t C'e~ mmate s wcrr Housto n pummeled Dallas 121 ·
talking about it and made it clea r 99, Sa n Antonio downed the LA
.the,y..wer@.going to get the ball to Lak ers 115-10~. and Portland
me and encourage me to shoot tripped Uta h 111· 101.
Celtics lOS, , Bulls lOa
it ' "
An eig ht·fObt turn around jump
At Boston, Larry Bird scored
shot with !i : 01 left in th e th ird .1H points to lead the Celtlcs to
quarter ga \T Erving his :lO.IX)() th thPir 1~th straight vic tory ovpr
point.
the Bu lls. Michael .Jordan. who
"The crowd was in the gam e saw lim ited playing time be·
and m~· tC'amma tes wpre in thr raus&lt;&gt; or a bruised . left thigh ,
gam 0." Ervi ng S;Jid. " It wa s u scored 17 points. HP ended the
regular season with ~.041 points,
nirc happ~ning. "
Rer ausc of the victorv , the the third -highest single- season
.

total in NBA history .
Bullets U2. Knlcks 110
At New .York. Moses Malone
scored 22 points to help Washington earn the Bullets the sixth
playoff . spot in the Eastern
Conference. The virtory ass ured
the Bullets of avoidi ng the Boston
Celt ics a nd Atlanta Hawks In the
opening round of the:playoffs .
· Pistons 130, Nets 117
At Pontiac. Mich.. Adrian
Da ntley scored 28 points and Bill
Lal mbeer 23 to power the Pistons
before a crowd of 22.691 that gave

.

Brewers make it 10 in row; &gt;:"'··~
Indians lose seventh straight ...•.·....
•
••

the Pistons the NBA singleseaso n atte ndance record. ThC'
Pistons' 52nd vic tor:,&lt; tied th£&gt;
team record.
Rocket• 121. Mavericks 99
At Houstop, Akeem Olajuwon
scored 29 points to help' the
Rockets snap the Mavericks'
three -game winning streak .
Ralph Sampson added 20 points
and Rodney McCray 18 as
Houston avenged W£&gt;dnesday
night' s loss to the Mavericks at
Dallas. Derek Harper led the
Maverickswit h 2Rpolnt s.

•

'. :~

'"

By DAVID E. NATHAN
UP1 Sports Writ er
The Milwaukee Brewers are
10-0 and unimpressed .
Surprising Milwaukee sta yed
unbeaten Friday night, downing
the Texas Rangers 10-2 behind
the fi ve-hit pilch ing of Teddy
Higuera. The left -hander. :1.0.
struck ou t 12 and walked two in
his first romplete game or the
season.
The Brewers moved within a
game of the America n League
record for victories at thE&gt; start of
the season establ ished by the
Oakland Athl etics In 1981·. The
major-league record is 1:1. set In
1982 by the Atla nta Braves.
" I think this team has a lot of
potential." sa id Bre we r out ·
fi elder Rob Deer . "R ight now ,
it 's hard to sav . I don ' t feC'lllke
we 're a good tea m."
.lu st as restrained about Mil·
waukee's t)uick start was Man ager Tqm Trebf'lhorn: "We' rr
playing pretty well. We'll have to
wa il a nd see if we play bcttN or

•

CARDINAL

'

REPLACEMENT
.
·WINDOWS
CALL LOCAL REPRESENTAnVtS
DON or BEnY. DEWin
446·6229

..

WOI'S (\ "

Higuera. who had five complrte gamE's last year , wa s
par ti cu larly tough on the
Ran gr-r s when ' run nC'rs wC'rf' on

base.
" He gets very aggres slw when
hr gets runners in scori ng
position and that' s what makes
him efferlive," Texas first bas&lt;•·
man PNe O'Brien sa id. "To get
him, you've go t to get a big inning
brcaus,; .he bears down. H&lt;•
Mnies you."

I.VNE CENTER SCHEDULE
\\'f•l•k nl April 19, 19K1'

Dulf-Gymna.•dum

1\prll 1 9- Cio~f'( L
fl. ~

p.m. C' n l l r-~.;P

Pool
..... ... ........ .. .. ............. C'Io~; f'd
............... ... ft. ~ p.m. Co ll r~r Swim
.. ...... 12: :m-L:ID p.m . Fi1nf'ss Swim
fi -X p.m. Co ll ~r Swim
. ... 12: ;u_). J: :mp.m. F'\lnPss ~v.· lm
C' lo!K'd
.10-1:10
Swim
11-!l. p.m. Col1&lt;'1!"r Swim

nN·.

April '&lt;!0- f.-R p .m . ('ollf'J.~ ~· Rcr. ..

April 21- Ctmwd..

F.ii~NT:

HONOREU - .Julius (lk

\\Ia \If'S lrorn UOdf'r Uu• has kt•l to I arts as

·'-I
hl'

Ervin" smiles as he
""

t•nlt•rs lllf' ()la y ing floor

for l'lpt•clal ~t.· rt •monh•s for him hl'forf• hi."i IaNt r cgnhlr smt."ion gamt•
ut 'l'ht• Spectrum fi"'riday he fore n•llrcmcnt . Erving sc.·ored tlw
nett•ssary :16 points lo gh••• him a :UI,Of)() t.:urt•er total , hut it wa."'i not

,\p•lt 22 -~"

p.m. Cult• ·"' ' R,.,.

.. 12

April t~ -tl-~ p.m Co lh ·.L! I' R Pl'...
April ~t -tl-~ p.m. Op!•n R!' l'. ... ..
Apru 2r,- 1.:1 p .m . Opf'n RP(". .. .....
April ~ - 1 ·:! p.m. Oprn R{'(·. .. .

·conference games
CIJF:SfiiR F: - K y ~N Crc&gt;e k
gir ls' soflbil ll won thrc·P gumr-s
this j)'lst wt•P k a nd ral sNI its
S-VAC' and It s ovPra ll r&lt;'l'ord to

+11.

. In an April HI gaml' with
Symm es VilllP.V. the L;1 dy Hob·
ca ts pn•v;.dlt'd 4-:l. Rc nr t· Wa rd
was thP \\'Inning pitr tH·r a nd
: Es tc•p wa s the' loser fnr Ill&lt;'
Vikings In a ~am(' that saw both
teams gel two hits &lt;' il ch.
In las t Sui urdily 's g,;mr·
aga inst Hannan Truro. 1h• · T a IS
wal kc•d ilwa y with a 19·11vieton .
WlnnJna pitr hN .ill I Drummon.&lt;l
'
"trur knut1llundallowpdnn r hll .
b,v losing plt r ht•r Unr 01 •. Jlobc; ll s
'-'
• sh h;u1 a :l for :t gn mr
~ r II .\' i•
,ou
a.n&lt;l Vlc·ki NoiJl c&gt; we nt~ fnr ~ .
: Th r J-:a st(' rn gam t· Mond a'
'W&lt;'n l int o Pl ght innin ~s h.. rorc thr.
11obr~Ji s Pl"l'\'ilill'd R-7. Drumr(lond won aguln. l"''ling l·:ast-.
prn 's Hurkhclm••r. l.itnrr got lht•
ohl.v hit fnr I·:asl!•rn .

. •.•...• ....... .. .. .. ..... .. ..... , ....... .

IN THIS WORLD OF
coNSTANT CHANGE ...
EXERCISE YOUR liGHT
TO CHOOSE YOUR
MEDICAL CARElli

hospital,· heart not problem
BALT tMO){E I Ul'lt - Dor·
Hr also gained widespread
tors said ehrst pa ins s uffNed by famr modeling Jorkey undrr·
tor mrr Ha ltlm n rc • Orio les wear In national television c'ompile hrr .lim PalmPr a ppar&lt;' ntl)' mc•rrla ls. Since his retirement in
Sl&lt;'mm&lt; ·d fr om " musc ulill' skelc· May 1 9H~ . Palmer ha s bC'en a
ta l" sourc es. not hear t proiJil'mS. co lor commen tator for ABC -TV .
P;ilnll'r was rrl PaSt'd F'rlda y
Anoth e r ba seba ll grr&lt;il .
lmm Nor th Cha r h•s &lt;.cncral formPI' Nl'w York Ya nkee
Hospit;Jt' s aeutc· eo rona r.v r are Mickey Manti&lt;•. had a similar
uni t. HP had entered lhl' fa r llitY problem last week.
abou i 7:4&gt; p.m. ThurscJ;, )' r omMantle. ;;;;, wh o also compla lnlng of r·hest pa ins a nd plalnr d of chest pains and
dllfiru Ic y in brr al h i n ~.
shor tness or breath, wa s released
"A It of Ih&lt;' l&lt;'s ts wet'&lt;' norma I," from an Irving. Texas. hosplt a I
hos pit a l s pokes ma n Da vid Tuesda y alter a two- da y sta,·.
lJ&lt;' ndt•r sai d. " li e had a sm•ss -His doctors said he was s uffer ing
1.; s t and 1d1othin g tu rnhed up. Mr. from stressa nda nu pperrespira·
1 a 1mer or s not ilVC h0ar1 tory lnlertlon. ·
tll'Oblems. He• app'il'nntl)'
.•o uf• '
ferrd somt' t)·pr of musc·ular
skPl c&gt;tal pa in . ll r' ll he alJ rig ht. "
Palmer. '11 . " th rr f'·llmt• c_
,.
Young J\ wa rd winn rr. was l:.lk(ln
to thr hos pltill by hi s dau ght er
an&lt;l a fr iend. Dr. ShC'Idon Go ld·
gl'iPr said Pal mc&gt; r told him he

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t

By niCK VANSANT
CINCINNATii UPit- Fortu•nat ely for the Cincinnat i Reds ..
~urt Stillwell's iirst; major
~ragu e home r un turned out to be
.a grand slam and Dave Parker's
~OOt h career homer happened to
•be a ~- run blast on the same
:night.
; Those two homers providPd
:Cincinnati seven runs Friday
111ight - and the Reds needed
;every one or them In a 9-8
tsQUeaker over the Houston
f'stros .
.
t " I know the Reds are thP type
~fr lubtha t lsgo lngto srore some
~·u ns," said Houston manager
~al Lanier. " I just didn't think
they would srore this many."
•' Parker's :l-run homer In the
: (irst Inning gave the Reds" 3-l
; lead. but Houstor. rallied tosC'Ize
: a 6-4 adva nt age by the fifth .
• That's when Sti llwell unloaded
: his gra nd slammer to give thC'
· Reds the lead for good .
:. "I think I'll remember this
: homr run for awhile," said
: Stillwell. a 21 -year-old shortstop
. l'n his second major leagur
; $rason. "This wa s the first gra nd
· slam of my life. I never even had
:~ne in i..Jtilc League."
f.. Stillwell wa s only In the lineup
· because regular shorts top Barry
.J.ar kln was Injured a few days
J gO.
• " I've been ten se lat ely. not
having murh fun , bl'rau se of the
1 dd situa tion that got me playIng." said Stillwell. " But this
grand s lam wil l help loosen mC'
'up. I'm not as tight now as I was .
,J'm happy ,"
... Sa id Reds' managN Pete
lRose, "You have to win the game
i If you ~~:e t a gra nd slamm er from
'your shortstop. I mean , tha t 's not
,exactly a power -hilling
rposltlon .' "
' But Parker said he had been
ailing for Stlflwellto tag a lo ng
,one.
,• " I'm not too surprised Kurt
homered toni ght because he's
young and strong." said Parker.
'' He's been doing some things
wrong a t the plate, but If he gets
that straight ened out. he's capa ·
ble of hitting quite a few homer·s.
He ca n be part or ihe explosive
offensive attack we 've got. "

646 Jackson Pike

• Elec1ric lley star1
• AulomoliWI pinion &amp; seclor

oory anaetvnents
• T~~~;:h ·a· Matlc' Hi1ch Sr,11em
I Cast-Iron Kohler Magnum
engin-es

• Cast-lion lront aate
• Oiagro&amp;tic ..Otmeter
I LOW' oil light

Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614 -446-2206
Complott Rohabilitotivo Sonic".'
fuiiHnt invtntory of hon. htahh
IIIICh. Complete Bract Dept. with
-tifiOII fittws on ctaff.

sl&amp;et.ng

I lnterlodl. indicalor ljghls

I Padded lgnlllon key
1

Eledro~tat iealy baked

on

enamel paint

BAUM TRUE VALUE
CHESTER '

985-3301

. .. offers unbelievable prices!

ual PXl'l'lion&lt;t l nct \vi ties wllil'h ht•

had 11C'I' n doing ttw last s0ve ral
clays," sa id (;ol dgl'igl'r . who also
~ liR· 1~2

reco rd while throwing 2.212 str l·
k('()ut s and :l:l shutout s ror

lh~·

Orio les duri ng his 19-ve;H r a·
twr. Thr t'il(ht ·handl' r ',s No. 22
jc•rscy lla.&lt; brr n rrt irr·d by 1hr
cluh.

·liM PALMER

/,ocal borvlinK
NW II1' 0\\'1...'\
Sk)•llnt• l .llnl '!oi
:l·'l/Hii"

EXECUTIVE

Tl• &amp;UII

\\'

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C'll't• k' .~ .

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~

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14

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47

E\' ttn .~

t\(1

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Ol\·t·r ~l rlrtlln v

, Ml

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Mc·OOn:• tl.-. ... .

t••n!rul SuPIJI\
Bl~ Rh·•·r F: lt:,..

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l tv ln .~ (i l ;t .~s ..................... 411
~- ··u l Am . Fill\"'11
................. 47
-l'l
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.JNfrrs .......... ..

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L})(·••l. ~ uc~l ....
'J1lt · . t~ lk~ ......

.

APIIIL t7

"'"' 23

FRJDA'f tllru THURSDAY !

.----

~ ~;

t\1;
ti!l

r ;mn ...

L

~~

$424.50 pe&lt; mo. (240 paymentsl

J

·--

~3

r~

fl:l
h-&amp;

gte-family homes. We continue
. to Improve the appearance and
111e ttoo1 ptans of the homes ,..

M

n!'i
70

i:l
7:;1

~
db&lt;litd1: Andtly·to"'.:,'! ~
885181

&gt; '

ru iCI

•I.O&lt;' tll •li-1~ wnn t'IJ,l hl poi nts from Th 1~
F:lks . lllJ~;h lxl\''1('1' tor l.or·al •l AAIJ \nu• T.
'tu u ~ h wllh 1)12. lll ~h howh·r lor Thl' t-:tk~

James W. Walter
Chairman olthe Board

~

rDo nald!l. Hls;!;h txlw!Pt' for R!o Mi nl Mu•·t
Ill E . MeOonulcl u•l th ~ - H l~ h b01.1.·1rr for

c- Do n a ld~ " ' tl$ J . Shuu• \\:ilh ~u ~.
0 ~ 1 \'l r~ " 'on riJ!h l poin t ~ rrom Bob
FJ!v:.t n ~ . Hl ~ h OOwlPr for Pnul Ou\' INO wall(' .

·

tPuul

~

nd w ith ~~- lfl ,:~h lx.lwlrr

s R. Sprnc&lt;' with i\M.

for Bob E\'Oi ft5

SllOwd,rn IM. w a n ,~ l1i poi nts form lrv ln5

,_, "

""

1'011 to own 'f'NI own home WICI1

FRI .. SAT.. SUN.

S!A:ND
lYME
\\11 \\lll .\1()

tn;.s . Hl~h OO"'If' r for SnO\\'d€'ft tn5. wus
MaKum " 'ilh ~16. HIJ;rh bow ll'r for
Ins Cla ~s w:1!1 A. Fr l!'' wit h ~­

;Phillip !'porn won six Polnu from Grt"'~•t

I'QU, buln 011 I'I)Ur property to

almost a 5
ct.oooe up to 90% compiote.
ny tAgo you

No Dotn J&gt;.rrfJa~t
lo&lt;X. A.P.R. Fixft-JIOTtfdgt FiMNcillg
a,0 "Poi'IIIJ "/."" "'-t "-·
nO """' llf .-tr ?' Otlttr Ftu
(to quill/lid 11'0/Jtrfr Olllllm}
fllthia price, no- ditooun1s apply. Our standard
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codto ,.quilt addtlfonlllrlming or 04hlr modl"l l"'l •
an-~~~ dlarge lillY bt .,.· a y. 'SPeCIAl '
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AND IN CERTAIN OTHER LOCAL AAEAS. MAKE

ADDITIONAl CHAAGES NECESSARY.

/\ln. Floor. High bo••lrt• ror Phll ttp Sporn

f

H. Rus:~('ll wl1h ~- Hl$1:h boWk'r for
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JC&gt;ffl"'r!l won six Points from Crntral
pply , HlRh bOWI('r for JE'ffefs WQS J.

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SOUIH POIJIT, 01.
I.S. lt. 52 (lace••• 1•.1

tor Clrc l t~S

f~r DlvllrsUird lnv. was L. Bush wllh !'t68.

'·

Of llilil QUI'

homeoenter

r.t9.

Hl~h

' .

I

~

I

\

;

:l

., .Visiting Texas . whi ch ·los t It s
seventh straight. scored its runs
on homers by Larry Parrish and
Oon Slaught.
Texas start er Mike Mason. 0-2.
gave up three runs on !'our hit s in
5 2-3 innings.
.
Tpe Brewers' bi~ inning wa s
the seventh. whPn thry sent 12
batt er s to the pliltC and scored
seven runs. Jim Gan tner drove
homP . two ru ns while PU ul
Molitor, Robin Yount. Cerll
\ oopN, Greg Bror k a nd Deer
eac h drove homr a run.
Elsew here, Baltimore beat
Cleveland 4-1. Delrolt topped·
Chi cago 3-,1 . Toron to downed
Boston 10-!'i , Sea ttle ou tscored
Oakla nd 4· 2 and California ('dgcd
Mlnnesolil ·"·1. The game in New
York between the Yankees and
Ka nsas Ci ty wa s postponed due
to rain .

Oriol•s 4, Indians I
At Ball'lmore. Mike Boddlcker
and Ma r k Williamson combined
on a fivcchiller a nd Fred Lynn
had two RBI to give thC' Indians
their seventh stt·alght loss. Bod·
dickel'. 1-0. snapped a pPrSonal
sevc'n-gamr losing streak dating
back to last sea son. Williamson
pltr hr d tw o innin gs fur his first
major- league save. Tom C'a n&lt;ll·
ott i. 0-.l took th&lt;' loss.
Tigers 3, Whitl' Sox t
At Detroit. Dat'l'ell Evans
doubl ed in a run to highlight a
thrcC'· run th ird inning and F rank
Tanana a nd two rellevrrs com·
bl ned on a five -hi ller to carry
Detroit . Ta nana , 2-0, star ting In

•••

;

place of .Jark Morris. who has:a:
stiff neck , allow&lt;'d four hits '!ti:
seven Innings. Mark Thurmo.A41

for Z»:

earned the saV(\ tht' f irst

.

Detroit pltrher this season. Rk'
'
cha rd Dotson , 1-2, was th£&gt; loser;,
Blue .Jays 10, Red ~ox 5 ·~~
AI Toronto. rookie F red•
MrGI'iff bl astP&lt;I his first maj~:
league home r un and JoltJI;
CN ultl a nd · Mark EichhQ-'11•
tramed for eigh t Innings
shu tout •relief to lead th(' _B!ijQ:
.Jays. Aft er the Red Sox hli4•
take n a !i-0 lead off starter Duat~:
Ward, Ceru tt i, f-0. an d F:lchhor:•.
limited Boston to fl vP hit s th~j:
reaftcr . Bob Stanlev.
. l· 2. sul':
Cered the defeat.
·•
•
~ ~,."
Murlnt•rs 4. Alhlellcs 2 :·.~
At Seall le, Mark L a n gst~~
scaltered six hi ts to ou tdu el
Young to lift the Mariner~~
La ngston. 1-2. struck out 11 a'~:
wal ked two. Young, 1·1. allow~·
six hit s and one eil rnr d run o~ ~:
sr\'en Innings. Young brrame t~:
fi rs t Oak land pitc•hrr to bat s l~•
Bill C'a udlll on .July :10. 1984, whij~
hl' grounded out 'tn the severitli•
inning al'ter Oak land lost )l;~
dc&gt;s lgnated hlttr r·.
·: :

.'bf:

.

curt:

,•t"'

Angl'ls 2, Twins I

AI- Anaheim . Calif.. Dev~;
\\'hill' hi t a solo homer In the th ~
inning and mudr a !rapi ng ea tl\¢·
to rob Roy Smallc•;v of.a hom ei"I'I~
thP srvrn th to -lift thr A n~rl)&lt;;!
Mlk•• Will . 2-l . llmlt rd the Tw~:
to thn'P hil s unll st ruc·k out srv&lt;l)i.
in hi s sr r ond eomplrll· ga m (• ;~t·
thr seaso n. Brt'l Bi)·ievrn w~at:
the dista nce bu t fell to 1-1.
·•

Milner enters counseling program :
SA N FRANC'ISCO I UP! \ Th e Sa n Francisco Gia nt s Friday
~ nnouncrd
outfielder Eddie
Miln('r has voluntarily ent ered a
counseling program to eva lu ate
and I rca I a drug problem .
Giant s Pres ide nt and Ge nera l
Manager AI Ros&lt;' n said Milner,
who asked club officials for help,
was placed on the21 -day disabled
list. Milner was expected to
remai n under therapy at an
undi sclosed local ion for at least
the next 28 da ys.
"The Gi a nt s are prepared to
ass ist In every wa y possible with
Eddie Milner 's recovery ," Rosen
said.
Milne r Is the sero nd major
leaguer this seaso n to go on the
disabled list beca use of a dru~
problem. New York Mets pitcher

"But I'm hoping to reac h :mo."
Concopc·ion si ngled in a run in
the second and Rob Murphy . 2-0.
the second ol four Cincinnati
pitchers, worked I 2- 3 innings to
g('tt he win. John Franco pitched
the ninth for. his third save.
Walling. ju st off lh£&gt; disabled
list , homered on his firs t at -bat of
the season in the first inning off
Bill Landrum an d Kevin Bass
added another solo homer fo r
Hous ton In the six th off Murphy .
Houston scored twice In the
fo urth whe n Billy Hatcher
reac hed first on second baseman
Ron Orster' s fielding error,
rac ed to third on Walling's single
and scored on a s lngll' by GIC'nn
Davis . Bass walked to load the
bases and Walling scored on a
ground out· by Jose Cruz.
The Astros took" 6-4lead wit h
a :1-ru n fifth. Craig Rey nolds
sing led. took s econd o n
Knepper's sac rifice bunt a nd
moved to third on Billy Doran's
Infield single. Billy Hatcher
cr acked a 2-ru n triple to right·
C'cnter off Landrum a nd sr orcd
on pi nch-hiller Phil Gar ner's
sacr ifice fly off Murphy.
Houston addC'd a run In thC'
eighth when Ga rner singled, took
second on a ground out and
scored on a sl~g l e by Ra ss.

Dwigh t Gooden entered a rcha·
biil tatlon treatment ct'n t,er on
April 2. ·
In keeping with major -leagup

pollc·,·. Milner will not fa~r
discipl inary 11ctl6n If hi s trPal ·
ment Is successful.
_,
Continued on C-6
'

.

••

•

'
'' I

when you need a CPA ...;

-

I.A. IEILEI Ill, CPA

0

•

KEBLER BUSINESS SERVICE
611 I . ... St .. '-•~· Oh. 457•9

PH... 4·992· 270

.

•

I

"NV'

&gt;

I

I

I

I

'

'

.'

lef Ti-re Sale

,---------------------------1

. 2 ways.to thank

Midi~

...

Michelin,

Your secretary a bunch~

blckld by

Send the fTO®L£tlerbox
Bouquet or planter.
Serretaries WOO&lt; starts April 20.
jt&amp; call or visit us tcxlay.

SAVE 35o/o 40% on
RoadHandler 45 radial tires
Steel belli providi1X1:8lllnl lmPICI rMI·
; ance. long - r. Umlted _,-out wanen·
ty lor 45,000 mlltll ...... " ' -

Handley maintains
lead in GUO action

1ncJuding · So come in. Choose a heine tnat
• 1'011 1iltt trom CMr 20 modets. Wro1t tigure a 0011 price tor

'

an affordal&gt;te monthly payment.
This Is WI a "llhel1' home. At
our low. package prica 11 witt be tinished 90% complete
including torced-alr central heating. Just Install )OUt
choice ot ttooc OOYOring, paint interior waDs and trim,
connect to outside uttHIIes and '""""ln.
HERE'S WHAT'S tNCWDED : • House COOipletely
finished outside (no walks. driYiways. or landscaping)
• Pier and pnrcast bale 1oundadon • Double l1ools
• Complete wiring to local codn • All plumbing, including
kitchen. and etch birth wtlh tub lnd Sl1oMc • Kill:llen and
bathroom Cllllnttt • Will tfittthed wttllwatlboard. oeady
to be painlld • Shlllhii!IIRIIrliding • Insulation: 3~·
(R·11) in ond lloorS, 8' (R-19) In coiling • All inside
doors and trim • Cennl, 1orced-alr healing

"~:.1. WHCI!' wllt1 '\HI,

"''!"

You may choose ~iUonal options. such as air con·
d~loning, sepliC tank ahd solid toondahon at eKtra cost.
tiowe'&lt;er, 11 our SPECtAL P8Ckl!ll• prices. I'OU may not
delete any of tile abcM ~ems .
.,.
.411 rat:llage Prim Off Our ~ Complet~
Ho•t~ 1111111 6un DrutiC«llv Rtftctd!
OPEN EVERY WEEKEND. Yes, "!''"' open -.y day

For the second conseculive year,
Jim Walter Homes has been
acdaimed America~ NUMBER
ONE builder of delaclled, sin·

!'It;

MJnkll Auto won f'l)l.ht points from BIJl
RJvrr F. h'('. HIS! h bowlf'r fC"I r Mink,; Auto
T. M ams wl1h ~~- H l~ h bowll•r IOI'
~ Rl\'t' Ef&lt;'&lt;'. \1!11!1 .l.R. RifflP wtt h :'!!\!.
Rl ~ Mint Mllr t v.•nn t·l ~ hl p\11 nt!l rrom

$43,995* cashtn:e

3 or 4 bldwtl$-2 ~ bllhs · 1652 sq. n. tMng,...

BARGAIN MATI NEES SATURDAY I
SUNDAY • All SEATS IZ.SO
ADMIIStOH EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

SK \ ' UNIO:US U: M t 1 ' t~
StnntllnKl'i fnr t·!l-M1

Stillwell'sgrandslamrappeda
!i-run fifth inning-. Parker and
Eric Davis opened the Inning
with singles a nd Buddy Be ll dre w
a walk from loser Bob Knepper,
1·1, to load the bases. Re liever
Aurelio Lopez walked Bo Dlaz on
a :1-2 pitch to force in Parker and
Stillwell followed with a gra nd
slam homer to right.
Lan ier was more an!(ered over
the bases -loaded walk that Lopez
Iss ued Dlaz on a 3-2 pitch tha n the
grand slam homer.
&gt;'!didn't care too much for the
pitch selection." said La nier.
"Wi th a two-run lead, you don ' t
throw a :l-2 slider In that
situa tion . Thlswasthebestwe've
swung thr bats all year, but th e
worst we've played the game a ll .
year. "
Parker's homer In the firs t was
set up by two Houston errors.
Tracy .Jones reached first on
shortstop Cra ig Reynolds' throw ing C'rror, Dave Concepcion was
sa fe on th ird baseman Denn y
Walling' s fi elding error and then
Parker homered to right , his
th ird of the year and 200th of his
1 ~- year career.
"1 think 250 homers is a good
milestone for me because 1 rea lly
haven't been a home run hitter
until reren tl;•," said Park!'r , .15.

~

Whlel HorN 400-Strila atlndafd features :
I Uni-Oriw '• lransule
• Super·siled f1ame !or~

of Frldy's Nl, West game in Rlv&lt;•rfront Stadium.
Lah•r, Stlllwt•ll hit a grand s lam home run to glv••
Cincinnati a 9-R com e·from-he hlnd victory over
th•• defending division champions. (UP II

Stillwell, Parker hit homers;
•
[Reds
outscore
Astros,
9-8
!
.

...........

prohalll )' rr lat NI to some&gt; unuus-

is the• OriOIC's physi l·ia n.
Pa lmPr compill•d a

Cincinnati

'· or a relay throw from th••outfieldaller Houston's
.'!Illy Hatcher tripled in two runs in thl'fifth inning

Th e M• d"ICG1
ShopPe' In C.

HERMAN L. DILLON,
Physical Therapist
DEE OILLDN , R.N.

REVE;NGE COMES LATER -

~ shortstop Kurt Stillwell watches runm•r and wafts

rlo!Of'd

wokP up with chPSI pain s T hurs ·
ci a)' mornln l(.
...Mu s&lt;' ulur ~ ~ ('\ {' tal pa in is th r
~: tmt ' !hlng as r ht·s t Wt.J il pain .

Lot-al howling

~
I

p.m
.Pllness

~~g:~:;~lp;~:d~~::ateji;· lpP~l;~;l) rel~e~a~s~e;.·d~pj.mjf~'r;ol~;""~",;~;"~~---r.:====. =. ·="·R:p:.m:.:Co:tl:eg:eS:w:tm~
"'

t

. ........ .....• ..... 12: .l0-1: .10 p.m. F'ltnf'Ss s~.~.· lm
f).~ p.m. OpPn S1.1.•lm
.. 1-:t p.m . Opr&gt;n Swim
....... ........ .
....... . 1-.1 p.m . OpPn Swim

The Sunday ·

W. Va.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point

WINDSOR LOCKS. Conn .
!UPII - Bob Handley of Pompano Beach, Fla., maintained a
(jG.pln lead to claim the top seed
In the championship round of the
$140,000 Grea ter Hartford Open
Friday nigh t.
Handley won 16 ol his 24 match
11ames In holding off the challenge of 19-year·old Ji mmy ·
Keeth of West Palm Beach, Fla.
' Keeth. who went 14-10 In match
play, knocked down 9,945 pins.
Handley. a three-time PBA
tltllst, has not won a crown since
i98.l a nd Is t rylng to requalify for ·
pext week's Tournament of
Champions.
: Marshall Holman of Medford,
Pre., roared from 14th place to
lhlrd by winning six of his last
fight matches. Holman's six th·
tound games were 278, 236, 268,
256. 247, 205, 236 and 251 .
·
'

3~1

SAVE 112
ROidHindler G-T

Stftl·bt~ed II•

HllvyDuty '

DIIHird·
..... 'I

OUshock ·

Up to ~ IITipl for
dependllbte ttart·

Large pistons for '
more ~ontrol. ell·
Wllthll ftyld,

::... 4999

9!!

lngpawtr. - "

&amp;-iuJSe }001' smetary
is a lukling ~-

TIRES
IN
STOCK

Send the fTD® Secretaries
Week Bud Va~e.
Sro-etaries Week starts April 20.
lust a~ll or visil !1'; today.

IF 0

BLEM
SALE

Batteries
In

stock

-

spin
blllsnclng MrVIce

450

ONLY

We'll lllelronlcally balance tlrea
end whft(a lOt a tmOOthtr ride.

WE SEI.L
.... ...,......... __ ....,._.-..
- -·
. Allllbtlut ..... t:rldll

Pomeroy Flower Shop
106 httll'llllt Awe.
tft·IOJt

nRES

ALSO ON

d ....... l'liM.

SllVtiiiiDGE PlAZA

P...rey, Ohio
If

H!-5721

................,tit
ltr .......

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

I,

99 ·

dial with deep
trtiCI.n -

GAWPOUS
••

•

'

�Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Farm

Brewers win I Oth in row;. Indians. lose
fly .f() f.: fi.I.UZZI
L f' l. Sport• Writ"r
Hr~;~ v Ps

Managrr

Chu c k

T:mnN who c·ould find some·
lh lng l""il !v·&lt;· in" 12- 11 loss, hud u
n ·aS&lt;m 1o '''' op&lt;im is&lt;l c Prlda y
11i,L! II 1•

Smilh pilc·hed a four -hil
tl! •·,•r n hi s !irhl victory a!-.

Z&lt;~n• ·

"hu toul

l ;;~t July2, lra dlng
L·O v ktor·y 0\'(\ f l hP
S,J tt F rand~co CJ ;J nt s.
" 1ft : .., b('f •n pitching wP il. hut
.1

.-. I&lt;Jflj •r .., lrtt·f •

r\ ! I&lt;Htl&lt;J l t J (J

li t· wu' ju" p&lt;·rfrt'l lonlghl ,"
'i;&lt;Jnn&lt;'r ., ald . " I lhfnk hp's on•· of
t I If'

hf•.-. r pildtl 'r s In 1h( lc·aguC'. "
' Sm!&lt; h. I I. ., I ruck oul r•lg hl und
1

&lt;Jicl nul w:, lk a hal lcr. Slm·r' !hal
. ul.v &lt; v!r·rory . which ;r!so c·amf&gt;
&lt;~.[.! &lt; • i ns 1 !fH· (;Jan 1~ . Sm ith wvs 1-7
~· it !J lh&lt;· " ' " ' v·Jt-iory co ming in
I C' lif'! .
thing Is
" I Jhink Jh•·
ll(•ari rr g l h&lt;' (;ian", " s.aid .'imllh ,
~· }1cr ,..,;Ji d 'hi s ·~ ll'lk r•ou t ~ cl:l m('

l"'"

moslly on cur v~balls . " Th t•y 'rr
In first place rlghl.nOw, bu ill lei s
the Glanl s know we c~ n pla y with
!hem."
San Fra nci sco statiN Mike
Kr ukow , 0-2, yielded eight hi ts
an d fanned eight in elghl innings.
/\ rlanra scored lwicc in the fi rs t
In ning. Dltm .James and Ken
Obt.'rkfr&gt;ll hit ronserull ve slng1rs
~ nd moved up on " sacrifi ce by
Cr·r"l d Perry. Dal e Murphy
;truck out . and the Gia nts lh•·n
wal kPd Kc·n Griffey lnl en.tlonally
ro load the bases.
Sa n F'ran clsco'"'rra l egy hac· k·
fired a s Andres Thom as lin ed a
~ - 1 pil ch dow n the lcfl . fl rl d line
ro score .tamrs aiul Obcr krr ll.
San Pranrlsco had .Its blggcsl
lhrr&gt;a r In the sPvenlh . Candy
Maldonado led off with a double
and Chr is Brown wa s hil by a
pl! c· h. Bub Brenly adva nced th e

NBA

Majun~

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Ia look" ' II as u posl llv•(•. Maybe•
hr can hrlp us mor·r when hr grrs
ba ck."
To ra k0 Mllnrr's plor,ce ot1 thr
rostt'l', lhr Glnnt s rt'ca lled oul ·
fielder R:rndy Kul chN from rhe
Ph o nix Fl r ebirds of thf'TI' ipl•' A
P" cl flr C'ou sr Lt•agut.'. l&lt;urchrr,
2(;, wus hilling .:!OR ll'ith two
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kf 1.'* ~ m!l h•fln. l'lllnn

"A Cut Above The Rest".
We have the finest .relection of fre.rh tfnd frozen
seafood in the area. Fresh selljood is available
Thrmda1' through Sunday each wee/e. Frozen
seafood is available e11eryday. Yott may place special
order.r for .reafood delivered fresh each Thursday.
Ortr fresh meat ca.re came.r the h~f!.hest quality red
meats. lire rue/come requests for .rpecial cuts not in
our ca.re.
Our deN came.r fresh homemade itemr, plus a
laty,e selection of lttnch meat.r and cheeses from
quality rru.mufacturer.r.
Ottr selection of fine wine. im.ported and
domestic beer is groruin.f!. every day.
·

lh .In, lh m 1111 d \ :llo •nt lto' l ' ' · I . \
.1.11

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l'hll

:~ ud

W.

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l .o· a~ m ·

-

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Hnn 1:

in .tn dt)r"""· '\ \ '!I; tiou 11"t•

10'
1.99 2.69
3.37 3.90
4.41 5.59
4.77 6.26
-- 9.06
-· 15.86
2.18 · 2.28.

Lumber
12'

14'

--

";;•:;:::.":

~···

16'
4.89
7.33
9.13
9.56
16.59
26.16
4.06

2x4
3.14
2x6
s.os 5.89
2x8
7.08 8.18
4x4
7.60 8.35
4x6
11.61 ••
6x6
18.73 ••
1x6
127 3.60
l.andsc:ape Ttnbers...."......~.J••-$2.99

All
PRICES
DELIVERED
TO
JOB

DECK STAIN
SPECIAl

SCUFF OUARO
FORMUlA

sm

This Spring

9
l16 ~

LUMBER

u~ Out·
Va. IJ1111!1)'

Uttrt un ll tllt \\ nrr,•ll ,

SUPPL

'

"''",... ""', l&lt;\1

Orm ?-9. ..,.. rrtw.S.1turd:\\•
t ·A. S..nd:ly

•

.'

512 SIJtlt Strttt

675-1160

Slll(e...., ••tftWsi WO ut. Te S.OO jt.lll.,

.'

New

We Also feature

Weat Warket!Sea.food Cit:v
ti(WIJdfm.w&gt; Rt.&lt;l.
A&gt;int Pit;&gt;&lt;.1n1. W.V:t

"

#2SYP

8'

ae
! Southern Ohio Graded Bull Sale
,at Hillsboro, Saturday , April 25
~at 1:30 p.m. Sale will be I he Union
Stockyards located .on I he corner
,or West Main and E lm Streets .
JFlfty-elght bulls Will be offered . 1
'ihave one catalog.
VI 1
c
Wild T k
.
n on oun1Y
ur ey
Festival - To be hel~ on the
$streets of McArthur on Friday
~and Saturday, May 1 and 2. The
j fesllval will feal ure arts an~
Acrafts, a photography and ar
: show and judging, and evening·
.:entertalnmenl. Stage enterta in·
,mept will begin Frid ay, at 5:30
p.m. Saturday event s 1nclude
J?luegrass, country, and gospel
R'luslc , ch ildren's games, a
f!Jrkey-calllng contest, and a
'parade at 6: 00 p.m. We have
llrochures .
' How to Help Your Alfalfa
~ed l n g - Alfalfa growers ca n
prevenl some Josse to Ph ytoph·
fhora root rot, one of the crop's
most destructive diseases, by
.isi ng see d from l real ed
varieties.
' Thai recomme ndalton,
coupled with planting !he crop In
well-drained soils, tend s to min·
lmlze Phytophfhora problems,
according lo Donald K. Myers,
~g r o n omls t , and Land on H.
Rhodes, plan! pathologlsl.
~ Seedlings ca n be killed by the
disease even before they emerge
from the soli, but usually Infected
,plants die within a few weeks
aft er emergence. Enllre sl ands
are sometimes destroyed .
_ Pl ants lnfecled by the disease
suddenly will , tu r n yellow and
die. The lap root !urns dark
llrown to black and ma y rol
compl el ely. lnfecllon and death
ol the plan t can be r-apid under
cool co ndlll ons an d waler ·
saturated soils.
: The researc hers say Ihe enti re
4eterlora tion proces s acceler·
ates and loss Is grea ter when
other unfavorabl e condlllons,
such as herbicide Injury, low soli
fertility or Insert problem s, enter
the picture.
Growers ca n selecl from a
n umb er of Ph ytop hth ora·
i.eslsl ant alfalfa varieties avalla·
ble. Tesls show . Ohio growers
):nay get better results by choos Ing one of those varieties trealed
with a chemical specific for the
!(roup of organism s involved.
One such chemical is mela laxyl ,
marketed u.nder the trade name
)it Apron-FL.
• The researchers found the cos!
bf lhe metalaKyl lreatment low
jmou-gh 10 make Its use eronoml·
~ally feasible for most farm
operations. However , they still
emphasize that alfalfa planted In
well -drained soli performs IK'sl.
' Growers can get a lfst of
Phytophthora -reslstanl al!alfa
varieties at this office by asking
for Agronomy Tips Fact Sheet,
' ·'A if al la Variet y
Characteristics."
Weather - Hot. Cold, Dry, Wet
- I would like to share some
weather Jtifffmatlon I received
lflrough Doane's rPCently.
"Weather and Its Impact on
f armers" - Weather patterns
~ve changed considerably over
~years . Here's an assessmen t
iJt what has happened In recent
lilstory. what mlgbt be expected
ttJrlng the next deeade, and how
operations might be managed to
iilnlmlu the effects of Increased
1)rlabillly In the weather.
Average temperatures peaked
around 19fO'at their blghesllevel

'f .

We've got
Pressure Treated

' llh't't&lt; ill'! l.o'll(\io ' - l ..tn,~;..,l u n , :-.,,,. ·:~:

..:, ' .u

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' mi!h, \II IIi.

\\ lu . l .tl !.1; ll lflu •ra . \lll 'f t:
"' \1, . ... uu &lt;•• l lll
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~

WOOD DECK

SIZE

Fifty-eight ·bulls will
~be offered at sale this year
.;
By John C. Rice
t
Counly Ji1xlenslon Agent
t
Agriculture
&lt; POMEROY _ Bull s 1 _

OWN PAnO

-ChKk

I!I:

256-1582

Give her flowers

YOU 'DON'T NEED
TO BE ACARPENTER

,,,.. '"·-·· w. VI.

flllll•r W01.111. le 12-

ca..~ h prize from the Ohio Valley Puhlishing Co.
Leave your name, addre-s and tel.ephone numiK'r
with your card or letter. No l elephone calls will ht•
accepted. All contest entries should be turned In to
thl' newspapl'r office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In ca..~t· of a tie, the winner will he ch,.,en hy
lottery . Next week, a Meigs C'ounty I arm will b&lt;•
featured ll.v the Meigs Soli and Water ( :onserva·
lion Dlstrkt. ·

Meigs County agent~~ corner

~~

1 10

'ltll.o•uut ..
" " ' ~"L •I I J',IJ:II•' - :&lt;"l •uu , ll 11u '!l;

SATURDAYS &amp;
S D
SO
UN AYS, AL

Letterbox Bouquet

BUILD Y

ea rnin g

" II shoulcl nor afff'r l us . It 's nor

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l't'l ltlh·ll u ullh·l 1h•r

NOW FILLING GAS
GRILL TANKS

SEND FTD'S

46 Court St.
446· 1777

" This who it' thing wa s" shock ro
me. Hr ramr and la lk&lt;'d ro me
about II Hl irtlriJul II tnk es:J rra l
man 10 ad mil hr 's go ! a probif'm .
He needed help and hr ns krd for
II. ..
.l. Oul fi&lt;·lder Chili Dav is said he
mad never notlr·ed " n.v sir: n.s ol
d t' u ~ abusr.
" I nrvr t' r&lt;'a lly noticrd any ·
th ing !ha l would c"usc me ro
thin k h•• ha cl a probl m. " Dav.ls
s;rlcl. " 1-l r was happy :md c:Jrc'·
fr&lt;'c and uri I'd jus! l hP Sa me us
I he flrsr d:t) he jolnNI Ihc rram .
"I w:r s surprlsccl . and a IIIII&lt;'
disuppolntf'd . I think there &lt;rre
guys hrr(• he co uld havr cornc·lo
and tu lkcd lo abou! ll. But some
lh lngs you j us! can 't talk abou t."
Da vis said hr did nor lhlnk
Mllnr r' s loss would hut'! lhf'

:1

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in I ~t i Cllt' ) nl l 0 ;t~l li t • 4 1111'1 1.&lt;'.11111'
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t

Gino DiFioria scored lwo goa ls
and Ku i HaaskJv·J rull iecl lhrre
assist s 10 i&lt;'ad C lrnland. whic·h
had wo n six or II s last nln f' ga mes
bur ff' ll 10 29-li.
Th e loss, co uplrd wilh Buill,
rn o rP' s 4 - ~ vict o ry OVC' I' Dallas
;: rida.v· nigh! . d ropped ro !he
Porce to l '~ ga mes bl'hind l he
divislon -lcu dlnr: Rla sl in lhe
M ISL. Easl.

back," C'nsig said .
/\ elosp rrlr nrl ol Mil ner . th ird ·
hasrma n Chris Hrown. said :

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l ko·r , \ 111

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forw~1rd

lookin g

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I ul n11ol~o ' 1.\ \ ' \l . t

(;jan t ~

1rlth !17 sc-co nd ~ left in thP fourth
quarlr•r lo put I he Wi ngs ah&lt;•a d
1'1;r good.

mPt'1i ng hPforr l hP Ciants mr•1
i\llan ra F'rlrl:r y nigh t.
" HP said hr W it."- !W IT ~ · tha1 h( 1
had lf' t 1h4' eluh dow n a nd w~ls

Lt'iii{UI'

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Tlll o•tlu 1111•11
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LOWER IT. 7, EUREKA

Secretaries'
Week is
April20-24.

to the• t(•am ln ;1 l.'!osrd · doo r

lulo 'flt.o l \~o u. ol I • •:I J:III '
1

· MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
.farm, featured hy the Gallia Soil and Wat er
Conservation Distrlcl , Is located somewhere In
Gallla County, Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do so hy guessing lhe
I arm's owner . .Just mail, or drop off your guess to
·the the Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769 'or the Gallipolis Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., GalllpoJL~. Ohio, 45631, and you may win aS:;

l&amp;J GROCERY
EXXON

I

(' raig 1'0a d J 1(' 11rr f rom Miln t ·1·

\\ I. I ' ol

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Munagt•r Rogc·r&lt; ·raigsai d. ' 'Th('
man js sick und Ol' l'd s )wlp. T hr
m&lt;»l lmporlanr lh ing tor him
now is j u .~.; f to gf'! Wf' Jl: -•

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So' Ill ' a lI.\ I tilt; , 111 Mhi
f.' ! 'lip ill I :Still S t. nl ~t hl

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I

m•rv(' coming l'orwarct.··

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th ing Is lh &lt;~ l ht • .stJOW&lt;'d " lol ol

ut 1 11'1 . II p .111
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l oll

H&lt;•d.'-1

F t·ank Willi.sm.t. . in .Januarv. HP
b:rll"~ .n&lt; with o nr· 11R i in.r·ighl
ga mrs .

" \

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M ilnPr . .''I , a nati v r· uf Ces i um

bu s. Ohio. wa s :tl'q uired fr om lh•·

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n ii•I !H

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u .. u ..t " " ul I I uno Inn.II I !
l 'l olhlllo ·l 1•h l,, .u l 'iii , J•nnch
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r-------:----

I

Milner...

rivers, and creeks are muddy
and full o! sediment.
Your topsoil . has become so
thin that each time you plow you
bring up subsoil (yellow or red
clay) . You attribute this to just
" thin soli' : or " poor soil" ,
Your fertilizer bills are getting
higher and higher If you are
applying accorctJrig lo soli test
results. You notice several areas
In your field that have standlnl(
water or notice very poor growth
occurlng In specific strips
throughout your field .
Do you really care? If so you
mos.t likely are trying to come up
with some solutions to problems
such as those discussed above.
Sediment. thin topsoil, high fer·
tlllzer costs and compaction .are
directly r.elated to eonventlonal
tillage (plowing If you will) . In
order to solve these problems, a
blanket, In lhe form ol crop
residue and/ or grass/ legumes,
needs to IK' placed over the soli
tor protPCIIon.
Fall plowing and leaving the
soil bare and susceptible to· all
elements or ra in and wind must

FRANCO UPSET - Cleveland's .full Franco (rlghO can't
helleve he has been called out on strikes by Nick Brl•migan in
Friday's AL East game In Baltimore. Th e Orioles handed tht•
Indians their s~venth loss in a row. 4· 1. (UPI)

. fiiiii;;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d~~~~~~~~~~;;~~

l'rl tl n.~ ·, Uo·.. ulh

"'I' '"

j(

t~M!~~~r;str!~~~t~auyr~~d~~ne!v~ ~!~f~m~~tlon

Raceway re.~ults

l.eug
s Wing-s
Wt'S !ern
[) lv Isio n
Wh
il&lt;'ue'
lh&lt;'
Wl'l'l' win ning,
Sa n DiPgo and Kan sas li t \' wer~
losing. Kansas C il y and Wic·hita
ha 1c ilif'nli &lt;•al 2~ · 22 records. Sa n
llicgo s1ands at 2:;. 2:1.
llurja scnrpd his seco nd goalj

F:DIH E MILNER
.illl l '! 1'.
j ~ ,j
!f1I!
1:1·! :111

No-till management system easy

11

\U.t ...... l ll h;..i,. n
"I . I'• I 1; 11
.H ! ~ . hll; -

\ l'n rl
• f, I&lt;J n

II

Page-C-7

•

TOumo. Oh io 1up 11
WI CHITA, K an. 1UPlr T!'adl'r Ozcap tured !he lOih r ace
C'ill.r9 Borju sco r ed IWO!(Oa l ~ and rro1 al Raeewa v · Park Friday
adclC1d ont' assist F'riduy nlghlro night. holding ofi F'roslir&gt; Ra y in
lea d I he Wichit a Wings to a 5- ~ !he sr.rerrh 'to wi n by a neck. ·
Tlrl vC'r C'..J. Osbo rn guided the
vic tory over C'levrland, snapping
'.lh ,.n~ko.rcr ' s th ree- gume win ning wi nner over the mi le In 2:01 :1. &gt;.
·' ' "
p;ood for pavoffs of $o, $2..JO and
florja , Wichll a's all-star mid· $2.20. Froslie Ra.v puid $2AOand
fielder , hl'lpc•d the Wi ngs move $2.20 for second . whilf' Wa gon
into a IIHW·way lir for second Whe&lt;'l s ca me in th ird ,md rcpla r·r in I he Major Indoor Soccrr turned $2.20. ·

II
IIi
:11
:11

.i ! !II

\,., \ "' l.l lt,od i n t: I 11 1.11 " ' l .nnl•l l "\

I

;, ~

stroked a tw o-r un lrlple lo key ·
Philadelphia's fou r- r~n lOth In·
ning: Stev;e Bedrosian, 2·1.·
ear ned the victory as the Phlllles .
snapped · a four-game .losing
streak. Barry Jones. 0-1 , took the
loss .
&lt;.:uhs 7, Expos 0
AI Chicago, Rick Sutcli ffe
pi tch ed a fou r-hi Iter and drove In
three runs with a single and a
double. The viclory wa s lhe
Cubs' fi rs! a1 hom e this season In
fiVl' ga mes. Jody na vis wen14 for
~ wilh a lwo-ru n homer and
Andre 11aws on drove In two ru ns
wit h a sixth -inning double lo
support Sulcli.ff!.', 2·1.
Dodgers 5, Padres 3 .
AI Sa n' Dir·go, Fernando Va len·
zuela pilchcd a seven" hitter in
his firs! comple te game of !he
season and bene fited from fo~r
home runs . /\ II Dodger home
ru ns. including t hree in the firs t
in ning, came off losing pit cher
f.d Whit son, 1·2, whohasgtvenup
U hil s - lnc·l uding eight home
runs- in lo 1-3 Innings.

Wichita wins

,\."iiill~

.j~

,, ..,. ,j ,

h

.., , l ... uJ.,., I \o •\o\ r ur~ :1
I ., ~ \ . oro ~J, .., i , ... .111 lt h • ~: u ,I
I 11.1111 .1 !. "'•' u I· 1.111 , I" " II
" ,II LifiJ ,I\ ' ' lo :L 1111 -.
\ l u u l l " • Ill ,, II lt, ol I h lo I 'ln ololll \ II
n, I !II II 111
l ' loiiU .ol'o n .ou II l o,• l l' ill ' ~\ .11 ~I! ll o. ! l:t
t' Ill

! Il l

l'hilli es li, l'iral&lt;•s 2
.\I Pill sbur gh, Mill Thompson

\\ 1. I'• 1. r; 11
\ 11..... .....
' l'hlla

) 'II

'

J(JSPI .

\il:nolk ll hl.,lllll

..... " \ ,,, k

... . 111 I • III II\

viclorv. Ll'fl "handPr Ri ck Hon an
linishPtJ Up 10 l •arn his SPI'On&lt;l
save. Boll OjPda, 1"2, " ''" th r

f: u ~ l • · rn I unlt•ro·ll o•·

t .n ~ l

.'

pi1 Chf'd slx innings to C'&lt;Jrn lhP

r~suhM

'\T if J\ ,\1 . 1\ \.' l Kf-:TII ,\1.1.

" \1' 111 \ \1 . I 1·. \1 , 1 I·
l\1 I ull• · dl' r l"'~ IUII·rl t.l l lu n.ll

r unners wi lh a sacrlfi c&lt;•. Mall
William s !hen . lined lo second•
baseman Glenn Hubbard, who
flipped to Thomas at srcond for
an inning-ending double pla v.
In ol hN games. S1. Loui s cdgl'd
Nt•w York 4·:!. Philadelphi'a bca l
Pillsburgh 6·2 in 10 inn l ~s.
Cl ncinnal l ourslugged Houston
9-R, Chil'agO bla nk••d Montreal
7-ll and Los Angt'les dPft'al0d Sa n
Dicr:o ~d .
Cardinals I. Mets :1
AI Si . l..ouis. Tom Her r drove in
lhrep runs ro help l he Cardinals
hand lhr&gt;'thr World Serie&gt; cham "
pions l hrir firs ! di visional loss or
t hl' sc:Json. .John Tudor. 2· 1.

April19, 1987

in over 1,00o year s.
We are quite conscious of
weather during the last f ew days
an d of whether the season Is
warm orrold, wet or dry . And we
m ay remember a past season
such as I he summer of 19&amp;3 wtlh
Its bli stering heat and drouth .
Although weather tor any spe·
ciflc year ca nnot be forecast with
cert ainly In advance, trend s In
weather can be recognized.
The decade ol the 1930s Is
Infamous lor the drouths of '34
and '36 and many records set
!hen still sl;md. That 's when
farmers now retiring probably
began farming. But most of
loday's farmer s have dealt only
with events of the pas! 20 to 30
years.
The two high temperatures
took place In 1934 and 1936.
Although those two years sland
out, other summers during lhe
1930s and 1940s were quite warm .
In several years, temperat ures
averaged around 75 degrees F .
A change occurred In the 1950s.
Average temperatures declined,
and In many year s temperatures
averaged just above 70 degrees
F . The warmesl summers In the
1960s and '70s only reached lhe
average levels of th e 1930s and
'40s.
While temperalures cooled
during the 1960s and '70s, rainfall
incr eased. For exa mple. from
1931 lo 1960, most midwestern
corn and soybean stales averaged between 3 and 4 Inches of
rai n In July . But by1980, many of
these same states averaged over
4 Inches of rainfall.
Management Suggestions Whal should farmers do l o avoid
being whipsawed by expeclcd
Increased wea ther variability?
Here are some suggestions:
Take advantage of Govern·
ment programs thai guarantee
some payment s based on aver·
age crop yields.
Consider putting eligi bl e land
In the conservation reserve.
particularly If th ai land tends 10
be droulhy.
Don't gel so carried awaywltth
the ex cellenl y ields man y
, fa r mers harvested In 1985 and
1986 that you plan! all of your
crop at high population levels .
Unless you are blessed with soils
having excellent moisture reten tion characteristics, a strelch of
hot, dry weather. could sharply
cui yields.
Be!(ln planlfn!( and harvesting
early to beat rain delay prob·
lems. We have seen an unusual
amount of lale harvesti ng of
r ai n-damaged, l ow -yiel ding
crops due to the harvest delays In
recent years.
.
Prepare to provi de m ore relief
to livestock from hot su mmer
weal her.
The trend to warmer summer
temperatures should conllnue.
Odds favor a warm rather than a
cool summer In 1987. •
These unsettled conditions
may persist Into 1988.

May .2 registration deadline
POMEROY - Meigs County
4-H and FFA members planning
to carry a market hog project In
1987 are reminded that the
animals must IK' registered with
the Extension Office as of May 2.
Reglslrallon forms can be
obtained from th e Extension
Office by ca lling 992 -6696.
A lee of $7.50 per animal (or
pair) for pictures i s due al the

same time (May 2) : Thls•should
be paid to Eleanor Leonard and
send to Route 3, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Minimum and max imum
weights to be eligible to sell In
1987 wilt be 200 and 260 pounds at
weigh· in at the fair on Tuesday,
Aug. 18, 1997.
For more lnlorm atlon, call
John Rice at 992-6696.

residue on the surface over the
winter months Is a terrific soli
saver .
But the ultimate solullon Is
converting your conventiona l,
planlfng system to a- Ictal no-till
sys tem. "Whoa!", You say!
" I've tried no-till or at leas! seen
some. It jusl doesn'l work for
me,"or " l ' mnot very lmpresse~
with it. " Other excuses for nol
trying no-till have been, " I jus!
don't want lo polson tj'IHarl'h any
more by applyl nl( all the r heml·
ra ls" or I can· get much betl er
yields going conventi onal.
The truth Is, folks, I hal no· till
does work and It works very,
very well. It Is perhaps the IK'sl
erosion tool I hat we,have at I his
date. \For when we plow the
slopes as we have In Meigs
County, we run the r isk of losing
15 to 20 tons of soil per acre each
year,.from our croplands.
No-1111 Is a management sys Iem that Is easy to learn and yel
may take years to perfect . Here
are some tips th ai should be
followed for eflecllve no·t lll :
1. Always and I do mean
always gel a va lfd updaled soli
test (s ) done on the field or fields
you are pla-nning to no"tlll. Ta.ke
samples'rrom I he flrs1 21nches to
check for pH and anoth er sa mple
In the 6" to 8" deplh for
potas sium and phosphorus.
2. Always use a chemica l lo
suppress or kill existing vegeta·
lion prior to planling. This will

tne

for
newly seeded crop. These r heml·
ca ls are to! ally sale as long as
you use !hem according 1o the
specifications of their respect ive
label s. You ca nnot expecl lo
recei ve a good yieldin g crop
wllhout suppressing lhecompetl·
fi ve weed s, grasses, el c.
3. Selecl one of your bett er·
fields lo IK'gln with . Give no"till
every opporlunlly to work. Don 't
begin no-1111 wtlh a field which
lies nalurally wei and ha s your
worst weed probl em.
4. Sta rt small. Do onlv a few
acres at a tim e until you be!(ln Jo
perfecl your new management.
syslem.
5. Don't Rei fruslral ed! No-till
work s! It you have a failu re mosl
likely you would have a failure
wllh co nvrnllona t also. Yield
dala show !hal no-t ill and conven·.
llonal !lllagr run very. very close.
(2 1o 3 bushel /ac re C'ilher wu y) . •
lf you follow the basic sl eps
Insuring good burnd ow n, correct
secdln!( deplh, and correcl appll·
ca l ion of fertil izer accordln~ ro,
soli tests you will nol only Teap
good xlelds bur also save many
tons of soli. prevent compacllon.
· save gas and wear and lear on
equlpml'nt , nnd also save many
hours I hal could be sprnl doing
many ot hr r l hlngs around !he
farm .
Ca ll us for addll lonal inrorma·
lion regard ing this new ll ll agt'•
melhod a! 992·6647 - Meigs So il;
and Waler Consprva l ion Dlstrlcl. •

QUAliTY FEATURES

'lliAT SET GRAVELY
TRACI'ORS APART.

Farm flashes ·

Weather main topic

1 Cast-iron tranJ.

,mls!lon housing.
early
detection
of
early
season
38-Jpeed
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN,
tranamiuion.
tobacco plant bed disorders Is
Gallla County Extension Agent,
Important
In
correctio
n
3
AU.gear power train
Agriculture
(no belb).
probl
ems.
GALLIPOLIS- We have been
4 Precilion
The following are some of Dr.
quite consci ous of the weather
bear! ...
Nesmith 's suggestions:
during the las! few weeks .
50nepower
Cold Injury - Temperatures
Bul most of us give llltle
50Urtedrha
near
freezing may ca use the buds
thought to the Idea that shffts In
mo,.tiwl20
attachments.
our weather are occurlng and and young leaves to turn yellow
I Rear,
should be considered as part of · or whitish In color. Leaves may
mounted
cup
upward
and
become
puck·
the long-term farm production
tnalne.
erect
or
elongated.
No
treatment
strategy.
7 lnstanl
In an article I recently read, Is suggested as affected plants
forwanl.
claiming lo be based on factual will resume normal growth with
Information believed 10 be accu· warm weather.
8 Euy.occess
Salt or Ferllllzer Injury conli'OIJ.
rate but not !(uaranteed, the
-Exressslve
fertilizer
rates
or
salt
• c...... P'ro, with
author says !hat trendss In
front and ,.., P'ro
weather can be recognized . He accumulations ran damage to·
ll(llionl.
furlher sugges ts lhere Is oppor· barco seedlings, especially In
10 Rack and pinion
tunl!y to adjust farming to dry weather. Wilting plants ,
•~«rinl
yellowing and brown lear mar·
account for expected changes.
11
Cut-Iron
pi"'ting
Low sunspot number years gins ol ten suggest this problem.
front axle.
sur h as 1987 are assoclaletj with A dead area a! the sollllne often
12 W.kl&lt;d, reinfurted
• Professional results on all your lawn care jobs,
less vigorous summer patlerns. occurs. A whitish sail or lertlllzer
frame.
residue
m
ay
be
presenl
on
lhr
• Durability. • Factory-authorized service from
Look for drier wea ther In the
13 26.5" hlmi"'!r.adi...
)'OUI' Cra&gt;e~ dealer. • Fi~e-Year Umited Warranty.'
central U. S. The lrend Jo soiL A thorough watering of the
14 Solely inr.riock
warmer summer temperalures plant bed for two or 1hre&lt;&gt;
• m'P..VI'AI WllrTI!D W~IIIM'TY, WI,UI1 llltf •If' 111'11111111111( Ill t t-lllfllftl
consecutive days usually cor·
15 Quick-mount fea·
should continue.
,.,cb.M•IMI Ml••l• ""· O.lol1n. '"~•till .
tdle for mower deck
Odds favor a warm ral her than reel s this problem.
and ~tt.K hments.
.\lgae- Growth of green or red
lSI GRAVELY.
a cool summ&lt;'r In 1987. /\ return to
bellcr condlllons Is expected scum In plant beds Is usually a
Fallin love with a Grave/g.
durin!( 1989 or 1990, with excel· sign of algae growth. These
l ent weather prod ucing record microscopic planls en s~~;~oth er
ANY G PIOFISSIONAL GIAVILJ RIDER
yough SE'!'dllngs and co rnpelc lor
yields in on~ of those years.
Wmt
MOWII
Unfortunately, no preci se nutrients.
Beds overfertilized or In shade
answer can be given.
NEW HOUISr MON., WID. I THUIS. 9·5; TUIS. I FRI. 9·1; SAT. 9·1 ·
most susceptibl e to rapid
are
From the Ohio Crop Reporting
ON THE SPOT t'INANCtNG
Board, average l arm land price algae growth. Applications of
bluestone-llme
will
reduce
the
In Ohio this spring Is $942 per
acre. Thi s Is seven perrenl less problem. Removal of the plant
204 COIIIOI n.
bed rover to allow fo r Increased
POMIIOJ
than last year's average.
to
dry
the
site
can
be
U. S. average price for farm
land Is down 8 percenl from a
year ago. Crop l and rent In Ohio
for this spring averaged $6:1.26
per acre, compared to S70.321asl
Y.ear.
In an USDA l and va lue reporl.
FAJtM C ITY llliC
'0Mf.fll0'f. D"
Iowa land Is currently renl lng a1
114 IU 2111
nearly 10 percent of value.
Youth planning markel pig
projects for the 1987 Ga llla
•
Pay1ro PottiRI Mil
County Junior Fair are currently
.\
going through the ta sk of select·
A '"""""' ;tolllott ........
s,odolly f-'tle4 of .....
~0. , I' c•,
ing thi&gt;fr animals.
,..... h«lwMII H-k.t,.._
ACcording 10 David Gerber,
ex tension swine spec fallsl, It will
take about98 days for an average
NOW
lllaigltl friiR bag
pig to grow from 44 pounds to 210
. . ltii'Hiet... MCIIW'
pounds. Th is would be an averALUMINUM
age or 1.694 pounds of gain ller .
A....... io 4 ~~. I fll. 20..
day .
&amp; 40J '"" loop.
De~lde on your show weight,
HG.
count !he num ber of days In the
11.49 IIOW.
feeding period, multiply by the
average gain llgure (or a gain
figure lrom a past project) and
calcu late the IK'glnnlng weight.
WHITE WISnNGHOUSE
If everything goes well, you
22 tine l~mp~rttl stttl spring brace rake
will be on target.
. NOW ONLY
ACcording to Dr. Bill Smith,
with 48 inch hcuNit
lEG.
SU9.9S

........

'

YOU GOTTA GET A GRAVELY
TO GET THEM. AND YOU'LL
GET ALL THIS, 1'001

-m
.

so ..

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAlES &amp; SERVICE

SPRING SAVINGS AT
MGM FARM CITY

\-

....""''.""'·-

6'

.....

STEP

$ON~

.

....,..,. '"' "'""''

Sl 09

9

LADDER

. 2 $2995
REFRIGERAJOR

$54995

$279

..---Agriculture briefs__,
OSU frosh will attent

$1,000 OFF

sympo.~ium

27 CU. FT. HOTPOIN1

FREEZER

SVflllll4 lttail $4.19

NOW ONLY

$4

Sft. Sit /II-H·2241

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! I -Ohio State University !reshmah
Elizabeth An n Rlgelsky of Berlin Center Is gol.ng to the 36th
annual 4-H Commodity Mar,ket lng Symposium this monlh In
Chicago.
She joins 32 other young people from around the nation . Each
" completed ao outstanding 4·H marketing project and was
selected to attend by the Cooperative Extension Service. The
Aprll26-29 educallonal event Is sponsored by the Chicago Board
ol Trade.

995

BLEND FERTILIZERS! UR
PHOSPHATE AND POTASH BLENDED TO YOUR NE

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

JA"M CITVIftt-

POMI~OY . OI&lt;,

'

540 lad lain
"

•

�'.

.·

..
Page- C-8-. The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-~lipolis.

April19,1987 ·

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Vii-ginia guard activated to fight floods ;·
By SEBASTIAN ROTELLA

r.:r."]

~SNOW

fZrl SHOWERS

-RAIN

WC01d

FRONTS: . . Wann

-Static ROccluded
WEATI!Eit M1\ P - Rai n is predi cted for parts of the central
J'lateau region and the n ~ rth ern Plains Sunday morning. (UPI)

enforcem ent agencies and we're
·going to hav&lt;' small boats availa·
ble to pull people out of the
water," National Guar d Col.
Edison Ha yes said.
._
The Jam es was reported· at
near cres1 at Columbia, reaching
35 feet - 17 feet ~bove flood
stage . Flood warnings rem ained
In effect for small st ream s In
northern VIrginia and high water
· tr oubled . central and western
areas, but·it appeared the flood·
lngwouid not approach the levels
that deva stated the area In 1985. .
In Scott sville, where resident s
~fleeted a massive exodus to high
ground Thursday night, official s
expected the James IO cr est at 27
feel and most r esident s to return
by today .
1
In Washington D .C. , the Potomac River climbed toward an
expected mark of 4 feet above
normal, spreading minor flood s
Into the elegant Georgetown area
ular conceni because the sources and Alexandria. Va .
ma y have been lost lnlo the
The storm has been blamed for

. £'1ne· aga1nst
• LTV
NRC proposes $2,()()()

.
Weather
Ohio Jorecsts
Uy United Press International

United Pres• International
Virgliita National Guardsm'en
were .activated to fight floods
caused by a stor m blamed tor.
four deaths In the eastern part of
the country, and a western
hea twave swept away r ecords
from the Rocki es to the M lssl s~
sipl River Valley.
As last week' s ferocious storm
fa ded Into light r atns In lime for
Good Frid ay, showers conllnued
fr om south ern New England to
Eas tern Pennsy lvania and fr om
nor theas t Florida across the
Ca r olinas Into southern Virgini a.
The state of VIrginia remain ed
the wett est In the nation, as the
.Jam es and (\ppomattox r ivers
surged over th eir banks.
I n the M idwest. Frida y's log

gave way to lnc reasl n ~: I Y clear
skies and ri sing tempera iu res .
Though river levels fell as
torrential downpours abated a!~
ter pounding Virginia with. 6
Inches of rain since Thursday,
flooding continued in that stale
and In east Tennessee· and
northern North Carolina.
Floodwaters crept within sight
of the state capltolln.Rlchmond ,
where city official s declared a
state of emergency Friday night.
Aboul 150 state g1,1ardsmen
placed on alert by Gov. Gerard
Ballles assumed duty stations.
with a new projection calling for
the James Riv er to crest at· 25
feet at the · city lacks early .
Sa turday .
' 'We' re dealing primar ily with
tra ffic contr ol and ass isting law

.

I

Ohio Zone Forec a."ils
1'\orthwes t Ohio
•
West Central Ohio
Sunny Sunda y, with highs in th e low 70s.
The probabili ty of p1w· i pi tutlon is ncar Z&lt;·ro .
Wind s w ill IJ&lt;• vo riahlc at 10 mph or less .
Central L akt• Erie Short•
F; a."il l.ake E rit~ Shore
N ortlwa.~t Ohio Inland
Ct•nt ral Ohio Highlands
Sunny Sun dov. wll h highs nc~r 70.
· '
·
Ohio Miami Valley
f;entral Ohio
Southwest Ohio
Sunny Sun d;.ry, wl lll highs in lhr m id 70s.
The probobilily 0f prrcipiW iion is nca r zer o.
Winds wil l be v ariabl&lt;• ol JU mph or less.
Easl Central Ohio
South l'entral Ohio
Sunn.1 Sundo y, wil h hi!(hS in thr mid 70s.
The proljob ilily of preci pit ation is ncar zero.
Winds w ill be vorb bl c at 111 mph or less .

CLE VEL ,\ND tU Pii - The
LTV Steel Co. l aces a $2, 000 fine
fro m the Nuclea r Regulatory
Commiss ion for allegedly losing .public
Bert Region
Davi s,
acting domain,
director" of NRC
fi ve sea led cont ain er s QI paten· III .
li ~ ll y danger ous ra dio ac tive
LTV cooperat ed with the NRC
mal erials.
invesiigalion, an LTV spokesTh e containers . smaller than man said.
mar bit's , were not found In a N ov.
" The vio la lions we are dea ling
6, 1986, srarr h of LTV' s Resear ch with her e are paper w ork dc fi Ce nt er Building In Cleveland and r iencies thai hav e been cor·
disposa l areas.' NRC Region Ill reel ed." ali LTV spokesman
spo kes man .Russ Marablto sa id said. "Or iginallv, tht' NRC was
Frid ay.
not ifi ed by us I hat som e r adioar·
"As far as we' re concerned. t ivc sources wer e nol accounted
l hey' r e m issing," Mar ablto said . for ."
" Th ey are l icensed to possess
LTV has until May 8 to eith er
thi s ma teri al and an , inventory pay the flnr or prol cst It . Th e
determined lhat the materi al is company ma ~ r eques t a hearing
gone."
if the fi ne is imposed over its
T he NRC sa id tw o of th e obj ection.
cont ainer s had "cobali -GO. wh ich
An LTV spokesm an said the
could represent -a signifi ca nt company had not yet decided
radi al ion haza rd 10 m em bers of whether to pay or protest the
the public II improperl y handled. fin e.
The other three sou rces are
much less ha zardous." The ra·

sai~

di oact lvc m alerials were used to
meas ure the densi ty of m ate·
rials. Mar ablt o sa id.
" Th ey have v iola led two NRC
regulations," M ar bilo sa id. " W&lt;?
co nsid er i1 ver y se rious."
LTV was cit ed lor failure l o
maintai n the sources und er con·
stan! s·ur velllance and lmme·
diate control when stored In an
unres tricted ar ea, and failure to
co nduct a ph ys ic al Inventory
every six m onths to account for
all radloac t ive mat erials .
"These v loatlons are of partie·

Grand Opening
RT. 141 IN CENTENARY

SPECIAL:

12 Session $2 5

No one hurt in
· early morning fire

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OXFOHO . Ohio 1UP I I -

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Send the ITO® Secretaries
Week Bud Vasz.
Secretaries Week starts

Start Your Kids
Off Right

1\n

· dr nl s fr om lill'lr liv inh quarter, ,
blll no orH' wa :-. tnjurrd. ufrl cio.rls
so ld.
/\ fi n • llro k• • nul In l he living
1'0om of a thn•1• slorv building
w hr• r p fr C'~ hnwn m :tlr:-. lh'l'rl .

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Apri120. Just call

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~~
FLORIST

Meigs County's Oldest Florist
352 E. Main St., •Pomeroy, Oh.

.;.'

~h. 992 ·2644
"Often lmmilated - Nt•lw
D14 plirnll•1l"

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446-6566
·CALl FOI AN APPJ. TODAY

lnjur \l'S wrrf' rrportf'cl .
Hr said flr t'fl ghlt'rs fr om tim •••

•Zenith

R.v BOU WEBSTER
LOS /\NGF: LF.S 1UPI 1- Ca ll
II a c·asr of an urademlr Oav ld
1 mecl ing one of I he I r ue Co tlalh s
of b u si n ~.s.

That's thr

WHITE &amp; 1•1GHTS

3oo s.contl a...

of Inability to pay.

PlANNED PARENTHOOD

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992· _5912 Monday.friday

GALUPOUS
414 Stcalllf An., 21111 llaor
446·0166 ......Sat.
CWSlD TMIIRSDA Y

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_oil.·
Al10:
.jackson,
Chesapeake.
Athlne.
Chillicothe.
Logen

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p~r iod

last year . However,

l he division's loss In the most
recent quart er was well below
the s:12. 9 m illion l oss ex perienced
in I he fourlh quart er of 1986."
He co nt inued. "The r ea sons for
this for this lower loss compared
with the prior quarter are con·
tinu ed success in our cos I redu c~
tlon program. Improvements in
domestic and E uropean sales
vo lume and product mix. and a
higher primary alum inum pr ice
which partially offset lower
fa br ica ted produc t prices."
Mater sa id that primary alum I·
num prices " have r ise n by aboul
10 cents per pound so far In 1987,
but as is normal. domes llr.
r'eal ized pri ces lor fabrira tC'd

and matu r ilies In the hi ghly
co mpetilive mort gagt• m arket.
· You will have to dea l with a
whole new vocabulary that Is
Important to master . Ov er lh e
l ilr of a 30-year morlgagea sm all
diff~ren ce In monthl y pa yments
can add thousands of dolla rs to
your cost s.
The aver age r a1e na t ionw ide
on 30-yea r fi xed r ate mortg age Is
about .9.2!i percenl: 15-ye.ar loans
aver age 8. 9 per cent , and on&lt;'·
year adju stable ra le mortgages
aver age 7.5 perr enl, the lowes t In
more than eight years, according
.1 0 I he Bank Ratc Monllor.
But th e publication says 30yca r fixed mortga ges can be
found below 8 percent and ARM s
ar c being of fer ed bel ow 6. !i
per cent, althou gh som e of these
low advertised rat es .can end up
costin g more than a higher one:
T he decision belwecn a !lxed·
and adjustable-rate mortgage is
lhc first one you will have to
make. · •
Since banks car ry the risk of a
rise In l nl er est rat es, I hey charge
more on fixed -rat e loan s.
Mon thly pa y ment s are hlgtier,

produ r l s which mukc upmos 1of co mpared wi th a year -ago , pe· .
our shipm('ni S ar e l a~gin g be· riod . Mai0r said. bu l he C'xpects
hind tho trend i n prim ar y mPt al. improvement In li s oper ating
· " We arc enro umgcd' by the •·esuit s for I he full &gt;•ca r.
aluminum div ision 's lower oper·
In conclusion. he sa id . " This
al ing loss compared wi l h the d ivision has improved lht; effi·
fourth quarter and are co nfident r i0ncy or i ts commodil)' cheml·
of fur l her ga in s bcra use a n ~ ra ls bu siness. and It has recently
nounced pr ire in cr eases for mad~ impo1·tant new product
many fr abricalcd pr oduc ts w ill inlrod uctions lhal should in-'
take effec t in I he months lmmc- cr caS!' revenues and profit abilit y
diately ahea d," he sai d. "A lso. In th es per l ali.H hemira i su rea.",
seronp quarl cr aluminum ship·
Th e co mpany's ~ lumtnum
ment VOlume will be Sl rong, lhi rd Shipmen IS in I he first quar ter of
quarter bookings ar p al a high 1987 toloi ed 212.400 tQns. :t pr r leve l. and OUI' prog ram 10 furl her C('nl abo ve shipm ents of 20";~ 0(1.
rcdu c(' operat lng and admlniS· tons In lhr same pc1·iod las t ye ar.
· Shipments in the lo1·m or l abrl·
tra tlvr r os 1s is wor k ing well. "
Opcra llng C'a rnin gs of i hr ra ted produr l s made up 92
co mpany's indu st rial and spc· per re ni of 1he lol fli. down rrorn 9~
clalt y chem ica ls div ision dr•· prrer nl in lhe first quan er of
r linP&lt;i in thr fi rs I qu ar·l er of 19R7 19R(i.

UOiV('I'Sil~'

IO

d C'V IS&lt;'

U

th ~

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SA name.&lt;; new area manager

Inve.~tment

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Elliott's

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APPLIANCES - TV- VIDEO
PH. 446-8051

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firm renew.s coverage

GALLIPOLIS - The Investment firm of Blunt Elli s &amp; Loewl
Inc .. · as announced by Thomas S. Franke, pr esident and chief
cxCt' utlvc officer . ha s renewed insurance cover age for
securltics arcounls hr ld at the firm . Securities accoun ts held at
Blunt E llis &amp; Loewl are now Insured up to $10 million.
Th f' Securities Jn vt:&gt;stor Prot('('tlon Corporation ;SJPCt
presmtly covers all customer securities acroun1 s for up to
$500,000 of f'QUit y wllh coverage on cash poslllons limlled to
5100.000. The additional $9.5 million or coverage i s provided by
the Kemper Croup.
Thf're is no servk'e charge or fee for Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
customers.
" We are on!' of only a handful of firms to furnish this
safpguard," Franke said. " In an area of u~rtalnty lor many
financial lnstllutlons, we a1 Blunl Ellis .. Loewl feel II Is

Bankr rs sav mos l A mrrica ns
prefer the .10~.vea r m atur ity. It Is
wha t their p11 rent s and gr andpur ·
ent s bou ght I heir hom es with .
But ban ks Incr eas ingly a r c
offer ing - Indeed pu shing 15-yea r m or tgages. lnt erPsl
costs over lhe life of the m an
gage ar c substu nl lail)· lower but
monthly paym\' nls ar c• mon•.
Some 15-year loa ns havr I wier·
a·monlh pay ment s thai ca n lx'
oner ous. You r an acc·omplish I he
sam e pur pose - sav ing lntcr&lt;'St
- by taking a i'onger malurlt y
and prepay ing prlnc i~la l ever y
month . And should you havt' "
financial setback you won't be
locked lnl o higher monthly
pay ment s.
ARMs ca r r y a lower Initial
ral c. You have lher lsko f a r lsr ln

rat es bu t yo u be nefit if thev
dec line. The II RM should have
low annual adjust ment ca p - 2
per cent age point s a year Is
average - and a rea s onabl~
lifetime ca p - look for und er 13
per cent.
.
Bowa r·e of unrea listica lly low
" teaser " ra t es I hal can go' up
weeks or a fcli• months. A
one-yeur /\RM should b&lt;' ad·
juswd on ce u year and the
ad j ustm ent Index Is Important.
Choose an In stitu tion thai adjusts
to T n•asut·y bills or a n o th ~r
publl r rat e an&lt;l not an Intern~ !
Index of fund s.
.
Mak e sure y ou are puy lng-whal
you wer e told ,vour r ate would ·bc.
On&lt;' la rge New York t~r!ft
rcrrnf.l)l was forced 10 r·e(uRd
hu ge sum s to customers w.hen
one dlscovr red his arlual p :/
mcnt s Wl'rP hlgh&lt;'r than the
bank' s advertised ratr and th n
his loan con1r11u1 called for . :
You should consid er an /\~M
If: you ca n' t qualify for ~ a
conventional mortgage, your In·
com e Is rL, ing and y ou wtll 6!'
able to rover any' ln cr eail!d
pay ment s and you ex pect to ~ll
your hom e within two ycurs. ~

8

In

lnl~l'('sl $

In the brsl
of f' ,.
c·or p o r u tl o n
and ' ·s
stockhold ers ."
Th e company sai d 214.fimllJn
C'O mf]lon ~ h n n·s ~'C' rf' o ut s t~ ·
ln g as of Marc h 2.1.
'••
lnlormutlon on r-xrc utlvc~y
lnr lud&lt;•d In thr proxy Slalr
t
showed 'hal r man Lee lac·
a
1wrrved $792.972 In sa lary ~nd
cash cqul val cmcnt It em s In ~ !jl!6,
along with $B7, ,000 lnrcnjjve
eompcnsa l lon from 1YX:. pro{j!R.
for a tota l of $1.7 million.
Th&lt;· slal cm c·nl noted th e D~ln ·
war !' Lcglslaturr la sl .June
am&lt;' ndPd th!• la w fo r Dr-lawarc
c·or )JOra tlons, pcr mlttlnll thcrt) to
i lm ll d irector llab/111 .1' and ,Jlt O·
vl dr suhslilutr PI'Otrr t lon_ 'i)r ·
c·;r usr of " lh t• unaval labllt y. or
t rad l ll onat tl n sur unc r o
poli cies."
. .. r

Tax-deferred qualified!plans for retirement ..., .

UNDER JNSPECfiON - Aluminum wheel~ with a one-Inch
thick •olid ruhht•r surlact' are inspected here at Goodyear's
Engineered products plant In St. Marys, Ohio. The whe~ ls are uowd
to drive the tracks , also made by Goodyear, on I he U.S. Army'• Ml
tank. Each lank contains 32 such wheels. (UPI)

l mpor t~ n t lo prov ide our va lu ed rusl omr rs with this add ed

·

s~rv ir~:~ . ~

1\SHL/\ND. K&gt;·· - K!'ith F. . Smith will be the oew ~ a rca
managrr of SuperA mcriras torC's, a!'rordlng to ,John F . Pettus.
senior vlrc pres idr n1 and grn&lt;'ra l managc·r of Super /\ mcr lca 's
Sou thern Division.
Sm ith . who was ba sed In &amp;-&lt;- ktcy, w .'v a .. as an area managcr
of stores ro nccntratcd In south ern WeSI Vi rg inia. will be
responsibl e for opera tion of six stor es In southcastrrn Ohi o and
wester n Wesl \' irginla.
/\ nat ivr or Huntlhgton. W.Va .. Sm ith joined the ro mpan7' In
1978 as an assistant storc m anag1'r.

vea l's.

DETROIT i UP l t - Chrys lc~
Corp. Frid ay asked stockh older·s
to approvc an Increase auth o·
rlzcd co mmon stock 10 :~111
million from :100 million sha rrs
as a defr ns . aga lnsl possibl e
hostil(• takcvO!'r bid s.
The aut om aker also Is src•kln g
shar ehold er approva l of mov&lt;·s
to limit dlrrclor li abil it y In
response to high dam agP awurds
and lnsuranrf1 ros ts.
Th e proposa ls by C'h Jl&gt; SI!'r 's ·
dlrcc lor s appean •d In proxy
matrr lal se nt F rid ay to 1:to. m11
shareholdrrs In ;r dva nrr of lhP
annual m ee tin g May 21 In Sava n·
oah, Ga.
Chrys ler sa id lh c additional
shares could " lx• Issued 10
holders who might side wil h 1h1•
board In o ppQs ln ~ a ta k rovcr bl&lt;l
that th ~ board dctr r m lnt•s Is not

said .lanirP Ne wmiln. a m£' mb£' r
Ri ve rside l ea rn .
T he• pa rl ·l imc busi ness sl udt'nt
- she also works as the public
a ffai r.&lt; coordinator for Co nl el.
the stat e's thlrd -l ar gcsl telr·
phone rompan.v - will prcsrnl
t hr Rivers ld e'st m lc•gy to a panel
of General M otor s exer utl vrs
I his work. · •
" Yolr la lk aboul advrrlisin g
and promotion and ma r ket rP·
sa r ch bu l il Is a vastl y &lt;liffer!'nl
thin g 10 go out and do it. " sa id
Walt Henry, an assoriatr prof!'s·
sor of mar Keti ng- at the !\,()(XI·
sl udent ca mpu s and one of three
f ac ult y a dv i sers f or lh c
rom pet il ion.
Sludenl s ben efit from the ro m ·
pet it ion. Henry said. be&lt;'a usr of
li s " real wor ld " envi ronm cnl.
" Plus." he sai d. " it will look
good on th ei r res um e~. "

and It lakes a higher Income 10
qu allfv .
Fi xed ra l r Is for )•ou i f: your
Income• Is sta ble, )'0 0 nrcd
predi ctable housing cosls a nd
don' I want the risk of bellin g on
in lcrl'S I ratrs . you ca n qualify
and can afford the Initial higher
mont hi )' pay ment s and you don' l
plan to move for al l!•as t fi V!'

Chrysler tries ·. to start
anti-takeover defense

product. This yr ar . thr tea m s
will co n!'cnl ratr on helping G M
sell m or~ of it s sporl .l ' Po nt iac
F ie r o aut omobiles .
"Th e differe nt ·~ i&gt;Piwee n thi s
projec·t and ·so mr of thP r ase
st lldles I' ve done is lh at the
d ~a dl i nrs hNe arc ver y r ea l and
thai put s a lot of pressul'e on it ."

(No Punhon Nenuoryl

v

By Mi\RY TOUJN
UPI Busint'SS Wrller
NEW YORK iU Pl t -A fr w
years ago when mortgagr cos1s
wer e hitt i ng 16 per cenl . rales ol
6.5 per cent to 9 percent seem ed a
th ing of the past. Bul th ai' s whal
mort gages go for toda:• - and i n
a bu yets' mark el for housin g.
w i ll be hi cc ups
1 " Th er r
lh rou ~:ho ut the yea r bu t th er e's
no quest ion in our mind s that
inl er est r ates wi ll hold pretty
much at current lrvel s for all of
1987 and Into 1988." sa id Thomas
D . Ruth ven, execuli ve vlre pres! ·
· den I at Goldom e Really Crrdi l
Corp., subsidiar y of Goldom e
Savings Bank of Buffal o. N. Y.
" With lnl cr cst ral es low and
homes on the m ar ket at afforda·
blr prices, II seems a good ti me
for many po lenll al homeowner s
10 bu y," Ruth vcn sai d.
Bu1 finding your drea m house
al a price you can afford ca n be
the eas l ~s l part of the process.
No matter lhe low ln lcrest
rates. fin ancin g your pu rchase
wi)l require pi cking lhrough a
minefi eld of fixed and adjustabl e
ra les, balloon mortgages. point s

,...----.Business Briefs:--------...,

DURING
AUCTION

OF SOUT..Asr OHIO

Mtigs.Midical Building
(acro11 l111m Veterans Hasp.)

f'OC'h

.; market ing and aclvert lslngr;l m·
' paign for a General Motor s

CREDIT PERSONNEL WILL BE IN OUR . STORE FOR INSTANT FINANCING .
Auction conducted br Bud McGhte Auction Com111nr. Bud McGhee. Auction"'
Steve McGhte, Apprentice Auctionw

614 Silver Bridge
Plaza
Behind Daltrs
Galipolis, Ohio

Graduat r

rag!'r ' 10 show . I hal it s student s
have• 1he • mar kel lng maxi!' · to
rompt•lr ogai nsl I he lik es of the
I vy l.eagur's Colu m bi a Univrr·
sitv and the bl ur-bl ood tJ n i,·cr~
sl1y of Virgini a.
The rompetil lon ra il s for a
1ram of busi ness st udrnl s fr om

Full Factory Warranty- Dealers Welcome

• •Sliding fee ·scale. No one refused services because

univt\ r s it~r 's

' vprsit v . svstC' m, Hiversidf' is

TV's, TV Carts, YCR's, ·Microwave Ovens, Electr_ic &amp; Gas .
WHAT: Color
Ranges. Dishwashers, Washers. Dryers, Freezers, Refrigerators.
We at ELLIOTT'S have talked to our major suppliers, and they have
WHY: a1reed
to brin1 ill all new merchandise for 1 DAYand 1 DAY ONLY!

'Services include:
Birth Control; V.D. Scretnlng;
Cancer Scnening; ..-egnancy
'-Its; education and counst•t
for individuals and couples.

2~1

Srhool of Managem ent has bern
sf'lflr t C'd b~' ~f'n t•r; J I Mo tors as
onr 111 univcrsltirs na l ionwidr 10
rom prlr In lhc I ~R7 GenNa !
Motors Ma r k~ling Com pet ition.
Oflrn ovrrsha clowrtl b&gt;· thr
lar g!•r un lvrrsitics. sur h as
UCLA an d · UC fkorkr lry. in
•, Cal ifornia ' s eig ht-ca mpus un i-

AWAY

90 DAYS TIL
1ST PAYMENT

Your privacy is respected
Your questions answered

furi ng

TO BE GIVEN

90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH

Gallipolis

.'

~rr nario

sludrnl s al l he Ri vers ide' ca mpu s
or the Unlvrrsil .v of Ca lifor nia .
&lt;l bou l fill m ilrs sou lhrast of Los·
,\ngelrs.

'

FREE
PRIZES.

tin ~ u ls hcd tlw bla w in IIIJO\It ~()

"POWROY:

G/\L LIPOLIS - B lun t Ellis &amp; Loewl lnr. will hold an open
house Saturday. /\prll 2o. and Sunday. /\pr il 26. at its Ga llipoli s
offi ce, 416 Seco nd live .. from 1· 4 p.m .
O url n ~ the open hou se. m anager Bryce L. Smith and
invr slmenl broke r M ark E . Smith will beo ~ hand to speak with
,·isitors and anSI•ccr any quesllons they mlghl have abo ul the
!nvcstmc nt business.
" Wf' wa nt to ex tend a cordial invitation to rvrryonc in
Cal lipolis. Poin t Pl easant and the surrounding communi lies."
se~ icl Rn·cc Smilh . " /\ll hou gh Blun t E llis &amp; Loewl is an old
o&gt;stablished firm in I he m idwes t. It Is new to Ga llipolis. We ar e
happy l o offer thr oppo rtunit y to have mor e people berome
mor e acquai nted w l 1h our fir m."
Rl unl E lli s &amp; Loew i is a fuli ~ser vice regional fir m founded in
1 92~. /Is a member of I he K emper Group of Companies, Blunl
F. ills &amp; Loewi ha s the subslanllai capit al backing of the Kemper
Corp. ThE" firm srrvices 11\0r!' than 2o0.000 cu stomers throu gh
OliO bP~nrhe s lorated throughout the midwest .

UPI Business \\1rlh_•r

l' X

The Shoe ·Cafe

s.a me

{" Competition spurs
· business students

•Gibson
•Sharp
•Crosley

•Whirlpool
•Speed
Queen

wer r · {'\'U('UUIPd SU [ C' IV nnd 110

mlnul r s.
1.1 111 ~ said till' lt v in ~ r oom .rr!';l
oft he' haII wa.s gu lll ·d u nd ~ f' \' I'I 'H l
I'Cs icJC' nt r oo n1s suf ft' l'&lt;'cl hPa r~·
· smokr dam ag•··
" Mu nv wlll bi' ahll 10 I'P iu t· n to
thei r r oom s IOnlght. bul so mr
· will hcl\'r to tnOH' Into olhcr
housi ng arr Ms campu s." Lil tlr

Firm's open hot~:se.
slated next weekend

•,

or visit us today.

•RCA

Uni \'rl's! ty SIJOkl's man Hi ·
&lt;' hard l.i t ii P .s. dd l hr s tuclf'nt s

dC'piH inwnt s tT·.s po ndr d and

OPEN HOUSE PLANNED invr•tmenl hruker with Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewllnc . in Gallipolis,
and Bryce L. Smith, standing, the local office manager,
r~amined stock market activity on a display terminal. An open
hous•• lor the new ollie&lt;• has heen set lor Saturday, Aprll25, and
Sunday, April 26, from 1-~ p.m.

Thr

rilr lv·mor ning flrl' In a m0n 's
n •s liJr n&lt;'C ha ll fon ·t•d l ~ll stu ·

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.ELLIOTT'S GREATEST SALE EVER
SATURI)AY, APRIL 25th 11:00 A.M.

~-------------------1

loss to in cr easE' sli ghlly to $24 .3
million from $22. 1 million In the

Mortgage options open to home buyers

•

.ALL NEW APPLIANCES AND TV's
DON'T MISS THI.SONE·
FUJ,L 1\PRIL MOON - The full April moon rises over a small
farm In Ellznht•thlown Atlrll 13 sl10rtly alter dusk. Tht• spring lull
moon Is u rmnlndt•r to larnwrs of the upcoming planting se•~~on
and tho• long work da.vs ahead. (U I'I )

Section

'

RAVENSWOOD, W. Va .
Kaiser Aluminum '&amp; Chem ica l
Corp. repor·ted las1 week a fir st
quarter 1987 nel loss of $29.:!
million , or G9 cent s p&lt;?r co mmon
. .
share.
· In the first qu arter lasl yea r.
when the company recorded
pre- tax gain s from non-oper atin g
Hems tha i totaled $51.4 million.
Kaiser A luminum had net in·
&lt;;orne of $17.4 million or $.37 a
share.
Sales incr eased lo $o.17. :l mil·
lion In the first qu arler I his yea r
from $5:!0.7 million the same
period .o f 198n.
Chairman Corn ell C. M airr
said "a sm all decline in domestic
fabriratro produr1 s pr ice r·eali·
zatlons caused lh e alum inum
division' s first quart er operating

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiij;;;;;~

rr==========::;i
DEBBIE'S
TROPIC TAN

Business

four deaths since last Monday- ·.
one each In Oklahqma and .
Florida and two in Virginia. The
latest victim was a 74-year· old •..
woman who drove past a barri- ·
cade Thursday near the Shenandoah River in western Virginia ·
and was· swept away by the
current, authorities said.
. M eanwhile, the western part or ·
the country sweltered under a
mass of heat, with t emperatures .
ranging from the 70s in some '
parts.of the region to the 90s and .
100 in the des~rt southwest and .
southern plains.
,
The heat wave scorched the ·
Rockies and Plains ard snapped ·
at least 25 records from Montana ;
to Texas. Hig~emperatures··
included 100 deg ees at Phoenix, '
Ariz .; 93 at Au
and Waco. :
T exas; 92' at Hou t.(&gt;n, Tulsa, ·
Okla., and Oklahoma City ,:
Okla. ; 91 at Shreveport, La ..; 87,
at Huron, S.D.; 86 at St; Cloud. ·
Minn.; 85 at Salt Lake City and76.
at International Falls. Minn.

Blunt E llis &amp; Locw i ln c. ls onf'o f I he na t ion's largest r egional
brokrrag~ and i nves lm ent bank ing firms. With corporate
h ca d~u ar t ers In Milwauk ee and Chicago: the fi rm services
m or r I han 200.000 customers th ro ugh 00&lt;1lnves lment brokers In
i 1 branch offices In 12 sta tes, Th r co mpa ny Is a member of the
K cmpc·r gr oup of com pa nles.

A rea

di.~tributor win~

recognition

!ITHENS - Ken neth K err of K Pr r Olsl t'ibutlng Co. Inc ..
/\ thens. was selected as a "GoldPn Lion " wi nnrr or the Str oh
Brewcr.v Company Corpora l l' Wholesa l er Incenti ve and
Recognit ion Program for 1986.
Kerr Di stributin g was one of 1o wholesa lers selerted for I hi s
awa rd by Str oh. More I han 1. 000 wholesaler parllclpatcd In I he
program . Stroh selct'led 65 of lhem as " Proud Lions" and
earned a Tahitian paradi se adve nture tri p.
" Go.lden Lion " winners were also awarded a specially
des igned trophy, a 100percenl cashmere blazer and an 18-c arat
gold lapel pin. Spouses of th f' winner s received a gold bracel el
and a hand-crarted charm. Wholesaler uniformed personnel
r eceiv ed "Golden Lion" patches, while olher employees wer e
given a gold-pl at ed lapel pin.
The " Golden Li on" wholesa ler s wer e selected to participate
ba sed on corpora te sales of all brands, and the percentage of
sal es Incr ea se over a wholesa ler 's" corporate goal and
achievement of goals for the Stroh's, Sl roh Li ght and Schlit z
Malt Liqu or brands.
·

By STAN EVANS
G/\LLIPOI.IS - For employ·
rr s and sr i!·
lndlv ldu ·
a is. lhr St'rurlty
of lhrl r retire·
m cnl depe nd s

ol up to -m l&gt;l'f&lt;'""' of ro mpcnsu·

l ion paltl 10 Pmploy&lt;•es not· lo
cxr••cd $:1rt,1Kitl co ntrlhutrd for
any Individ ual Pmployr'&lt;' . Contrt.
hul lons mu st tx• mHd&lt;• out of n!'!
profl!s . and the c mpl oy~ r ·ha~
Ori h OW .SUC'CPS~ ·
flcx lhll lt,l ' par h .vear In d&lt;'l l•rm)n··
fully they can
l ng the l&lt;•w l ol' eo nl rlbutlon,; , 1\n
S(' l usld fl a S!'H11S
employer Is no1 obl lgll l&lt;•&lt;i to
today. In ord er
mukc a &lt;·ont rl lrut lon c•ac h ~· 1'~ 1· :
t o mel'l li v in g
howrvrr. mn t r lliirt Ions should·hP
expenses onrc t
fnadr on iJ n ').!ulur ha sls In oi'{,PI'
wage ear ners.
elfccl of
to ma ln1uln a p&lt;•rma nr nl bt~~b
Jnflat ion, over l ime. Is to t•a usr a for lh!' 11lan .
• ·
dra mat lc lnrrea.; r In 1he cos\ of
1\ mo nf',\ ' pu n ·h:.ts(' p liJn p1 ·
meelln g thosr l iv ing l'Xpe nses. In . mlts un l'mpi&lt;Jyr'r to - rna , .
f act. the cost of l lv ln ~ has morr
rC~g u l ar annua l t·ontrlhu tion " 6 a
th an doubl ed over lhe lasl lO Spf'r lf lcd j)!' r&lt;·&lt;'ntagr nf l' . t h
I
Yea r s.
OIJ1 p!oyep' ' !'tJmpt•nsa tion to i &lt;'
· Congress has been awarro f thc
plan. Onrl• ' '' laill rs hed: an &lt;'rf1
effect of lnflallon In t he fln an'cia l
ployer Is eommi lll •cl to ma kt• 1~1 ·
secur it y of rPiire~s :md lhj&lt; fac t
annual ronl ri hution r''cn In ;~· ­
1hat soc ial secur ity ca nnot ket'p ar s In whi&lt;•h th!'rc arc no
•t
,up with thr continu al Incr ea se I n pro fits. T hr la x·d&lt;'ducllil l&lt; ' ,.
the cost of li vi ng. There fore, they
trlhutlo n c·t;~ n nn l l'X C'P('tl 2;) pt ·have co ntinu ally passel] lcgls la· cent of carnl'd lnt·OmP or $:lit.( 1
li on whi ch ha s favored and
for eac h (•ll~llli P &lt;• mployN'. II. ; n
·encouraged em ployers and se ll · employer rif'l'l s 10 &lt;·omhlnl'
employed Indi viduals to set .aside pro fll - ~h a r ln~ und a m onry p~··
a por tion of their ea rni ngs by chase pl an. lhP ma ximum a lim•··
providi ng 1ax deduct ions for abl e annu a I mni r lbut io n Is ,, till~.,
contribut ions made to a q ual lflt;o d
pcrrrnl .of eo rnecl lnc·o m&lt;'
r
retfrcmenl plan. In addition, $:KJ,000. Ma n; · r m piO)'CJ's \1 I
these contr ibu tions ar c perm il ~
combine pla ns and cs tubllsn
ted to ear n and gr ow tax deferred
regular annuu I Ill pNccnt &lt;·ont •
until retlrem enr .
butlon lrvPI in lhc monc;• ·1;\l:t.
One such plan Is a defi ned · chase portion and I hen be Ubi r:lQ
cont r ibution plan, which consists have dlsr r PI ion s car h yc•ar
of two ty ~s of pia ns. /\ n how much 10 rpnl r ibutr to 1
employer may elect to es labll sh pr ofll -sha r l n ~ portion up to
either plan or ca n pair bo lh plans maximum of 1o percent.
toaether. A prollt·shar lng plan
(Mr. Evans Is an invo.,.tm
may pe r mlya n empl oyer to m ake hroker with Th t• Ohio Com p · ·
in Its Galllp.alis office. )
an~ua l de&lt;Jil,c llbl e contributions

:a

t'

'

,.

�'

'

April 19, 1987
April19~1987

3 , Announcement~

....---Ohio Briefs:-- Steel finn
Ex-president slates appearance
forsetalls
li([llililtti()Jl
DE LAWARE I'U Pl t -Former President G&lt;.&gt;rald f ord will
spea k Wednesday evening at Ohio Wes leyan University as paq
or the sc hool' s program on the bicentenn ia l observa nces or the
Constitu tion.
OWU has set "''d" Wl'dncsdal' as Constit ution Day, a
hig hlight or th(' ,vr ar long \'ationa l Colloq uiu m Sludv of the

Cons ti t ut ion .

·

Cna.~ter

·

fans plan conference

MlflD I. I&lt;TOWi\ tU Pi t - i\m,rrira n Coa ster Enth usias ts will
hold a Coas1&lt;•r Conf• •rpnr&lt;· 1\pril 21i at Americ ana Amu sement
PCtrk in Midd letm.i·n.
This group )NIII IJ&lt;.· rid tng Am&lt;•rira n&lt;J's Coas tPr "The
Screeching IO: ug lc." desig nrd with high hills and long drops.
C oa ~ wr r ntflu siasr Dav id .J ackson s~~ ~· s 1he orga nizat ion

' Irives to promote the roller roaster and lhP par ks at the same
1im('.

Temple to install rabbi
COLUMB US rUPl t - Ohio' s oldes t· and largest .ll'wish
c·ongreg ation has completl'd a yew-long scare h for a rabbi who
will he• installr•d Ap ril 24.
'
Rabbi Brad ley Rl ccf!'ld h;, s been chosen to head the Temple
lsrar•l in Columbus. HP wil l br lh&lt;•24th ra bbi at the J.IJ .ycar-old
co n~rP,l:W 1!on.

Rabbi Rlcclr ld ha&gt; bc •pn an assoeial!• rabb i at B&lt;d.limore
Hebrew Congrrgai ion and sen ior rabbi at Anshe Hescd
fo ngrcgu l ion in F: r i e, Pa.

On&lt;· of 1hose pPrformi ng t hP Ins 1a II at io n w iII be Ra biJi .IPro me
F'olkman who installed Ra bbi fl lr·rfrl d in J!li7 in Oallimon •,

VA apprm ,cs program fundinK
DA YTON rUPl t - The VP trrans Ad ministra tion C&lt;" ntral
Olt ic·e in Was hington has approved fundin g for a progra m of the
Da ~! f o n

Vfl l r &lt;-tns l\dmin i ~ t ra ti o n MNi i r~d Cr nll'r .

The proposal th at rwel vC'd $128.221i call ' for the \'A Medi cal
Ce nter to work with other agcn('i(os in the• cil y to seck. tr&lt;•al and
re hab lllta ll' the homeless vetPra ns who ore r· h roni r a ll ~
mentall y ill .
0t1~' 1 D O
~ nd .

ERIE. Pa . iUPl i - The
Sharon Steel Corp. has avoided
the threa t or Immediate llqulda·
rion, bul the fu lure olt he nallon's
12th-largest steelmaker remains
in doubt.
·
_ The company flied for reorgan·
ization Friday under Chapter\1
of Ihe U.S. Ba nk ruptcy Code, just
one hour before a major bond
holder planned to inlllar e Involuntary liquldatlon proceedings.
Sharo n Steel has been trying
fo r two years to refinance a bond
debt of more than $400 million,
but Quantum Overseas N-V.
which holds $96.9 million of
Sharon Steel' s 13.5 percent debentures . had directed bond trustee Mellon Bank to Ill&lt;' an
Involunt ary Chapter 711quldation
action against the sreelmakN a~
any time aft er noon Friday.
Sharon StPel' s defensive rear·
ganizarion filing In U.S. Bankruptcy Cour t in Erie has raised
legitimate concerns among the
2..100 union workers at lhe com·
pany's VIctor Posner Works in
farrel l. Pa .. and local gover nment s !hal .rely hl'av lly on
Sharon Steel ta x dollars arc
fared with an un eE'rta in future .
Wall er Sierkman. Sharon
Steel' s chief operating officer.
said the . company, based In
Miami. will con tinue normal

wa s OnC' Of 4:J pn 1posuls approrrd to s hoJI'(&gt; J $;} m i l lion

·

Retired jurist dead at 82
LORAI N 1 UP It - l{eliretl l.oraln l"uuntr Common Pl eas
CouJ'I .ludg&lt;' .fohn Pinf' ura is dear! at Ihr agl' of 8~.
Pincura died Frid ay in Lorain's St . .loseph Hospita l. He'd had
(·ancer surgf'r y fi \'f' Yf'ar s ago. and thr di SPH Sf' rr(' urrrd six

months ago.
Pi ncura had s('rvcd a!-; C' i t y so l k it or for t hl' ci ,_
, .of Lora in for 18

ypa rs b!'fon• ht• was elcra•d a judgC' in 19ol . Hr ret ir&lt;"d in 1~77 .
but .1\er vcd Ll ~

il

v isllinJ:: jutl gr ·ln nl'i ghhor i ng co un ti es for u f ew

yea rs alter his rr tirr menr .
A funeral will be held Tuesday afl!•rnoon in Lonlin .

l.awmaker t.o open

serie.~

ADA iUP II- Sen . Orr in G. Hatch. 11-Utah . wil l deli ver the
lna ugura ll&lt; ormr nuy Lrrture Srrl••s ler ltnr al Ohio Nor lhern
Unlversll y Ma v L
Har ch will spra k on "The t it·igina I IniPn1 or 1he Ca nst itulion ."
Th&lt;" lr!'lure 3eries . nam C'd for rhr lai c C'IPveland allornev
StPvr n Kormendy who gradual eli from lhr Ohio NorlhPrn Ia,;..
S&lt;'hool In 19'1~. fr olu res a prominen t JUrist.

Touri.~m

unit

rel(Ja.~ es

brochure

COLUMRUS 1UP II - What to src' and whcre·to go inOh io th is
summrr arC' ltstf'd in t ht' sum m(' r r alf' nda r pf rv f' nts . ava i Ia ble

th rough thC' slate' s f) Ivis ion of Travl'l and Tourism.
Many of the event s he lp Oh ioans pay tribute to the 200th
ann ii'Prsar.l· of the No rthwest Ordinan&lt;·c and lhc U. S.
Const itut ion. .
Tills bookiPt. wit h an in vita tion fro mC o1·. Hlr lwrd f '. Ce ll'SI&lt;'
" to CXJX•ricnc0 the splrll of Ollio" , lists art lvlll&lt;'s from May
through i\ugusl. II is a1·allablr without r ha rg&lt;' by r ailing the
sla fp's toll·ft'c&lt;' lal'el inform ation numbc·r 1-81111-BUCKEYE .

OBES

rwf('.~

increase in jobs

COLUMBUS llJ PII - The numll•·r of Johs in Oh io in••rca sed
pl'rr f•nt in 1!-!Kti ov rr thP pt'£'\'ious ,vC';n·. ~trro rdin g- to 1:1
rPport by th l' Ohio nurr au of l•: mplo,, ·nw nt SNvi ('C'S Labor

IJ.v

~ .: t

MarkPI lnfor m:t tlon llil'ision.

-

Thl' &lt;'olurnhu s at ·f·a \I'd llw s !Hi t· wll h the b!g gt•s t ri:l l l'~f jo b
growth, H pr t·cenl. The Cln•·lnnali :t rc •a "'" ' nex t wllh a J.7

pcrrc·nl irH·n•asc. lollowt•d IJV Tolt•dc•. :t-2; Dal'ton-Spri ngficld.
2.9; \'oun gstown-W&lt;IITI' n, ~ . 2; Ch•l'elll ntl. I .·1; Akron. 11 .9; and
Canton. 11.2.

KSU clwo.. ('.'i actitrK admini.'itralnr
KI&lt;NT rUP II - 1\&lt;•nt Stall• Urt ii'&lt;'I'S ll )' officials lt&lt;IVI' r hos&lt;'n
T honw s 0 . M oo rP to hP .l f '! lng vi r t• prf'sidt ·nt for Ar ;t dr mlc and

Student Mfair.s.
pt'(•s idt •n t fo r F'anlll .\' t\lftdr ... illld Prr ~ onnr.l. w ill
rake owr Ills riew position .Junr I. rr• p l ac in ~ 'i'&lt; 'IT)' Roark who
t'('S ignl'd to lx't·ornt• p rc·sldent of I hf• Un iVl' I'Sit.v of w~·o min g .

Moon".

\ ' ii'P

TROY 1 LIP II - M i; e~nis burg laii) 'N William Sams has
pl(•miPd gulit )· to disonlt•rl.' · t·o ndu•'t In Miami Count y Muncipal
Coun . ll fr ('r 1111' romplainlng wl rn rss In lh&lt;' case aga inst him
r&lt;'fusrd to f('Siify .

Sam s. .110, "'"' d&gt;arged In No1·r mbrr with sollrltlng for
prost ltulon fot· u•llln g a r lir nr she could supply sex In exchange
for $4oll shr owed him for clcfrndlng her in a traffic case. He
faced a poss lbh• tiO·da)' jail sr nt enr•• and $:"&gt;1MI flnr for' the
lhlrd·degrP&lt;' ml&gt;d&lt;·meanor.
But the woman rdusrd to It'S Ill)' in a pre•· tr ia I hra ring Friday .
from Mi nrni Co u nt~· Mun i(· ipal .Judgr t\ lan
Bro un sh&lt;' could IJP held In c·ontrmpt oi' court and far&lt;"d a

ckspilr a

w&lt;~ rnin g

possible• jail sentr•n!'C' if th•• ras P"'''"' to trial.
Snm s piC'ad('(( guilt y to thr minor misdemeanor charge and
was fi ned $11~ 1 and •·our! cos ts.
In a srp:n·;1f t• c·as(•, Mont gonwr,v Count y Comrilon PIC'as

.fudge Rl r har&lt;l DodgC' in F&lt;' bi'U&lt;IIY found Sa ms innocent of
bu)·ing diet pills from a r lif' nl who II'(JS a police lnformanL

Crack:down on

animal.~

urged

MIDDLETOWN 1UP II - Two Middletown women who say
lhei"r cit y sounds more llkr FarmN McDonald' s barnyard will
ask clty.rommlssioners to rhange a city law.
.Joyce Planck and Lynn Harrer say they arc tired of the
clurk·r luck·s het'e. thr qu ar k-quark' s rh('re. hP re a ba a. there a
rork·a·doodle·doo, E'VCI'I'Whcre a chirp-chirp.
The two said thPy have mosrers. chickens . guinE'H hens. duck s
and a goa t In their neighborhood.
They plantoa llend TuPsday's commission meeting to ask lor
a change In rhe cit)' law thai allows fowl and farm animals In the
cl ly.
The city ordinance doesn't prohibit the animals. only
prohibits them from runn)ng loose. rrea!lngodors or unsanitary
conditions, said Bettie Arthu r. city commission clerk. ·
" It' s Impossible to have a cookout ," Harli'r said. "One
bac kya rd Is nothing bur chicken houses."
Planck said that' when they complained earlier. Middletown
health il,fllclals told them the chicken coopers were clea ner thlln
some people's homes.
••

Response
•
•
Intrigues
coun"".....

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

21

·:im••s CHAIN

Businns
Opportunity

:": Lilli FENCE

...: \
RMidentiel
: c:bmmorclal • lndultrlat

fl. 614-245-9113
. . S.ltt - ''" , _ "

"' CllliPIITI

AllAilON

•

•• AmmoN

" IUSIIIISSMIN,
; ;COIRUCTOIS. ••
Dim WOUI

.

• much. much more.

MAC'S

SANDIUSTlNG
•

do bu•"-• with people You
~· and NOT to eend m6ney
through the meil until you h...,e
invelt6gMed the off•lng.

franchiM for Nit et 1 v..-y
reaoneble pl'ic.-· term• avelle·
bit. It Covers o..tiPolis. Pome-

roy. Ohio end 1urounding c:oun·
llu . PI•••• reply to :

EXTERMITAL CHEMICALS
INC ., BOX 1533, DAYTON OH
45401' or Callt 513 ·263-elu.

3 Announcements

Crew• City

. 2511·1247 ••
: . 25'·1653

NOAH'S ARK'
ANIMAL PARK
Schools. Churches
Company Picnits
Birthday Parties
and Family Reunions
384-3060
J.B00-282-2167

SHADE COUNTRY
SPORTS
GOING FOR ( 'II APTER J1- Day shill workers
al the VIctor Posner Works ol lhP Sharon Steel
Corp. t•nded their turn Friday on a somber note

BAUM
LUMBER

...,..

-~··~
"i·

.

operat ions.
" We th ink it is in lhl' best
inlerests of the company to file
for protection under c;'hnptr r 11
of Ihe bankrup tcy code in view of
the very aggress ive dcadlinr
imposed on us by the Quantum
Fund;" Sieckman said.
Quantum Fund. a .Net h&lt;"rlands
Ant illes COI' poration tha t operates Quantum OV!'rseas . decided

_

when lht' eorporatlon lih•d lor r~organlzatlorf ;:
undt•r Chapter II ol the ledt•ralllankruptcy code. :.:::
(UPI)
.
~~

to fo rce an_ involuntary liquidalion when Sharon Stee l pulled out
of a deal to sell its Mueller B~ass
Co . to an in veslmt'n t part nc rs hip
headed by Quantum.
The• l'&lt;'fusal to srll Mueller
spu rred Qu,111tum to d0mand
payment ofthe rn rlre
ripa l of
the t.l o percent
srrirs.
and it wa .s ass umed
Sharo n
IhOSl'
Steel could not'

CHESTER

CHECK OUT OUR
TURKEY CALLS
NEW &amp; USED GUNS
BLACK POWDER .
&amp; ACCESSORIES

·..::
payments. which would amount-=

to about $.1:!0 million.
· -··
The ' debentures would no( ::
normall.v hUI'C be&lt;'n du e until tli'r·: ·
)'~ a r 20(1(1. but the bonds arc in •
dcfaull because Sha ron Sieel has . •
fa iled to pa,v interest on them for
more than two years .
ThP Mueller deal was expected
10 provide $40 million to aid the
dcb&lt;'n 1urc l'xrha nge.

CINCINNATI tUP II - A
Announc ements
11 Help Wanted
11 Help Wanted
member of the cll y council wants
to know how police off icers
Giveaway
respond to domestic disturba nce 4
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Repres·
Baby sitter needed part-time,
ent MERAI · MAC FAMILY
ca lls.
references required. Call 614 Young Female pert Blue li ck SHOPPING SERVICE. 100% 446·4447.
The requrst for a review or Hound.
Cail614 -245 -6439 .
GUARANTEED line of Glft1.
polke response procedu rescame
Toys and Home Decor! Compare Mature person d11per~tely
Olve.way: Young male c:l og. part our catalogs and program . No
needed to babysit 2yr. old in our
from Cincinna ti co uncil member Beeale.
Good with klda. 614- tnvestment collecting or deliv- home, all 3 ahitu . Centenary Ph.
Steve Shabo! after 17-yrar vete- 986·4216 evenings.
et"ing. ' (Jnllmited territory. excel- 814-446-9416 2 to 8 PM .
ltnt pay, bonuses and prizes. Cer
ran pollee veteran Clifford
puppies to give to good &amp; phone nec:esNry. Ph. 1 ·800B1bysitter needed to care for
George was shot wllh his own Mhted
home . Cute. Call 61 4-986· 992·1072.
Infant at child'• home, on
re\'Oiver a.s he tried lo handcuff a 4188.
Mond1y'1 and Friday's, Begin·
Hiring! Government jobs-your
ning mid· May to June. Nol'lsuspect Thursday.
•
Free Easter KiUena. 304 -875- area. $16,000· 888,000 . Phone amoker with own tran•por1a·
The suspect, Melvin Moreland. 6517.
call refund•ble. 802-838 -8886 . tJon , He11tlble hours , and
axperience with children is de3.1. visiting Cincinnati from Sr.
Man'"' &amp;: bo• springs. Good Make extra money sell Avon
aired. Please sand letter of Intent
Produi::tJ.
Can
earn
up
to
60%
Lo uis, was later shot and killed in Condition.
304·676-3731 .
and references ra P.O. Bo• •
profit Ph . 614·446· 2166 .
T· 360. Care of Gaillpolls Daily
an exchange of gunfi re with two
Moving must vlveaway ColUe
Tribune, 826 Third Ave., Galliother officers.
Shepherd Pup Bwk1. old Ph. Eltperienced bOdy men needed polis, Oh 45631 .
to
btJild
1alvaged
can
or
truckS.
George will be buried with full 81.· 448-4070 . '
Must have tool• &amp; be able to do Part-time aocial work position.
pollee honors Tuesday.
Famale black ltlbradora dog, structure work . Call 614· 388 · Prolectlve Jerviee representa 9815.
Ht• was on a one-man unit when 1yr. old Ph. &amp;14 -446-0912 .
tive serving person• with mental
reterdation-devetopmental diah&lt;' TC'sponded to a domestic
Part-Time
Administrative
As. abilities in Gellis County eree.
e puppies gi'la.way to goad
disturbance cal l.
listant.
Must
type
60
wpm
Ba chelors degree in related field
home, mothltt' 1 be-ele. 8wks
tccurately. Good verbal Jkill• &amp; pref&amp;ned . Send·resume by May
Pollee Sgt. Charles Horstman old Ph. 814· 448·3591 .
written communication 1kills 1 to Diane Sauvageot , Advocacy
said standard procedures are
required. Good filing skill• re- &amp; Prate ctive Services, 88145
quired. Must be able to work well Bannock Ao•d. St . Clairsville.
thai two unlls be sent ro all
under prenure . Knowledge of Ohto 43960.
6 Lost and Found
domestic disturbance ra lls.
ahorttland. computen &amp;: word
proce11on beneficial. Job shar· HBJ ln1urance Farm Unit . SeekPollr~ Chief l.awrenrp Whalen
posi tion . Hourt are Bam - ing sales rep . in Galli1 &amp;
said George, the first olllcer on lost Of atrtyed. 2 Elk Hounds. 1 ing
4 :30 pm every Thursday &amp; surrounding counUn. Un ique
lhr scene. radioed thai other m•l• &amp; 1 female. Calll14·«8· Frldtv &amp; every other Wadnll- markl!ting sy1tem. Many exist day . Send resumfl to: SEOEMS.
ofllc&lt;"rs could disregard the ca ll 0124.
account a. Company ben efits
At. 4, Box 144, Gallipolia. OH ing
&amp;• Incentive program• . Great
· because he thou gh he could
45831 by April 27th.
earning potenti al . For personal
7
Yard ~ala
handle the ca ll by himsell.
interview writ1: Mr. OainesOitt.
Need pJrt·time bJbYiitter in my Mgr. Clfe of Bo• T-200 Gall!po·
G~org&lt;" was tr)•ing lo put ,
nome. Pay 190.00 month, 4 lis Dally Tribune. 826 Third Ave .
dey1 a week . Ph. 614 -44&amp;- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
handcuffs on Moreland when the
6866.
suspect gra bbed the officer's
Jobs. t1&amp; ,040 ·
..1!i7-magnum revolver. George
Pm·time lPN &amp; part -lime MlT. Government
U9, 230 yr. Now hiring . Cell
&amp; Vicinity
Apply in perton batwean 9· 6 806-687 -8000 E.11t. R·9806 for
was ab le to call lor help before
Mon thru Fri. at the Medical current toderalliat.
Moreland .shot him twice and
Pike, 203 J• ckson Pl11a .
fled.
Hhlrig l Go vernment job•· vour
Ed's Flee Market open Fri-Sat·
hbytitter to come to mv home 2 are1 . 115.000. -168,000. Phone
Two officers responded In Sun. Vlst your pt.ce of warship children,
cloH to Holzer 7 :30 to cell refundable . (802)838-8886
atrltngth and direction. Come
2;00. Ref•en ce requied Call
separate cars and pursued More· lor
lo the Fl11 Market for bargain~
E- .:::
"~
· 1_4.::4_::
9 ·---------- ·lcland who wounded Ol!lcer Ge· and rtcreaUon . Shop indoor~. 814.·448·0498 eh er 8PM .
EXCELLENT
WAGES for spare
out on tha pevement •nd In the
raid Norton In the leg and killed Flea
Truck drlver needed, 3yrl. expetime a11emblv work; elec:1ron·
Field. Guess where wt are?
rience, tanker e11tperience necn·
his pollee do~: Bandit.
ict. craha. Otheu . Info 604·
ury. F•mily man
641 ·0091 EXT. 3026, 7 dtYS.
Pollee have sa id Moreland was
Wells Trucking Ph.
CALL NOW.
······-PrPtaasiinf·····
608B .
killed by return fi re !rom Nor.
ton's revolver and Ofllcer Steve
&amp; Vicinity
· NATIONAL CClMPANV NEEDS
Frommold's shotgun .
" MANAGING PARTNER " IN
YOUR AREA
Shabo! said he wants a review
To qualify you must tlave a dnire
2 . In Memoriam
Back
Vard
hie,
830
Mein
St
.,
of pollee response procMures nor
to own your own bu1inna. and - - - - - - - - - -- - - Point PIHPnt. Thurs. Fri. Sat.
.,...,. •115,000 tor equipment.
to place blame on this Incident, 9 :00AM to4 ;00 PM .
Company witt e11ablith 1t1e
but to make sure II doesn't
buslnHI. Na1ion.. survey lhows
IN MEMORY
Porch Sale. Mon and Tues. 12015
happen again.
average monthly earnings of
Vltnd St .• 9:00 till ?. CHEAP.
In memory of our
tt.3e5. No HMing lnvohed.
Stntice eccounta Mt up by
father . Charles
company htndling Frito-Lav•
9 Wanted To Buy
.and ottter convenience tnack
Howard ·Wilson and
products. Potential exptlnsion
mother
. Kate Wilson,
earnings of •2 .710 per month
We pav cash for late model clean
with
no
additional
invtltment
on
who passed on April
used Clll.
your prl. Write New Am..-lcan,
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
22, 1935 and
P.O. Boll3&amp;0247. Bifmingham ,
IHI Gene Johnson
AL 315238 or Clll .,n.free
114·448· 3e72
April.22;
l97i,
1·IQ0-231 ·0663. A1k l ~ r Op..-.
respectively.
JtOJ 4:5 ',
TOP CASH plkl fOf '83 modtl
and ntwer uMd cars. Smith
Nora Jordan
CLEVELAND IUPI I - A Buick-Ponlitc, 1911 Ent•n
newborn boy found cryi ng and Ave. , Gallipollt. Call 814 -«8Ada Easterday
bleeding In a trash dumpster on 2282.
Vinas lee
the city's east side has underjlone UsN Mobile Hom11 Ph. 114·
448-0175.
s u r~:ery lor his nine sta b wounds.
1 Card of Thanks
Officia ls of the Rainbow Ba · Boy Scouts doth... mens small
IN MEMORY
shortt • pants in Iiiii
bles and Children's Hospital say shirts.
20-2 2, 32 waill Ph. 114-441 Tht !emily of Sh1relene
Ihe Infan t. believed to lx&gt; aboul12 7337.
,Diun would like to extend
hours old when a maintenance
our dHptst thtnks to all
I. Arvil Holter, .n to ti!Mk
worker found him. was In critical luyinv da;ty gold. titvtr coins.
!emily
and friends who
those in t1rt dul:hls who
ring~. }twelry, stiffing ware, old
sllarld
with
us the loss of
condi tion Saturday but was I'X · wino.
1 - cuOTOn&lt;Y. Top pr&gt;
Sllll tnt ens, ~ lid
our rnother.
peered Ia· survive.
e•· Ed lurltttt larber ShOp.
risilld
ll!d-==:.cr
tlrtir
Znd. Avo. Middleport, Oh, 81··
The Infant . said to be full-term. lt2·:S.7t.
wllill 1· •
.
at
We would like to rec:oanla
underwent surgery at Sl. Luke's
hlnrs
· "'-or,
Rw. Art Lund and Willis
Hospital before being trans· luytng }unit c.... Call attari:OO Sl Josllilt II f'lrbnllurr.
Funeral Homt lor their
V&amp;.llld tlrt Clmllnd ctlnic.
kindness tnd assistance
!erred to Rainbow . St. Luke's prn. C.i 11.·HZ· IMI .
and tilt Arntrican Ieaton
Also tlrtnb to Or. Zlnlril
surgeron Dr. Jami'S Thornton
Aldliary and HIC lor ihtir
0.,0 llld Iliff: Or. Fn..
said the boy had eight' stab
riMrllorill semen.
...
tlrt
lral
.
.
.
.
Iliff
wounds In his chest. one puncturIIIII
dDdtn
at
Sl._
Or.
Ing his lung. an.d one In his
S!ltc:ial th111ks to Or.
...... llld Dr. s.r....
YIIIH. 4-Ent (PCU). 5abdomen that cut Into his liver.
... .... IIIII .. Or...
Eist 111d ICU It Hilt lor
Thornton. a cardlotnoraclc 11 Help W1ntld
IIIII 11 tilt aaal11d Chic
tlltir
kind ind COIIIPISSionsurgeon, said the umbilical rord
stl
c111 end to 11tr "fllllily"
...
~~~~~~~tlrtnb
was attached and not dry when
Ill tlrt
EllS 'lrllrR
on PHiltrics llld tllroa$QIId
and
T11J1111R
P11ins
the Infant was round. inqicating
~
Povl
tilt lloSfitlllo! lkr
he was less than 12 hOurs old.
a •r n - ,__ .._ $QIId llld .... tlrtnb for
Jori11
npport hrlq IMr
tlltr...Cri
He had a full head of h{l:ir, 61* c • IJJt •••· . . .
lone illness
I tltlply appreciate 111
w.:-lghed 6 pounds and was 20 ;:::..z:=e.~t..~.t.:
..bill Siiss
. of JOII' lffarts.
tnchi'S long, Th?rnton said.
" I - ' - - - -·- - - JrtR aiiCI JoH Dil01

When: April 25 &amp; 26
8 a.m.-8 p.m.

•
•

:
,

•
•

:

1

Federal, State and Civil Service · •

Jobs. $18,707. to t59.148 . • • .
year . Now hiring . Call Job line• :
1-618-469-3611 Ext. F-13860 ' •
for listing . 24 hn.
·•
Now taking ap~lications for pool.' :
m1n1ger and lite guard1 . Send• l
resume to Jenice Lawson, Syr~ · •
CUll, Ohio by M1y 1, 1 987 . ...

*·

=•torr.;:

...

8

Situations
Wantl!d

Work wanted mowing, odd jobl.
light hauling. Meigs. Gallla and
Mason Counties . 614 -992 -

5569,

15 ·

Schools
Instruction

.

.
I

•
•

·
•

Mature Chf-iatian man. GrOUf\dS. :
keeping, handyfTitn, and l1wn - • '
Ph....:,
. 614-446-2750.
___
___..:_..:-=.:....___ •· ••

..

Electrolu x Sal es and Servi ce.
304· 675 ·1457. Special. Electrolu ll 0 ·2 aweeper S349.00 .
Wedding pictures, Spring Spe-

Wesl

Nor1b

Pass
Pass

2•

Pass

I t
2 NT

3.

Pass
Pass
Pass

4•
6

P1ss
Pass
'Pass

5+
Pass

+

Easl

304 - 675 , 29~1 '

Soulb

Re al

4+

31
Opening lead: +Q

Lar 9o 6BR house, 47 acres. '
Me1gs local. Cherry Ridge.

$39.900 .00 Call 614 -992 71eO

Est ~ te

11

@ 1M7, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Lee Johnson
AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740
Not Respons ible for Accidents or Loss of Property

1•

·3D yr. gutrnteed . vinyle eldtng. ·1 ,
w -w carpet, 1'II bath, un6que ; •
woodwork. 614·992·51 28.
·
Go..,ern.ment home&amp; from n .
{U-repi!rt Delinquent IIX prop·
erty. ,Repouauions. Citll 101· ·
687-&amp;00Q Ext. GH .-9801 ..for
current repo ll1t.
2 bedroom house In Clifton t
Price reduced from • 18,000 to :
S1 ot.OOO. Phone 1-304-nl. ,.

lg .

kitchen. dining room. Lg . living
room. AC, 9'h% interest 83000
down &amp; 'ake over paym ent s. Ph .
614-446· 2472 .

'

Help Wanted

Both part-time and full -time positions available In
Special Care Unit and Emergency Room.
Competitive salary and benefits, with lleKible scheduling available.
Please submit resumes to:
Sheri W. Johnson. RN , BSN
. Oirector of Nuraing
350 Charlotl8 Avenue
Oak Hill. Ohio 45656
(6141 682 -7717

614-446-2639.
garage.

For ule by owner : 2 ttory hDUM
in Middleport averlol;)klng fYrk .

RN'S &amp; GN's
WE NEED YOU, AT:
OAK HILL COMMUNITY MEDKAL CENTER. f.l(.

Mu1t Sell : Very nice, · 1BR ,
carport, 1undeek. b~~J&amp;ement. ga1
furnace, 64 Mill Cre&amp;k Rd. Ph .
baths.

Two nice 2 BR homes with 2 Cll\
gar1ge &amp; workShop. 4 .383 acrl-a
on At. 2,8, Ph. 814-441·1116.

:::=:_-----:;::;:::::;::;::;l====:---:-- :..

Homes for Sale

3BR , 2

A new book by James Jacoby and his
father, the late Oswald Jacoby, is now
available at bookstores. It is "Jacoby
on Card Games, " published by Pharos
Books.

Homes for Sale

6634.
'
7 rooms. bath Va. hQuUJ In
Chester, Oh io. Pri ce reduced 3 BR ., recreation ro'om, kitchen. ' ,
from &amp;27.000 to $26.000 . . dining roo m, large ffont end ·
b1ck porch. 8.1110 woodtn bulkl·
Phone 61 4-986 -3571 .
ing, yard with chain link fence . 1
6 root'n , bath, ut ilil'f , garaae. Rustic Hlll1. Syracute. Ohio . , ·
central heat, A.c .:· ltorm win- 614 .949 -2910 between I · ,
dow a 11.nd doo rs. 614 -992 - 4p.m. 814-992 -fi86Chfter4 :00 •
6204.
p.m. ·
~

New 3BFI 2 car garage, brick
front , front porch. nice lot . 6
mi lea South of Gallipolis
$47,600. Ph . 61 4· 446·B0 3B.

harm. Whatever they do next, you will
be able to proceed as before. After you
have rulled a club and drawn trumps.
the rest or the tricks will be yours.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

4BR, 2 bath in city price reduced
128.600. Call 614-446-6583.

31

'.

:

.

'

Hou se for sale in MercervltleC &amp;II
614 -446· 7610 .

LICENSE PRACnCAL NURSE

University Personnel Services is currently acceptin&amp;
application for two (2) part-time/fermanent licensed
Practical Nurse for the College o Osteopathic Medicine . Job Duties: Responsible lor carry inc out physi·
cian 's orders; administer controlled medication: prepare necessary reports: maintain palianl records and
other related duties .
Qualifications/ Requirements: Licensed Practical
Nursing clinical experience helpful. Startina hourly
rate is $7. 99. Deadline lor making application is Sunday , April 27. 1987. Make application to R. D. Scott,
Employment Mana&amp;6r, Univerily Personnel Services.
Ohio University, 44 Univers ity Terrace. McKee House.
Athens. Ohio 45701.
OHIO UNIVERSITY
Athena. Ohio
An Aflirmall ve Action/Equal Opportunity Emplo~tr

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

From Gallipolis, take Route 141. turn left onto
Route 775. Turn right onto Patriot Cadmus Road.
Watch for signs.
Looking lor merchandise7 Trjlhe Patriot Auction Barn!
We have all t1P6S of new and used merchandise - appli·
ances. furniture. antiques and collectors item s. Someth·
ing for everyone!
,
Saturd~y. April 25. 1987 at 7:00 P.M.
Partial Listin1: New livin g room suites. good Gibson Rel11·
geralot , color TVs. B&amp;O saw, new 10 speed bicycles. Ho mei ile electrical cham saw, couc h, chairs. stgns, lence chor ger,
hand tools, diShes, cabmet. record ra cks, Siylus albums.
speakers, 7-Up signs. guilar, log chains, ptclure frames, tables. milk cans. beds. pols&amp;pans, tent. &amp; much. muchmore.
SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00 P.M.
Door Prizes Given Weekly.
·
Consi&amp;J1f1!tntsaccepted from 1:00-5:00 p.m. on Saturday.
Have something you want to sell! Contact Marlin Wede·
meyer. Auctioneer. Arrangements for pic kup service available.
Barn and Auctioneer available for Public Auction s oncon·
tract Contract includes hauling ·and transporting all
merchandise.
Resident and .Business Auction Service also available.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER. AUCTIONEER
614/245-5152

.

'

'.
'•

CLERICAL SPECIALIST I
. MEDICAL ASSISTANT

University Personnel Sel"'ices Is seekin&amp; two (2)
part-time/permanent Clerical Specialist/llltiCIIcal
Assistant positions at the Colleae of Osteo()lthlc
Medicine . Job Duties: Assist the cliniCII stiff with
medically related duties (i.e. examination &amp;suralcal
set-up, autoclave operation. banduin1. visual acuity testing and vital sian measurement.)
Qualifications/Requirements: Associate Deane
In Medical Assistina required; knowled&amp;e of medical
office procedures and cl inicaltechnlques preferred;
typing abilit~ preferred . Starlin&amp; hourly rate is
$6.66. Deadlrne for makin&amp; application is Monday.
April27. 1987. Make application toR. Q. Scott, Em·
ployment Manager. University Personnel Sel"'ice,
Ohio University, 44 University Terrace , McKee
House , Athens. Ohio 45701.
OHIO UNIVERSITY
Athent, Ohio
An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employor

I •

,

j •

I •

;•
•'

.

~----------------~~~--~--~-----';;.

Real Estate General

Rea l Estate General

NEW LISTINGS
W·E PROUDLY PRESENT
TWO OF THE AREA'S NI~EST HOMES
•

ELliOTT'S

APPLIANCES -TV - VIDEO
PH. 446-8051

I

614 Silver Bridp Plaza, behind Dale's
Gallipolis, Ohio

!

ESTATE
AUC'nON

••

-••

The Easter Bunny
•
Hopped Out Of His
Way, To Wish Mr. P. ":i
A Happy Birthday!
:
From · •
.
THE TWO DAFFYDILS :

• ••

limited budget. Independently
owned, 304-676-6535.

cials. Howard's Studio, phone

BILLY RAY HAYES. OWNER

WHAT: Color TV's, TV Carts. VCR's, Microwave
· Ovens. Electric &amp; Gas Ran1u. Dishwashers. Washirs. Dryers. FrHzars. Refrip11tors,
WHY: We at ELLIOn'S have talktiCIIo our major suppliers. and they hive qetd t.o brin&amp; in all new
l)lerchanidse lor I DAY and I DAY ONLY!

!

Happy Ads

" A Uitlt Ouign", interior deaig n buaineJS for people on

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

(never broken), 20 silver money clocks (made belore 19641. and
several coll~tor's pocket knives.
Terms: Cash

DON'T MISS THIS ONE
ELLIOTI'S GREAT SALE EVER

Jim 's odd jobs ptinting. drive· • •
wey resealing. c•penter work &amp; • •
roof repair, trees &amp; hedgn t
experienced . Cali 814 -379 2416.
:

5

614·949-2927 .

• 9 7 53

+ 73
.Q52
t K QJ 5
+ ·A K 8 2

whiskey bottles w11h the majority of them have the seals mtact

Saturday, .April 25, 11:00 A.M.

Saw sh~panlng and on truCk :
electronic 1pin wh eel balancing
Ph . 614-446-1759 .

Sun$et Or. on Second Ave . Ph.
61 4·44 6-2573 or 446· ,, 71 ,

1-iametown persone! care. Have
vacancy tor adult care. Profes·
aicm1l employ8es In 3 working·
l hifts. Call 614 -992-15869 or

SOUTH

be conducted on any 1tem or it~ms !OJ which any two or morem·

PUBLIC
AUCTION
ALL NEW APPLIANCES AND TV'S

18 Wanted to Do

c••

t9862
+QJ 10

dividua ls are wtlling to btd "tag price."
The followina is 1 brief list of the items that will be offered at
"II&amp; price."
15 Belgium with Browni ng Sweet 16 shotguns. Belgium mad e
Browning 12 gauge, 222 11lle, 243 rille, appro&lt;. 25 Colt and
Smith &amp; Wesson pistols and other guns. approx. 600 decanler

Aoril 25 •.1987-Sat. 10:00 A.M.

-------------- .'..'
Septic tank pumping, resid81ltial
&amp; commerical. 180 per lotd.
Ron E-vansEnterprises.Jadcaon,
Ohio. Call 614-288-6930

+P4

eral hand tools and mise, items.
As soon as the auction ol the latm related 1tems has been
completed a ve&lt;y large selection ol gu ns, kniVes and wh•skey
llaskwill be on dtsplay and altered at "ta gp11ce." An auction wi ll

Ldcaled at Dunbar, W. Va. on Charles Ave .., Exit off 164 on Dunbar Exit
(STATE~ W. VA. SURPLUS)
Cars. tru~ k;, office equipment. desks, chairs, furni ·
lure of various kinds, testing equipment. rows and
rows of different types of merchandise that comes
from all over the state of W. Va. LARGE SALE
Cashiered by the State of W. Va.
Auctioneer: Lon Neal-614-367-7101
1 Sale a Month - Call for Info

'•

Retrain Now. SoutheasternBulineu College. Call 614-4464367.

EAST
• J 10 8 2
• J 97
• 7.

.K 10 6 4

lawn Boy mowers, some lumber, some household furnitur e, sev-

PUBLIC AUCTION

------------------ ,,'

'

WEST

located on State Route 217 in Scottown, OH .
Thelollowina will be sold:
1983 ford 4100 tractO&lt; (785 hrs.l withDunham Lear loada, far·
malll30 tractor with cultivat01s, far mall Cublractor with culti·
vators, 16 HP tractor w~h cultivalors. 16 HPtractor wilh mower.
16 HP tract01 with plow. th ree 5HP garden tillers, 3 pt. scraper
blade, 3 pt. disc. set ol 14" turning plows, 500 ga llon sprayer
with motor lor tra iler, 12' and 8' llal bed Iarm trailers. largeset ol
plallorm scales, water pump. 200 leel ol alu mtnumpipe with
sprinklers, 2 electric pumps, approXImately 4,000 tobacco
sticks. approx. 2,000 tomalostakes, approx. 2,000 bean poles,2

CONTINUOUS SHOWING: COME ANY TIME

Earn extra money in the A.rmv . :
Netionei Guard. 304-676· 3960 • i
&lt;&gt;&lt;1-800·642 ·3619.
:

···· ..Gampolis..... _,__ _

Stahhed newborn
expected to live

Where: Hearthitone Model Home. located
2 miles S/0 Cadmus on SR 141, tum right 1st roa~
(Wiseman Road), go 1 mile,1st log home on right.
COME ON IN.
Why: To display a beautiful Hearthstone
Log Home. explain all the unique features only
available in a Hearthstone. vtew video tapes.
display corners and have a question and answer
• session.
Who: Anyone who wants to enjoy comforta·
ble living.
· · What will you get: Colored handouts,
promotional key chain or pen or pencil. a nice
door prize if your name is drawn and a far better
. knowlege of log homes . OR A NEW LOG HOME IF
• YOU CHOOSE.
Refreshments &amp; Dick's Special BEAN SOUP

AVON. no service charge, open
territor ies. phone · 304 -675 1429.

12

t A 10 3

+s 4

Professional
Services

SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1987
10:00 A.M .

· Log Living ~inar &amp; Open House

11 Help Wanted
EMT. lPN or RN to perform !
insurance eums . Experienced . •
Pan time posilian with flaxibil- •
hy. Send resume to PMI , F'.O. •
Bolt 370. Dunbar; WenVirglnl•. •
25604.
:

8

23

• A 83

Homes for Sale

Mod ern 3 bedroom home frame.
Lg. kitchen plenty of ctbinet a.
refrigerator, electric fen ge, die·
poall. dining room, 2 full btth a,
carpeted , full basement fin ished,
CA. new gas turnece. fenced in
beckyard. fg , carpon . Ready 10
move in to, good location on

Hearthstone Homes

Tribune - •2342
.Slntlnel ,-- 992·2156
Realslar - 61~ 1333

U:::''

'

31

614-657-3933 after 6:00p.m.

1·11·11

+AKQ 65

Here is an old-fashioned bidding sequence that we jkm't often see anymore. Strong jump shift by responder
North; two no-trump to show a balanced,, rather minimum opening; a
show or diamond support !rom North;
then some cue-bidding followed by
North placing the contract in six
diamonds.
Although bidding can be old-lash·
ioned or newfangled, play of the hand
remains constant. Whether you're a
traditional conservative or a modern
bridge scientist, you should know how
to take your best chance to make this
slam. So cover the East·West hands
and give it a little thought before
continuing.
·
·
Do you see that It's easy to play A-K
and rull a club with the diamond 10.
and then play ace and a diamond ?
Drawing trumps is no problem if they
split no worse than 4-2, II diamonds
are luckily 3-3, you may even be able
to play spades and ruff one, if the ruff
is needed to set up that suit. However.
il diamonds are 4-2 (most likely) and
spades are also 4·2, you may lind your·
sell giving up a' spade late in the deal
only to see a defender cash the setting
trick with a high club. Can that sad occasion be avoided? Sure. At trick two,
simply play a low spade and play low
!rom dummy. Give the defenders their
trick now, when they cannot do any

Business
Opportunity

Grocery end Carrv Out Busin&amp;as
for sel&amp; in Chester, Ohio. loCated adjacent to State Rout111 7.
For more information, call 1·

NORTH

By Jameo Jacoby

control bulinw• for th..,Mivtt.

Lgd~.nlng, Painting, High
Pw.uure Wllhlng. lladctop
Stlllnv. Tr.tflc Une Peinting

~

Good timing
solves a.problem

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. NCOINrllf'ldl ttt.l you

PttMntly we hween ntlbllthtd

(¥1 OilS 10 10 fOUl
'

James Jacoby

Exttrmtt.l' Ch.,.icalt. Inc. it
'"king for • peraon who w1nt1
~o 1M ln the tennhe and peat

.;. ·Mo•owlils, ·

·~

BRID'GE

21

v

-

The Sunday Times-Sentinei..,- Page- D-3 ·
'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gat~polis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Page- D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

J

.

IF YOU ARE SERIOUS about awnin&amp; a quality home with same remarkable laatures.
consider this charmin1 21evtl home conveniently located-on a ¥,acre shady lot. at
the tiCI&amp;e of town. As soon as you enter. you'll be attracted to many unusually mce
appoint1111nts. Parquet oak floors, unusually nice woodwork. Je~na1re ruae . entire all of litMStont surroundin1 tht fireplace, brand new luxurtous wall to wall
Cllpet, alk·in clotets. Andersen thtrmo()lne windows. lara~ rooms throucttout,
chtny kitclltn cabinets, 2ri wall studs. extra htavy insulalton. Tlus 4. bedro~m
brick IIICI•dts forMII dinlna roo11 llr&amp;e llvinc room. 2 baths. outstandiAg famrly
flltllllllltl -.lzttl2 car~.lfuvery pretty settincand will su!t the mored_rs·
criltillltllll btiJif. If yaa respentlilll ower $90,000 for a home. don t buy anythtn&amp;
tudil Jt111 111 tills ont 11 Slli.OOO.
U09

Esll1t of the late Lorena Ill. Weiss. mired sdtoolllldilr.
located II 2nd Slnlt. lllasun, W. Va. Rilht aloit In
tnet. 12 miles north of Poitt Plllsant. W. Yl. an Rt 33.
AIIIQUfS &amp; HOU!liiOlO: 4 pieco beaoom ,..... I!OOs cod¥ chtll
W!lnut ViciQriMl bed. walnut Vidorian chtll 7 QUI!. lfllwts. 2 trunll.

compode, ~ WISher ~ • • Mltic Chef ,..... l(olojilllttl
it!JIIor, llttlt ~ 4 cl1liB. little nl&amp; dtoin. 2 dlinls. I lip.
ian watro.l ctllir!, 61!1 IJt*. .... ra:ls. 3 - ..r.tnl. . m. ~l!l!llllio t1b1t desi&lt;. Zrill Cllb-IV. 2cltlin. IIW. 2 pia
· room lUit!. OJJJIIu cirlir. cirlir, arrnor cltlir. l:olltle Ill* and IIIII
IItties. onpt Ck11. .._ EIISI """"'· '*I pidwt t - Gtrie
,..., pi1lRs. . . Imp. lnss lbr . . Ntntri HarliN. rink
IOePtis!ion
' ' eenn.t • croclt!.
..mg JNdine. rrrollllrtll nl

.....

WISE AN REAl ESTATE

sm.

litiliii!t 1101(: This il ane al the 181 •

wilt nice Mmn! You

. . . . miss !lis ant.
ADMINI8TIIATOR: I'IDt.t E. l'nllh. ....,

AUCTWJNEER: ... ,...••
,,· 773-11430 Malan. W. Ye.
773-171&amp;
. . . Cllltl• Clllllt .....
(Ill I ; It Ftr ' II h Or.'- 01 Pr ...ll)

••

HERE'S A GENTLEMAN'S COUNTRY PLACE
.
.
You'll have a little to do except relax and enjoy one of the best butlt homes tn the
count This is a roomy 2100 sq. 11 .. 3 bedroom brick with J V, acres of rolling land .
p est~ious neighborhood In an area restricted to htgher pnc~d restdentral. Th.ree
l;r e bedrooms. formal dinin&amp; and charmin&amp; family roo~ wtth see·throuch flrepla~e . The kitchen includes Corningware ranee. new relngertor. mtcro~ve oven ,
dishwasher and lots of oak cabinets, 2 full ceramtc baths. and an oversll~d 2 cah
pra 1 with automatic door. You'll be are1ted by an outstandtn&amp; vtew from tiC
win~ow. This stately appearing home will be hard to match rn today's ma~~~
Priced at $119.000.

'•'
•

446-3644

I

•

\

I .

'

'.
•.

�.•

. J

. Page- D-4- The

Ohio- Point

3·1 Homes for Sale
Nice home. PomMoy. 109 lo·
cuSI St. 1acrou from Plua Hut).

·'::~:~:~y S@\\~M-~£~s·
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
0. words
below to moke 6

1. BHroom b•ic: rent t17&amp;.00

$lmple words.

eo(h in

Mus1 sell within 30 daya. In
Pomeroy. nice 3 bedroom hou~e
with fireplace. full baMmtnt and
n~~Wer t lumjnum siding. Only

111

for Re'rtt

by CLA V I. I'OUAH •

lditod

Overlook• Ohio Rtver. Sen· or
rant. make oHer·ltnd cont rec:t
Call Gregg 614-~86 · 3837 .

Apartment ~

44

'

plu1 electric. Alto requlilid 1

·uoo.oo .....rirvd-«.coN-

~ucres .

44t · 3887 Equal Hou1ing

TACT: Jtckton E"ntt" Dept. Ph

Opport;unity.

ME L B E M

Fur.,ilhed &amp; unfumiahed apt1 .,

816.000 . C• 116U·992 ·3187 .

t •HiO.OO and up, ref_.-.neu Ph.

304-875- nn •• 304-8755104 A· 1 Real Elt.te.

3 bed room home. storm win·
dows. CllfPtning, ut ill1y·garage
and storage. Gerden spot . Pric:ed
tor quick sale. See Fr&amp;d Williem·
son or c.all614 ·742 -2490 s fter
6 p.m.

Country U..:ino. 1 Bff furn 'td
ept. AC, Wuhtr and dryer. no
children or p~s. ref &amp;: dep
req'ed. Call 014·992 ~ 2807 . ef·
ter IPM .

SAG RYE

I I I 1· I J

Middleport, reh,n~thed Inside. 6
room. bath. large porch. garage.
work shop , good locat ro n c.n
614 -99 2·2602

INTO ON

I I I' I I

. Ju1t lew minutel from lown. six
e c r ~s Nrce 3 bedroom house,
bu ernent , a nd carpon . 304875-3030 or 676 -3431.

l

44 • Apartment
. for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rent

44

1987

94 LQCUI1 Sr. 1 BA . furnished,
apt. updilirs. t200 Utilh:iespaid
$80 dep. Ph 446-1340 Of

448-3870.

3 roo'!t! &amp; bath,

11ov~ &amp; refrlg . 16 Coun $irNI, 2 BA , 11fi

All utilit* Mlcfuded. Adldu

only. No pet1. Ph. 114-441·
2583,
.

&amp;.th1. w / w ' c.rpet. · compl ...
rytodem khch.n. ga hNt. w.ll
intulattd. wtred '"' phone •
cabte tv, tpacioot, p.trldng in
rear. patio, t37S / mo. plut
Vtiliti•. O.pasit. R~•"'cn·
r.equirW. No Pflt. Call 151 4 ·4415·

44
•

..,

Grackn.tt lving. 1 and 2 '*1rOom •P.rt~ents at Villtgt
Menor . 1nd Aivlflide APirt•
mttntl in Middlepo'n . From
12.1 &amp;. indlldiog utilities Call

771~ .

45

5150.

tQ town.
No petl.
024 or 441 ·

For rent bedroom with privtta
bath temal" only Ph. 614-.W&amp;-

20•1 .

~o

1 bath,

'

446-3636~

lot.

rental cottage.
Jefferson 81\ld. 304 ·676· 3901
efter 5:30 p m .
acra

32 Mobile Homes
for Sole
NEW AND USED MOBILE

KESSEL'S QUAUTY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST. GAlLIPOLIS , RT 35.
HOMES

P.HONE 614·448·7274 .

1.S72 Cutle 14M66 with 1982

.ElVB ElNid331S 814 Ul JOOij 841
UO AM IIH 'AIIM p&amp;JtAO:IIIfP puv
WOCIIII!IlPMIUII daetn 19M 1111
81fljM IIID!U euo ·epvw At1081Jed
. sA8MJ11 nM peq s,uos An

"·EK pando 1 2•20. Fireplace, Cen·
~H &amp;I Air, 2 Bathl. 2 ttorage
. build ino •- Mull Sefl e13,800 Of
•roaaonablt1 off"' Ph. 614 ·246-

·&amp;884
~1 984 Shullz Mnhlle Heme
,Wh lllll de&amp;li Ph. 614 ·448 -6726.

-12.1165 KirkwoodTrtiler, 2 BR . In
·good co ndit ion Ca ll 814 ·256·
"8896 .
' 198 2 Man alon

on

beautiful

.:riverfron t lot in Mid dleport. Total
..eluctric. AC. two ltrg e bed·
.,ooma and menv eMtru. Ca ll

:Q.14·992 ·3348
' 1975, 12x80 mobiiA hom e lor

: aalo. $2200. Call 814·992·
~ 15941

Freedom. 14x70 3 bed·
·room•. atove, refrlgetatdr, cur' tfllns. e7500. Call 614 -992·
~ 19 73

7 479.
:1 974 Grenville 14170, 3 bed·
-room, 1 'h bit h. allel&amp;ctric. Mutt
·be maved U800 . 080 . C11tl

·814·986-4387 .
t 1.984 Schult 3 bedroom•. total
~,t:trl t. e•Ual. phpn e 3Q4-676·
· '
&amp;375 afler 4:00 PM.

l.l · h

) 04 ·U82 ·21 71 « 882· 2823.

01 SIIJMSNY

41

50 ecr.e ferm Will sell whole or

Cottage Ul5 00 per week. utilitill paid, 304-876·3100 .

five 6 -ecre loU and 215 acre•
woodlend. On Ebenezer-Cermel
11

4273.
2 pieeea of land for 82600
Addlaon TWP. See Gabriella at
1137 Second A11e. Galliollt

14x66 2 DR trailer, 6mi. from
town on 218 . Large prrvi te lot
with lndustriallypll play
equipment. t200mo. Ph

n ,ooo 2 .&amp; acres on Alo·
Centerpoint Rd. 1mL trom Rio
Grande clear level hont. woods
Call 614-448-3806 after 7PM.

268-1393.
2 Bedroom, netr Holzer, child·
ren accepted Ph. 614-446·

7032.

36

Reql Estate
Wanted

28ft reference • depoail re·
quhed Ph. 614-387·7220 .

10 to 15 acres. Letart. New
Haven or Me10n are... With or
without houH. Cell 814-446·

3072 after 8 :00 PM .

:9 'h

Ac:tAI· ModMn hou1e, barn,
hunt ing. Borden Wavne Forrelt.
~ U9 . 000 . land Contr11ct- quell·
"flud.buyer Ph . 614· 379· 2144 .

"10 acre fa rm, 38R Mobile homtt
,with 14x 18 room add ition.

.wooctburner, g11r11ge, 3 oulbulld·
-lngs. separ11 te lot with 28d6

~f o ot foundation &amp; block work for
·now home, clatern , wlllt4H . 12
n1llee h om G&amp;llipollt on Hannan
Trtc&amp; Rd off77&amp;e19,000. Call

' 814-256·6620
20 1H:re term H11 nn•n TrACI
·Ro11d. Glflllwood . W. '~~•· for
:more lnformerlon call 304 · 773·
6118 or 773-6186 after 6 :00 .

34

Business
Buildings

12x60 2BR , furniahed Plants
Subdlviaion e1815mo , t100
Deposlt 1 chUd. ou11ido peta.
C1ll 614· 448-4514 after 6pm.
2 bedroom lreller In country.
$200 per month. Gu and water

Included. 814-742-2170 .

Runt.tl s

2 bedroom, furnished. clean. 1
child. no peu . • no. per month.
New Haven, W.Va. Call 304-

Houses for Rent

882-2466.

3 bdr. ran ch. Rodney Village II.
t285 mo. plus depoalt. Ref•tn ·
c ea required Call BIKI!butn
Aelllty 814 -448-0008
Unfurn lahed houte. 3BA . Rod ·
ney Vllltge II .' 1276. Ph. 446 ·
441 8 1fter 7PM .

.•

Mobile hamA tor rent , 2 bedroom• . depoah requittd. you pey

utllitlea. phone 304-175-2153&amp;.
2

rated. t160 . month plua utililit~. 304·273 -615! . Only u ·

--~~~~~~~

n

l ot 4 -5 acraa more· lall. 6 miles
,:hom city limit•. Rt. 218. CJJI
~614 - 44 8 - 2480 eftff 4pm,

4 8/ 10 aerea· Jaokaon Co. with
~32.08 8ulldlng, electric &amp; Cli ty
_w,.ter hook -up. Owner ••v• no
.reftlont~ble offer will be refuaed.
ta ll614 · 288 -66 22.
leu, mobile

: nome• pMmitted. Clyde Bowen.
; J 1 304-576· 2336,

....
.
; County
Inc. Good
uHd appliancM and TV Mta.
Open 8AM to IPM. Mon thru

NEW LISTING - 217 baths, 3
bedrooms. 2 sundecks. 2 pa·
tros. 2 barbecue prts. green·
house, root c~lar, work gar·
age, drilled well, nice kitchen,
eleven yrs. old. 6.6 acres.
$59,500.00 '
NEAR KROGER'S- 2 lots, 9
rm. home. modern kitchen,
furnace, 2 apts .. 2
~ra ge, carport

- 6 rooms. on nice
corner lot. Walk to the
stores. next to school. Has
lull b~sement and db!. gar·
age. Just $20,000.
SALISBURY - 1.55 acres
near Pomeroy with old house
and kees. Only $4,000.
RACINE- Nrce older home
with lg. rooms.
in good
condition, has
lg. kitchen, dinmg rm.,
livrng about 24x25, lg.
garage &amp; 2 level Its
$27.500.
WANT TO SELL
CALL 992-3325
CERTIFIED APP~AfSALS

Hottsmq
H ·~a dq ua rl e rs

Real Estate General

Sol.

Myrtle hach Condo Rental. 2
bedrooma. 2 battla. aleepa 6.

Furni1htd co mplttt with linens.

couftl, Indoor -outdoor

poolt, uun1 , lttam room , rt~ ·
tauranl. Few atepa from the
ocean. No peta . E111cellent tltll.
Phone 614 -423-8817.

3 ~ldroomt . 2 full b1tha, ltrgt
living room. dining room and
kitchen. Alto laundry room, 2
car vtrgl, central air. Ellltrn
School distric t. Referenc" rt·
quirtd . Call 614· 247-4945 .

.£ 8mt'th

ADDRESS: BITTERSWEET DRIVE.
PRICE: $39,000
ANNUAL TAXES: $344.64
LOT SIZE: 110X200
MONTHLY PAYMENT: $298.13
(Based on 9% interest rate, 30 year term
with 5% down payment)

CONVENIENT LOCATION JUST A FEW
MILES FROM CITY. 3 BEDROOMS, 1V:
BATHS, ATTACHEIJ GARAGE. FENCED
BACK YARD.

ST~TELY MANOR - SPACIOUS ENTRY, WINDING STAIR·
CASE. THIS HOME ONCE HAD ABALLROOM. lOCATED IN
DOWNTOWN GAlliPOLIS. PERFECT FOR AlARGE FAMILY
OR COMMERCIAL VENTURE DON'T LET THIS SELL BEFORE
YOU SEE IT! JUST LISTED' $69,900.

Let us help
you sell
your home!

PICTURE THIS.... you &amp; your family relaxing on a wrap
around deck enroyrng a terrrlrc vrewol the Ohio River. You
can w.ith this home at the edge of town. Other attractive fea·
lures rnclude 3/ 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR with stone lrreplace and
mrrrored wall that refl ects the river view, FR, rec. room,
kitchen, drnette, 2 frreplaces, carpet, cent. air. If you like the
riw you 'lllove thi s one. BlACKBURN REALTY 446-0008.

LEADINGHAM lEAL ESTlfE-4411·7699

2783 ,

Real Estata Gener111

Wuhln~

i
Nonh
turn at Wett
follow signi, 304·

New never IIMmbled round
concrete picnic teble with 3
~ch•, 304·468·1817.

FOR SALE
6 room house In
Middleport. 3
bedrooms, bath,
full basement.
large lot. 2 car
garage.

AFTER 4

992-5815

Reel

HOME FOR SAlE
IY OWNER .

Nice 3 IR lrrick homo wi1h
2 baths, living room, largo
ki1chln &amp; ' rlining with
plenty built-in cabinets.
doubft oven stave, rtfrig.,
ond dilhwasher. ·Carpel
&amp;ke new throughout. Gqs
furnace and central air
(Onlll'~~ c:ity utilities, two
car gar111e, slarlll•· buil~­
iftgs on large fonctd lot
with largo garden. fruit
lrHS and grope arbor.
Noar city in Gallipolis
School Dist. Call for appointment, 446·0 194,

~ ton pick-up, with woOden bed
t1400. Ctmpw top t26. Both
good ahap1. 12 gauge Jhotgun (
made in Br~ziH 1nd 410 ahotgun.

Coll814·992·8881 .

SOUTHERN
HILLS I.E., INC.
'.

:446-6610

~ Sofaa and cll~rt priced from
: t395 to t995 . Tabl• t&amp;O end
~ up to t125. Hlde-a·bedl UIO
• to $515. Recliners t226 to
• t,376 . Lamps U8 to t12l5.
· Dinettes t109 and up to e486.
" Wood table w ·&amp; chain UB&amp; to
.: t795 . o. ... 1100 up to U7&amp;.
• Hutch• t400 1nd up. Bunk
• bedl complete w -mattru••
· ·1295 •nd uplo t391S. Btby beds
• 8110 &amp; t175. MettrMIII or bolt
~ sprlnga full or rwln U3, ftrm
: •?3. and til. OuunsettU21,
_ Kmg 1310. 4 drawer ch•ttll .
• Oreqera t89. Qun cabinllt I. ·
~ 10, 12gun . GIIOfelectricrange
• t375 . Baby mattretlts ejt&amp; ·a
• 045. Bed lnlrnoo UO, 030 6
' King frame tiO. Good seltctln

of bedroom tul.... metal c•
bineta. hetdbo1rds UO and up

• tO

t86 .

, Used Furniture: wood tabla &amp; 2
benchn, beds, • dre11er. 3
• mil" out Bula11ille Rd. Open
9AM to 15PM, Mon. thru Sat.

614·448-0322 .
STOP·LOOK -SAVE

SPECIAL HOM£ HAS A O!COIIATOI'S TOUCH •

#114

.

Real Estate General

REALEST~TE

.

R[5 1DUHIAL. . 1Nv&amp;STI-4EN TS . C0"4MUC 1.4U

PIOfiSSIOIIAl SE!tVICIIA!IS THE

- I ~ story home,
barn and several outbuHdiniS. Gas well on proper!j.
Home has .3 bedrooms, bath, dinrng and trvrng rooms,

YES, ITS flUE -THE I'IICE IS SZUOO - 3 BEDROOM

. FRAME IWICH, FENCED BACK YARD, INCITY BETTER OEAL
rAST ON TtiiS HOME!

POMEROY - large 2 story
stone home wrth 4 bed·
rooms, l 'h baths, famir
room, drnfng room and lull
::::~~· A really nice
for ,Jusl $28,900.00.

a
3 1£01001 UICI AIID FUI£ 11011£ IN CEIITEURY.
HOME HAS NEW ROOF AND VINYL SIDING. YOU Will ENJOY
THE FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND THE CONVENI·
ENCE OF THE ATTACHED GARAGE. BACK YARD IS FENCED
·To PROTECT CHILDREN ~NO PETS. SEE AND YOU'll BUY!
$48,000..
'

COlOIIIAL smE Oil~ ACIE. WEUIWNTAI(«D 3 Btl'S,

I BATH, FAMILY ROOM. WOOD BURNER. GARAGE WITH
WORICSHOP AREA PUIS MOBilE HOME PRESENTLY
RENTED. BUY BOlli FOR ONLY $45,000. •

Htnry E. Cltland Jr.
991-6191
Trussell ..... 949-2660
"DOttit tu-..... HZ-5612
Office ................ 992-2259

mu

.,., ...

screened m back porch and basement. Addison
Township.

approved sept1c

s~stem,

water and electric on lot. This

FARM LISTING - 160 acres. Privale tocat~n . Modern
house, 6 rms.. I ~ baths. Prtvafe waler system. spring
development Tobacco base, barn. tie house. Many
sprlnr, lor lrvestock water. Pasture, taiable land and
wood and. Joins Wayne National Forest, Good huntln&amp;
and recre atoon. Southwestern schools. Pricedtow S60s.

.

meo .

HARD TO BELIEVE, BUT TRUE -124,000 IS the askrng
price onthis nrce 3 bed room, I stor/ home, situated on

to apprec11te.

G101 YOUR OWl GAIOEI. DOGS, c,AnLE &amp; KIDS on
this scenic 29 acre farm. 1~ story tume home. 4 or 5
bedrooms, basement Garage. barns, storage bur ldtn~
large pond Call todayJh rs" the !jpe ollarm that IS
dttl&lt;ult to ltn d. 169,900.
'
m30

·-·
"""*'

-lootli.1! llw tlltio ........., h . no., Iii·

tiolr~~. . , _ ditiol ""·1 - . 1~ 11011. z..
• . 131.0110.

_,_stor·

HAil I1IUI 0111 PWM\It IOAI liOQ; ~~ - lllii...,_IOOirioJMr.
Off SR 110-7 ACRES 1/l ..trtllol lloildirlcltcolion. ,
r.tlllll! Cfll; 71 Kill . 111m. -~ !lonl. llttd CGtllratl.
Wlli!SV!U~: M ..,., • it. .... ollor.

toll,- --.. .

IWIIAI TIACIID.:

1011&lt;111. 2 roool lroottp ..... olltr. .
DO IOU- rutf!CIIOII1 t:llr lwp,, ! IC.
I plto.lf~ _ l • . lllilll!.lrio! lull, ki{ iloift.- !11111-jl.... Ill.
fwill! liMp io liv. ,.,, Cooy doolliti .. 110'. lfOll' llnl. I

:ril-

-""'-""'. -·-'*"' . .

•!-.

=!OUIIIItD:Sootoo-lito'""\wil*oritloio--&lt;ll

INs IMirltrlclt- 1oaatt1 daoo ID-.

-pilot wilt illcl'lltid silo.
laioioo. loo. 01811CM1T 1£

D!

!

fl w/oMp.

,IUCII-_ AboOolitwl '-lor rntor·

- ·in-

UllltU!YAIU: tltrllnll. 121.1!10 wit IMiy 7 acns pi" I oico !itt!o - ·
..,... 1M ltllfiAI. ... rDGt. wulfll. pod insul1hon. nn -itchtn ubiOils. w/oof ..... Ctosolo Ito.

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

no..orlllily .... - . . . ,. -

. . . . . . . orA ... _ _ _ ,...,

llril&amp;,..-

'.

nACEFUllOCAIIOiw/TAllllltiS. Oldor -

IIW USIIIG

·'·

aoo lowly lot 115.11110.

"'*-

" " ro• CIOOIOI ollord lo .. ~•. 4
w/4 Kill. llolltrollls. 1101f, rtf.. ·.,.. 104 ~"'or, LJ.l
ur ptllt. Pfotltrty II 1 JfS. oW . .. will ..... CU 1Mim t-.e-.,

Ull 'SICIUS!Oil lhis is I

-

NEW LISTING ....
FIRST TilE DFF£R!D! - Approx. 3.5acres and 3 yr.
old ranch featuu~g 3 bedrooms, ktlchen includes
bu11l·in microwave. central vacuum system, attached 2

car garage, treed t.. n. I Car unanacheli garoge
Unbeatable price 149,900.00.
·

112376

HAlO TO BEAT! - $4,500 mobrle home m mellen!
condit~n. C~l1!pietely underpnned. Nice carpet. Must
"" to believe the good care thiS 2 bedroom home has
had.

12345

WASHIIIGTON ELEIENTAIT - 3 bedroom home rust
minutes from town, tnt!udes family room. I ~ baths,

newer kitchen , new gas furnace. located on a qu1et

deadend streel l'lithin minutes lrorn Ctty. t Year Buyer
Protection Plan rnctuded. 145,000.
12282
A HOI! FOR TH£ EITIRE FAIILY - SPacwus 4
bedroom buck ranch near H.M.C. Includes 2 b~ths, lg.
fam rly room. 2 lireplaces, formal ~inin~ full finished
basemen1, newer gas furnace and central au, newer
thermal wrndows and much more. Call lor mo•e
information.
" ACRE fARII - 3 bedroom mo~te home, I~ barn,
Bordered by Raccoon Creek near Vinton. $45.000. Call
for more mrormabon.·

112312

PRICED·TO S!ll AT $12.000 - Four room hou~ and
u!t!ity room, Iron! porch, cellar and smokehouse.
Situated on I acre in Addrson lownslup
·
112357
1.153 ACRES on Bulil'ltl~ !ddrson Road. Water
included. Mobtle homes welcome.
J2359
NOI... NEW... N£W... t3 ACR!S IIORE 01\),LE!St Se'ielal feet of ro.ad !rootage, producinK gas well
partially wooded, minerol rilht! and pOnd, rural wllt;
mffable!

Arrificllv! SPLIHEYEL - Nicety decorated, Jlarge
bedrooms, !h baths, dlmng area, hvJf18 room, z c~ r

garage, mcecovered pallo, good garden area, ,appro~ .

acre lawn, $49.000.

appro•. 1.5 acres. Furnace approx. year old. Must see

lOIII MO COIJIIII:7.,,-

PIICE REDUCED - Hm is
a nice 10 yr. old ranch type
home with J bedrooms,
bath, garage on a level lot.
Many new features. Was
$36,500.

ms1

farm is impressive. Call us now.

.

I£CIIIll-lllll!D-IItidl101. 311. ...... 1~ - - - " ' - •
111to lildlol w/ rolld 011 - _ poodl. lllll :
li'IIO'w,_,- · !IIO'wiriltJt.tlltJIIIIII r..,.,..,IIE.IitiS!tll. l'or,

Pt iet!

equipment. Rural water. Extra one acre tot with

0 ..

•

busin~ss.

reduced to rn the 1805. Lincoln Pike Rd. Harnson
lownshtp, 61 ACRES INCLU0£0 AS.HONUS!

unloader. Mobile home. farm pond , tractor and

OlffiRENCE

tlBANONTOWNSH IP - 30
ae,res woodland, minerals,
~ee gas from exrsting well.
Private &amp; secluded. RE·
DUCEO PRICE' $8,500.00.

JUST liSTED! NICE RIVER VIEW. FRAME RANCH WITH
VINYL SIDING. 3 BR, fORMAl D.R.1 PARTIAL BSMT., CAR·
PORT. KC SCHOOl DIST. liSTED ~T $24,900. CAN BUY
EXTRA ACRE WITH 40X40 STORAGE BLDG. &amp;MOBILE HOME
HOOK·UP. All fOR $29.900.

Qara!le, sel up as a woodwm kmg

.57 ACRES IIDIE DR LESS - . LIVESTOCK FARII ·
Marketable timber or great wooded lot. Above average
pas1ure area fen ced, large barn, stone silo w1ih

Vt'rgin~· £ 8mith lsil
~ .lrn
a
.

GALL!A COUNTYS BEST IUYI Only 6 years otd. 4
bedrooms, 2 lull baths, 10 closets. modern'kitchen, 24
II. cabrnels, lull two story woth walkout b"'ment.
HomeSite Includes CQmmerclall1fJe hutldrng with 3car

lmmal dming 20'x40' inground co ncrete and steel pool

and more too numerous to mention.

,,......._ .

IN THE COUNTRY- Over I
acre,. nice spirt entry home
wrth 3 bedrooms, I \7 baths,
woodburner. good location.
All in good condition.

'-

mss

992-2259

1980 i4X70 MOBILE HOlE WITH I'&gt; ACRES, ADJOINS
CARRY OUT LISTED ABOVE. 2LARGE BR'S, RANGE, REFRIG.,
WOOOBURNER IN LR, B. GAS fURNACE, RURAL WATER.
LAND IS ROLLING WITH TREES AND ANICE PRIVATE POND .
LISTED AT $23,000.

outbutldings. Kyger Creel Sc hools.

OWNER WILLING TO TAK£ HOM£ IN ON DOWN
PATIIENI DR Wtll CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT Beautitul contemporary home with appror. 3.200 sq. ft.
and approx. 17'" acres. lull finished basement. 3
bedrooms, 2 lull baths, 1 hall baths, lamtly roomand

WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
'

Re11l Estate Gener11l

PRICE REDUCED - MID OLEPORT - Nrcety remo·
deled I \7 story home on a
quiet street in town. Many
features. Must be seen. Was
$24,900. NOW $21 ,900.00.

wrth range, dishwasher, relrigerator. disposal. Attached

2 car garage .. 88'x56' born pi"' other sheds and

. !2292
LOTS 4-SALE - 121 I acoe lots pruchase separate11 ot
together. Approx. 7 mrtes lrom crty. Call tor more detaitsl
112249
WHAT A PRICE! $11,000111 is what the owners are
askong tor this 3 bedroom ranch! Family room. eat·tn
kitchen. bath and more. Quret locat1on and approx. 2
acres.

DESPEUlE
OFF£1!11
Don't pus up this
Restored 2
story home on tpprox: 2.5acrts in city schools. Formal
tnlrtnce,' livin1 room with woodburner, dinin&amp; room, til·
in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, I\\ baths, full blsemtnt with outside entr1nce. Outbuildina. Aluminum sidin&amp;. Quiet set·
tina. Askin&amp; $52.900, butwill consider ANY oller.

-

tEE CIRCLE - SYRACUSE
- Nice 3 bedroom ranch
with dining area, large living
room, laundry area, carport
and outside storage. Nice
neighborhood. Owner must
sacrifice. $31,900.00.

•"h'"

AIAR£ DPPOilUNIIY
5mlleo oftown. 42ocres.
Road honl111.e alonk two roads frame ranch IPIJIOJ..
1,500 sq. II., 31g, bedrooii!S, 2baths,I"Q~ewncomptete

basement, 3 bedrooms, bath , eat-in k1lchen and dou ble

E. Mlit~WIII

AN ACRE.·DOES GOOD BUSINESS - HAS POTENTIAL FOR
MUCH MORE. ASKING $66,900

N2375

IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THIS ONE Y£1, CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT TDOAVI - Neat br ick ranch, 2 car
~arage wrth e1tra storage space. 3bedrooms I ~ baths
living room , dining area and more. lot sUe approx'
65'&lt;85' Nice neighborhood. $405.
·
12223
ATOUCH OF COUNTIll wrthin 3 miles of t..n. L·shaped.
brick and cedar ranch situated on 2.H acres. 4
bedrooms. 3baths, eal·tn kitchenwith 23ft. olcabinets
. 8'K32' deck, garden area with strawberries luli
basement, 2 car garage. Don't miss this on~ '
!2373
VINTON .... $20,000 - I story frame home wtlh partial
. tot lei's go.look'

Mo11ohtn Furniture lr Awlien·
Ctl, At. 1 North GaiUpolia, Ohio
Ph. 814-448-7444 . 15pc. Wood
Living Room Suite t399 .00.

POME~OY,

molude kitt hen with separate formal dining •

area, !lull bath, 3BR, living room, spacious family room,
anached garage. I~ law ~ txt. brick and alum. siding.
Priced 140s.
·

aai:aa2&amp;

~J~Je;~ ~~~E~~M~~s~~~M~;· :L~~Ko~l8~i:,}~~t~

REALTOR•

NEW LISTING - RID GRANO£ - $31.500.00. I story
home wifh 2 bedrooms, living and C11nmg rooms, H?

Amen~ies

good advice uk a REALTOR e a1CANAOAY REALTY.

NEW COIIIIERCIAl LISTING! CARRYOUT, STOCK &amp; EQUIP·
0

IB

•
388-8155
379·2184
446-2230
446-7881
446-0458
446·1655
245-9490
446-6595

baths, eat·1n kitchen, storage building and I acre, glass

Buying or aelling real estate1 For fair treatment and

.

BRO~ER

JUDY DEWITT
J. Merrill Carter
Phyllis Loveday ·
Jim Cochran ·
Becky lane
Patrick Cochran
Ron Pitchford
Charles Moore

enclosed porch.

complicated closing .

IF DAD WANTS A FARII, AND MOM WANTS ASPACIOUS
COMFORTABLE HOME, THIS PROPERTY Will MAKE BOTH
HAPPY. 30 ACRES, 2 STORY, 3 BEDROOM HOME. ALSOHAS
MOBILE HOME HOOKUP. LOT OF ROAD FRONTAGE NORTH
GAlliA SCHOOLS. $69,500.
'

BY OWNER
Restore this lovely colonial home. Laree stately
home with open stairway, approx. 70 acres,
Leadina Creek water, lV: miles from Pomeroy,
Oh. on. Rt. 143.
PHONE 614·992·7098

3 ltDIOOM liOUSE, Wlht Ttrract, Pomtro,, Ohio
·Large lat, full bannltnt. - $16,500.00

'

R8111 Estate General

PRICE REDUCED $2,000 ON THIS EXTRA NICE IIOBilE HOllE
WITH IIANY EXTIIAS!- 3 bedrooms. bUIIt·ln stereo and micr&lt;&gt;
wave, centr&amp;l air, eat-in kitchen wrth bay wrndow. Newer carpet.
Extra nice level land that expands to over 7 acrel
•2n1
NEW LiliA ROAD - Has spacious family toom with fireplace,
I ~ bath, 3 bedrooms. Nice neighborhood. Call lor appointment
today!
. •2309
AGED JUSTRIGHTI - II you are young enough toenjoyand old
enough to appreciate the charm of older homes, come see this
one! 3 bedrooms: bath, din ingroom, breakfast nook and more.
n3SS
FlATWOODS ROAD AREA - low ma intenance extremely well
built 3 bedroom home. Unde&lt;3 yeors of !IJ.e. lt!. kitchen with
lots ol ca binet and st"!age space. Under $70,000. 112267

Concrete btoc:ka alllizet prd or
delfvery. Malon aand. o.lliPolit
Bloc• Co., 123YJ Pfne St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 61 4· 448·

Mtylllg wa1her, needa timet,

,. " ,.

POOl
IN KITCHEN
PLUS SOLAR HEAT!
$55,000.

lin•. I 14 -593-8419 or
898·1317 .

814-448·1354.

·' $80 .00. 304-875-7124.

~

Owner llnanc.ln~; with .down payment, appro!. 7 mites
from Gallipolis ..Ideal location. Excellent condition, ovtl·
looks Blue llkland Raccoon Creek. 23ft. trevel trailer.
sund~ck. rural water•.stptlc system, and electric. Fishin&amp;.
boat1n1. huntln&amp; or JUSt relax!~&amp;.
#S84

Burn~aple•

7'JC16 ' Flatbed Dual A~tleTrailer.
aaoo Ph. 446· 6637 etter &amp;:DO.

1960. Ph. 814-379-2802 ••
378-27!18.

.

Qu,llty AottweUer pupt.
both ,_,..,u •nd pup from

' LAYNE' S FURNITURE

. Canaday

LOTS OF SPACE -MOBILE HOME W! EXPANOO, NICE DIN·
lNG AREA, HUGE liVING ROOM, CARPORT. FURNITURE
STAYS. 200X200 LEVEL LOT. All FOR $21,000.

"MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY"

~lueberriM .

Aed leaf Ho!lv.
~'I,~J::'..:~:•· :'~nid;~w~h~it1.
Yews. etc.

Trade for 21hp outbo1rd motor
elect. atert. One nikon F Pho·
tomic Camera, Wi\h F 1.2 lens.
One Auto 200M Telephoto 90 to
230MM, one doubler, one etec·
tronic fl11h Ph. 814-446-1759 .

tangea. Skage• Appllantll,
· U11per Rrver Rd. betide Stone
Ctttt Mottl. 814·441-7311.

Good used c~lor portable • ftoor
model TV's Ph. 814-448-1149.

Reglsterld Gftlat Dane. femele,
black wlthwhltablu:e. 21h yurt
old. Pay for"" bltl-e100. Call

, 8irch, ·Azaleas, Oog-

Reel Eatata Gener11l

For a.ale &amp;00 gel. fuel tank t200 .
John qetrl Baler good ahape

34•22•41 1200. Ph. 814-448·
9833.

814-818· 1~)7.

614·992·5569

GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
W11hert, dryert, refrigeretora.

. HOUSE OF THE WEEK

448-1354.

CALL

after 6PM.

freezer almond color

Quality Aottweilll' puppi11. Sit
both perenu end pup from latt
litter . .Call 814-593-8419 or

with all accnaories.

8821 .

locate mort:g1ge loans, and wh1t to do for a quick, un-

446-8810

, I

2 hycl;autic thairs, tJtcellant
condition t40.00 each. 1 salon
heir dryer $50 .00 Call 814-448·

realistic price: who the qualified buyers are; where to

seuTHERN HILS R.E.,INC.

Welcome your children, pets and prdener to this nice home
rn an excellent locatio n. 3 bedrooms. new kichen w/drop-in
raoge and oven. Good roof and insulation. 24'x24 garage and
small build ing. 7 beautiful acres. Owner w~l sell additional 7
ams at a reasonable

aon, Oh. 814-288-15930.

GaiHpolls.

Chest

248·5121 .

Hamtter· set up· lncludea tenk·
top. water bottte. 1 lb food 6
hee hamtter. tB.OO Call eu..

t%25.00. 304- 882-~335 . .

Plastic ci1tern atate approved,
J)llltie nptic tenkt. plaatic
culvertt, metal cuklerts. RON
E~ANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·

Whirlpool no frost refrigerator,
like new Ph. 814-44&amp;-8217

CANADAY REALTV. They know how to detennlne a

Put Number I
to work lor,you:

$26,510.110

54 MIIC. Merchandise

~alley Fumlture, new lit u1ed.
I..Jrge MCtion ot quality furni·
lure . 1218 Eaatern Ave .,

'

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S FINEST - 99.5acres ot hills, streams
and lush woods, nature at its best. Ahunter's paradrse. If this is
not en ough, nestled among the wooded hitlsrde is a private 3
acre lake, a ltshermann's dream and a year 'round hideaway.
low $60s. Call for more information
'
112293
WOLF PEN ROAD IN IIEIGS COUNTY - Vinyl sided frame
house wrth thr~ bedrooms, lg. bath, format dinin~ full base·
ment and enclosed porch. All thil on a nat one acre lot. $25,000.
Call for more information.
tms
COUNTRY LIVING. BUT CLOSE TO TOWN - Crew Road in Mei15
county. Sphllevel on 3asres m/1, 4 bedroom~ It family room
wrth frreprac~. 2 car ear age, brick &amp;alum. sidin~ Nice home in
th iS area. Prrco!d m the S60s.
.•
•2341

RE.\;_ ESTATE
388~8826

814-448·1188. 827 3&lt;d.

Ave. Gallipotit, OH ,

PuNibred Pttt full Puppiea P~ .

16 foot Stlf'l ~1mming pool

compl~e

reclinet"l ntw • uledi bedroom

. --------Apphnce.

IW.IOI
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(6141-992-3326

814·268·6009 .

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

I

Real Estate L.J.::!

Hunt ington. 2(5 minutes from
Gallipolit, new loclltehool. C1ll

c--~)

51 Household Goods

• 448· 3158.

New houM for ren1 or uie In
Crown Clty: 1 fi mlute1 lrom

·====~::.!.::;=====
•.
Reat Estate Generill
..------~~~~~~-------

Virgt·nia

Mmllandisc

Talk ro Audrey Canaday, Mary Floyd or Bob Gordon at

month plus 1200. deposit. Rtf ·
ertnc" required . Call 814-992 ·
7701 .

lftor 6 ;00 PM.

1uites, wrinoer washlfs, •
.. shou. New llvlngroom autte1
.. •1.19-SSII. lempa. Call 114-

448·0974.

Tennlt

876 · 307~

~

Unfurn lahed 4 room house in
Gallipolla. Gas heet Ph. 614· .

3 bedroom, unfurnl1hed 11 813
Mill St .. MlddlopO&lt;I. UOO. por

33 acrtts: 3 mile~ we11 of HMC.
near route 315 . Call 814·448·
8221 after 6 .

rant. l•rge recrelltlon and picnic
area, free lot give away. 304-

AUDREY F. CAIIADAY. RfALTDR

TEAFORDm

Ha . Rent 2&amp; Mill Creek Ph.
814· 448·8919

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Old Oriental Rugt Wentedl Any
liae or conditiOn. Call toll free

Formals. blue Gunn&amp; Sax ,
mauve Fwtratlont 1ize 9. Pink
wit~ bl.ck lace tlze 8. All lAC
corw.t. 304-675-3&amp;09.

suite t318. bunk beds e191.·

rlou1 lnquiri11 .

304·882·2488.

Antiques

Vltee.

Spacioua Mobi'- Home loti for

I)B(RT GORDON, RfALTOR, 446-62t6
IWf FlOYD, R£ALTDR: 446-3383
25 LOCUST Sl)IEE1, GAliiPI!,lJS.OitiO

1769

2 bedroom. furnished , AC. 1
child, no peta Ntw H111en

53

Building Materiata
Block. brick. sewer pipet, win·
dow., lintels, etc. Claude Win·
tert, Rio Grende, 0 . Call 11•·

3001 .

Space for tmell trailet'l. All ' Clll•h1n'a UaedTireShop . o._.
hook-upa. C.ble. Alao efticiiM'Icy 1,000 tiffl, Iilii 12.13. 14. 11.
rooms. air and cabl1. M11on. 16, 16.6. 8 miiH out Rt. 218.
Coli 81,4-256·8251 .
W.Va. Call 304· n3-l5661 .

"

Rea l Estate General

For rant new 1 bedroom hou1e.
furnished with Wlter •nd fumi ·
ture. t22 6 .00 month Reflt'en ·
cea &amp; Depo1it. Ph. 614 ·46·

.. otfJCOI • A·One Real Eatate.
- C11rol Vttager, Broker Call 304·
676-6104 .

Hemlack, IS' · to 6', tightty
aheared conical aha.,.. lde•l•for
landacaping . Santl' a Foreat,
Evana, W. Ve. Phone 304-895-

SWAI!'I
• AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82
• Olive St .• Gallipollt. New &amp; used
· woOd-coalatovn.l pc wood LR

1358.

· tommttrcial buildings fo r iuae.
: oo~n l own Pt. Pleasa nt . Stora1,

building

bedroom unfumlahed, 58

Burden&amp; Addn. Newly redeco·

3 BA . Ii11ingroom. large kitchen.
alngle gtrage. utility room , on
At . 35 3mi. trom HMC . With
option to buy Ph. 814-446·

4 rooma, bath. all new p•lnt, mce
and c:l .. n. Depotlt and referenca
required . 1 or 2 children. 614·
992·3090.

~ A sh ton

Houses for Rent

Rd. Retlricted aquare footage
houses. 10 percent down.
Owner financing . Call 416·

41

1973 Kirkwood. 141l70, 3 b&amp;d·
.ron mi. poreh, outbuilding, l .llt&amp;l·
·Ute dlsh. located' , acre• on
·McCu mber Road . Autlend.
' Ohio. rtllocatl ng mu tt tell, ~• II

E&gt;Y9 E&gt;Nid3InS
IfiOOIM
N3XY1:J
J.lld.JJIO
NOUON
J.SV3!fE&gt;
W1'18W3
SJ.3"1-W'(!fOS

35 Lots 8r Acreage

·12M50 mobile home, unfur•nithod, 2 bedrooms, 1970
"Dodge J~ ton . Call DYeninga only

:304 · 773-6279 .

·

Rental trailert. Call ' 814·992-

814-25e-1021 '

814·318·1331.

7479.

Realty··

Oeva

l~

4&amp;8-1885.

1 - ~"'33-7847,

CO\INTRV MOBILI' Homo P•k.
Route 33. North of Pom.ay.

Go House Hunting With

pninta or clo sing cottlf 3 -br.
hm i ly room w woodburner cen1rel air. 1 1/;
•culia Attume loin at 10
p8rcent mtere1t . Call after 4 ·00
p. m, 304 -675-4460

with Cra,, Field hetld ayatem,
built in amp and IP41aker. 304·

46 Space for Rent

614-448-3844

.

2 AKC Aetiatereci Blue Eyed
Slbirien Hu•kl• . *lleachmafe
2yr. old • femtle 1yr. okl Ph.

135 DO new,

AkW mod.i M-9 AHI Recorder·

.,

Old time log homes. for more
rrllo rmation ca /1 304-675 -7384,

60's Coli 304 · 765 · 0128 .
Thundayl 9 :00·9.00 uk tor

pottY ch•r.

Aduh

55 Building Supplies

for Anorneys. Accountaf!.t, etc.
CloH to Court HouM. Cell
WiHmen Reel Estate Agency.

unt. 3 bedrooms newly remo·
deled kitchen 1nd bath. New
· carpet. Unattached gerage. Full
1ita basem&amp;nt. Largelrvl ngroom
;and dining. Great location Low

332&amp;.

RoomJ .for r_,t, dty . weft.
month. Galli• HoteJ. Call 614·
448- 9716. Rent •II! low 'a sl120
month.

APARTMENTS, mobile hom11 . ·
hOUMI. Pt. Plelllnt and Glllipolit. 614-448-8221 .

· Pets for Sale

Light flnlah, aalid rftaple droplaef
pods. 4 upholatered
ctt.tn, chiM cebirm. 304· 876· '

tNitpfid. ia210P*I'fTIOnth,l100
depOih. Middleport. 614-992-

kitchen, g11

56

Pets for Sale

table.

Furnisl)ed Rooms

Oftlce Space for Rent. Excellent

507 Chandler Drive. Point Plea·

54 M iiC. Merc:handise 56

phono 304· 87~· 11413.

Newty decor•~ 2 bdr fur•Pt in G1Hipolis. Adults
onfy. Aaf, and dep. r4tquifed.
1200. P!ll' month plu• utilities. 4926 .
c.n 448· 4273.
814·982· 7787. EOH .
'
New apartment: completelY
turn. Ret. &amp; l;)ep. 1 or 2 adults Aptrtmen't l tnd hOuMs for ren.t .
· Call614'992-2403. ·
Private entttnee &amp; privet• park· onty . Call eu.~448 ~ 0338 .
ing. 1 blidroom, utilitiu ·JMid.
1 bedroom furnished apt. UtiliGood location Ph. 114-446nish~

Apartment
for Rllnt

New •pt next to Kentuc•y
Chicken, t260.00. Store IPIIC'
Main St., Pt. Pk. Calll14·448·
3'131.10:00 to 6:00 N!Oft. thru
Stt.

Fumithed Apl. 18fL 701 F~urth
Av..• G1lllpollt. 1225 Utilldts ,

Pd Ph. oUI-4418 oftor 7Pik

w.

. Phio~Point

, Apartment
for Rent

'.

Print letters of

line of

~ts.

W. Va.

~

12296

20 ACRES WITHIN MINUTES OF HOlZU. (SR 160) Rural water available. Situated close lo new grade
school.
HOlE IN CITY - ThiS 2bedroom home hasawarm and
cheertul atmosphere. Nrce sunny krtchen with range
and refnlerator. formal dlnmg room.livinl room, extra
wrde halwa1. part11l basement and ro nt porch.
Included also, curtarns, blinds, ""her and dryer and

•

dehumtdlli er.

2 STOIY HOlE AND 7'!, ACRES lORE Dl L£$1,
OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVER! - Home oilers 4
bedrooms, 2 baths. livrng room, lamily room. utiltl1
room, remodeled lilchen w~h ltreplace. Storoge
bu1!ding and barn. level land to river. FrUIIIrees and

PAIC£ REOUCEOI - On thrs ranch1111t homeand over
2 acres of land. Modern home. one story, approx. 1488

sq. It, 3 bedoms. hvinRroom. formal dinmg room ver~

nice. Blackjop road. Green 1wp , clo&lt;e toGalltP~li.'Good
condrtoon. Prtced to see at $34.900

m&amp;e

more.

12321
1974 IIOIILE HOME wrlh 10'!14' expando. 2
bedrooms. Currently rn trailer par\. REASONABW
112322
GREAT INV£Slii£NI PROPERTY - Mobrle home park
wrth 10 mobt~ homes: Avery nlca 3 bed room, 2 bath
horne wrth basemenlapt.lg. 40's60' buHdrng. Park has
centralltghted streets and 11 spaces. located at River
Street.

GOOD AS N!WI- Older 2slory home rn the crty Home
has 3 bedrooms, t ~ baths. livrng room,'drnrng room,
k1tthen and family worn. nat ga!. hea l and central a1r.
Home " rn mellen! eondltron. Prtced rn the 4{)j,
.
'
12342
lAKE, LIVING, AT IT'S BEST! -llyouenroypuvacyan ~
• secluded area, this home " lor you! 3 bedrooms. I'
baths, greenhouse large scemc yard e• pandmgtoover

CLOSE TO C.ITY - Large tamtly room and fireplace, 3

ATTENTION PROFESSIONAlS! - Olltce butl01 n1
located at23 LocustStoeel An c.cetrenrrocat•n lor Ihe
professiOnal person! Call lor more deta ils. Pnr.ed at
137,000.
m 20
3 B!DROOij TUllER AND LOT " Eureka. $15.000.

wzm

bedrooms, dmmg room, lots ol ~ood cabmets mk1lchen

eotra large tot

Washin~on

£tern. Evaps Hgts.

·

m90

COUNIIY LIVIIIG - 7.9 4CRES- MAJOR HIGHWAY
-Laree 2story, 4 bedrooms wilh TV roomdining room
and bath. Southwestern schont dislriel. Rt'. 141. Prtced
'" lhe 40s.
· m91
WHAT A GREAT OPPOITUIITY &amp; ASKING OILY
S10,500 - Class u!lodayand make us an offer on this
commerc111block buHdrng lao)rox.l 24'x48'1 . Close to
Tycoon Lake. Perlect for bart shop, !lore, etc 1/3 acre
plus water and stplr~ .

m&amp;s

I acres Ctlme see the 1esl 1

12335

N2311

BUILDING LOT - Located il lower Rl. f. access ro
Raccoon Cree\. Approx. I acre and restr rcted, no mobrle
homes. Beautrlul surroundongs. Prt ced at $S,SOO,
NOI LISTING112316
EDGE OF IOWN - lhr"" betlt oom ranch w1th b•th.
eat-m k1lchen. hardwood flo or~ and 2 Ci!J gar~~, 111th
effrcoency apartment. In crty lO iiools. $35,000 C&lt;lllor
complete hstmg"

LOCATtON ANO CONVUf£NT TO THE VILLAGE Of 110
!235i
G~Of m'akes thiS seven room home a destrable
NEW ' LISTING• PERFECT FOR THE FAMILY! - 4
listm~ liYing room, formal dlnin ~ complete kitchen, bedroom ranch, I'h baths, ltvmg room and lamrly uroo•r
parli~ buement. Uke new shin~e roof. Aluminum large kttchen wrth lots ol caUrnets Nrce ~ecluded ,;.i
sidin£. Allordable prrce ranae-1011 SJOs.
approx. 1.4 acres wrth lots ol trees. n~r dPCI on.1
mn
112360 garden sp~ .
.
~2376
1
'
'
. '1'"''''" fin~\&lt; NAF.~oftd~-~rkl
of "t
~~ryll Aol ,....
~ ...•ettC.............,itkm.
Printl f'in U
, .S.A. Equil Housir1g Opp!
~ t9&amp;6Ctntury 21 Jltal Esut1Corporaticn "'
IIJI
'"Y"'
AND OPERATED.

I

\.

I

�\

•
! \, .

'·

Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point

61
2010 John Deere di"fil tr1etor·
~.. dlec t3960. New Idee

bvn• Bounce mower •496. late
model 224T John Deere beler

11281!1. H•v wa9on t300. Call

1!4·281·1122.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.&amp;. 311i W•t. Jadlson, Ohio.

114-288·146 1.

Maaaey Ferguson, New Holland,
Buth Hov Sales II Service. Ovm
40 used tr~ctora to choose from
&amp; · ce~mpltte line of new &amp; ulfld
tqulpment. Largeat selection in
S .E. Ohio.

63

3000 Ford Trtctor with 309 2
row ·Ford Com Plant.,, plows.
disc. t4160. P~ . 614· 288 -

6522.

Case Dozer 460 wllh bllderopa
Excellent . condition. t115, &amp;oo:

9,oo. s,oo

~1 4 · 992 · 3~84

Mon.·Sat.

~977 Cue . 986 . 68 H.P.,
excellent conditton, new tlrea·.
86800. Call 614·986-4143 after 6 : 00 p . m . anytime

wukendt.

..

.

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 36 W, Gallipolia,
Ohio. Call 614-446·9777, eve.

6 h . Bush hog. 3 ft. H. 6 ft .

114·446·3&amp;92 . Up front treelOU with warranty over 40 used
lrtctQrt, , 000 10011.

Chain saw parts, S!o! PPiies and

UtHity Bldg. Spl: 30 ' •40' ll9'.
1 lx8 Overhead door. Service
Door. *6333 · Erected. Iron
Hor~ Bldgs. 614-332·9746
Mttlf'( Ferguson Tnctor. 69hp
wllhplowl, transpondls c.4rtlw
ltlMttf' , Ford mow ing machine.
l'lt.rnaUonal raika , New Holland
B1IM t48150 . Ph . 814·288 ·

1122

For ~·· four bot1om lnlornn ·

tlonel Pull Plow t176 . John
O.n 4 new JOin. Ctlrn planter
t21SO. 2 row corn plantert $3 00 .
end up. Btt. Wheel disks $375 .
Auger W.gon 1300. PTO Ma·

nure Spreader 1600. New Idea
Hay Aakt 18715. Hav conditioner
UlliO. Square hay balers S760.
and up. Cub Olak 1200. Other
fllfd rtady, new snd used
equipment. Howe's Farm Ma·

Bled&amp;, 3 pt H. 614· 986 ·3881 ,
repairs. Siders Equipment Sales
HendBuon, W.Va. phone 304:

675-7421 .

Ferguson tractor with plows.
new rea~ tlrea, rebuilt engine,
new pamt, $1 . 760 .00. Ce ll

304·676·8886.

.

19. 1987

-WIS

3yr. old Registerd Sorr~l Ouerter !"forte mere getding uoo.
Reg•sterad Sorrell Mtr•bred to
grendson or Sonny Dte Bar
2 Regislered Pure 8 red lJmousin•
Bull•. 1 1 moa. old 8001bs. uch.
Call 814-256-11'87.

Autos for Sate

:·
1 978

Chevy Malibu Clastic.

&amp;-ov,t.

.

446-3.644

Be ntly Pig Sale Wed. April 29,
7:30 PM . Fayet1e Coufity Fair·
grounds Wuhinglon Court
Hou11. Selling 1&amp;0 he(!d of
Duroc's, Hamp-Di.lroc, HampVork, B1rrows, Gilts. Con.
slgnere Rog.- Bentley Ph, 5135t;l~·2398 . Ltroy Larrick, R1ndy
a.wgley. Remember the ChamPIOn llerrow at the Ohio Sltte
Fa ir Junior Show was purch ...d
at ian year sale.

1~:
.92UI.

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER
. ~U~!~~ BUI~T OLDER HOME located on large lot
DAVID WISEMAN, 446-9666
Basemen;oy.H t car garage, storage area above.
8. J. HAIRSTON, 446-4240
. o water heat gas furnace 2
bd
e ~oms now, could arrange tor 3 bedrooms .Let
CLYDE ~ ~ALKER, 246-6276
·
LORETTA McDADE, 446:'7}29 U! s ow you thiS one._Asking $32,500.

We
Need'
ligfinflll

t1 350

Ph. 814-446·

197-8 VW, 96,000 actual miles.
DI.YI call614-446· 1919 Evert·
in~Call614·440·6570 .

1985 Monti CarlO. nice 2-tone
btlae. 9 ,600mi., PB , PS. AC. CC
4 4 .fuel injected engine. Apro11.
30~ mpg . Highway, remainder 5
.,..., warranty vensferable.Call
1

614·266·6091 .

1980 Olds Delta 88 Royale, air.
,ttres, higtt mileage. good
condition $2300. Ph . 614·256·
n~

#300

6580.

Bull Call

.

1.~81 Ch&amp;Vylmpale . 4 -door. AC,
titt steering. ·!;:r,uist. AM·F M,
good condilion. 12660 Ph.

Regi•tered Polled Hereford Bull1

1- - - - - - - - -

.April 19. 1987

•

REAL ESTATE

1300. Coll614,286·0522.

614·448·2663

BT Domino 1SG. Butler 452m.
Enforcer, bred. 6 mo.-3 vra
614·985 ·3881 .
I

1976 Dodge Oert good condi·
8600. Ph . 614 -2515· 6278
after 4PM, ·
1~

Now buying shear corn or ear

corn. Call tor late1t quotes. River
City Farm Supply. 614·446·

64

Hay 8o Grain

Wanted to !Juy gral')de logs
to Uwf'!'li ll . Paul
Mer cer Sawmill , McAr t hur'
Oh io 46861 . 614 - 696·5933. ·

Hay. 800 b..M on N111ighbor·
hood Rd. Call Dal e Beam
614·446· 0871 .

delivered

63

Pomeroy-· Middleport-Gallipolis.' Ohio-Point Pleasant.
71

Autos for Sale

72

_1 978 Ford F-260 4~~:4 . good
condition, chromt wheels. good
conditiQn 83500 . Ph . 814 -388·

.

Livestock

I N fOfd l'ractor. plowl, df1c.
c~hlvators , boom. 4tt. brush
hot. 5ft. Blade. 12800 Ph .

custom designed and
quality home is
offered fo! sale. locateq on 11 beautiful acres
(more available), lh1s 5 year old brick home offers
space, pmacy and scen1c view wrthin a Jew
minutes of H.M.C. Some of the o.utstandmg
features are 4 bedrooms, 2 ~ baths, spaciou s
kitchen /hvmg area, 20x40 pool, 2car garage plus
a full_y msulated 24x36 detached multi-purpose
bu1ldmg w1th bath. Cal) for more mformation. ·
H413

OUTSTANDING BUY IN SYRACUSE- 3bedroom
home wnh all the trmmings. fully equipped eatin ,
krtchen, dmmg room, 2 full baths, living room and
family roolm . Country style decorating. Large 2 car
garage WI h heat and water. ONLy $43 000. Many
other extras.
·
'
#236

WHAT A YIEW!
·Overlooking beautiful
countryside, this 3 bedroom home is perfect tor
the family. Full basement Includes family room
and rec. room. 2 fireplaces. Appro• 2 acres of
ground. $37,500
#218

1885 Chrysler . 6th Avenue.
16,600mi ., excell11111 condition.
,laather interio•, loaded Call

614-446·9614.

18'1 Pontiac Trans Am 306
Turbo with t·top. u. condition,
niw¥ eKhluat Ph. 614-446·2201
9· 6 or 446· 2734 on weekend•
after 6pm .
74~

Dodge Dart &amp;400 . 76 ' Ford

LTO HOO.

'.::

Ph. 614·3889

1980 Datsun 310 . Good condi·
tlbn 8800. Call 814-693-7390
evanings.

114-US-1837.

A"oto Tiller. 5 H .P. M.T.O . 11·60 .
2 yrs. old. 814-247· 4122.

• Rmg In Th~ Low P11ce~
~ In Tf1t Clm•(.-d l•rl•on

Real Estate General

Vans 8t 4 W.lil.

74

Motorcycles
Real Estate General

1979 CJ6 Jeep 304 ·3 speed,
41 .000 mil•: 19811&lt;swaAki
KX600. .both ,auellent. 304·

9780.

882·3571 .

1987 Sieta Cluslc 4-whtel
Drive, loaded. 6,000mi: Ph .

7~

114-379-2820.

1978 Ford LTD 2 ~oor sudan.
Fully equipped, 67.000 actual
mil... absolutely immaculate.

1984 Ford Ranger: Orange, V-6.
PS, PB. &amp;.speed overdrive. mag
wfle~s. Ph . 814-246· 5214.

1983 Suzuki AM 12&amp;, Wilt.,
cooled &amp; tull .f loltit sutpt"tion.
runt grtlt U815. Ph . 8,.·246·

Motorcycles

9157

'85 Trans Am, T-Top. loaded.
one owner, low m i les.

1986 Chevy 5·1 0 ma11.i cab . V-6
euto. tilt. air, phone 304-675·
5376 after 4:00PM .

1984. ' t~ondt V-30 Magna 1911 Hariey '~Davklson Super·
!500cc) 6400 milt~ . 11100. . qtlde. Ca11114-742-2875.
Calll!lfttr 5, &amp;14 ·441·478&amp;.
l 912 Honda CB7150 Cuatom.
198$ Honda R•flex 200 CC . New tires. new b1ttery. plut
Won on raffle licket. 15 ectual extr~a . Call 014-949-2734.
miles. t1 595 rtllit. Asking
For Nle: 1984 Honda Aacot.
S976 . Call 61.,·4•6-9407.
1700 mil... Llkt l)ew. C1ll
For tale or trade for equal value 614·992·2772 .
1982 Yamaha 550 Mn
' 84 Yem1ha 3 wheeler. si:re &amp;0.
1&amp;7&amp;.00 Ph. 814·26&amp;·1181.

'80 Cordoba car runt good and
look• good. 81,000 .00 . 304·

66 GMC 2· ton CBaC 6·cyl. 512 ,
runs good . ssoo. or best ofler.
;J0•·676 · 7397 or 675-1247 .

1982 Su1uki R S 176 dirt bike
good ' condition. •400. 1972
Suzuki T S 12&amp; good condition

73

1978 HO 751~ Annlverllry FLH
complete rlbuilt, S&amp;S 2 throat',
lights, oil cooler, and t)ltfll.
Excellent condition 84,600 .·Ph.

12200. Coli 114·992·8719.

19n Plymouth Volare. 62 000
mil... 4 door, auto. good body.
good tires, runs goo~. good
family or work car. 5450.

'85 GMC S-16 4x4 , .Extended
cab. loaded, wAite .' fiberglass
1opper, fa ctory warranty .

16,500 miles . 19900. 614·9929:00 -6:00 Mon.·Sat .

814·742 -2502.

3~84

111.200.00, 304,-576·2180.
875-3386.

1981 Chewolet Malibu Classic
wagon, AC , AM -FM stereo.
power windows, door loeb, exc
cond. 304-178-4384.

0325.00. 304·882·3335.

'

1226. Ph. 814·251·1287.
'

1981 four door Silver Volkeswagen LS duiel R abblt,

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Dodge Ma11i Van. 16
pauenger. 318 engine. Call
814-742 -2460.

1985 Camero t7.500 .00. 304-

For

73

The Sunday Times-

Ukenew 19 . . Honde&amp;O, 1325.

1968 Corvette. 327 t"glne. 350
H.P. All nu~bert mite h. 0 mile~
since total restoratiOn. No fx ·
Ptnct apertd. T-Top . 814-949~225 . .

Trucks for Sale

w. Va.

Ph. l14·446·7109.

1989 Corve~e. 360-300 HP. 4
tp. CaiiiU-7.. 2-2676 . .
·

n,ooo.oo. 304·676 -2771.

l -29_8_5_
. - - - -- - -

114-281·5944.

•

Vv. Va . .

Tran swort all on

2 Small horses weight 800-700
pounds. Call 614· 261-1431

ddnery, AppalachJan Highway.
Mayhew Rd., Jackson Oh . Ph.

.,

.·.;

Livestock

Yearling Charolais
614-448-4447.

62 Wanted to Buy

Plea~nt,

'

•

675-5510. .

61 4·••6·3083.

1979,,ttarl.y Davidson Claulc,
lour j)lckage; 1986 230· CC
Surukl A.T.V.. Serious Inquiries
only. 304-171 -15917.

75

RETIRE TO THE COUNTRY!!!
Maintain a relaxed, but active lifestyle in this modern 3 bedroom ranch on
Brushy Point Road (next to Doxol Plant on Rt. 35). 2 bath ;, utility room.
full basement, good drilled well. 11.487 acres REDUCED to $51,000, or
house and 5 acres for $45,000. OWNERS WANTIT SOlD!!!
#116

Boats and
Motors for Sale

WISEMAN

1978 Honda X.L-360 Slreet &amp;.
Trail Bike. ExceUent condition,
seldom used. Ph . 814-245·

ESTATE AGENCY

9688.

1976 Grand Prix parts for sale.
304-6715· 7110 or 676·1749.

Real Estate General

1979 Trans Am 82860 FIRM .
Rebuih engine, transmi11ion.
new clutch, preuure plate,
throw out bearing. 400 ·cu. in .
High Performance. Need• Paint.

304-875 -4819.

197• VW SupM Beetle, neW
cond, Immaculate. $3,800.00
price negotiable. phone 304·

468-1113.
'

1988 Plymouth Turisno, sun
roof. 6 speed, $4, 700.00, call

614·448 -8898 .

'78 Olds Cutla1s Supreme. call

304·895·3347.

N_
EW LISTING IN KRISTI DRIVE - Attractive
offers comfortable living on every floor. 3
bedro~ms, 2 full baths: Also includes living room
w1th t_~replace and family room. Nrce lot with nice
VIew 1n quality neighborhood. Garage, central air.
$63,900.

tr~ - level

BEAUTIFUL 2 STORY
HOME just off Rt
16(], I mi. from hospitaL Plenty of comfortable
room for any size ,family. 4·5 BRs, family room ,
hvmg room. dmmg room , equiped kitcpen w/lots
of cab1n ets, plus 2 room s in basement. 15
peaceful acres for raising small crop, large
garden, beef or horses and beautiful yard. Also
Includes enclosed pool and large heated garage
and workshop:Quiet, scenic locaton. Perfect place
to raise a family.
#241

lUTES
REAL ESTATE
BONNIE l. STUTES-REALTOR
JIM STUTES-REALTOR
CALL
462 2ND AVE., REAR 44~-42P6
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

1ST TIME EVER OFFERED ATTHIS PRICE!_ One
of the prett1est seH1ngs 10 Middlep o~ . Modern 3
bedroom home surrounded by large trees and
rock cliffs. All kmds of b11ds, deer and squirrels
will VISit your 1.27 acre lot every day. This very
well kept 20 year old home mcludesanice eat-in
kitchen, formal dining room, hardwond floors and
. a full dry basement There's a 3 car carport and a •
16x32 mground pool. It's at the end of Vine Street
IU~ t off Grant There's no traffic. it's quiet, just like
livmg !n the country yet only a minute away from
shoppmg, church and grade schools. Priced at
$56,900.

'"'!!

OWNER MOVING OUT OF STATE - ll 'you are
looking for a good quality modern home just 4
blocks from downtown , see this medium priced
ranch . Includes 3 bedrooms, very nice kitchen,
fam1ly rQom, 2 baths and full basement with
finished rec. room. woodburning fireplace, large
enclosed back porch tor storage. Located on a
large lot with room for ga~den . look at this before
you buy! $56,900.

JUST IN TIME FOR SPRING -Very nice
ran ch style home offers 3 BRs, 1\\ baths,
kitchen , FR. LR. fu ll basement, fireplace
gas heat/cent: air. attached garage, 16132
pool. You'll like th is one. Call today.

730 THIRD AVENUE - 3 BEDROOM_ Wh a

rent when this nice small 3 bedroom ho~~ i~
available?_,Needs some decorating, but for
$29,500, 't sa good deal. Just right for a starter
home or ret11ed couple.

LeGRANDE B,OULEVARD ,.... 14 year old lrame
w1th low utility bills lwoodburner included). 3
bedrooms. livmg room, large kitchen, covered
patio, and fenced backyard. Just the right size and
located for starter home or retirement. Green
schools. $39,900.
#412

#304
OWNER WILL HELP WITH FINANCE! ANO DOWN WMENTI G'
f01 more - 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, pool. 4
"e usacall

s a.ooo.oo.

·

MODERN RANCH - 3 b d
·
..
less. $41 .900.00.
e rooms. lg. kitchen &amp; dmmg, .75 acre more or

HAPPILY EYER AnER -Is how you'll live in this
3 bedroom cedar ranch. featuring formal dining
room , cozy family room with stone fireplace, large
kitchen and 2 baths. Well decorated throughout
Over ~ 900 sq. It of living space. 2 car garage.
Buyer s ProtecliOn Plan. $60,000.
#249

the land IS creek bottom and productive for lield
~~0 P s and garden. Also storage buildin gs. Good
1 1 · 1971 12•65 Schultz in good conditon and
1961 10•50 Elcona '" _
good condition. Located
lUSt oil St. Rt. 325, 2.5 m1les N.E. ol Vinton. County
water hoe on St Rt. 325. Priced to sell at $16,500.
~311

1750 sq. ft ., 3 bedlooms. kitchen ~ppliances.
- 5·000 sq. ft., 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, pool, lots extras.
LESS - 3 bedroom s, 2 baths. ATRIUM ROOM, lg. gar·
MORE

~Rn'N~sncomSe $38500, city. Only $34,000.00.
-

lory &amp; half. 5 bedrooms. country.

HAPPY EASTER!

DESIRABLE . OLOR HOME IN GALLIPOLIS _
Remodeled '" 1979, 1982 and room added 10
1986. Near supe1market, library and laundry.
Large backyard w1lh 5 ~- high chain link fence.
One room basement Gas forced air :turnace· gas
water heater and storage. Attic area suitabie to
remodel fo1 additional bedroom. All for $3B,900.
H310
49 ACRES - Several excellent bulldmg srtes
1200 f~et road frontage on state highway 4 mileS ·
from RLO Grande. Genliy rolling hills and valley
Qu,,et counlry ~urroundings. Outstanding view.
Th1s property wrll really turn you on.
·
1136
SOME OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S MOST
BEAUTIFUL COUNTRYSIDE is contained wnhin
thrs 86_acres. I ~ story remodeled homein good
shape mcl~des 3 bedrooms, I bath, large eat-in
kitchen, liVIng room and front room. Aluminum
sidmg, approximately 50·55 acres are cleared
grassland. Small pond. $66.500.
•245

NEVER THOUGHT YOU COULD AFFORD AHOMEl
:- Here's. your chance. Good location on Rt. 588
1n c1ty hm1ts. $20,000 buys th 1s clean 1·2
bedroom home. includes full b.asement. forced air
furnace, n1ce backyard with garden spot Call now.
#223
OUTSTANDING BUILDING SITE .- 8 acres with
over BOO feet of road frontage. 300 teet off Rt.
141. 5 mrles from town mGreen Township Buy it'
Spilt 11 up! Make a profit! $25, 800.
·
·
Nl45
ONE OF ARE_
A'S GRANDEST HOMES! - This
prestlg1ous brick ISlocated about one mile lrom
downtown on an absolutely outstanding tot. 2.7
acres of nature at 1ts best, beautiful old trees, a
pond. huge boulders and lovely manicured lawn.
The house looks like apicture from Better Homes .
and Gardens and includes a large family room,
formal dmmg and large hvmg room each of which
hasa large picture window offering'abreathtaking
view of the river. All 4 bedrooms are large, 3 of
which are connected to a bath. There are lots of
closets and two large storage rooms. Beautiful new
carpet, central air and an inground pool add to
comfort and fun of spending more of your time at
home. $95.000.
#134
GHEEN ACHES- 141tota l of forest and meadow
la.nd. Good _
trmber stands espeCially walnut and
h1gh potent1al return va lue. Several home sites .
w1th excellent ~iew . Scemc Ra ccoon Creek
frontage, all . mrneral nghls, county water
ava~laDie. Possible access lo 3000' long air stnp
on ad1acent farm. Reasonable pr~ce of $55.000.

#350

5 ACRES PLUS 2 MOBILE HOMES_ Over hall of

VINTON- CORNEitOF CHERRY &amp; CLAY
..,.. Nice two sto1y home oilers 4 BRs, 2
bat hs, LR. kitchen. den, d1n1ng room, full
basemen!, sundeck. fireplac e. Cali lor an
appomtment

NICE CAPE COD I_
N CHESHIRE - Thi s sturdy
older home was bUilt to last and ~ has' Recently
renovated, has new bath, 3 bedrooms dining
room, full basement. hardwood floors and fenced
backyard. Cert!lnly worthwhile to see this one.
$34,900.
#410

RUSTIC. RANCH

A PLACE YOU'll LOVE TO CALL HOME
Charming 2 story vmyl sided home giVes you a
wonderful wa~m teehng._lnctuoes 4 bedrooms, 1~
baths, hvmg roomWlthflfepiace, attractive dining
room w1th corn er chma c_abmets, large eat-in
k1tch.en and .lull basement w1th asecond fireplace.
Quality deta~led construction throughout. located
on a qu1et dead end street within walking distance
to sc hools. 2 car garage. All tor $65,000.
#209
RIO GRANDE HOME - Near glade school and
college. Home on 11 of an acre lot with 30•36 barn.
E•cellent Rarden area. Historic older home
occup ~ ed by former colle_ge presidents 1n good
cond1t1on. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, large liVIng room
w1th wood stove. fam1lv room dining 1oom
modern k1tchen and 121[8 sun ;oom Gas tired'
hot. water he~l. Chestnut wood w1ndow and door
facmgs 1n mam part of home. Just one of the best
burlt and modern1zed (m good taste) homes in Rio
Grande. Pr~ ced to sell at $54,800.

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU Located fU&lt;I oil St. Rt. 35 1n Spr~n e Valley
Estales. l1i·level hnme w1lh 3 BR s, ! 111
baths, eQuipped kitChen. LR. d1nett e. FR,
lnepla ce, carpet, gas heal, cenlral an ,
covered 1ear patiO, pool and attched R!l ·
age. Oop 't let lh1s one gel away

'

THE FAMILY Will LOVE THIS ONE! Ranch style home on .5 acre m/1, offers 3
BRs. bath, kitchen, family roo.m, LR. carpet,
heatalator fireplace, WB stove, 2 car
attached garage, l6x32 in-ground pool.
Chain link lence. Ca ll tor an appomtment.

ALOTl - h"'' 110n1e
nurr,ha&lt;ed with 5 acresor and
otters
BR s.
baths, LR, k itc h ~n.
woodburning stove, wpel , tobacco base,
40•60 barn, cellar house and seve~al
sheds. Call tor mme mtormalron.

'

E{'N6ou.f:1~SG M~:AEDOYRTL0ESS , SPECTACUlAR VIEW &amp; SETTING! LOTS OF
LOCATION IS SUPER for anyone who likes to live
downtown within walking distance oft he park and
shoppmg hub. W1th 3-4 bedrooms. family room,
dmmg room, large kitchen , vinyl siding and
fen ced. yard, property is also a desirable rental
Unit $44,900
#400
10% LOAN .ASSUMPTION ON , MOST OF THE
ASKING PRICE - Quality built 5year old 6 room
3 BR. 2 bath home. Central heat w1th al;
conditioning. 15•20 living room, 12x 13 fam ily
room, 2 car gara ge, all on large I acrelot. Agood
buy at $57,600.

- 2.5acres, more01
Very attractive ran ch style homefeatures
bed1ooms, 2 baths, LR, k1tche n w/ range ,
ref11g. , m1crow ave. full basement, carpel·
mg. heat pump/cent, a11 , one car attached
garage plus an unattached garaRe. Lots of
room lor gardenmg and en10! 1np_ lhe
outdoors. Call tod.ay,

#113

ron··

EXTR
BURST INTO BLOOM. PRtVm LOTS OF
AS. A MUST TO SEE AND YOU WILL AGREE A DREAM HOME THIS
COUL 0 BE. PRICED IN 60'S.

STEP INTO ELEGANCE when you enter the
foyer ol one of the french City's finest.
formallR, formal dining, spacious master
bedroom with office or sewing room
adjacent, den, 2 BRs upstairs, 2'h bath s, 3
! ~repla ces. lg. fam ily room, solarium,
covered patio. screened porch .and much
more. Call tor an appt.

.'

lB
~ !AL

OON1 BE CRAMPED FOR
ANY
MORE - Th 1s lovely home offers approx.
2000 sQ. ft . and is fUll fiVe m1nutes from
town - 4 BRs, t ~ baths, powder room.
kitchen. dinette. LR with corner· wood·
burn er. fam ily room , carpet and hardwood ,
gas heat, cent. air , altached garage. city
schools. Call today.

#211

.

.

~~

OWNER VERY AUQUS TO SELL!!! - You'll enjoy
NOTA THING TO DO- Except move in.This brick the QUietness of th ecountrys1~e and convenience
ranch is in A·l condition. Owners have thoroughly • of being close to town in'lhls 7year old 3bedroom
enjoyed the neighborhood and the house. which
home ius! 4 miles out 10 c1ty school district The .
mcludes 3 bedrooms, 1~ baths. large eat-in
rough cedar S1d10g and a new wrap around deck
k1tchen wllh dmmg area and acomlo~able family
!treated tumberl make it astandout on the market.
room with awoodburning fireplace and insert. But Includes a nice krtchen with range and
most of all they've taken great care ot this home relrigerator, Formica countertops and nrce
tor you! 2 car garage. convenient location. ca binets. formal diningroom and 2baths. There 's
$64,900.
a large family (oom with fireplace and 1 car
H216 garage. 24x30 outbuildmg for storage. You'll like
TARA HOME -:- Very clean and well mamt~med the added ouldoor summer livmg space ·the deck
bnck ranch w1th full basement. Incl udes family proVIdes, abov~ ground pool is extra. It you 're
room, 3 bedr~ms , 2 full baths, living room, diniQg about to buy a ~orne. see thivrne before you close
area plus_eqUipped, eat-in kitchen. Also features on anl')lling else! $64:500.
screened m porch and opeQ patio, garaga Central
#108
!If, Well decorated . Priced m the 60s.
SPECIAL OFFERING
#234
BEST BUILDIIIG SITES IN
ATTENTION MOBILE HOlE OWIIERsr
I
&amp;ALLIA COUNTY
vacant groond al.ong Route 7. lnciudes ~;~~
· · "Early llrds" will' &amp;II the best silt!!!
frontage. located lUSt below Eureka $10.000.
We are subrhvid1ng a 1100 acre larm into small
.224 med1um and large buildmg srtes. From 2 to 30
acres o1 gently rOlling meldows and hitftOp land
LOW MAINTENANCE BRICK - Th1s aHractive
oHering
woodefful countryside vrews, clun, fresh
home '"" please anyone looking for a lriendly
aromll$ and quiel pmeful surroundings. located
nerghborhood. It's conveniently located on Rl. 35
on slate highway, Rio ·Grande Elementary and
and mcludes very nice kitchen with range
Gan11
Andemy H1gh School. Gallia County Rura l
dishwasher and relfigerator, 3 nice sized
Water.
hcellent neithborhood. financ1ng availa·
bedrooms, I ll ceram1c baths, garage indudes
ble. NO MOBILE HOMES PERMiffiD.
automatic door opener. Priced 1 t $69.500.

1123

8137

LOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE!- 2000sq. ft .
building with frontage on St. Rt. 160
12120 walk·IO cooler. 12 11. da~ry case.Call
for more details.

e:
SPRING IS HERE and we have the perfect coHage along •
a · llaccoon Creek lor you to s'pend your summer eveffings
w:~nd weekend s- Year around living. Buy now.$42,500.

••• COMFORTABLE COTTAGE, 2 bedrm .. situaled along
Garfield Avenue. Buy now for $16.000.
• CONVENIENTLY LOCATED ALONG 3rd AVE. (300 block)
• · ;- 3-4·5 bedroom home, 2 baths, recently renovated,
• new gas F/ A•Jurnace. $50,000.
• BUY NOW: 21.\ acre lot located with m Spr~ngf1eld Twp.,
• Galha Co. $10,500.
• THREE BEDROOM HOME in Pl ants Subdivision. Exc.
condition and ready lo move 1nto. full basement,carport.
• Comfortable. '$43,000.
.
APPIOitiiATELY 5 ACRES of level ground adracentto
• Pleasant Valley Estates: 350ft. of road frontage, w1th c1ty
water. sewer and gas on premises. $400 per front toot.
• NEAT 3 BEDIOOit HOME located alon g Roush Rd.,
Chesh~re Twp. Kyger Creek schools. Approx. ~ acre,
wblp, pool. Buy now tor $49,500.
3 BEDROOM HOME ON KATHY DRIVE near Holzer
Hospital. Low traffic area. large back yard, WBfP.
Gallipolis City School Oistnct Price $45,000.
• 'ACREAGE: 132 acres, 30 acres of bottom land. Buy now
lor S35,000. ($26 5.00 11t1 ACRE!! ~
20 Aclt~ more or less wrth l ~H mob1le home. Hazel
• RrdRe. $19.900. ,
LISTING!!! OVER LOOKING THE OHIO RIVER. '
1967 Mobile Home. One acre of land w1lh 2-car garage.
• ·tliday'! This one won'l lsi for $10,000.00!'

e
e

Ie

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

DUPLEX 4 SAll - Great investment tor
the buyer. Located on Graham School Rd.
Each unit offers 2 BRs, living room , bath,
kitchen and stove. ret 11g., OW and dispL,
laundry. large carport. central a11 and
storage well.

DOWNTOWN LOCATION - LIVE IN ONE
RENT THE OTHER or RENT BOTH! - 2
story home with 3 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen.
dining rm., gas heat. Garage apartment in
rear oilers 2 ·BRs, bath, kitChen, laund1y
room. Call lor more 1nlormat1on.

YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOYTHIS HOME 4 BRs, 2 bath s, equipped k1tchen , LR,
attached garage, heat pump/cent. a11,
whirlpool in masterbath. above g1ound
pool. Shown by appomtment

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP - Lovely home
oile1s 3 BRs. 3 baths, equ1pped "'!chen.
14x44 tam1ly room.dinette. I~re pla ce , 2car
unattached garage. 20x40 pool and
satelhle d1sh. Call for an appomtmenl

LOVELY BRICK HOME.IN TOWN - This
home has a lotto otfet. Kitchen w1th range
and displ., LR with fireplace. carpet over
hardwood , full basement. atla ched garage
with electnc opener. gas heaVcent. a1r.
stor mw1ndows. You'll want to see thisone.

REDUC£D TO •n , :rwll
offers living room.
relrig. and d1spl.,
i room, bath,
c arpetin~ woodburnmg stove. unattached
garage and a 16x30 oft1ce and shop, Call
today.

GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD - Very n1ce
ranch ol_ters kitchen wlran ge, retr 1g, OW,
d1spl., mrcrowave. LR, FR, dmetle. 3 BRs, 1
bath, cent. a11, carpefmg, 2 metal uti111y
bldgs. Shown by appomtment.

$39,900 - 1.7 acres m/1.
style home features 2 bath s,
fam1ly rm. and lormal dinmg, r&gt;rr&gt;Piirlo
woodburn1ng stove. Call tp r
1nlormahon.

PRICE REDUCED TO UUOOI - GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - This home offer s a
farge LR w1th firepla ce, kitchen, dming
area. 3 BRs, bath. full basemen!, I car
garage, deck, fenced yard just minutes to
lown on Rt. 141. C&lt;rll for an appointment.

DRIVE - Lovely home for begmners,
3 BRs, LR, eal·mklfchen. bath, carpcline.
gas heat, ce nt. a11, attached garage. Call
now tor appomtment.

MAKE THIS YOUR NEW HOME - Brick
ranch , 3 BRs. l'h baths. k1tchen w / ran~e .
double oven, OW, l1vm g rm ., dmette, Iam1ly
rm.. fireplace. lull base1nent, screened
porch, 2 car attached ga10r,e, KC school
d1stnct.

COMFORTABLE LIVING PRICEO AT
$19,900 - lhrs allractiVe home oiiPrs 2
BRs, bath, k1tchen w1!h ran ~e. dllllnJ: room ,
LR, carpet, I ca1 unallached garage
Slluated on lwo lois CaiiiO&lt;tay.
'

JUST $29,900
- Close to c1ty on Rt 14 11hll homeoilers
k1lchen. lR, larnrly 100m, d1n111R roorn and
full basement La1ee ' "" ll ac ~ cd block
R313 P.e Call lor an ' PPOmlme,nt

·

e

VALLEY ESTATES - !111 level
offer s 3 BRs, 2 bath\, nn:e' eQuipped
k1tchen, l ·shaped LR, rlinilll' " ca. 1~• 1/
family 1oom w1th wood 1Ju1111nr, l11e pt~ce.
~a 1 heat. cent a11, 2 ca1 r,a'''" Call torlay

e

• -1lw

IIJY THIS HOllE ON THIRD AYE. for only $22-,500.00.
lor more information!'
·
'

4711ADISOII - One story home wah
krtchen, bath, BR, gas heal, prited
$12,900!
.

STATE ROUT£ 1&amp;0- COIIEilOT- This
home offers 3 BRs, LR, kHchen, bath,
unlltJChed prage.

OWNER HAS REDUC EO THE PRICE TO
· AFFORDAIILITY + LOCATIOII • One n1ce , $39.900 - 132 9 Mil. pa11ure la110
starter home near Green School, 3 BRs. spnngs, 42•94 barn, tobacco base Olde;
bath, LR, kitchen, fireplace, full basement, home in ROod shape, 3 BR1. bath, LR,
big yard. Call for more delaits.
kitchen. Call today.

�The Sunday Times-~entinel
76

·Auto Parts

78

&amp; Accessories
IUDO~TTrensmlssians : U1&amp;d &amp;
Rilllulh. All typn torque conVer-

ttfs • trantf..- c.-es. Engine
Ol;llrhtul kit1. Allison Tran•mt•lkNI P1rt1 II CVC Joint•. Gua - .
rtl'ltltd, will deliver. cash &amp;
c•ry. or lnsr.n Cell 814 -379 -

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Camping
Equipment

81

Lot for S1la- 40JI100 camping
lot, in c~mpgrour"ld on Aaccoon
Creek . Ph . 614· ""6·1294.

Home
ImprovementS

All typH C.tJ*Iftr • concrete

Home
Improvements ·

Work:

ln~.,ior,•

exterior, remo·

deling, ptintlng, roofing, fret
eatimates. Ctll 114-.Ue-&amp;174.
Prof•tional wellpeper inltllli·

79 Motors Homes

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnGCJ~~dltionel lifetimt QUirin·

&amp; Campers

2220 0&lt; 1· 304·175-676e.

81

Serv1ce s

tion .Cell Randy Ph. 6U-U6·
6260 or 4-'8·3131 or 446 2200.

tee. Local ref•tnces turnithed. , - - - - - - - - Free ntimatee. C.ll cotlect
1-114-237-0488, diV or night.

213 Chf'lty engine. Good. One
C4 Ford tren1mlnion 1nd one ' 1987 Travelmuter by Coach3&amp;0 GM :, tran~misalon . C1ll men . 26tt., 7,000 org. mile1 1
liMe ntnov, loaded. Call 614 -258 1_1 '-992· 2&amp;e6 .
1267.
Truck Topper for Ford R~~nger
long bfd. Four 14" Outlaw
Chrctmt WhMis , new, for Chevy 19'76 Dodge RoCkwood M ini
Mot or Home. 47 ,000 mila~ .
8 -10. 304-676-1070.
nooo. Call 614 - 949- ~128.

R o ·g e r· •

B·• 1 e ·m en t

Wtttrproollng.

SWEEPER an_d Iewing machine
reptlr, perta. end suppli•. Pick
up tnd dtlivt'V. Davia Vacuum
Cl .. nar, one half mile up
Georg" Creetc Rd. Call 614 -

446· 0294.

LAwn Mowing Churches. Reti·
dentlal.tnd Buslnett. By hour or
by the job. In Gallipolis and

11mounding areas. Ph. 614367-0634 .
RON'S Television Service .
H01.1M c1ll1 on RCA, Quazar.
GE . Specialing in ZBflhh. Call
304 -676 -2398 or 814 -4462464.
•

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Ohio Valley Bank
Company. 420 Third Avo·
nut, Gallipolis:'" Ohio offers

81

Home
Improvements

Fttty Tree Trimming, stump
rtmOYIII . Call304-171 -1331 ,
RINOLES'S SERVICE. tllpt rienced carpanter. eleculcJan.
meson, pein1er, roofing {Including hot tar application) 304676-2098 Of 676-7147 .
.
Rotery or teble tool drilling .
Mon wells completed nmtdfV.
Pump tales ,end service. 304-

85

.

Dillard Wilier Service: PooWs,
Cistllrns; Weltt. DeiNery Anylime. Cell 1514-448 -7404-No
Sunday calls.

Formerly Ken Wheaton 's now
John'• Water Service. 1 ,000 to
· 2.000 gal service. 304 -576-

614 -446-3438. Open dailv 9 fo
4: 30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.
...

utimatea.

AL record

PICK-4
0124

Daily Numht•r ·
-· 004

- Page_4 ·

Mowrey 's Upholstering serviJ:tg
-tri countyar11a :i!2 years. The belt
in fumiture upholstering . Cl{ll
304 - 675 -4154 for free ·

Louo
33-I 6-25-14-9-22

or

promises in Miting.

Home 12x66

at
·
. y

.,
Vol.36. No.244
Copyrighted 1987

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

· Clear tonight with a low
near 55. Mosfly sunny Tuesday with a high hetween HO and
85. The prohahlllty of precipitation Is near zero through
Tuesday.

•

ent1ne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 20, 1987

1 Section , 10 Pages
25 Cenl s
A Mul_
t imedia Inc. Newspaper

TheCENTURY2rActionWanan~~
When you're ready to sell your home, get
the CENTURY 21 Action Warranty-a
personal promise of service that tells youin writing-the steps we'll take to help
sell. your home.

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

1971 Marietta Mobil e

•

We put our

St1rks Tree and lawn Service.
Greener ..wnsthlt i• Weed and
Pes1 Free. liquid or grenduler
application -tree and shrub too.
Stump removal anywhere without lewn dem!l9'· For complele

Home 12x66

Gallipolil. Ohio

Phone 614-446·3888 or 614·
446-4417

83

Aprll20 . 1987.at3:00P M.

.Call today for details.
446-6610
Ontu~

Excavating

All property will be sold to

the hlghell bidder "as is"

Cultom garden tilling, profel·
slonal equipment. profesllon ..
resuht. Ph. 614 -367 -0567.

without •nv eJipreaaed or
lmplltd wlrranty. Arrange·
mentt to see the mobile
homea can be made by cont.cting the Con1umer loan

84

Dtponment.
The Ohio Vallay Bonk Com·
pany mervet the right to accept "' reject any end ell bids.

Electrical

~21

&amp; Refrigeration
Resider'tial or commercial wir ing'. New aerv~ce or repain.
Llcented electrician . e.nmate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304676-1786. .

and to wrthdraw any or all
property from sale prior to

confifmltion.
AprM 12, 16, 19

85

86 Climbing plants
87 Danish island
88 Roman bronze

90 - Lanka(Ceylon)

91 " The Man Thai
Never - "

92 Part of circle
93 "The Lion in - "
96 Certain
99 Observes
101 Flngerless glove
104 Brick-carrying
device

105
107
108
t09

Hearing organ
Mourntul
Seed cont ainer
Succor

110 Mr. Gershwin

111
112
114
1t6
117

" - Llle to Livo"
lnlerlwlne
Reaps
- Lollobrig lda
Association:
abbr.
118 Arllliclal
language
120 Melabollc
disease

122
123
124
125

Sn Is li s symbol
- and pepper
At home
Above

171 Wear away
172 Uncanny
173 Score
175 Rational
176 Lock ol hair
177 Falls In drops
178 God ot love

73
75
76
79
81
84
87
89
92
93
94
95
97
98
99
tOO

DOWN
1 Gaseous
'-,

hydrocarbon
2 Merrymaking
3 Unlocks:
poe11c
4 Youngster

5 Either
6 Tidy
7 Mother
8 Arabian garment

9 Disprove
10 Oregon 's capital
11 In favor ol
12 Old pronoun
13 Equal
14 Negallve prellx
15 Sai lor: colloq .
16 Egyptian goddess
17 Public
storehouse

131 Former Russian
rulers

133 Mr. Patino

35 French article

127 Before noon

129 Journeys

Locate
Unrullled
Run easily
Hurl
Saucy
Poured
Fuel

124
125
126
128

136
137
139
140

3 7 Commonplace
statement s:

141 Inquire

142 Printer' s measure
143 Anger
145 Permit
147 VIsionary
151 Plunge
152 Belore
153 High
155 Gratuity
157 Send lorth
158 Ship channel
159 Mix
160 Revised : abbr.
161 Des Moines Is
lis cap .
163 Nobleman
165 Jet lorth
167 Diphthong
168 Sliver symbol
169 Surgical thread

1986 Buick Park Avenue
List new for over $19,000
Choose from 3 Factory
Program Cars.

Sin
Scold
Disturbance
Is ill
Twist
Roman 51
Clo1hlng
Paddle
Bound
District ol

$14 ,900

WERE
JUST ANNOUNCED
FACTO.RY SPONSORED
$
.
'REBATE ................................. 1200

NOW ONLY

Kind
Joins
Marches
- de mer

slang
40 Ale 10 lose
weight
42 Baker's products
43 Grin and - II
45 Uses a pencil
Up
48 Rear of ship
52 "- Last
Frontier "

56 Twists
1oge1her
58 " - Farly Dallas"
59 Sum
60 Macaws
62 Foreigner
63 Essenses
65 Rivor In llaly
66 Places ol combat
67 Choice
68 Tibetan gazelle
69 Catch: colloq .
71 Oog Star

$13,700

1986 Pontiac Sunbird 4 Dr.
3 To Choose From

132 More
precrlpltlous
133 Snake
134 Continued S1ories
135 Power
138 Obtain
141 River Island
144 Spanish article
146 Country ol Asia
148 Anglo-Saxon

Still Under Factory Warranty with
·
Low Miles.

WAS
DISCOUNT -

s7995
s595

NOW ONLY$]

1987 Pontiac Sunbird
NEW
Automatic, Air Cond, AM-FM,
etc.

$9450
AFTER REBATE

1986 Buick Somersets
7 IN STOCK

Some of the "Best Buys in the
Ohio Valley". Good colors, low
miles, popular options.

400

$8988

slaves

149 ·· - the World
Turns"
150 Pondered
151 Ap'polntments
152 Latin conjunction
154 King of beasts
156 Young salmon
158 Clutch
159 Scorch
162 Sue - Langdon
164 Fish eggs
166 Swiss canton
167 Devoured
170 Tantalum symbol
174 Beholdl

·-

FACTORY LIST Sl0,311
NOW ONLY

Sorry-temporarily sold out of America's #1 Van
Conversion-Mark Ill-more coming next week.

..'
1

-

senger, ~2,000 miles. This hard to find unit shows
excellent care ...............................................................
II

1984 Pontiac Trans Am with T-tops.Just

traded this week. Completely loaded ...................... .
Ill

1984 Buick Century St. Wagon

We solq it new. Absolutely Immaculate ....................

SAVE$
•

!

v 1983 Chrysl'er LeBaron, local one owner,

low miles, shows TLC, "good Family Car' ................ . $.5695 ~

Sniith Buick-Pontiac
1911 EASTERN AVE, GALLIPOLIS, OH.

@ 1N7 U1111..r F..... Syndicate

446-2282

"Have a Happy Easter with Your Family"
\

By PAM MURPHY
United Press International
Americans rose with the sun 10.
worship at r.'aster s!'rvices from
the Lincoln Memorial to the
Hollywood Bowl and dell~hf ed in
egg hunts, sky-diving bunniPs
and a show of bonnets lo inspire
son net s In New York's Fifth
Avenu e parade. •·
In San Francisco. speci~l pray·
ers were read Sunday for AIDS
,·lrllms at Most Holy Redeemrr
· Catholic Church, where I he Rev .
.John McGarran spok~ about his
work mlnlslerin)l: to pallenl s
suffering from acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome In an adja·
cent hospice.
" I speak of God 's love lo
family, friends and 10 peoplr who
arc dyln)l:." said McGarran .
"There's a special kind or lovt&gt;
among us we mighl 'never ha v&lt;'
bellrved pos sible.··
In Detroit. a 7-year-old girl's
appearance at Sunday school
spared her from a fire I hal swrpl

throu~h her lamlly's home. Crys·
Ia I Lawson got up on her own. put
on ~ new pink dress and l eft the
house about 8 a.m . lo attend the
class. missing lhe bta 7.~ that
er upted an hour later and seriously injured her falhcr ,
mother and younger brother.
President Rea)l:an and his wile
Nancy anende!l ·s-ervlres at •th·e
Firsl Presbyterian Church In
Santa Barba ra, Calif., greeted by
applause as they entered and left
1h&lt;: church .

Cardinal John O'Connor held
Easter Mass -al St. Patrick's
Cathedral In New York for 6.000
worshipers. and a celebration
dubbed a sunrise service "In the
clouds" look place atop the
Empire Slate Building's 86th·
floor obsrrvalory.
Rain clouds gave way losun for
thr traditional Eas1er Parade In
the Big' Apple. where up to 10,000
people strolled up and down Filth
Avenu~ showing off 1he bonnets

and other spring finery thai
moved Irving Berlin to consider
wrlt!n!( a sonnet In 1he song
"Easter Parad(•."
Dressed as a clown. Robert
Richard Finne, 48, of New York.
balanced a 50-pound pink ferris
wheel filled with Easier eggs on
his head. sweat trickling down
Ills Wlllte-palnte(l !nee.
Fran Sorrow of Dallas and her
five grown children, all ouffllt cd
In bunn)· costumes, paraded
down I he avenue packed together
In a giant cardboard lop h'at.
Nearly 15,000 worshipers filled
lhe Hollywood· Bowl In Los
Angeles for Its 67th Annual
Easter Sunrise Se'r vlre, broad·
cast by satellite lo 37 rou nlrles.
Actor Roben Stack read from
thr Bible, Rhogda Fleming rt&gt;ad
a poem and Rober! Guillaume
sang "I Believe. " Hundreds of
white doves were rcle"sed afler
Shirley Jones led children
dresst&gt;d In cos tu'mes represenl ·

Middleport Fire Depaftmcnt.ln hack ar~ Michael
Dorst, who found a $23 gold elfg; Gary Lct•llcn•e,
who found a $25 gold and a $5 hronz~ ••gg; Bohby
.Johnson, a $25 gold; Pet er Cottontail, who was
Ju•t th~n· lo havr a good tlmt&gt;; Ko•nny Currcnct•,
who lound a $10 sllvt•r &lt;&gt;gg; Tara Grut·s~r. a $3
bronze; Zack Meadows, ll $10 sllvrr; and Preston
Cook, a $5 hronze. Not pldurrd t. $10 sllv.r ''KK
winner ,Jamie Walters.

.

•

·
•
:
•
:

ing lh~ nations or the world In
singing "Let Th~re Be Peace On
E~rlh . "

Severa l thousand people ga l herrd for sunrise services on 1he
steps of I he Lincoln Memorial In
Wa shington and across the Po·
lomar River al lhe lwo ,Jima
Memorial In Arllnl(lon, Va .,
where lht&gt;
ol"lh{' resur_. •
lion of Jes us Christ was retold.
embellished lly music an!llnlerprellve dance .
Against lhP splrll of peace
Integra l to Easter, a 20- y~ar - old
h'adlllon among street gangs
drew abou1 fi ,OO(J people - lo
downtown Chicago for an Easier
Day brawl thaf resulted In .10
arrests, primar ily for disorderly
conduct.
In Georgi~. some 25. 000 peopll'
!locke(! 10 thr G~rrlson family
home In Banks County for the
28th ~nnual F.asler egg hunt.
recognized as the world 's la rgesl
by lhe Gulnnt'ss Boo k of Wor ld
Records.

.nr,

Swollen Va. waterways begin to recede

•

1980 GMC Suburban,4wheeldrive,8pas-

With lots of people on hand to searc h lor the
hrl~htly colored t·~gs. the hunt Is over in a mah••r
of minutes. But It's fun while It h.-Is.

WINNERS - Some 800 pla.•tlc ~ggs contal nlng
slips lor prizes lrom ar•a businesses were hidden
In the grass of Hartinger Park for Sunday's
annual Easter t•gg hunt sponsored by MiddleportPomeroy Rotary. These lucky youngNiers found
the eggs coutalnlng tht~ special prizes which wert•
given away. In front from left to rlghl arr
Matthew Caldwell and Eddlt• McKinnt•y with
Ea.•ter ha.•kcts which werr provided hy thr

America rises to joip. Easter~· celebration

With $1200 Factory Sponsored Rebates on
Buick Park Avenue for Two Weeks Only.

marks

36 Walstcoa1

SE/lRCHJNG THROUGH THE CROWD Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Cl uh's annual
Easter egg hunt al.ways attracts a large crowd.

The "Good Stuff is on Sale!

130 Punctuation

134 Selenium symbol

Sodium symbol
Tattered cloth
Born
Flap

At Smith Buick-Pontiac

Melted
On behall ol
Also
"- Elmo's Fire"
Roman gods
S1ill
Mr. Garfunkel
Search for
Verdi opera
Which person?
The act of: suffix
Tolled
Knock
Revises
Squandered·
Dawn goddess

Germany

18
19
23
26
29
32
33

652 SECOND AVENUE

Geneial Hauling

10 1 Large amount

102
103
106
109
113
115
116
119
121
123

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

J ,J. Water Service. Swimming
pools. cistern• &amp; walla. Call
614·246-92e6.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

61 Teutonic deity
82 Capllal ol
Canada
64 Deep sleep
66 Gels up
86 Alrlcan
antelope
70 Sends lorlh
72 Decay
73 Barter
74 Newt
77 Grain
78 Tooth doclor
80 Sticks to
82 Game at cards
83 Competently
85 Lac:k of
sufficiency

cit.,, Oh. &amp;14-256-1470. eve.

Ohio Lottery

Estate

Homo 14x50

60 Oriental nurse

Hou1tt coal , limestone, and
gravel. Delhte'red 1 ton and up.
Jim Laniet'. 304-'875 -1247 or
675 -7397.

224e.

baumenlt - any aize job. Senior
Citizen Dl1eount. Rick Gerfield .
614-985-4464 .

1971 Windsor Mobil e

1 Nucleus ol the
atom
7 Deface
10 "The - Who
Loved Me"
13 Shows
compassion
19 Make ready
20 Actor Vlgoda
21 Metric measure
22 Rubber band
24 Manlleated
affection
25 Laotian mo~ey
27 Hebrew month
28 Tony - Blanco
29 Hebrew letter
30 Lasso
31 Simians
32 Traffic sign
3.\ Rubber tree
36 Part of speech
38 Twirled
39 White House
nickname
40 Delirium
tremens: abbr.
41 FoUows August
44 Concerning
48 Consume
47 StyliSh
48 Ventilate
49 Capuchin monkey
50 N.Y. time
51 Morsel
53 Tellurium symbol
54 Prellx ol down
55 Pedal
extremities
57 Decade
59 Make lace

R S. M C1.1Uom Co1,1che1 and
. Raupholstery, St. Rt. 7 , Cr01,in

2~19 .

Concrete finish. parking lots,

1986 Redman Mobile

ACIID88

Watterson 's Water Hauling.
ruaonable rates, immediate
2, 000 gallon delivery , eiJterna,
pools, well. ate. cell 304-6 76 -

·Milwaukee
establishes

896-3802

82

ptrty lhlll be told by aaalod
bid at the main office of Ohio
Vtllty Bank on Monday,

87

General fiaulfiliJ

-----~

2842 Or 676-2903.

The aforementioned pro -

85

General Hauling

trennd lawn carecall304-576-

for' sale the following:-

19137

-...

.'

RICHMOND , Va . iUPii Tralllc began movi ng more
normally . throu)l:h a llood ·
stricken sect ion of down1own
Rl rhmond today bu 1elf;· workers
sf Ill raced a ma ssive cleanup job.
Pari of Main StrE'et through
low -lying Shock()(' Bottom In
downtown Richmond area reo·
pened by 7:.~0 a.m . and clly
officials hoped to reopen a bridge
that was closed because or high
watrr ovrr thr w~kend.
Thedowntowncxlf ramps from
Interstate 95 north and- south .
• rPOpened In t lme for commuters ,
said a spokesman lor fhe
Richmond -Petersburg Turnpike.
"Thl' rlfy Is doing a good job of
clean in)( lhlngs up." said David
Cosby. the turnpike spokesman.
"Thl'y·re right on fop of If."
Floodwater had receded from
mosf streets but many remained
blocked by mud , slit and d!'brls, a
spokesman sai d. National
Guardsmen called to !he scene to
HelP. and to guard against looting
left fhe city Sunday .
The James crested early Sun day at 24.91ee1 - almosl 16 feel
over flood stagr - before II
began receding .
No one was killed or Injured In
the second flood to )til Rrchmond
In 17 months and au1h0rlt1es kepr'
curiosity seekl'rs away from thl'
swirling waters produced by
snow mellln!( In VIrginia's west ·
ern mountains and a week of
heavy rain.
Tom Carr. of the- city emer·
gency operallons olffce, sald 500
workers spent Easter Sunday
clearing debris from streets.
'"They're doing as much as •
they t'an right now with what's
gone done already," Carr said.
"They have lire hoses that
they're using lor a washdown. •·
Thl' National Weather Service
said the river: had dro~;~ped 1o

17.26 fel'l by 8 a.m. Ieday, hrlplng
arcrlerale I he cleanup .
Assessmen t crews surveyed
the flood damag!' Sunday . Preelse estimates were not "''aliable
but William Costin, of the emer gency operations office, said
damages probably will not ap·
proach the$100 million caused by
the 198!i Election Day flood .
City Manager Roberl Bobb
sa id a key s!'wer pumping station
near the low-lying Shockoe Bot ·
lorn was kepi open 1hrough the
flood , minimizing damage In the
former warehouse dlstrlrf now
dolled wllh trendy renovation
projPCtS.
The pumping station usually
closes when the water tops 21

feel' but sa ndbags were placcd
around the facility and steel
plates were . welded over the
doors.
Bobb sa ld kE'epjng 1he pumping
slallon oprn was crucial to
holding down damages. If lhe
plant had closed, floodwaters
would have .barked through lhe
sewer sys tem and Inundated a
larger area.
" I think the parties lhat
worked at the pump slallon were
really the her()('s ." he said .
AI Its height, the rain-swollen
r iver was 30 to 100 yards wid er
than no1·mul on both banks
throughout I he city . Pollee sai d
!i!i str&lt;'E'ts wPre closed and
floeded lo depths oflwo fee11oslx

fret.
Somr threatened m erchants
and Wllrchou sc ownrrs sand·
bagged their bu sl nessPs and
slarfcd movi ng Item~ Ia hi gher
ground 4R hours ahead of the
flooding.
.Joe Defazio. whosr ,&lt;; hock&lt;X'
Bol l om restauran t was damaged
by 1he flood. said sandbags kepi
fh~ raging wal crs al bay lor a
while.
"We were beating the flood ·lht'
whole way:· said DeFazio. " We
saw I he wal cr co me up I he gla ss
and WI' were sta nding on dry
~round Inside. Buf I hen th e ll oor
popped and It 1lloed ) won ."
Two people were killed la st
week In flooding upstream .

RGC part of new planning program
RIO GRANDE - The explo·
slve growth In knowledge and
Information, scientific and tech·
nologlcal advances. ahd lhe
desire for an Improved qualify of
life. expanded career options and
financial slablllty have In·
rreased the need lor a college
educallon.
Yet, large numtlers of students
- ·especially those whose parents
did not attend college, members
ofmlnor!fy groups. and economl·
rally . or culfurally dlsadvan·
faged youth - do not perceive
themselves Ia have 1heoppor1un·
lly for continuing their formal
educations tleyond high school.
Research suggests that par·
ents need to be Involved In
planning I heir children's educa·
tlonat an early age II college Is to
be a viable option. They need
Information about the kinds ol
college opportunities available,
academic preparation required.
college costs, financial planning
and ava!lablllty of financial ald.

centers. churches and olher civic
In response lo this need. the
Ohio College Association, of
organizations.
which ~lo Grande College and · A series of public service
Communlly College Is a
announcements. mailings Ia po·
tentlal user groups and direc t
member, has authorized expen·
contact s by fhe colleges and
d!fure of $40,000 to make available to the parents of Oh lo' s.
universities will be used to
450,000 seventh, eighth and ninth . generate Interest In I he program
grade students the nationally·
and publicize Its availability .
acclaimed "Paving the Way "
Coordination or this collabora·
program. Developed by the Natlve college and university elton
will be provided by 1he Ohio
tional lnst!fute lor Independent
Colleges and Unlversltles. lhe
College Association, with the
program consists of a 20-mlnute
support or 1he Association of
videotape presenta lion, an Illuslndependenl Colleges and Unl·
versltles of Ohio. the Inter·
trated parents guide fo college
planning and relurn mailers for
University Council of Ohio and
Information about specific colI he Ohio Technical and Commun·
leges and sources of financial
lly College Association , repres·
ald.
entlng more than 80 public and
The program will be conducted
privati' Institutions of higher
by experienced admissiOns or
education In Ohio.
financial aid olflrers from Ohio's
The project Is endorsed by
public and private collegeli and
Gov. Richard F . Celeste, Board
universities. The presentations
of Regents Chancellor William B .
be available beginning In the Coulter and Superintendent of
fall or 1987 to middle school!jun·
Public Instruction .Franklin B .
lor high PrA groopt. communl!y
Walter.

will

WHAT DID YOU GET! - Melwa and Andrea Ntutzllnrt•IOJJ In
tht• mld~t of Sunday'M annual Middleport-Pomeroy llotary Club
Ea.~t~r Egg Hunl to Hec Ju•t what 1-year-old Androa got In her
pla.•tlc &lt;•ggs. The hunt Willi held a! Hartln~er Park.

Ferry senrice may
resume this week
Hopefull y. Pomeroy's ferry
will resume serv ice by mid-week
wllhoul lurther problem s 10
hlnderr Its opera lion .
Marcia Rodger, wife of ferry
opera1or Darrell ~dgrr, r e·
porfed fhl s mornlnR lhal her
husband's twin -engine boat Is In
dry dork al Marion Shamblin's In
Polnf Pl easa nt where a broken
propeller Is being rcplac&lt;•d. She
said lhe propeller should be
finished by Tuesday, which
means the ferry may be In
operallon by Wednesday.
One of I he boal' stwo propellers
broke la st weekend when II
became entangled In trash and
debri s from fhe r cccnl high
waler. Rodger . then wen I to
Duffy. Ohio, where he leased a
si ngle-engine boat to use In pla ce
ol 11ic larger twin -engine. However , when he lrled lo ao back

'

lnlo scrvlt•e wllh the slngl!'·
engine boa I. he found 11 'did nof
have I he power wo•·klng from th&lt;'
sldr or I he ba rgc, nor the
maneuverabllty necessary to
fight I he swift rurrenl on I he Ohio
sidE' or lhl• r iver.
Unable Ia depend on tho leased
boaf, Mrs. Rod~cr lh'cn drove to
Wi sconsin Ia pick up I he rcplacvmenl propeller for the lwln e nt~lne boat.
She sa id her hu sband had
expecw&lt;l 10 have lhl' big boat
bac k loda y and be back In servll·&lt;'
Tuesday. but rt' P.Uirs an'laklnga
lillie longN I han experled .
Even whc•n lhr larger haul Is
back In opNallon. Mrs. Rodg•·r
said her hu sha nd ma y ust• a
smaller boul . whirh hr bt'OURh l
wllh him from lh••lr CIInlon. Iowa
base, Ia asslsl wllh landings on
I he Pomeroy sltk.

EPA chief denies
conflict of interest
COLUMBUS !UP!) -Ohio
E nvironm ental Protecll on
A ge nt'y Director Warr en
Ty ler ma lnta ln s thaf his ser·
vice on I he advisory board of a
firm he r ecommended for an
EPA headquarters design con·
tra ct did not represent a
conlllcl of Interest.
The company, Moody-Nolan
Lid ., working wllh Ihe project
. developer, The Daimler
Group Inc.. designed Ohio
EPA's new $7.8 million head·
quarters In suburban Columbus las.t year. Moody-Nolan
received a $1l7,000 lee.
The Daimler Group, In the
formal proposal submllfed to

Ty ler Ma y:,, l~XIi. s" ld Mood.' .
Nolan would Jx• lh c'a rrhllf•&lt;'l
for the proje~t . Bol h compan Ies are loca to:&gt;d In Co lumbu s.
Tyler rcs lgnt·d lrom Mood)'·
Nolan's ad1·lsory board nlm·
day s later , sta tIng In a let wr 1o
company cxecull vr Cur ti s
Moody thal )te had enjoyed hi s
lime on lhe board but though I
II appropriate to rcsign.
Tyler and o th ~r·s ass()(' laird
with the co nstrucllon proje&lt;·l
confirmed th at Tyler rt'rom·
mended Moody-No lan while
serv.lng on the board. but thry
denied lher e was any
Impropriety .

;
•

•

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