<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12685" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12685?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T02:32:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43657">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/8a6d32021f423d11cc112b2e23baa8ad.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4cb59ac4931562774976a8ec226ae0e2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39778">
                  <text>'

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, November 20, 1987

Pomll!'oy-Middleport, Ohio

I··

Community calendar
FRIDAY
LONG BO'ITOM - There will
be a square dance on Friday
from 8 to 11 p.m. at the Long
Bottom Community Building.
Everyone welcome.
GALLIPOLIS
Galltpolls
Flame Fellowship Chapter will
Meet Friday, 6:30p.m., at Dale's
Smorgasbord. Speaker will he
Bob Shackleford from Delaware,
Ohio.

SYRACUSE - A revival Is
underway through Sunday at
Syracuse Church of the Naza·
rene. Evangelist is Rev. Ron
Roth . Services hegln at 7 p.m.
nightly through Saturday. Sun·
day services will he at 10:30 a.m.
a.n d 6 p.m.
POMEROY - Revival servl·
ces will be conducted Friday,
7:30 p.m. at the Senior Citizen
Center In Pomeroy. Evangelist
will be Herbert Inscoe and music

Forest Run·UMW meets
A program on Thanksgiving
with the annual thank offering
being taken highlighted the recent meeting of the Forest Run
United Methodist Women.
The meeting followed a potluck
s upper at the church. Mary
Nease opened the program with
group singing of "We Gather
Together." Emphasis was on
having the members recall and
share events of the year for
which they are thankful as well
as to identify ministries as a way
of linking with other women

will he by the . United Gospel
Singers. The pubUc Is Invited.

MGMDINNER
MIDDLEPORT - MGM Dis·
trlct, Boy Scouts of America,
recognition dinner will be held on
MONDAY
RACINE - The regular meet· Dec. 3 at the new American
lng of Southern Local Board of . Legon Hall In Middleport.
Reservations are to he made
Education will he held Monday at
7 p.m. in the high school by Nov. 27 with Lisa Roush, 33178
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
cafeteria.
45769, or by calling 992·3486. Ail
POMEROY - Pomeroy East· reservations of $6.50 must be
ern Star 186 will hold a special paid in advance.
meeting for Installation of new
'
officers for ~988 on Monday, 7:30 TICKETS
p.m. , In the Chester Masonic a:an
POMEROY - T!cketes for..the
at Chester. Members and oflic· Beta Sigma Phil Christmas
ers are asked to bring a relish buffet and dance are on sale from
tray, dessert or jello salad.

around the world.
Mrs. Nease read "In Every·
thing Give Thanks." Psalm 100
was read by Evelyn Hollon and
Mrs. Nease gave the closing
pr~yer . There was a litany of
Thanksgiving with Edith Sisson
as the reader, and a short
meditation as each member gave
her thank offering. Other poems
and meditations on Thanksgiv·
ing were read by members.
Carrie Grueser and Mildred
Arnold were guests.

Gibson

Maize

' Senior talents shine - B-Section
Rio Grande in
finals C-Section

:$36 7-'

b1g capacity in a freezer thai
fits almost anywhere
teldured lid, tiH·out basket.
adjustable cold control.

$277

REG. $41CJ

REG. '349

RCA

RCA

XL-100

XL·100

(OLOR
TELEVISION

SOUND .
FMI AM stereo,

25'~ogonol .

XL-100 Color TV

doub e cassette deck,
two speaker cabinet,
audio rack.

$49
REG. 599

w/REMOU

LAYAWAY FOR (HRISTMAS

$499

$177

REG. S599
REG. 5239

RGII~

SHARP.

25"
RCA ProWonder
•

Uses standard VHS tape cassettes

$897

~fto

REG. 5999

VCR

$397 $247
WIRELESS REMOTE

REG. $499

45" :'
COLOR
TELEVISION
I

We wish to express once again our deep
gratitude to our many friends who came
to join us in the laughter, fun and good
food making our yearly · bazaar a g~el\t
sucJess.

0

REG. 5299

Open.

Sunday

SAVE

$5
00
non
~
..
.,,
$57

5 . P.M.

12" B&amp;W

TELEVISION
REG.

REMOTE
REG. 15 . .

1 P.M.

'

$79

-

COLOR TV

til

remained a home video outlet. The night also saw
her husband, Harry, taking tickets at the door
once again. (Times-Sentinel photo by Lee Ann
Welch)

•

int~at.d stereo
am ·fiers, s1trto

RCA

•

mt

Apartment complex
underway in Racine

Colony Theater reopens big screen
to movie-goers in tri-county area
By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes.Senllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - It was 50
years ago Tuesday that the
Colony Theater opened in down·
town GaH!polls. It was compared
.. to the lavish!shly-designed •
j{elth-Athee In Huntington and
~onsldered "the eat's meow," so
to speak.
Friday, the Colony reopened
Its theater to the public. after
being closed since May 1986,
according to manager, Tom
Wheeler. The theater is termed a
"dollar house" in professiona'l
llpgo, meaning all seats are $1.
The movie-goers came into the
lobby In droves , braving the
wind, cold and snow flurries.
They bought tubs of buttery
popcorn, boxes of candy and
containers of soda, then settled
back to watch the movie, "Dirty
Dancing."
Wheeler Is the third generation

,.

__....
,,

of his family to be Involved with
the movie business, he said. His
father, Harry, opened the Colony
on Nov. 24, 1937, but his grand·
father, Fred, bought the contents
·of the-Gallipolis Theater In 1919,
and was responsible for bringing
"talkies" to the area In 1930,
when the equipment became
more affordable.
The history of the Colony is
rich, and many a young Galli a
Countian spent a Friday evening
or Saturday afternoon in the
auditorium of the theater . .
Another big attraction in days
gone by was Cash Night, when
patrons were eligible for prize
money during the movie that
night. It boosted business, and
someone in the audience was the
recipient of $50.
During the construction of the
Colony, Wheeler said his father
rowed to the site during the 1937
flood, and water covered the area

of the floor, where the slope of the
auditorium had been scooped
out.
Since 1986, the Colony has been
a video store, and Wheeler sald
·there ~re ,plans for expansion.
Originally, ·he was going to push
back the walls of the theater arid
expand the video business that
way, but had second thoughts
about reopening to blg-scteen
movies.
"If I didn't try it (reopening the
theater), It would always be in
the back of my mind, 'Could I
have made it?'" So, several
weeks ago, the wheels - and
Wheelers - went into overdrive
to spruce up and fix up the
auditorium.
The Colony theater has reopened with "Dirty Dancing," .
which stars Fj_atr!ck Swayze,
Diane Lane ana Jerry Orbach.
The'f!lm' is rated PG-13. It will be
showing at 7:30p.m., nightly.

Icy roads ·cause one death
ln auto accident Friday.night
RIO GRANDE -A Greenfield
·man was killed in an accident
. Friday, according to the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the Highway
.Patrol. 'I'he accident occured at
8:35 p.m., on U.S. 35, near the
Raccoon Creek Canoe Livery at
Bob Evans Farms .
' Orville E. Karnes , 63, died
after suffering a head injury and
a crushed chest caused by the
head-on accident. The passenger
in Karnes ' Cadillac, Gayland J .
Wiseman, 53, of Wllm!nglon, wa s
'taken to Holzer Medical Center
)ly Gallla County Emergency
Medical Service.
The occupants of the other
vehicle, a Chevrolet pickup
truck, also taken to Holzer were,
driver Russell A. Sowards, 17, of
Ewlngton, Jason E . Marcum, 17,
of Vinton, and Christina K. Stepp,
14, of Ri. 1, Vinton.

Marcu111 was later transferred
to Cahell-Huntinglon Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va. , by Lif~·
Flight, where he was admitted to
!he Critical Care Unit for a head
injury. He was listed In stable
condition at 5 p.m . Saturday,
according to a nursing
supervisor.
Wiseman was admitted to
Holzer Medical Center for facial
cuts, _ facial fra ctures and a
fractured arm. He was listed In
stable condition.
Sowards was also admltfed to
Holzer for multiple fractures,
and was listed in stable
condition.
Stepp was treated a nd released
for multiple bruises and scrapes
and a facial cut.
Sowards was traveling west as
Karnes was driving east. So·
wards lost control o~ the Icy
bridge, went left of center and hit

I

Karnes' car head 'on. None of the
victims Involved wore seat belts.
No citations were given by the
patrol at last report, ·and the
accident Is still under
investigation.
The accident was the fourth
highway fatality of the year in
Gallia County.
Called to the scene were the
Jaws of Life resuce unit of the
Gailia County Sheriff's Depart·
ments in addition to six deputies,
four first responders and two
two-person paramedic crews
from Gallia County Emergency
Medical Service, · and the
Wellston-based LifeFllghl helic·
opter of · Grant Hospital In
Columbus. ·,
The Gailia·Melgs Post re·
ported a .total of 14 accidents in
Gallia and Meigs Counties from
Friday, at 8 a.m. to Saturday, at 8

a.m.

Winter weather hits in Ohio
By United Press International
Cold Canadian air blew Into
Ohio Friday, bringing with it
wind and snow for the season's
first major winter storm.
Snow began sticl&lt;lng around
·ruSh hour and as temperatures
began dropping, roads and
bridges began freezing, causing
numerous accidents.
AuthOrities said at least one
person was killed in a weather·
related traffic accident.
. The victim was Identified as
'1'homas E. McGee, 22. Colum·
bus, whose car skidded on an Icy
bridge and \I'BS hit by a van,
.
police o!!!cers said.
Storm systems crossing Lake
Erie normally drop most of the

Sunny Sunday. Highs in mid
Chance of rain near zero.

A Multimedia ,Inc. Newspaper

BACK TO BUSINESS - Hazel Wheeler
resumes the box olllce sales slot at the Colony
Theater Friday night, when II reopened lor
blg·screeo movies. :I'he theater closed in 1986, but

$197

Weather

8 Sections, 76 Pagn

19"

CENTER
Stereo tum table,

13" COLOR
TELEVISION

Along the River ........ B-J-8
Buslness .................. .... D·I
Comics-TV .............. Insert
Cl ass!lleds ................ D•3·7
Deaths ................. ....... A-7
Editorial ....... ............... A·%
Sports ... ~ ........... ....... C.J-8

Vol. 22 No. 40

SAMSUNE

SHAR~

Sands A-3

•
,.,
tmts

ELEtTRIC
DinER

4UmMlTIC
WISHER

50 cents

ln,;idt'

-t
\-.

REG. S359

THANKS!!

We value the friendship of our many ·
friends and we plan and look forward to
this event when we can share this celebration of family and friends together.
;Our heartfelt thanks to all. God bless you
abundantly.
'
Fr. TonY., Sr. Jan and the
Parishioners
.
. of Sacred Heart Parililh

SMORGAsBORD
WILKESVILLE - The Py,
th!an Sisters are sponsoring a
smorgasbilfd at Pythian Hall hi
Wilkesville on Saturday, Nov. 28,
from 4: 30 to 7:30p.m. ·

$267

Rodney Hill, husband of Ruth
Ebersbach Hill, frequent visitors
to Ml!!gs County, has been having
some health problems also. He
has heen returned to his home
and cards may be sent to him at4
West VIctoria, Buckhannon, w.
Va. 26201.

.I know things aren't too good
for you right now - but it can
always be .w orse. Just think.
What If you were a turkey? Do
keep smiling.

Recalls early TV days

SAVE. S144.ON PAIR
Speed Queen•

get help.
Meantime, anyone wishing to
offer any help to the family may
do so through The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co. in Pomeroy.

Congratulations to Franklin
Edward Ihle and Kyle Stark
Woods, both of Pomeroy. They
have been selected as Outstand·
ing Young Men of America for
1987. The program recognizes the
achievements and abilities of
men between 21 and 36 for
outstanding civic and profes·
slonal contributions to their
communities, their states as well
as their nation.

Brucemen
beat Blue &amp;

Page C-1

IALE

compact oonvenienC!3 and

With the birthday people are
Katie Anthony, Front St., Middle·
port, who will mark her 81st
birthday Sunday - also she and
her husband, Willis, w!ll observe
their 60th wedding anniversary
Monday. Nola Swisher of Middle·
port will chalk up another birth·
day Sunday. Let me make it
perfectly clear that Katie is 81not Nola.

ALUMNI MEETING
POMEROY - Meigs Alumni
Association will hold its bi·
monthly meeting to discuss the
first readling of the new constl;
tu!on and by-laws, on Monday at
7 p.m . at the United Methodist
·
Church of Pomeroy. .

.

SATURDAY, SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

Coming home again...
By BOB HOEFLICH
If all goes well, David Pratt
will be returned to his home on
Baker Road in
the Kingsbury
area today from
University Hosp i t a l in
Columbus.
David has had
a terrible time
of It since last summer when he
received severe injuries when
struck -by a tree limb - things
probably will gel worse, but
there must be some help out
there.
·David is helng returned to his
home with a "loaner" wheel·
chair. An electric wheelchair
which he could use to get around
the house is $8.500. Medicare will
pay 80 percent of up to $2700 for
the equipment. If the loaner has
to be returned then David will be
confined to bed 24 hours a day. He
has to be turned every three
hours, every day of the week, and
c9theterized every six hours. His
wife is legally blind but there are
five people who a reattempting to
provide care for him. A hospital
bed and a lift have been left at the
Pratt home but will have to ' be
returned if they are not given
Medicare approval. b.
Mr. and Mrs. Pratt are on
social security which provides
barely enough for the vital
necessities - you know, like
food.
Recently , a fund drive was
started on behalf of David, who
was a good Indian for many
years. It raised only about $150
and as luck would have it, the
t~ansmisslon on the van which Is
used to transport David to and
from University· Hospital went
out wiping out the fund.
Certainly with all of the agen·
cies that exist today there must
be one which will provide help lor
th&lt;&gt; Pratts . I'm willing to hear
about It and so are the Pratts who
have exhausted every effort to

ACCEPTING DONATIONS
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Fire
Department Is accepting dona·
lions for Christmas treats. Dona·
lions may be sent to the fire
department at Box 706, Syra·
cuse, or cai1992· 7181 for pick up .
Toys for· needy children are also
helng collected. New or very
good used toys are
and

anyone wishing to give toys
should call 992·7181 or 992·7775. :

ONLY

gift exchange party will be held
on Dec. 15 at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Phyllis Hackett.
Members are to take ornaments
for the gift exchange.
Plans were made to help two
needy families for the Thanks·
giving season. Next meeting will
he held on Dec. 1 at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
A progressive dinner was iheld
preceding the · meeting with
members traveling to the homes
of Debbie Jones, Darla Staats,
and Mrs. Ault.

Beat of the bend

club officers and chapter
members. The event will be Dec.
5, at the Senior Citizen Center in
Pomeroy. Social hour Is 7 to 8
p.m. Tickets are $8 for singles
ana $16 for couples. It will be
hosted by Ohio Eta Phi Chapter.

3 DAYS

Xi Gamma Epsilon meets
Holiday activities were
planned at a recent meeting of Xi
Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, held at the
home of Vickie Ault.
Tickets were on sale for· the
couple's party to be held on Dec. 5
at the Senior Citizens Center. The
social hour will begin at 7 p.m
and the dance will he held from 8
to midnight with. an all-evening
buffet being served.
Pizza with Santa will he held
for the member's children on
Dec. 12 at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church at 11 a.m. The

Sunday

In neighboring Summit
County, snow fell off and on
during the Youngstown StateAkron football game at the Akron
Rubber Bowl that drew little
more than 5,000 fans to· the·
''Oh, wow! havewegot snow,''
35,400-sea
t stadium.
exclaimed Portage County she·
Ground
crew workers had to
riff's dispatcher Pat Mohler, who
estimated at midnight about six scrape the artificial turf at
or seven Inches of snow on the halftime. Officials watched care·
fully late In the second quarter
ground.
"It's coming down like bar· when Akron fqllback Scott Rind·
rels," she said. "Most of the fuss raced 89 yards down the
people are staying ln . You look sidelines with a kickoff for a
out the window and can't see touchdown.
Rapidly fall!ng temperatures
across the street. I wanted to stay.
and
the numerous accidents
home IO!Jight, but I couldn~t."
spelled
problems for road crews
She said there had been numer·
In
Columbus
:
ous traffic accidents, but nothing
WINl'ER,
A5)
(See
major.

snow ln counties along Lake .
Erie. This system appears to
have wailed until It hit Portage
County, a couple of counties
southeast of the lake.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times.Senllnel Staff
·RACINE- After six years of
walling, construction of an apart·
ment complex on Elm Street in
Racine is finally underway and is
likely to be completed ahead of
schedule. Initial paperwork !Or
the complex, Elmwood Terrace
Apartments, was undertaken by
the owners , Dr. and Mrs. Harold
D. Brown Jr. of Pomeroy , ln
September 1981. Brown Is
pleased that the project is finally
taking shape.
Total costs for the project,
designed by architect Fred
Schwab, Columbus, amount to
$600,000, and Interim financing is
being provided by Farmers
Home Administration.
According to Don Sommers,
FmHA district loan specialist,
the elderly, as well as families,
will be eligible for residence In
Elmwood Terrace. The four
building complex will house 20
units altogether 12 two·
bedroom and 8 stngle· bedroom
_and one of each size unit will be
equipped for the handicapped.
Residents will receive rental
assistance through FmHA,
·Semmers said, and will '' pay 30
percent of their adjusted gross
, Income for rent and utilities, per
month," he explained. "Veryiow
income' ' persons will be given

priority in the selection of resi·
dents, he added.
As owner, Brown said he
Intends to exercise close control
over the complex which !c.
situated on approximately three
and one-half acres, formerly the
Eldon Krautter property, pur chased from Paul Black c,!
Racine. Brown has assured Ra·
cine officials that the grc-mds
and the buildings, which will
have exteriors of brick and
siding, will be well maintained
throughout the years.
Inside, in addition to othel'
storage facilities , e~ch double·
bedroom unit will Include a ·
double walk-In closet and each
single-bedroom unit will have an
exterior storage area. The rna·
jority of apartments will be on
ground floor level and all will be
heated by electricity. Laundry
facilities for the complex will be
available In one of the buildings.
Office space will also be
provided for a resident manager.
Although the manager has not
yet been chosen, negotiations are
underway with a management
firm which will probably choose
the manager ba'sed on Input from
Brown.
Al!hough construction is not
, expected .to be completed until
mid-March, Brown has already
received numerous Inquiries at
his Pomeroy dental office re ·

.

garding the availabillty of the
apartments. Racine · officials
have also heen receiving inquir·
ies. When the apartments are
ready for occupancy, potential
residents will need to complete
official rental forms, Brown said.
Brown has commended his
construction contractor, · Greg
Roush Construction of Syracuse,
for being ahead of schedule.
Roush said he's been able to
move forward quickly because of
excellent personnel, . Including
subcontractors, who have been
willing to work longer hours In
order to take advantage of recent
mild weather.
Brown is committed to "the
spirit of development" which he
believes now exists in 'Meigs
County. And an Important part of
development In any community
"is to provide better housing and
enhance living conditions for thE:
residents of'the community," he
commen!ed.
In addition to Elmwood Ter·
race, Brown is also behind the
current construction in Middle·
port of a $3.15 million 100-beq
nursing home which should he
open this summer.
. For his efforts In bringing
deveJopme!'t to. .. the county,
Browr. was honored earlier this
month as Southeastern Ohio
Regional Development Council's
Meigs County man-of-the-year.

complex in Racine Is ahead of schedu.le.
Construction contractor Is Greg Roush Construe·
tlon of Syracuse.

AHEAD OF SCHEDULE ·- Construction of the
four building Elmwood Terrace Aparhnent

Proper heat system, maintenance
prevents accidents: fire chief
- Never "Over fire" so that the stove pipe
By MARGARET CALDWELL
becomes "red hot,"
Times -Sentinel Staff
· - Never leave the doors open or screen off
GALLIPOLIS - As oi' man winter creeps up,
except
to fuel the fire,
people will be using their heating systems more
Never
dry clothing closer than three feet to
during the holiday season. Proper cleaning and
the
stove,
and
maintenance are the keys to a safe, warm winter,
-Never leave small children in a room where a
said Ray Bush, Gallipolis fire chief.
wood
stove is In use.
"People often postpone getting their heating
major
prOblem with woodburning stoves are
A
system serviced," Bush said. "l'low Is the time to
make sure home heating equipment is ready to chimney maintenance. A chimney should be
Inspected and cleaned by a qualified cleaner
provide safe and trouble'free service when It
monthly or every two months. no less than twice a
turns cold. "
year, Bush said.
Bush advises those with fuel-oil furnaces to
Chimney fires are caused when a wood-burning
have a qualified heating service check the
by-product, creosote, collects on the inside of the
eontrols, the flame and the fuel flow. Most
chimney and Is ignited. A chimney fire may
problems occur with this kind of heating &amp;ystem
crackle, rumble or roar and caJse the stove pipe
when the controls let in too much fuel. Often the
to become red hot.
excess fuel will seep out and ignite.
To prevent creosote bu ildup, burn only dry,
There are 'normally not too many problems with
seasoned
wood, avoid slow buring smokey fires.
electric heating systems, Bush said, as long as the
and
have
your chimney inspec ted and cleaned.
coils are cleared of dust and lint. People should be
If you do have a chimney fire, call the fire
especially cautious to clean the system in late fall,
department and get everyone · out of the house,
early winter when the systems are first turned on.
Bush said. If the fire is not out of control, close the
This Is the most alarming time for electric
stove doo.r, draft opening and damper to cut off air
systems.
. .
to the fire, and never throw water on a hot stove.
Natural gas furnaces should be checked by a
All fires start small, Bush said. For the greatest
quall(led heating specialist for size of flame and
measure of safety, Install approved smoke
for the proper mixture in the ·comb~Stion
detectors throughout the house and on each level
chamber . Bush said he advises people to chec·k the
of
the house. Families sbould practice a fire
filters every two months and no less than twice a
escape
plan with two ways out of every room in tile
year.
house.
,
According to the U.S. Fire Administration,
Bush
warned
agains t do-it -yourself servicing.
woodburnlng stoves cause twice as many fires as
He
said
homeowners
should spend a few ciollars
traditional fireplaces . They also cause 11 times
for a serv!ce·salety check by a qualified heating
the deaths and almost double the Injuries .
dealer .
When using a woodburlng stove,:
"That's ~a small price to pay lor your family's
- Never usc flammable liquids to light. a fire,
- Never ·store flammable liquids in an area • safety and yo,ur own peace of mind," Bush said .
"And properly adjusted equipment will save you
where a stove is being used,
money, In t he long run, In both fuel efficiency and
-Never burn 'trash , large amounts of paper or
lower fuel costs."
small twigs,

I'

'

�•

'

November 22, 1987

Commentary and perspective
•
•
•
•
•
•

November 22, 1987

·~===============~~====~==========================

A taIe of t wo races, 1987---!....-----Chuck Stone

•••
•
••

A Division of

•••
••

R2.'\ Third 1\ve., Gallipolis, Ohio 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614 ) 446-2342

(6 U ) 992-2156

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Puhli!&lt;ihl~r·

HOBART WILSON .JR . .
Ex et·utivP Editor

·

PAT WHITEHEAD
A"istant Puhlisher-Controller

.\ !\1FMB~ ' R • ! T hr L'rill •d Pr 1 ~~ l rll • r r•;1111 11 ;1] l ni'.J nd 0 ,1'1 \ Pr t·-.l
tit &gt;ll .1nd lh t ,\mt •t i1·.t t :'\ 1 11 ~p .t ptr J&gt;uhli&lt;:h t•l ~ , \ ._~ , ,d,rtinn

•
•

•
•
•

I. E T1' ~ : !1!-:

•
'•

OF OPI\10!\

.11 , 11rll11 n1•

'1'111 '' -. hr•ultl

.\"""' ·1;1

~11 • I t · ~" rh :tn : :r~ 11 r&gt;rd~

lt•nt· A II lr•rrr •r ~ :rt r• -.uhit• d l n t ·t !llt rl~.: .trHI rr L·"' 11, · "'~'11 • •I 11 11 11 n,t ml•. . ulill ' ~ '":- . 111 ~1
I&lt; lo ·plwn• • ·ml!n l~&lt; 1 ~' ' tt n... ·i.t: n• 'fl 'lt ·t lo ·t '- ~~ ll ! tw JIUhli..,llf •rl I o•ll t•r:o; ~h nu lrt 1)1' in
-' "" ' 1 1,,~11 •

, &lt;t hl r l '"~ i h~~ i'- ~l ll ~ .

nt •l po 1~rr n.1 lili r• •

=• ~====================~

:• Babbitt, Robertson,
~ have opposite views
••

By LEE LEONARD
•
UPI Statehouse Reporter
•
COLUMBU~, Ohio (UP!) -The 1988 presidential campai gn ca me
•"' to Ohio last week, or at least the two extremes of it did.
;
On the far right, we had Pat Robertson, a form er TV preacher who
•. told his audience everything it wanted to hear, even if his message
· didn 't always c&lt;iincide with that of Jesus Christ .
On the far left, we had former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt, who told
his audience a lot of th ings it didn' t want to hear, and may have
missed his ca lling as a minister of the gos pel :
They had two things in co mmon. Both claimed roots in Ohio ,
Robertson 's wife being a native of Bexley and Babbitt's forebears
having lived in Cincinnati in the late 1800s. And neither is likely to
make much of a splash in the balloting in Ohio next May.
Robertson, in a luncheon speech to the faithful , said he would be a
worthy successor to Ronald Reagan. " It 's time to break from the old
cliches and the old deals and the old ways of doing things," he said.
"We need a man who hears from God."
What he apparently hea rs from God Is that America has grown soft
• on communism under the Reagan adm inistra tion .
::~ Robertson said it was .a n "absolute disgrace" that Mikhail
:• Gorbachev had been irtvi ted to address Congress , where he would
• . liave a nationwide television forum to air .the party line.
~-; "The best secret fo r peace," he said , "is military strength, not
··: military weakness. This great nat,! on should not be allowed to become
: : the servant of any nation in the world."
: -: Robertson proposed an end to financial credit to nations which turn
;.pnAmerica, a return of prayer and moral training to public schools,
•: tax deductions for women who stay home and take care of their
: l:hlldren.
: • He received a standing ovation when he linked "radical
::homosexuals" with drug dealers and pornographer s, and vowed to
:-fight them.
.
• •• On the other hand , Babbitt, a former civil rights marcher who
: ; worked with the poor in South America, ca lled for selective budget
~ - l:uts based on needs and a national sa les tax with income-based'
&lt; credits. He also proposed taxing Social. Security income oi the
&lt; .wealthy.
:- : When he men tioned raising taxes, his · audience of mainly
··~ Democrats was silent for a few seconds, until one self-appointed
~· c heerleader clapped. A few others joined in. · ·
~ ~ ; Babbit sa id he favors public service by college gradua tes who take
~, student loans, and an abolition of tu ition grants to free up money for
• · health care for the poor.
7,: ; He also said federal housing assis tance should be available only to
•: those who need it , and not for developers building ski lod ges and

HARTFORD, Conn. - The "They' II be looking at you like, study of 438 high schools in four scholarships and winning more
elections. And athletically, they
emotional tug of war oscillates 'He looks like he be down with Southern California counties
have Inaugurated a quie t
like a bell -pride a nd despair.
somebody,' but you're not."
· shows a 10-year decline in
Home for a visit with my three
revolution.
.
A few weeks ago, my Hartford achievement in minority schools,
Ten years ago; a black football
sisters, I shared their pride in the Public High School class of 1942 Schools with l]lgh concent rations
election of the first black woman celebrated Its 45th reunion .
of poor minority children showed qu ar terback was · as rare as a
mayor of a major U.S. city. " Was
None of the 16 blacks In my lower scores on standardized successful Reagan first choice
for the Supreme Court. Black
that little Carrie Saxon who used class of 675 nor any of my black tests In 1985-86 than they had on
to come to the library when she frl~ nds used " black English." the same tests 10 years ago. fullbacks and linebackers were
was a gir l?"
The Carrie Saxons who lived In That's why I contend that the allowed to "tote that barge and
"Mayor Carrie Saxon Perry," Hartford's North End ghetto also recent tiny Increase reported In lift that ball," but they weren't
corrected my sister.
were strangers to this semantic black SAT scores Is psychomet· supposed to be able to explain
But what has she inherited?
how.
bastardy. What has happened ric garbage.
She has Inherited the pride of since Mayor Perry was a teenToday, black quarterbacks are
But If my hometown of Hart·
Hartford, a city that Is known ager? Are blacks going back- lord Is "a tale of two cttfes,'' partially responsible for the
nationally as "The Insurance . wards linguistically?
blacks today are "a tale of two national football success of three
City." She has also inherited the
of the top 10 teams : Oklahoma,
Granted, black cognitive stag· races."
despair of a city so crime- nation In Los Angeles and ChiDespite seeming scholastic re- Nebraska and Syracuse. In addl·
blighted that .. hoodlums shoot . cago is not as devastating as gression (and an eight percent tlon, Michigan, Notre Dame and
peopl~ at random on the streets
murder, but It still Is hindering decline In nine years of high Southern Callforpia have don e
and tr eat gang warfare as black progress. And the trend Is . school graduates going to col· well with occasional black quarnormally as a bus far e.
lege), blacks are achieving more ter backs .
national.
One of the 56-year-old Demo·
A recent University of Chicago
crat 's first goals is to defu se
youth ga ngs and reduce street'
shootin gs. She blames drug
traffic.
Harford is "a tale of two
cities." And so are Los Angeles
and Chicago (both governed by
black mayors) , where young
blacks have raised the Inhuman·
ity of ghetto genocide to a
murd~rous art form.
·
Not only are . ghetto lives
systematically being wiped out,
young minds are being seriously
mlseducated.
"Yeah, I be worried about
getting hurt, " said SheIlene
Arnold, 16, a Hartford Public
High School senior. "When they
be lighting, they don't know who
they be flg~tlng." Can you
446-2691
"Your Only Diamond Shop"
992-2054
believe that semantic abuse from
&lt;;ALUPOUS
•VISA oM/C •DISCOVER•TERMS
POMEROY
a senior?
Emerson M,a rs hall , 15, said:

uper Savings
SALE

; :

:&lt;•
1

...'•
•,.'
,.
'...

•

•' .

j
•'
•,.
•
••
'

••
'·
~·

•'c

'.

30°/o"50°/0
Off E1111E STOCI. ,

Dexter dre·ss s oes
10 t abOUt
sav
a
'J_
who
you are
.

8

8-C-D-E-EEE

That's why these shoes have
Votan Leather Soles. Leather Uppers
and are made by
STORE
HOURS

M&lt;'n . &amp; Fri .
Till B

IN 19~9 , THIS BUILDING, AT Third and Court in Gallipolis
housed Elliott 1\ppllance. On Nov. 15, 1949, several Gallipolitans
croweded here and across the street at Womeldorii·Thomas to
watch the first telecast of WSAZ·TV.

Tues. · W~ .

Thurs. II Fri.
TillS

\

CAROUSELII AND TOUCH MICROWAVE OVEN

•VARIABLE COOKING
•DEFROST CY~LE
•99 MINUTE TIMER
•MINUTE PLUS
•COOKS BIG
1 2 LB. TURKEYS

·•
COMPARE TO
$349 95
*INTRODUCTORY
PRICED*

$219~~

•

•••

••

"'

'

'

•'
~ ..................~..............................

BEDS

.

.. SAVE:' ;:~.:i

I'

ssqoo

Easy to Use!

''

.; : The even ing stars are Venus. Jupiter and Saturn.
•':-: Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
;. : tnclude French explorer of North America Rene Robert de Ia Salle in
:• 1643; English novelist George E liot (Mary Ann Evans) in 1819;
-~ Fren ch sta tesman and military leader Charles de Gaulle in 1890;
::wiley Pos t. th e first pilot to fly solo around the world. in 1898;
:·composers Hoagy Carmichael in 1899 and Benjamin Britten in 1913;
•:actress Geraldine Page in 1924; actor Robert Vaughn in 1932 (age 55);
:•iennls player Billie Jean King in 1943 (age44), and actress Jamie Lee
::curt is in 1958 (age 29) .
,

,.
•
•

•3.4 CUBIC INCHES
•SOLID STATE IGNITION
•ANTI-VIBRATION
I .
•AUTOMATIC OILER
eCHAIN BRAKE
•VERTICAL CYLINDER

~

' Start As Low As

.,;&gt;:,

iiiiiii_;.___h
iiiiiii__iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;___

SHARR CARmUSEI: .B

'••

•

o·ol 8 OUT OF
USI ESS SALE.,

eve ning

IS PROUD TO BE SELLING THE #1 MICROWAV1 OVEN

~

By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Nov. 22, the 326th day of 1987 with 39 to follow.

...;--' ~·:at:a~l~s:ho~t:s:.::::::~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;,-!

peop le ' s

Brown

.
...

in history

..•

c hanged

Black or

''·

.

•'" ·•.' On th is date in history:
.
·:~: In 1950, a wreck on a Long Island Railroa d train in New York City
.
.
'•".killed 79 people.
~. ·: In 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas ;
;:yice President Lyndon Johnson was sworn in as the nation 's 36th
'· .ehlef executive a short time later. Lee Harvey Oswa ld was arres ted
:•and later named by the Warren Commission as the man who fi red the

to $400 range, but hod bccon\e so
popular that · they had already

· BOB'S
ELECTRONICS

'

,•
.. The moon is waxing, mov ing toward Hs first quarter.
,••• The morning stars are Mercury and Ma rs.

•

The first soap operas to be see n
on WSAZ-TV were "Love of
Life", "Search lor Tomorrow"
and "Guiding ' Light" . Othe;
daytime shows in 19!i2 included
" Garry Moore", "TV Handy·
man" and WSAZ·TV's own
"Farmer Glick" . The Gallipolis
Dally Tribune began li~ tin g tele·
visio n programs In 1949 but from
1949 to 1951 they were listed
under Radio listi ngs . By1952 .the
heading had bee n changed to
Radio and TV- with radio still
getting top billing. In 1952 televi·
slons were still costing in the$200

••

.

~(foday
....

model. And we note the advertis·
lng for TV's had skyrocketed and
become more compllcated. For
instance Phllco· came with or
without the "Go lden Grid
Tuner". Womeldorff-Thomas
sold the Phllco in 1952.
By 1952 WSAZ·TV was co ming
on the air at 11 a.m. and began to
include game shows and soap
operas. Of the former one of the
most popular was "Strike It
R,ich" starri ng Warren Hull a nd
sometimes Monty Hall . Also
popular were "Break the Bank".
and " Big Payoff" .
· ·.

'

• : · The for mer Arizona governor said he favors a federally supported
·: day care system for working mothers, again based on income; an end
:.• lo revenue sharing to save money for anti-poverty program s; and a
;-:ionference with Japan and E uropean nations to cooperate on a trade
&lt;-: tlalance.
: . ; . "Honesty is the way this campaign is going to be won," said
; : f1abbitt, who may have forgo tte n what happens to messengers that
;:: people don't wantio hE-ar.

~

By JAMES SANDS
.from CBS, ABC, NBC, and
November 15, 1949 was an
Dumont.
Important da y in Gallia County
Prior to WSAZ-TV going on the
history. It was on that day that
air, persons in the coun ty who
WSAZ·TV went on the air from
owned te lev isions could barely
· Huntington, W.Va.
pickup programs from Cincin·
Beginning about 6:30 p.m.
natl , Columbu s and Cleveland.
some 1200 Galllpolltans would
With the Huntington station's
come to the three stores that so ld
opening, reception In the county
televisions to watch the even·
obviously improved grea tly.
ing's entertainment in a box .
Ot her shows that co uld be seen
Chairs were se t up at
in 1949 Included " Lucky Pup,"
"TV Closeups'', " Lopez at the
Womeldorff·Thomas, Elliott Ap·
pliance, and Empire Furniture.
Piano" ' and " Wres tling." A 10
Womeldorff·Thomas sold Phllco inch screen cost about$200 In 1949
· and Westinghouse sets, Empire and a 16 inch screen could go as
sold the Crosley and EE!Iiott's high as $400. We note that In 1949
sold Stromberg-Carlson, RCA,
there were few ads for televisions
in the Tribune.
and Motorola .
In November of 1949 only some
1950 WSAZ-TV offered a few
11 TV sets were owned In the· more shows with program ming
beginning at 5:15 p.m. with the
coun ty other than by the three
dealers. There were sets In the
"Boys Railroad Club" fo llowed
by "Jiowdy Doody". T here was
Lafayette Hote l Lounge, Joe's
Place, Gilkey's , E lk's, El ces·
also "Arthur Godfrey", " Alan
sor's store, and in the homes of Young", "Stop the Music",
U.A. Cornett, Hugo Pierotti,
" Martin Kane, PI", "Groucho
Frank Fowler, Dr. HB Thomas , Marx ". "Lone Ranger ". Still!ew
A.W. Thorne in Rio Gr ande and TV's were advertized. However
Charley Gilfillen in Kanauga .
by 1951 several places sold
televisions and advertised the
The first telev ision in the
county was purchased in Febru · same. The Trade Center at 750
ary, 1949 by Gllfille n who was Th ird sold the Ze nith 17' ' at $309;
employed by Elliott Appliance.
Dayton's Hardware sold a 17"
,. He was one ol the first in the
CBS mod el at $200 and a 20" a t
: · coun ty also to know much about $470; Coulter's App li ance had
television .
only 1 TV for sale; Tawney's
t advertised the GE 17" for $250
That fir st evening of entertain· a nd even arranged 78 week
menton WSAZ·TV channe!5 then fina ncing; Allison Electric had
(now channel 3) included wei· the TeleKing !or $200 and Gil·
, come and ded ication of the fillen Radio and TV sold the
' station. The firs t network show St rombe rg-Carlson 21" at$429 .
• on the air was the " Kukla, Fran
Shows on WSAZ-TV in 1951
, and Ollie" show. At 7:50 p.m. included: "Mr. District Attar·
• people watched the " Telenews ney", "Sa m Linn" ''Freddy
Newsreel" followed by " Film Martin", "Who Said That" star·
Theatre ," "Eleanor Steger" an d lng John Cameron Swayze,
' "Premiere Varieties" starring "Amos and Andy", "Gabby
, local talent " Hoad Copas and His Hayes ", "Perry Como", "Nor·
Buckaroos," " Texas Slim and wood Come a Calli ng ", and "The
His Prairie Buckaroos, " and the Texaco Star Theatre With Milton
Marshall College Madrigal Cl ub. Berle". By 1952 Central Supply
In 1949 WSAZ·TV was an inde· was even selling televisions-:
pendent station a nd got feeds T hey carried the Raytheon

l

·:·.. Condominiums.

.= --~

The early -days of television for Gallla (:ounty

f.

..

"

James Sands

Page-A-2

· The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis;· Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

BOOKCASE
CLOSE-OUTS
HEADBOARD BED
DISCONTINUED
0
BEDS
SCRATCH .&amp; DENTS WITH FREE SOLID WOOD
'-.. SIX DRAWER
ONEOFAKIND

$269°

~

PEDESTAL

SHARP'S BEST
. •'
,.•'

'

~
t

'
•
\'

SOLID WOOD 8
DRAWER PEDESTAL
WITH BED PURCHASE
ONLY

$16900

WITHOUT BED PURCHASE

S21900

6

oz.

MATTRESS
PADS

$1495

2 PIECE

RAIL CAPS
,~-·$1995

6 MONTH

WATER
CONDITIONER

ONLY
========~========~======~===~

$2 49

1.6 Drawer Pedestal With Every

REE • Extended Rail Bed Purchase!

.'
I

.. t
•

Plan Your Thanksgiving
Dinner With Us:
Turkey, Ham, Chicken &amp; Noddles, Fried
Chicken, Baked Fish, and all The
Trimmings!
$4,50 ADULTS
ALL YOU CAN EAT

1

$1 •99 CHILDREN

BANQUET ROOM FACILITIES
AVAILABLE

•Browns, Bakes, Broiles and Crisps with
Four-way Cooking
•Auto-touch Controls with 99 min. 99
sec. Timer &amp; Clock
•CompuDefrost Automatically Calcu·
lates All Defrosting Times
•Progrmmable Up to 4 Stages

•

USE THIS ONE ANYWHERE
•COOKING GUIDE FOR A
•

VARIETY OF FOODS
•OVEN LIGHT
•SLEEK ALMOND CABINET
w/SEE THRU DOOR
•EASY TO USE 20 MINUTE
TIMER .

ONLY

$11995

"OPTIONAL KIT NEEDED FOR THESE APPliCATIONS

APPALACHIAN

.i:i*Come
See
Out
Eniite
Dig
lag!/*
STATION------------------------------..:.-.,;,._.:;._____

WATERBEDS
2416 JACKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
SMORGASBORD

Book

SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA
A Family Place to Ear

,,

CONVECTION MICROWAVE OVEN

OPEN THANKSGIVING FOR ·BREAKFAST
AND DINNER 8 A:M.·7 P.M.

MUST CLIP &amp; BRING AD TO RECEIVE 6 DR. iPEDESTAL

UNDER THE "CABINET" OR
"HANG IT ON THE WALL"

,,

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

UPPER ROUTE 7

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
HONDA

�Ohio tree has 'Capit~I' Christmas

Ohio gas
drops .02,
.said
AAA
.
••

'·

COLUMBUS !UP!) - Gaso·
line prices in Ohio dropped an
average of two cents a gallon
: since Labor Day, according to
•,the American Automobile Asso·
:.elation's Thanksgiving Holiday
;.Fuel Gauge Report.
: The current price for a gallon
·or gasoline in Ohio is $1.112,
,:versus a Labor Day weekend
·'average of $1.133. The national
; average is $1.110, compared with
;'the Labor Day average of $1.122.
Fuel prices will be of parttcu· ·
'·tar Interest to the estimated 24.5
·million motorists tha t the AAA
expects will travel 100 miles or
• more away from their home
•, during the Thanksg1ving holiday
·~ weekend.
The association's Thanksgiv·
, ing Fuel Gauge Report's results
: indicate the following average.
• per·gailon prices for Individual
; grades of gasoline in Ohio:
·
" 91.4 cents;
Self·serve regular,
Self·serve unleaded, 92.9 cents;
Sell-serve premium unleaded,
$1.109; Self·serve diesel, $1.011;
Full·serve regular, $1.152; Full·
, serve unleaded, $1.182; Full·
serve premium unleaded, $1.323;
Full·serve diesel, $1.141.
,•
State and national gasoline
·' cost averages are comprised of
, · regular, unleaded, and premium ·
unleaded grades dispensed at
full· and self·serve pumps. Diesel
• fuel prices are excluded, due to
• that fuel's small market share.
Neighboring states posted the
.' · following average per-galion pri ·
ces: Pennsylvania, $1.052; West
VIrginia, $1.096; Kentucky.
$1.103; Indiana, $1.081; and Mich·
igan, $1.124.
On Thanksgiving Day, 61 per·
cent of service stations will be
open normal hours and 27 per·
cent will be open on a 24·hour
. basis.
•'
The AAA Fuel Gauge Report is
.••• the result of a survey of appro xi·
,: mately 5,000 service stations
:: located along major travel
,• routes in the United States. The
• report is issued six times a year,
•: ' coinciding with major holidays.
:.
Since the Thanksgiving holt·
•: · day last year, Ohio's gasoline
·'• prices have increased an aver·
:: age of 23 cents per gallon. The
•' national gasoline price bas in·
• creased an average of 20.6 cents
:: per gallon since the 1986 Thanks·
•' giving period, AAA officials said.

.

DOBIE'S BACK CBS
Televt..ion Is bringing back the classic
TV series "Doble Gillis'' as a two hour movie, serving as a pilot lor
a half-hour series. Entitled "Bring Me the jHead of Doble GlUt..,"
the special reunites Dwayne Hickman (L) as jDobie Gluts, Sheila
James (C) as Zelda &amp; Bob Denver (R) as ~laynard G. Krebs. No
air date has been set. I UPI)

MARIETTA, .Ohlo (UP!)-'!\ Appleseed handed out been making reservations for
55·foot spruce tree planted In appleseeds.
bus tours of Washlllfton, D.C.,
southeastern Ohio by homestead·
Officials oft~ Wayne National for those ceremonies. said Phyl·
ers In the early part of this Forest said they counted the Its Richerson, director of til&lt;&gt; ·•
century heads to Washington rings on the tree when it was c•t WaohllltoD County VIsitors and •
today where it will stand in front and found 75, mea 11 tng the tree Conve~~llon B~~reau . One bus will
of the Capitol Building during the was 75 years old.
carry Frontier High School band
Officials selected th" tree from m"mllft's and their supporters.
hOliday season.
The tree was felled Friday in Ohio this year, the 200th annlver· The tree came from the FroRIIer
the Wayne National Forest, and sary of the signing of the U.S. sc~ool district.
carefully wrapped and hauled to Constitution and of the Northw·
Several other trees will he cut
the Marietta College campus est Ordinance, the document that !rom throughout the Wayne
where a ceremony was to be held paved the way to expanding the National Forest in southeastern
today to start the trip · to young nation past the Allegheny Ohio and will go to Washlftlton to
Washington.
Mountains.
be placed In front ol other !~rat
Washington County ComJ111S·
Marietta, alongtheOhloRtver, blllldlJII!S.
·
sioners and descendants of the beCame the first permanent
farm on which the tree grew settlement In the Northwest
made the !lrst few cuts before Territory and Ohio was the first
POMEROY - A marriage
workers finished the task with a state !rom the Territory to be license has been Issued In Meigs
cross saw.
admitted to the Union.
County Probate Court to Bruce
Meanwhile, residents from the D. · Swift. 23 .. and Angela K.
Mayor Nancy Putnam Hollis·
ter, a direct descendant of washington County area have vanCooney, 22.
pioneer Rufus Putnam, will iead ------------------------~
today's ceremonies.
,The spruce, not native to Ohio,
was brought into the state early
In the 20th Century by settlers
who handed out the young trees

available in 1988.
Walker said based on historical
graduation and attrition rates. it
would take an extra $5.346
million to fully fund scholarships
for 4,000 students from the
current fall quarter through the
end of the biennium.
It would cost another $3 million
to bring 850 guardsmen Into the
pr.ogram during winter quarter
at various state universities, she
said.
Republican senators are complaining that mismanagement
by the National Guard has
resulted in a ·lack or funding for
the promised scholarships.

Christmat
Open House
100fo OFF ENTIRE
250fo

STOCK
TO 50% OFF

SELECTED MERCHANDISE
SALE STARTS SAT. 10 TO 7
FlEE REFRESHMENTS

Come To NasliviUe
For the Warmth &amp; Spirit Of Christmtls

Stay At The Opryland Hotel for An
Old-Fashioned Celebration
December 6-8, 1987
~@) Gallipolis
J61

s.c.- Awe. Gellipelil
446-0699

MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga.
(UP!) - A judge ordered two
unmarried sisters on welfare not
to have any more children out of
· wedlock and to get jobs, or face
prison terms on shoplifting
convictions,
Bernice Mosley, 24, and Va·
nessa Mosley, 22, were cdnvlcted
of shoplifting Wednesday, and
Baldwin County Superior Caliri
Judge Hugh P. Thompson used a
· state law banning sex between
• unmarried people when he ruled
the case.
'' in The
sisters were given 10 years
probation with a condition that
' they must not have any more
children while they are single.
Thompson also ordered them to
get jobs, do 200 hours of commun·
tty service and pay a $2,000 fine
each.
The women were arrested last
summer when a store employee
saw them loading $172 worth of
gToccrtes into a pickup truck.

Rt. 35, Rio Grande, Oh.

DR. A. JACKSON BAILES

OPTOMETRISTS

One man's trade is·
another man's bargain

DR. T. JAY BRADSHAW
Visual Examina1tions - Glasses
Children's/Pediatri.c Vision
low/Geriatric. Vision
Contact lenses - All Types

.'

OPEN SATURDAYS- CLOSED MONDAYS
Evening Hour By Appointment

TWO OFFICES FOR CONVENIENCE
2 SO 2!1d Ave., Gallipolis - 446-3.3 00
11'0 Methar'~ St., Pomeroy - 992-3279

.
•'
....••
,.

How do you get the best
price on a used car? Just
visit our used car center.
Because, right now, we're
opim to any reasonable
offer on our imprl!!asive
selection of used cars. You
see, we've got quite a fleet
of trade-ins, thanks to our
simple business 1uccess
"Remember: l1t10uldo't
in selling new cars. And
Bell a aBed car that l
one of these trades is
your best used car bargain. wouldn't let my
Most have been 'expertly
reconditioned and carry
{JuL
our guarantee coverage.

,.•
'•.·

us

·..'•,
•,

Junb~ 'mimes- jrntintl

••

Pu hli~ hPil 1•, •&lt;·h Sund:•\", ft!!j Th ird i\ , .• · .
(;:d! ipuli!- , Oh i1• , h' t h/· Oh i• • \' ; illf'\ ' Pt l h
1 1:-hin~ ( 't•mp:un Mulliml'fib. lnt ·. S.·
r·onr l r-1:1 .. ~ JX•sl :IJ! t' p:•id :11 fi: illiJll •li" .
011il• ..j~0:\1. F.n lt 'IHI : 1~ S('l'llnd d ;'""
m;1il In).! m nllt 'l' :•• Pnmt 'f l"l\. 011 If•. Pn~l

'·

'

Oltin·
Mt ·mlwr : { ' n ilt •i l P11'"" l nl t • rn~illt • n : •l
lnl :1 nrl D :•lh p,,, .. -: A"·"I•I ·I:•lil•n :1nd lht·
Ohit• r'\t •Yo ~p;, pl 'l fl.s .. l•("l;ll ir •n , l\:11itoll, tl
i\ti\'Plli:-.inf,! Rf'Jl l'f''o. f'n1:11[\'( ', n•.•nham
Nt 'W!&lt;p,ipt ·J S;d~ . ";:\.1 'l'hird An •lllil '

~·;;~ j)

LIGHTER
g~t
--~

'85 CHEVROLET 112 T. PICKUP •••••••••••••• 58500

FLUQRIGARD

CURAD

DENTAL RINSE

POLIDENT

PLASTIC BANDAGES

DENTURE CLEANSER

SINGLE
PACK

I 5' OFF

LABEL

~ Sl oo
5 FOR

12

oz.

ASSORTED
30's

8' Fleetside, air. speed control. power windows, power locks, tilt wheel,
tape player.

4 Door CL

s~dan, air and full power, beige exterior, sharp.

'84 AMC EAGLE •••••••••••••••••••;;:••••••••••••• $6000

Plus I 2
FREE

4

$349

Door sedan.

4

wheel drive. automatic, air, power.

'85 CHEVROLET ................................... 58000

4 door station wagon. 8 cylinder. automatic, air conditioning. power.

'85 DODGE 2 Dl. CHARGER ................ S3900
5

l\t •\1

' '111 k . !\'I'W \' ( •t'k [IHlJ'; .

Sl1NIH\' ONI.\'
."\{ ' US('IUPTIO!'\ R1\1'•:s
Hy.Clrri..r or· :\l11tor Huult•
fiO f'l ' l ll~

01w Wt •l'k ..
(ln 1•

y,.,,..

..

.. . S.' ;l :!!I

SIN(il.l•: ('QP\'
I' RICE

·.

~um\ : 1\

''
'

i'\11 "llil"• "l iplit•n • In m :t d p1 •r m i lfl'llln
:tl' t ':ls Whl'lf' nl i!llll l': ll "iiT·I "( ' IT i n • i'

......... .

speed transmission. air, tape player, clean.

'84 DODGE 4 DR. DIPLOMAT SE .......... S6300
8 cylinder, air, FM radio, tilt wheel, speed control, low ,mileage.

'82 CHRYSLER 4 DR. FlnH AVENUE ......S6000
Full power, white exterior, clean,

62,000

m iles.

'86 FORD TEMPO .......... ~ ...................... 57000
4 Door sedan, 4 cylinder, air, tilt wheel, FM stereo.

"A GOOD SELECTION Of USED CARS BELOW *2000"

'l'h1' Sunll .11 Tim1 · ~ Si ' lllinl'l II Ill not 111'
l'I'."J)"n:-ill[l' lo.t' ,H II'; HH·i• p:1\ rT W il l'

.·

m.•dt· 1" c-; ,,.,.1,.,.,

!\T t\11., S{ lf\S( ' IUI"'I'IOSS

.. l Oil ! ' Yt

Sunda,\' On!,\'
: II .

. :;;:t.!.:.: l

1 ~i.\ ffiNilh" .

'

'

..
•'

'

Oall~·

!ni\JJ.

Homecare Medical Supply, Inc.

~SNOW

l'fiiJIRAJN
( a SHOWERS
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
FRONTS:
Map shows ininmum temperal\Jres. At least 50"1. of any shaded area is forecast
to receive precipitation indicated
UPI

II

ft

WEATHER MAP- Snow will occur, especially in the morning,
across portions of northern and eastern New England. Snow
showers will be scattered across the northern and central
Appalachians as well as the northern and eastern Great Lakes.
Rainshowers will extend across the northwest with some
snowshowers in the. higher elevations. (UPI) ·
along the Atlantic Coast from
Virginia to Massachusetts.
Temperatures across Massa·
chusetts were In the teens and
tower 20s early Saturday and
Shelters for the homei&amp;SS were
crowded In Boston.
The city's three. major shel·
ters. Pine Street Inn, Fort Point
and the Boston University Ar·
mory bullding, housed about 775
to BOO .homeiess people Friday
night and Pine Street's lobby was
crowded Saturday with aboul150

for lunch, sa id day surervisor
Jay Todd.
"We're in our winter operation
now , that 's for sure," Todd said .
"We're pretty bu sy today just
because it's so cold. This is by far
our biggest crowd of this fall."
Elsewhere across the nation, a
coldfront triggered scattered
showers in the Pacific Northw·
est. Skies were cloudy from the
Pacific Coast to the northern
Plains.

Each had a previous shoplifting
conviclion, making a prison term
likely.
· Martinez said Bernice Mosley
has two children; Vanessa has
one and Is pregnant. The sisters
and their children share a
two·bedroom apartment with 10
relatives .
Neither woman has ever been
married . They are dependent on
public assistance pa ~ ments.
County Assistant Distrist At·
torney AI Martinez said under
Georgia taw, sex between un.
married people is illegal.
Bernice Mosley 's attorney, An·
gela Emerson, , described her
reaction to the sentence as a
"complete surprise."
"! questipn its legality and
conslltutionallty," she said.
"There's only one way to find
out whether it's constitutional
and that 's to appeal it," Emerson
said .
Robert Boulineau, Vanessa
Mosley's attorney, said he also
plans to discuss challenging the
sentence with hls client. He said
Vanessa Mosley has Indicated
she plans to marry and "she's
happy she's not going to jail."
Martinez said courts have
problems giving prison senten·
ces to single, femal e parents.
"It interferes with the ability of
the court to property deal with
these cases," he said. "When
there Is nobody else to care for
the children, it 's hard for the ·
court to put the mother in
custody ,"
Ralph Goldberg. an Atlanta
lawyer who is a. cooperating
attorney with the American Civil
Liberties Union, thinks the sent·
ence may stand.
"It's outrageous," he said. "I
don' t know that It's unconstltu -

lnslclt• fnunr~·
. . Sl'; 101
:!ti Wt • l'k ~.. .
... :-.::! llli
~~2 \\'j' t•k,., .
. .. Sl)l• ",!i
lblt '" Oul s lciE· fuunl~· ·
1:1 WN' I&gt;" .
:o; Jfo, :!tl

,:-;:r.,

..

BANKRUPTCY

446-7283 .

OpenHOttse
Medicine: The Way it Was

You Are Cordially Invited;
To See The Unique
Historical Exhibit

"Medicine:
The Way It Was"
1794 to the Present

tiona!, but it's outrageous."

AUTO TRIM CENTER

NOW ON DISPLAY

(Gift Certificates Available) .

in the Main Lobby of the

18 BERGER AVE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

INSTALLED

· Truck Bed Covm .............$1 0 Off
Truck Carpet ..................... I6S.OO
Truck Seat Covers ........... IBS.OO

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

(Many Fabrics Available)

Jeep Tops Repaired .................Call
Boa I (overs ............................ Coil
(Custom Made)
Auto Carpel ......................... $J3 5·
(50 samples to choose trom)

,.

Convertible Tops ..................... Call
Dash Covers ............................ Call

NOVEMBER 29, 1987
2·4 PM

Dash Pratedors ............... $2S.OO

Refreshments Served

~A.dd

on or replacement)

(Repair Cracked Dashes)
(protect from Sun)

WE RUN A VERY

FLINTSTONES.

"PIUS fRON " VITAMINS

IIIDPII bUllOUS

60's
•

--=-:-,.;_

,:..~

.0

SUNDAY

Headliners Recovered .... from "65.00

Vinyl Roofs .............................Call

''

Special Monitors on Duty.

'

luggage Racks .................. 'S2.SO
Sunroofs .......................... II7S.OO
(No Leak Guatantee1)
Stripes &amp; Mouldings ............... Call
(lg. Selec:tion)
All WORK BY APPOINTMENT
446· 1968

•

•
•
•

•·

385 JACKSON PIKE • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MON .·FRI . 9 Til 5

.. ,
•
•
•
•

Share your
holiday
with a
needy
child.

•
..
•
•

'

.
•

•

'

•
•
•

•

,.

•

••

614-221-0888

L. W. CENNAMO

w

, ,-.;1\'j !1ll

336 S. High St., Columbus, OH.
LOCAL CONSULTATION in
Pomeroy 992.-64 I 7, in Gallio
County 245·9591.
tn Pomeroy, with ATTORNEY D.
. MICHAEL MULLINS.

Toys
for
Tots

READY, WILLING,
AND ABLE

used cars

' ''1.'

or
Books, Equipment, Furniture, and
Memorabilia from 1794 to the Present

ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

anrt Sunda)'

S{fRSfRIPTION~

t:l Wt ' t ' k~ .

:!liWt'I' I&gt;S
;,~ ""''''"!-.

..Temperatures dropped too casters said snowfall was ex· inches over the remainder ot
fast and a couple of cars wegt · pected to acc.umulate up to eight northeast Ohio by early today.
over the· guard rail and we Inches In the snow bell' area east Less than aq inch of snow was
couldn't get the salt trucks out." of Cleveland and up to three expected elsewhere in the state.
said a Columbus police
dispatcher.
Police officers closed Inter·
state 70 from · downtown west·
ward for about five hours. Traffic
on that main east·weat artery
through Columbus was moving
again by midnight,
Accidents were so numerous in
"Complete Medical Equipment For Home Use''
the snowy areas of' Ohio ·that
pollee departments asked motor··
•HOME OXYGEN
•ADULT DIAPERS
•LIFT CHAIRS
ists involved in non·injury acci·
•WHEELCHAIRS
•UNDERPADS
(CHUXSl
•WALKERS
dents to exchange information.
•HOSPITAL
BEDS
•BEDSIDE
COMMODES
•DIABET.IC SUPPLIES
"We had bunches or ace!·
•SHOWER
STOOlS
·
•PAnENT
LIFTS
•MANY OTHER ITEMS
pents,'' said a Stale Highway
Available
24
Hours
A
Day-Serving
Southeastern
Ohi'o &amp; W. Ya.
Patrol trooper in Elyria.
.
Most item1 _Medicar~ Approved-We do the paperwork for you.
· The extreme northeastern part
of the state remalnded under a
THIRD &amp; PINE ST. Fictwrl &amp; MalyAMBa.man
GALUPOLIS
·C1M.ERS·
heavy snow warning early today.
National Weather service fore·

Bowmans

: n ·; til:thl~&lt; .

'85 CELEBRITY ..................................... 57600

TABLETS
84

.

'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-5

(From WINTER. All
W t'nt· er....·~-;-:----:=-=-=-::----:-:c:------,.-.,---..,------::=:-::;­

Get jobs, not kids, sisters told

.., 'l"nbbel Agency

SHENANDOAH
GIFT SHOP

•

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

By United Press International
A- cold bias• or air brought
' frigid temperatures to the East
Saturday. setting or tying record ·
lows In 10 cities In six states from
New York to Alabama .
Morning lows were in the
single digits and teens, and high
winds sent the wind chill factor
even lower, the National
Weather Service said.
Record IQws readings Included
Binghamton, N.Y. , 8; Syracuse,
. N.Y., 9; Scranton, Pa., 14; and
Pinson, Ala., 21. Southern Flor·
ida was the only state on the East
Coast In which the overnight
temperature did not drop below
50.
The National Weather Service
said wind cbUI factors early
Sunday would be between 20 and
30 degrees below zero In eastern
Pennsylvania and about 20 below
In southern New England.
Scattered snowshowers hit
western and upstate New York
SaturdiiY, and 2 Inches fell at
Syracuse and Binghamton. Flur· ,
rles also hit western
• Pennsylvania.
Snow advisories were in effect
. lor much of New York state, the
, northern Ohio Valley, and the
. northern mountains of West
Virginia,
Snow squalls dumped 8 inches
of snow overnight in northeast·
ern Ohio, and up to 14 Inches fell
In West VIrginia.
Gale warnings were posted for
Lake Erie andiLake Ontario and

Guard looks for college funds rrm=uc=h=ltk=e=the=l::eg::en::da::ry::Jo::hn::ny;l
COLUMBUS, Ohio (U PI) The state Office of Budget and
Management is combing various
accounts and revenue sources for
$8.4 million to fully fund college
scholarships for Ohio National
Guardsmen through June 30,
1989.
"We are looking for possibili·
ties," director L. Lee Walker
said Friday , declining to elabo·
rate on potential sources of
funding. She said it would take a
week or JO days to come up with
recommendations.
Walker said no legislative
appropriation is needed In 1987
for cash flow purposes, more
money will have to be made

22, 1987

East hit
by freeze

M • l'
arrr,age ' r.cense

.

'

l
November

New:nber 22. 1987 •

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

- Page-A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•••
•
•

•

•

FREE CONNECTIONS
Donate a new toy (worth $5 00 or more)
and receive one of th e following FREE
offers lrom Cablevision.
NON CABLEVISION SUBSCRIBERSGive Cablevision a try and we'll connect it
FREE for you! Save $75.00.
Month ly rates begin as low as

$12.95.
CURRENT CABLEVISION SUBSCRIBERS- Add any Cablevision service to your current service and we'll
wa ive our normal cpnnection fee ..Save

DALLAS
CHEVROLET ·CO.

'.

•

•
•,•

.•,
•.

•
•
•

••
•
•

.,•••
•

••

.

•

•'

$15.00.

1-800-344-3331
675.3398

353 E. MAIN STREET
JACKSON, OHIO
PHONE 286-2171
Offer valid in areas served by Cablevision . Offer

e~pires . December

23 , 1987.

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

�•

'
•

Page- A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 22. 1987

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

November 22, 1987

The Sunday Times-Sentinel - Page- A· 7

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

...-'·-Local briefs.!·- --.. -------Area deaths--- - - - - - Dor.wtions being accepted

Pauline 'Polly' Forbes

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Fire Department Is now accepting
donations for Christmas treats. Please send donations to the flr e
department at Box 706, Syracuse, or call 992-7181. The
department is also collecting toys for needy children. New or
very good used toys are preferred. Call 992-7181 or 992-7775 for
information.

Tennessee man charged
GALLIPOLIS- A Tennessee man was charged and cited in
an accident Friday, at 7 p.m., in Meigs CountY's Salisbury
Township, just north of the Gallla-Melgs Cou nty line, by the
Highway PatroL
·
Leonard G. Paden, 62, of Memphis, Tenn., was charged with
OW! and cited for driving left of center after his car hit a car
driven by John D. Edwards, 29, of Pomeroy .
Edwards was driving south when he observed Paden, who
was driving north , In the southboUnd lane . Edwards had to
swerve to avoid hitting Paden's car, but Paden hit Edward's car
in the side.

Brown Jr. of Pomeroy , at right, guides Certified
Public Acco untant Pete Dague, Columbus, on a
tour of th e construction site.
Jack Nicholson won an Oscar as
Sest Supporti ng Actor lor his performance in '' Terms . of Endearment"

(1983).

INVOLVED - Many of those involved In
Racine's Elmwo,od Terrace Apartments project
were on site Thursday morning for a look at the
construction which is movin g ahead of schedule.
From left to right, front, a re Milton Roush, Greg
Roush and Sharon Roush, a ll of Greg Roush
Co nstruction, the contra'ctor; Charles Pyles,

'

mayor of Rac ine; and Lynn and Harold D. Brow~
Jr., owners of the apartments. In back, left to
right, are Fred Schw ab, architect; Don So mmerS/
district loan specialist with Farmers Hom ~
Administration; Frank Cleland, Racine' s mayor,elecl; David Koblentz, Meigs ,County Commts:
sioner; and Bob ·Sprout, FmHA inspector.

fou~d

GALLIPOLIS - Samuel N.M. Meade, 26, of VInton, was
charged Saturday morning by the Gallipolis Poilce Department
with DWI and cited for driving on an expired license.
Susan L. Sanford, 38, of 328 LeGrande Blvd., was cited by the
pollc·e for speeding~

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
missing Cincinnati Opera singer
has been found unharmed . It
turned out that Instead of raising
his voice at the opera he had been
raising glasses in bars.
Richard Davis , 50, of Louis·
ville, Ky., had been repor ted
missing by opera officials after
he unexplainably missed Wednesday nigh t's opening performance of "Turandot" and failed
to show up for Thursday 's shows.
Police investigators !ound l&gt;a vis In a Cincinnati bar Friday
night and he was driven home by
relatives to Louisville. Police
officials said Davis had been
making the rou11ds of . bar s
because he was despondent over
the death of his wife and mother

within the last year .
A bartender said that on
Wednesday night he had served
Davis eight whiskeys · before
refusing to serve him any more.
Davis' relatives and a police
officer visited several bars Friday searching for Davis before
finally locating him. Although
Davis had rented an apartment
In Cincinnati earlier in the week,
he stayed Thursday night In a
hotel room.
Allhough 'Davis didn 't show up
for any of his opera performan ces in Cincinnati, he discussed
opera In the bars.
Kitty Wood, a bar customer,
said Davis told her about the four
most hnpo rtant things in life.

POMEROY - Admitted Friday to•. Veterans Memorial
Hospital were Max Folmer, Long Bottom; E lva Barnitz,
Pomeroy; David Reed, Pomeroy.
Discharged Friday were Henry Hartman, Frank Smith,
Frederick Noble, Gladys Parfitt, Edna Swick , Lester Thomas.

Emergency reports given

Speaker announced tonight
POMEROY -Lt. Duane Ha rris of the Athens Salvation Army
will speak at a special meeting to be held at the local corps
headquarters on Butternut Ave ., P(Jmeroy, at 6:.30 thi s evening.
The public Is invited.

ADVANCED
FORMULA

WILDLIFE HONOREES - Charles Ray Harris, center,
receives the Wildlife Conse rvation Award from Keith Wood, Meigs
Game Protector, and Larry Johnson , wildlife biologist, during
recent Meigs Soil and Water Conservation banquet.

A~EEZE

$0LVENT

OUR SALE PRICE . 4.47

PROTECTS TO -25'

MAIL-IN REBATE .. 1.00

Rep. Gradison has surgery
WASHINGTON iUPI) -Rep.
Willis Gradison, R-Ohio, underwen t su rgery Friday at Walter
Reed Hospital for partial removal of his thyroid gland, which
subsequently was discovered to
be ca ncerous.
Gradison. 58. was reported in
sa tisfactory cond ition today,
sa id aide Robert Boster.

VALVDUNE
POWER
STEERING
FWD

NOW! .
GUAUNTEED
LOW PRICES . . .-;,. ,

"They did find ca ncer, but the
prognosis is absolutely excellent," Boster said.
Doctors sa id there was no
indication the cancer had spread
to any other part of Gradison' s
body, the a·ide said.
Gradi son is a seven-term
member of Congress.

ALEMITE

AD¥llmSID NtCI CHI ANY IUHDe mMIIN

FlEL INJEcnGN
OVERHAUL
•STOPS HESITI.TIOH

•O.EANS CLOGGED
FUEL INJECTORS

NO. 4193

99

.·\ ,,, soage Frurn The Bible .. .
SAVED BY GRACE
WiUiarnB. Kughn
"For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that nut of yourselves:
it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any rnan should boast .. IEph. _
2:8.~1-

41 (
QT.

Saved

of man i·s not m IL1insel[' tl ts not m man that walketh to dtrect h1s steps
{Jrr. 10:23). The compassionate God looked down upon His si nful
nf&gt;:lture to rescue him from sin.
Salvation, "th11 gift of God," is like unto a coin, having two sides. On
eac h side. there is the proper inscription which makes it valid. One s ide

will not su ffi ce.lt mu st have bot h. So it is wit h the coin ofsalvation. It
has tw~ ~ i£_l e~ wit_h Lhe pro.~er ins~ription s that . mak~ it.. y~lid ... The
divirw side IS mscr1bed With grace. The human Side w1th Jatth. One

;ide will nol suffice. ll takes bot h.
Grace

"Grace ," Lhe divine side•, desc:ribes the actions of God in providing

•

~a lva tion:

1. H e offered His Son "to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself'
(He h. 9:261:
.

2. He sent th•· "Spirit of t.ruth "to lhe apostles lo guide lhem inlo all
truth (Jno. 16:13); and
.
3. He established the church , the spiritual body of Christ (Eph . 1:22.
231 lo which the sa ved are adde d {Acts 2:47).
The ··grace of God" thal brings salvation demands hearing (Rm.
10: 17): belieVing (J no. 3: \6): re penti ng {Acts 17:30); confessing {Ml.
10:32.331: haplism (Mk . 16:161: and church membership (Acls 2:47) to
,

t

he s av~d.

§
§

"Faith," the hum an s ide.

describ~s

G6d'~ provision~:

. FILTERS

200

LIMIT 2

this poi nl man, through obedient faith, makes contact with God's grace.
He Is "not juStified by the works of the law" {Gal. 2:16), nor "by works
of r~ght e o11s ness {Meritorious)" which he has done {Tit. 3 :5), but by

REMANUFACTURED

You cannol be saved by "grace'' alone! You can nol be saved by
. "faith" illonc! ll takes both!
For Free Bible Correspondence Course, Write , .•

Bul tn illt&gt; Boad • I'.U. Box ;{08
Call ipnlis, Ohio 45h:U
Sunda}' Momlnt=
Dible Study 9:30

Sunlhl}' E-.enlna1
Wonhlp 6:00

Wof"ihlp 10t30

. ~ ~:[J

W1tch "'T'he Hlb~ 1\n•WJU" WOWk·TV 13 •

Wedn.U71
Bible Stud'
7100p;m.

,

Rodlo
"A Mau,ae From

The BAtie"
DoUj I )l'lEJI '

500 .
OFF

§

Chapel Hill Ciu.u:ch of Christ

OUR REGULAR

HOURS:
Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 8

Saturday 8 to 6
Sunday 9 to S

lliiSOIIJN'I'I PRICE

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

.,.

\

MAIN FLOOR

HAS BEEN RELOCATED!
I

SILVER BRIDGE PL·AZA
PH. 446-9335

$299° 0

AIIOWAI

CONTEMPORARY
RECLINA·ROCKER '
RECLINER
1!\SIIIfi!I&lt;JJI

tnat

-z

ll't''~

rJJ•o..· ,··m··""''

f VIIOOTAoloi i. ICor&lt;J

DAVE MICHAEL - MANAGER
merchendlte, additional qutntltle• 11 regullr price. Rebated Item• limited to manufacture,. rnlr lc:llont.
1987,
'
Q

-·

The main entran·ce .is n_ow located at
the East side of the Clinic - facing
Route 160. There is also a new, closer
parking area located behind the clinic.
You'll get into t~e building a little
easier, protected by a covered
walkway,· and you won't have to
worry about .steps.!
c

IIIJ$. stu-. SU&amp;illtlt!l1ea $1~1e olfll'llo l Ull 1:100~
uimlnn r....,,., contour~&lt;! '"'""'"' •t•l&lt;o"'o
i!nd I... CkiV CYSh•OMtt •I S ~ l&lt;M OI)e.lfl

•Free
Parking

11 155a.nl.

7•30 a.m . kndar

LA·Z·BOY'recliner!

CARBURE I0115

"grace throuyhfnit h."

' .·-.

save~""
on the most comforting
gift you can give, a genuine

lt&lt;IOII .lh ' ' t~s·

L

· t~~n
.Ll.~(Z·8
~

ljl!;iSII{i!if*iJJ;!fii#!iJ

Open '
Daily

CJ-5
Monday
&amp;

CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREETS Friday
'1 -8
Delivery
GALLIPOLIS
446 ·3045

•Free
11·22-C

ai

-lt4f

-THE HOLIER CLINIC

Clinic has always been
dedicated to offering the h.ighest
quality healthcare. The new
Holzer Clinic addition, housing
over 50 physicians and 200' people
trained to help, are here for you."

JOINTS

199

o

~llltMBit~ -RICAN OEM IOCIU¥

~'Holzer

~
UNIVERSAL

.

.

GALLIPOLIS- Seven couples recently applied for marriage
licenses in Ga Ilia County Probate Court.
Applying were Donald R. Swisher, 21, 269 Jackson Pike.
Gallipolis, and Susan M. Sta_niey, 20, 193 Greenbriar St.; Doyle
Ray Callihan, 18, Rt. 1, Ewington. and Tonya Lee Cox , 17 , Rt. 2,
Gallipolis; James G. Splete, 44, Rt. 1, Bidwell, and Patricia
Jean Martin, 47, ~t. 1, Bidweli; John Henry Elliott, 19, Rt. 2,
Patriot, and Vanessa Lee Buiiock , 18, Rt. 4, Gallipolis; Rudie
Lee A. Sherfield, 26, .Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Janice Marie
Ross, 20, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ; James Michael Daniels, 27, Rt.
1, Crown City, and Delorse Irene Cox, 30, Eureka Star Route,
Gallipolis; Douglas Samuel Turner, 26, Rt. 1, Water loo, and
Shelia Kay Miller , 22, Rt. 1, Patriot.

AIR

lhe actions of man in accepting

_,.SECOND AVINUE

. .....

Pd. Pol. Ad by Cand.-30191 Old Dexter Ch. Rd., Dexter, Ohio

~

~

l
' t. He hear!! i(l orde r lo receive the faith, for "fait h cometh by hearing, arui heariug by the word of God"\Rm. 10: I7) :
2. He believes, "for with the heart man believeth unto righteou.~ ness"(Rm. 10:101 : and
'
3. He obeys "from the h~art thatfonn of doctrine" {Rm , 6: 17).
Faith .. r&lt;'sponds to God's grace by hearing (Rm. 10: 17): believing
I.) no. 3:161: rrprnl ing (Ael.s 17:aO): confessing (Ml. 10:32,33); baptism
IMk. 16:1 61: and becoming a member of the church {Acts 2:47). It is at
L

GALLIPOLIS - Jerry Lee Bias, of Rt. 2, Bidwell, and
Catherine Bias. of Eureka Star Route, Gallipolis, r eceived a
decree of divorce Monday in Gallia County Common Pleas
Court.
Avonell Mays, of Rt . 1, Vinton, a nd Romie D. Mays,- of
Thurman, l'fCeived a decree of divorce Monday .
Marty O'Dell Pinkerman, of Rt. 2, Patriot, and Anita Lynn
Pinkerman, of Rt. 2, Patriot, received their decree of
dissolution Wednesday .
Mike Thompson, ol273 Jackson Pike, and Mary Thompson, of
Rt. 1, Thurman, were given a decree of dissolution Wednesday .

t

Faith

a small Jeposit
will holJ your selection
till Christmas
at

STANLEY E. HUTTON

POMEROY ·_ Divorce actions have been flied in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Cat hy Pridemore, Middle port,
against Rick Pridemore, Langsville; James Wilburn Wolford,
Long Bottom, against Charlotte Ann Wolford , Long Bottom;
Gregory Alan Shamblin, by his next friend , Lincla Imboden,
Racine, against Kimberly Carol Ball Shamblin , by her next
friend , Bre nda Hauber, Racine . •
Rita Kay Woodburn, Belpre, and Scott Keith Woodburn,
Belpre; Melinda Counts, Pomeroy, and Jeffrey Coun ts, in ~are
of Victor and Kitty Counts, Syracuse, have filed for dissolutiOns
of marriage.
Glenda Marlene Donovan was granted a divorce from George
W. Donovan.
Granted a dissolution were Brian 0. Mullen and Nancy A.
Mullen.
In a pending divo rce action by Rankin Ray P ickens against
Mary H. Pickens, both parties have been enjoined from
di sposing · of any marit al assets pend ing finalization by the
.court.

The verb "saved " means "to deliver from spiritual death, or rescue,"
denoting a stale or condition. M.ln, being dead spiritually "in t resp~s ­
ses and sins"IE ph. 2: ll ), was separated from God (Isa. 59 :2). In his miquitous and ~c lp !ess con_di_tion, ~ e could not save him se l~, for "~h e way,

is sure to be
unJer the tree!

Thank you for your support and
vote in the
November 3rd election.

Divorcf!S filed in court
1

in bar

TO THE PEOPLE OF SALEM TOWNSHIP

Divorces, dissolutions given

Couples apply for licenses

AUIO WO. . I WIU. lUI ANT CUIUJR

CHESHIRE - James Enos
Nelson, 84, of Route 1 Cheshire,

Missing singer

POMEROY - Three calls were answered by loc al units
Friday, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports .
At l: 30 a .m ., Racine took Max Folmer from Long Run Road to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 5:01 p.m. took Anna .
Wolfe from White'S Hill Road to Veterans Memorial;
Middleport at 6:24 p.m . went to the scene of an auto accident on
Route 7 near Hobson. Oakie Meadows and Sharon Meadows
were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospita.

WINDSHIELD
WASHER

Enos Nelson

Man charged with DWI

Hospital report made
DISCUSS PROJECT - Owner of Racine's
Elmwood Terrace Apartments, Dr. Harold D.

PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. Pauline "Polly" Love Forbes , 81,
Route 2, Point Pleasant , died
Friday In Pleasant Valley Hospital after a long illness.
She was born Aug. 22, 1906 In
Point Pleasant, to the late
Morgan Love and Ora Eckard
Love.
She had worked as a foster
grandparent at Lakin for several
years, and for the former Quality
Manufacturing Company of
Point Pleasant for several years.
She was preceded in death by
her husband , Joseph W. " Joe"
Forbes, on Aprll19, 1982.
Surviving are two daul'(hters,

Mrs . Duane (Phyliis ) PlanJ.s , died Saturday at Holzer Medical preceded in death by three .•
Cross Lanes, W.Va.,
Mrs . Center.
sisters and three brothers.
-~
Tommy {Lavon) Thompson, CoBorn June 23, 1903 in Jackson
He was a retired coal miner
lumbu s, Ohio; two sons, Joseph County, W.Va., he was the son of and attended Silver Memorial
H . Forbes, Point Pleasa nt, Wil· the late James Nelson and Iva Freewill Baptist Ch urch in
·uam "Bill"' Forbes, Gallatin, Dell Jones Nelson.
Kanauga.
Tenn.; 12 grandchlidren and 17
Surviving is his wife, Ploma
Services will be conducted
great-grandchildren .
,
Siders Nelson, whom he married Tuesday, 2 p .m ., at Willis Fun·
Services will be Monday at 11 April 1, 1929 in Akron , Ohio. Also eral Home. Rev. Alfred Holley
a.m. at the Wlicoxen Funera l surviving are one brother, Cha- officiating. Burial foliows at
Home with the Rev. Bryan Blair rles Nelson of Canal Fu lton, Gravel Hill Cemetery . Friends
officiat.ing. Burial will follow in Ohio; one nephew, C. Marvin may call at the fune ral hOme
the Suncrest Cemetery.
· Hufford of Gallipolis. He was from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9 p.m .
Friends may call at Wilcoxen - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Funeral home Sunday from 6 to 9 ,p.m.

'WELCOME!

'

�Page-A-S-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

r1ver

•'
hyAnr-

, .... '49.00 .._

N-ln

Section

November 22, 1987

fWith ......y ... c:r.tlll)

Tiylof Ni11111 wlllgl'll W0v from~ to 12~ U!ltl DICk fOr Cllrllfr~U
n~nSII or 10 hllp with W.at Strlll io•s or tor dowt1 PIYIMftl.

•,
'

NISSAN

NISSAN SINTIA
!lot , _ _ ,..
C. lo tra Cloll '

No. 1 In Quality Control
. Of All Japanese
Manufacturers! ·

'600-'1000 c.lo ....

"'

•'

'•
,•

•tI

1917 NISSAN
4a2 TIUCK

"CASH BACK

.,'

5 speed, rldlal Urn,
dQuble walled cargo

'10,713
Cash Back .... . •01200
'9513

bed end protec11on

fl

patikag~ .

j,.

·'1000
MiliAN 4•6 HAINOOT ...OCUP
'M,, ,,, ' -', •, • • ,,,. •173

,.Moll...

13

ptu• w and title.

'12 monlhl

~i

•72 months financing, $1000 cash or trade plus tax and title.

ATHENS 1ARG.EST NISSAN DEALER

,I

,.
......

•'
•'•''

·TAYLOR NISSAN- YOUR USED TRUCK HEAbQUARTERS ·
SAU
I UP IT GOES - Buckeye Baptist Builders, a
group of Southern Baptist Convention men who
volunteer their labor In the construction of new

1980
1916
1.915
1914

churches, moved Into Middleport on a recent
Saturday to put the new Victory Baptist Church
structure upder roof.

Church going up ·in Meigs
with help of Baptist Builders

1981
1911
1983
1915

MlDDLEPORT - The new , Ion . He has been in the Middle· now being done and the goal of
port location for the past six the minister Is to celebrate the
building of the Victory Baptist
New Year with services in the
years.
Church, Second St. in Middleport
new
church.
Interior work at the church is
was put under roof in a day by the
Buckeye Baptist Builders of the
Southern Baptist Convention.
Thirty-two men moved onto the
site abo ut 8 a.m., one Saturday
morning and before darkness fell
HQLZEA CLINIC
the exterior structure complete
with roof was completed. Joining
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO
the Baptist Builders were sev~r al members of the church and
other local volunteers.
"CONVENIENT HEALTH CARE -THAT
Women of the church served
dinner to the workers in the old
DOESN'T COST AN ARM AND A LEG"
church which is located to the
front of the iot where the new
church is being constructed .
Plans call for that structure to t.ie
torn down providing parking
space fo r the congregation.
A fundamen tal independent
Baptist church, the new structure is 100 x 40 feet a nd will'have a
seating capaclty of 200, five
Located at Holzer Clinic
~
classrooms, two of which will
have slid ing doo rs which can be
on Rr. )5 In Gaqip&lt;:Jlis .
opened to create a large banquet
room. a kitchenette, office and
nursery.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
The Rev. )&lt;eesee, a na tive
Meigs Counti~n. began his minis·
\\' t•t•k r1HIJO &amp; HoI i 1IJJ ~- !"I
1\-lun cl o1~ • f' ri tla ~·
try in Meigs County ten yea rs ago
s,oo t' . ~l. '" 9,no t• . ~t.
t ,oo ''·"· '" 9,oo I'.M.
!Javing moved here from Massi]-

1986~ NISsAN 412 Pickup •...............••......•• 55995'
1986 NdSAN 4x2 Pkkup ............................ '5995
1982 FORD f.1 00, low 11Ut1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '4995
1984 NISSAN Sport Truck, 4x2. _. .••••••...•••••••.•••• 15995
1985 NISSAN 4x4 lilt Cab, blue .. • ................... 18995

URGENT
CARE. ·cENTER
446•5287

~ifd
~

'.

GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY

BULOVA-SEIKO-PULSAR
·COLIBRE
Pocket Watches
ALL
NOW UNTIL

CHRISTMAS

Pendant Watches

20°/o

BELOW
REG. PRICE

'·

134

ISUZU Pickup ................................. '4995
NISSAN Pickup •.••....•.•....•.......•.••••... '4995
FORD Ranger Pickup ........................... '4995

cal.

I
I

.....

CH~IOLET C-1 0 Pickup ........................ 51995

NISSAN ling

,I

'

'

.•,•' '
'
'

:'

'

''·

'19

..

NISSAN Shorthd Pickup ....•.•........ • ..•..... 53995
NISSAN Lontbed Pickup, 27,000. niles .... , ........ f4995 .

•fl2

CHEVROLET 5•10 Pickup ........................ !5995

1125

1

.

.

.

.'l·

shine

v *140

RIO GRANDE - The artistic
talents of many senior citizens in
Gallla and surrounding counties
a~e displayed at the Senior
Citizen Art Exh!bt at the atrium
of the Fine Arts Center at Rio
Grande College and Community
College, sponsored by the Area
Agency on Aging.
Roy Cable, of Adams County,
was awarded Bes t of Show for his
picture "Fishing Around," featuring a raccoon, dipping a paw In
a creek.
The show is composed of works
from 32 senior citizens, all 60
years old or older. The tencounty area served by · the Area .
Agency on Aging, District 7,
Include Adams. Brown, Ga!lia,
Highland, Jackson, Lawrence,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and · Vinton
counties .
From Gallia County, Vilma
Plkkoja was the only exhibitor,
The exhibit was judged by
James Allen of Rio Grande, art
Instructor at the college.
A tea and reception In honor of
the artists was hosted by Dr .
Paul C. Hayes, president of Rio
Grande, on Nov. 12.

'199

GARAGE &amp;

CARS TO FIT YOUR

. .
1980 flAT Brava, outo111tlc, air, defroster, sun roof .... , . 1995 •a•
1982 CHEVROLET Chevette ..... _. ...............••.... 'lttS . •34 ','
.

.

.

.

.

.

'SAU

;"

.

"'

.,.•u.,

ltll PONTIAC 'T·1000 .............................. •1995
1fls DODGE OMit. ·•... ·.~~ · .•... ~ ..............•.. ~· '1"1
1980 OLD$ Oilege, blue ..••.••...••f ~ .............. :.·*1995
,1983 PLYMOUTH Reliant -.n, red .••..•...•........•. 12995
1983 FORD Escort ....n, blue •.•• .' •. ,. ...........•.•..*3495 *70
1983 CHEVROLET Chevette .................. : ........ 13495 · '70
1981 FORD Elcort .........•..........•..
~ '2995
'74
$
•
1985 DODGE Omni.. . .. .. • . .. . .. .. . . .. • .. .. .. • .. • .. 3995 •75
, 1913 OLDS
Omego ... , ... , .... : .. , ..................
'3995 •as
.
'
1985 DODGE 400, pewter, 4 door ...•........ : ....... ,14995
1979 PONTIAC Areblrd .............................. ,3995 •109
1982 FORD MuiiMii ............................. ~ . .'3995 *109
'
'
.
1984 NISSAN Sentra, 4 door, white ..•...........•...•. •4995 '113
1914 FOlD Tempo, 4 door, white ..................... '4995 '112
'
1
5
1986 NISSAN Sutra ................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5995 ,125
1986 NISSAN Sentra .......... . ..........•.•....... u5995 •125
1984 PONTIAC Aera, black .......................... '6495 '137.
1983 MAZDA 626, 4 door ........... ~ ............... '5995 '140
1984 NISSAN Sentra ............• : . ................. '5995 '140
' 1984 NiSSAN Sentra wigon .......................... '$995· '140
1984 NISSAN 200 SX, black .... ; ................ .. : ... 55995 '140
1986 PLYMOUTH. CaraYelle •........•.......•...•...•. '699~ '149
1917 CHEVY Spectrum; .......... , .................. '799S '157
1985 NISSlN 200 SX, blue .. d . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '7995 · '175
I 985 OLD$ Cutlos1 . .. . . . .. . .. .. . . . . . , . .. . . . • . . . . . .. 5 799 5 '175
1984 NISSAN 200 SX, silver ....................... .'. '7995 1197
1985 t:HEVIOLET Caprice, loaded ...................... •8995 '*199
•
1986 PONTIAC Grand AM ...................... . ..... '8995 '199
1986 NISSAN Stanz•
loaded ........•.•...... , .'. 58995 5199
'1986 NISSAN Stanza 4x4 .....~ ....................... '8985 '224
· 1985 NISSAN 300 IX 2+2, block, 19,000 miles ........ •12,995
1917 IIISSAN 300 ZX Juno, red ...... ; ....... ·....... 517,995

.,.

•

'

'

.

'

I

•

·,

••

f

t

.•

·· ·~

l+

.,...

. •n

' , ..1 ·

•••

...

BEAUT
1910 OPEL •.•••.•.•••.•.•. '195 1974 CHEVY Monte
1975 CHEVY Nova, bl11 .' .... '395 . 1981 DODGE Omnl. ........ ~
1977 FOlD LTD .........•.. '895 . 1978 CHEVY Chevltte ....... '995

'S95

•

Senior
talents

~

··-

•VISA
•M/C
•DISCOVER
•TERMS

on Water," Cash Frost; "Jackson County
Bridge," Donna Stanley; and ' 4Winter Snow,"
Harry McDowell, Oak Hill.

' s~f- •
1125
*121

••on,

POMEROY
992-2054
GALLIPOLIS
446-2691

VISITING DISPLAY - A visilor_to the senior
art expo views the works of area senior citizens. In
'
• the foreground panel are, clockwise from top left,
"N&amp;W Depot," by Cash Frost of Peebles; "Duck
''

Pickup ........................ '3995

NISSAN

1200 E. State St.
Athens, Ohio 594-352-8

ON EXHmiT- On exhibit at the senior clllzen
art show sponsored by the Area Agency on Aging,
are~ top' row, •'Dressed for Church," by Donna
Stanley of JackSon; "Old Mill Pond," Carol Buck

of Jackson; center row, 11Bird on Glass," Ruby
Evans, Jackson; ''Water Lily,' ' Carol Buck; ''Old
Cow Bell," Sally Hutchinson, Jackson, honorable
mention; and bottom, 'HI World," Donna Stanley:
'

TALENTS - At left is best
of show painting "Fishing
Around," by Roy Cable. At
right, GaJUa County's VIlma
Plkkoja painted the "Our
House Courtyard," which is
included In the exhibit at Rio
Grande College and Community College in the atrium of the
Fine and Performing Arls
Center.

;"'-·

•
•
~

•
•
:
'
:
•
•'

'

story
cancer:
one
Coping
with
and
beating
,...

'
••.

•

••

•

(Editor's note: Columbus reporter Sandra Latimer celebrates 20 years with UPI next
March. Five years ago, however,
she was wondering If she would
reach her 1~th anniversary. Her
battle with cancer, and her
ultimate victory, have spurred
her to work with others In the
same situation. For those she
cannot reach personally, her
story may offer hope:)

I

•

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ' The American Cancer Society
says suvlvors of cancer today
can !Ill a city the size of Los
Angeles.
That mythical city has gone
through a mini-population boom
-me.
A cancer survivor Is one who
lills !lved five years since the
cancer was detected.
, ll's been five•years (Oct. 14,
· : 1982) since I wa.s told I had
• ovarian ca ncer. Two years of
: chemotherapy, two subsequent
operations and the loss and
., regaining of my hair, I'm a
, cancer survivor. And proud of it.
'" I've got to admit that I was a
: little anxious when I went In for
: my final checkup a few weeks
, ago. In my mind, I knew I was a
, syrv!vor. But I needed someone
official to tell me.
After my surgeon poked and
· probed and punched, he took off
· his glove, shook my hand and
said, ''Kid, you made lt.'' Then he
put his · arm around my

-.

shouiders, and I threw my arms
around his waist and the tears
came.
Five years ago I struggled to
face the day, ,hardly able to tal k
about my problem. Today, I'm
trying to help others.
"I've got better things to do
with my life," I told my doctors
those first few days.
I had seven treatments where
anti-cancer drugs Cls-Plat!n,
Cytoxan and Adrlamyacln and
the "sterold Solumedril were fed
through an IV.
Once the nurses got the IV
sta rted In my left arm, they'd
often strap It to a board and tell
me not to move. My veins were
being used so much that the
doctor would order a finger stick
blood test rather than have the
lab workers draw a vial of blood
from my arm every time I
entered the hospital for
treatment.
':We've got to save those
. veins," my oncologist wo!ild say.
By the time I had finished
seven treatments, the creatinine
In my urine was so high and my
white blood Cllll count so low I
couldn't tolerate any more Cis· .
Platln.
I continued monthly treat·
ments with Cytoxan and Adria·
myacln, gotn~: to the doctor' s
office rather than the hospita l
where I'd spend' two days.
One year alter the first surgery
I had a second -look operation.
The surgeon washed my abdoml·
nal cavity out with a saline

solution and made 50 slides.
My oncologist said he found
one slide suspicious enough to
keep me on the treatments for
another year.
I was depressed, knowing that
I'd have to face having needles
pushed through by veins - just
as if a plow were being pushed
through a garden.
1
I fought, but yet I'd cry and tell
the nurses, "I want to cooperate.
There's nothing more In the
world that I want than to get this
over with."
Still they pushed those needles.
By the spring of 1984, when I
finally managed to handle the
needles, the elements were prohibiting the Intensive treat·
menls. This time the oncologist
prescribed Leukera'n pills, little
white pills I took three a day,
most of the time.
How many I took were determined by my weekly blood testa !Inger stick. The first couple of
times were hard but again I had
to work to overcome my fear.
Eventually I was able to walk
Into the lab, put my hand on the
table palm up, close my eyes and
talk to the technician and hardly
know when she stuck my linger.
Then I could watch as she sucked
the blood Into little glass tubes
and make slldes.
Several drugs are used In
chemotherapy treatments. sOme
given intravenously, some in the
muscles and some orally . What
the patient gets depends on the
location of the cancer, the length

•
•
•

•

of time It had grown before It was public, and opted for ,a red We're not supposed to use per&gt;
terrycloth beachcomber hat ill sonal exper)ences because noi
ta ken out, and the patient.
Cls-Piatin is one drug that other times. What hurt the worst everyone Is affected the same
way. At times the caller says the
affects the hair. In the beginning, 'Yas not having hair to brush.
After
I
began
taking
Leukeran;
·
Information
I have given and the
the oncologist said I would likely
my
hair
began
to
come
back.
I
way
I
have
handled the reques~
lose my hair. He said the drugs
felt
It
in
back
first
,
tight
little
sounds
as
though
I have been
were designed to seek out rapidly
through II. And a couple of Urnes;
producing cells. Cancer Is a curls.
In ·October of 1984, II went I had to be honest and explalr(
rapidly producing c·en. So is the
hair cell. But the drugs can't swimming with ·a friend. I that I am a survivor. I feeII have
distinguish between good cells carried · my styrofoam wig form been of help to someone.
I feel I breezed through my
with me. She convinced me that
and bad cells.
I los t my shoulder-length day I didn't need to wear.the wig. ordeal with flying colors. But
brown hair In six days between She llked my hair that way . The some other people are not as
wig got put away.
fortunate.
my first two treatments.
The
next
month
I
had
my
third
When I fi rs t learned of .what}
"It affects people differently,"
-and
final,
I
hopedsurg
_
ery.
was
facing, alii could remember.
my oncologist said when I told
Not
long
after
I
was
released
was
the people who'd had cancef
him he didn' t tell me how rapidly
from the oncologist, I heard that and had been on chemotherapy
this would happen.
I bought a wig that looked so the Ohio Cancer Information and had died. Weren 't there
much like my real hair -In style Service needed volunteers. I survivors?
Then I realized I knew a
and color - that some people figured my knowledge and expe·
were surprised when I told them rlences could help people.
woma,n who'd had both breasts
The Cancer Information Ser· removed , five years apart. I got
It wasn't reaL
The nurses and nurse technt.' vice, operated through the Na· in touch with her . By this time, clans on the oncology floor where tional Cancer Institute, has the the cancer apparently had re:
I had my treatments would tell fam!l!ar number 1-8 00 · turnedand shewasverybitter. ~
me that my hair would come 4CANCER. Nearly every state few months later, I attended her
back, probably curly and thick. has an office. For Instance, funeraL ,
In the last five years, I've lost a -·
Curly I could stand, but thick? people who dial that toll-free
When I started to school, I had . number In Ohio during normal lew frle~ds to cancer. If I
braids so thick they were nearly business hours wltl get the office &amp;urv!ved, why can't they ,,I'd as11
myself.
as wide as my neck. And I could In Columbus.
Volunteers assist a couple of
I know a few people who have
remember my mother would
always have the hairdresser thin paid staff members answering been diagnOsed as having cancer
the telephone and disseminating since 1 was. They look to me as an
my hair when it was cut.
Those few months when I Information about cancer, Its Inspiration. Some people 1· fee]
wasn't taking Cis-Platln, my hair education programs, treafment I'm helping. Some I wish 1 could
started to return- straggly, thin programs and services available .help more, but we know that
there Is little help right now for
and grayish. B,ut It fell out again for patients and family .
and quickly when · I resumed
I try to work In that office at the type of cancer they have. It's
least once a week, lor a few hours these people and their families 1
Cts-Piatln.
I usually wore the wig In at a time. It can be very dltflcult .
(See COPING, B8)
•

�Page--8-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 2.2. 1987

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

Capehart anniversary to be noted

anniversary planned

MASON - Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Capehart .will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary
with an open house at thelrThlrd
St. .home tn Mason, W.Va. on
Sunday, Nov. 29 from 2 to 5 p.m.
The couple were married on
Nov. 27, 1937 at Lawrenceburg,
Ind. by the Rev. H.M. Goetv In a
double wedding with a cousin, the
late Vlrglnla Hackemeyer and
her husband, Edward,
Cincinnati.
The observance Is being hosted
by the Capehart's daughters,
Jackie Sisson and Diane Troy,
both of Mason. Besides their
daughters. Mr. and Mrs. Cape-

CLARENCE and MAY
W.Va. -An open
reception honoring Clarence and
¥ay Wamsley on their 50th
wedding anniversary will be held
Saturday, Nov. 28. from 2 to 4
l).m. at the Mason Fire Department meeting ,room.
Mr. and Mrs. Wamsley were
married on Dec. 4, 1937 and have
ll,ved ln Clifton since that time.

WAMSLEY
Thereceptlonlshostedbythelr
chlldren, Bob of Pomeroy, John
of Clifton, Eugene of St. Loutsville, Leona of Indlanapolls, and
Bonnie and Sue of Columbu s.
They also have 12 grandchildren,
and three great-grandchlldren.
The family requested that gifts '
be omltted by those at~ndlng the
celebration.

-

:"-h .•_j,&lt;

:il.t \-:'~ /

is the son of Lenora Jenkins and
the late Fred Jenkins. Jenkins Is
employed with the Village of
Pomeroy Street Department.
Whlle no celebratlon of the
occasion Is planned at this time,
the couple will be going on a trip
soon.

.
•
I,;;

~::I~
~

1987 SANTA

6
Different
Styles
In
Stock

1987 SNOWMAN

APerfect 81ft and lnve~ttnentl ·
ONLY

•

$1 075 EACH

'11.75 Ill CIIIISTIIAS
PIESIIITAnOII CASE

LIMITED NUMBEI IN STOCII

WE ALSO HAVE THE NEW AMERICAN EAGLE
1 OZ. GOLD COINS

l~iture

Galleries

Comer 2nd and Grape Str.,t
Gallipolis

'

MTS COIN CO.
Corner East•• at lincoln St.
Gollipolh

OPEN THUR . 1 ;30-8 ;30 ONLY

'

Take Home This
OUTRAGEO-US

Comedy Hit
Today!

··. .

TONYACOX
DOYLE CALLWAN

CoxCallihan
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Gloria
Jea n Cox of Gallipolis and Allen
M. Cox of Gallipolis announce the
engagement and upcoming wed ~ i ng of Tanya Cox to Doyle
G:alllhan son of Mrs. Brenda
Kincaid of Wllkesvllle and Gary
Callihan of Gallipolis.
The wedding will take place on
,Dec. 19, ln Jackson, wlth a
re'ception following.
Miss Cox is attending Buckeye
Hills Career Center.
· Callihan Is a graduate of
Buckeye Hllls and Is now with the
U.S. Navy In Chicago, Ill.

BeHe Midler and
Shelley Long are
looking for a man.
And when they
.find him,
·Watch out!

~

Now Available At

DEBORAH L. CRAFr
MARK A. MCCANN

Craft-McCann
TUPPE RS PLAINS- Mr.
and Mrs . Robert R. Cra ft of
Tuppers Plains are announcing
the engagement and forthcom ing wedding of their daughter.
Debo rah Lynn Crall to Mark
Allen McCann, son of Charles
E. McCann, Elizabeth, W.Va.
Miss Craft is a graduate of
Eastern High School and is
emp loyed by Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital.
McCann attended Wlrt County
High Sc hool and Is employed by
S(9ne a nd Thomas.
The open church wedding will
be held on Dec. 12 at 2 p.m. at the
United Pentecostal Church of
Middleport. A reception will
follow In the church hall.

TOUCHSTONE PICTURES presents in association with SILVER SCREEN PARTNERS II
An INTERSCOPE COMMUNICATIONS PRODUCTION
BETTE MIDLER SHELLEY LONG An ARTHUR HILLER FILM "OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE"
.
PETER COYOTE and GEORGE C.ARLIN Music by ALAN SILVESTRI .
Co-produced by PETER V. HERALD SCOTT KROOPF MARTIN MICKELSON Written by LESLIE-DIXON
Produced by TED FIELD ROBERT W. COAT
Directed by ARTHUR HILLER
~

MCMLXXX\111
Touchstone Pictures

Available on VHS Videocassette
''

I'

Vallance-Fuller

hart have eight grandchildren
and two great-great grandchildren .
·
For many years Capehart
owned and operated the Bletner
Block Co. and then ln later years
built and operated the Mason
Bowling Center also working at
that tlme as a school bus driver.
His wife retlred as guidance
counselor at Wahama High
School ln 1976.
The couple have requested that
relatives and friends attending
not bring gifts.

.-.1,._.

Williams'

..... . . . . ..

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3 ·

\SANTA ANA, Calif. - Terry
Lee Vallance and Tammy Lee
Fuller were united In marriage ·
with a double ring ceremony July
10.
The bride was given In marriage by her father, Gary Fuller
of Nowata, Okla. The wedding
took place ln the Hacienda
Chapel ln Santa Ana, Cal if.
Best man was Scott Hlll.
Bridesmaids were Julie Money,
step-sister of the bride, and
Stephanie ,Vallance. Ring bearer
was Mark Vallance. Registering
the guests was Heather Vallance.
The minister was Rev. Jeff
Allsbrook.
'
The couple ls employed at

Northrop Advance Systems Olv' -.
lsion (aircraft) In the Tool:;
Designing Dept. They are resld· .
lng at Huntington Beach, Callt. ~
•

Baseball card
show plarzned

·-·-

~:

WELLSTON - The Wellston "
Ohilico Society js sponsoring a ::
Baseball Card Show Tuesday, :::
November 24 at the Saints Peter and Paul Parish Hall, Wellston,- ~
Ohio,

:.

The Card Show begins at 5 p.m.::,·
'and conllnues untll10 p.m.
:For more informatlon phone-;:
614-384-3850.
·- ·
•

1 OU{t(.E .999 FINE SILVER

Jenkins anniversary observed
MIDDLEPORT-- Mr. and Mrs.
Lanny Jenkins, Beech St. Middleport, will observe their 25th
wedding anniversary Tuesday .
Mrs. Jenkins ls the daughter of
the late George and Mary Nesselroad, Pomeroy. and her husband

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio=- Point Rleasant, W.Va.

SILVER CHRISTMAS BARS

. MR. ·and MRS RUSSELL CAPEHART

c CLIFTON,

November 22, 1987

TOUCHSTONE
HOME VIDEO

~-.

.

HANSEN and PAMELA (REffiEL) BUCKLEY

TERRY and TAMMY (FULLER) VALLANCE

Buckley-Reibel
POMEROY - Pamela Dawn
Riebel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John Riebel. Sr .. and Hansen
Bryce Buckley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Buckley, Pomeroy ,
were united ln marriage Oct. 10
at Mullen-Memorial Bapti st
Church, Belpre.
The Rev. Mark McClung,
former pas tor of Middleport
First Baptist Church, performed
the double-ring candlelight ceremony. Music was by Sharon
Hawley, organist and vocalist,
and Chris Rouse, pianist.
An archway decorated with
pink and burgandy roses with Ivy
flanked by two seven branch
ca ndelabra , a kneeling bench,
palms and two large fern decorated the altar. Lighted aisle
candelabra with bows marked
the family pews.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a taffeta
gown fashioned with a high
beaded lace co llar, illusion yoke,
fitted sweetheart bodice and
basque waist styled with reembroidered alencon lace accented with seed pearls and
sequins. Double puff tops
crowned the s heer fitted sleeves
and scalloped edge of alencon
la ce encircled the full skirt and
chapel length trai n which was
adorned with beaded lace.
The brIde's tiered fingertip veil
and blusher of illusion fell from
lace tiara crown, gift of her
maternal grandmothers. She
carried a cascade arrangement
of pink and burgandy sllk roses,
stephanotis , baby's breath and
ivy attached to a mother-of-pearl
Bible which her parents brought
from the Holy Land. She wore
diamond earrings, g ift of the
groom, pearl earri ngs, a gift of
her parenis. and an emerald ring
borrowed from her aunt.
Robin Pitzer, Long Bottom,
was maid of honor. She wore a
floor-length gown of burgandy
satin wlth a sweetheart neckline,
puffed sleeves and a contrasting
train of pink and burgandy. In

pink satl n of Identical style were
the bridesmaids , Tammy Morton, Belpre, cousin of the bride,
Lori Louks of Long Bottom and
Melissa Scarbrough of Tuppers
Plains. They wore Hower combs
in their hair and carried lighted
hurricane lamps with rings of
pink and burgandy silk roses and
tri·gold bracelets , gifts of the
bride.
Flower girls were Jessica
Watson, Little Hocking, bride's
cousin, and Juli Bailey , Pomeroy, groom's cousin, in pink satin
long dresses with back bows and
ruffles in l)urgandy and pink and
halos of minature roses. They
carried white wicker baskets of
pink rose petals.
Chris Ball, Pomeroy, nephew
of the bridegroom, was ring
bearer. Kevin Buckley, Pomeroy, was best man for his
brother, and ~he groomsmen
were Scott Robinett, Lancaster,
the groom's cousin, John Riebel,
Jr. brother of the bride, and
Charles Massar . The groom wore
a charcoal tuxedo. His attend·
ants wore dauphin gray acc.essorized in the wedding colors. All
had pink rose boutonnieres
Mrs . Reibel wore a pink floor
length gown, and Mrs. Buckley, a
mauve tea' length dress. Both had
pil'l~ and i1,urgandy silk rose
corsages. Jo Ann Watson, Belpre, aunt of the bride, re!(lstered
guests.
The reception followed in the
church fellowship room. Jocelyn
Bailey, groom's aunt, baked the
three-tiered fountain cake wlth
stairwa ys holding replicas of the
wedding party extending to four
side cakes and inscribed hearts haped cakes . Mrs . Bailey,
Tammy Boyer, Charlotte Hanning, Vicki Morton, an~ Melissa
McElfresh, cousins, served.
Eve Watson , Amber Watson,
Michelle Buckley and Kelli Bailey, all relatives, passed out pink
and burg andy rose flo wers made
by the Busy Bees 4-H Club.
The couple reside at 36767
Texas Road , Pomeroy

Senior Citizen Centers
will observe Thanksgiving
GALLIPOLIS- Activities and a.m. featuring Jan Laven dar and
menus for the week of November Cathy McDaniel , ceram ics 10-12
23 through November 27, ·at the - Wednesday -Social Security
Senior Ci tizens Center, 220 Jack- Representative 10-12, Bingo 1-2,
Bowling 1:30
son Pike, are as follows:
Monday - Chorus, 1-3 p.m.;
Thursday and F r iday- Center
Cen ter Blood Pressure Check.
will be closed for Thanksgiving
Tuesdav - S.T.O.P./Physical holiday
Fitness, io:30 a.m.; ThanksgivFriday night - Round and
square dance 8-11, with mus\G.by
ing Program &amp; Dinner.
Wednesday- Card Games, 1-3 True Country, admission $1.50
p.m.
per person.
Thursday- Closed- ThanksReservations for the Thanksgiving Day
giving dinner needed to be made
Friday- Closed- Thanksgiv- last week, please call the Center
ing Holiday.
a t 992-2161 to cancel your meal if
you are unable to attend.
Menus consists of: •
Monday- Cheeseburger, oven
The Senior Nutrition Program
fries. s pinach with vinegar, bun, menu is:
pear half with jello sprinkles.
Monday - Baked steak,
Tuesday - Turkey/ Gravy, mashed potatoes, lima beans,
dressing, green beans, cran~ cookie
berry sauce, mashed pota toes,
Tuesday - Roast turkey,
roll, pumpkin pie / whipped mashed potatoes and gravy,
topping.
green beans and corn, cranberry
Wednesday - Pork Chops, au sauce, pumpkin cookie ·
gratin potatoes, broccoli, whole
Wednesday- Sloppy joe, oven
grain bread, graham cracker browned potatoes, cole slaw,
dcsert / cho.colate pudding.
brownie
Thursday - Closed Choice of beve rage available
't h
1
Friday- Closed- Than~sgivThanksgiving
ing Holiday
Choice of coffee, tea, lema·
nade, milk, or buttermilk with
each meal.
Pomeroy -The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center has the
following activities scheduled for .
the·week of Nov. 16-20:
Monday - Round and square
dance 1-3, Exercise Class 3:30
Tuesday - Thanks giving
Dinner, mus ical program at 11

The
Shoe Cafe

t-;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;r"

GALLIA MEDICAL SUPPLIES
53 COURT STREET

Tuesday: Porter, 1:30-1: 50;
Eno , 2: 00-2: 20; Africa Road,
2: 25·2: 40; Kyger 1Sisson). 2:452:55; Kyger !Rope), 2:57-3:07;
Roush Lane I. 3: 15-3: 30; Roush
Lane II. 3:35-4:00; supper, 4:00·
4: 30; Cheshire (old school),
4: 40-5: 35; Addison !towns house). 5:45-6:00; Georges Creek
(Kelly Dr.), 6: 10-6: 40; Kanauga
5th Ave., 6:50-7: 10; Foster 's
Mobile Home Park, Rt. 7, 7: 15·
7: 40; K&amp;K Trailer Park, Rt. 7,
7:45-8: 05
Wednesday ' No route, mainte·
nance day .
Thursday: No route,
Thanksgiving.
Frid1ty: Fast Stop, 1:00-1: 15;
Banes, 1:20·1:30; Youngs, 1:351:45; Franklin (Clay Ch.) , 1:55·
2: 10; Roma Myers, 6:15-6: 30;
Ohio Townhouse, 6: 45-7: 10; Kenny's Carryout, 7:25-7: 50 ; Teen 's
Run, 8: 00-8:25
SATURJ)AY: Crousebeck,
1e:00-10; 30; ' Gallia Metro Estates : Office, 10:45-11: 15; Hill,
11: 20-12: 00; lu nch. 12: 00·12: 30;
Alice, 1: 00-1: 30; Vinton, 1:452:15; Morgan Center Road, 2:20·
2: 50; Morgan Center, 3; 00-4:00

MEIGS COUNT
POMEROY- Bookmobile service In Meigs Co unty is provided
by the Meigs County Public
Library under contract wit h the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL).
Monday: Burlingham (County
Mobile Home Park), 3:30-4: 30;
Harrisonville (Church) , 5:006: 00; New Lima Road (1 mlle
south of Fort Meigs), 6:40-7:40

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

(Located between Oscar's and Mack's Auto)

Home Health Supplies
'oil PPI .IE!'I-t .un\ alto!',
Squ ihh. Holli•tt-r, t-Ic·.

O~T0\1\

llli\RF.l'll.

~II'PI.IF.~

OBI'~

. EQt 'tPMEIIIT
' rin,:ton,

AOI 'LT

sw .... n. ft~rt'~h·t· h

Ot~Pf. R~

•nd l 'lllfR-

PAD~

RF., F.'I;~I'Rf. Pll S.
PI'LMOCi\RE

"UKERS. "HEELCHAIRS.
C4.~E!'ii,

t&gt;lt·.

RACK. ~F.CK. K"EE Sl 'PPORTS
anrl BRACt.S

ORF.S~tN(;,;

CERTIFIED F!TIER and PRIVATE FITTING ROOM ·

Mon.-Fri. 9 AM-5 PM
No PaperworkComputerized Billing

"

FORM~

unrl BHA!"i
F.:\~1

SKI'\; f.ARF. PROOII:l',-C.,.

..

BACK RESTS

MA~TU:TOMY

and

.

'

614-446-6949

SUSAN ELLIOTT, RN, C.F.
Manager

'• '

-

..'-'. .

........
'1,.;-.•

I

""'--·
"'
.-.....-•..
~-­

-~­

...
'-...--·
~

·.-·...,....-

··-

r~W~l~Jl1~e;a;.::::::::::::::::~~===================:==========~~~==========;

Diamond

Ciusters
YOUR
CHOICE

Bookmobile routes slated
GALLIA COUNTY
GALLIPOLIS - Bookmobile
schedules fo r Ga llia Co unty are
(Oct. 25-0ct. 31)
Monday: Lewis Drive, 9:4510:15; Sun ·Valley , 10:25-10:55;
Pinecrest, 11:00-11:15; 35 West
Apt., 11:20-11: 35; Scenic Hills.
11: 40-12: 10; C&amp;S Bank, 12: 1512:30: lunch, 12:30-1: 00; Rio
Grande (Jones). 1:30-1: 45; Rio
Mini Mart , 1:50-2 :30; Kerr
1P.O.), Bidwel l, 4:15-4: 35; Old
School, 4:45-4: 35; Nolans, 5: 155: 35; Carl Phillips, 5:45-6: 00;
William Henry, 6:02-6: 15; Coch·
rans 1Adamsville), 6: 20-6: 45;
Deer Creek, 6:55-7: 10; Deer
Cree k Church, 7: 15:7: 30; Rio
Grande E states. 7:45-8:30

:100 Second, \ve.
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, 0.

•

1S

1/4 CARAT

S179
lf2 CARAT

S495

Tawney Jewelers
422 Second, Gallipolis

YOU'RE INVITED
TO OUR ANNUAL

C5R!Stii1BS
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29th
ll P.M. TO 5 P.M.
US LIGHT UP YOUR LifE AT OLIR

HAPPY HOLIDAYS
·OPEN HOUSE

We're 11low with wonduful Jifts. dttorations 1nd lbt ..
holiday spirit. SlOP bW to 111 tltt sptelll rtew thlnts
we·n mattd f01 ~u this Jllr ... idtu 'olortul .and
tmiq 11 e .. ldtu tw~n.. ina and tr~dili~n~l ... aU ,d iiiJMd
to
tltt eMir ol Cttristns 1nto (lijr lilt.

COIU TO SEE USI WE'll lAVE 0001
PlllES, IIFIESIIMEIITS AIID SAIIT AWill
U HEIE wnH nun FOI THE liDS.

i
w
i

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
614 / 992-2644
Migs Cou n1 y's Olde&lt;r Florisr
.

If you haven't visited Shoney's Breakfast Bar lately, you're in
for a pleasant surprise. In fact, lots of pleasant surprises.
Because we've added lots of new items like cinnamon drop
. biscuits, scrambled eggs toppings, sausage rice, mini sweet
rolls, gra(:lefru'it halves, apple cakes, cinnamon butter, glazed
fruit salad, fresh fruit yogurts, French toast and pancakes
every day.
Visit Shoney's Breakfast Bar, available until 11 a.m. ,
Monday through Friday, and until 2 p.m. on .weeken_ds.

. SHONE~
America's Dinner Table®
328 VINE STREET -

PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~!.! L--------------------~---------------------.r----------------------------J
.,

,

'

�•

·'

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

Page-B-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Flu clinic planned in Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - The flnal flu
will be held Nov . 24 In the
Gallia County Health Department, located In the basement of
the county courthouse.

~ l i nic

Hours for administration of the
flu vaccine will be 9 a.m. to 11:30
a. m. and 1 p.m . to 3:30p.m .
The vaccine will be administered free of charge to Gallla
County residents. No appointment Is necessary for this No-

'

j

vember 24 Flu Clinic. The supply
of the flu vaccine is limited.
The week of the Thanksgiving
Holiday TB skin tests wlll be
given on Monday, Novem~r 23.
1987, and read on Wednesday,
November 25. Immunizations
wll I be given on the regular
schedule of Tuesday and Friday,
8 a.m. to 11:30 a .m. and 1 p.m. to
' 3:30p.m.
If there are any questions,
please call 446-4612, Ext. 292.

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio-Ppint Pleasant. W. Va .

November 22. 1987

November 22, 1~7

Cantrell r~tnniversary to be noted
GALLIPOL IS -Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Cantrell of GaiUpolis. wUI
celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary on Nov. 30. She is the
former June Hartley, daught&lt;!r
of the late Mr. a nd Mrs. Homer A.
Hartley of Middleport, Ohio, and
he Is the son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Hirani H. Cantrell of
Gallipolis.
··
They were married November
30, 1937 In the parsonage of tbe
Firs! Baptist Church of Gallipolis

by the late Rev. George Sagan.
They are the parents of William
0 . Cantrell or Galllpolls and the
late Thomas Allen Cantrell. They
also have two gran4sons, and a
granddaughter. Their 'f amily Is
hosting an open reception for
them on ,Sunday, Nov. 29, at the
First Presbyterian Church In
CaiUpoUs from 1 until 3 p.m. The ·
Cantrells request that gifts be
omitted.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
.Monday fhru Sunday

8 AM-10 PM

--·

Church purchases building,
remodeling begins in Middleport
MIDDLEPORT - Pastor MIchael Pangia announces that the
Rejoicing Life Baptist Church in
Middleport has purchased the
.former R.C. Bottling Co ., buildjng on North Second Ave.,
Middleport.
Remodeling of the 14.000
squa re foot structure will ta ke
approximately two and one-half
years. _,Upon completion, the
facility will Inc lude a sanctuary
seating 1,100 people, Sunday
school classrooms, nursery accomodatlons, offices and a fellowship hall.
At that time, the presen1
church, also on North Second
Ave. in Middleport, will be used
to house junior church for youth,
for additiona l class rooms for
)lpper grades in 1ne chu rch's
Christian School and add it io na l

offices .
The ministries of !he Rejoicing
Life Churc h include: Sunday and
Wednesday services; nursery
and children's services lor ages
one through 12 at each regularly
scheduled meeting of the church;
co ntinuous effor ts to meet the
needs of teens by the use of
videos, monthly teen gatherings
and Sunday school; bi-monthly
home care group meeti ngs in
homes lor the purpose of caring
for one ano1her;
full time.
counse\lng m inis1ry using up to
date methods with a Biblical
foundation by a trained counselor, a nd operation lor !he Christian School which is open to the
public for grades K through six.
Anyone wishing information
may call 992-6249.

Quirks in the news
Who zeJ"oed Babe?: BELOIT, that lte,n be served."
·.
Wis. (UP!) - Gun and hunting
Cblacu-ji'orsythe, a mother of
enthusiasts want to find out who tht~. called. Twinkles a prime
MR. and MRS. OWEN CANTRELL
shot Babe - a two-ton steer example of "empty calories."
reported to be one of the blgges t Her stance was supported 1hls
In the world- between the eyes. week by the rest· of lite School
Babe was recovering from the Committee.
GALLIPOLIS - The Catholic on Nov . 25 from 10 a.m. to 2 p,lfl.
wound received last weekend,
Kaveny said If students can't Women Club of St. Louis Church in the church hall . Bring Y_.
but area hUnters are concerned get Twinkles In ·the schoQis; will ha e C ft/F 11 ·•·sltl D
lunch and_ crafts.
the shooting will give th&lt;!m a bad tlley 'll just have to go around the r-r:;;;:;;v;;;;;:a:;;;:r:;a:;;;::;e=o:w==p=a~y=========;:::=::::;;;:;.
name. They have started a corner to the local convenience
reward lund to try to find 5
someone who has Information
L
J_
.
about the shooting. So far, Utey KAUKAUNA, Wis. (UP!) (J/CUVj~
have collected $1 ,500.
StudMts at Quinney Junior High
Pollee said Babe was on the SchOOl who don 't eat everything
grounds of Joe Ryan's farm wh&lt;!n on theif lunch plate may soon
the steer was grazed between the . face punishment If a plan that
,
eyes with a .22-callber bullet .
for wasting
_·
The extent of Babe's Injury has
'From 1984. until last spring,
not been determined because no
one has been able to get close students were given detentions,
enough to the steer to take a look. rele!(ated to half portions the
Ryan said he had consldenod next day or barred from taking
having Babe tranquilized, but he desoerts when they did not clean
was conce rned that It would be their plates without go_od reason.
too dangerous.
Students who carried their food
"Once he gets going there's no from home did not face such .
stopping him," .Ryan said.
penalties.
Some parents complained and
Twinkles axed from sehoel
menu : WOONSOCKET, R.I. the school discontinued the prac(UP! ) - A state education official tice. but lunchroom supervisor
has bowed to local pressure and Kenneth Smith has now asked the
says he will never again offer School Board lor approval to
Twinkles on the ltlenu of state reinstate lt .
schools.
·
"It seems to be a sign of the
''There are a million pros and a times In tfiis throwaway society
million cons over what 's nutri- that If you buy It, you cando what
tious." 1\obert Kaveny , state you want with It," Smith said. He
manager ilf'"school food services, added that he .abhOrred waste
said Thursday. "There are many and believed children should be
children out there who need taught responsible eating habits.
Smith, who has been a teacher
sugar."
for
more than 30 years, said he
For !hal reason, Kaveny decided to put Twinkles on the wlll at least ask the board for an
anti-waste program to begin Jn,
lunch menu for 70,000 Rhode
second or third grade so that ''by
&amp;
Island school kids on Oct. 27.
the time they get older. It will be
He said he makes sure Rhode
Instilled In them."
Island 's school lunches follow
and
The Polley and Procedures
federal nutritional guidelines,
Committee
of
the
School
Board
but he said· he also believes In
~
has been studying the matter and
offering Items that children are
SALE ENDS DEC. 5Tio1
may have a recommendation for
willing to eat.
412 SECOND- DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
the board next month.
"I've tried everything over the
years," he said. "I've tried
carrot sticks, I'Ve tried celery
filled wl1h cheese and the kids
BEAT THE HIGH COST OF BEING
just leave them on their plates."
The dietician said that al·
STRANOED ON A WINTERS NIGHT
though It "was a big day for the
kids," he'll never do It again
because of a heated protestfrom
a Woonsocket School Committee
Chlllrwoman Christine Chlacu·
Forsythe.
Chiacu-Forsythe objected in a
strongly worded protest to
Kaveny.
"I'm not saying Twinkles
shouldn't be consumed at all, but
not in our school system /' she
said. " I am absolutely offended. I
can't believe a dietician would let

Craft Day set

"Holi flJillJ
VI In d0 wsh0pp• n sale
(t,_?

~dshavetocleanthelrplates:

~~~j:l:1sn:t~t~~ts

~,;,.

'Custom (or!. ·:~~ ~ !OC!_~u~r~~~~;

I

SAVE UP TO 35°/o ON
MIDWEST DRAPERIES SHIARS
KIRSCH VERTICAL BLINDS
MINI BLINDS, WOVEN WOOD'
PLEATED SHADES

MR. and MRS. ARTHUR EBLIN

:Eblins observe anniversary
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Eblin recently celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary
wi1h a family observance a1 !he
home of 'Mr. and Mrs. Ca r l
DeLong.
Mr . and Mrs. t.blln were
mar ried on Nov. 4, 1937 by Earl
'fi tus in Pomeroy _
: They have three children,
Kenneth Eblin a nd Ge ne\'leve
DeLong of Pomeroy. and Doris
Mu rray, Apache Jet., Ariz. ;
seven grandchldren. a nd lou r

great ·grandc hildren.
Refreshments were served to
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Eblin, Mr .
and Mrs. Rick E dwards, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim McDonald and son,
Mike, Mr. and Mrs. Carl DeLong,
and the honored gues ts .

Bake sale
GALLIPOLIS- Amer ican Legion Auxiliary will bold a bake
sale, 9 a.m. Haskins and
Tanners.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-B-5

-----------

PRE-WINTER SAVINGS
NOW AT JIM COBB

..
..------

BEAT WlfiER CAR WOES
AND SAVE COlD · cASH
I

IN 111E BARGAIN
1 . 0 rain and flush rad.iet&amp;r
2. Teat pressure
3. Inspect for leaks
4. Check all hoses and clamps
&amp;. Check fan belts
6. Refill with coolant

You're Invited To Our 28th Annual Christmas

Open lliJuge

I
tl®lOk)l
s~c; I
pq

CHECK ON OTHER SPECIALS
ON TUNE-UPS AND
OIL CHANGES

WRI L. HOWELL
LARRY D. ARTHUR

HowellArthur
GALLIPOLIS- Mr . and Mrs .
Ballard L. Howell of Ga llipolis
. announce the ~orth coming marriage of their daughter Lori L.
Howell to Larry D. Ar1hur, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Arthur of
,Gallipolis.
The open -c hurch wedding will . ·
take place December at 7 p.m. a1 '
the First Church of The Nazarene
Galllpolls. A Reception will Immediately follow In the Fetlow·shlp Hall.

MIXED
.

~ryer

Whole Fryers .... ~B··· 49&lt;
FRONTIER

Sliced Bacon ••••••••• 79&lt;
LB.

TURKEY

Drumsticks ••.•.••• ~•• ~ 33&lt;

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

Turkey •••••••••••••••••• 79&lt;
TOMS 16-22 LB.

ANITA ARROWOOD
PAUL MCCOY

ArrowoodMcCay
OAK HILL - Mr. and Mrs.
Ervin Arrowood o!St"f{t. 297 Qa k
Hill, announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of
heir daughter, Anita Arrowood,
to Paul McCoy, son of Mr. a nd
'Mrs. Don McCoy, Hyland Lane,
Oak Hill.
Miss Arrowood is e nrolled In
the Cosmetology Class at Buck·
eye Hills Career Center.
McCoy Is a graduate of Oak
Hill High School and Buckeye
. Hills Career Center, He Is employed by Broads tone Tool &amp; Die
of McArthur.
The open-church wedding has
been set for 1: 30 p.m. Saturday
Dec. 19, at !he Thurman Methodist Church, Thurman wl1h Rev.
Dirk Elliott Pe rformin g the
double-ring ceremony.

LB.

QUARTER

Pork Loin •••••••••• ~•• $129
.
.

~

.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

·

Chuck Roast ••••• ~..

$ 59
1

.

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

99
$ausage ••••.•••••••~•• $1

S2595

;-•

I

•

Cranberries •••1:.a.z.:K:•• 79&lt;

.

. BROUGHTON'S

2°/o Milk ••••••••••~A!.•• $149

________

r------ ---.I·r--------..,I

9:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.
*Yards and Yards of New Garland
*Christmas Arrangements (Live, Permanent &amp; Silk) ·
•Candles &amp; Candle Rings
*Gr~ve Blankets and Sprays
*Door Wreaths
•Poinsettias
•Potted Plants
*Potpourri Cookers
*Fruit Baskets

FRONT END ALIGNMENT

S2600

Ind...:

-c.nbeJ Alljtntm1nt

::::'t:ch,..
11

I

With Coupon
~fer Adjwstmtt~t

::.~oclcu....,.

Cho&lt;lc

EXTRA LARGE

Eggs •• ~ ••••••••••••••~a;••• 59&lt;

I·26 POJNT SAFETY CHECI
I . . $1500
11
_ . With Coupon I
~~ ~~

OtfwGoodWithC"u ponUntil12 / 31 / l?

I

LORI J. KLOES
TERRY E. HERRON

DOMINO lOX, LT. OR DARK BROWN

Off• Good With Coupon Unti 1213 1/ 87

KloesHerron

I• l§i.r.:.1:'~m.
Jl
L--~~~------L---------·
I ----------·
- ..
JIM COBB I

Chti1fms1 Giffg Fot Thsf
Hatd fo Bug Fot Pet1on
3 DOOR PRIZES EACH DAY!!
GRAND PRIZE: Cut Flower Arrangement
Each Month For One Year.
" Lorol Delivery Only"
Plan to be with us for our "Opening" of
the Christmas Season.

fl.:;:~Wmm )!.~

Chev .-Oids.-Cad.
614-992-6614

308 E. Main, Pomeroy, Oh.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

l"
L /. ~
,
fV./1 .~

PH, 992 -2039
106 Butternut Ave.
992-5721
Pomeroy, Oh .
We Accep1 All Mojor Credit Cards &amp; Wire Flowers Everywhere

~ GMQUALIIY
t~l UI!I/ICl PARTS

....... ............_
~

..

-}lio ,:;,.:u..,_,._

I

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
• Mrs. Manning Kloes of Middle' port , announ ce !he engagemen1
' and a pproaching marriage of
thee ir daughter. Lori Jean Kloes,
to Terry E. Herron, son of Mr.
and Mr s. Earl He.rron ,
-Lancaster.
• Miss Kloes is a graduate of
; Meigs High Sc hool and Buch•ye
Hills SchOol of Practical
Nursing.
Herron is a gradu ate of Aman ada High Sc hool .
An open church wedding is
being planned for Dec. 26 at 6:30
• p.m. at the Firs t Baptist Church,
' Lancaster . A reception will fol• Jow at the Holiday Inn .

COMPUTERIZED
ENGINE ANALYST

I

I
I
I '

Parts.'...... ~.~- 39&lt;

Now Only

I
JIM COBB
I Chevrolft·Oid-•IIIII
I Ofltr GoodCadillac
Until 12-31-17
I
With Coolt®l·::~:.u:i . \(J )i, lj;.,j~_,

*DOOR PRIZES*FREE GIFTS*REFRESHMENTS

SATURDAY, NOV~MBER 28, 1987
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1987

SPECIAL
7·POINY
PRE-WINYER
· SAYINGS

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., NOV. 28, 1987

$2 600

With .Coupon

Offer Good With Coupon Until 12 / 31 / -7

-

I
L ............
[®].r.:..Tm ii!i )., ~

,... ""'. ' . .

.
Sugar •••••••••••••••••
LB. BOX

2I $1

BIRDS-EYE

Cool Whip ••..••.••!~~·. 69&lt; -

•

WAGNER'S ORANGE or

RHODES FROZEN

,

.Grape Drink •• ;:~!-. •• 89(

·

·

Dinner Rolls •• ~2.~A:. 2

• •••••
COUPON ••••••
....
. ...... •
.
.
.
.
.
.
..... ' •·····couPON·······
·····couPON·······
.
...
.
•
•
•
•
•
coo
·
~
'PON
·
·
•
•
•
·
·
•
• •
• •
• • JOAN OF ARC LIGHT RED
:
. BETT-Y CROCKER
:
I

••
•

I

I

I

•

I

I

•

Cake Mixes

~ s~~z. 3 f$2
18

" limit 1 P11 Customer
•
• Good Only AI Powell'• Supermarket
• . Offer Good Thru Nov. 28, 1917

I

I

I

••
••
••

•

-

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN

TIDE DETERGENT

NOODLE SOUP

• lg;,s

1

.....

I

•
•

3f$1

limil 1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's Supermarket
Olfer Good Thru No•. 28, 1987

•
•••
oz.
147

•

•

•••••••••••••••••••••

KIDNEY BEANS

$599

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell 's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Nov. 28, t987

~i~

... ,,.......... .•
•

•

3/S·l

limit 3 Per Cui1omer
Good Only AI Powell 's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Nov. 28, 1987

.•

• ••••••••••••••••••••

�'

Page-B-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

November 22, 1987

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

Community -calendar

Millionaire offers $1,000 prizes to virgin teenagers

]Fl( .assassinated
24 years ago Surtday
1

By RENE STUTZMAN
73, of San Francisco was on~ of
DALLAS I UP)) - For 24 years scores of . tourists strolling
they have come, armspolntingat through Dealey Plaza, just south
the blank sixth floor .window of of where Kennedy was shot,
the Texas Schoolbook Deposi- asking directions about where to
tory, eyes searching for the spot find the Texas Schoolbook
near the grassy knoll where a Depository .
sniper's bullets mortally
''I remember distinctly when it
wounded a president.
happened ," said Brady. "SomeIt was Nov. 22, 196:f, when one came in · with - how can I
President John F. Kennedy was e~press the look on his face'- an
assassinated on the west edge of Incredible, unbelieving, mystical
downtown Dallas.
expression on his face. His eyes
Despite the passage of 24 were wide. He said, 'Kennedy 's
years, scores of people still visit been shot.'
..
the assassination site dally. They
''I thought, 'Who is this guy
.a re tourists mostly, dressed In trying to make a big entrance? '
casual clothes with cameras but his expression didn ' t
around their necks, but when change." Tears came to Brady's
they reach the.spotonElmStreet eyees. "I didn't know what. to
where the shots rang .out, their say. I was speechless, dumb·
voices become muted, their founded . ... I couldn't. do any
words reverent.
work.''
''Oh, Jesus. Qh holy Jesus,"
"At that point I was ready to
breathed Roger Leger, 40, a break .into tears."
stock broker from Moncton, New
"It seems l!ke it's not so long
Brunswick, Canada, as he looked ago. What was It, 24 years?" said
for the first limo;&gt; at the School· Landry.
book Depository.
It was from a window on
building's sixth floor where Lee
Harvey Oswald, a former Ma·
rlne, fired the shots that killed
Kennedy, the Warren CommisBy WILLIAM C. TROTT
sion concluded.
l1nlted
Press International
"Have you ever had a chilling
STAGE FRIGHT HITS:
feeling down your back?" Leger
asked. "You can feel President Joh!lny Carson had to deal with a
Kennedy was killed somewhere serious case of stage fright
· afflicting an 8-year-old .guest
near here.' '
Thursday night. Hailey Nance of
It was a complicated crime.
the assassination of a president, Renton, Wash .. was to be Carand before the country could son's first "Tonight" guest and
recover, the murder of the talk about how she served as
suspected assassin in the base- principal of her school for a day.
ment of Dallas police But Hailey refused to come out,
clutching her mother and moanheadquarters.
Ing just outside the curtain.
Investigators concluded that
Carson came over to 1ry to
Oswald acted alone, but that did soothe her and quickly suggested
not quiet a flurry of conspiracy Hailey - who had missed a
theories.
chance a week earlier to be on the
Whether people believe the show because of the flu - come
theories or not, they gravitate back another night. But Hailey
toward the Schoolbook Deposi- gathered her strength and retory, a squat, red brick building turned at the end of the show,
that anchors the northwest appearing long enough to tell
comer of downtown.
Carson that the best thing about
"It Is just, too, I don't know. her day as principal was "giving
For some reason I had pictured all the other children ice cream
that building taller than that," for free."
said Norman Landry, 46, of
The Carson show sought out
Moncton, N.B., Canada.
Hailey after she won a contest by
Dallas County has bought the reading 118 books in a school
building and renovated the bot- summer reading contest. Her
tom five floors.
prize "(as either $20 In toys or a
The ·boxes of books behind day in her principal's chair at
which Oswald is said to have Bryn Mawr Elementary SchooL
hidden have been removed, but She picked the chair.
otherwise, the sixth floor rel1P IN SMOKE: Bob Dylan lost
mains much the same.
about $17,000 worth of tools, yard
By this time next year, the equipment and personal items In
Dallas County Historical Foun- a garage fire at his Malibu home
dation hopes to have a $1.5 Thursday night. Early indica·
million exhibit al1out the assassi- lions are that the fire was started
·nation opened there.
by spontaneous combustion of'
"Weare nota museum. Weare paint and chemicals stored in the
not going to have artifacts: No, garage. Dylan wasn't at home at
we will not have a gun," said the time of the fire but the setting
Lindalyn Adams, leader of the
newly accelerated exhibit effort.
"There will be a recreated
area by the window. It will have
book boxes and will be (based on
information) from police photographs to show how he concealed
himself by the book boxes,"
Adams sAid of Oswald.
For 10 years Adams has fought
to open the sixth floor to visitors.
"You are tall1ing to a person ·
who has always l,.oted the Republican ticket for as long as I could
vote, but I don't think I've ever

called who said, ·we want to give
a preference to those girls."'
La Corte said he chOse 19 as a
cutoff "because &lt;!I ag'e 19 a girl
has matured. If they can pre·
serve themselves untu 19 they
can preserve themselves untU
they're married:"
He said he hopes the lottery
program, limited to Brooklyn,
Queens and Staten Island - ·'the
718 area code'' - will be a model
for cities around the country.
La Corte, said he moved from
the Jersey City, N.J., to Italy
with his parents at age 3, and

"I talk to God every night," La
By SARAH RAPER
NEW YORK (UPI) - An Corte said. "I asked, 'Show me
elderly millionaire, Inspired in a the way how I can help,' and r got
dream to "help young people the Idea In a dream." •
La Corte plans to record the
regain some of their lost morals," said Saturday he nas set up names of girls who wa.n t to
a lottery offering $1,000 to teen - participate and to hold an ·annual
age girls who can prove their lottery for !hose who ha:ve turned
19.
vlrgln!ty at age 19.
Those teens whose names are
· John Napoleon La Corte, 79,
told. United Press International drawn - the number would
that dozens of teenage girls have depend each year on the amount
asked to participate in his of money available - wouid be
''Model Student" project, which awarded $1,000 !f they could offer
will be financed with some of the proof of their virginity. Those not
millions he made In the Insu- chosen would receive buttons
designating them "Super Model
rance industry.
"I'm an old man and Tbelieve Students."
Details such as what would
that I should Invest my money to
see that . you ng people regain constitute proof of virginity still
some of their lost morals," John must be worked out, La Corte
Napoleon La Corte, 79, told said, but the phones already are
United Press International on ringing off the hook.
Saturday.
"We've been bombarded.
"We have to do something to There were 37 girls who called
bring back the tradition of today," La Corte Said, adding
virginity that was once our that they ranged In age from 13
to 17 and had all asked to
backbone."
La Corte said he anguis hed participate.
"Some of their parents called
over what he could do to solve the
up.
I got a lot of calls from young
problems of teenage pregnancy
men
who said they wanted the
and sexually transmitted diseases, including AIDS, that he names' of these g!~ls. Employers
believes threaten the family.

People in the· news

inspired the lawmen who came
out to investigate.
"The deputies would have told
me if anything really Important was burned," said Sheriff's Sgt.
Kevin Mauch . "They've been
walking around all night singing
these songs I haven't heard In
years. It's kind of wild."
· .
BEGIN MAKES GRAVE
Former Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin, who
rarely ventures out since his
wife, Allza, died, visited her
grave Friday to mark the fourth
anniversary of her death, Begin,
74, looked gaunt and was supported by his two daughters as he
walked from the car to the grave,
where he recited the Hebrew
prayer for the dead.
VISIT:

~BASKETBALL

SHOES

AISENAL KW

S4900

returned to Brooklyn with 17
cents In his pockets on July 4,
1929, his birthday. He called his
"Model Student" program a way
to thank God for his financial .,
success.
La Corte said ·the Better World
J .L. Institute lie · founded will
oversee the program and a
similar one In which youths who
can prove they have not used
alcohol or drugs also w!ll receive
$1,000 rewards.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Arthritis Foundation
monthly meeting will be held
Nov. 23 at 7 p.m. at the
Presbyterian Church.
Diane Boster, branch director
of Southwestern Ohio Chapter of
the National Arthritis Founda·
t!on, will speak on the Self-Help
courses and support groups, and
how Individuals can benefit from
these groups.
All persons having arthritis
and Interested in how to help
themselves are encouraged to
attend this Important meeting.
Other persons Interested in
knowing more about arthritis or
how to help people with arthritiS'
are also welcome.

Food distribution
has extended hours
GALLIPOLIS - The GalliaMelgs Community Action
Agency will be holding an ex·
tended Food Commodity Dlstrl·
butlon . In Gallla and Meigs
counties as follows.
In Gallla County the distribution will be at the Gallla County
Fairgrounds Nov. 23 from 12:30
p.m. to 3 p.m. In Meigs County
the distribution will he at the
Meigs United Methodist Cooper·
atlve Parish Office, half a mile
off Ohio 7 at Rocksprings, Nov. 25
from 10 a.m. to noon.
This distribution Is for those
persons holding cards who did
not receive commodities on Nov.
19. No new applications will be
filled out on this day.

PORTER - Pearly Gates wlll
sing at Clark Chapt&gt;l Church ,
Sunday, 10 a.m.

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

Craft Day
GALLIPOLIS - The Cathollc
Women Club of St. Louis Church
will have a Craft/Fellowship Day
on Nov. 25 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
In the Church hall . Bring -your
lunch and crafts.

EWINGTON Gloryland
Grass at Ewlngton Church of
Christ in Christian Union, Sunday , 6:30p.m .

MGM dinner
MIDDLEPORT - MGM District, Boy Scouts of America,
recognition dinner will be held on
Dec. 3 at the new American
Legan Hall In Middleport.
Reservations arc to be made
·by Nov. 27 with Lisa Roush, 33178
RACINE- The regular meet · · Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
ing of Sou theril Local Board of 45769, or by calling 992-3486. All
Education will be held Monday at reservations or $6.50 must be
7 p.m. In the high school paid In advance.
cl).feterla.
·
Tickets
POMEROY - Meigs Alumni
POMEROY - Tlcketes for the
Association will hold Its bi- Beta · Sigma Phil Christmas
monthly meeting to discuss the buffet and dance are on sale from
ffrst readilng of the new constl- club officers and chapter
tulon and by-laws, on Monday at members. The eve nt will be Dec.
7 p.m. at the United Method'tst 5, a( the Senior Citizen Center II\.
Church of Pomeroy.
Pomeroy . Social hOur Is 7 to 8
p.m. Tickets are $8 for singles
POMEROY - Pomeroy East·
ern Star 186 will hold a special
meeting for Installation of new
officers for 1988 on Monday , 7: 30
p.m., !n the Chester Masonic Hall
at Chester. Members and officers are asked to bring a relish
tray, dessert or jello salad.

Tbomas Edison invcntL&gt;d the sliJCk
The game of chess dates back to antrcker in !870.
tiquity. Its ongm is unknown.

.

and $16 for couples. It will be
hosfed by Ohio Eta Phi Chapter,
Accepting donations
SYRACUSE - Syt:)'cuse Fire
Department is accepting dona·
tions for Christmas treats. Dona·
lions may be sent to the fire
department at Box 706, Syracuse, or call992-7181 for pick up.
Toys for needy children are·also
being collected. New or very
good used toys are prefered and
anyone wishing to give toys
shou ld call 992-i181 or 992·7775.
Revival
HARRISONVILLE -

sonvllle Holiness Chapel, Route
684. will be !n revival !rom No\L.
28 through Dec. 6 with Sister
Nadine Fetterman , evangelist.
Pasta~ David Ferrell welcomes
the public.

Harrl·

RUTLAND
ship Trustees
lar session at
day at the
Rutland.

5J1 JACKSON l?ti&lt;E · RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446-4524

SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATI NEES
All SEATS 12.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY $1 .99

STAY WARM
THIS WINTER!

STARTING FRIDAY,
NOVEMBER 20th

TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS- Charter night
for GFWC /Community League
of Gallia County, Tuesday,
dinner at 6:30 p.m.; business at
7: 15; Giovanni's on Second Ave.

"DIRTY
DANCING"
NIGHTLY SHOW
7:30 P.M.
ADMISSION Sl.OO

GALLIPOLIS- Rotary meets
at the Down Under. 6 p.m ..
Tuesday.
· 'CHESHIRE- O.E.S. Cheshire
Chapter installation, 7:30 p.m .,
Tuesday. Members bring salad
and sandwiches.

The Ultimate

- Rutland Town·
will meet In regu5:30p.m. Wednes first station in

We offer complete tu ..edo rental
service to help you look your bast
on that spacial day. Priced from

"i.

S29•s

' ••

Groom's tu .. FREE with 6 or more .

HASKINS-TANNER
\

-..

~~

rues Wed lhur
Si1 9 ~

/

~

'

.

ites . Whatever your requirements may be, complete satisfaC·

tion is assured with Rock of Ages .
MONDAY, TUESDAY, THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY 9 :00 TO 4:00
Other hours by apt. by calling 593 -1455

Gallipolis, OH.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Thf' regu lar
meeting of the Meigs County
Litter Control Advisory Board
will be held at the litter control
office at the intersection of Union
Ave. and Route 7, Pomeroy, on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. All
members are asked to a ttend.

'

1n

CARPETING CLEANING

Sl7!~,

WHOLE HOUSE
SPECIAL

$7795

Now. 30, 1987

PEl lOOM - TWO lOOMS 01 MOlE"

Li¥1ng Room, Dining
Aoom . 3 Bedrooms
and H•tl

---crURNITURE CLEANING-.....,
Sofa &amp; Chair ................. ..... '64.95
Sofa &amp; Love Seat ......... .... .. '74.95
Sofa, Love Seat &amp; Chair ...... '84.95

Includes all preconditioning,
Prespotting &amp; Furniture
Moving, if needed.

SERVING ALL OF .
GALLIA-MASON-MEIGS

Jlllllll~llllllllllllllllllllllllill

OUR WARRANTY

Our •port ..... wilt d... .
y-. ..po~ loot,. ...., H""' · ;
otlw -~ ... _ had l
... lht j&amp; It wilt bolrl!#lfw,

Only the professional·
strengt h tru de•IIIOURt
system can dean thelllso
that they STAY CLEAN!

ADVANCED
CARPET CLEANING SERVICE

- ......- ..... lim :
..., 11111 •• ""' that ...., .
"""' -

1446-3915

loogor.

... Completely portable, total ly
self-conta ined.

,FLAIR FVRNITURE

'

.

&amp;DESIGN
87.5-1371

"'"""'

•Guaranteed Results
•6 ·week Course
•Pre-Registration Required
•Special Instruction

We can help you design your memorial so that it will show im·
portant facts about your life for generations to come. Whether it be
an etching; showing your own home or farm, your portraits, a
nature scene or a religious scene, we have superior craftsmen to
help you. Color-art is available so that your design can be in
bea\.Jtlful colqr, If desired .
. Let it stand forever in solemn dignity - a memorial of magnifi·
cent beauty.
. All of our memorials have an everlasting guarantee.

36

$12021 '

:48

$'12491.

48
'·'

S14' 4 ~

36

$·147 71 '

.BUICk LtSAIIE
19,85

SJA.

1982

.

.,

·_ ,.;-·

1tl4

771A

OJ'S Crafts

SPRING VAlLEY PLAZA

CIIM C·10 PICKUP

.

· 3431

r··---------~--------------,
I
COUPON
•.

:0
I

0
0

~oUX .

I
Pleme se nd me FREE booklets showing memorial s I
printed in ful l color with s1ze and prices li s ted .

Kindly have on authorized Logon
representative cal l ot my home .

Monument

tl .

lr~/tm-1 ~

1
Co .

5361

'

' 1611

IUICI LeSABRE

48

1

--~.

CADILLAC ELDOUDO

36

&gt;;;·

CIEV.Y CELEBRITY .·

.36

CIEU

MADE IN U .S A

Please. send me de tai ls abou t mausoleums withou1
obligation .

Nome _______________________________

'
:;'

S18860
S19254
S20615 .
S22623
$236°0

•,' •

Street or Route -~-----------­

OPEN EVENINGS

School board meets

AND SUNDAYS

RACINE- The regular meet ing of Southern Local Board of
Education will be held Monday at
7 p.m. In the high school
cafeteria.

and

Installation ser

n'OW, get up

to

$11 ba~;k from Chi&lt;:,

'

Phone

L----------··••••···--

the world 's best-fitting

POMEROY - Pomeroy Eastern Star 186 will hold a special
l'l'll?etlng for Installation of new
officers for 1988 on Monday, 7:30
p.m., !n the Chester Masonic Hall
at Chester. Members and officers are asked to bring a rei ish
tray, dessert or jello salad.

iegns and panh. Come

In for detads . Chic. .

Mode in the U. S.A .
'Naturally.

I

·,

'I

GM39

----LOGAN MONUMENT -CO.

BY APPOINTMENTS

1

City or Town - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

POMEROY, OHIO

. VINTON, OHIO

MEIGS COUNTY
GALLIA COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
DISPLAY YARD
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
JAMES 0. BUSH,
LEE L. VAUGHAN, MGR.
MANAGER
Ll.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiPiiiHiiiOiiiNiiiEiii9iii9iii2iii-2ii5ii8iii8iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~pH0 N E 3 8 8. 8 60 3

DEYIUE
...

.I

.CADIU.AC DmUI
.
...,
.,
.
..,

i[il
Looks, Comfort.
Warm - Sio.ux Mox .
.

Made in U.S .A.

'

.,

54

' GM47
'
.

446-2134

·48 ,

"

~

48,
.

76A

CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE-WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS

I

·:• .. .

BY DEBBIE SIDERS

10% Deposil and Balance In Convenient Low Monthly Payments ·
CHOOSE FROM THE LARG~ST SELECTIONS IN CENTRAL and SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

Logan Monument's con·
sultants are tralne(l to help
see your plans through
from beginning to end by
provid}ng sound informa·
tion and the finest quality
products.
When you 've made the
pre-planning de~lsion you
needn 'I justify it to anyone
- least of all us ... It's
what we understand best.

\nw U•'f{•

•

Compact;6' 4"x4' 5"x27.5"
Never over $20 per month to
operate.
.

•
~

'

&lt;o4' '

for Mother on

Dries faster than
any ofher systtm I

::::"J·. . .:1_. /'-·-.1'-~~·~s:.:J.~
I•

'.!1•.;/i!J \k11, !I

THANKSGIVING SPECIAL

SAFE FOR ALL CARPETS

I

332 Second Ave .
Gallipolis. Ohio

HOUI&lt;S
Man &amp; fr1 98

'· ~ TUESDAy I DEC. 1
6:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.

Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different cQiored gran-

.PH. 441&gt;·2327
. ' - . -·

'

.j

GALLIPOLIS- American Le- ,
glon Post 161 , 7:30 p.m .,,
Tuesday.

'

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTS

'.
;;

In 1687. Isaac Newton established
the laws or -gravity and the universal
law s of motion.

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Chapter No .283 O.E.S. Annual
Installatin of Officers at the
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m .
Members bring. covered dish.

Let Uc Help Vou
Plan Vour Wedding

I' ,";,f-~',

, Trustees meeting

Knitting Classes

cried as much at any time in my

3S2 Third Ave.

Bake sale
GALLIPOLIS - American Legion Auxiliary will hold a bake
sale, 9 a.m., Tuesday, Haskins
and Tanners.

CROWN CfTY - Children of
the Real King, the Johnson and
Taylor families will sing at Big
Four Chtuch, Sunday, 7:30p.m.

LARGE SELECTION

Ufe as (l did during) that time,"
she said of the assassination .
"This was a great, great
tragedy ."
She expects 500,000 visitors
.
annually at the exhibit.
In August, after months of
dispute, the city approved construction of a 60-foot exterior
elevator on the north side of the
depository. Dallas County commissioners approved the Sale of
$2.2 million in bonds to finance its
construction.
The backing of Dallas County
Judge Lee Jackson was key.
"What I tried to do was say this
was an Important piece of
unfinished business, that Dallas
County was the steward of the
building, and as long as the
building was here, hundreds of
visitors each day were coming
here, photographing it," said
Jackson.
On F;ida y, Thomas P. Brady,

POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty, will meet Tuesday night at
7:30 at the home of Mrs. Evelyn
Knight.

· SUNDAY
WELLSTON - Grubb Family
singers will be at Wellston Full
Gospel Church, Sunday, 7:30
p.m .

Arthritis group
plans meeting

'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B-7

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

November22.1987

.

60.

' $39551
. $39551

"

.,
'

�Page B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

coping•••---'-'-~(F~ro~m:._:C:::_OP::_IN:.:_:G::.:_,

B=l:.....
l --\

feel so sorry for.
.
Is one thing that the ACS and NCI
I kept much of the curl In my both stress. I had noticed my
hair, although It has been lump In August of 1982 and two
trimmed several times In the months later I had surgery .
put year and a half. I learned
I had been having regular Pap
lila~ If the patient's hair Is
smears, but a Pap smear can
strala'ht to begin with (as mine only detect cervical cancer, not
was) It will come In curly, but ovarian or a ·cancer In any other
I!:Ventually return to what it was part of the body .
originally. And vice versa. My
l've had a lot of support from
hair Is the same color as before, family, friends and co-workers
although the gray Is more gen· during the past five yea,rs. I still
era! and It's longer now than It's maintain a good attitude, al·
been since I was 6 years old.
thougli deep down In my mind Is
I lost some weight Initially, but tbat little fear that It can recur.
I've gatned It all back, and then But through education, I am also
some. I'm a little heavier than more aware of good eating habits
what I want to be, but I feel good, and the warning signals. There
[look good, and I do as much now are seven of them, and easy to
remember because It spells
as I did five years ago.
The drugs made me a little sick CAUTION:
Change In bowel or bladder
at times. Some drugs can Irritate
the stomach ltnlng. But I remem- bablts
A sore that does not heal
bered that TV commercial for
Unusual bleeding or discharge
Pepto-Blsmol, about how It coats
Thickening or lump In the
the stomach. So when I got sick
after treatment, I'd look for some breast or elsewhere
Indigestion or difficulty In
food that coated the stomach eenerally something with milk It swallowing
Obvious change In a mole or
In, I ate a lot of cream of tomato
wart
soup and pumpkin pie.
Nagging cough or hoarseness.
Nurses at the hospital were
If
any of these symptoms
&amp;so very helpful, and friendly .
persist
more than two weeks,lt is
Often when they'd take their
recommended
you see a doctor
breaks, they'd get a cup of coffee
and come In and sit by the bed immediately. These symptoms
do not necessarily mean you
and talk to me.
I guess I'm a survivor today have cancer, but they be warning
because of early detection. This you of something else.

Beat of the bend

The first two surgeries had me ''Brain, tell that arm to move."
laid up lor six weeks or so. But Finally, the nurse raised and
the surgeon said that after the lowered my arms.
third one, I could be back to my
The IV came out In a few hours.
normal ltfestyle In two or three That's when I knew I had beaten
weeks.
cancer. Thene~Ctday, the~octors
After the first surgery, I told me I was clean.
couldn't watt to get back to work.
The doctors never once gave
I found that as long as I sat at me any Indication of how llfehome and looked at four walls, I threatentrig my Illness was. I
would cry. I didn't need that. I don't know If I could have
needed ·people. I needed my handled It If they had told me I
friends at work.
had a gtven amount of time.
After the second surgery, I
I had a tumor on the right side
didn't want to go back to work at of my pelvis that had metastasall, but pushed myself.
Ized to the ovaries. The tumor
By the fall of 1984, I told myself was sltuatl!d In such a manner
I was clean and I wouldn't have that It was preventing the kid·
an IV when I came out from the neys from functioning properly.
third surgery.
Cathethers (tubes) were InWhen I woke up In my room, I serted between the kidneys and
. looked around. My husband was the bladder, and chariged about
on one side, a friendly nurse on every lour to five months. In
IV needle
hanging
the other
and and
the the
above
my head
In r;:;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
my hand. I was dejected.
"Don't worry," the nurse said.
"That's coming out."
I wanted to get up and shout,
but I couldn't move my arms.
Nurses had had so much trouble
getting the IV' s started that I had
Band-Aids on my hands and I
thought I was weighted down
with IV's and tubes.
The nurse told m~ I could move
my arms. I couldn't. I tried to ask
hertohel)lme, but my mouth was
so dry I couldn't talk. My
husband tried to feed me lee
chips. I felt about as much lee
slide down my neck as went In my
ll\OUih.
I knew that my brain could
send signals to my arms to move,
so I kept repeating In my mind,

Gary Griffin has had a time of
It, but wants to extend thanks to
you for the birthday and get well
cards which you sent along .
Gary had major heart surgery
In April and came home. An
Infection developed and he was
returned to University .Hospital
on Oct. 9. He came home again on
Nov. 5 and four days tater had to
be returned to the hospital when
another Infection developed.
He's making good progress now
but Is not expected to get home
again until about mid-December.
His address is Room 901, Doan
Hall, Universit y Hospital ,
Columbus.

•

And earner tn the week. I tried
to advise you on the condition or
Nora Rice and Kenneth McEI·
hlnny, both of Middleport and
both having undergone major hip
surgery recently at Mount Carmel East, Columbus. I had the
room numbers and so forth since
I knew that many of you would
want to remember the two
popular Middleport residents .
However, that effort went to
"computer heaven " - so let me
say that things are going welt for
the two of them. In fact, Ken ma y
get to come home today and Nora
Jn a few more days.
Carl Hysell and his community
service youth group will be
· Jlandl1ng traffic control and
parking at Saturday night's Big
Bend Minstrel Association must·
cal at the Meigs High School. It's
a great service and the group did
so well with It last year when they
handled the traffic chore at th e
Rutland Ctvtc Center when the .
minstrel association's musical
was staged out there.

----Caroline Miller, a resident of

VMlage Minor, observed her 9011·
birthday Wednesday.
Hl!r daughter, Laura Cornwell
of Palm Beach, Fla .. was on hand
for the &lt;•ccaslon and arranged a
suprlse party fo r Mrs. Mille,·

The Mother-To-Be
Motemil)' .fushiom f'rom
lingrrie To finer Omser
for Speciuf OccoJionJ.

Infant l1othing 0.21 MtmthJ

230 Broadway St .. Jackson
9,30 til. e.oo p.m.

HELENE CURTIS PERM SALE
On any Helene
Curtis wave
regularly $35 or
higher.

Sale price Includes shampoo,
cut ana style. Long hair slightly
higher. Participating stylists only.
Appointments ore not always
·necessary. Sale price good
·1 through December 5. 1987

The music 'goes 'round and
'round and the dollar goes down
and down, but you keep smlltng.

I REG;;;~~~;;·;.Y
VARY BY LOCATION

••Y

.,

BB 5000

The300 Shoe
Cafe
SECOND AVE.

the price of one, processing and
printing only by Kodak.
Nttd mort exposure information?
We'n gat tht sources at Tawney's

SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA
GALLIPOLIS,OHIO
446-3353

Studio 424 5tcand Au.. 446·1615.

LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

LA·Z·BOY~

SALE ON MEN'S
AND WOMEN'S

1onoon.

-L...JFOO®

COATS AND JACKETS
CONTINUES

25°/o TO 50°/o
BAHR .MIDDLEPORT
CLOTHIERS
SAVE

THANKSGIVING ....
A TIME FOR CARING .
.~·

\J
lNcnnm·

3

Save on the most comforting
gift you can give, a genuine
LA·Z·DOY~recliner!
.
'

CONTEMPORARY
RECLINA-ROCKER®
RECLINER .
Th•s sleek. streamh ned style offers full · body
comfort. Gently contoured. channel · st•tched
and thickly cushioned . 1fs a European
msp1rat1on that feels as good as •t tooks!

'

Telef/ora's Cranberry
Mold Bouquet.

Teleflora's
Country Basket Bouquets
•

. Contemporary_

Recllno-Rocker• Recliner
Sttlle inlo this nandaome wood·
detailed contemporary with thick
paeldtd back and s..t cushioning.

J!IIMhCI'f
FLORIST

Send the FTO®
Harvest Bowl"'' Bouquet.

28 CEDAR STRUT

Locally Owned by
Candy &amp; John Hood
446-9721

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SALE! $29900

SALE! $37900

Tronsltlonol
.Recllno-Rocker · Recliner

Transil1onal
Recline-Rocker' Recliner

Relax in this tufled transitional
that's cushioned for soothing
comfort. Gracefully detai led.

LPI 111(' ef~ vE':IOpE: ar1 "welcome
1nto a gctawdy to r:o mfon
Jl,fied and generO dSiy paOded

yr,~~

'

Flair Furniture &amp; Design
liH our :!.':'~ur
VIIQ 01
Ord

ROSS SNAGS PASS - Ohio's Everett Ross Ohio State-Michigan game at Ann Arbor. The
(right) pulls down pass In endzone for a · Bucks rallied to win, 23-20. (UPl)
touchdown In second quarter play of Saturday's

Ohio University drops finale
Western Mlchlgall 31

going Into the final period.

· Ohlo·untverslt:f'f3 _,. ·.-' -·- Western- lints bed at 5·6 overall

675-1371

Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 9:00 a.m.-5:00p.m., Fri. 9:00 a.m.·8:00 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.·S.p.m.
RT. 2SOUTH
GALLIPOLIS
, W.VA.

.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. ( UPI) ~Kevin Madden and Jeff Lebo
each made 1-and·l free throws In the final 37 seconds of
overtime Saturday, rallying No. 2 North Cl\rollna past No. I
Syracuse 911-93 In the Hall of Fame Tipoff Classic.
Madden's shots, which put the Tar Heels ahead 92-91 with 37
seconds left In the season opener for both teams, came after he
knocked away a lob pass by Syracuse's Sherman Douglas.
The Tar Heels then repealed the defensive play as Syracuse
tried to pass the ball in to center Rony Selkaly. In the scramble
for possession, Syracuse's Earl Duncan was called for fouling
Lebo, who made his shots with 21 seconds remaining.
On Syracuse's last possession, Douglas missed a 3-polnt shot
hut teammate Matt Roe hit a pair offree throws to make 1194-93.
North Carolina's Rick Fox hit a breakaway dunk to complete
the scoring.
The Tar Heels, who trailed 50-39 at halftime and by as many as
14 points early In the second half, rallied but needed a 10-loot
turnaround by Peter Chilcutt at the buzzer to fo~e the
·
overtime.
Ranzlno Smith, the Tar Heels' only senior, scored 17 of his
team-high 21 points In the second half and overtime. He was
named the game's outstanding player.
Lebo scored 2G and Fox 15 for the Tar Heels, who were without
All-America candidate J.R. Reid and Steve Bucknall. Reid and
Bucknall were suspended by Coach Dean Smith for their part In
an altercation at a Raleigh, N.C. nightclub.
Selkaly scored 23 and Douglas had 22forSyracuse, which lost
an opening game for the lirst time In Coach Jim Boehelm's 12
seasons. '
The Orangemen, despite blowing their halftime lead, almost
won the game after Selkaly hit two free throws with 11 seconds
left In regulation to tie the score 83-83. Derrick Coleman then
, Intercepted UNC's lnbounds pass and made two free throws a
second later to put Syracuse up 8$-83.
But Lebo. rushed the ball Into UNC's end, and passed to
Chilcutt In the lane. Chilcutt's tUJ'naround shot bounced once
then fell through as the horn sounded. .

L----------------------~-...1·

•

•

.

moved the Chippewas In front
17-8. Two plays after the ensuing
kickoff, Dackin threw short lo
Heard who dashed to the end zone
to pull Bowling Green, 5-6 and 5-3,
tol!7-15.
Nicholl. with S: 23 left. was
wide to. the left on a 37-yard
field -goal attempt · .Eleven plays
later. Zeller kicked his longest
field goal In his three years.
·•

ATHENS, Ohio tUPI) -Jamie
and 4-4 In the MAC . OU has not
Hence caught16 passes Saturday won a league game In two years.
for 181 yards and two fourth·
quarter touchdowns In Western
BGU 18CMU 17
Michigan'$ 31-13 win over Ohio
BOWLING GREEN. Ohio
University In the Mid-American
rUPI) - 1M[ke Me Gee sprlnted 93.
Conference.
·
yards for a touchdown - the
Hence took a 6-yard pass from
longest run ' tn Bowling Green
Tony Kimbrough early in the
history- to highlight an 18-point
fourth period to break open a
fourth quarter surge Saturday
ti!:jht game. The Ktmbrough-to·
that carried the Falcons to an
Texas 34 Baylor 16
Hence connection worked again
18-17 triumph over Central
AUSTIN, Texas (UPI)- Eric
about four minutes later as
Michigan.
Metcalf scored three times, once
Hence carried In an 8· yard pass•.
Jason Zeller kicked a 44-yard on a 5.9·yard punt return, .and
Kl mbrough had also thrown 15 field goal and Rich Dacktn threw surpassed the l,OOO-yard rushing
yards to Bruce Boykl!.
a 67-yard touchdown pass to Ron mark 'for the season Saturday to
OU, which finished the season
Heard to help Bowltng Green propel Texas 10 a 34 ·16 Southwest
J.IO overall and 0-8 In the MAC, . overcome a 10·0 deficit In the Conference victory over errorstruck first with a 23-yard Held Mid· American Conference prone Baylor.
goal by Mike Fultz. But Lewis
Howard put Western up on a game.
Central Michigan, which ended
Vanderbilt 34
2-yard run.
5·5·1 overall and 3-4-1 in the MAC,
Maryland 24
Anthony Thornton's 5-yard scored on its first possession, a
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) scoring run gave OU a 10·7lead In 22-yard field goal by Kevin Eric Jones ran for a touchdown
the second quarter, but Boyko's
Nicholl~ The Chippewas scored Saturday and threw two scoring
scoring pass put the Broncos up again early in the second period passes to Carl Parker Saturday,
to stay . OU cul .the lead to 14-13 on on John Hood's 2-yard run.
lifting Vanderbilt to a 34 · 24
Fultz's second Held goal, but
In the fourth quarter, Central victory over Maryland.
John Creek gave Western some Michigan punted from lts39-yard
Pitt 28
breathing room with a 24-yard line and the ball rolled dead at the
Kent State 5
field to give WMU a 17-13 lead Bowling Green 7. But McGee
PITTSBURGH (UP!) -Craig
raced off tackle and moved "Iron[)ead" Heyward rushed for
untouched to the end zone to draw 259 yards and three -touchdowns
the Falcons to 10-8 following a on a snow-covered field Satursuccessful tWo-point try.
day, leading No. 17 Pittsburgh to
Hood's 11-yard touchdown run a 28-5 victory over Kent State.

NQrth Carolina tops
Syracuse in ·classic

lelcflom'

SALEI$29900

.

.

SAVE s10

in dim light such as campfires, can·

Meigs County Recorder Larry
Spencer has been released from
the Holzer Medical Center and is
recuperating at his home in the
Racine area. Larry says much
thanks for the cards of
encouragement.

LINCOLN. Neb. (UPI) - Pa·
trick contns' 65-yard sprint down
the sideline late In the third
period Saturday boosted No. 2
Oklahoma to a 17· 7 victory over
No. 1 Nebraska, giving the
unbeaten Sooners the Big Eight
.championship and sending them
~o the Orange Bowl for a shot at
the national title:
. .· Oklahoma extended the na·
.
tton's longest current maJOr "
college winning streak to · 20 ··
games before the largest crowd
In the history of Nebraska's
Memorial Stadium - 76,663.
the Sooners overcame a series
of flrst-hali mlsiakes and a. 7-0
deficit by relying on their over·
powering defen~.e until coming
up wllh some breaks.
·
They got one early In the third
·.quarter when Rlcliy Dixon Inter·
'Cepted a )lass from Steve Taylor
and returned it ·24 yards to the
' Cornhuskers 13. From there
·Oklahoma needed two plays and
;41 seconds before Anthony Staf·
ford ran around right end for 11
yards and the !yin~ touchdown.
With 1:39 left In the third
quarter and Oklahoma facing a
third-and-five frol'\'1 Its 35-yard
·une, Colttns took a pitch from
.quarterback Charles Thompson.
He ran between two defenders,
broke a tackle and scurried down
the sidelines In front of the
·Sooners bench for the score that
dampened Nebraska's hopes for
a perfect season.
,_
The Sooners added a 27-yard
.field goal by R.D. Lashar with
7:40 left. Lashar missed a 44·
yard try In the first half and was
wide left on a 35-yard attempt
with 1:40 remaining. Nebraska's
only touchdown came in the
opening quarter on a 25-yard run
by Keith Jones.
The triumph In the traditional
Big Eight showdown was made
sweeter for lhe Sooners since
they had to take on the
Cornhuskers without their two
key offensive weapons - quar·
terback Jamelle Holleway and
fullback Lydell Carr.
Thompson, a freshman, played
an almost flawless game in place
of Holleway while Anderson
fumbled twice In the first half to
kill Oklahoma drives. Anderson.
however, joined Thompson and
Collins by gaining more than 100
yards.
Oklahoma completed an 11-0
regular season and enhanced Its
defensive reputation by frustrat·
lng the Nebraska offense
throughout the cool, windy day.
The Sooners wtll next appear in _
the Orange Bowl on the evening
of Jan. 1 to take on the Miami
Hurricanes.
Nebraska lost for the firs t time
since Its heartbreaking 20·17
· setback to Oklahoma a year ago.
The Cornhuskers will take a 9-1
record Into next week's meeting
with Colorado in Boulder and
then will play Florida State in th e
Fiesta Bowl.

286-2559

Mondor &amp; fridoy
Tues. WM. lhur. &amp; Sat. 9,30 til 5•30 p.m.

WHEN DO I USE 1000-SPEED flM?
1OOO;sptod film is low light film
tho! works llost in artificial ~gilt af
medium inl.,sity. In ury tjark conditions. it tends to undtrozpost. In
dtylight, it tends to •••••pose. Use
1000.spood film for sports, for journalism ossigni!NIII~ and for candid
sho'ts in roam light.
The range of its usefulness can be
upondtd somewhat by "fooling"

Bucks carry Bruce
off field after wi:D

Sooners
·cop Big 8;
•
17-7

The Needs Of

By
David
Tawney

dlolight, undtr str•tlights, and
ather dtrk situations. Make suro you
••light an the subjKt, tht~ shoot at
1/30 to 1/60th soc. usually at fU.
If your camera has a 1/2000 or
1/4000 shutt• spood, Y"" can use .
1OOO·spood film for
high spood
adion shots at 116 or f22 outdoors
in bright sunlight.
This month's spKial is 2 prints far

November 22, 1987

A Shop To Meet

tom. By setting your camera for on
indt1 of 500 to 100, Y"" can shoot

following services at the Middle·
port First Baptist Chu"ch Wed·
nesday evening - with refresh·
ments, of course. Mrs. Miller
received 43 cards from friends
and relatives noting her
birthday .

Sports
Ohio State downs ·Michigan, 23-20

nation learned about cancer
when President Reagan had
pOlyps removed from his colon, I
was rejoicing. Theoncologlslhad
told me I was wasting hls time
and mine going to see him.
I continued the six-month
checkups with the surgeon. I
figured 11 I went In for one In
January, I could start the new
year off right. And the next one
would be In July, so I could have
something to celebrate.

November of 1983, they were
removed for good.
The urologist told me that most
people who have been through
what I've been through don't
make It a year and already I'd
made It 13 months. That made
me feel good.
After my third surgery, I
continued to seethe oncologist, at
three-montll Intervals, rather
than monthly.
· In the summer of 1985. as the

yaur camera's auto-exposurt sys·

It's our history...
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Mason County residents must
be delighted with their new
history book which Is just out.
There's quite · a relationship
between Meigs and Mason Coun·
ttans so ,there probably is consld·
erable interest In the book in our
county.
"They only come along every
hundred years.'' Is the comment
of Mildred Gibbs, chairman of
the Mason County Book Commit·
tee, In describing the new collec·
tor's edition of the History of
Mason County, West Virginia,
1987.
A hardbound volume with
nearly 500 pages, the book
features more than 1.000 Mason
County family histpries anu
photos as well as Intriguing
photos of Mason County places,
thtngs and events.
·
The book Is a must for anyone
with roots In Mason County.
particularly those wanting ge·
nealoglcal or family tnforma·
tlon, Gt bbs reports.
Mrs. Gibbs describes the book
as a "labor of love", - nearly
three years worth - and suggests that It w111 make a dandy
Christmas gift. In Meigs County,
copies may been seen at ·the
Pomeroy Public Library.
Books may be ordered by
calling the Mason County Public
Library at 304-675·2913 or writing
to the library at Sixth and Viand
Sis .. Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550.
Cost of the new edition is $42.50
plus $3 postage and handling and
quantities are limited.

Your
Photos

November 22, 1987

By RICHARD L . SHOOK
_
UP! Sports Writer
.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)- Matt Franlzatoned forhlsflrstextra
point miss In two seasons by kicking a 26-yard field goal with 5:18 to
play Saturday and give Ohio State a 23-20 victory over Michigan In
Earle Bruce's last game as coach of the Buckeyes.
Despite the loss, Michigan was expected to accept a bid to play In
the Jan. 2 Hall of Fame boWl In Tampa, Fla. Ohio State was expected
to decltne any bowl bid It might receive.
The Buckeyes, who snapped a
three-game Btg Ten losing streak Buckeyes' 1ast possession to keep
to finish 4·4 In the conference and the ball out of the Wolverines'
6·4·1 overall, came to ltfe late In hands.
Doug Mallory, who missed a
the second quarter when ltne·
tackle
at his own 25 on Carlos
backer Mike McCray pounced on
a Michigan fumble and went on to Snow's 70-yard touchdown recep·
convert four turnovers by the tton at the start of the second
half, recovered a Snow fumble on
Wolverines Into 13 points.
Quarterback-punter Tom Tupa the Ohio State 46 to trigger the
shrugged off a miserable start to tying drive.
Taylor played sporadically In
complete 18 of 26 passes for 218
yards and a pair of touchdowns the game after starter Brown
whtle scoring once In .his final strained his right knee on the
second possession of the game.
collegiate game.
The victory for Bruce - fired He came In after Brown threw an
Monday by the university for Interception In the third quarter
unspecified reasons- snapped a thatled to a 1-yard sneak byTupa
personal two-game losing streak which gave Ohio State lls 20-13
against Michigan and gave him a lead.
Morris ended the game with
5·4 edge over the Wolverines' Bo
130
yards on 23 carries -exactly
Schembechler. Bruce ended 81·
what
he needed to break Rob
26·1 at Ohio State and 57-17 in the
Lytle's
single-season Michigan
Big Ten.
.
rushing record of 1,469 yards.
The loss dropped Michigan to
7-4 overall and 5·3 In the Morris wtll take 1,470 yards Into
the Hall of Fame bowl.
conference.
Brown completed 4 of 5 passes
Frantz missed the extra point,
hls first miss after 26 successful for 75 yards In first half, but
conversions this year, following under more pressure In the
Tupa 's !-yard TD run and It second was only 1 for 8 for 4 yards
looked as though It would cost wllh an Interception.
Ohio State a victory. That made
Wildcats Upset Dllni ·
the score 20-13.
EVANSTON.
Ill. (UP I)
Backup fullback Leroy Hoard
Mike
Greenfield
threw for one
of Michigan tied the game, 20-20,
on a 10-yard pinball run up the touchdown and set up another
middle wllh 1: 14 left In the third Saturday. and Northwestern's
defense shut down Illinois'
quarter.
But Ohio State drove from Its ground game to post a 28-lP upset
own 14 to the Michigan nine late of the Illlnl In the season finale
In the game and Frantz easily for both teams.
nailed his lOth Ueld goal In 17
Iowa 34 Minnesota 20
tries this season. Tupa com·
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI)
pleted 5 of 6 passes for 49 yards In
Chuck Hartlieb passed for 328
the drive.
Michigan scored on Its first yards and two tnuchdowns Saturthree possessions of the game- day to spark No. 20 Iowa to.a 34·20
a 1.yard run by Jamie Morris and Big Te:t victory over Minnesota.
rteld goals of 34· and 19-yards by
The Ha wkeyes, who accepted a
Mike Gillette.
bld for the Dec. 30 Holiday Bowl
Everett , Ross scored on a In San Diego after the game,
4-yardpassbyTupaneartheend finished the regular season at 9·3
of the half and Snow's 70-yardTD overall and tied for second with
catch on Ohio state •s 11 rs t off en- Indiana In the Big Ten at 6·2.
stve play of the second half Minnesota finished at 6-5 overall,
brought the Buckeyes back Into 3·5 in the league and heldoutfalnt
the game.
hope for an invitation to either
Michigan stuffed Ohio State's the Sun or Independence bowls.
running game In the early going
and dared Tupa to throw. He did
Indiana 35, Purdue l4
but not for enough yardage to
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI) ·
sustain drives until McCray Anthony Thompson scored three
pounced on a fumble by fullback touchdowns and Indiana forced
Jarrod Bunch In a drive that si~C turnovers Saturday, leading
could have given the Wolverines . the Pea.ch Bowl-bound Hoosiers
a 20·0 lead.
to a 35-14 victory over Intrastate
Instead, Tupa completed six rival Purdue.
straight passes for 52 yards In a
Thompson scored on runs oil,
drive · that resulted in Ross 3, and 5 yards and quarterback
making a nice over-the-shoulder Dave Kramme dove 1 yard for
catch in the end zone to shave the another touchdown to help the
margin to 13·7 at halftime.
. . Hoosiers finish the regular seaGtllette then missed a 34-yard son M-3, their best record since
field goal try, scuffing It low and 1967.
to the left, with three seconds
left. Michigan had the ball five
Michigan Slate 30
Urnes In the first half, scoring on
Wisconsin 9
Its first three possessions but
MADISON, Wis. (UPI)
stopping Itself on the last two.
Lorenzo White ran for two
Michigan held Ohio State to first-half touchdowns and John
just six yards net rushing In the Langeloh kicked three field goals
first half and just 1021n the game Saturday to lead Big Ten cham·
but the freshman Snow made 30 pion and No.ll Michigan State to
yards on a draw play on the a 30·9 victory over Wisconsin.

Dayton ·romps; Duke T~~!~!::~

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI)Steve Slayden passed for two
touchdowns and rushed for
another Saturday to lead Duke to
a 25-10 victory over North Carol·
ina, further endangering the job
of Tar Heels Coach Dick Crum.
The loss handed North Carol·
Ina a 5-6 record amid week-long
speculation that Crum would be
!Ired or forced to resign.
There have been several pub·
llshed reports that Crum told his
staff privately before that game
that he would step down in the
near future . Crum, 106-60-4 over·
all and 72-41·31n lOyearsat North
Carollna, still has four years left
on a 10-year Tar Heel contract.

'

Brigham Young:
N.C. State entered with a
h
chance to finish second In t e
ACC despite a losing record, but
finished 4· 7 overall. 4·3· in the
ACC.

--William &amp; Mary 20
Richmond 7
WILLIAMSBURG , Va. rUPI )
_ John Brosnahan threw a
68·yard touchdown pass to Harry
Mehre and scored on a 53-yard
run Saturday 10 1111 Wtliiam &amp;
Mary to a 20 _7 upset over
playoff-bound Richmond.

Penn 49, partmouth 7
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Chris Flynn. In his last game for
Pennsylvania, rushed for 194
yards and tied a 47-year record
Virginia 34
with five touchdowns Saturday to
NC State 31
.
RALEIGH , N.C. (UP!)- Scott lead t)le Quakers to a 49-7 Ivy
Secules passed for 270 yards and League victory over Dartmouth.
a pair of touchdowns Saturday
Wake Forest 33
and VIrginia held off turnoverGeorgia Tec.h 6
plagued North Carolina State
ATLANTA (UPI) - Wake
34-311n theAtlanttc CoastConfer·
Forest scored on four field goals
ence Hnale for both teams. VIrginia, 7-4 overall and 5·2 In by Wilson Hoyle, a blocked punt
the ACC, received a bid after thf return for a touchdown by Tony
game to the All-American Bowl Mosley and one of A.J. Greene's
In Birmingham, Ala., whete the four lnte~cepttons Saturday to
rout favored Georgia Tech '33·6.
Cavaliers anticipate meeting_

UP!
LEXINGTON, Va. (
)
Steve Colwell generated three
first-half touchdowns Saturday
dd d
and Darryl Streeter a e a
37.yard scoring run to spark
Tennessee-Chattanooga to a 31-0
Southern Conference romp over
VIrginia Military.

!~-~,~~~

to Randy Cummings and a
17-yard scoring toss to Tim
Eubank . Wilhelm also ran 8
yards for a TD
·
Dayton's Dave Jones, who
carried 27 times for 112 yards,
scored on a !-yard run and MIke
Duvtc kicked a 25-yard field goal.
Three of Capital's four touch·
downs came on passes of 17, 16
and 6 yards from ·John Keel to
Keith Wtlllke. Todd Dunkle ran 7
yards for the other score.

Virginia Tecl! 21
Cincinnati 20 ·
' BLACKSBURG, Va. (UP! ) John Jeffries r.ushed for two
touchdowns and VIrginia Teenstopped a two-point conversion
Missouri 19 Kansas 7
try by Cincinnati wlth3: 27 to play
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPii
Saturday to edge the Bearcats Tommy Stowers rushed for 130
21-20.
yards with a touchdown Saturday to lead Mlss.ourl to a 19-7 Big
Dayton 52, Capital 28
Eight victory over K'a nsas.
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!)- Mike
The victory was Missouri 's
Nicholson ran for three touch· se~ond straight over Kansas and
downs while Kevlri Wilhelm paltded Its lead in the oldest
passed for two scores and ran for rivalry west of the Mississippi
another to pace Dayton to a 52-28 River to 45-42·9.
rout of Capital In an NCAA
Division Ill playoff game
Brown Ul, Columbia .M
Saturday .
PROVIDENCE. fU. t U?l) ~
Dayton, 9·2, plays four-time
Columbia
's record lostl'l~snak .
defending Division Ill champion
reached
41 games S'aturday,
Augustana next Saturday. Capiwhen
Brown
quarterback Danny
tal finished Its season with a 7·2·2
Clark
rushed
for two touchdowns
record.
and
passed
for
a third to spark a ·
Nicholson scored touchdowns
19-16
comback
victory In an Ivy
on runs of 6, 8 and 24 yards as .
League
game.
Dayton stormed to a 28·0 lead.

�\

C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 22, 1987

November 22. 1987

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

.

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

,..•

RIO GRANDE'S MIKE TIDWEI"L (24) driv~s Inside for two
I" against Friday's opponent In Bevo Francis Classic. Rio Grande
1; won and played Waynesburg Saturday night for the tourney crown.
'·&lt; On leflls Rio's Doug Fogt.
;:

.. . .

'~

Redwomen gain finals
.of Francis Classic
,• ·RIO GRANDE -A91-63defeat
: Friday of Georgian Court of
• L)lkewood, N.J., placed the Rio
; Grande Redwomen In the cham·
: pkmship round of the Bevo
• F)'ancis Classic.
: •The Redwomen were to face
'
I
• &lt;:arson
Newman
of Jefferson
; City, Tenn., in a 4 p.m . Saturday
: game at Lyne Center, while
• Georgian Court would play West
&lt; Virginia State in the consolation
; round at 2 p.m.
1
Earlier, West Viq~·thia State
~ had fallen to Coach Eddie Car·
: ter's Carson Newman club 93·73.
• Freshman Beth Coil, a stan.
•• doul among the younger players,
: got things cooking for the Redwo( rt)en with a basket, and combin·
; ing with the scoring talents of
'.senior captain Renee Halley and
: j9nior Holly Hastings , the Red·
: women shortly outdistanced
; Georgian Court.
• ; the hosts remained in control
i of the game throughout, boosting
l tbe scoring margin as high as 20
' before the half closed with Rio
, Grande's slate at 51 and the
v)sitors 32.
· Georgian Court, coached by
11175 Rio Grande graduate Tom
' Westen, came back in the second
( half through some effective scar·
: lng by juniors Tabitha Roman s
apd Linda Brophy. Hjwever, the
loss of center: Kristen Andersen
..;. at 6·0, their tallest player : · !~rough foul trouble limited
' Georgian Court's chances.
! :coach Cheryl Fielitz's bench
• made an enthusiastic contribu·
: tibn to the ga me as juniors
: Ailgela Packard, Billie Jo Ste·
• phenson and fres hmen Leisa
: Apderson and Jenni Couch all
: saw court action.
• : " 1 have a fanta stic group of
•: kids ," Fielitz co mmented after·
; ward . "The key to the game was
• that we ran up and down the court
: and caused them (Georgian
; Court) to get out of position .
• ' "The defense was good, our
~ rebounding was good, but our
• offense was terrible," she con·
; tipued, "which is surpris ing
~ considering we scored 91 points."
~ 'Hastings scored 29 points for
, t~e Redwoman while Halley
: added 16. Coil. Packard and
: guard Lea . Ann Mullins eac h
, a~ded 12 potnts. T he Redwomen
; were 41.1 percent on field goa ls

(35 of 8~ attempts ) and sank 21
and 32 tries at the free throw line
for 65.6 percent.
Georgian Court's 'Romans was
hig scorer with 22, while Brophy
added 10 and freshman Ct.rol
Walters supplied 9. The visitors
netted 27 of 58 attempts on field
goals for 46.5 percent and were 9
of 12 in free throws for 75 percent.
Carson Newman dominated
Robert "Bud" Francis' West
Virginia State club in size,
building a 22-point lead at the half
(55-33). WVS worked on narrowing the margin in the second half,
but remained behind its
opponent.
Carson Newman's top sc-orers
were Traci Inman with 21 and
Corean Wells and Lynnette
Hayden, each with 17. On field
goals, Carson Newman was 61
percent t 36 of 59) and sank 21 of
33 charity tosses for 63 percent.
WVS had its best showing from
senior Maria Battle and fresh·
man Rebina Marshall, each of
whom netted 18. Junior Willie
Mae Thomas added 11 .

By GEOFF OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESHIRE - The opening
night of the SVAC boys' basket ball preview saw a team who
• seems to be living up to its
: coach's desire for a running
• attack and two teams who
provided a contest that was not
· Indicative of the final score.
The Hannan Trace Wildcats of
Coach Mike Jenkins ran the bali
up and down the court at every
opportunity to secure a hard·
fought 30-27 win over North
Gallia.
The Wildcats were not intimi·
dated by the Pirates ' front wall of
6·4 senior center Ke(th Burnette,
6-4 senior forward Rick Hammel
and 6·0 senior forward Blaine
Gilmore. The Wildcats' front·
court of Rick Swain, a 6·2 senior
pivotman, 6-2 senior swingman
Chris Petro and 6·1 senior lor·
ward Scott Rankin, took their
positions inside agains t the Pi·
rate front and consistently
battled on the boards at both ends
of the court to gel their baskets
and to secure 15 chances at the
charity stripe. The Wildcats
picked up seven points at the foul
line In the two quarters played.
Though both teams showed
little signs of ragged play, the
Wildcats' passing was precise,
even in traffic under 'the boards
and beyond the paint. Though
.Jenkins' charges executed the
run -and -gun attack and used it to
rack up the greater portion of
their ll -for-31 performance from
• the field, they didn't seem like
.. fish outofwaterwhen the Pirates
: co uld slow them down to a
halfcourt game.
In that game Rankin had 11
. points , followed by Petro with
· seven and se nior Richard Stitt
. with six. Leading Pirate scorers
·. were Denney and junior Sieve
· George with six points each.
VIkings· Eagles
ThC' Symmes Valley -Eastern
boys· ~ontest was played one
way, but the Eagles' 43·28 win
· wasn 't cons istent with the way
both team~ played.
Terry Sau nd ers' Vikings
played hard and fought the
Eagles tooth and nail under the
. boardS' and everywhl're else the
· bali was for 16 minutes. How·
: ever, the offensive rebounds by
• the Reedsville squad , Viking
• turnovers forced by a pressing
Eagle defense and a number of
.. mi ssed opportunities on Viking
· fast breaks put the Vikings
. behind by 15 at the final buzze r.
The Eagles, coached by Dennis
Eichinger. showed a lot of
qui ckness. !hough th ey and the
Vikings seemed to prefer the
halfcourt game. The Eagles
could prove th emselves a very
good defensive team, . which
seems to be th eir stre ngth.
because their lack of height
(tallest player Is 6·1 senior center
Mike Martin) could prove to betheir downfall if they should pla y
equally good defe nsive teams
with bigger players.
In that contest the Eagles' top
scorers were senior Steve Horner
with 12 points and Martfn with 10.
The Vikings ' top men were

For the prtvtlege ot liv1ng and worktng in lh1s community .. For
For serving your msurance

needs May vou all enJOY a sale and happy Holida&gt;

Seiko
Bulova - Pulsar
Quartz Watches

Call . .: CAROLL SNOWDEN
Cor. Third &amp; State, Gallipolis
Phone 446-4290
Home: 446-4518
Like a good ne,ghbor, State Farm IS there

SAVE

20°/o

OFF

TAWNEY JEWELERS

GALLIPOLIS

422 SECOND AVE.

~mt~fi~.~sw~~lf;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

RIO GRA.NDF: (91) · 1'-larlo Kh&lt;tler, 0·6-2-2;
-l••nnl Couch, H}-0 2r lfolly Hastin~es, 1 2- 11-5-~9.
lA' a Ann Mullins . ti-G-G-12; Rene~ lfalley, 6-e--t-16:

Let Civic Savings·turn you ·
into a cheerful giver
this holiday season with our

Continued on C-3

&gt;JBRIBKIJ

HOLIDAY MONEY

WElCOME TO THE FUTURE

~BASKETBAll

D

SHOES

0

0

•

c

TECHNIQUE KW

Qualified borrowers may have up to
s2,500 for as little as ss7 .09* a month
CALL' 446-3832 OR STOP BY

$5900

CIVIC

:z

•ld

:•' ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~

§AVllNGS
B
~For

example $2,500 lor 36 months at $87.09 per month: Based on 14.5 APR.

THIS HOLIDAY SET

A

N

K

441 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

TABLE WITH THANKS

THE

•

.

j

HOLZER CLINIC
GALLIPOLIS , OHIO

'

----

•
•

•
I

'•.
•'
•
\

.

EYE CARE CENTER

•

'•··

RELOCATING

' • BEGINNING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, THE HOLIER

'•
•

•'

'

..

IS

'

CUNIC EYE CARE CENTER WILL BE LOCATED IN CON·
VENIENT, AnRACTIVE FACIUTIES AT THE MAIN
HOLZER CUNIC LOCATION .ON JACIISON PIKE. NO_W
IT WIU BE EVEN EASIER FOR YOU TO VISn A HIGH(Y
QUAUFIED HOLZER CLINIC OPHTHALMOLOGIST.
JUST ONE OF THE WAYS HOLZER CLINIC IS •••

Redwomen...
Teleflora's Cranberry
Mold Bouquet.

Continued from C-2

Teleflora's
Country Basket Bouquets

Hr l h (oil, J-11-l\2; Blllll' Jo :S i rp h(•nN!In, 1 - 0-2 -~ ;
Ml~&gt;s.v l' &lt;
w k, !HH-2. An~r ln J•adtl.lrd , ~ - IH - n

Totals :l~0 - 21 - 91.
(11-:0HGIAN COU RT (63)- Tahllha Romt•ns,
9-11--1-22: ,\ lit•lw\11' Sallck, 1-0 D2: Elh't'n 8a)' nh.
'.!-0-2-6: Linda Hruphy , !i-0-11-10: Kr l!&lt;ih•n ,\ndt•£1-iPII ,
-1 · 11-11- ~: U ~n

'1'n•nkll', I·U.G-1!; Toni

lu:l~ .

\!-11-0--1 :

C'urol Walter!' . :1-0-3-9. ToLals 2i f}-t-63.
f ,\RSOS 1\'EWMA:"i (93) -

·Pomeroy Flower Shop
106 BUnERNUT

I

Send the FTO®
Harvest Bowl'" Bouquet.

992-2039

POMEROY, OHIO

Browning, Dennis Rucker, VInce
LaCond, Greg Hayman, Tom
Parker, Ron Hens ley, Kirk Flck,
Bruce Bissell, Bria n Bailey , Max
Long, Jimm.v Carter, Robert
Continued on C4

•

AU. UNITS SHOWN FEAnJIE
ELECTRONIC IGNITION
FOR INSTANT STARTS AND
EXTRA I'OWEI.

Wildcats, Eagles
•
•
preview wmners

c:fi time for giving thanks
wonder1ul friends and neighbors

elated and you will t&gt;e a me to see
possible players such as : Roger
Bissell, Ryan Bearhs, Mike
Lance, Bill Smith, Dave Haw thorne, CD Mcintyre, Randy
Browning, Dan Spencer, Kenny

_WINNER'S TJ,tOPHY - The Fourth . Annual Rival Classic
wmner will be receiving thls t,rophy along with four special awards
as the Kyger Creek Bobcat Alumni take on the Eastern Eagle
alumni at 2:00p.m. Sunday, November ~2. at the Eastern Hlgh
School stadium. Your support will be very much appreciated as
the proceeds will be going to the atheletic booster clubs of the two
schools.

percent (28 of 82 attempts) and
was 70.8 percent on free throws (5
of lll.

..
I

,)

6

battle will ta ke place at Eastern
High School with old grads
hitting th e pads once again in the
Rival Classic.
Your support of these two
schools will be deeply. appre·

EASTMEIGS- Wlthklckoff
time Sunday Nov. 22,at 2p.m. lhe
Eas tern alumni will take on the
alumni of Kyger Creek In a battle
to raise proceeds for the two
schools atheletlc boosters. The

,.

Bockwltz's Cougars ever got &lt;1n exception of senior Ray Sin· kept them in the game despite a
the scoreboard .
gleton, sidelined due to an Injury · 15-point deficit (59·44) at the half.
Th9mas More plugged away at
Spring Arbor, which was 2-1 In the Kentucky Christian game
entering Friday's game, re· on Nov. 17 - got a chance to the Yellow Jackets' lead, narmalned solidly behind the hosts score, wl th points provided by rowing It at one point to 6 (64·58)
for the remainder of the half as junior Marc Gothard, sophomore before Waynesburg again WI· ,
Rio Grande built 20-points-plus John Lambcke and freshman dened the margin.
leads several times. The closest Mike Tidwell.
Top scorers for. the Yellow
the Cougars came in the first half
"What I think we did so well is Jackets were juniors Darrin
was 12 points, due In part to the that we didn't let them get into Walls with 28 and Rob Montgo·
continued scoring assualt and their offense," Lawhorn re· mery with 19. Thomas More's
smooth floor coordination of fleeted later. "Our double· Steve Butcher, a junior, recorded
Kearns, Rlttinger, Raymore and teaming and putting on the 25 and junior center Brian Clapp
freshman Brian Watkins, who pressure was excellent. I think added 23.
RIO GRA.NDE (Ill) - Anthony RQmore,
has made an Impressive debut In our guard play was excellent In R-11-1-11:
Jim Kearns, fi5J -2·1-'l5: a.n Wlttncer,
the Redmen's previous encoun· that Raymore, Kearns and Wat· ao-1 -~-U: Du111 Fo~ . J.(l-11-6: Mike Tidwell,
2·2-H; Hrtan Watklna:, 31!1 ·1-t-14; .John
ters with Dyke an..d· Kentucky ktns took care of the ball, rnade Lambcke,
1-0.:3-2: Jeff Warner, 1-6-6-2; Dne
Christian.
decisions and pressured at ther Shepherd, fl.l -1-t ; Mille Whteler. t)(!) .0.1-6; Thad
Hill. I{IHH~·S: Man: Golhard, tJ..I -11-1. Toti.IN
The game continued to go to right time."
35(10)-1 1-ll-11 i.
Rio Grande's way In the second
SPRING ARBOR 1~~ -Trent AJien, I (2) ... (1..8;
That the Redmen defense was
Larr~ DeSimplarc, 3-1).1 -7; Bryan Snyder, 5( 1)-3·
half, with the hosts leading by as able to keep Spring Arbor's 0-14:
Paul Hodpon. 3-11-1-tl; Dave Gardella,
much as 41 (86-45). Coach John Bryan Snyder down to a scprlng 5-1-2·11; Todd Tlbbetb, 11-2-1-2; Joe Tomlin,
1-1}.3-2; Da-wf' Follis, 0+3-1; Kayne tl•her ,
Lawhorn then employed his high of 14 was impressive, 3(1)
-H- )4. Totals 20(5l·H'1·1l2.
"four horsemen" from the fresh· Lawhorn said.
WAfNE~BURG ( 109)- Harold Hamlin, 7-6-14:
man squad- Jeff Warner, Mike
Kearns' energetic yielded a Ron
Moon!, :J.II-6; Rob Montl(omery, fi.S-It;
Wheeler, Dave Shepherd and scoring high of 25, followed by Darrin Walls, 12(1).1·28: Shawn McCalll&amp;~er ,
5-1·11, Vance Walker, 5-HJ: O!r11Greelll!.4-D-8;
Thad Hill - to good effect, as Rlttlnger with 21, Raymore's 16 He\'ln
Lee, ~(I 1 1-8: Clurence Crall(, 2-M. T4llaiR
Wheeler made a crowd-pleasing and 14 from Watkins. From the .Jii(2H~· 1tt!l .
ntOMAS MORE (871 -Mart, &amp;alaer, 4-3-11;
scoring debut with two 3-point free throw line, Rio Grande was l(e~ln
St&gt;~h~r. 1-Q-'!; Tim Hardin, 2-&amp;-4: Sieve
field goals. All members of 50 percent, sinking 11 of 22 Mlrlrch, 1-0-2: stevr 8utuhcr, 12-1-25; Dan
Alhrlnk. 2-!1-12; &amp;-Jan Clapp, 3-7-23: Greg
Lawhorn's club - with the .attemptsland was 55 percent (35 8at!iehe. "-o-!t ToiJlls M-11-87.
of 60) on field goals.
Placing behind Snyder In scor·
lng for the Cougars was senior
Dave Gardella with 11 and junior
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
Trent
Allen with 8. Spring Arbor
Week of November 22,. 1987
at the charity stripe
did
better
DATE-Gl'MNASRJM
POOL
Sunday, Nov. 22-1-3 p.m./Open Recreation., ............................. 1-3 p.m./Open Swtm
than the hosts, nettlng7 ofll tries
6-8 p.m. / College Recreation .................. .... 6-8 p.m./College Swim
for 64 percent. On field goals,
Monday, Nov. 23-6-8 p.m./College Recreation ........... : .. 12: 30--l. 30 p.m./Fitness Swim
Tells Your Pas~ Present &amp; Future.
·
6-8 p.m ./College Swim
Spring Arbor was 40 percenton21
Advice On All Affairs Of LiftTuesday, Nov. 24-7·30 p m ./REDMEN vs. BLUFFTON,. , .. ... 12:30-1.30 p.m. / Fitness
of 60 attempts.
Sale
,
.
As Love, Marriage &amp; Business. All
Earlier, Rudy Marlsa•s physi·
S
Wednesday , Nov. 25-CLOSED •H .s. Basketball Preview ...... 12' 30-1: 30 p.m ./Fitness
wlm
~
cal
Waynesburg club fdund itself IRe;adlngs ConfldenUal.
~hursda~:;. Nov. 2G-CLOSED"THANKSGJVJNG BREAK ..: ........................... CLOSED
Cl" And Save $5. 011 Any Palm or
with a game on its hands when It
r lday, ov. 27-CLOSEO:THANKSGJVING BREAK ................................. CLOSED
Card Reading.
Salurrlay, Nov 28-6:00 p.m .(REOWOMEN vs. W.VA. TEO!.. .... ................ CLOSED
faced Jim Connor's team from
Sunday. Nov. 29-6-B p.m./College Recreation ...................... 6-8 p m /Co llege Swim
Open
9
a.m. · 11 p.m. Da1ly
Thomas More. The Rebels' te·
Call
675· 7889
naclty and ability at the foul line
2217 Ja~k90P Av('
l'(~nl rlr &lt;l. nt \'f&gt;

RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande's
Redmen exploded for 23 field
goals In the first half of Friday's
Bevo Francis Classic opener
against Spring Arbor (Mich.)
and went on to hand the Cougars
a 111·62 loss.
·
In earlier men's round action,
third-ranked NAIA team Way·
nesburg (Pa.) fought off a
determined attack by Thomas
More College of CrestvieW Hills.
Ky., to post a 109-87 victory.
Waynesburg and Rio Gra'nde
were to face each other In the
championship round at 9 p.m.
Saturday, while Thomas More
and Spring Arbor were set for the
consolation match at 7 p.m.
After some Indifferent success
In its first two season games, Rio
Grande came alivEf· against
Spring Arbor. starting with a
3-point field goal by Jim Kearns
- the first of five for the 6-1
Redmen guard. Successive
baskets by teammates Anthony
Raymore, Ron Rlttlnger and
Mike Tidwell put the Redmen
ahead by 14 before Coach Bill

this afternoon

Eastern . alumni to battle Kyger Creek in football tilt

Rio gains Bevo Francis Classic finals

.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-· Page-C-3

3 - 11-~ - HI.

CLEAN UP WITH STIHL'S DEFERIIED PAYMENT PLANt•

Purchase any Stlbl chain saw,
c~.,.,...
.
trimOH:r or blower betwoen
~::= •
September 15 and November 15, - -. -- ' •
1987, and make rw paymenu untU
l2l't
~
1
12
123
January 15,1988 ... and pay fW
.,.. • .,....
interest during Ibis period! With
·
monthly payments as low ao $25. -snHL CREDIT 0010- : .

= ;;,'

seniors Duane McCarty an(! Joe
White, each with six points,
followed by senior Tony Pernesti
with four.
In girls' basketball action,
North Gailia beat Hannan Trace
21·8, and Symmes Valley beat
Eastern 46-11.

ST/HC.
NUMa•R ON. WOifi.DI/IIID.

• At participating dealen.

POMERO

•

R TRA

SALES

GALLIPOLIS, OH. 4563 L

POMEROY, OH. 457b9 U04 EASTERN AVE.

600 E. MAIN ST.

PC-Compatible Tandy® 1000 HX

as

seen

59900 ~oewg~.:~:~~~Mon~"~

Save $100

Tandy
1000

Tv

HX

The easiest-to-use IBM'" PC compatible ever! Bwlt-in
MS·DOS-just power and run. 720K 31/2" disk drive
With Personal DeskMate~ 2 software. #25-1053 Mon,lo• e•u•
IBM/Reg TM IBM Corp MS-OOSfTM Microsol t Carp

Picture-perfect gift! HQ system for
sharper picture. Quick-Timer re· ~~
cording, 14-day/6-event t1mer.
#16--508 Remote battenes eKira

With CM-5 Save
Color Monitor $150

Reg. 349.95

Low As $43 Per Month •

Low A.s 515 Per Monlh •

2-Way Speaker System
Nova®-15 by Realistic

HALF PRICE

if 39?.~ :;~5
Get two for the regular price ol one!
Big 8" long-throw woofer, 2'12". .
tweeter. Genu1ne oiled-walnut f1n1sh.
19" high . #40-4034

Reg. Separate Items 998.95

DMP 130A by Tandy

Save s110
Reg. 199.95

24995

Low As S1S Per Month •

Start computing today! Built-in Extended
BASIC. Attaches to any TV. #26-3334

IBM PC compatible! Print$120 cps Word,
data-processing und graphiCS modes. With
traCtOr. #26-1280

seen

S

FD-502 Color Thinline Disk #0

ave
sao

21995

26-3133

Stereo Rack System With Remote
System 1000 by Realistic

Cut s300

Saves3o

31 -1130/40-1130/&lt;12-1 130

69!~,~

Buy one to give and one to keep! Make
or take calls around the house Without .
cords . Switchable Touch-Tone/pulse• d1al·
ing. #43-547

Reg. 299.95

Low As $15 Per Monlh•
~~~--~----~~~----~~~------

ET-395 by Radio Shack

on TV

25·1053
25·1023

Dot-Matrix Printer

Cordless Phone 30% Off
as

.84895

"100 Wads Per

69900

low As$35
Per Month•

Reg. 999.00

Shown wtth opt1ona1 CD player

• SA-1000 tOO Watt' Amp • TM-11100 Digital Tuner
• Optimus"-1000 3-Way Speakers • Remote Control
• EQ-1000 7-Band Equalizer • SCT·1000 Dual Cassette
• LAB·1000 Turntable • Deluxe Glass·Door Audio Rack
Get10" off our CD-2300 CD player (#42·5006, Reg. 219.95)
when purchased wtlh System 1000
Channel , Minimum RMS Into 8 Ohms From 20·20,000 Hz With No More Than 0.09" THO

CB With
ET-120 by RadiO Shack

Clock Radio

Patrolman~

SW-60
By Real istic

Cut 35%

Saves40

12~ 5
Reg. 19.95

Touch-redial. Pulse
dialing'.
White, #43·501
Brown , #43·502

Cut.
36%

TRC-474 by Real1sl1c

Save s&amp;o

5995 7995

3188

Reg. 99.95

Reg . 139.95

Reg. 49.95

Dual alarms, big 0.6" LED display. #12·1559

AM/FM Stereo Headset
STEREO-MATE"' by Realistic

42%

Off

21 95

Reg.

37.95

We1ghs only 6'/2 ounces with bal·
teries . #12·125 Battenes e:.tra

Electronic Melody-Maker

10%

Concertmate· ·300 by Realistic

Off

4495

Electric Pencil ___
Sharpener
SPECIAL PURCHASE

399

Four preset tones, 100-note
memOry. #42-4003 Bone•ios "'''"

Knrrn fook,

~- ll-2- 1 2; Cureun Wt•lls,
(1-:1- 17: l .y nr.,•l tt" llayth'n, &amp;-II· it· I 7: l'ra.·l l n nmn ,

Vlt•kl•• i"ttllll'r,

7
'.!-B,3-i ; Kr l'ih

llrook.~ . 1-0 '.! -10; \hndy Dnlll: ttn ,
1-o;o-2; Ha1•h&lt;'l lnnlll.n, t ·ll-11-~; 'frn ~y LnnP ,
0·11-1 I. Total s 3&amp;-Q-\!1 B:l.
WJo~ ST \' IUGINIA S'J',\TE (7!1) .,... L11 ne l'ulnt.o-r ,
~ - li-~ · 6: Wlllll' Mal' Thomas, t -Q-;1-11 : Rl•)tina
Mttr!tlud t, 7-11·-1-UI; lllarl11 S.ttlc . 1!-0-2-111; Tnn')
111lmllt nn, 5-0-1-10: lkhOI Crl'f'('h, rl(i!)-6-11: Sarah
DonnwhiH•, J.IJ-11-'l: U0011 Irons, 1·11-6-'l. Tulnl,..
~II('!) · II • 7.1:

Most Major Credit
Cards Accepted

�(

November 22, 1987

Novemtler 22, 1987

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

Page- C-4 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.lilldiM.

Ai W.-n!'a

Eastern alumni

Continued from C-3

Malson. Don Maxson. Richard
Bearhs, and Phillip LaComb for
Eastern. The following alumni
will be featured for the Kyger
Creek Bobcats: John Stevens,
Kenny Coughenour. Troy Edwards, Tom Waugh, John Amos,
Bill Ross, David Sands .. Rich

Smit h. Bryan Sutphin, Steve
Flint, Rob Helms , Greg Smit)l,
Bob Polycn, Car l Ward; David
Martin, Mike Elkins. Semakl
Corflas, Michael Ellio tt , Bart
Stump, Gary Johnson , Tim Gordon, Mike Conkle. Jack Minor,
and Paul Lalseter.

All.,_

Playoffs
Ohio Htslll !klilool

Plr.y...tf L • ult•
Prl , No v. %1
DlvWGn II

M-

You; aun ...._, U, Si,..en I

".............
Dh... Mrv

.

SOUTH PO INT - E mployi ng
the • services of a lP 12 boys
dressed, Gallipolis downed Rock
Hill 32-28 In Friday night 's
opening game of the 1987 Ohio
Valley Conference preview .
Coach ·Jtm Osborne opened
, .with Mark Kimble, David Todd,
• : Jason Thomas, Dennis McGuire
. . and B171y Evans, then followed up
:. with Mark Berklch, Todd Casey,
:: William Strait. Tim Nev17le, Pete
· Anderson, Tom Cornett and Joe
; Owen.
Junior forward Denni s
; •'McGuire,
6-2 "pile driver"
~ •paced the Gall!ans with nine
; -markers. McGuire started in
': place of Berk!ch, Who sat out
:'·most of the week with a s prained
:. ankle. McGuire picked off three
; rebounds .
,
David Todd led GAHS on the
boards w!lh six rebounds . Ber; k!ch finished with six points,
;: Thomas f!ve, Owen four and
•' Todd four .
'
Bob Morris paced the Redmen
. with nine markers.
Gallipolis connected on 13 of 31
field goal attempts for 41 per' cent. At the line, GAHS was eight
• of 10 for 80 percent. The Devils
: had 10 personals. 19 rebounds

Vf'. .lltN ft. WllulrniMI'I 8

Ae....,

AtOr.w,....

C.hn ...
II

at •nedlotiiJI! It, TIIUn t'..olllll'lhlan I

I

1

At Yo.p....

"' hJIDn
li(!lt.!riiiK" "Iter !'I, f'rllnkli• ll (4 ot)
.'.t iiUIP svllk&gt;
!'ltt&gt;.en\·Hie n, Cvtwnbuw WMI!erllltli

..

Gallip.olis trips
•
•
RHUS m prevtew

0 ...... IZ

Dlvlll..•lll
AtT 9
Cia F~~~~Wt.Paril J. •ooll:vlle t
At r.rwnoUIII
.,.._n,lr..... It
At·~· .
EMW Cat_. u .....,... t

Foot~~~au

II, UIJert)' Ullio..

Includes these sturdy general purpose blades:
• 16-Tlast-&lt;:ul
carbide tipped

• Economy
cutoftlrip

• Economy ply-

a

wood/paneU "!I
• Masonry cuton
(52911)

.t
....
....,,.,y
RaP ·y....

,..,..

GLASSBURN PUTS UP SHOT - North GaFiia guard Greg
, GFassbum (14) puts up the shoHn trafFic In the first period oftheir
• SV AC preview contest against Hannan Trace Friday night. The
game, which was close throughout, saw the WIFdcats post a 30-27
victory. Defending for the WIFdcats are Chris Petro (43) and
' Richard Stitt (31). (Times-8entine7 photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

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

.

• and seven turnovers.

fie ld , including one three·po!nt
goal by Brock Zornes. RHHS hit
seven of 15 free throw attempts
a nd had seve n personals. The
Redmen had 13 re bounds, three
each by Da vld Hopper and John
Large_ Rock Hill had eight
turnovers.
Gal!1po11s, after trailing 1-0 and
5-2 early in the two quarter
preview. built up a 14-6 advantage 12: 13) before taking an 18-13 ·
first period lead.
Rock Hill forged a hea d 20-18on
a layup by Steve Wells (6: 36)
be fore Mar k Berklch's goal knotted the count . Ber kich put GAllS
ahead to stay with back-to-back
goals at 4:36 and 4:21.
GAHS scri mmaged at Lancas ter Saturday . The Blue Devils
open their 1987-88 campaign at
Southern F riday night.
Box score:
·

0g§lonis.
·Tdisc furnace"

Solid brass pencil flame jet torch,
clog-proof filter. 14.1 oz. disposable
propane fuel
cylinder. (751 B)

(12·92~ (P861-TC)

le'j Proplfte

Ml Terch

.

ReDDY HeSTeR'

79~9
Reddy
Heater""
PIRATE UNGUARDED- North GaFIIa's Greg GFassburn (14)
: •dribbles up court without any pressure In Friday night's preview
: tiFt against Hannan Trace.

•
•
•

•
•
;
•
•
•
•
,
;.
·;
'·

•.

i·
~:

•:

:C

Zimmer new Chicago Cubs manager
CHICAGO (UP! ) - The Chicago Cubs F r iday na med former
Cubs player and coac h Don
Zimmer as their new manager.
reuniting him 'l'ith hi s old hig h
school buddll'. Jim Frev .
•
Frey· was named the Cubs'
director of baseball operations
last week a nd as his flrst ma jor
decision named Zimmer the
Cubs' 40th ma nager. Zimmer Is
also the 15th former Cubs player
to m a nage t he team .
"This is a unique job." Zi mme r
sa ld. "Chicago is one of the best
baseba ll cities in the world with
the best fans in th e world."
Zimmer was Frey's third base
coach in 1984 when Frey ma na ged the Cubs to the NL East title
- th e c lub's first pennant of a ny
kind since 1945. They were a lso
fired together In the middle of the
1986 season .
·
Whe n Frey became director of
base ball 9perations, Zimme r
wa s the first person he thought of
for th e club's vacant manageria l
s pot.

MOBILITY

A wheelchair can give you the mobility you n..d to perform your daily
tasks. It can also allow you to visit
friends and go shopping. They come
in a •oriety of styles anohoFors. Thty
are also Medicare/Medicaid approved. For more information call or

Energy
efficient.
Provides
enough
heat to warm most 2 car garages, sheds, workshops .
Operates up to 11 hours on one filling of kerosene or
fuel oil. 50,000 BTU . (RSO)
.
.

GET READY FOR OL' MAN WINTER
Insulate now·to save energy*
Bag Big Energy
and enjoy yeaNound comfort!
Savings*
On Quality
Oaena Corning Pink

' Sav1ngs vary . F1n d ou t why in the Sel ler's Fact Sheet on
A-valu es H1gher A-values mean greater insulating _ __
power
You don't have to hunt for
great insulation value. OwensCorning Pink Fiberglas® saves
energy, it's easy to install, and
helps add value and comfort
to your home.

Fiberglas® 1n1u1at1on

Truckload Savings
R-25/8"

Owe.n, 2-0.4; Bi lly Evans, 0·0·0. TOTALS
l:J.II-34.
.
ROCK HILL (28 ) - Bob MorriS, 1·1·3:
David Hopper, 2-2-6: Jim Sheridan , 0.1 -1;
Brock Zornes, 0·(1) -3; Kip Rlchard.~on.
1·0·2: Jo hn La rg~;&gt;, 1-0-2: Dennis Cade,
0.0·0; Shane Lawson, 1·0-2; Darrell Russe ll , 0-0-0. TOTAl.&lt;; 9-11)-7-28.

\

visit our store.

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE
&amp;3 Pine St.
Gallipolis

446-7283

Sale Ends

Ro•

11/28/87
R-1916V4'

In Memory of William F. "Pop" Clark

••

:·

born Mt~rch 14. 1916 -

t

•
•

•

nf Pnp'r mt.WJ' rmdea1 ·nn .

:

Tbere t~ ere peop!rt u:ho k1unt him all the u·ay hac~! to tbeir bigh
uhool day.r. T bere ll 'ere flou ors from his Mraduati" R cla.rr of 1934.
Ma1lJ ca11J'' u.·bo /mew Pop u ·be 1l be wo rked road conJJrucrlon.
Tb(jse included J'OIOlf!, people and old alike. His reputation uJ a brus
U'df to he firm but fai'f" and aluays ready to listen to a problem. Quite
a numba came from his days as a banjo pla;~ er"u • iJh tbe Bif!, lk,ld
Mi11.r1rel AHocirJ.Jimi. From the .rtories wid he ll'1-1S l'ery popular
aW0/1~ cuJ! mr: mber.r. Por iu.stance. durin{!. a brea~ he crmld be found
playinp, frJCk."'1d roll 0 11 his ba 11jo. so th tr;J'ONilR people could dance.
Pof' u:us probab/)1 best lmou-nfnr his acth•itier in Jhe church wbere
01 er tbe yearJ be buc/ become a tremendous hupirat10n to all whrJ
kneu.: him . Tbi.r "U'a.r especially true durin!!. his illn el".r wbe11 he u·a.r
able Jo dem onJtratB his faith a11d streuf!,lh throil,(!,hout hiJ lonf!. and
pai,1jul ordeal. E1·en durinp, his last moments on tbis eartb u. •ben he
p.,ent/)1 pointed towa rds 1-/eal'tm and paued uway only a moment Iater, he lt.'d.f able to comfort !IS i11 the kno r11ledp,e he k,wu · u here he
1t'd.J f!Oin~ and u;as not afraid. I think weallca ~t ag ree Pop waJ truly a
leader of men.

~
;

:
•

•
•
...

011r family would like 10 take this opportumty to tbank the literally
hrmdreds of people who have been so kind during Pop's dln eJJ, be fore 1.4nd aft er thefunera,l and cominue to Jbow their support;, so

:

· man;
f

..

15"161/4" • 48.!1!1 sq. ft.

Died No vember 2, 1987

$11 53

Our fa mil)' ba / jeit Pop to be a spec/a/ per1o11 for many yean a11d we
bat·e afu 'a)l.r been proud of him and hi.r man_)', m(my R i·t ' in~ ways .
L::1'ide11tly Pop 'r 1mique per.ronality was 1201 a '1'0')' well kept .recret.
Tbi.r beca~m! quite obt·lou.r&lt;tn our farn.ily during the tu ·o days of fu·
nr; ral ser'!'lceJ when so many came to pa)' Jbeir respactJ. Some! of the
fiJce.r u/erc! 1 e1J' famlha and rome had t o he introduced. bHt ull of
tbr:ir bt·e.r bdd he.eH J011ched in w me U'aJ' ot•er tbe J'f!arf throu)!.h o7e

••

..

KBAFf FACED

lt'a)'L

There rs. no UIJ)' all of the name I ca n be Hrted but please ;mder.r tan.!
how ,milch we appreciated every card or flower, et,ery dona.ti01: and
tt dy drsh of f ood that ha s bee" ~iven so generously. Stmply, thank
JON .

Ida Mae, April. Carle11e and Dick Clark

Roll

FQU, FACED
15"x81/4"- 48.96 sq. rt.
69 Ron

$12

'.

WE ARE A DEER

CHECKING STATION

RUGER SUPER

BLACK HAWK

OPEN 11127-12/S UNTIL BP.M.-1 P,.M.TO 8 P.M. NOV. 29th
INSIDE SALES ONLY ON NOV. 29th

_..,_
H·ValllH

mean grealtlr

...,

....

FIBERGLAS

BE SURE TO REGISTER
FOR DRAWING ON 4'
PINK PANTHER DOLLS

15"x31/2"- 88.12 sq. ft .

$1 099 Roll

$11 87 Ron
23''x3 112"- 135.07 sq.
$1873 Roll

DRAWlNG WILL BE FRIDAY, NOV. 28TH
2 TO BE GIVEN AWAY
WINNERS NEED NOT BE P~SENT

$

Roll

.•
•

'Your privacy is respected
Your questions answered

StJi~F~ ~TN' I · ~
t

•services include:
..
Birth Contr~l; V,D.. Sc~ning;
Ca_ncer_ Scneni.rg; ..-egnoncy
tests; edu,ation and 'ounseling .
for individuals and aMII'Ies.
.
.
-•Sliding fee scale; No one refused services because
·
·
of inability
. . to pay.
.
.

PLANNED. PARENTHOOD

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO .
POMEROY: ·
236 E·. Main St.

GALLIPOLIS
414 Second Ave., 2nd floor

Open 8:30 to 5:00

•Monday-Friday

446-01 66 Mon.·Sat.
Except Wednesday
CLOSED THURSDAY
Closed
Logan ·
AFso: Jackson~ Chesapeake. Athe~s.

1ji:

"'-":: ;f~ ·

r

••

-

·'

'?- -.'"

~'*'· t~·

~

'

~

•

~

•
•

~--

•

••

. I .

!

••

i

•

'

:,_·-: ---~ . . ~-::.-~--· _:..:::. -- -- --

•

••

:*'

•

1987 FORD AEROSTAR

-••

Custom Conversion Bv Starcruiser. blue &amp; silver. 3.0 V-6 eng .. auto . 0 / 0 trans .. air cond., AM -FM
cassette stereo, tiFt wheel, cruise control, delev wipers, p~r windows, power door locks. CBradio. 4

·•

captain' s chairs and couch, curtains and blinds , oak package, aluminum wheels &amp; morel

•...

LAST NEW '87 MODEL LEFT WAS $16,900 CLEARANCE PRICED AT

,

.

s1 5 soooq

ALSO IN STOCK:

I

I

1988 CHEVY ASTRO 11988 CHEVY FUll SIZE 11983 CHEVY FUll SII~ 1982 CHEVY 1 TON
LOADED!

LOADED!

LOCAl TIIADE!

l:l PASSENGER

}

BARNETT

•Ford
•Mercury
•Lincoln

(formerly Ab•l• Ford)

l1.,
••

84 Escort

4 dr., 4 cyl. au:o. air cond. AM/FM radio, new tires, low mileage.

$3 99 S

NOW

WAS '4496

84 Honda Civic

1987 FORD F·350 4X4 TON TRUCK

Four w~eel drive, dual wheels. 11 . 000 # G.V.W.. 6.91ilre diBSel engine, 5 speed trans. , air cond.,
AM -FM stereo. dual tanks. 1 0 ply radial tires. SY,.ft. steel flatbed. PS.H spring rear bumper, running
boards, tool boxes, aux . lighting, electric brake control. gooseneck ball mounted in bed. lnliler ight

s
69
3

NOW $

~P~~- Hatchback, 4 1yl., A-1 1ond., 4
WAS '4295

84 Ford LTD

~~l~v~~e~o TO WORK!
~~

.~

. 4 Dr., V-6, auto., AM/FM sle(eo, dean
car. WAS '6496

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Reds
minor league hitting instructor
:·. Ted Kluszew ski ha s retired due
·.: to health reasons, team officials
;-. said Friday .
I&lt;Juszewsk!, 63, has been with
the • Reds as an ins u·uctor or
coach since 1969. During his
playing career with the Reds
from 1948·1957, he hit 251 home
runs and batted .302 . Overall, he
played 15 years and hit 290
homers.

,.!

i

&lt;' i #,

•

NOW

$4695

NOW

$3895

..
'

.•

..

JUST 4.500 MILES!

I '

.· ~ MCJ

$AVE!

'£.

4

~

•

82 Ford F·l 00

Long ~ed, 6 cyl. 4 speed w/topper, new
tires.
WAS •4995

SEE BOB ROSS FOR THE BEST DEAL IN THE AREA!
STATE RT. 93
614-682-7731 OAK HILL, OHIO

1984 CHEVROLET S·10 TRUCK

'

Tahoe Package, long bed, md and white. V-6 eng .. auto. trans .. PS. PB, air cond., AM -FM cassette
stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, delay wipers. running boards. chrome bumpers .
NICE CLEAN LOCAL ONE-OWNER!
I

s5 99 500

Thanksgiving Day, n PPtn1ntrw 11:00 a.m.
All you care to eat from our better than ever
Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar

FREE GIFT
Cranberry
Sauce
Toasted Dinner
Bread

10" PINK PANTHER DOLL
WITH PURCHASE OF
lOORMORE
ROLLS

INSULATION

CAROLINA.LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY COMPANY
675-1160
312 6th Street

·.•

'

· ' ~S"x61/4"- 48.9&amp; sq. ft.
23"x6 1/4" -75.07 sq. ft.

..•

CHESTER
985-3301

VNFACED.

Sneel 01'1 A·Ya111111. HIOhll'

•
•
'

BAUM LUMBER

KIMBLE DRIVES- Ga751polis' Mark Kimble (13) drives up
court with Roc'k HiFI's Jim Sheridan (20) giving chase. GAHS won
the two-quarter preview, 34-28..
·
·

23"x6 1/4" • 75.07 sq.ll.
'SaVIngtl VII ~ Fond out
wfly on lhll Se1Bt"1 Fact

00
.
2·59

$

Scofe by quart~rs:
Gal!lpolis .... l 8 14 - 32
Rock Hlll .... .l3 15- 28

Big Ted retires

UNFACED
15"x8" • 31.25 sq. ft.

•Hunting Clothes
•Hunting License and
Tags
•Full Line of Hunting
Accessories

McGuire, 2-5·9; Todd Casev. 0.0-0; Wllllam

Park District Soccer
'
GALLIPOLIS- Fn 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park District soccer action
from November 14 , the 6-8
, year-old division featured an 8-l
victory by Legal Eagle Dragons
over the Southwestern Buckeyes
8-1. Jason Ratliff and Robbie
Woodward scored four goals
, each for the winners . Chris Lew is
• scored one for the Buckeyes.
The second game In the junior
league ended in a 7-2 win by the
M&amp;T Airplanes over the Bodimer
: · Grocery Strikers. Matt Donl ey
; and Richar d Stephens each
• kicked two goals for the winning
: 'Planes, while Jessica Ow ens ,
:· Mat Toler and Kevin Ward
,. contrlbutec;l a goal each to fle sh
: out the winners' scoring. Aaron
Beaver was the lone offensive
force for the Strikers , putting in
; both of their goals.
,. The 9-ll year-old league saw
,. tougher competition, as ev l• denced by the Porter Exxon
• Bengals' 2-1 win over the Shoe
: Cafe Kicks . Chad Shamblin and
: Chad Slone put in the Bengals'
: . goals, while Dusty Hill scored for
I he Kicks .
The other game In the senior
circuit saw the Foodland
Bombers pick up their first win of
the season by beating the C&amp;S
Comets 2-0. Tony Gillman was
responsible for both goals.
~
The games on Saturday will be
' the final games for the fa11
season. Junior circuit action will
' have Bodimer wi 11 take on the
: Legal Eagle Dragons at 10 a.m ..
; fo11owed by the Buckeyes-Smith
:. Bu!ck· Pontlac Bea rs game at
11 : 15 a.m. Senior division action
will have the Kicks against the
Comets at 10 a.m. and the
Domino's Pi zza Dragons and the
Bombers at 11 :15 a .m . &lt;[

Sentry® 2-Pc.
Propane Torch Kit

Enough power to heat
large rooms.
Exclusive internal
thermostat holds
selected
temperatures.
Safety features.

gy SABOT, REMFNGTON,
WINCHEStEit, PEOERAF. FIERNNEKE

Stralghr. 1·0·2: Tl m Nevi ll e, 0·2-2; Pete
A nderson, 0-0·0: Tom Cornett. 1·0·2: Jo~

· &gt;Soccer results

Control

•Slugs

GALLIPOUS (34) - Mark Kimbl e
?-0-0; Dav1 d Todd, 2-04; Jasoo Thom as:
2-1-5; M ark · Ber klch. 3-0· t:i; Dennis

Rock H111 was 10 or'23from the

Disc Furnace"'
wHh Thermostatic

ffgo ltdi!!!l,-llf Allin llle WAKTAfC

Store Ho.urs: Monday·Frlday,! a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday, 8 a.m.·12 noon

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

~~fL.~~
Mashed
~
Potatoes
Tender, Sliced
Tom Turkey
Carryout service iS available.

~~--Ught

Cornbread Dressing

Start your holiday nff righ( with uur 8 rcakfliM
Bar It's open tW 11:30 a. m . Thanksgiving Day.

~HONEY~~
=======AmeriCas Di.llfler Table·r====='===
•

' -

..

1983 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
4 door, finished in light desert IBn with brown plush wlour interior, loadedwith equipment including
fuiF power. AM· FM cas!l8tt9 stereo, di~al dash, aluminum wheels. kevFessentry system &amp; new tires !
CL!eAN LOCAL TRADE-IN!

S9 99500

'

'

�Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bengals seeking
•
revenge tn return
bout with Steelers
By RICK VANSANT

CINCINNATI (UP!)- " Wicky
Wacky " seeks revenge Sunday.
" Wicky Wacky" is what Pittsburgh Steelers' assistant coach
Dick Hoak calls Cincinnati Bengals head coach Sam Wyche.
Four weeks ago In Pittsburgh,
Wyche couldn 't get his field goal
unit on the field before time ran
out and the Bengals wound up
losing 23-20 to the Steelers .
"Wicky Wacky screwed up
another one," Hoak declared
after the game . " He's got the
bes t material in the division and
can 't win."
Wyche has a chance to nix that
nickname Sunda y when the Ben·
gals host the Stee lers in a
rematch of the AFC Central
division rivals. Pittsburgh (5-4)
trails divis ion co-leaders Cleveland and Houston by one game,
while Ci ncinnati (3-6) is three
games behind.
Wyche isn't the only person ~
involved in Sunday's ga me who is
being ca lied names. Pittsburgh
quarterback Ma r k Maione. the
worst passer In the NFL, is under
fire - again .
Pittsburgh fans booed Malone
last Sunday when he completed
only seven of 22 passes for just89_
yards aniklne interception In the
Steelers' 23-:l loss to the Oilers.
Alt hough Malone was replaced in
the fourth quarter by Bubby
Brister, Malone will star t Sund ay
in Cincin nati.
"It could help Mark to be on the

road, " said Pittsburgh head
coach Chuck Noll. "But the only
thing that's rea lly going to hel p is
a few victories."

November 22, 1987

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

Ma lone in~ists he's we at rer' •g
lh&lt;: storm.
"I'm having no problem whatsoever," he said . " When fans get
on you, It doesn't make your job
any easier. you can't lie about
that. But, I'm not go ing to get
caughf up in It and let it star t
messing with m y head."
Even Cincinnati quarterback
Boomer Esiason has been booed
by the hometown folk s this year .'
"It doesn't surprise me," said

Malone. " When a team struggles, regardles s of the reasons ,
the quarterback is the one who
gets a lot of the blame.
" I was around here when a guy
(Terry Bradshaw ) who won four
world championships got booed
right out of the stadium a couple
of times . It happens to the best of
them. Unfortunately, it just goes
with the job desc ription. "
Part of Malone' s problem is
that he doesn't have deep threat
Lpuis Lipps to throw to. Lipps has
been on the shelf ever since the
players' st rike ended with a
hamstring Injury .
" He was alright early. bu t then
after the strike he was trying to
r un and he had problems with hi s
hamstring," said Noll. " Louis is
a big play guy and wha t we 've
needed Is a big play and we
haven't bee n able to turn enough
of them ."
"It hurts not to have a weapon
like Louis available," said Malone. "He not only can go deep,
but catch the medium pass,
break a tackle and make a big
play ."

•
November 22, 1987

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

Final area teams bow out

Ironton, Wheelersbur'g eliminated Friday
By United Press International
It took Elyria Catholic three
quarters to get accustomed to
Bellevue before Jim Klingshirn
found a way to penetra te the
Redmeri's defense.
Bellevue led 6-0 going Into that
fo urth quarter. But Klingshirn
found openings for three four thquarter touchdown s in E lyria
Catholic's 21-6 win in Division Ill,
Region 10 game Friday night. He .
scored on r uns of I , 3B and 4 yards
lo send Elyria Ca tholic into the
semi-fina ls nexi week against
Youngstown Mooney, a 21-3

winner over !;truthers.
Division II, Ill and IV games
were played Friday night while
Division I and V played Saturday
night.
Ketter in g Alter edged Franklin 27-21 In four overtimes in a
Division TI, Region 8 game. Alter
wil l play Steubenville, a 27-20
wi nn er · over· Co lumbu s
Watterson.
In the other Division II games,
Cleveland Benedictine' s Ron
Grocell scored three touchdowns
to lead his team to a 20-0 win over
Tiffin Columb ian. One touch·

down was set up by a fumble , a
seco nd from a deflected punt and
the third from blocked punt.
Benedictine goes Into the semifinals against Akron Buchtel. a
20-12 winner over Chardon.
In Division Ill, Cincinnati
Forest Park shut out Brookville
3-0 in Region 12 and will play
Sheridan, a 27-14 winner over
Ironton in Region 11.
In Division TV, Versailles
downed Wheelersburg 22-B in
RegiOI). 16 and will play Columbus
Academy, a 3B-14 winner over
Liberty Union · in Region 15.

YSU whips Akron in 'Snawbowl'
AKRON, Ohio (UPl) - The
Rubber Bowl looked a Jot lik!" the
"Snow Bowl" Friday night as
Youngstown State edged Akron
10-~ in a snowstorm.
Snil"! fell throughout the ga m e,
obscuring yard lines and side
lines . A fi eld crew was forced Ia
scrap the Rubber Bowl 's As traturf su rface at halflime.
The win gave Youngstown
State an 8-3 record and left the
Penguins waiting du ring the
weekend to 1·e arn whether they
wi ll be invited to compete in the
NCAA T-AA playoffs. Akron, a
1-AA independent, fini shed ~- 7.
As a crowd of just over 5,000
braved -the storm. Trenton Lykes
hit Maury Biebcnt with a scoring

field goal attempts In the third
period. In the fourth, they drove
to the Youngstown 7, where they
had a first down , but runnin g out
of plays .

pass and John Dowling kicked a
field goal to pace the Penguins .
Youngstown drove 65 yards in
eigh t plays after the opening
kickoff with Lykes connecting
with Bien bent for a 24-yard
scoring pass . With about four
minutes left fn the second period,
John Dowling kicked a 33-yard
field goal to give the Penguins a
10-0 lead, capping an B2-yard,
15- play drive.
Akron'sScott Rind fuss took the
ensuing ki ckoff and dashed 89
yards down the sidelines for the
Zips only score. Snow had nearly
covered the sideline marker, but
offic ials sa id he remained
lnbounds. ·
The Zips missed a co upl e of

Archbold kicked a field goal in
overtime to hand Huron a 3-0
setback in Region 14. Archbold
wlll play Gates Mills Hawken, a
36-6 victor over Chagr in Falls. :
Regional finals in divi sions I
an&lt;j V wili be played tonight
ln Division l. Region 4, Gahanna plays Cincinnati Princeton at Day ton; Sandusky plays
Brunswick at Berea in Region 3;
Toledo Whitmer plays Middletown at Troy in Region 2 and
Boardman plays Cleveland St.
Joseph at Akron in Region 1.
In Division V, Middletown
Fenwick plays s t. Henry at
Clayton Northmont In Region 2Q,
Grandview plays Newark Ca ~
thollc at Dublin in Region 191
Delphos Jefferson plays Monroeville at Ll rna in Region 18 and
Lorain Clearview plays Mogadore at Barberton in Region 17.,

~
ONE WEEK IN

.Honolulu.
•

Stop Dreaming &amp; Start
Pac~ing!

JIM BILL'S

FEBRUARY 16-24 1988
Escort: Pat Gerard

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVICE

Includes roundtrip air via TWA, 7
nights accommodations at the Woikiki ;
Beachcomber with full or partial ocean
view rooms, plus many extras.

SINCE 1933

446-2362

SALES:
Industrial V -Belts
lawn Mower V-Belts
Automative V-Belts
Electric Motors
Fan Blades
. Fuses
Regul~tors

ELECTRIC REPAIRS:
Battery Chargers
Small Welders
Motor Controls

GALLIPOLIS
Agency

AUTOMOTIVE ELEC. REPAIR:
Alternators
Generators (Tractor)

Starters
Troubleshoot Wiring

360 Second Ave.

3 7 Pine St., Gallipolis, Ohio

Ohio

NR.. resuhs

Dr UnHed Prftllnltrnatlonal
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Amelicu CoafereJK:e
Ea•t

W L T Pet . PF

N:t' Jet!&gt;
lndlanapol18
Ruffalo
Miami
New En&amp;fand

5

.us

• •

4$0
4 G 0
4 s 0

.•' ..•.•

Cenlral

Cle.,eland
Routon
PlttAbUI'Ib
Clnclnllall

p~

211 llltl

s • o .sas tu3 1w

'

,MtHWW
.M4 244 21J
.144 118 191

.887 2311 131

.en :m

183

.55f J'Jj 19~
.S33 IU 18&amp;

3

••

ao

Deii'Yer

8
&amp;
5

3 I

.8R9 192 m
.187 232 ns
.811 229 189

LA Raiders
KaaiiU City

3
I

B fl
II 0

.Ill 14! 2i5

w...

San Dte10

suule

I 0

,333 183 1"

NMional Conleunce

Eul

W L T Pc~ . PF PA
7 z t
.ns m 1s2
5 4 0 .$$6 2118 2112

Waahln,;ton
Dallu
PIIUadelphla
NY Glantl
St. Lollis

..

5 •

.444 191 233

3
3

8 •
8 •

.33! 160 20!
.333 20t 235

1
5
4
3

2 0

.178 241 IGO

Central

Chlcaro
Mlnnesoca
Tampa BAy
Green O.y
Dflroll

• 0 .558 193 19'J
5 0 .44. ~lit 18%
5 I .389 180 1118
2 1 o n:z 159 no
West
•
San Fran.
7 2 0 . 778 250 200
New Orlei.ns
6 3 o .881 2, 7 1111
Atlanta
2 7 o .222 uo no
LA Ranu
I! '2 0 .%22 Hll 219
~.day's Game11
Atla•ta &amp;I Ml rtnefl,Ota, I p.m .
Bulfalo at NV Jeh, J p.m .
Cle\'eland al Hou.ton, I p .m.
Detroit at Chklap, 1 p .m.
Gree• RaJ at Kansu City, 1 p .m .
lndlanapolll at New Enrland, 1 p.m .

NBA results
By UnUed Pre.a International
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC.
Eutern Confererice
AUanllc Dlvbdon
W L Pd. GB
Boston
,
2 .77!1 • PhU.delphla
3 3 .50(1 '! \'r
New Jer!le)'
- ~ 4 .333 3\-4
W•.h la(ton
2 6 .250 -l 'h
New York
I 7 .1t5 5%
Ce ntral DIVI!!Ion
Ollca.:o
7 1 J\75 Milwaukee
7 2 . 77R 1
t\tlaata
5 3 .625 2

4 3 ..m

Delrol&amp;
lldlana

Bea rings
Pump Seals
Capacitors
Brushes
· Couplings
Pu"'leys

E.lectric Motors
Water Pumps
Aireators

Scoreboard

21-1

5 4 .556 2~
CI~Ja.d
'I 5 .%116 4 ~
Western Conltrence
Mldw~t Dhlslon
Houston
6 2 .750 Dfnwr
53.6Z5J
Dalia.•
$ 3 .62!1 I
Utah
5 .J .1156 I 'A
Saa .-\alonlo
3 5 .375 11
Sacramento
2 5 .21!6 3~~
Pacific Dhl'llon
LA Laker11
K 0 1.000 Seattle
4 • .500 4
LA Clippers
3 5 .3'75 5
Phoenix
3 5 .375 5
Portl.,.d
3 5 .:m 5
Gold~nSI .
I II .Ill 7?..
Frlday'!l Resu.lh
Detroh 131, GoldeaSialf' IIlii
PllU:.df'lpftla 1111, Ho!l&amp;lln k:J
01 lea~ !M, AUanta 9'l
Df'nwr 1511, San Antonio 14!!
Utah 112, lndlii!M IU
LA CllppeniJ!, PtJoonlx 9&amp;
LA Lakers 119, Daltas 116
Portlud 120, WaMinrton 101
Suttle 99, Mllwaukef' 97
Sundii)''N GamH
lndh&amp;na at Portland, nlxhl
Milwaukee at LA Lllkers, nla:hl

Meigs, Trimble, Logan,· Athens cop preview wins
ATHENS
Basketball as Senior Mike Bartruin was
stepped Into the sports spctlight fouled In the act of shooting and
Friday night as area teams sank both free throws. Bartrum
opened the 1987-88 season with hit again a few seconds later
from the three point range with
preview play.
.
one
minute gone for a five point
Six teams from the TVC and
lead .
Meigs
two from the SEOAL gave their
Vinton narrowed it to 5 to 4 on
fans a look at what Is to come In
the next three months of play In eonsecutlves goals by Matt Sanders and Joe Griffith at the 5:58
the Athens gym.
In the opener, the Marauders mark in quarter one. They would
of Coach Mlck Chllds went get no closer, however, as the
aga inst Vinton County's VIkings Marauders; pulled away to lead
wlth the locals prev.alllng 41 to 24 by as many as 19 in the second
In the 16 minute (two quarters) frame . The VIkings, aagainst an
aggressive Marauder defense,
affair.
Controlling the opening tip , committed numerous turnovers
Meigs lit up the scoreboard first and managed only a 28 percent
shooting average from the floor

of
Gallipelis

L T

NOV. 19TH-· NOV•., aJ'l.B
'

Sb:lt 11 77l8l2 dean, tront ,wheel m . 4 cvl. 4

.........

SDNd ltlll$ . stm. hns., ,tM ra:lio, IJdl!l tra

$1750.
1987 FORD F-250

Pt~.

11

10

Pltl!lhUfR'h

NV Ranx••r11

I

17
17

6

Phllt~dt-lphla

$12,700.

Adam11 DlvjHion
Montrul

6
16
Campt&lt;•IJ C:onll'rentt'
Norris Dhr'IHiun
211

9

l·l
Smythe Divis ion

EclmDn~;on

IU

V1U1Coa~~r

93

l.m! AnKeh•11
Frldll)''!&lt;l Rt'suJts
Butfalo '· WIW!In«ton 3
New Jrr.' lty 5, C hiu~ 2
Nl' Ranlf'r!l ol , WlnnlpP,; 3
Edmonton -1 1 Pltl-'lhur,;h I
Sundll)' 's G8me"
DoNlOn at Detroit , nla;hl
Los AnKelf'lll at BuUalo, nla;ht
Edmonton 1111 WI nnlpex. ftl«hl
VancOU\'t't 1111 Ollcaxo. niKhl

WMewaft
No Trads NeBded

TiemJIO

Rad1al

Bank Personnel From Citizens National, Commercial
&amp; Savings, Central Trust &amp; Ohio Valley Bank Will Be

Available And On Site To Approve Your Deal!

No Payments 'Til February 1988

Transactions
&amp;.o;ehllll
BoMun- Sl xnrd llr'!4t-hali(' llnd bal. tin~~:
t'OII.ch Walter Hrlnluk to 2- )'f'llr t:&lt;~ ntnut .
Ullt111KO (NL ) - Slpd Munal{!'r Don
Zimmer to 2-)'l'IU' t·ontmd .
CIMin.wtl - Mlnor·lt'UXIH' hlltlnl{
IMtroctor Tf'd IUU!ilf'Wiikl rt•llrt'd.
PIU8btlf'R'h - Sl«t1('d lnflrlde-r S k~..r
Barfll"i lu Trlplr- .-\ l'Dnln&amp;ct .
S~an Franci~~eo- Slll:"ned pllt her ~\· ••
DrllVI'cky to Z.year 1;ontrae1.
SuHit' - Addl'd pll,·hers Mtkr
&amp; ·hool€'r. BUI Sw lftand THryTayloru.nd
clllchl'r Bill McGalr~ to -11}-mlln ro11ler:
releuf'd t•al.cher JE'rry Nan,-,n 11nd
outflelck&gt;r .urn Weavf'r.
C'olk-11:1'
Colll&amp;tl•- Foutbllllt"Oach Frt•d Dunlap

MAY TAG
HEAVY DUTY WASHERS
No. 1: in long life, in fewest repairs,
in lowest service costs, in nationwide
preference· • Large capacity tub

k2

9

!

Calp.ry
" 'lnnlpt"ll:

~9~~
~

MODEL
A104

Sb:k II 73531. 4 d:m. !!dan. tJOtt wtwllhe. 5
cyl, 1ir ID"d. 5 spea:ls!Jnd tars . PS, PB !X1W8
wind:lws. powtf OOor leW. tru!!t allllrtj. NMfM
rOo. !itet@O tlpe, ra:llll liri!S.

"''""'
$10,800.
2-1987 FORD

OFF

OFF

MAYTAG
MAYTAG
30 INCH RANGES BIG LOAD DRYERS

MAYTAG
JETCLEAN'M
DISHWASHER

300 SERIES

For Small Cr~rs &amp;

$tfl
"'3 90
Oth~r

MODEL WU50 2

lmpr~rts

r55SRJ2 Blackwall
With aid f(re

sizes sim l~arly va lue price d

Great Troctlr1n And

$"3 5 JO

unsurpassed capacity .~
• 'Quiet' clean sound
control system

:.!

Non·Mjustllble
Rear Suspension

BUYANY

.

$25.

No. 1 Preferred Dryer·
"(8asecl on a consumer brand
p rl'!ference survey)

90'blvs,

A
MONTH

SAME AS CASH

.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

RUTLAND
742-2211
Home of the Grate Boys, Where You Get Greot Buys

•

Susp en~lon

Uech ank:ally
MJustable

JUST SAY CHARGE IT!

• Easy care fabric cycles

!HIIOOGHIMYTA0'8
pii; ~~
R£110/.VING CRfOfT PI.MI :t ::

FOR AS LITTLE AS

Shim Type
AdJ U! tllblo Rear

Limited W•rn~ nty ll:~r e mQflth • or 8,000 mllee, whlcho.,.r com.• ftrt~t .
' Cost ol sh ims and ln91allatlon a~ttra where reQuired. Che11ettes. Flaros.
li ~ ht 1/ucks, 4-wneet ori11e venlcles ano cars requiring MacPherson
Strut correcl•o n erlrfl

• Dual deep racking

MAYI'.AG

. $39

Re•r Suspene1on
• All 4 whoors aligned !Of maximum !Ire mileage. • Computeraligned lront and rear to eJ~.act rnlr. settings

Cooking quality you can
depend on • Deluxe easyclean styling

iii
RAIN
a ratfl

Fuel Econr1my
Pl55180RI28itJciiWJJII
W11h olr:J tire

Other sizes similarly value priced

All Wheel Alignment

$2195 5 $29.

ARRIVA
RADIAL

Oil Filter, Chassis Lube
&amp; Oil Change
·95 with
Lubricate chassis. d rain oil and refill
up to five quarts of major brand

Sl 1

motor oil, and install a new oil filter.
Note: special diesel oil and filter type rnay resu lt
In extra charges.

Br8nda may vary
by location.

I
I

•I

Let Goodyear
Value rolie
You Home

Dalla.oi Hedlund ;
Eli plnD'l-11 .

socc•·r
Re lrMed dl'll'nder ,John
d e frnd('r .Jorl('

~lll:"ned

College scores
Ohio Collt•a;t•
BI&amp;Nkt'lhuil Rr!!uiiP&gt;
Fri., Nov. ~D

Baldwln·"' aJJac•• K9. Grt•e nsboro IIH
Ca plla.l

U nl~er"lt y

A.lun1nl Tourney
AI Cohanhu"

DrPIWW 61\ Heldelher~ 8~
f.apttaltOI , Olhl't (Michl 411
Mapt1• Cll y Clwtslc
At Slera Hrlrhl ~. Mlfh.
Polnl Park (PI) 77, Mount Vernon '75
Siena llhl (Mil'! h ) iDI, Ohio Dominican

"

fulure deli~~tny at thtt adver1 ised

pnct~.

M.EIGS TIRE CENTER ••
I

..
J. MARCUS FULTZ ...., JOHN FULTZ
242 WEST MAIN
992-2101

Hoclif')' IA'IlJ'ue.

("')

You may uso Goodyur' s own cr8d it eard :
Oimcover C.ard • MasterCard • VISA
CHECK-II we sel f out of your slz&amp; we will issue you

check, as$ uring

DePIWI- D&lt;odared II:Uilnl Rod St ri ck·
lanf hK•IIIflhl€' to play ha~~keth!UIIn tht•
IIlii q11111rk'r.
M•ml)'Slah• -Suspend e d~;:uardsDon
Mann and Lo~nzo Doylr and lorw11rd
Umle Fo,11ler for cl~:ht ~;am~ .
Texa1 ('hrl'llhtn - Su~pt·nded runnln'f
hac II Tony Jpflrey fur S"*urd~ty'li Kame .
Hockl&gt;y
N'' R111n«Crll - Traded defen!lfman
Curt Gil~ 1o MlnncsOia lor center Byron
IAmow -d a draft choler ; .!lt'nl cf'.,ter
Mike Slltala and right wlnll:" fWn Tlllu ·
kollkl to Colorado of th~ International
Hot•ke)' l.e~tK\M'; rt'CaUed t·e nler Ull
Dahll'n and dt'fea.w man Mark Tlnordl
from Colorado; IH'nt def~nHman P11ul
- BouUUcr to New H1we n of th {' Amerieun

POMEROY

••••••••••••••••

..

Ohio WIP.!IIt&gt;yan KlwuiA Touney

AI Deht.ware
Df'flancr H , No rlh Carollftll Wesll'yan

Ohio W!'!l'l lf!yan 96, Wllmln~on 71
Urhana Hall of Fame Tournament
AI Urhana
'
Gt'Ofll:t'town (Ky ) 96. Dyke 70
Cumberland 4Ky) 73, Urbana 67
Northern Kent~ky Tlpoll Cluslt'
At HIKhlandl'l HCSIK)r)
r Northern Kentucky 9-1, Tllfln fl5
Carnecte Mtllon Tournllment
At PlttsbUflh
BrandPIII Kl. Cue WHtt&gt;rn IICl
IWvo Francl• (11UUik
,o\t Rio Grandt'
RloGrunde 111, Sprtn«Arbor fMlc hl62
W~n~ra ( Pal 108, Thomlls More
(Kyj 87

,_

TEMPOS

1'PIIIped,

lsETrERil

$5600.

9

['hll-a~o

.,

61

:1 ' HI

II

Toronto
Ot-t roil
Mlnllt'Jiot!l
St . Louis

The Original All
Season Radial

!ALE Hlct

I

WaaMhln~on

, ==~~no
Quehet·
lbrtford

the Spartans with 10 points.
The Athens Bulldogs, Meigs'
f&lt;le on Tuesday night at Larry R.
Mor rison gym, defeated Federal
Hocking 25-221n the final game of
the night as Sophomores Scott
Deca mlnada and Scott StrickUn
combined lor 12 points . The ·
Bulldogs will field a team with a
number of sophomores and j uniors seeing a lot of action this
season, according to Informed
so urces.
Eac h coach subsiituted freely
dur ing the four game preview
which gave them the opportunity
to determine the starti ng lineups
for most of Tuesday night'$
openers.

7 BIG DAYS

, GF G'
"" '' ' " .."" .,""
'' " ' .." ,..
• "" '' "" " ""
" '•' •' " ",., . "
• " "
'' •' " "'' ""
' ' '' ." ,." .."
'' "' ·' " .. "
• " ' . " ""
" '' ''' .,.. " ""
,' • ' .. " ,"
' "" '' " "" "
w

throw route.
In other preview action, Trimble topped Nelsonville-Yo rk 41
to 35 as Jeff Holbert picked up 10,
Dave Kovach had 9 and Bill
Sayre and Jeff Koons eac h
canned B. For the Bucks, Mike
Eckels was high point man at 13
followed by Chad Savage with 10
and Brad Spencer with B.
A three point shot by. Doug
Stiverson with two seconds left
on the clock lifted Logan's
Chleftans to a 27-24 win over
Alexander. Stiverson was the
leading scorer for the Chiefs wl th
10. Alexander tried a desperation
shot with one tick left on t he clock
to no avaiL Mike Chapman led

-~

NATIONAL HOCKEV LEAGUE
WaleM Conference
P.-trlck Dl .. t~lon

Nl' IKialtdt'n
New ·ll!rNe)"

and hitting seven of eleven from
the foul line.
Meigs managed a 39 percent
average as the Marauders attempted 41 from the field and hit
on 16. At the free throw line, they
canned six out of seven. With all
players getting Into the action, It
was difficult to assess the overall
potential of the unit (as It was
with all teams involved). Mike
Bartrum was the leading scorer
for the Marauders as he racked
up 13 points. He also grabbed five
rebounds with Bryan Durst and
Bill Brothers close behind In that
department with four each. Joe
Griffith led the Vlkes with ten
points, six ~ omlng via the free

rnpike

NHL results

ORTA
0134

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-7

4 doors. hwd ~ l!ont llilee' driole. 4 cyl. 111 alnd.,
1ulo. h'IS.. PS. PB. JXI'I'I'tl' ~ t1twheel. .WIFM
radio, lldill lfts, I:IJcht !elb, 1!11" winli:Jw dm&amp;

TAKE ME

HOME!

~ocl

• 84571

SAl.! PRICE

FREE
TURKEY!
WITH PURCHASE
ON ANY NEW

ASTROVAN

Stock It 74241. 6 cyt., air CD'Id.. Mo. ms.. PS. PB.
tD'I'ef cb:Jt k&lt;:ks. • 'llfM. ttulle contml AMifM
radiO. !Ureo IIPf. lluck!l Bts. rear wlncbw \~~!foe

S.U£PM

OR
USED CAR
OR
TRUCK!

Stodt ~ 77381. 4 Ibn. natd too. 6 cyt , ar oond.,
aoto. trans. PS. PB IIdia tiles, .nte l'llls.
SAL£ rRia

$6800.

SAVE ON DEMO'S

•~tn.,k

No.
Was
Now
1
7777 1987 TOPAZ ...................... '10,986 .... 945000
7474 1987 TEMPO ......................11,656..... 10,25000
7400 1987 TOPAZ ..... :................ 11,543..... 10.15000 '
7413 1987 RANGER 4X4 ............. .13,538.... 11,99000
7441 1987 RANGER 4X4 .............. 12,153.... 10,65000
7799 1987 COUGAR'XR-7 ............ .17,961.... 15.45000
8317 1988 RANGER 4X2 ............. .10.689....... 9850 00
8318 1988 RANGER 4X4 STX ....... .15,156..... 13,65000
8349 1988 F-150 4}(2 ................. .16,450. .. : 13,99000
7559 1987 AEROSTAR ................. 17,438.... 15,57500

Dwing
Our Big
Pre-Holiday
Sale!

�•
November 22. 1 987

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

Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Business

GAf!S Blue Qevils goal: 'To compete (or league crown'
GALLIPOLI1l- "Our goal Js to
compete for the league (Southeastern Ohio) championship,"
states Gallipolis basketball
coach ~im Osborne as he prepares h1s cagers for their 1987-88
campaign.
" Not too ma ny teams have
repeated as conference champions in recent years," he added.
(Note
Iron~on, former
league member, repeated In
1975-76 and 1976-77 and in 1978-79
and 1979-80. Logan did it in
1984-85 and 1985-86) .
Gallia Academy High School
has three lettermen (one fulltime star ter) two part-time starte rs a nd three others who gained
va lua ble playing experience on
Iastyear'sSEOALchampionship
squad which finished 19-3 overall
and 10-0 in league play.
Berklch Top R~turnee
Mark Berkich, senior center
and a two-year letterman is the
Gallla ns' top returnee. As a
junior, Berkich was named XIISEOAL by league coaches. He
led the 1986.87 Devils in rebound·
tng 1180) and was second in team

as a unit all their careers (except Division II District, to be held at
one year) and· have always been Ohio University In Athens.
winners. They have lots of
There's also several new rule
pride."
changes this winter - namely
Begli!S 19th Season
the three-point shot (!Ike college)
Osborne, whose teams have from 19 feet, nine Inches out;
won 250 and lost 1311n 18 previous being able to call time out out of
seasons (}53-75 Inside the bounds up to five seconds (before
SEOAL) has coached four league you could not call time after four
championship teams at GAHS- seconds had elapsed); officials
1973-74; 1981·82; 1983-84 and must display ball In direction
1986-87. His teams· have won team is going when taking it out
three Class AA SecUonals. (1972· of bounds; no dunking or touch·
73; 1973·74 and 1976·77) and one ing rim before game or a
Class AA District (1972-73).
two-shot technical will be called
The Devils open their 20·game against the boy's coach; all
card with Southern at Racine on technical fouls will result In two
Nov. 27. First home game -Is shots; teams must get on floor
Saturday, Nov. 28, against immediately because ball will be
Waverly.
put In play; officials no longer
Reserve games precede the will go over and tell teams to
varsity encounters. League out- "play ball" after horn soundsings are set for 7:30p.m.
. .. which means team that didn't
Logan Is Osborne's top choice have ball could take it and score
In the conference with "Marietta If other team Is stlll on sidelines.
a strong dark horse."
Name Assistants
He feels Portsmouth will be
Assisting Osborne will be Bill
one of the st&lt;~te's top Division II Leedy, varsity assistant now in
squads this winter, along with his eighth season at that position;
Wheelersburg, both non-league Barry Sealock, reserves, second
foes.
year; Roger Branden berry,
New Post-season Setup
freshmen; Chuck Bradbury,
Osborne said under the new veteran eighth grade coach who
post-season state playoffs, Galli· will be assisted by Greg Adkins
polls will take parlin the Division and Jim Niday, seventh grade
IIlevelnextMarch (theoldClass coach who wUl be assisted by
A, AA and AAA system has been David Johnson.
done away with and replaced by
The cil/' recreation departfour divisions).
ment, (Mike Simmons, director
Gallipolis will play its sectional and former coach In th:e GAHS
tournament games at Rio system) will be in charge of the
Grande College, along with fourth, fifth and sixth grade
Meigs, Jackson, arid Vinton ·rlnky-dlnk programs again this
County. Four sectional winners winter.
from southern Ohio will go to the
Osborne said various clinics

scoring (155 points) . Berkich had squad's assist leader; and for56 assists In 22 outings.
·wards Joel Spencer, Chris HowJason Thomas, forward-guard ard and Tom Cassady.
alternated as Gallia's sixth man.
Osborne feels the Galllpolts
The senior veteran, In 22 outings, program Is In a position "where
had 39 assists, 142 points and 58 we're not rebulldlng a team, just
rebounds.
trying to flt people into the right
Third returning letterman Is spots."
·
David Todd,, who started several
Osborne continued, "We are
games for the Blue and White very fortunate to have some able
quintet. Todd had 53 rebounds, 58 bodied replacements who played
points and 10 assists in22 outings. in substitute roles last year. They
Earning valuable playing time· · will be going into full time actlv·
were seniors Billy Evans, guard, . ity this year," he added.
who had 29 points and five assists
The veteran GAHS coach feels
in 19 outings; Tom Ha\lldren, out GAHS will be tested early be·
earlier this year with kl)ee cause "several our our youngsproblems, who had 27 points, 14 ters did not have to go in there
rebounds and five assists In 13 under fire last year."
outings; Tom Cornett and Tim
Spots 'Up For Grabs'
Neville. Neville missed the final
The Devll guard positions, up
11 games after suffering a broken for grabs, wlll be Gallia's blg
ankle in drills last January.
questlonmark. "We hope a couFive Graduate ·
pie wlll step forward and keep the
Gone from last year's squad tradition of fine guards alive at
are All-Ohio guard Gary Harrl- GAHS," Osborne said. ·
son, who set a school career
Osborne feels Gallla has good
scoring record with 1,347 points inside players in Becklch, Todd
in three years of varsttycompeti· and Thomas. "It's going to be a
lion; guard Todd Miller. the . very competitive situation. We
have 15 candidates (Including
seven up from last year's reserve
squad) who have played lots of
basketball the past eight to 10
years," he continued.
Asked to compare the 1987-88
squad with those of previous
years, Osborne said, "That's
difficult. Each team is a chal·
lenge to put together. The pieces
are never the same, but we hope ·
the picture ends up the same."
Osborne continued, "Oneofthe
things this bunch has going for It
is that they have played together

will be conducted tor the youngsters and that dates for the annual
olymplcs · wlll be announced
later .
The annual parents night contest wlll be Friday, Feb. 12, when
Marietta vlslts Gallipolis. Seniors night will be observed on
Saturday, Feb. 20, .when Point
Pleasant helps GAHS close out
the 1987 campaign.
Tentative date for the 1987-88
shoot-a·thon Is Dec. 12.
Rosters, Schedules
•
Here are the varsity and
rreserve schedules for the 1987-88
Blue Devlls and Blue Imps:

Wall Street's reaction
to budget 'lukewarltl'
'

By DONALD GALLAGHER
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK_ The stock market spent tne past
week pleading with· budget negotiators in .
Washington to reach an agreement, and when it
finally came Wall Street was so worn out its last
session wa$ a fitting finale · II ended mixed
The Dow Jones industria·! average which. rose
18.24 on Friday, fell 21.38 points on 'the week to
close at 1939.63. Despite the Friday advance,
declines beat advancers 823-71l among the 1,964
issues traded during the session
After a week long wait for· Washington to
produce an accord, the market was given the final
word in the week's last hour oi trading when
.... President Reagan announced that a two-year
deficit cutting plan had been reached.
The pact, described by Reagan as "credible and
reliable", would cut the deficit by about$30 billion'
this fiscal year and S45 billion next year.
. Prior to the president's announcement, however, there was strong evidence that market
participants had anticipated the accord and were
not impressed .
·
"Wall Street has given up waiting for anyone in
Washington to get over the hump," said Thorn
Brown,
chairman of the investmenl policy
Cormgratu,Jat,es Hospital Officials - Charles E.
the Hospital, along with Thomas E. Tope,
committee at Butcher &amp; Singer Inc. in Phlladel·
Holzer, Jr., M.D., President of the Medical Staff
Chalnnan of the B9ard ·Of Trustees of the Holzer
phia. "It 's like waiting to win the state lottery."
at the Holzer Medical Center congratulates
Hospital Foundation upon receipt of the 3-year
In the proposed agreement "there will be
Charles I. Adkins, Jr., Chief Executive Officer of
JCAH accreditation.
billions of dollars of tax increases " Brown said
rece;v~s
"and' tax increases are not th~ problem i~
II
II
.
Washington . They spend too much money. It
. would be better if they packed their lunch kits and
went home and gave us all a break.
"The market has ceased to pay attention to
. what's going on In Washington " Brown said
"Anyone with doubts sold out thls morning, and
now
the market is minding its own bidding. We
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer ment control tool, and confirms Board of commissioners whose
Medical Center has been the Hospital's accoutablllty and 22 members are appointed by the went to the show - It flopped - and left early "
On Thursday, the Dow plunged 43_ 77 poin.ts
awarded a Certificate of Accredi· commitment to excellence in the American College of Surgeons,
when
the market was forced to suffer through a
tation by the Joint Commission provision of health care services American College of Physlctans,
parade
of bad news surrounding the plan ,
on Accreditation of Hospitals to the residents of the multi· American Dental Association,
specifically
word that Republicans had raised
(JCAH) for the maximum three county area we serve", he said.
American Hospital Association
To become accredited , the 'and the American Medical Assoyear period.
JCAH accreditation is evi- Holzer Medical Center voluntar- ciation. A public member is
d.e nce of the Holzer Medical lly requested an on-site evalua· appointed by the Board of ComCenter's efforts to provide qual- tion by · JCAH surveyors who missioners to represent consulty health care.
applied standards designed to mer concerns.
The Holzer Medical Center is
In making the announcement,. further the objectives of quality
Charles I. Adkins, Jr., Chief patient care and the safety of the proud to have .continuing JCAH
Executive Off!cer of the hospital environment in which that care is accreditation and pays a fee to be
said, "Notification of our contln· provided. These national stand- a part or this voluntary accredi·
ulng accreditation by the Joint ards represent a consensus tatlon process, which was estab·
Commission for the max1mum among health care professionals lished in 1951. The role of JCAH
three year period, reflects the and are periodically updated to as both an evaluator and t;;onsulefforts of every person in the reflect changes in health care tant results in a continuing
development and refinement of•
Holzer Medical Center Faml· delivery.
_ 1)(... ~~l)l~al .staff, the bOJ!Pk
The JCAH surve~ · .!earn con- standards..i!s It ~.r_~orms accredl·
. hil staff, lfte hoard or trustees · ' sists iifhealth care profelistonals
taUon surveys to measure a
and the volunteers .. : In fact
trained to evaluate the hospital's hospital's compliance with these
everyone Involved in the day to efforts to provide quality care.
standards.
day operatton of the Hospital.
The surveyors also consult with
When a hospital demonstrates
the professional and administra- substantial compliance with the
They are all to be congratulated
because this achievement of tive staffs to help them In their standards, a Certificate Of Ac·
continuing accreditation reflects efforts to· continually Improve credltation Is awarded by the
JCAH. Approximately 5000 of the
a true team effort. My message
patient care.
to everyone is 'Congratulations
Those whO came to the Holzer 6000 hospitals in the United
States participate in the JCAH
Medical Center on July 22·23,
and thank you for a good job', all
for the benefit of our patients" .
1987 for the two day survey Hospital Accreditation
JCAH accreditation demon- necessary to award accreditaProgram.
strates the Holzer Medical Cen·
tion were a physician, a hospital
ter's commitment to quality
administrator and a registered
nurse. The three surveyors,
patient care. As Adkins pointed
out, "The accreditation process
during the intensive two day .
provides us with an on-site
period, covered all departments
evaluapon based on realistic,
within the Hospital.
nationally recognized standards.
JCAH is a private, not -for The accreditation standards in·
profit organization crea,ted by
elude a quality assurance pro- and composed of health care
.
cess that can serve as a manage·
professionals . It Is governed by a
NEW BURLlLE OlL OFFICE- A worker from
·:-·i ... ..
the Randall Mullins Construction Co., of Gallipo·
&lt;•
lis, walks the rooftop during construction of the
.. , _.
·,'sF&lt;\ · ;
new Burlile 011 office building, located at the
junction of Ohio 7 and the Rt. 7-35 by-pass, in

GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS
1881·8&amp; CAGE BOSTER

NO-NAME-POS

liT YR
4

13-Mark Klmble-G .................. 5'9
30-Davld Tadd-F" .................... 6'6

12-Jason Thomas-F• ............... 6'2

31-Mark Berklch-C" ................ 6'4
2!&gt;-Dennls McGulre-F ................6'2
10-Todd Casey-G .... .... :.... , .. ..... 5'10
15-Wllllam Slralt-G ................. 5'10
21-Tim Nevllle-F ... .................. 6'1
23-Pete Anderson,G ............. ,.... 5111
24-Tom Corneti-G ...... :............ 5'10
22-JoeOwen-C ........................ 6'4
11-Bllly Evans-·0 ..................... 5'10

4

4
4
3

3
2
4
3

4
3
4

118'7-88 GARS
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Nov. 27-SOuthern ......................... Away
Nov. 28-Waverly .......................... HomP
Dec. 4-Warren ................ ............. Away
Dec. 5-Chesapeakc....................... Away
Dec. 11-Atht'ns............................. HomeOec. 18-LOgan ............................. Away
De-c. 19-South Point. ............ ....._.... Home
Dec. 29-McCiatn .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Portsmouth West ........... .... Away
Jan. 9-Marl~tt~- ............................ Away
Jan. 15-Jack.!on ..... ...................... Home
Jan. 16-Pt. Pleasant. .................... Away
Jan. 22-Warren ....................... ..... Home
Jan. 29-Athens ... ... ... .................... Away
Jan. 30-Portsmouth...................... Away
Feb. 5-Logan ................................ Home
Feb. 12-Marletta .......................... Home
Ft'b. 13-Wheelersburg .................. Home
Ft'b. 19-Jacksoo ............. \....... ...... Away
Feb. 20-Pt. Pleasant .................... 1-Jome

'HMC

• • j rom )Otnt
• • COffim'lSStOn
.
• •
UCCred lJUttOn

'" SIXTH MAN" T-Shirts wiD be sold lor Sl to the first 330
individuals attending Monday night's "Meet-the-Team" program
In the GAHS gym. Proceeds will go toward a community project
according to veteran GAHS coach Jim Osborne, right, who
displays one ol the shirts for Hobart Wilson, Jr. Alter Monday's
7:30p.m., session, the shirts will be sold by boosters for $3.

Littler fires 4-under for tourney lead
lj:EY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UP!)

~ Gene Littler llred a 4-uhderpar 67 to take a one stroke lead

over Bob Charles and Orville
Moody· Saturday in the second
rou nd of the $300,000 PGA Senior
Classic.
Littler had birdies on the first,
sixth, lOth, 13th and 14th holes to

taketheleadontheKeyBiscayne
Golf Club course after shooting a
par 71 in the first round.
Charles and Moody were
among six players tied for the
first-round lead at 2-under and
both remained in contention for
Sunday's final round with
1-under-par 70s.

Will announce Lombardi fmalists
·· HOUSTON (UP!) - Four
finalists for the Lombardi
Trophy, which honors the best
collegiate lineman in the na tion,
will be announced Tuesday,
officials reported.
Twelve players - 10 linemen,
one tight end and a linebackerhave been. nominated lor this
year' s award. which will be
presented in Houston Dec. 3.
Among those favored are Oklahoma tight E'nd Keith Jackson
and Michael Dean Perry, a
de(enslve tackle at Clemson who
is the you nger brother of William
" Refrigerator" P erry of the
Chicago Bears .
Seven defensive linemen were
nominated: Arkan sas no se
guard Tony Cherico, Syracuse ·
nose guard Ted Gre11ory, Air

Force tackle Chad Hennings,
Hawaii tackle Alapatl Noga,
Perry, Auburn tackle Tracy
Rocker and Miami end Daniel
Stubbs.
The three o!fensive linemen
nominated are John Elliott, a
tackle at Mic)ligan; Mark Hut·
son, a guard from Oklahoma;
and Randall McDaniel, a guard
at Arizona State.
Also nominated were Jackson
and Chris Spielman, a linebacker
at Ohio State.
Cornelius Bennett of Alabama,
now a linebacker with the Buffalo
Bills, won the Lombard! Trophy
last year.
The finalists are selected by a
221 -member committee of
coaches, sports writers and
sportscasters.

1987 TRANS AM

We sold this one new. Local doctor's car. Only 3.500
miles and features T-top, P. windo~s. P. door locks,
AM-FM cassette. custom interior. 'The list goes on
and on.

1985 BUICK RIVIERA
The last of its kind. This local executive's car has a low
22.000 milea. loadad with luxury and power assist optiona. Quality from bumper to bum par.

•

Money Ideas

The Outlook

1987 PONT. PARISIENNE WAGON
"BRASS HAT"
3,800 miles. This full size 3 seat wagon, on display
now, is incredibly sharp and has power everything.

1986 BUICK LeSABRE
We sold this one new to a local ratirad couple. Equipped

with tilt, cruise, stereo, rear defogger. wire wheel covers
delay wipers.
· $
WAS '1 0,900
NOW CASH PRICE

9

1986 BUICK PARK AVENUE
Local one owner, extra sharp. Black exterior and cherry
Interior. Must see to appreciate. .

Phone 446-8413
.oo;~.tJ

------- ....,..,-

'

----

___ ____

- ·-· ---

(

.___..

1911 EASTERN AVE.1 GALLIPOliS

'446-2282
.
.

--·~~-·---..,..----...--

·- -----

&gt;

"

~

'
·---

'

.

- ~

Kanauga. Upon its scheduled completion in late
January, 1988, Burllle 011 will move In from 'lis,

~:~~=::l~h~~~c;y ~- ~~!~c~~c~~:o!:~· (Ti~~~

Postal workers
complete training

By STAN EVANS
weeks arc a result of a collision
between monetary policy and
GALLIPOLIS - While many
professionals are
the
foreign markets concerned about
I
current market
the U.S. trade and budget deficit .
COLUMBUS - Roger Rees,
In addition, a significantly rising
decline to the
postmaster at Bidwell, and Marpercent of institutional funds in
1962 and 1929
vin Konkle, rural carrier in
brea ks. we be·
an already institutionally domi·
Chillicothe,
recently completed
_DR. WADE NA~ED TO
lieve the markE't
nated equity market not only
40
hours
of
facilitator
training.
ACADEMY- Dr. John Wade,
wan ted the performance of rising
today resembles
Their
duties
will
include
with
ear, nose and throat specialist
the sharp brea.k
markets but an insurance policy
volunteer
work
teams
consisting
at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
in eq·uity prices
to protect against losses . Howof rural carriers and managers
Point Pleasant, W.Va,. was
ever, the~e investors did not
that occurred in
drawn from an eight-county
recently named to the Ameritember 1981 decline.
major
include in thoc:ir futures "con·
area. They will be responsible for ·,
can Academy of Otolluyngic
difference between the current
tracts," a provision lor cataclysall Post Offices in Adams, Galli a,
Allergy following five years or
market and that period is the
mic losses .
·
Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross,
Intensive study and case
Personal experience also tells
mag:~itude and the intensity of
Scioto
and
Vinton Counties.
work. This accomplishment
the decline. In 1982, on an
us that we learn from our
The
work
teams will be part pf
makes Wade the only board·
intra-day basis, the Dow declined
mistakes, and tha t over the long
the
Quality
Work
Life/ Employee
certified physician .In both
about 20 percent over a period of
haul, the comeback is usually
IQWL!El
) process.
Involvement
otolaryngic (head and neck)
six weeks, while the current
stronger because of the learning
estat:&gt;llshed
bX
the
Postal
Service
allergy and ololarynglc
market approximates a 35 per- experience. In no way are we
and
designed
t&lt;i
Improve
comsurgery in a five-county area.
waving the ali-clear signal fo r
cent decline In price when
munication between craft and
measured from early October.
the finan c ial markets. The
'r t
management el'nployees.
The break In 1981 came after a
markets will continue to wrestle
honeymoon with Reaganomics .
with the problems that brought
us to this crash. However,
as the investor suddenly ended
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Mortthe romance with a realization .recognition of the problem s
gage rates dropped slightly last
should bring a little more comthat the budget deficit would be
week, with fixed-rate loans de·
far greater than expected. It also
fort and stability to the markets . creasing 0.06 percentage point
as the problems we have outlined
marked the transition In equities
and adjustable-rate deals falling
work their way toward a solution.
from an "inflationary era" to the
0.01 percentage point, the FedThe financial markets have
beginning of the ' 'consumer
er~! Home Loan Mortgage Corp.
CHESHIRE - Thomas L.
demonstrated over the long haul
era." The curren( decline in
said Friday.
(Lee)
Nlceswanger, a mainteequity prices is also associated
the ability to respond to the
The agency, which buys mortnance
mechanic-A at the Ohio
with not one but two deficits problems that this country ha s
gages from lenders and packCompa ny 's Gavin Plant,
Power
faced
with
new
investment
op,
trad e and budget. .
ages them as securities for sale
retired
on November 1 after 13
Much like the 1981-82 period, portunlti es. We view the current
to investors, said fixed-rate loans
years
at
the plant and 18 years
we believe th e market will "stay decli11e with the same
reached 10.60 percent this week
.
with
the
company.
on the bottom" for an extended perspective.
.
from 10.66 perc4;nt the week
Niceswanger . joined Ohio
time period, with the market
Over the next 12 to 18 months
before. Adjustable-rate mort·
Power
In 1969 at the former Philo
characterized by a wide trading we w'ill see less economic growth,
gages averaged 7.97 percent,
Plant
near :Uanll8ville. He
range and moderating volatility. less or a trade deficit, less
down from 7.98 percent last
worked
in utility and auxiliary
During. this " bottoming out" ln!lation, a lessening of our
week.
equipment
operator classificaprocess we expect new market ' problems and more investment
The 'fixed-rate average is for a
leadership to exert itself accom- opportunities in areas not readily 30-year loan covering 80 percent tions before moving into the
panied by a significant number of apparent to us today.
of a home 's cost. The average maintenance group In 1971. He
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment adjustable-rate mortgage also Is transferred to Gavin In 1974.
positive and negative surprises.
Niceswanger and his wife Ruth
The problems within the flnan · broker for The Ohio Company In
fot 30 year:~ but for 75 percent of
li
ve
in Zanesville.
cia! markets over the past few Its Gallipolis office. )
the home price.
•

•

.+16-4597

•

&lt;

•

•

••

'

Niceswanger
retires

SMITH. Buick-Pontiac
,

243 Third Ave., Gallipolis

•

4 WD sea~on is here and this unit is nice enough for
any occas1on. It features a low 29,000 miles tilt
cruise, AM-FM cassette, rear def., and more. '
'

SEE HARLAND WOOD, TOM KESSEL, JIM COCHRAN o~ GREG SMITH.
TODAY AT

lliPPd.,"

A

_..~ -~.

Mo gage rates drop.

.

·coming Soon, GRAND OPENING!

~For A II lour SprJrl in!{

1985 FORD BRONCO XlT

THESE CARS ARE SOME OF THE FINEST PRE-OWNED CARS ON
OUR LOT~ 'IN ADDITION TO THESE, WE HAVE MORE THAN 150
NEW AND USED CARS TO CHOOSE
FROM
.

Sideline Sports

~,

~

Panic!

Now, there's no need t~ travel out of
town for your sporting needs. We're in
your own backyard.
Sideline- Sports Does COMPLETE Transfer Work

strenuous objections:
.
Sen. Bob ?lackwoo~: R-Ore., ~al~. Sena;;:
Republicans signaled overwhelmmg oppo's e
. ~~on to ~he package under. discussion be~~u ·
they thmk some of the savmgs are phor_&gt;Y·
f'
House Republican leader Robert Mtchel 9
Illinois described many of his GOP colleagues .a s
"cantankerous'' in opposing the pi'I'J. desptte
efforts _by Treasury Secretary James Baker and
the White House to wm t~elr support .
.
Even Democrats sent signals to the market not
to expect too much.
,
_"What will eme~~e will not be heroic, neither
w111 it be pam less, House Speaker Jim Wng!lt,
D-Texas , told reporters Thur~day .
Wall
Reagan, aware · of the cnt1cism _from
,
Street, apl?€ared tired of the fing er pomhng from
the flnanc1al market s and, while re1uslng to.?ffer
any direct rebuttal of hts. own, Friday said th.ElX
have so me things to stra1g~ten out thef?,selves. n
Congress and the White House had ~
opportunity In the last couple of weeks tQ ·
demonstrate to th1s country and the world that
they had control of the situatiOn and they were n!Jt
playing politlcs," said ~dward S~opkorn, partn6lr
m charge of i.~stitut10nal eqUltie~ a.t Maboh.
Nugent &amp; Co. The poht1~1ans missed a great
opportumty to ~e decisive.
Shop,korn said the lower volume of the past
week tells you that.mvestors are, by and large;; ,
uncommitted to puttmg money into the market • •
Broad-market indicators also declined on tl;!e:
~eek. The New York Stock Exchange Composi~e
mdex fell 2.04 to 135.56. Standard &amp; Poor ~500-stock index dropped 3.64 to 242.00.
Declining issu~s outnumbered advancers 1,285671 among 2,170 Issues traded.
.
Big B.oard volume totaled 817,248,300, com-.
pared w1th 874,295,982, last week and 860,596,2~a:
year ago.
• •
On the trading floor , GTE was the mos~ acti-re:
NYSE-IIsted 1ssue on the week, up 2 to 36 Y...
•
Niagara Mohawk follow~d, dow~ lY., to 12%&lt;_ :'
AT&amp;T was third, down l Y, to 28Y, .
,

.

Don't
We've Got
Everything
Under
Control

max;mum .three-year .

~

• OPEN HOUSE FOR STYLING SALON....,. Hair llighlights a new '
hair and styllng salon at 432 Pike St., Kanauga, Is having a~ 0 en ,
house Sunday, from I to 5 p.m. Above, Sharon Rudolph, ' owne~ of
the salon, puts the finishing touches on the sign. Be low Rudolph t
left, stands with her two assistants, Penny Burge, qenter , and J '1~
Hysell.
··
u e •

�,.

'

Farm

November 22, 1987

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

----------------------------:

#"

November 22, 1987

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse·Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) - A
representative of the National
Audubon Society sald Thursday
20 out of 163 publlc water supplies
In Ohio have tested positive for
herbicides heavily advertised for
their ablllty to kill farmers'
WeedS.

URBAN WINNERS -

The Southern Future
Farmers of America received the team ttophy for
the urban soli judging contest. Present were

Aaron Sayre, left, Instructor, and team members;
Benny Dalley, Kevin Greuser, David Custer and
James Langwell.
,&lt;

Meigs County agent's corner

What to know more about record keeping?
leader at Ohio State University.
There. were 2,638 fires associated with wood burning stoves
In Ohio In 1986. Eight deaths and
$6 million In property losses
resulted, according to the DivIsion of State Flre Marshal office
In Columbus Most of the fires
were caused by creosote bullup
In chimneys.
Creosote Is an oily, yellow
liquid produced when wood Is
burned. Once it accumulates In a
chimney, It can catch fire or clog
the chimney. Simple safety measures help control creosote
buildup.
Burn only dry wood that has
been air-dried more than slx
months. Burning green. wood
produces creosote. Hardwoods
produce less creosote and more
heat than softwoods.
Never burn garbage, maga·
zines or newspapers. The flash
fire they produce can Ignite
creosote deposits. Smoldering
garbage will damage the stove
grate.
The comblnating of smolder·
lng fires and lower chimney and
stove pipe temperatures produces the most creosote. Burning a
hot fire every day for 30 minutes

But a respresentatlve of thp
company which manufactures
one of those chemicals said the
level is not dangerous to health;
that the sampling was taken
shortly after farmers would have
applied the herbicides to their
fields .
Maureen Hinkle. director of
the agricultural program for the
Audubon SOciety, and Andrew J .
Klein, manager for regulatory
affairs of the Monsanto Agricultural Co., St. Louis, participated
In a seminar conducted by the
Ohio Alliance for the
Environment.
Their panel was entitled "Agriculture's Pollution - Who's At
Risk." Also participating was
Susan Fisher. an entomologist at
Ohio State University.
Hinkle sald tests by the state of
Ohlo last April through June
showed concentrations of the
popular Lasso and Dual herbicides. The highest amounts were
found In the Dublin and Marys -

help remove creosote. When
stoves burn at full capacity, they
are most efficient and create less
creosote. But at full capacity,
most stoves will overheat a room
except during cold weather.
Save wood burning for cold
weather or put the stove In the
basement where overheating ls
more tolerable. Use the central
heat lng sys tern ducts to circulate
heat from the basement throughout the house.
If a stove can't be placed in a
Gallipolis - Thanksgiving Is
basement, consider a cold air
the
time of traditional reflection
return duct near the stove. Then
food
production for the year. It
on
use the central heating and
Is
symbolic
of when our ances·
cooling system fan to move heat
tors started using the food from
to the rest of the house. A
the stored supply.
termometer that attaches to the
To many families, It was that
stove pipe wlll help you establish
time of year when the fattened
the rate of creosote formation.
pig or calf were butchered.
The thermometer is available
Wildlife
were hunted to supplefrom wood -b urning stove
ment
the
domestic food supply .
dealers.
Today, food ls taken for granted
Inspect the chimney at least
by most of us.
twice a year. Have lt professionTake the opportunity this week
ally cleaned once a year. Clean It
to
thank a "food producer" for
now If lt wasn't done before the
providing
an ample supply of
' heating season. Hlre a reliable
quality food. These people get up
chimney sweep. Remember, a
· early and work late. They chalfire must be completely out lenge nature. They take big
before the chimney can be
financial risks. One of the major
cleaned.
U.S. problems currently Is the

Farm Flashes

vllle water supplies.
Klein pointed out the samples
were taken right after farmers
applied the chemicals on their
fields In the spring. "Thls Is what
we would have expected," he
said.
Klein said his company, which
makes Lasso, Is concerned that It
was detected In the water supplies . "But If you're asking
whether we're concerned that
the public Is exposed to a danger
to their health , the answer Is
emphatically no ,·· he said.
Klein, who was representing
the National Agricultural Chemical Association, said a committee of Internationally renowned
toxicologists determined In a
report Issued Tuesday that Lasso
be reinstated ln Canada. where It
had been banned for two years
pending Monsanto's appeal.
He said hls company has
Invested $10 mllllon In pesticide
research In the last three years.
and urged all parties to work
cooperatively toward reasonable
water quality standards.
-Hinkle said weeds are becomIng more resistant to herbicides .
"The rate at which he (the
farmer) Is applying the chemical
doesn't work, therefore he applies more, .. she said .
The solution to plant resistance, she said. Is to rotate

..

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere In
~leigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
!arm's owner. Just mall, or dropollyour guess to
the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, or the GaiUpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, and you may win a$5

cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or letter. No telephone calls will be
accepted. All contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In case of a tie, the winner will be chosen by
lottery. Next week a Gallia County farm will be
featured by the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District.

NEW TECHNICIAN
Blair Windon has joined the
staff of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
as district technician. Windon
Is a graduate of Washington
Technician College where he
ear~~ed a degree In diesel
mechanics. He Is from Chesler Township where he also
works on the family beef, hog
and grain farm.

Special

Special

WINTER ENGINE
OVERHAUL SPECIAL

chemicals, "but If you work for
Monsanto, you want them to use
more Lasso."
Klein said chemical companies
would like the government to
make up Its mlnsJ -' and Issue
decisive standards based on
facts and figures, and a risk-tO&gt;
benefit assessment.
"We don't Uve In a zero-risk
society," he said. "Everyt~lng
we do Involves risk."
"Audubon does not require a
risk-free society," said Hinkle.
"But the risk should be analyzed
more c!)mprehenslvely. The risk
of traffic fatalities ls reduced by
Imposing speed limits and seat·
belt laws. We can, as a society,
reduce the risks of water
contamination."

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report Fonn

990PF for December 31 .
1986, for tho Kibble Foundation. Bernard V. Fultz, Trul18e.

es

avail able fo' public ins pee·
tion at Barnard V. Fultz Law
Office. 111 % W. Second

subsequent to publication of
this notiye.

1111 18, 19. 20. 22. 23. 24.
25. 7tc

Labor surplus

COLUMBUS - Gl'llla and
Meigs Counties are among 56
Ohio counties listed as labor
surplus areas for the period of
October 1, 1987, to September 30,
1988. according to the U.S.
Department of Labor.
The classification is assigned
on a county level If a county
contains a city or cities with a
population of less than 25,000.

ceived at the office of the Director of the Ohio Department
of Transportation, Columbus.

Ohio, until tO:OO A.M .• Ohio
Stond...d Time. Tueodav. DJ-

cember 14, 1987, for imprt&gt;
vementa in:
"'
Galli a County, Ohio. on suc-

tion GAL-21 8-10.15. State

Route 218 in Harrilon Township. bv grading. paving with
asphatt concrete on a bftumi·
nous aggregate baae, and by
constructing:

600

forbearers, they are illegal. The
triploid form Is sterile and thls
risk Is significantly reduced.
Therefore, many states IncludIng Ohio have legalized the sale
and use of triploid whit amur for
vegetation control while prohibitIng the sale or use ~f the diploid
form .
The type and quality of aquatic
vegetation should be used to
determine the number of triploid
white amur to stock. Five per
surface acre are recommended
where 20·40 percent of the lm·
poundment has weeds. Where
40-60 percent Is covered, 10 per
acre should be stocked and when
over 60 per is covered, 20 per
surface acre are recommended.
Triploid white amur will be
available from dealers who have
received permits from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resour·
ces, Division of Wildlife. When
purchasing triploid white amur,
one should receive a receipt from
the seller indicating the number
and size of !Ish purchased and the
seller's name . We wlll try to have
more on this'topic by spring.
A special thanks to all those
who made the November 18 trip
to the North American Livestock
Expo In Louisville, Kentucky, a
success. Efforts of Gary Lewis ln
putting the group together made
the trip possible.

guardrails!. gver Bulskin Crook.
Proioct length - 200.00
botween

lin. feet or 0 .038 mile.

Work length - 440.00 tin.

..

\

\·\

\

\

S52500
SAVINGS ·OF 25°/o OR MORE
800

GOOD THIU DEC. 31 .

' I)ONG SEIWICE -Rex Shenefield, lefl, was presented a plaque
lor 26 years of dedicated service to the Meigs Sol! and \Vater
Conservation District recently by James Rush, program
spt!clallst, Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Soli
and Water Conservation.

CARTER TRACTOR
SALES INC.
2204 EASTERN AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
PHONE 614-446·0523
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

WARREN J SMITH
DIRECTOR
Nov . 22.29

MGM ARM CITY

t1£ Y.
. "' . '

Gas cood sttlve. Call 614-446 ·
7133-Piease leave m ..aage

NOTICE
TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus. Ohio
Contract Sales

Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Department of Transportation, Columbus. Ohio, until _10:00
A.M .• Ohio Stand&amp;Jd Time,
Tuesday , December 1 .
1987, for improvements in .
(Parts 1 to (4) inclusive are
offered as one contract and
will be considered on the
basis of the total amount

b1d.J Parts 1 Ch•u (41 Gallie

and Vinton Counties. Ohio,
on 4 structure&amp; on various
routes and sections in Gallia
and Vinton Counties, by
replacing 4 concrete slab
structures w1th 1 prectist
concrete box culverts and 2
three sided precast culvert,
and 1 steel box culvert, and
other related work. Project
length- 715.00 feet or

"THe date set for completion of this work shall be as
set forth in the bidding
proposal. "
Each bidder shall be required to tile with h1s bid a
certified check or cashier's
check for an amount equal to
five per c'nt of his bid, but in
no event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
tor ten per cent of his b1d,
payable to the Director.
~idders must apply, on the
pr6per forms. for qualific8 tion at least ten days prior to
the date set for opening bids
in accordance with Chapter

6626 Ohio Revioed Code,

Plans and specifications
are on file in the Department
of Transportation and the
office of the District Deputy
Director.
The Director reserves the
righl to reject any and all
bids.

WARREN J . SMITH.
DIRECTOR
111115. 22. 2tc

An nouneemenIs

6

NOTICE OF ELECTION
The annual election of
directors of the Albany In de·
pendent Agricultural Society will be held December

R

Eaty to
numbers in styron cast
with 4 fMt of capilary tubt. Allows
you to r..., imide ond outside tom·
ptroturo from intide hou10.

06!-090/1103

LINED
.
LEATHER GLOVES

Split cowhide straight thumil, tCifl·
ortd cull with tlastic for 111ug fit.'
610-2U/4lll

lost and Found

Tour Guldaa-Male &amp; Female.
Our top people earn S800S1200 per week . Pleasant workil"!g conditions Salary to atan.
with bonuses. A really fun place
to work Friendly, neat. depandabla are the requiremeot s Calt
61 4·286-6421 118k for Sue.

7

Yard Sale

····--·Ganrpons·····---··
&amp; Vicinity
Garage Sale- Mon - Tues., 2324. 9-4 PM . White g•ag•
Burkhart Lane. Bedlmens.
dishes. m11c;: . i'lems Collectabl81.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

562-3309.

No hunting or trespauing, day
or night on tha Charles E Yost
Farm1.
No Hunting on Gill Ridge on
properties of C . R. Gill, Mitchell
Cullen. George Gill without
written pllfmtuion. Vlolatora
will be prosecuted.

Rt ck Pearson Auctioneer h·
censed in Ohio and West Virginia. E1tate, antique, f•m. liqui·
dation sales, 304-773-5786.
Christm81 Auct1on Su~day,
Nov. 22. 1987 Hartford Communrty Bldg . Hartford, WV.
Toys, Jawelry, Christmas gifts
tor whole family Everyone
Welcome. Auctioneer Richard
Rsy,!101ds. 301-87

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chav. -Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

614-446-3672

13

Insurance

Call us for vour mobile home
insurance Miller insurance.
304-882·2146 Also. auto.
home. life, health.

18 Wanted to Do
Septic tank pumping, residential
&amp; commerical sao per toed
Ron Evans Enterprises. Jackson,
Ohio Call 614-286-5930
Carpenter work. $6 a hr. or by
the job. Panelling, painting,
dryYJ8II. remodeling . Call 614.&amp;46-6377

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and n~NVer used cars Smith
8uick·Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Aw .. Galhpt~lia Cell 6,4. 446·
2282
.
WANTED TO 8UY Used wood
&amp; coal heaters. Swain's Furniture. 3rd. &amp; OINa St. Gallipolis
Call 614-446-3169 .
Wanted to buy· •tend1ng timber.
Call, 614-379-2758.
Buying daily gold, silver coins.
r1ngs, jewelry, sterling ware , old
coins, large currency . Top prices. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave . Middleport, Oh . 6,4-

Ant1qua lndi an motorcycle parta

needod. Coli

614-992-2797

Fmploymenl
Sr.rv1cr.s
Chrlltmaa•round the corner and
no monsv7 Sell Avon &amp; earn
money &amp; pnces Call 614-446-

Do you wentyourhomaclean for
the up coming Holiday Seasons
and justdon"thavetlmetoget to
It? Call 614·.&amp;46-3210 Have
refl!fenc ...
House Cleaning : Point Pleasant
and surrounding areas. 304895 ·3036

In Memoriam
In loving memory of
Mazie l. Roush who
passed away two years
ago today, November

Giveaway

22 , 1985.
How often we shed a tear.
For you were so very dear
It is certain that you we
miSS ,
But know you are in bliss
with your Savtournow and for evermore.
Ethel. Geneva.
!herr Families.

Happy Ads

21

HUSTONS WELDING
&amp; FAB
ICertHiedl
For any welding repa ir' or fabrication work. No job too amatl or
too large. Alum1num welding. a
specialty. We give quality and
quick .-rv1ce. Please call 614 682-7122 for estimate.

31

Rent , - t railer.

304-675-5924.

33

Farms for Sale

Homes for Sale

73 acres f•m 5 m1les from
Galhpolil, Oh1o, M. S. Kerns.
1860 Ealtes St Columbus,
Ohio 43207

2 Sr. trailer-cable. 8eautifulr1ver
VIew. Foster' a Mobile Home
Park Ca11614-446-1602.

4 BR ., fireplace. full basement. 3
mi. so of Gallipolis. 834.900.
Call Oays·614-446-1616, after

5.00· 446-1244.

Brand new 3 8R . near Gallipolis
Lock! on Rt 7. 2 car garage. nice
lot Immediate ponenion Will
consider trade in of Mobile
home, property, etc, Bargain
priced. Call 614-446-8038 .
room-fireplece, dining area. Attached garage, basement. Good
condition W•ll sell- land contrac:t. F1rst St. west- Holzers.
Call 614 ·446-3601 .
Modern 3 BR . house. Patriot,
Oh10 W1ll help finance Call

34

2 bedroom mobile home Syra cus.a. S150 month plu1 utilitiea.

l lh story, newly equipped kit·
chen. larg'l family room, air
condit1on, conven1ent locat1on

One floor, two bedrooms, ~ome
126 J»laasant St. Action priced at
829.500.00 Vmvl 11d1ng. storm
windoWs, g81'age, basement.
gas furnace, fenced yard and
near gro88rym drug, banking
and med1cal aervieea Fm.H .A
approved , Pleasant Valley
Realty, 304-676-4,00

14~~:70

In Memoriam
In Memory Of
BERNARD
MILHOAN
Who passed away
Nov.23. 1986
l walk Chrough che
vallev of lhe shado"
of d~alh, I will fear

no e\-'il; for Thou art
· "ilh me; Thy rod

and Thy scaff chey
('omfort m e~ Thou
prepar•~st

a tabl.-

before mt• in the
prt&gt; ~enee of mim~
enemies; Sunly

Concord 1974 3 BR .,
total elec. New carpet Extra
nice through out. $6900 Call
614-446 -0176
1970 New Moon. 1Z~e80 w / expando, 10x13 addition. Completely furnished . w / wooddburner &amp; fuel furnace Call

6t 4-446-1428.

,983 14x56 Fairmont Mobile
Home 2 BAs. Central air.
underpinning, porch , washerdryer hookup. E~tcal . cond. on
rented lot in cou ntry Unfu rnished. Call after 9 PM . Call
614·367-7774
,981 Shultz 14x52 Oue11Creek
Mobile Park. Call 6, 4-245 9438 .
1987 Forest Park, made by
Hollypark. 30~t60 garage. Approx 1 V3 acres. Call 614· 7422404 anytime.
12x66 MoblleHomewith 1 2x24
add-on w1th extra lot. 304 -676·

7669.

•

•
•

Profeaalon•l

Trigger Feed
I~·:=~=::.1
Glue Gun
__
Easy squeeze lever
action for extra control. Interchangeable
nozzle, hi·impact/hi;lemp. housing. (TR-550)

••

12·Pk. 8-ln. Remov•ble We•theratrlpplng
Apply with TR·550 glue gun. (WS8) S4.H

540 East Main

992 111

J
--~

30th+++

ef~ ...

lovs
1

ven

The Good Lord sent a ma n
Not to be rich or weathy
But to give a loving hand. ·

Card of Thanks

And with the Saviour's help

He lived a happy life

•
•

Swivel aerator and spray unit swivels 360 degrHs.

MGM
FARM _CITY

THANK YOU
SAINT JUDE
FOR ALL YOUR
HELP.

•

FAUCET AERATOR

FARM CITY I"''C
POMEAOY OH

belm rhe Dl~flj'IB
t1 mem H11ppy

••
•
•

Pomeroy.

•

••

Wit h the blessing of seven

CARD OF THANKS

children
And a very lm:ing wife

In appreciation of the kindness. care
and support of Mrs. Ora Carroll
during her recent illness and death.
We would like to thank Dr. Gene
Ables, Holzer Hospital, Willis Funeral
• Home, Rev. Charles Lambert, Frances
and Ronald Myers and all of h r many
friends and relatives.
The Ora Carroll Family
,.

But there comes a t1me when
all must end

And so he leff thi s lond
To travel to a betler place
TQSit at God's right hond.
Though now wa have but memories

Ou r smiles wash away the tears

The thoughts of all those
happy days
And of all the love hlled yea IS •
b~ w1fe
fnends .

,.

·'

A million times we've
needed you.
A million times we've
cried .
If love could have
saved you, '
You never would
have died.
In life we loved you
dearly,
In death we love you
still;
In our hea"s you hold
a place
No one can ever fill.
But you did not go
alone;
For pa" of us went
with you.
'
The day God took you
home.
Missed by Children.
Grandchildren
and many friends

NORTH

446-2071 .

2 Building lots- 1 V:i acrn each
with county water Jerrys Run
Ad. Apple Grove , W. Va. Call
304-676-2383.

Now Taking Orders for
Thanksgiving Turkeys
Welcome all Deer Kills

388-8801
Rt. 1, Box 56A, Bidwell

• 10 8
• J 872
+Jl0 9 4
93

• J 92
.9 4
t A 863
.A K 8 2

SOUTH

.' ' '.

.

. .,
..'

.

..
,_

.Q 10,

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer South

1629

2 BR., large liv ing room, stove,
wuher. Na• tow~ . No peu.
Dep. &amp; ref. Call614-446-1617

West

Norlh

East

Pass
Pass

I NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

3.1.

South

Opening lead: e J
By "James Jacoby
The one no-trump response I&lt;( a maJOr-sur! opening shows 6-9 high-card
pomts So what does •t mean when
opener then JUmps to three of h1s maJOr ? You got it - opener asks partner
to bid game with 8 or 9 pomts and to
pass with less. So why d1dn'l North b1d
a game? He must have known that you
were gomg to .be defending
w1th normal pedestrian defense. declarer w11l lament playing in only a
part-score contract. East can lake the
ace of diamonds and then cash the A·K
of clubs. Alter that , the defenders
wou ld have to d•g a mine shalt to lrnd
another tnck. But you. dea r reader,

3 BR . house &amp; garage A-1 Reel
Estete, Carol Yeager-Broker.

304-676-6104.

3 SA, woodburner, stove, refrigerator. new carpet, Centena!Y
area 5260 / mo plus depo11t.
Call 614-446-7014 or 379 2248
2 BR house, full basement.
large lot, on Honev1uckle Rd. in
Addison , $250 1 mo. plus dep.
Ca~ 614· 367-7670.
Unfurnished 2 BR , refrig. &amp;:
sto11e lower Second. Ref. &amp;.
dap. Call 614-446-3949 or
$260 per mo.- Countrv cottage
of log for rant. 2 BR s.'-4 rm s.
total. Good location. V1rg1n1a l.
Sm1th R.E, 614-388 -8828

have tmagination and verve, and you

2, 3, or 4 bedroom houses and
apt. in Pomeroy area Pay f':IWn
utllitif'll, depoait required . Call
614· 992·5 113. e 14·992-6723
Qf 814 -992·2509 . Call after
6:00. please

a Iso happen to be Jookmg at all four
hands. So. after winning the ace of d•amonds, you casually return the deuce
of cl ubs.
Now place yourself m dec Ia rer's
seat declarer not having seen the
East-West hands II East is Ieadmg
from the A-J or K -J rn clubs, the nght
play 1s the 10. It is nght to play the
queen only when East is underleadmg
the A-K, and believe me, that's an unlikely play for a defender to make So
decla rer will put in the 10 . West Will
be surprised to take the Jack, but not
so startled that he won 't return the
sui t to allow East to cake the ace and
king. That's four tncks for the de·
fense and now the continualion of the
fourth cl ub creates a trump loser for
the declarer through promotion Down
one. 1 guess North was right to bid so
timidly
11 Help Wanted

Newtv renovated . all electnc
with heat pump and central air. 3
bedrooms. plenty yard and
g•den space in Portland, Ohio.
6 miles from Ravenswood. W.
Va. Call 614-843-6309
Unfurnished house tor rent m
Pomeroy . Storm windows and
doors, insulated, all new paint.
Depoatt required Call614·992-

3090.

For rent or lease: 3 bedroom, 2
bathl, 1tove and r.etrigerator.
gaa heat. central &amp;If, carport,
large yard, near M1ddlepor1
school. park and shopping S226
month. plus deposit Call 81 4992 -7 065 after 6 00 p.m for
appt.

.
'•' '

-.-·..
....
···---·--~
-~

~-

..

..

.•

..
-·
...,.
..·.','

..• •
:~'

:

•

DIRECTOR OF RECORDS

0860.00

GROSS PERIWEK PARr TIME
HlndlinJ. Nabisco. Knbl•. fritalay
and s1mll• food pt"oducts. No sellinc

involved. Servicf oommtfaal Keounts. 10 snd. vendin1 matunes.
Natiorml census flcures sOOw aver·
ace &amp;JOSS earnings of $3,400.00 per
month. Requiras appr o~. 8 hours per

- -Yoowdl need$11,25000cash
now for equipment. Call 1·800-872·

8717 ask tor ope..ator f128. Phone
stafftd 24 hrs/day. Sunday calls at·
eepted

rREE
ESTIMATES

Double /1#'\ Construction
DON MOIGAN - 614·286-2498
~.:--:.::::..:::.::.::.=:.:...;;;;;...::..:.=;;.:.:.:;~~....&amp;

' '

tK

5 mom house-Fint Ave ., Gallipoli1. Off street parking. No
pe1s. Ret. &amp; Oep. Cat1614·256-

LOW,
LOW
PRICES

'.'

eAKQ764
.K6 3

2 8R . hou•e. Stove S. refrig.
furn located 1 928'h Chestnut
St. $176 mo. $76 dep. Call
614-446-3870.

.

". ,.

EAST

Homes for Rent

Pole Barns
Garages
Storage
Buildings
QUALITY
WORKMAN· .
SHIP

U·ZC-81

WEST

.J

Rental s

3 Announcements

Haney's Custom
Butcher Shop &amp;
Smoke House

",.'

• 53
• A Q 10 5
• Q 7, 2
.7 6 4

Albony. OH . 45710. R.. i-

Card of Thanks

Furnished upstair• 1 lA . Utili- ~ ,.,
tiM paid. S220 a mo. 176 dep. ~ ,; •
94 LoC\Jst St. C•ll 614-446· ,,,.;
134Q Of 446 -3870.

,•

· W'avc1e Milhoan

ERMA

'

BRIDGE

comes . Surveyed 1977 ..
37.789 acres. minllfal rights,
road frontage, 1 ,973. Call 614-

HENDRIX

614-446-1260.

2 bedroom furnished trailer
$186 month S75 Deposit plut
some utilities. 304-676-6612.

Ona or two bedroom house.
Furnished or unfurnl!hed. Available immediately . Ca11614·9926723 after 5·00 . Anytime
weekends .

3 Announcements

New 2 BR . equipplld kitchen.
l?w utihti•. convenient lo~ ,
t1on No pets. Ref. &amp; d.,p. Call

2 bedrooms. turmshed mobile
home, Keneuge. Ohio, ref9f'ence
required , 304-675-6196.

446-2419.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

a.

Tuppers Ple1ns. $175 _plusdep ·
osit and utilities Call 61 4·6673487

749 Third Ave. Presently The
Gift Shop. 1600 sq ft. Commercial or warehovse. Parking on
IJide Adjacent to Third&amp; Pin eSt
Call 61 4 · 446-2362 for
appointment.

41

Apertm&amp;f'!t • 1 136 2nd:, Gallipolis. 2 IR . Stove
refrtg.
furn1shed S185. Willer p1id.
Call614 -448-4418 aftBf' 7 PM.

2 bedroom trailer for rent in

676-5t04.

Last chance- logging crew

House. 2 bedrooms. femlty
room. full basement. central
heat and air cond. vinyl siding,
storm windows and doors, large
lot. garden 1pace, 304-675 3119 after4:00 pm

Brooks1de Apartments- larg• ·
country kitchen. flltove &amp; refrig- • , •
erator. Unfurnished. 1 BR, b..h.....
quiet area. Call 814-448-1932 . ... •

614-992-5732 .

7 room house, 2 full baths,
basement. Separate 3 room
apartment with bath- 642 Fifth
Ave. Cell 614-446-1607.
,

3 bedroom. 1 roorp one floor
home in Middlepon. 200x200
lot. Bob Haggerty 614·9925304. Priced under $14,000.

Downtown- Mod•n 1 IFI.,
complete kitchen, c•pet. air. • 1
electnc heat. Call 614-44C - .
4393-day a, 446· 0139-•lien &amp;
weekend• .

614-266-1629.

Commercial buildings for lease
Downtown Pt. Pleasant Stores.
offices. A-One Real Estate
Carol Ye~tger. Broker Call 304·

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

House for sale. At 33. Level lot,
2 BRS ., 2 baths, 2 car garage.
sw1mmlng pool, satil1te Close to
Salisbury &amp; Meigs H•gh. Call
614-99 2-3264

15 Court: 2 br .. 1 'V2 blth, larga •
living area. w-w c.-pet. new
kitchen, dishwa1h•. wired for
phone &amp; tv Gal he• Parking.
S360-mo. plus utillti... O.p. &amp;
Ref. Call 614 - 448 -~928 .

Sale-Rent : 1 SR . traller10x46at
Eureka Ref. &amp;: dep. No pets. Call

Business
Buildings

61 4-446-C340. 446-3870.

1 979 1 4x70 nice mobile home.
1 3 acres, Z baths. o•den tub,
fireplace. front porch. $14,900.
Call 614-256-6702.

446-4782.

2 Mobile homes tor rent · 1 4x70
w / eJ~epando, 2 BRS . 1 2J~C.65, 2
BRS Both total elect Good
cond. location· At. 7 below
Eureka. Call 614 -446· 12,1 or

256-t420.

Apartment
for Rent

Nice priveta apt Quiat. New
HMC. One adutt only . No,....
Sto\ft!l, refrig .. drapes 1226 •
mo. Ref required . Call 814·

2 mobile homes on one acr•.
Rural water. Blacktop road 2'h
miles from Merc;:erville (neer
Hannan Trace) , Ref. &amp; dep
required Call 614· 256-6343.

2666.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do bu•iness with people you
know, jlnd NOT to send money
through the mail until you h&amp;'lle
inve1tig&amp;ted the offermg.

2

44

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

150aeret•m. 1 milebackNew
Haven, W Va. phone 304-882·

7 room brick home, Upper
Mason. Carpet, stove , rat. doubleg•age 304-773-5397 .

LaSalle Gallery. Middleport. Establlshod Turn -Kev Operat1on.
For appointment. call614 -99271521 . Financiang available.
Lease or buy building.

2 BR . Mobile Home furnished.
Burnette Add. D•p. &amp;: r.r.
required . lt176 a mo. plus
utilitiM. Cali 304-675-1080.

Real Eslale

Business
Opportunity

goodnetttt and m crey
shall follow m e all
the days of m y life.

dents of Alexander Local
School District 18 years of
age and over who purchased

1

.:

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Two bedroom house With g¥•
age. No Pets. 304-675 -1400.

1 2JIC65 Matador, 2 bedtooms,
1 'h baths. must sell, phone

304-675-5027.

2t56.

2

1983 Na1hua. upando. 2
porchet, Mptic. 4 Vl acres lar'ld.
many extras. Between 6-10 p.m.
call 304-675 -5628
For Sele or

Homes for Rent

Nice 3 br home, 2 baths, family
room, garage, large lot. $3&amp;0'.
month Homestead Realty. 304676·6640 or 304-882-2406.

304-676-7271 .

homes from S1. IU
repair) . Delinquent ta11 property.
Repossessions. Call 805-687 6000 Ext GH-9805 for current
repo list.

Financial

Cash tor standing timber. We
buy veneer white oak and
walnut Call AI Tromm. 614-

41

Gt~vernment

992-3476.

To a good home-2 small house
type puppies- half Pekingese,
half Corgey Call 614 -4462045

6

Professional
Services

3 BR .. batn&amp;half. kitchen. living

No Hunting or Trespaning on
Raymond Smith or Mary Smith,
Lower Five Mile Rd.

4

Situations
Wanted

Babysitting in my home. Newborn and up Rutland and
surrounding areas. EJCperienced.
Call614·742-2390 anytime.

3 Announcements

No hunting or trespauing on
Eula Haggv Odegard property.
VIolators Will be prosecuted .

23

CALL

Large Nat'l Ins . 'Co. expanding
sales force to Mason County.
EJ~Cpet"ience a plus, but not
required . Auto . Home-hlte &amp;
Health Verv competitNe products. Salary · Commisison ·
hpense 1llowance 825.000
plus ,st year minimum All
reply a strictly confidential. 304 -

12

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Establish credit . Get credit
card•. Get low interest loan s.
Details . Money a1d - 8749 Hwy
172 w . Liberty, Ky. 41472.

614-494-2790.

AVON - All areas. Cell Marilyn
We~~o~er 304-882· 2646.

3999 0' 675-6037

22 Money to loan

To work on Da1ry Farm . Must
have milking e~tperience Call

LOST·REWARO . Large black
Lab. with white spot on chest
wearing yellow collar. 304-675-

742-2328

A diffflf'ent kind of datmg
service For information write.
Kupld's Nest. P 0 8011 619,
Ironton, OH 46638

Help Wanted

FOUND. Male Beagle on Key•
tone Rd near VInton. Call
61.·38 8-8609

Grange Hall located in AI ·
banv. Oh1o. Voting hours
\will be from 3 ·00 to 7 :00
p.m Candidates for direc·
tors must be a member of
the society. Petitions must
be signed • by 1 0 or more
members of the soc1ety and
flied with the secretary of
the society at least seven
days before the election
Petitions may be obtained
from the Secretary. Doris
Mace, At
1, Box 298

$579

614-446-4827 .

11

Government Jobs. $1&amp; ,o4Q(.
$59,230 yr Now hinng Your
area. 805-6 87-8000 Ext. R·
9805 for currant repo federal
lilt.
•

5, 1987 et the Albany

114 992 2111

-- ---

2 yr old AKC Reg. Shephard
Good with kids. Has had shots.
Call 6, 4-388-8470

Public Notice

•
--~w---

feet or 0 .083 mila.
Pavement width 20
teet.
The Ohio Oepartmern of
Transportation hereby notifiee ell bidders that it will affirmatively insure that '" any
corrtract entered · into pursuant to this advertisement,
minority business enterprises
will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response
to this invitatton and will not
ba discriminated against on
the groundl of race, color, or
netionll origin in consideration for an award.
"Minimum wage rates for
this project have been predetermin@d as required by
law and are set forth in the
bid proposal"
" The date set for comple·
tion of this work shall be set
forth in the bidding proposal." ·
Each bidder shall be required to file with his bid a
certified check or cashier's
check fQr an amount equal
to five per cent of his bid, but
in no event more than fifty
thousand dollars. or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid.
payable to the Director.
Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms, for qualification at least ten days prior to
the date set for opening bids
in accordance with Chapter
5526 Oh1o Revised Code.
Plans and specifications
are on file 1n the Department
of Transportation and the office of the District Deputy
Director.
The Director reserves the
right to reject any and all

bids.

$48500

.ssoooo

Public Notice

Bridge No. GAl-218-1016, 0 .' 1 36 mile. Work
Longth- 1100.00 feet or
0.208 mile.

a single span prestressed box
beam with reinforced conaete
abutmants on drilled shafts
tspon 62 foot. roadway 28 foot

Giveaway

Lab. Cell

Legal Copy No. 87-915
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

No. 87-936
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
BRS-981 (51
Seated proposals will be re-

4

Puppies· part Eng\11h Setter. part

NOTICE TO
CONTRACT-ORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Contract Sales Legal Copy

FORD TRACTOR ENGINE
\

11 1) 16. 22. 2tc

November 6, 1987

November 13. 1987

'

8N &amp; 9N

membership tickets for · th~e
1987 fair are eligible to vote
for directors .
Doris H . Maca, Secratary
Albany Independent
· Agricultural Society

Public Notice

Col4mbus. Ohio

areas designated

NOVEMBER SPECIALS AT
SPRINGFIELD

Public Notice

Stroot. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
during regular business hours
for a pEI'iod of 180 days

---

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

Public Notice

Take time this week to Jhank
food producers in the area
over-production of farm com·
modltles. It Is Ironic that those
who are responsible for the
plentiful food supply are often not
able to enjoy Thanksgiving because of financial stress. Reflect
and enjoy Thanksgiving!
More good news for private
pond owners on a new "tool" to
use In the control of undesirable
vegetation. The stocklngofAslan
fishes represent a biological
control option which may reduce
the need to use aquatic herb!·
cldes. This Is good news for those
who use their water for potable or
livestock uses as well as managers of larger private lakes where
annual aquatic herbicide treatment costs are prohibitive.
White amur are members of
the minnow family which may
grow up to 60 pounds or more In
size and live up to 15 years.
Leafy, rooted aquatic plants such
as pondweeds and coontall are
the preferred food for white
amur. Lacking these, they wlll
consume duckweed, algae, and
even cattails.
Because of a concern by
biologists that the natural (diploid) form of this fish might
escape from ponds and lakes and
become esta bllshed and reproduce ln river systems where their
vegitation consumption would
alter the habitat of other species
of fishes as well as waterfowl and

r_

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-133~

Herbicides may pollute
drinking water, society reports

By John C. Rice
Co. Ext. Agent,
AgrlcuHure
POMEROY - Contact one of
your vo-ag departments. Glen
Graham, from Gallla County, Is
working closely with the vo-ag
teachers In conducting farm
record schools In Meigs County.
These 'schools are scheduled
for the 1st and 3rd Mondays of
November and December. They
include learning to keep goo4
records and then analyzing these
records.
The M"eigs County Cooperative
Extension Service Is also con·
dueling classes In January on
getting the mos t from your
farming practices by comparing
your present set-up with different alternatives. If you have
wondered whether to Increase
your cow herd, add feeder pigs,
finish out cattle, ect., this would
be a good time to explore
different alternatives.
Don't Burn Down Your Hou·
se .... Recent mild temperatures
mean wood-burning stoves don't
get full use. And slow-burning
tires are perfect for building
creosote deposits In the chimney,
says AI Pugh, Extension safety

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-3 _:

~~~~==;;;;=~=~==~============~===================='·..

Page-0-2

,•

Rio Grande College/Community College announces
an opening for the Director of Records.
Reporting directly to the Vice Presillent for Student Ser·
vices. responsibilities of this posit1on mclude implementation of so~nd management procedures in the Office of
Records with particular emphasis on goal settin&amp;: budaet
considerations: staff evaluations and development; establishment and maintenance of eflicient and effective
procedures for recording, preserving and retrievin&amp; of Records Ol_fice_information: supervisi~n of class. recistration; vahdatron of student rnformatron for Social Security. teacher certification. 'Veterans benefits and araduation: preparation of academic '"rollment report. student
inventory report. course inventory to HE GIS and 'evaluationof student records for graduation requirements.
The Director of Records shall also manaae the Office of
Veterans Affairs and serve as the institution's certifying
offi cia! for veteran related matttrs.
Qualifications include a bacheloi s degree requir" and 1
Master's Degree preferred. Previous experience preferred.
Interested persons should send a copy of their up-dated
resume including the names and addresses ot three references before the deadline of November 30, 1987 to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason. Personnel Officer
Rio Grande College/Commumty Colleae
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande. OH . 45674
Rio Gronde Collce/ Communrly Colleae is on Equol
Opportunity/Affllmotive Act10n Employer
P 0. No. 13~68

1..----------:------J
t_.

'

...

�44

Furhi1hod: 4 rooms 6 bath.
Clnn. No petl. Adult aonty. Aef.
&amp; dllfl. required . Cell 614-448-

Apartment
for Rent

1119.

Furniahed ept . neMt to library.
One prof•sional adult only .
Parking. Call61 4 -4,6-0338.

11

Modem 1 BR apartment. Call
11.4J448-0390 .

Help Wanted

c·AMPUS SECURITY OFFICER

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for

rent. Belle rent for 1 bdr ..
6183.00; 2bdr., 1219 .0Q ...tllso
requind a 1200 .00 sKuritv
dtposh:. CO NTACT: Jackton
Eatst• Dept. Ph 4415-3997
Equ.l Housing Opportunhv.

Ranewly twdecorat~. Very niiDI
apart}T'IIntt in downtown Gallipolit. 1 • 2 BR .· unfumithed,
second floor. from •111-1221.
Dtp. &amp;. raf•enc. requirtd. CaD
ewe. 61 4-448·232&amp; Of 441·
4248.

2 SR . ,epts. 6 elosett, kitChiN1· Graeioua living. 1 and 2 be6•ppl. furnished, W•h•· Drver room apartm.nta at VMiaga
hook-up, ww carper. newtv Manor 1nd Riv....W. Ap~tt­
painted, dade . Regency, Inc. m..,u In Middlep•rt. '"""
Apll. Call 304-075-7738 or 121&amp;. Including utllt'-1. c.ll
676-610 • .
114-892.7787. EOH.

PART-TIME

11

lielp Wanted

Reporting directly to the Director of Security, the
Campus Security Officer is responsible for protec tion of the College's facilities and property and en forcement ·of Published College Regulations.

W

EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC/
TECHNICIAN
NEEDED

1-

Entry wage for this 37% hour a week position is $4.60 ·
per hour. Medical, other leaves and insurance available.
Interested persons should send an updated resume including the names of three references before the deadline of November 27, 1987 to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason. Personnel Officer
Rio Giande College/ Community College
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande, OH. 45674
Rio Grande College/ Community College is an Equal
Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer
P.D. No. 13524

e~~.cellent

8

DIST.

MANAGER
Person tQ supervise
others in this area ...
Salary Comm. · could
total · $40,000 first
year.
No experience necessary no age limit. Selected person flown to

Dist

Office for orien-

tation . Need $2900
(refundable) deposit
to cover supplies·. For
dptails call :
Toll Free
PAT MURPHY

1-800·225-4821
EXT. 802
~

I

HOURS: 9:30AM. to 5:00P.M.
Monday thru Friday, Sat. 9:30 to 4:00 P.M.
Aucttonear Lon Ntal, OWner

Beech Slrtet, Middleport., Ohio,
2 bedroom furNttled apartment.
u'ilttl• ,_id. Ref•ence &amp; Dep304-882·2566 .

In Middleport, Ohio, 1 •nd 2
rHm furrMM .. apanmenta. Pri·
wt• lt•tts. utilitiM paid. 304182·2188.
Mo4ern one bedroom aplt1·
m,ant. VeJtV ct•n and nice. No
Ptet. Ph. 304·176-13815.

lllo.mt tor rem. dav. week.
monttl. Galli a Hotel. Call 81 4·'
44t·ll80. Rent as low 11 t120

a

ALL PURPOSE

Lacatad in lhe Rutland American Legion l!tJildlng
Rutland, Ohio

TOYS-TOYS-TOYS
Large Wholesaler • Retailer
wm Bring Load Of Clwlsbnas Items To Be Auctioned.

-··

fumllhed room. t76. Utiliti•
palll. Sh.,. bath. Single male.
111 Second. Gallipolis. Call
4.4t-441• after 7pm.

SPECIAL

November 27, 1987-Frltlay Nile 7:00p.m.

.,

89C LB.

46 Space for Rent

VANILLA CONCENTRATE

Somelhfng For Evaryane-Men's-Wotnen'S.Chlldren's

4

1tem1 For Christmas.
ltJY MOlE PO&amp; YOtJI CHIIS'I'MAS 11ll AUCTibN WAY.

OffiCI Space for rept. beet.
downtown Gallipollt loc.tion.
lfte~Wi• cal .,4·•46· 4222.

$150

oz.

Mobile Home lot. 60 ft . or leu.
120 4th., Gallipolis. 176. Water
. =~ - Catl814 · 446-4416aflar7

NEW PRODUCTS

Thlo fa A Oae Day s.Je Only Auctloner: Lon Neal

CAIE FROSnNG

Laorg41 trailer lot . Bulawille·
Afditon Rd. Ward's Trailer Park.
Call lifter ol :30 PM . 814-446·
4281.

•

VANILLA &amp; CHOCOUft
16

$175

oz.

NOW CAIIYING JEWEL IVINS FMI.Y

ns.

From Glllipolis, teke Rt. 141, turn left onto Rt.
Tum right onto Cadmus Patriot Road. Watch for

sians.

BREADS, MIXES, GRAINS
&amp;CEREAL
"FlEE" CANDY LESSONS
FIIDAY, oaOIEI JOTR
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31St
11 A.M.-3 P.M.

FRIDAY NOV. 27, 1987 at 7:00 P.M.

'
An Equal Opportunity
Employer M/F/H/V.

LARGEST CHRISTMAS AUCTION
IN THE TRI-STATE AREA
DOOR PRIZES
MARLIN WEDEMEYER - AUCTIONEER
614-245-5152

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC
AUCTION
..

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

514 EAST MAIN
POMOOY

'il
- •

SATURDAY NOV. 28, 1987
AT 10:00 A.M.

-

:2=

(:OUNTRY MOBILE Home P.-11.
Rauta 33. North of Pomeroy.
-..ntal tran.-1. Call 614-992·
7471.

•

S.• for smal treilers. All

hoft.yPa. Cable. Alto efficiency
fOOffte, eir anil cable. Muon.
W.Va. Coli 304-773·&amp;161 .

,.

..

Fee4 S..,.

"of••ional vouple moving to
Rio Grand•Oallipolia area Janu ary '18 . o .. ~r. 3 bedroom
couMry homa to riN'1t . Cats and
~ no children. Phone 406131· 6187 bllween e :00-10,00
am. or .tter 7 :00 pm. or send
ct.t.ila to Deborah Judy, P.O.
lolc 729, Shattuck. Oklahoma
73158 .

41

WINTER SPECIAL

Location: From Gallipolis take 160 to Morgan
Center Road (approx. 11 miles from HoiZIII'
Hospital). turn right, go 2 miles. Follow signs.

MOVING SALE

HOUSEHOLD: Sleeper sofa, recliner, oak veneer desk, desk
and chair, king size water bed with heater, roll·away bed,
coffee table, White·Weslinghouse sewing machine, metal
wardrobe, metal cabinet. large wall mirror, hassock, feather
pillow, glassware and more.

• ••r• a

•..,..Ciecbeuc4

EQUIPMENT: J.D. corn sheller, hammer mill feed grinder
electric mortar mixer, drag type dirt scoop, head locks for
milking stalls.

tMflt'eftiC~

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES: Kilchen cabinet with pullout bread board , hall tree, wicker barrel hamper, wicker pic·
nic basket wit h tin liner, wicker planter, wicker basket with
lid wicker sewing basket. w1cker chair , porcelain baby bath
tub, porcelain diaper pail, iron skillets, iron bean pot, electric
iron !Patent 3·18·19151, graniteware, meat hand saw, tins
stove lire mat, brass lire extinguisher, large wood box,
rrunK, cameras, burlaQ cu rtams, crocks and JUS. quadruple,
Occupied Japan, England. McCoy 4 pc. dish set, BtueWillow,
France, Royal Porcelain, WT Cleveland Chemical Co. No. 2
bo1tle, jars, souvenier spoons, Christmas tin icicles, han.d
crocheted and embroidered table cloths and doilies, chemlle
bedspread lapprox. 35 years old) and lots more Ioo numerolis
to mention.
1976 Dodge Van with slant 6 cylinder &amp; auta. toos.

lywMn for N&amp;Y
" indow opening tnct

..........

MISC.: Draft table, elec. heater, marble slab, baby swing.
baby ocales, knitting machine, elec. meat slicer, linen table
cloths, and lots more.

"

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

'Ao'"

thick INiu~ r n; orau
unitiC1a u 1 aupel'iot
Mrrier 11111'\11 outlidl

Cucub

c:loalng

b;gi'lft
rigidity

to
--·fi'MII lnd Mtf'- hot
or cotd ai1 lot lroc:I'MMd
~Hngth Wid

.....
...,..,.""
proy--

t)(t~y tew
elr. Wiler. noJte and

01r1 infiltrlljon

........ camer.
for .._lti'M!Qih tnd
g...t~y 1'111\IMCI alr

eq. ft. commercial ·~n
·~• for offices. retailing, or
Mr'Vic.. Prima location-'corner

lnfi!WiiOrl

... ......

~rtllnt

•O..C a
C.. Loti! II'UI.. Ind
QOilipi

',.

WmdoW""...

•

Premium
Quality

..

Ulllf'lel

lf!Ufly tOiil"' ....... tor
tight IIC~Jrlty utd

-.,-Ioney

Mercltandtse

•

•

• Fiberglass lnaact Screen

•
•

•

'

Side by side Admiral
refrigerator-freezer. $200. Call
614-388·8896 or 388-9914 .
O~e ythitelavatory . one lavatory

With cabinet. Good co ndition.
Call after 8 :00 p.m. 614-9923401.
Wh .ir lpool Fros1fr
Refr.gerator-Freezer. 17
whha. extra nice-clean .
Call614-949 -2446 .
Pickens Used Furniture ·
Dinflltes, sofas. chairs, end
tabi1111, lamps. beds, dressers.
deek. glassware . • 304 · 675 1450.

52 CB,TV, Raolio
'; Equipment
26 inch RCA remote . TV with
large storag e cabinet on top , 90
dBV guarante e, 8600, Firm.
Uoyd • head remote control
VCR , $200. Firm . Ca11614-246 ·
9414.

53

--

SAWMILL LIQUIDATION

WhyAiside
Vinyl Wiftdowt?

• Attt'lctlve 'butt joint
O'tel't.p

va. Unslgl'ltly

~mltt~a

SALE ORDER &amp; riMES: The auction will begin a!IO:OOA.M.: 12:00 noon mill equipment: 1:30 P.l . Real
Estate: 2:00P.M. trucks: wheel loaders: and all remaining items will selL We will try to workaselo• to

Compare the H¥1ntagn

this schedule as possible. (co me early)

• Butt join1 overlap

SAW Mill EQUIPMENT: 2-Frick Otl·l saw husk and 2-Frick 3 Block Carnages w/ai r dogs. 46' trac.ks, elec.
sels lessth an I yr. old; Morbar k 58" 3 kn~fe Ch1ppack w/ Joader sy~ em (horo. leedl: Morbar k 48 6 kmle
Chi ppack (mt Jeed): Mellotl De barker 2001 : Cornell 3 saw edger: Cornell barn sweep: .2 Mellon No. Sloe
turners: Cornelll6' double end tnm saw: Clark Bros. 24' Ban M1ll w /cama~~ Edgerfeed Iwe rolls~/chains,
Me II otl 3strand hvedecks I 2' 16' I 8', 20' &amp;J 5': 100 plu s~. ol liVer oils vanoussectron ~n gths: 22 be~ con-

• FYIIIift ralls tm top
lnd I'Mmom IUhel VI.
Hlndln thlt Cln eome
10oM and fall off

'Jeyor; 26' IJibratmg conveyor: Mellott green chams 52': Mellon roof top green chains ~7'; [gan Ba~ ~esaw;
DeWal t 12" &amp; 14" ra dial saws w/d ead rolls; Cornell sa wdust blowers: Stetso n-Ross np saw: mulh-np sa w;
multt-np, ad1ustable w/20 h.p motor &amp; bl owe r; Powe rmat1c planner; Newman 30" knife shar pener: . 2·Se~ r s
Craftsman to" radral saws 2ik h.p. w/table; molder planner w/ 50 knives; tongue &amp;groove machrne: Kiln
carts; lumber cart s; several sets of rolls. and many other items.
TRACTORS - TRAILERS - WHEEL LOADERS - TRUCKS

ANTIQUES. Buy or Sell. Rive·
rlne Antiques, 1124 East Main
St. Pomeroy. Hours: Mon .Tues .-Wed. 10 a.m . to 6 p.m.
Sun .· 1 p.m.- 8 p.m . By chan co
or appointm ent . Russ Moore
614-992-2526 .

54 Misc . Merchandise
Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tires. slzes12. 13. 14, 1 5,
16 . 16.5 . B milee out Rt. 218 .
Cali 614-256-6251 .
Plastic cistern state approved,
plastic septic tanks, plastic
culverts, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jackson. Oh. 614-286 -5930 .
Quality firiiW'OOd, all hardwood,
for sale. $26 a pick· up load. Call
614-367·0669 .
Big Dakota Farm Hom e- built on
your lot only. $12.996 &amp; up. Cali
614·886-7311 .

• Full balance co~er

• High· tech vlnyt extrusions reatst

·.

cracking and warping and are much
eru11er to clean. Plus the Whiter color
coordinates with today's interior
designs.

'---

TOOLS -MILL PARTS-MOTORS -ELEC. PANEL-LUMBER

• Interlock 11 meeting
rail keepe our wind, unllkt 1 c::ompreuor ~e~l

REAL ESTATE
DEC. 1, 1987 trues.) 6:00P.M.

·T E E M 0 L

ENCARP

1~

I II

I~

NUTAQI

I

Mi11 ed hard wood slabs. $12 per
bundle. Containing approx. 1 'Ia
ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio . 614 · 992 - ~461 .

Location : 33 0 Thira Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Sale Conducted for: W. F. Gill S, II
Mary Jo Gills &amp; John E. Gills, Ill

I

OPEN HOUSE

SUNDAY, NOV. 29', 2:00-4:00 P.M.

I

LA ROME

Outra~ed tenant: "The roof
leaks, ram comes in through a
broken window and the floors
are flooded. How long is this
going to last? " Landlord:
" How should ·f know, I'm no

---1"

I
O
I
ll
I
I
I
'
I_L._L.
THWCER
!.,---,;:...:.;.,..:;.,.:_;-;;_,...;.1
9
0

For sale. Hardwood. Split. Se•
son ad . S 25 per load. Delivered
835 load . Call614-949-2069 .

L.

Remingto" Model 742. 30-06
AOL 3x9 Wewer Wlndfield,
sling, case, 3'h bo11.es Ammo.
Excellent co ndition. $325 . 304675-2396 or 614 - 992 · 2~83 .

Complete the chv~kle quoted

by f•lling in the missi ng words
_,l,_J__J_.J you develop from step No. 3 below.
II·'Z~ e """""""'""'·"''

I I I I I I I I I I .I

r----.-------------- -

2 twin beds with matching
hesciJloards, mattresses and
springs Included. 2 twin comforters, he•rt des igns, matc hing
pillow shams, duat ruffle~ and
curtains. Ail excellent condition.
Call 614-992-5018 .

,JN\irll:l3H1V3M

1
1
ou W,J 'Mou~ 1 Ptno~s MOH ..
:pJOfPUB'l .. ~ISBf OI6Ut06 Sf41 Sf 6UOJ

For Sale: 017 Alllls Chalmers
Tra cto r. Wide fTont3 point hitch.
Outst~nding conditiOn. New
lloor drill pi'ess. 3A HP. $200.
firm. Calt 614-949-2013.

MOH 'p&amp;p00f18J8 GJOOfl 841 pue MOP
-UJM ue~oJq e uBnoJul U! sewoo UJUJ
'G~8~J jOOJ 9~1 .. :jUBU91 pii68JjnQ

For sale: 10 inch wood planer.
Barnett Crossbow, Spotting
Scope. Cal161 4·992·6229 after.
5:00pm.

----="""-I

N'ti'II:J3Hl 't3M
H013/:JM
31'ti:JOYV
lNt'tnO
30N'ti:Jd
1313YVO
Hli:J't3H
S137·1'1'ti:JOS

1

Real Estate General

Firewood for sale. Delivered
anytime . $30 .00. 304-896 3446 .

King woodburner. Good cond .
1200. Call614·266·6639 .

Buy 6 Toning Tableeand receive
a lree Su ntan bed. Offer good
unt il Dec. 30, 1987. Call Caribbean Tans. Inc .. 304-422-4200.

Also Open 5:00 P.M. Day of Sale
To see property at other times call 446 -0552!
Auctioneers Note: this large brick home is known as the
John Martincourt House, built prior to 1834. House Is
situated on large 84ft by 173ft. 10 in. lot House is in
good condition. Be sure to see t hi s one!
Hou se includes spacious foyer wrth cherry sfa ircase, l1ving
room w1t h fireplace, lg. wooden folding doors leading into
dm1ng room, kitchen includes dishwasher, disposal. brick
wall and open stairway, glassed in back porch, 3 Ig. bedrooms, 2\l balhs, utility room. Plastered walls, nice woodwork, gas forced air furnace. Home also has an apartment
which includ es; Jg. living room, 2 bedrooms, bath, k1tchen
with wood cabinets (Formica lops!, disposal, gas furnace.
Front is enclosed with wrought iron fence, hou se has wood
shutters ms1de and out. front has copper spoufing. Other
amenilies too numerous to ment1on!
Terms of Sale: $5,000.00 cash or acceptable check at time
of auction. Closing to be on or before Decem ber 29, 1987.
Iaxes to be prorated to the day of closing. To be sold with
the confirmation of the owners.
Sale Conducted by:
Bud McGhee -Realty &amp; Auction Service
P.O. 8ox 191 -Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-0552
•
Auctioneers :
M. l. (Bud) McGhee &amp; Steve M~'thee
Lie. &amp; Bonded Ohio &amp; West. Va .
Not Responsible for Accidents

JUDY DEWITT
J . Merrill Carter

REALTOR ®

Becky Lane
Phyllis Loveday
Patrick Cochran
Liz Long
Sonny Garnes
Cheryl Lemley

3B8-8155
379-2184
446-0458
445-2230
446-B655
675-3968
446-2707
742 -3171

-

1

446-661 o_,

· SOUTHFRN.'HILLS
R.E.,-- .INC.
.

..,

•

"' '

.'

8 MM Camcorder with VCR
$800.00. Living room suit~
8350.00. 1988 Ch811. pick-up
4x4. 304-675-6574.
Amana freezer, Huffy bicycle,
file cabin81, antique trunk. tools.
23 chairs. 614-446 -8240. ·

•
'

'
NEW LISTING! LOCATION! LOCATION! On Seneca
Drive. !Meigs Co.) The kids can walk to Meigs High
or Sa lisbury Elem .· 5 bedrooms, family roo m, 2
- baths. 2 car garage. In A·I condition.
#2515

PRICE REDUCED- L1ke new, choice location. 3
bedroom, much remodeling has been done. 2 car
. garage, barn, and over 6 ac res of land, adJacent to
Raccoon County Par k. Priced only 1n the 30s.
Don't miss this buyer opportun1Iy 1
#2454

i setting. Seven
miles to town, large patio, 3
2 baths,
slorage buildin g, brick and frarne ranch, Kyger
Creek school disfrict Call lor an appointment
#2482

LED
- Brick chateau with 6
acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 2 fireplaces, living
room, dining area. full divided basemen! with
room lor Jam1ly roo m. Priced in !he $60s.
#2481

YOU WILL KNOW THIS ONE IS FOR YOU as you
enter through th e front door of this 3 bedroom
home. Cathedral ceiling enhances Ihe living room
and dining area, 2 full bal hs, walk-m closet a~
master bedroom , 2 car det~ched garage. Over 1

LOG CABIN &amp; 42 ACRES MORE OR LESS! OWNER
WILL HELP WITH FINANCING! - 3 bedrooms,
living room, electric heat pum p, 25'K25' approK.
unatta ched garage. Pond, toba cco base, approK.
5,000 Chnslmas trees
#2475

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gallipolis . .
NEW· I pc. wood groupo 1399.
LWinf room tuites- t189 -1&amp;99 .
!Junk bedl with bedding· 1199.
Ful IItie mattre11 • foundltion
starting · $99 . Recliners

""nino- t98.

US£0- Bed1 , dressers , bedroom
1ultea, $199 ·1 299 . Deskt,
wring• waaher, a complete line
of u.-cf furniture .
NEW- W•t•n boots· $30 .
Worllboott 118 &amp; up . lSteel 8.
ooftloel . Colll14-448·3169.
County Appliance, Inc. Good
uMd appliancas and TV sets.
o,., BAM to IPM , Mon thru
811. 114-441·1899. 127 3,d.
Avt. OaMipolit, OH .

NEW LISTING! OVERLOOKING OHIO RIVER IN
MEIGS COUNTY sits a lovely Victorian style 5
b ~droom horne with den, 1•1
h baths, tw olir eplac es,
fo rmal living and dining rooms and much, mu ch
more. Call lor more informa11on.
#2520

GOOB USED APPLIANCES
W•h.-a, dryers , refrig«ators,
ra• .... Shoo• Applianc:ee.
u....- ANet' Ad . baid• Stone

C••• M01et 114-446·7398 .

lof• and chlirs pric;:ed from
1395 to $996 . Ta~ .. 160 and
UJ to 1126. Hid••· beds S390
te tillS. AedinBf'l 1226 to
.1 371. Lampl 128 to t125 .
Din-• 1109 and up to t496.
Wood tabl• w -1 chairs $286 to
1711. O.ak 1100 up to S376 .
Mutch• 1400 and up . Bunk
bedl complete w·m ..tre..as
12M Md wpto 13915 . Babv beds:
1118. MattrestHorboxtpringa
tun or twin $18, firm t78. and
Ill. Queen 18tl 12215 . King
1350. 4 drawer ch•t 169. Gun
......... I gun. o .. or e4ectric
1378. Baby manra11as
Ul a •45. Bed frames. 120.
UO • King frame 160. Good
"lection of bedroom suites,
m...t cabih•s. tleadboatdl $30
and wp to $86.

•
•

FEDERAL STYLE- Elegant 3 beorn,. home overlooking
Chickamauga Creek. Cent AC , nat gas, FA lurn ace, lormal dinin g rm .. "step.d own'" liv 1ng rm., modern kitch en
with many "bu ill ins'' Lg. family rm ., 2 or 3 ca,r garage. A
quality hom e for tho se who appreCiate modern hvm g
with older
Pr~ce : $110,000.00.

NEW LISTING! - N1ce, 3 bedr oom home with l \&gt;
baths, living room , formal dining room, kitchen,
front porch , unattached garage, storage bu ilding,
chain link lence and best of all the low price of
$27,000.00 .
#2517
PRICED AT S10.000 to surt your pocketboo,.
SJ11all house and l acre. Home has 2 bedrooms,
lfving room , kitchen and storage room. Separate
build ing for storage. Located 1n AddisonTow nship.
Good rental invest ment
'
#2479

•ano•

72 + ACRES FOR $12,500 - Mineral right
included. Harrison Tow nship. Call lor more
information.
#2502

SO Days 11me •• cash wh:h
approved credit. 3 Miles out
l!kii.,Uie R... Open 9am Co &amp;pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph . 614-446·

WHAT A PLACE - Super nice 3 bedroom brick ,
and frame'ranch . ApproK. 2,7 DO sq. ft. F1 n1shed
basemen!,'2 car gamge plus unatta ched 24'!36'
garage. 3 baths, family room. formal dining.
pantry in kitchen. Very well co nstructed. Pnvate
location. 104 acres !borders Raccoon Creek) . •
#2450

.

! !, I
'"

0~22.

I

'

NEW LISTING - 7 room nome along 4th Ave. Can be
modified to make 2 apls. Ne ar dow ntown area and
schools. Pr~ced now $45,000.00

. PAASON'S FURNITURE
Ju.c: arrivad· 3 truck 'lo..:ll· New
INiftt room su ites; n.w w~d 6
pc. Mving wood suhea, t399.96 ;
ch11t of drawera; twin mat·
t,...M, U!i ut; microwave

CABIN &amp; DVER 7 ACRES, $10,800 - Hu ntmg
cabin approx. 5 yrs. old, we llmsulaled. Secluded
and nestled in the wood s. Rural water available.
#2488

D'ifWI ~tends .

THE WORKING
MIIN'S FRIEND

VACANT LAND - 19 acres more or less. Wooded
acreage. Several building siles. Ne~t to cityl
Priced at $19,000.00.
#2490

acre lawn.

#2491
NEW LISTiNG! - 2 LOTS, $5,000.00 Includes
septic and rural water. Call lor more detailS.
#2513
NEW LISTING! ·oWNER FINANCING $29,'500.00. l 'h slory fra me home with newer
vinyl siding! Over 2 acre flat law n. 3,bedrooms,
hving room. bafh, large rooms. Ca ll today.
#25 18
A HOUSE YOU CAN AFFORD! Below $30,000. 3
bedroom remodeled ranch. Vinyl Siding, newer
roof, liVIng room , bath, eaf-m k1tchen. Woodburner. City schools.
#2500
PASTURE FARM WITH 25 ACRES - Barn and
lovely ran ch slyle home. Home has 3 bedrooms, 1
large balh, kit chen, breaklasl room , formal dming
room. formal Jiv1ng room with fireplace, family
room , fu rnace room and utility rm. Addison Twp.
Priced in !he $60s.
#2496
$16,000 - OAKWOOD DOUBLEWIDE -Owner
want s offer! 3 bedroom s, living room, woodburner
md storage bu ildi ng.
#2503
LIKE NEW - Contemporarw home. 3 ar.4 large
bedrooms, 2 full batns. office. large enlertaining
room lor !he Jam1ly or execul1ve. Well equipped
kitchen and for mal d1ning area. Wrap·around
deck facing beautiful valley. Mulli·fuel system
(coal, wood, or propane gas!. 3 car garage and
workshop with approx. 3 acr es of land.
#2 463
EDGE OF TOWN - 3 bedroom house, 2car garage
with effi ciency apartment Nice neighborhood .
$32,000.
'
#2480

OFFER ·exPIRES DEC . 1, 1987

IN POINT PlEASANT
·

r,,,ll V\':I&lt;Hl RP.tlty lru
L' lot U'&gt;t St Cio~lhpu:•._,

NEW LISTING- 19.6 ACRES OF VACANT LANO
wit h .septic and water. pad fo r mobile home.
$15,000.00. Call for more inforll]alion.
#2516

WHAT AFARM! - Approx. 71 acr es more or less.
Located on Springfield Twp. Good· area. Call for
more informatiOn.
#2441
VACANT ACREAGE! - Over 36 ac res. Developed
sprin g. Several feet of road fronta ge. Call for more
information. $12,000.
#2478

QUAINT COUNTRY COTTAGE' - Decorated sa
cute! 2.8 acres borders Raccoon Creek. 2
bedroom home, nice livin g room w1th lireplace,
kitchen wilh ni ce cabinets. balh, partl31 basement
and l car unattach ed gara ge. Pnced 1n ther $20s.
#2489.

AGED CHARM! - Older 3 bedroom 1~ story
home. l iving and dining rooms, bath, rural wafer,
sh1ngle roof, hardw ood fla01s.
' #2505

OWNER WILL CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT - 3
bedroomaluminum sided ranch . 2 car,unattached
garage,2 baths, nice fam ily room and front porch.
Han dy to Rio Grande and Gallipolis. C1ty schools,
·
N4~

1980 BAYVIEW DELUXE MOBILE HOME- Living
room, bath, eat-in kitch en with range and
refngerator. 2 bedrooms. livin g room an d dining
room furniture included. plus all underp1n mng
and 2 porches.
#2 483

, E ; ,1 , {.J•rr. or.)tiUn "~ tru~ll!c lur th,• NAf , &amp; ~ nd ·• -.tr.ldt;m.trlo.s of C1.'111ury ~1 R.,.al Esto~lt&gt; Corporation. Equal Housing Opportuntly a
~' ~

.,.

.'

EXCEllENT BUY! On th iS 2 slory country home.
Clean, quiet, comfortable and renovated. like new
alum. siding, storm window s. modern eat-in
kitchen and bath. Fru11 trees, grape arbor and
approK. 4 acres pasture and wooded land. Listed
at $24,900.00.
#2472

REDUCED PRICE!"OW $33, 500.00- Over 37
acre far m, 2 story home, barn, corn cribs, tobacco
base storage building. Don' I hesitale, call today!
'
#2433

l·•1

-·

NOW WHO SAID THAT AGOOD "BUY" IS A THING
OF THE PAST?- 3 bedr ooms, L-shapedranch, 2
baths, equipped kitchen, family room, basement,
attached 2 car garage Sprin g Valley SubdiviSion.
Make an appoinlmenl today'
#2501

GENERAL FARM- Suitable for l1vestock. Owner
says suflicent water for cattle. Some marketable
l imber, barn, shOR and ~ou se wh1ch mcludes 6
rooms and bath. Clay Township. Call now,
#2210

.. .
,,1~
c. 1"'"' l''" 1ul") •

:

OWNERS Will · HELP WITH FINANCING ...
HARDWARE, GARAGE AND GROCERY BUSINESS! Sale includes buildin&amp; lol, business, and
lull inventory. Call today. Be your own boss
tomorrow!
#2493

LOVELY 2 BEDRllOM HOME WITH SPACIOUS
LIVING ROOM , dining area and kilche~ . Mud
room to the covered patio. 'A basement I car
allached garage, lighted closets, tronf porch and 1
acre lawn. Lo cated in Vintoo.
·
#2505
I

Buckeye Siding &amp; Window Co.

BROKER
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR

Ail Christmas'Trees t12 .. Come
early before cold weather. tag
your tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mile abo11e Muon
on"Hang,in g Aock Rd . 304·773 5371 or 882· 2886 .

rll,_.

FOR FREE ESTIMATES

·.-

Real Estate General

End tables, eoffeetable, chair,
baby bed . bassinette. J .C.Panney Toaster 011en. new fiber·
giaas Nova pens. 614-9926941 .

Vlller Furnit.ure
New and used furniture and
tppllcances. Call 114 -446 71572. Houn 9 -6.

Mountain State Siding &amp; Wintlow Co.
529 JACKSON PIKE-(614) 446·6260
321 VIAND ST.-(304) 675-2410
~~ 7 .____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
~ ----__;_---,..J

·-

PUBLIC AUCTION

Cata lyll c converteu. only
889.95. Most models. Install•
tion also available. Muffler Man.
9 Stimpson Ava ., Ath ens, Ohio.
, ·800-843-3767 .

• Full bi.!Mce covers
gi¥11 ciMn, finished
look
than UrtJighlly hatc:twl,. lhlt
can be teen In the
homo

IN GALLIPOLIS

A&amp;F LUMBER COMPANY

• Whiter,' stronger frames &amp; sast111

• Butyl wrap glazing
on irt.u lattng glass vs.
Metal to glut contact

Estate General

Wanted· Rock Ill dirt· 24 Chilli· '"
cot.he Rd . Easy access. Call
614-446-4913.
.

S&amp;IIOned firewood. S30 pickup
toed , deliwered within reason.
Call614-245-5039 attar 4PM .

Kindling Wood. $6 pickup load .
Call 614-446-341 3.

Four drawer cheat of dtiWet's.
all areas, Shirley Spears1 · 82 a. 614 -992-3079 .
304 -675-1429.
.

Seasoned Oak &amp; Ash firew ood·
Seasoned one year. Large load .
Split 8. deiillered-&amp;35. Catl614 266·1340 or 266 · 9303,
anytime.

Fuel oit heater with tank-like
n8'N. 3 drawer dask. -Good eond
Call614·446-4053.

54 Misc . Merchandise

AVON ,

Maple bedroom suite. Couch,
reclin8r, bo11. springs &amp; mattreu.
Frost·free refrig .. wooden storm
doors. Cell 614·446-3224.

27 inch Williamson Coal or
Wood Furnace with outside
metal jacket. Call 61 4· 992·
7388.

1 -Woodburning furnace-$260,
used one winter. 1 - Woodburn ing stove-$100 . Call 614-367 ·
7670 .

54 M isc. Merchandise

GAMr

New blaCk leather London Fog
jacket-boys eize 12 - $45. Call
614-446-3386.

1976 Jeep Renegade4x4. Runs
good, new 1iraa. Cheet-type
freezer. Maytag Dryer, excellent
condition. Call614-742-2433.

Gold print couch . Blue 11elvet
chair. Maple console stereo, $75
each. Call 614 -446-0619 after
4 :00.

WORD

Whirlpood Frost-free, side by
side refrigerator, 19 cubi c foot
with ice mltker, t200 . 60 feet of
6 foot high chain like fence with
gate and 8 post, 1100. Call
614 -446-1444.

Tree a. stump rem o11at. firewood
120 dump load , HEAP 110uchers
accepted. Liv e Ctlrist~as trees.
Don'e LaAdscapei, 614 -446·
9646 .

17.2 frolt -free G .E. refrig . with
icemaker, $400 . Body shop
compressor. $400. Furniture &amp;
misc. Call 614-446 ·6944.

&gt;:J

2 Wheet bicycle for sale. Cali
614-446 ·3668.

• Wraparound glaz ing
• Interlock at meeting rail

1979 Ford "CL·9000' Tractor w/ 400 Cummings En~ 13 s¢; 1967 Mack 'R-6()(1' Tractor w/237 Mack Eng: 1971
While Fre~ghtfiner .w/318 De. Eng 10 spd.; 1982 Tr~an "1900' wheel loader w/lorlis &amp; bucket. 70 h" : 2-Ca!eqlf
iar "910" wheel loaders: Tr011 mobile 40' open top tr01fer: 8-40' Van t~11er~ 1965 fruehaul 28' dumptrailer 13'
Sides du ~ oc bar~ Sid&lt; bd. krt lor 4lllalbe~ side txt kit wl tarp for 40 ftatbe¢ 19781nt Transtar II tractor w/270_
Cummings Eng (needs repair!: While ·~IXXJ" wactor chasSIS &amp;.frame: lnt Transtar "00 4000" ln!ctO&lt; w/671 Del
· eng 10 spd. (needs back rear endl: 10. "3508" wl lork (part~ : Farmall M(n"'ds repa~rl.
PICKUP TRUCKS- AUTOS: 1952 F-600 I ~ ton liatbed (mellenl cond.l; 1978 Ford conversion van: 1976
Ford F-150 w/ 4 WD: 1972 Chevr~el'h ton piCkup: 1973 Chevrolet stalion wagon.
TheelectriC panel conSistsof 30 amp. to 600 amp sy~ems w /West1~ghouse and A1ax 100 h.p..auto starters:
9-60" Head saw blades: WestmRhouse Flex-arc portable welder; 24 Bans: Edg..R1te shadow lig~ts: sod1um
lights: mi bath starters: 150 g_ai upng~t air co mpressor; Newcomb·DetrM "EE" exhaustion· railroad car
hoods (tool sheds!: 12-55 11L barr~s '' 011 base ex1er10r paint; many 3phase motors such as 2-Lmcoln 100
h.p. 460 vl)t w/c amages and other var1ou s horse: powers, nam~ brands consistmgof G.E., Brooks, &amp;A.C. to
name a few; 4/ 4 lumber, Cherry, Walnut. Sassafras, Poplar, tJanous length &amp;Width s: Ig. amt. ot Ma c iools;
be~ s. blades, bus hings, pulleys &amp; many 1tems too numerous to mention.
·
·1 .8 ACRES WITH JMPROVEMENJS
Asawm1ll known as A&amp;F Lumrer Co. has operaled ~!his bcation ror several year&gt; S4uated on 7.8 acres wrth an
11400 s~ tt. metal bu1icing designed for sawmill use. There IS nearly 70(1 of Rd. lrontge on St Rt 41wrth U.S. Rt
50' iUsl several hu r&lt;fred ft. away near Ill! downtown bu•ness dislr&lt;t ol Ba1n br1dge,Olt These lacilrtles are oclled
10 tl&gt;! heart o1 some ol the best bmberland 1n the regon. But w/ this primelocat~n lhere could be other poss1~e
uses tor this parcel ol Reo Estate. Come and see lor your~! tl'isun~ ~.&lt; opportunrty to purchaseal Pu~~ Auct1ort!
TERMS: REAl ESTATE- 10% Dn. doy of salew~h b'alance.due on or before Jon. 5,1981. Purchaser will
receive jQocllitle with Genenl Warranty Deed.
TERMS: PERSONAL PROPERTY - Cash or check w/p~oper LD.
For further inf.ormatlon brochures etc. Call Auct10n Hotline
393-3440. Lunch Served.

• Full lift rails

Antiques

1920'• 9x1 2 wooi rug whh
matching 3,~!:~ runner. $126. Call
614-992-39 55 or 614 ·992 ·
6976.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Cash or Check'with Positive ID- Food
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property. Licensed and bonded.

C!. ~

54 Misc . Merchandise

&amp;1 Household Goods

Opllonl
• Diamond or Colonial Grids

The Premium VInyl Window
mulli-&lt;:hambe&lt;ed conetruclion o"-'s
e&lt;cellent strerllllh and durability.
This design, with ill deed air
pockets, combined w~h the almoel
perfect insulating propenles of the
vinyl rliaterial, grM!ly reduce~
troublesome condenaatlon.

wnle»lp,.
'flfttl MOfllure rrom

32

v· 1
·
R~ent

• High Purformance LowE qtta

., ... ,
, •me .....

or 2nd. • Plna in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in rear. 1360 per
:;:~ ~~~~ 814·446· 4249 Of

ThePremi\un

• Tinled Glaoslor Extra Protection
Against Sun's o.mag!Ag ""'"

For Lease

1~

50°/o OFF ON SOLID VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

LOCATION : 20 mi. West of Chillicothe. Oh. 19 mi. East of Hillsboro, ·Oh. atthecorntr
of R1 ~ 50 &amp; St. Rt. 141 South of Bainbridge, Ohio.

HILLSBORO, OH. 4 513 3

2 bedroom furniMd apt, ref and
d. . .ll. Naw Havan. W. Ya.•
304·112·3287 or 304 ·7731024.

Public Sale
AuctiOn

MILL EQUIPMENT - REAL ESTATE
TRACTORS -WHEEL LOADERS - TRAILERS
Saturday. Dec. 5, 1987 Beginning at 10:00 A.M.

SALE CONDUCTED IT
1152 NO. HIGH ST.-

llo. 114-441 ·1221 .

675·3331

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

AUCTIONEER: FINIS ISAAC

AUCTION -

APARTMENTS. mobile homes.

houl•. Pit- Pl...ant and Gal'lipo-

415 Furnished Rooms

Auctioneers Note: Sale will be in a big building, so
bring your Thanksgiving company.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

-

SetoU , ••
S.! cl4 up 10 P22S.15'
lllnchnm

OR CALl 992-2104, EXT. 213

OWNERS: TOM AND MARY ANN MIRACLE

Oh. 45631.

Third Street - Point Pleasant, W. Va .
(Formerly Dunlop Tire Center)

,.,....,.., Call 614.992-5868 .

30 DAY WARRANTY
Now Over 2000 nres To Chooll I'Janl:
ToSPECIAiL·SPi:CIAI.·SPECIAL·TlwuNiw. 27

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

Murphy's Mart

E

Rio Grande College/Community College announces
an opening for a Secretary I as secretary to the EKecutive Dire~ tor of the Ohio Regional Association of
Concert Lecture Enterprises (ORACLE).
Reporting to the Executive Director this position
would be responsible for all correspondence of the Director; accounting for the program; assistance with
memberships and booking exchange network: receptionist duties for ORACLE office.
Qualifications for the position include a high school
degree, or equivalent, required: associate college degree
preferred; excellent telephone and communication
skills; word processing experience: computer skills in
the areas of data base and spread sheet accounting and
typing ability of 50 WPM. Previous office experience and
interest in non-profit organizations are expected. Availability for occasional travel is necessary.

Nlct efficiently apt. HUO approwlt. 221 Slh Mt. Vernon. Pt.

The Sunday Times-Seritinei-Page-D-5

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

Apartment
for Rant

C1aan 2 &amp;A . Apt., New Haven.
Also ..-ce for r81taurant. aerobiet. t~-vc•e. furniture or wh•
...... 814·812·7481 .

GEIOD USED CAR &amp; TRUCKS nRES

GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631

8

44

mnodtl•. c.&amp;t ..._

POOR BOYS TIRE SHOP

600 SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
ST. RT. 7

SEND RESUME TO:
Experienced Mechanic
P. 0. Box 311 ,
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Send resume to Box
113 c/o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, B25
3rd Ave., Gallipolis,

Immediate opening for full time and
part timeR. N.'a to work in areas of

MURPHY'S MART

Must have experience on
late model cars and trucks ..
GOOD PAY
HOURS: 8 A.M. 4:30 P.M.

R1~tv

MO pm, 814·tt2·881t.

64 Misc. Merchendile

DIIECJOI GF NUISitG
YmRANS IEMOIIAL IIIPIYAI. .
115 EAST MfMOIIAL DIIYE

e have an
part-lime
opportunity as a c-...stomerw
Service Supervisor awaiting you at Ames.
· As a Customer Service Supervisor,
you 'll oversee the total front·end operation
of ou r store du ri ng nights and peak sates
periods, to provide improved customer ser·
vice and produclivity at our check outs.
It's definitely a " people position," so the
be.st person for the job will possess excellent interpersonal skills-and be
available to work at least 3 evenings a
week and Sundays.
If you have at leasl 2 years of college.
or 2 years of management or supervisory
experience, this position will give you a
com petitive salary of at least $6.00 per
hour with lime and one half for Sundays,
the freedom of days off and excellent exposure to the workings of America's
fastest growing retail operation ,
For more information apply' in .person
at:

Action Employer

November 22, 1987

In Pomeroy, 2 b •• ..,.,,, ...,..,
furnllhed ..... Off . , . _ Awe.

niont. 814·992-Un.

2404.

REGISTERED NURSES

Join One Of America's
Fastest Growing Retailers!

P.D. No. 13492

Experience
necessary to
work in dinic.
Excellent
salary and
fringe benefits.

Help Wanted

ltiONDA DAlEY, R.N.

Minimum qualifications include a high school education, or equivalent. Basic law enforcement training is required. A commissioned officer is preferred.
Interested persons should send a cover letter and
resume including three references before the deadline of November 30, 1987 to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason. Personnel Officer
Rio Grande College/Community College
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande, OH. 45674
Rio Grande Collep/ Community College is an Equal

8

11

Grot location. Newty r.modeled . 2 BR. Uptitllrt. Panty
turnlahad IPt. Utlthi• ~l d . Call
oft• 3 ,30 PM, 814-448-1457.

1~..:.....---=:::----2 BR . furniiMd ap1 . Adultl onty. 2 b. .oom. 2 b*lh. Mlddltp&lt;Wt.·
Nice loCIIIion. Call 814-441· Depolft. 1140 nJMth, C'"'"'"

SEND RESUIIE TO:

Hours for this position would be Saturday and Sun day from 8:00a.m. through 5:00p.m. and other horus as needed. Compensation would be $5.00 per
hour.

OPHTHALMIC
ASSISTANT

2 IIR . ..... 5 - &amp; •oltiQ.
furNahed. Ne• Qo Mart. C.ll
114·441· 7021 .

113 fhl•d Aw .· 1 8R. O.pooij
,..,.,... C811 114-UI-4345
MtwoWII :OO PM &amp; 10,00 PM

•Specie! Cere
•Emergency Room
•.Skilled Nursing Facility
•Medical, Surgical Units
Salary comparable with e•perience.
Excellent Fringe Benefits

Rio Grande College / Community College announces
an opening for a part-time Campus Security Officer.

Opportunit~ /Affirmative

November 22. 1987

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

Page- D-4:-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

"'EACH OFFICE IS INO ErtENOENTL'r' OWNED AND OPERATED.

·

446-10(·6

,.

•

•

•

�•
Page-D-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
54 Misc. Merchandise

57

Musical.
Instruments·

For •le. Oil burn~r19.400 BTU
U5. Coiii14-S92-7352.
Winch..-r Model 94, 30· 30
Clrbina lnd rille 1or Mle. Ctll

304· 773-5 303.

CIPtlln't M.t8 bunk beds with
manreu. 304-875-6831 .

SURPLUS .t.AMY. DENIM ,
RENTAL CLOTHING . ICtrhwts
10 percent over coat) . Originat
army cwnouft-uo. H . 0 . " Sam "

Som...,.He'a, Old Rt. 21 EutRw..,•wood, Fri. Sel. Sun.
Noon • 8 :00 .p.m. Other diV•

•h• 5 p.m. 304-273-6865
lnauleted c.mouflage c11veralla
125 00.

Pewey
Heritage Amp
withutra
2speakercabinet.
Ukanew.
Call
Yamaha- CP30 electric p1ano.
Cost s 1400 new· $35 Call
614 -388-8637 even .• 446 1968days.
•
3 guitars. one Ch~t-Att.;ins Tenn .
Gretach; One Fender 12 string
acu1tic; One Fender l...eBre.alactric6 string. Priced $460 00
all together firm . 614 -367 -

7594.

58

F-tuit

Wood cook stove. 304-468Ul44,
AVON all area. Shirlev Spe1rs,

Another load Lake Ontario lar~e
apples, niN\I crop Naval Oranges,
Ruby Red Grapefruit, nuts,
candy. bananas. Jacka Frui'l
Mkt .. Rt, 36. Henderson, W Va .

55 Building Supplies
Building Mater1att
Block, bridt, sewer pipe~, wtn·
dowa. lintels, etc Cl.ude Win·

59 For Sale or Trade

tera, Aio Grtnde, 0 . Cell 614·
245-5121 '

1973 Chev . C60 Dump truck
with cattle ra cks, new tires,
8x12 bed -all metal. 1979
Mercury Ma,quis. 4 dr .. one
owner. 64.710 miles. new t~res
Call614 -446-2767

Concrete blocks all •ina yard or

dalivery. Maton 11nd Gallipolis
Block Co., 1231h Pine St ,
O.Uipolis. Ohio Call 614 -446·

Farm Supplies
&amp; Live stock

mix concrete and ell
cona ... IUPPii•. Call Ul Vall fill
Brook CemMt and Suppli811.
304-773-5234.

I··~M~F~t~ra~ct~o~r
, :pl~o~w~•·Call
:d_i•e:&amp;~
82600.
614~

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan. Per11an and
Siam... kittens. AKC Chow
puppi•. New kittena: Persians.
Call 614-446 -3844 aft• 7PM.
AKC Rag. Engliah Springer
Spaniel pups 7 mos. old.
Excell.,t hunting stock Call

~~P~:.~M';Mu-~M~C:!:

"W6

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 35 West. Jackson, Oh1o

514-288-6451.
Massey Ferguson, New Holland,
Bueh .-tag Sales &amp; Service Over
40 used tractors to choose from
&amp; complete Une of new &amp; used
equipment Largest selection in
S E Ohio
Utility buitd1ng spl 27'x36 ' tt8 ',
1-13'x8' sliding door, 1-3' service door· $4444. Iron Horse
Bldrs. Call 614 -332 -9746 .

:'!i!::

AC . Exeall. cond . *3400. Call
114-446-8502 after 6:30PM .

~TAT~
IN]f\E'R\~

New Holland end of 1a111on hay
tool sale. All he)l tools at delw
COlt plus interest free financing
until June 1, 1988 with normal
down payment Two451,3 pt 7
ft mowers 82, 100.00. One311,
3 joint PTO. standard tl,es
regular pickup. 86,800 00 One
472, 7 ft havbine. 86,900 00
One 474 . 7 ft haybin8 .
$6,400 .00 . Keefers Service
Center, 51 Rt 87, leon. W Va.
Phone 304-895- 3874.

1f78 lincoln Town car. 81 BOO,

WEI1£ /tU..
Fuu.-::0 1

Coll614-446-1633. '
1981 Honda Civic, 4 dr Sedan.
Auto .. Inter wipers. AM -FM cau.. reardet .• PB. $1900 Call
614- 448- 1608.

"f~L.I) ~I WI

1-1€' CDU\.b

\J~Y~

1858 Chavy. 283. Auto. new
parts, paint. duals, Radi" t1res .
Sh.,.p. Coli 614-446-446Z,

International 1060 grinder;
mix.er., New Holland 7 ft h~
bind. both in good cond. 304·
273·4216.

1982 Ch~WyVan 350 eng , auto,
air, PS, PB, PW.' AM·FM, new
tir•. customised lnt $5000.
1879 Flrebird. Auto, PS, air.
302 eng t1600. Call 614· 256·

Buy bar chain and sprocket for
any saw get second chain free.
offer good till Dee 1. Siders
Equipment Go. Phone304-676

1980 VW D•esel Dasher for sale.
Good Condition. 81,300 . Call
614 -388-9033 8\l&amp;nings.

6780.

8

7421 .
1984 F01d Tempo, 5 spd, air
Sharp. $3299 . John's Auto
Sales, Holld&amp;,olnn. Kanauga- Rt
7,

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buymg shell corn or ear
corn Call tor 1a1est quotes. River
C1ty Farm Supply, 614-446·
2985.

livestock

Reg. American Saddle Brad
Horses tor sale. Good bloodline.
Rea.soneble pr ic es Call 614·
446-8367 or 256-6461 -' after

5.00 PM .
Registered Quarter horses. Call

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All braedt .. All
11yl•. lams Pet Food DeaiM.
Julie Webb Ph 614-446 -0231 ,

71 Auto's .F or Sale

4020 JO trJctor with 4 row no
t1ll corn planter- f59 50. T0 -30

63

Ready

Pets for Sale

61
----------

614-446-0183.
Show Saddle with sliver he!KI
stall &amp; breast straps. Registered
Sorrell mare-borned Jan. 26.
1979 , 1 5 hands 3" . S850. Call
614-286-6522 .
Ouroc Bores tor better rate of
gain. Roger Bentley-513-5842398, Fabina, Oh1o

1976 Plymouth Arrow. $300

6~

Coll614-446-3969

Livestock

Transportation

1978 Thund8rbird, like new
42,000 actual ml181. $2000.
Firm. Call 614 -446-1909 or

3 Good quality Holstein cows,
approx 1300 lbs each. Be fr•h
in 30 d..,swlth second calf. Jack
Neal- 614·245· 6223.

71 Auto's For Sale
1978 Dodge Customl2:ed Van .
318. auto Sh.p. 11400 or best
off.-. Call 814-448-7354 aher

4'h yr. old heatthy pony for Mle.
2 sadie~. Good and fit for
Winter. 614· 843-6257 anytime

6PM.

Several butchering hogs, 260 lb
to 300 lb. 304-676-1807

1973 Gr-'mlin. 1959 Edsel. Both
runs good. Call for tunher infor.

Hay &amp; Grain

1974 Duster. Good cond. $460.
Call 814-388-9325

600 bales mitted hay. Conditioned, nwar wet . $1 .26 per bale.
Call 614-448-1909, 8\lenings.

1977 Chrysler Cordoba. Runs
good. Low mlla1. Body fair.
$760 Call814-446-1021 .

64

614-258-6255

71 Auto_' s For Sale

72

1977 Plymouth Volare- PS.
auto, 6 cyl. Runa good Call
614 -446-1339 or 446-3249.

1986 S-10 Chevy . PS , PB .
Extras. Call anytime, 614·246·
6826 Of 814-446 -9613

1974 Chevy Impala. 360, auto,
PS , PB, AC , 1111. Runs. Needs
carbarator work. 8300. Call

614-446-4680.
1982 Toyota TMcat 2dr .• 4 spd
Call 814 -266· 1529.

Sta1nlesa steel etthaust systems.

Now custom made for your
truck. motor homeorclassiccar.
With life-time warranty. Muffler
Man. 9 Stimpson A \Ill ., Athens.
Onto. 1-800-843-3767 .
1987 Olds Cutlass S!Jpreme.
Top shape. Assume loan Call
e\lenings, 304· 773 - 5911 or
304-773-6616
1981 Toyota Celica. Auto .• PS,
PO ,.. A1r. sunroof. AM -FM radio,
tilt wheel Body and interior in
El)l.cellent condition. Good gas
mil&amp;~~ge. Call 614 -886 -4341 .
1977 Qodge Aspen, may be
soon at 7th driveway above the
"Y" on Rt . 2 North, Point
Pleasant Eddie Black, owner

79 Ponttac Flrabird V-8. auto.
Good Cond 51,500. 304-675 -

7375 .

446·9160

1980 Chevette, red , ettc eond. 4
door, $1 ,000 .00 304-882·

1980 C1tat1on, good cond. For
Sale or Trad• truck, equal value
Call 814-446-9293 or 446·

2683 .

3279 .
1972 Monte Carlo 350 4 barrell.
4 bo't Fnain, PS. PB. Runs good .
BoctV falr S860 or best offer.

Ca11614-38B-9668 .
1978 Datsun 280 Z, 6 cyl , fuel
inJected. Runs good New t~res­
brakes· clouch- throw out bearing, AM ,FM -Cass- 60 wat~
equal. $1800. Call 614-4461172 or 388-9327 after 7 ·00
PM.

1983 Plymouth Reliant wagon.
4 cyl, air. auto trans, re'r
defroster. new radial tires. no
rust , clean in and out.
$3,195.00 . 304 -,676-2479 after 4 :00.

&amp; Accessories
614-448-4383 dovs. 446-0139
evens. &amp; weekends.

1961 Ch..,y Y2 ton with 54. 6
cyl. full pressure mator. Runs
well . 3 spd trans Ortven 20
miles dally . New king pins &amp;.
good tires 1860. Call614-446 -

1989 Ford Van 240 engine, 6
cyl 8450 . Cell 814-446 -3877 .

2306 .

74

1981 Chwy Statton Wagon. exc
cond. 128,000 miles.
$1,700.00. Phone 304·882·
2853 9 :00-3:00 or after 5 :00

304-773-5867,

1979 Yamaha YZBO . For Sate or
Trade Call614-446 -6861 .

1973 Dodge Pickup. 3 spd,
Slant 6. 5300. Firm. Call 614 446-8789.

3-Whtaler ATV· Kawnaki 200.
Good cond . Call 614- 446 Motoreycle street tlret. made
USA. 849 each MT 90- 18, MP
90-1 B qnly . 614 -992-2797

446-9664
"1983 Honda 110 CC three
wheeler. Feir conditlon. Pr~ce
8460. Call 81.,· 992-8342

1984 Mazda. 4 spd., AM ·FM
$2799 . John's Auto Sale ·
Holiday Inn, Kanauga -Rt. 7

Honda Founrax 2;10R . f1900
As is or $1600 stoc.k, manv
axtras .,ailable 614-992 -3666

1987 510 pick- up. PS. PP.. 4
speed Long bed. Very reuonable. 614 -992-6575

0&lt;814-431 ·5129 .

1982 Ford Yz ton. 3 speed of.
floor, 6 cyl., priced to sell,
$1696. Call 614-949-3093

75

1986 half ton Chev·tpickupV -8,
air cond, low mile. Nice 304·
675-7286 8\IBnings.

14' V-bottom boat with trailer
9 8 Mercury mot01. 2 gas tanks
&amp; oars, 41ifejacket•&amp; ring. 260 '
w· ny~n rf'pe. f2.000 . 304773·6776

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

76

1977 Chevy Sport Van Very
good cond . S1000. Call 614-

388-9074.
1977 Dodg•Van. Built -I n couch
&amp; table. auto. PS . 8700. Call
614-446-6602

- - - - - - - -·Ie-

lay•ng hens $1 00 each Call
614 -388-9074 .

..

INVESTMENlS

COMM ERCIAL

4SO 2nd AVE.
446-6806
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER. 388-8826
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR. 379-2628
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 256·6251

Chrastmes Puppiea AK C reg••tered buff colored Cock.- Spa·
niels. 304-773-6482.

QUALITY FROM TOP TO BOTTOM of this 4
bedroom, I ll bath home wtth full basement.
E~cellent storage area wrth large closets and
butlt·m shelves 20x28 fmished lower level
basement area w~h large fireplace, sliding doors
to patro and backyard area. Also good 10~28
storage, uttlity and workshop area. All hardwood
floors Spectal front door w1th s1de louvers for '
ven!llat1on and safety feature. Utility bills are
reasonable due to insulatton and quality
constructron. located JUSt off lake Drive near Rto
Grande College Qutet location and excellent
neighbors. You need to look at thts one. Priced in
the low 70s.
#321

Real Estate General

I

601

E. Matn

POMEROY, 0.
992·2259
N.P« LISTING- LETART- 3
ileflroom frame home w~h alummum siding Large rooms,
workstop, carport Nrce lot
ASKING $23,000.00.
Hl35. OWNER FINANCING - Make your ot1er Less money m1cht buy t11s

one. Stucco ranch Wit h heat pump. everylhma ts new. $30's.
•106 FARM-73 ACRIS M/ l-5 HORSI STAll BARN: 3 bedfm. nome. Ap-

·

H203 NEW LISTING· Are_you \oaklnJ tor a ba~gain13 bedrm mobile home
17 ac m/ 1w/ beauttfulland, an olDer home on property, 6 mi. from town.

131,900.

H205. IN TOWN - One step ins1de you Will see quality J-4 bedrooms, 2
baths LR. OR , hardwood floors, solid wood ubi nels. naturalaas and hot
wate~

heat. $37,500.

RUTlAND - A I ll story
home w/3 bedrooms, enclqsed front porch, equrppoo
k~chen, storage burlding and
part basement $21,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Th1s 2 story
home shows the work has
been done. N1ce krtchen, 3
bedrooms. I and one-thtrd
baths, level lot, storage buildtog $33.900.00
RIGGS CREST - Really
Nice' Split foyer home with
4·5 bedrooms all in e•cellent condtlton. Garage, ntce
tot, WB hookup. blinds &amp;
shutters. $54,900 00.

#104 NEW LISTING- ADDISON - lac .. 1
area New carpeted livln1 rm and wallpaper and

SYRACUSE - Remodeled two
stoy home Features 3·4 be(!.
rooms Ill baths, basement,
g..-age and an older barn.
Appx. I acre $39.900.00.

#118

#tta9 S~PERB QU~LITY Most unusual masterpiece . 4 bedrms, 2 baths.
enchantm1LR w/ dm. area. Open beamed ceiling w/ paddle fans , lam nn
w/ woodburner wrap-around deck REDUCED DRASTICALLY $49,500
#t207 NEW LISTING - INVESTORS - READ THIS. Rental income ol S445

ponds, ol6er 2 story home . New metal hoc barn and sheds. You can dr1ve
over appro11. 300 1t Good t1 ne fences

RUTIAN D - 3 bed roan
home. new~ remodeled with
central air. elec. heat garage
wo-kstop. concrete patll, fully
tnsulated $32.000.00.
TUPPERS PlAINS - Bnck
ranch w/ 3 bedrooms, I ll
baths. rec. room, full basement. 2 car garage, oak tflm,
quality work. MANY MORE
FEATURES $68.000.00.
IIIIIY l CllliNO. Jt..... 992-bl91
JEAN TAU!!Ell ............ 9·9-lbbO
OOTTII TURN II .......... 992-S b92
lfACY RlfFll .. .. .. ... U9 -J08Q
OfFICI .......... .... .... 992 -22S9

~ AW

SUPER HOME IN RIO GRANDE- Well butlt and
m good conditton. 3·5 bedrooms. family room,
livrng room, kitchen, dinmg area, uttlity room, I ll
baths, parttal basement for heatmg equ1pment
and storage. Energy eff1ctent, well insulated. City
utilittes. N1ce lot for lawn flowers and garden.
Opposrte Davts Hall Excellent for students,
teacher s and emplo) ees This one you needtosee
Ltsted at $50,000
#317

BESTBUILDING LOT- Butld the hou se you have
been dreammg about on this excellent 100'~175'
lot, 2 blocksfrom H.M.C Ctty water; sewer, natural
gas $13,500 No mobile homes

per mo. 2 mobile homes. I ae m/ 1. Mmeral rights. approx l00ac. t111able
~1/ . ~00
.
'
MI98 LARGE FAAM- 374ac. m/ 1. M1nera l f l&amp;hts, appro11.. 100 ac. tillable.

VINTON AREA - 10 acres of vaca nt lan d on
Sherman Hartsook Road County water available
$7,500.
#437

WANT TO HIDE? GET AWAY FROM IT All?- If
you love to watch wildltfe and entoy na\ure, you'll
want to see thts property before you buy anyth1ng
There's Jar too much mcluded tn this farm
to mention, so you'll have to call for all the details
but here's a short descrtptron: lBO acre farm w1th
121 wooded acres !lots ol l1mber reportedfc 65
acres oJ cropland, several barns and outbuildings
and fr ontage on RaccoonCreek. Very well bu11t 2-3
bedroom home wrth 2 baths, large wtndows and
deck to take full advantage of beautiful rolling
h1lls Much, much morel $94,500.
#242

IN VILLAGE AREA. BUT ROOM TO ROAM- 8.17
acres 1n all. Tree coveroo home area woth fruit,
holly tree and evergreens Htgh ridge area
overlooking Bob Evans Farm s and Rio Grande
College. Ideal for new home. Well burn good
condtllon 7 room home, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
step-saymg k1tchen, fireplace, useable basement
Good outbuildtng, workshop area, prrorly used as
llvmg quarters, plus I car garage. Ideally located
property w1th all its plus features can be yours for
$47,000
#318

If
~1 16. SEVIN SPRINGS, 108 AC. FARM. R11dy tor oporotlon, oncludos 3
moder~ hOJ b1rns w/fmowlnc houses Other luaeNrns for tobnto, Pas-

ture, limber, tru1t and crape~ , Ia:. tobacco base. H1ce country 3 bedrm.
home Raccoon Twp.
IH04 OLD FASHIOIII CHARM. 4 acrt$, suburban liYIOIWIII bt &amp;rut in th1s
ucepltonall~ smart 4bedrm . home. lara:e rms. for antiques. Super 11 kit, .
basement. rural water. Good co n6it1on. located on SR 554 nNr Porter .
•~tt85. FAMILY HOME. 4 yrs. old. J beli'm . I balh brict and viny"l ut"iut
rm. 18d6 tam1ly rm w/beautifut 10' fp w/ lf)sert. J cenma: tans. 1ulr ~~~~~~~
ties . chain link fen ced-in front. cit~ o~nd Green schools
cont~ct.

ll6.QOQ,

•

SPACIOUS CEDAR RANCH nestled in tall pine
trees offers more than most. Outstanding
kitchen loaded wtth beautrful oak cabinets and
large breakfast nook. Cozy famtly room wtth
hardwood floors and warm fireplace. Formal
dtnmg, study, part1al basement w1th rec room.
EnJoy the peace and quret on the multr·levet deck
whtch contains hot tub, taccuzzt off master
bedroom also. 2 car garage C1ty schools
$129,900
#204
4 BEDROOM - EXCELLENT NEIGHBORHOODEveryone wants a quality butlt home rn an
excellent netghborhod that 1s convemently
located Here's your chance! 4 large bedrooms,
large living room. beautiful kttchen and dtn tng
(patio doors), 2 full baths, large famtly room, full
basement, 2 car garage If you want an e~tra lot,
we can put that with it Grty water and schools,
plus communtty sewers. $98,600.

#115
QUALITY HOME approx 3 miles to Holzer
Hospital located on Kerr Bethel Road. 3
bedrooms, all electnc home has new forced an
furnace. Shop area oil garage large k1tchen wrth
lots of storage area .Almost %acre of land Chain
link fence around yard. Garden area. Prrced tosell
at $28,000.
#305
WHY RENT WHEN YOU CAN OWN? - Ju st as
cheaply· we might add. 3 bedroom home 1n good
neighborhood offers rem odel ed k1tchen and bath,
full basement Perfect for starters. Vtny l sidm&amp;
carport, central heat $33,900.
DON'T BUY ANYTHING UNTIL YOU SEE
#210 THIS .. .. Beaut11u12200 sq. ft ranch wtth e~cellenl
fl?or plan. Thts outstandtng home rncludes very
STARTER HOME WITH LOTS OF SPACE - 3 mce kttchen wtth bar, formal dining and Irving
bedroom older home in Rutland. Th enice s1zed lot room, 3 large bedrooms. sewtng or hobby room
has garden space, sever'al frutt trees and aon ecar large fam tly room wtth fireplace and woodburner'
garage wtth workshop All for $25,000
lots of closets (2 walk·tnsJ, large ut1hly and
#438 laundry room 2 car garage on a flat 3 acre lot
Realtor say s tl has an exceptronally mce in-ground
BEAUTIFUL VIEW of Ohro Rtver Valley and West pool w1th snack bar and prtvacy fence. He also
Vlr&amp;~nla h1lls free wtlh the purchase of this 5 reports tt's the very nicest home tn tts price range
room home w1th full basement Ntce krtchen bath on th e market \oday. Call now, 446-3644, and let
fuel oil forced atr furnace, ftreplace and hardwood us ma ke arrangements for you to see tl today"
floors. 3acres. m/ 1, efland Extra lot to sell or use
#104
as garden spa ce or some livestock. Holdtng at
$39,900
#303 COMMERCIAL SITE - RIO GRANDE - 2 lots on
corner of E. College Street. I block off Rt 35, 2
blocks from college campu s Excellent for most
GIVE ME LAND!- 40 acres of crop and pasture
any ktnd of busmess. $26,500
Good water supply And a 12x60 mobile home tn
#147
good condition. Barn, tobacco base. $25,000.
Awarts your diSco,ery
CONVENIENT LOCATION - Mamtenance Jree
#324 ranch wtth large eat- 1n k1lchen 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, Irving room and in-ground pool. Nt ce flat lot
TWICE REDUCED! SELLER RETIRING!! - Mod- located close to hospital. I car garage. $55,000
ern 3 bedroom home situated on a I 27 acre lot
#208
landscaped by Mother Na\ure. You'll enjoy the
peace and quret of the country-ltke atmosphere. REASONABLY PRICED - 3 bedroom home in
Home offers formal d~ning, hardwood floors, full Mtddleport on ntce Sl1 ed lot wtth 2 car
basemeut and 3 car carport. Plu s a l6x32 garage
.#444
inground pooL Scandalously pn ced at $49,900.
See rt todayt
#113

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

••' .

2 BR MOBilE HOML I ond • third acre. Ma1 la.nd

NEED HELP WITH YOUR MORTGAGE PAYMENT?
- When you buy thts 4 bedroom home tn town
you'll get extra mcome from the 2 bedroom garage
apartment. Well matnlamed property includes
I1V1ng room. dimng area, eat-in krtchen and bath
Newer plumbing furnace and root. · Apartment
rents for $175-$225 per month. $49,900.
#232

49 ACRES - , Several excellent building s~es.
1200 feet road lrontage on state htghway 4 miles
from R1o Grande. Gent~ rultng htlls and valley.
Qu1et country surroundings. Outstanding vrew.
This property wtll really turn you on.
#136

FAIRVIEW HOME- Well kept bnck home ollers4
bedrooms, living room, family room with attractive
fireplace. eat-in kitchen and I ll baths. 2 car
garage. Gas heat, central arr, replacement
wmdow s and e~tra Insulation Home tn very good
reparr Excellent neighborhood, close to shoppmg
hospital, etc. $79,900.
#239

RUTlAND- Mini FarmAppro• tmately 6 acres w/ a
3 bedroom home. Elec B B.
heat plus a woodburner.
Barn , shed, much more.
$29,500 00.
POMEROY - PRICE RE·
DUCED on tht s mce 3 bed·
room home Beautiful modern ktlchen , full basement,
nice woodwork. lots of closet space. $42,900 00.

83 ACRE FARM - 20 acres very good bottom
crop area not subtect to floodtng. 30 acres hill
pasture, balance wooded Tobacco base. 7 room
home, parttal basement with furnace, bath, 4
bedrooms, livrng and dining room, 2 large barns,
crtb and garage. Home and farm buildings could
be sold separate, subtect to owners' approval. This
ts a goCKf, qutet location to live along w1th a
productive farm'unit. located near Patrrol Askmg
$44,000 for aiL

U07

pro•. 5 m1. from town. City schools

Auto Repair

Struts, $119.95 p•ir, instilled
Most models Muffler Man, 9
St1mpson AYB . Athans. Oh1o

79 Motors !'lomas
&amp; Campers

(614) 446-3644

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTER"S PWM81111G
AIIID HEATING

Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814 -446-3888 or 614·

446 -4477

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
:

pools, ciswrns, wells Ph. 614-

- - - - - - -- -

245·9285 .

Resident ial or commerclll wiring. New sarv1ce or repaln.
licensed electrician. Estimate
free . Ridenour Electrical, 304·
876 -1786.

R &amp; R WateJ Service. Home

B5

General Hauling

D1llard Water S•vlce: Pools.
Cisterns, Wells Delivery Any·
time. Call 614 -446-7404-No
Sunday calls .

eitters, wells, pools filled. Formerly Jam81 Boys Waters. Call
304-676 -6370

85

General Hauling

Chrtstma• Spec• Ill· 1973 Claes
A motor home. AC generator.
awning. i6200. Mad TLC . Call
614-256 -1332 or 266-1307.

87

Upholstery

light lleuhng of any kind
Moving, garages and basemenu
t:l,aned , trash, 1unk, etc . Cell
614-379 -2602.

R &amp; M Custom Couches an d
Reupholstery , 51 . Rt 7 , Crown
City, Oh. 614-268-1470, Eve.
614-446- 3438. Open daily 9 10
4·30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered .

Watterson 's Water Hauling,
rNsonabla rates, •mhtedfate
2,000 gallon delivery. cl1terns.
pools. well, etc. call 304 -e;782919 .

Mowrey' s Uphola:tarlng serving
tri countyarae22 years Thebes~
in furniture upholstering . Cell
304 - 675 - 4154 for fre e
•
estimates

Need pans for 1975 Pont1ac
Cadillac Sedan DeVille. Sea at
128 Laurel St
Pomeroy .
Evenings.

446-3636~

'
5 room s, 3 bedrooms, I~ modern eat-tn kitchen Full basement w1th large famoly room and woodburner that does an
excellent JOb heating this home. Garage, summer aor condt·
ltonoo Adown payment and loan as1umption Paymentsap
pr ox $300 00/mo . Ntce large lot
#559

Canaday Realty

1977 T1tan motor home 25',
3500 wt generator, fully ~elf·
contained, dual gas1ankl, *leaps
six, low mi, 304-676-&amp;372
anvtime.

''

.

Trade for truck &amp; camp., Must
be nice. Call614·256-6613.
19 ft Lakeland trevel camper,
fully contained Sleep16 . heel.
cond 11400 Call 814 -3670447

Real Estate General

Paul Aupe. Jr. WMer Service.
Pools, cisterns, weHs. Caii 614 446-;J171 .

New motor home. 2700 miles.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
446-

or 446-9539

AUDREY F. CANADAY. REALTOR
ROUER! GOROON. REALTOR. 446-6116
MARY FLOYD. REALTOR. 446-3383
~~ LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS. OHfO

"Bud" McGHEE REALTY
414 2nd Ave .. Suite 200
Gallipol is. Ohio
446-0552 Anytime

Ser v tces
81

GARFIELD EXT. - 3 bedrooms, garage, rtver frontage
Needs some repatr but priced cheap. lmmed1ate possesSion
$21,000
ROUTE 7 - 3 bedrooms, ftreplace, garage,'? acre, consider
trade for mobrle home.
$29.900

Home
Improvements
8ASEMEIIIT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee local refwences furni1hed.
Free estimates. Call collect
1- 814 -237-0488, day or night.
RogersBaaement
Waterproofing.

"

MORE FOR THE MONEY- N
OF SPACE FOR LIT·
TLE MONEY? 4 BEDROOM. l'h
RANCH HAS FAMILY
ROOM ATTACHED GARAGE, VERY CONVENIENT LOCATION
JUST OFF Rl 35. OWNER HAS JUST INSTALLEO NEW CARPET IN LIVING ROOM, HALL ANO KITCHEN. $52,000.

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, pans. and tuppliea . Ptck
up and delivery, Da\11s Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Ad. Call 614 -

QUALITY AND CLASS - FOUR YEAR OLO 3 BEDROOM
RANCH, FULLY CARPETED EXCEPT KITCHEN FORMAL DINING AREA SCREENED PORCH , FENCED BACK YARD WITH
LARGE STORAGE BLDG. ONEOF THE MOST CONVENIENT LO·
CATIONS IN THIS AREA JUST LISTED. $59,000

446-0294.

RON ' S Televi1ion Service.
House calls on RCA, Oua:rar
GE . Spec1aling in Zenith. Cali
304-676-2398 or 814 -446 -

2454,

PORTER AREA - 3 bedrooms, wood fmtsh tnt error, partly
fu rmshed. butldtn gs, 5 acres, tmmediate possesston
$31.900
SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOLS - 30 acres mostly ltllable,
house, barn, pond. tobacco base, Raccoon Creek frontage.
$4 1,000
KYGER CREEK - 24 17 acre farm, house wtth added apartment for one person wrth all uliflttes
$49,500
RACCOON ROAD- 3 bedr ooms.garage, outburldmgs, creek
frontage, boat dock, 4 acr es, pmate 51h m1les to town Sell
all or part
$69,500
CARVIN BLOOMER. Broker
DONA McGHEE ........................... ...... ........... 446-0552
BETH NULL ............................................... 245-9507

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-676 -1331
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most welts completed same day
Pump sales and 1ervice 304896 -3802

FOR SALE BY OWNERS: Large split-level and lennis
court .
4-5 BEDROOMS: 3 balh s, formal Irving and dinrng
rooms, gourmet kttchen , family room , game room,
sludy.. mud/ laundry room. md oo r storage room wrth
additional laundry fac1ltt1es. 2 car garage, 2 fireplaces,
cetling lan s. wooden deck, full length of hou se. Many
extras.
BREATHTAKING VIEW of Gallipolts and Ohio River, full
length windows for maxtmum view. Secluded for total
privacy. City school d1 stnct. Located l'h mtles from
downtown Gallipolis Only 8 mtles from Locks and
Dam .
EXCELLENT home and grounds for tamrly and/or entertaming. Must see to appreciate qualt ty
HOUSE, TENNIS COURT and 25 ACRES- $173,000
Will consider house, court and 5 acres tor $155,000
Call tor Appointment - 614-446-3386
Serious Buyers Only Please

YOUR ESTATE AWAITS - CIRCLE DRIVE, PARK LIKE
GROUND AND'A STATELY COLONIAL4,BEDROOM, 2 BATH
HOME Wtm RECREATION ROO M COMPLETE WITH POOL TA·
BLE PLUS FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND BAR. ENOR·
MOUS GARAGE WITH LOFT THAT COULD EASILY BECOME
GUEST QUARTERS. ING~OUND POOL $125,000.

Loretta McDade, 446-7729
B.. J. Hairston, 446-4240

Specialists in Residential, Farms and Commercial

,I

THE PRICE IS TOUGH TO BEAT! -'- SUPER NICE MODULAR
IN KC SCHOOL DISTRICT 3 BRS, 2 BATHS UR, BIG LR. All
KITCHEN APPLIANCES AND CARPORT ON LARGE LEVEL LOT
GAS FURANCE AND CENTRAL AIR TAKE ALOOK ANO COM·
PARE AND YOU'Ll SEE WHAT A DEAL THIS IS AT$30,000.

••
BEAUTFiUL COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS MAKE APERFECT
SETTING FOR THIS 3 BEDROOM COLONIAL HOME FORMAL
DINING ROOM, OEN, IN-GROUND POOL, 5 ACRES $60,000.

REAL ESTATE
462 2ND AVE . REAR
BONNIE 8o JIM STUTES - REALTORS

TAMMY MOORE-REALTOR- 367-7760

ATTENTION BARGAIN HUNTERS! FRAME RANCH IN TOWN.
3 BRS, RANGE, REFRIG., WASHER &amp; DRYER, FULLY
CARPETED, 2 CAR GARAGE SENSATIONAL OEAL AT
$25,000!

MILES-WIDE VIEW- ONE -OF-A-KIND CUSTOM HOME DE·
SIGNED FOR THE SITE FOUR LEVELS, CATHEDRAL CEIL·
INGS ARE HIGHLIGHTSIN FAMILY ROOM AND LIVING AREA.
4 BEDROOMS. 2'A BATHS NEAR CI TY. $55,000.

446·4206

.,

1B

QU lfO R

3 APARTM~NTS- 2 efftmncy and l bedroom Brmgs '"
$720.00 per month; also an offtcespace Askmg$37,000 00
Call for more delatls
THE PERFECT HOME FOR YOUR TREASURED ANTIQUES! IF
YOU LOVE THAT VICTORIAN LOOK, BEAUTIFUL OLD WOOD·
WORK AND LARGE ROOMS THIS ONE'S FOR YOU AND ONLY
IN THE 60'S

.,•'•
"'.,

"•

•

• .:
•'=--

...._,'',. .
.-. ..
•!"':
..-..

" ~·

I&lt;

:~
~·

•

~

·-·

.....

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE - QUiet but convent en!, that's the
best way to describe thiS pr operty. Modern 4 bedroom home.
I ll baths living room and family room both feature woodburners. Lg modern ktchen and laundry room. SpaCious patiofrom F.R. Home has 1504 sq H. liv1ngspace. Ctty schools.
Setting on 1.4 acres+. Be the first to take a look at thos property.
THIS HOME OFFERS A VIEW OF THE OHIO
RIVER THAT JUST DOESN'T QUIT!!- The
front of th1s home faces the nver and the
owners have used glass \o 1ts fu ll
advantage. Beautiful Ir ving room wtlh
mnrored wall reflectmg the river vtew,
beamed cerlings, stone ftreplace, dmette,
equrpped kitc hen, 3 or 4 bedrooms, famtly
room, rec room. 3 baths, 2 car garage,
central aid.
THE FAMILY WILL LOVE THIS ONE!
- Ranch style home on 5 acres m/ 1, offer s 3
BRs, bath, kttchen, family room,LR. carpet,
heatalatorfl"eplace, WB stove, 2 car
attach«! garage 16~32 in-ground pool.
Cham link fence, Call for an appointment
YOU ARE GOING TO LOVE THIS HOME! locate on Jay Drtve thiS bt-level home
offers everythmg you want for your
family's comfort Kttchen w/DW. drSpl.,
range, refng , livmg room. famtly rm.,
dmtng rm., carpel, gas heat cent a1r and
wood and coal burning stove, 2 car garage,
12xl6 storage butldin&amp; ctty sc ho ols. Call
tod ay and make an appomtmenllo seethts
nice home.
GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD - Very mce
ranch offers ki\chen w/ range, relrtg, OW.
dis pl .. microwave, LR, FR, di nette. 3 BRs, I
bath, cent atr, carpeting. 2 metal uttltty
bldgs Shown by appotntment
HOLCOMB HILL - The pnce'nas been
red uced on th1s outstandmg hom e tust at
the edge of town. Qual tty workmanshtp tn
every room, large LR wrth FP and vrew of
city, den w/ FP and soltd cherry walls and
bookshelves, jormal dtntn&amp; eat-tn kitchen,
211 baths, 3 BRs. sewmgroom. spactous FR
w~h woodburner, screened summer
porch. patio with brtck · BBQ grill,
gardener' s shed,. 1.975 acre m/ 1. Thereare
so many other features, tu st gtve us a call.
RODNEY CORA RD.- Beautiful home on
12 acres m/1 this lovely house ts
surrou nded by trees and offers a unique
floor plan. l tving rm. features woodburner,
open cetlrng design, kitchen, formal dintng
3 BR. 211 baths, Ig. patio oft dtntng area,
26x40 barn and 15x2 4 garage. Call for an
appointment

OWNER LIVES OUT OF STATE AND WANTS
TO SELL IMMEDIATELY- Very ntce and
roomy home 1n Sprtng Valley. Thts home
offers LR, equrpped krtchen leal-in),
dmette, 3 BR s. 2 baths, family room wrth
ftreplace, two car attached garage, gas
heat, cent atr Co m ~ look at thts one and
make us an offer

PRICE REDUCED BY $5,000!!! ASKING
$54,900- rflis home is situa ted tn a very
mce netghborhood at the edge oftowuand
oilers appro~. 2,000 sq H 4 BRs. t 17
baths. kitchen, dtnette, LR, FR, wood ·
burner, gas heat, cent air, attached
gara ge City schools. Make us an offer

PRICE REDUCED TO $39.900! -GREAT
BEGINNER HOME- This home offers a •
large LR with fireplace, kitchen, dimng
area, 3 BRs. bath, full basement, I car
garage, deck, fenced yard just monutes to
town on Rt 141 Call lor an appotntm ent.

COMFORTABLE. AFFORDABLE HOME
WITH COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE - located
tn Addtson Twp , home oilers 3 BRs, bath,
LR, k~chen w/ stove, refng. washer, carpet,
woodburntng stove. KC school dtslrtcl $27.50011!

AFFOROABLY PRICED AT JUST $29,900
- Close to ctty on Rt 141 thts home oilers
krtchen, LR, family room, drning r011m and
full ba sement. large unattached block
garage. Call for an appointment
RIO GRANDE AREA- 20 acres m/ 1, '"ry
mce home has been remodeled and offers
3 BRs, Jlh baths, kttchen wtth o,.n, range.
woodburner, family room / d1nmg combo,
LR, heat pump / cent. air, 30x30 garage,
laundry rm., 12~ 65 mobil e home on
property . SW school dtstnct Ga ll for
appointment

REe~:u_:l: _ riR~:E~~OUC£Dt RED UCEO!
Rio Grande Areasetttn g on 12 acres+ of woodland lots of pme hees Home features l1vmg room w/ wood·
burning ftrepla ce and lots of book shelves. Formal dtning
ream, modern kttchen. 2 balhs, exiralg laundry room . Sptral
sta~rs leadtng to 3 bedrooms Ma ster bedroom features a
deck; 3 car ga rage C1ty sc hools. Shown by appo1ntment.

21

YOU'll LOVE COMING HOMETOTHIS- A
beauttful log addit ion ha~ been added to
thts home an d tl ts lovely. 3 BRs, bath.
formal dmtng, ktlchen,_family room w/ loft,
wood burner, stone chrmney Thts home tS
situated on 10 acres m/1. wtth quret
su rroundmgs.
GREEN TOWNSHIP- $38,000- Ranclr
style home offers 3 BRs, bath, kttchen. LR,
car pet. I car attac hed garage, close to
Green Elementary.

RACGOON·TWP. - 6 ACRES MI L- Plu s
a nrce home. 4 BRs, bath, kttchen, LR.
dmmg rm., carpet, county water and well.
cellar house, garage, toba cco shed. Gall for
an appotntme nt.

LOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE - 2,000 sq ft
butld1ng with frontage on St. Rt. 160.
12x20 walk-in cooler . 12ft. darry case. Ca ll
for more deta1ls

EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - $39.900
- Ranch style home JUSt 5 mtnutes from
town, offers 2 BRs, bath, kitchen wasstove
and stde-by·Side refrtg., LR, carpet and
)lardwood, carport and co vered patio.
Tratler pad on lot next to house. Gtty school
distnct. Call today .

• DUPLEX 4 SALE - Great tnvestment for
the buyer, located on Graham School Rd
Each unit off ~rs 2 BRs, lt,ing room, bath,
krtchen and sto,., ref rig.. OW and displ.1
laundry, large carport, central atr ana
storage well

•

-·

BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER VIEW
40
acres, more or less, home s~es, ctty
scho ols.

HOME AND ONE HALF ACRE FOR SALE1050 sq. of h"ng space. LR, Kttchen,
d1n1ng rm , bath. $10,900. Call for more
lnformatron

29.8 ACRES M/ l VACANT lAND - Fronts
on Rt 160. Build or put a mobtle home
here $16,900.

COMME~CIAL

2'1&gt; ACRES PLUS WOODLAND , rustt c ranch. 3 bedrooms. 2
baths. k1tchen w/m tcrowave. unftmshed basement heal
pump/ce ntral an. 2'~ m1les from hospttal
BUSINESS AND HOME - Need rn EXTRA INCOME' Thts IS a
ca rry-out. grocery and batt busi n~ss Well estab lished. Adrivethrough storage and stock room, has been recently added.
Also,a home only I ~ years old Modern home w/l l'mg room
and fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, famtly room and modern
kitchen wtth all applrances. Built-111 mtcrowve oven. Ste reo
.ssystem. Give us a call for appt today

«

SITE for sale located at
2206 Eastern Ave All ultltltes avatlabl e

E. M. Wiseman, Broker
David Wiseman, 446-9555
Clyde B. Walker, 245-5276

.

Real E!iJ!te General

Real listate General

f ARM S

3026.

SYRACUSE - Brick &amp;
frame ranch type home
w/ basement. I car garage,
3 bedrooms on level large
lot Fenced rear play area
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT.
$39,500.00.

Qual 8.1Chaust kits. 899 .96 Installed. Moat Fords. Ch.vy
truch. Vans. 4x4 't, Muffler
Man. 9 Stimpson Ave ., Atheru,
Ohio, 1· 800·843-3767

1983 Ford Rengar, 4 cvL 4
speed, pans. call after 5 :00,
304·875 -3073

Pure Bred Siamese kittens. Call
evenings 614-949-2290.

-

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Budget Trarism•slion •. Used and
rebuilt. all types. Guarantee 30
days. Call e14 -379 -2220 or
304-676 ~ 42 30

Coli 814-379-2273.

Meigs County Humane Society
haa cats for adopt1on. Some
spr~~yed and neutered. Reldv to
go. All shots up to date.
Adoption fee requ1red. Call tor
more informat1on about our cats
and come VISit or volunteer.
614-992-6505 or 614-992-

Boats and
Motors for Sale

tank•. oars, 41ifejacketsand life
r•ng. 260ft. Y1 inch rope. 12000
Inquire 11 304-773-6776 .

AKC Miniature Oachahund
pups. Good Christmaa pets for
children 1st shots &amp; wormed

RESIDENTIAL

77

14ft. V-bottom boat and trailer
9 8 HP Mercury motor, 2 gas

1981 Ford pickup black-white
spoke wheals, 6 sp, overdrive,
looks&amp;runsgood.'$1400 080 .
304-576-2941 .

Real Estate General

AKC Reg. Codes Spaniel pups
$160each Caii614-38B -8890.

Starks Tree and Ltwn Ser\lice.
lawn care. landscaping, stump
removal, 304- 676· 2842 or

84

7025

86Y2 Niuan pickup. Excel. cond .
with fiberglass topper. Alum.
wheels . Call after 6 PM ·614 ·

614-448-1393 .
'h Chow Chow pupp1es- 4
m .. •. 3 femal•. Cute MotherAKC reg. $25 each. Call 614 446-2108.

Motorcycles

Home
Improvements

576-2903.

1-800-843-3767.

1972 Pontiac Catalina $300 00.

304-882-2790.

Whhe fibargl•s truck toppor tor
Chevy S·1 0. caJ\304-876 , 7831
Of 675- 1311.

81

82

1983 Dodga 4 spd. topper.
aport rims. ntw.' tires. 13999
John' s Auto Sal811, below Holi·
day Inn, Kanauga· R1. 7 .

73

ng

Trucks for Sale
1982 Dodge 250 Ram. Custom
co nversion Trall• ready . Call

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0 -7 ·

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

Vans &amp; 4 W .O .

73

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

D IN7

2783.

56

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

614-446-3969.

&amp; Vegetables

304·875· 1429.

November 22, 1987
November 22. 1987

JAY DRIVE - Modern bi -level, 4 bedruoms. 2 baths Formal
livtng room with ftreplace, modern kitchen. lg fam1ly room
also a fireplace. 2 car garage Washrngton Elementary.
Pnced in the $60,000 OO's

'·,.
'•

�Ohio Lottery
Waynesburg
wins Rio
tournament
Page4

PRE-HOLIDAY CLEARANCE SALE

CHECK THESE DEALS - SEE US FIRST
NOBODY WALKS- YOU WILL DRIVE AWAY"'
BANK &amp; GMAC FINANCING AVAILABLE
(let Us Help You Get the Best Interest Rate Possible)

Daily Number
•

•

•

1986 CAMARO Z-28

•

PA881NG HISTORY - A solid 'brass locking
~ae whistle from the Gallipolis LOcks and
Dam complex was presented to Lt.G:n. E.R.
HelberJ, left, chief of the U.S. Army Corps of
· EnJIDeers, by Concressman Clarence Miller
(R-Laacaster) . The mounted whistle was used by

~'

~-~

WAS '12,995.00

the Corps In 1937 for signaling to approachhtg tows
moving along the river. The Corps plans to add the
whistle to a collection reflecting the navigation
history of the Ohio River and the Ohio River
Valley.

Bomb blast rocks
offices in Soweto

RGC professor
is promoted
RIO GRANDE -Kent Forrest
Wllllams, a faculty member In
the School of General Studies and
, Liberal Arts at Rio Grande
. College, has been promoted to
, assistant professor of English.
_ A professor who is in his fourth
year at the college, he has taught
at the collegiate level for nine
'. years and has been In . the
teaching profession for 12 years.
Among his fellowships and
· awards are a Folger fellowship, a
Benedum fellowship, a certificate of meritorious award for
outstanding performance in
scholarship. a faculty development grant from Rio Grande
College and a $3,500 National
Endowment for the Humanities
grant.
He has attended Marshall
University, West Virginia University, the Folger Shakespeare
Library, Indiana University and
Trinity College of Oxford
University .
Among his recent projects are
a two-month seminar on Victorian history at Indiana Univer-

' : f"'

JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (UP!) - A bomb blast
rocked municipal offices in the
black township of Soweto today.·
causing extensive damage but no
casualties, authorities said.
No one immediately claimed
responsibility for the explosion,
which coincided wllh renewed
efforts by authorities to break a
2-year-old rent strike ln the
sprawling community of 2 million blacks.

Sll , 2 0 0

1985 CHEVROLET CAPRlCE CLASSIC 2 DR.
SALE S 9 0 0 0

1982 AMC EAGLE

Maroon, 2 door, 4 wheel drive.
.WAS '4995

1986 CHEVROLET Z-24

One local owner. This car is double sharp. Buy Now and Save!
SALE S 8 9 9 0

4 dr. sedan, 1 brown - 1 beige air, AM-FM stereo (low miles
14,000 to 19,0001. Compare anywhere.
KENT WILLIAMS
sity and directorship of a two-day
Conference on the Humanities
(" The Humanities and the Transcendent: Relationship and Its
Meaning" ), held at Rio Grande
College on October 23 and 24.
He is a doctoral student of at
West Virginia University, studying Romantic and Victorian
literature and the writings of
Samuel Johnson.

years.

'SALE $ 6 5 0 0

WAS 0 6995.00

1983 FORD LTD 4 DR.
14K GOLD
BIRTHSTONE &amp; DIAMOND

.RING or PENDANT

.,~~Gss

SAlE

$12995

'3~~~oo

37

1985 HONDA ACCORD 4 DR.

Heavy on milei but strong on appeal. runs like a dock. Air,
5-speed, locally ownedSALE $ 4 4 0 0
WAS '5595.00

WATERFALL
DIAMOND

In a joint communique issued in
Vientiane' today, Embassy spokesman Ross Petzing said.
j..aos will excavate a crash site
in Savannakhet province, 332
miles northeast of Bangkok and
4S~ miles southeast of Hanoi, on
the Thai-Lao border, a Laotian
version of the joint communique
said.

Cream beige, 6 cylinder, ai;, auto. trns., sharp family sized
0
intermediate sedan. SALE $
0
WAS ,$4295.00

$ 17900

1984 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR.

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Dark blue, V-6, air cruise, stereo, new 5-BI-,zer trade. one
local owner.

SAlE

422 Second Ave., Gallipolis
PH. 446-1615

WAS 0 5995.00

1985 PONTIAC GRAND AM

-

The great one from Pontiac. Air, cruise, P. stHring AM/FM stereo,
power windows. Extra niSceA.LE
5 00
WAS 0 8495.00

$7

1983 CHEVROLET CAVALIER 2 DR.

a;;

---

WINCHESTER®
,

.

Bright red - 4 speed, air and more.
WAS $3995.00 .

$1 79

SALE $ 2

7

00

.1986 CHEVROLET SPECTRUM 4 DR•

SUPER-X HOLLOW POINT RIFLED SLUG LOADS

'";;:.~";~
J...-::=::::::::~-ON_L_Y_ __;_~--o-r_s_j_..,..._~s~ 99~?~
12 GA.

BOX

JUtt:NNF:Kt; JUF1.ED SLUGS

Air, auto. trans., AM-FM, dark burgundy. We sold it new.
wAs '7495.oo

·SALE S 6 4 9 0

1982 DODGE CHALLENGER
White, 4 speed, air cond., sharp throughout. Just traded
this week.
WAS $3788.00

12, 16, 20 GA.
5 COUNT BOX

"SLUGGER" RIFLED SLUG LOADS

1979 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 DR.
Locally owned, light blue, air, custom cloth interior.

12, 16, 20 GA.

WAS '2995.00

SALE. $ 1 9 0 0

1978 FORD LTD II

Jtmington.

enttne

By CHARLES A. MASON
. OVP Staff Writer
Workers got the green light
Friday to begin the Gallipolis
Locks and Dam project, Dave
Urban, project manager for GLR
Constructors, said Friday
afternoon.
"We received the · notice to
proceed today," Urban said
"We've actually been clearing
(land) this week, so we got a
Jump."
About a dozen people are on the
job site now, with hundreds to join
the project over the next several

SALE S 2 9 9 0

WAS '10.295.00

Dark grun, 2 dr. low miles, air con d. Priced to sell.

......

WAS $2995.00

~~ SHOULDER GUNS
MODEl. 500 SLI[)E ACTION SHO'l'qUNS

PU.MP .4.CT10N MODEL )1'70 SIIOT(H; Si!&gt;

SALE S 2 4 9 0

•

2 Sections, 12 Pogeo 25 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Gallipolis dam project
•
receives green light

· Dark grHn, landau equipment, 19,000 miles. One local owner.
WAS '1 0,900.00

Cloudy tonight. Lows .in mid
40s. Mostly cloudy Tuesday.
Chance of rain.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. November 23, 1987

Vol.37, No.138
Copyrighted 19 87

2-1986 CHEVROLET CAVALIERS

Laos agrees to cooperate on MIAs
· BANGKOK, Tha!land (lJP!) ·Laos has agreed to excavate the
crash site of a U.S. aircraft shot
down during the Vietnam War
and search for the remains of
three American servicemen
missing in the area, the U.S.
Embassy said today.
The agreement to search for
some of the 549 U.S. servicemen
missing In Indochina was made

SALE

•

at y

Black, fully equipped, only 19,000 miles.
• ;.;~

Pick 4

.2731
44-26-40-3-8-15

•

&gt;.;·,

184

SOLOISTS- Six of the soloists of the Big Bend
Minstrel Association's Varieties of '87 to be
presented at 8:10p.m. Saturday at the Meigs High
School took a break from a four hour reheal'fl&amp;l
Saturday afternoon for The Dally Sentinel

camera. Included are Adam Sheets and Jean
Trussell, new vocalists to the show cast, and
Jayne Hoeflich, Jim Soulsby, Bruce Wolfe and
Kathy McCreedy, veterans of the association
shows.

Rebellion enters
third day; inmates
argue over talks
OAKDALE, La. (UPI) -The
1,000 Cuban convicts holding

more than 20 hostages in a
federal prison squabbled over
how to end the rebellion In its
. third day today, and the warden
. promised to refrain from using
.force unless the captives are
harmed.
•
"The negotiations have com·
pletely ceased," Allen Parish
. Sheriff John Durio said. "We're
just waiting and hoping."
The Inmates, who torched
buildings Saturday night in a
riot, freed some of the 28 prison
employees they took hostage.
But officials said they would not
accept Inmate demands that
· none be sent back to Cuba under
an Immigration pact that
sparked the uprising and that
none_be prosecuted for rioting at
the Federal Allen Detention
Center.
Officials said the Inmates,
armed with homemade weapons,
do not believe government assu rances that few of thell\ wlll be
deported under the agreement ln
which Cuba will take back 2,746
"undesirable" refugees who
came to the United States In the
1980 Marie! flotilla . .
''They believe they are going
back to Cuba, almost every one of
- them," Warden J.R. Johnson
· said.
· Hundreds of officers ln riot
gear ringed the 47-acre mediumsecurity prison that stlll smol·
dered early today from fires set
by the rampaging inmates Satur·
day night. Utility trucks with
cherry pickers were parked
outside tile prison to lift up
sharpshooters if needed, officials

said, and portable spotllghts
shone pastcolls of razor wire into
the smoky compound.
Officials said no food has been
brought Into the prison since the
1,050 Inmates rioted. Thirty-one
people, Including six prison employees, were Injured, and 16
were adinltted to Humana Hospital-In Oakdale.
Officials said the hostages
were held In buildings scattered
around tlie prison. "We're not
sure where the hostages are at
this point," prison official Jim
Stevens said early today.
Reporters allowed to tour the
prison said four of the 28 hostages
were released Sunday, but officials refused to confirm the
figure, saying only that some had
been freed, including at least one
who faked chest pains. Durio said
he had been told that the
prisoners still held 26 hostages.
Forty-two prisoners surrendered Sunday, officials said.
Talks began Sunday between
four or five federal officers and
about three prisoners, and an
FBI agent carried ln a letter
from Attorney General 1Cdwln
Meese that "contained assuran·
ces to the Cubans," said Stevens,
who would not elaborate.
The negotiation,s broke off
because of squa bbllng among the
Inmates over who would be their
chief spokesman, said reporter
Paul Murphy of television station
KPLC in Lake Charles, La., who
was allowed on the prison
grounds.
"We are de a ling wl th a tired
bunch. They're unruly. They are
tired. They're confused.

'The majority of employment
will be through the unions.
"We will be buying some supplies and permanent materials
locally," he said.
Urban explained that people
seeking employment for the project ·need to contact eight union
hiring halls. Non-union lobs will
also open up In the clerical areas at
the projectata later date. Officials
expect to have an office set up at

the Job site by mid-December.
Currently, employees are using
some mlnl·trallers. 'The larger
office unit w!ll be delivered to
Hogsett.
'The union halls which may be
contacted are:
- Operative Plasterers' &amp; Ce·
ment Masons' International ASsociation Local No. 249, Huntington.
Mike Totten is the business agent.
- Teamsters !.Deal No. 505,
· Huntington. Donald S. Bartram Is
the secretary-treasw-er and serves
as business agent.
- Bricklayers Local No. 5,
Huntington. Maxwell Jordan Is the
business agent.
- Millwright !.Deal No. 1755,
Charleston, H.B. Hill Is the bus!·
ness agent.
- International Association of
Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers (affillated
. with
the AFL-C!O), Parkersburg. Andy
Twyman Is the business agent.
- Carpenter's Local No. 1159,
Point Pleasant. R. Kenton Sheline
Is the business agent.

.

- LabOrer's Local No. 543,
Huntington. Leo "Tubby" Spry Is
the business manager,
-International Unlonotbperat·
lng Engineers !.Deal No. 132,
Charleston. Joseph L. Handley is
the business manager.
Urban said the jobs will phase
out the following way beginning In
1988 and proceeding throu&amp;h 1991.
The 1988 work will basically be
excavation ot the site, and there
will a need for 100 to 150 heaVy
equipment operators. In 1989 to
19~ ls when the heavy coocrete
schedule begins. 'There will be 400
to 500 manual labOrers and also
continuing excavation work. In
1991, !here will be people working
with the machinery, gates, piping
and electrical needs. Employees
on site during that period will be
abOut 200 people.
In addition to the aforementi·
oned numbers, there will be pn an
average of 50 people in supervl·
sory, englneerlng-SillVeylng, ofCqntlnued on page 7

'

Bmce's·$7.4 million suit alleges slander, libel

Bruce said he was "never
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) given ... a reason for the firing.''
Fired Ohio State football coach
Jennings said the firing was for
Earle Bruce, saying he "has to
look after his family," has filed a , unspecifled personnel reasons,
but several newspapers, quoting
$7.4 mllllon suit against · the
university arid Its president, other-.osu-sourees; · said It- was
because of Bruce's lax conduct
Edward Jennings.
The suit alleges Jennings, who
off the field.
An editorial in The Columbus
fired Bruce last Monday, libeled
Dispatch Wednesday said the
and slandered Bruce, 5-4-lin the
Big Ten this season and 81-26-1 in
firing was proper, because Bruce
nine years at OSU, and hurt his
never realized the job of football
family. The dismissal was an- coach carried with it community
nounced by 'Athletic Director
responsibilities.
Rick Bay, who immediately
But the Dispatch itself was
resigned in protest.
drawn Into the controversy. The
"This really affected my fam·
Cleveland Plain Dealer Indicated
ily, my wife," Bruce said. "When John Walton Wolfe, owner of The
she got up crying every mprnlng.
Dispatch, was one of several
a man has to look after his family
figures who urged Jennings to
-that's my Job. When you get hit fire Bruce.
hard. as a football coach It hurts,
The suit charged Ohio State
but that doesn't mean you can't deprived Bruce of "certain conhit back."
stitutional rights, including ...
Bruce filed the suit late Friday, the conditions of his employbut announced It during a news ment, by Intentionally and maliconference following the team's ciously breaching the aforemen23-20 victory Saturday over Mich- tioned agreement in bad faith
igan. Bruce's lawyer, John and In a wanton and reckless
Zonak. discredited Jennings and manner.''
accused him of "carousing and . The suit further charged "Jenexcessive drinking."
1 nlngs ... as part of a scheme with
Jennings read a prepared premeditation and bad faith,
statement Sunday, but refused to made false and untrue state·
answer any questions', Including ments about the plaintiff ... made
those · about Zpnak's comments. slanderous and libelous untrue
He said his decision was made statements to others regarding
within the framework of the the good reputation' of the
unlver~ity and denied that he
plaintiff."
unjustly assailed Bruce.
Neither Zonak nor Bruce would
"The recent lawsuit brought by be specific about which state·
Mr. Bruce implies that Intercol- ments by Jennings were libelous.
legiate athletics should trans· Bruce did refer to allegations
cend the university Itself and its about his horse betting -which
governance structure," he said. was mentioned as a possible
"This is not the case at Ohio State reason by Gov, Richard Celeste
nor will it ever be."
ln a conversation with news·
Edmund Redman, chairman of paper editors ln Des Moines,
the university's board of trus- Iowa, last week.
tees, read a statement Sunday,
When asked about allegations
calling the remark's "shocking." that "two small pressure
He said the trustees "fully groups" Influenced Jennings to
support Jennings," and also fire Bruce, the former coach
refused to answer questions said: "! kind of feel if you read
the· newspapers, you would find
abOut the suit.
1

out who that ls," apparently in
reference to The Dispatch.
The only elaboration on Jennings' alleged character defects
came from Zonak, who said the
sult's·referenceo ·to th&lt;!m "proba·
bly indicate the Board of Trustees' disapproval of (Jennings')
carousing and excessive drink·
ing. I have an idea the board has

addressed that matter with him
on a personal level."
The suit also seeks depositions
from Jennings' estranged wile,
Mary Eleanor, and Ba-r bara
Real, an Ohio State fund-raiser.
Zonak said Real could testify
about how the flrln'g has affected
college fund-raising.

Ohio has at least 13 .
weekend road deaths
Elyria, killed in a one-car acciBy Un lted Press International
dent
on Ohio 113 near Amherst in
At least 13 people died from
·
Lorain
County. ·
traffic accidents this weekend in
Cassandra A'. Vest,18,
Ottawa:
Ohio, with abOut half of the
Deshler,
killed
when her car slid
deaths being attributed to the
snow-covered and ley highways broadside Into a tree and a car on
early in the weekend, the State . Ohio Route 109 in Putnam
County.
.
Highway Patrol said today .
Galllpolls:
Orville
E.
Karnes,
The count shOwed seven deaths
63,
Greenfield,
killed
when
a
Friday, four Saturday and two
truck
skidded
on
an
icy
bridge
on
Sunday. One double-fatality
crash was reported and one u.s. 35 in Gallia County and
struck his car,
,
victim was a pedestrian .
Sidney:
John
J.
Pequigqot,
57,
Victims Include:
and
Delores
F.
Pequignot,
55,
Friday night
both
of
Jackson
Center,
killed
IT Akron: Joan HenthOrn, 55,
Norton, killed In a one-car when a truck skidded on Icy Ohio
accident on an Akron city street. Route 65 In Shelby County and
Continued on page 7
Elyria: Harry J. Huffman, 60,

Vehicles damaged in wrecks
Four vehicles were damaged and two drivers cited in two
weekend accidents Investigated by the Pomeroy Police
Department
At 12: 01 a.m., Monday on the Chester Road, a car driven by
· Shirley Durst, Syracuse, crossed the centerline anj) str':lck a
westbound vehicle drlvebn by Kevin Barton, Reedsville, police
said. Damages to the Barton vehicle were heavy and moderate
to the Durst vehicle. Durst was cited on charges of being left of
center and no operator's license, police state.
Saturday at 6:30 p.m., a vehicle driven by Vicky Rickard,
Clifton, W. Va., backed Into a car driven by Charles Sullivan,
West Columbia, W. Va. There were llght damages to both
vehicles and Rickard was cited for assured clear distance and
operating under suspension.

1986 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 4 DR.
Medium gray exterior. V-6, air, auto. trans.

•

DEER GUN

12 GA. WITH ACCU

12 OR 20 GAUGES

CHOKE II BARREL

$2.1999

WAS '9995.00

SALE $ 8 5 0 0
•. r

·OVER
MORE CLERANCE PRICED AND READY TO GO.
NO PAYMENT TILL FEB. 1,1988 TO QUALIFIED BUYERS
SEE US FOR DETAILS

40

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.
TIUCKS: 446-2000
Ill ~1-44 8-2336

·
Rt. 36. Spring Va!lt~y Shopping Plaza, Gallipoli1. Ohio 46831
Store Hours: .Mon. thru Fn. 9 :30 - 6
.• Sat. 9-6 p.m., Sunday _12-:-:-_6 p.m.

GRID SPECIAL AWARDS - Members of the
Southern High football team receh(lng special

•

I

awards were Danny Gheen, Mike Sharp, Mike
Amos, 1'odd Usle, Pete Roush, and Rick Sellers.

.,.

SENIOR AND SPECIAL AWARD NETTERSSenior members of the Southern Voll\)yball Squad

honored Sunday were Angie Grueser, Jennifer
Arnold, Tammy Holter, and Palrece Circle.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="211">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2801">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39780">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39779">
              <text>November 22, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="450">
      <name>forbes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1557">
      <name>love</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
