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                  <text>12-The

Sentinel

Tubercul~sis
By Joan Tewloibaty, RN
Melp '111 Nul'8e
The tuberculosis bacillus requires .oxygen to survive and Is
oostroyed by heat and ultravkllet
light. Wilen tile bacHius enters the
lx&gt;dy, lt•does (XlOrly In tissues that
lliive a low oxygen content Slich as
the llver and spleen, while thriving
In the lungs and lddneys.
Four out of five new tuberculosis
cases occur In the lungs, rut the ·
IBciUI attack other areas ci the
body as well. Tuberculosis klcated
In areas other than the rungs Is
caUed extrapulmoniu-y tuberrulo·
sis. Commiil extrapulmon3ry sites
Include bones and 1olnts, lymph
gland, and also the urinary,
digestive and reproductive
systems.
Treatment of tuberculosis once
consisted of surgical removal of tb:btftoctoo lung and ribs followed by
extended hospltallzatton bt special
tuberculosis facUlties. Patients had
to take medications the rest ci their ·
lives. Today, surgery and longterm hospltallzatton for tuberrubsls are Ull('()mmon.
Educating the tuberculin patient
and his family Is an e&lt;sentlal part !X
the treatment. My teachbtg ~an
covers transmission (recautlons,
the disease process, medlcatklns,

Ohio

still being reported

nutrition, activity and t&gt;Uow-up
care. An understanding rl the
disease and Its effects helps •
btctease patient compliance with
medication therapy and (reVent
the spread d InfeCtion. The Meigs
County Tuberculosis Clinic lliis a
supply of pamphlets about tulJercu losls and other respiratory
diseases.
Above
tubercuklsls patients
must understand their role h
transmitting the disease. To explain why the patient must rover
his nose and mouth when coughing
or · sneezing, we tell him how
_btfectlon spreads. If tre patient
must be lsolatal, we clarity the
reason for this procedure. It will
help mbtlmlze the stigma stUI
associated with the disease.
We wish to emplliislze the
Importance ci the tuberculosis
problem, so tlliit with yliu'r oontlnued support, we wUl continue our
effort for the ~ry prei.oentlon,
treatment and control of tuberculo~ls bt Meigs County. The tubercuklsls office offers these services tree
to all rPSidents of Meigs County;
Skbt tests; Chest X-rays and
btterpretatlons for positive reactors: Laboratory procedures.
Other services Include: Moolcal

au,

evaluation hy Dr. Roy L. Donnerberg, Olest Clbttctan; avallabutty
of consultants when Indicated; all
tuberculin drugs as ordered hy our
chest clinician or the patient's
private physician; monitoring
procedures, at least on the monthly
basts, for regular drug-taking and
possible adverse side e!ftocts; home
visits; vision checks; dtscharg~e
clbtlc visit for the patient at the
termination of the treatment, to
recap btformatlon regandbtg the
disease and rECommenda lions for
the future.
The tuberculosis nurse goe; to all
Meigs County schools fortre testing
of students, certlflal and noncertltled personnel.
She conducts evenbtg skin te&lt;t
clinics bt vamus locations throughaut tile county for the convenience
of the pobllc as well as going to
restaurants, dental offices, Department of Human Services, employment of!lce, grocery stores, County
btflrmary and area church grou~.
She Is on 24-bour can for any
patient seekbtg her assistance. A
patient Is our concern - rot an
lnterruptkln of our work- he Is the
purpose of lt. It Is our desire to
handle his requirements In an
e!ftclent, pleasant and satisfactory

... ....

~·· ····

Jim Cobb

CHEVROLET·OLDS-CADILLAC

Bank
bt Cincinnati
was Reserve
held on
A tour
of the Federal
Monday mombtg followed hY a
luncheon tbere. The group watched
the opening day parade of the
Cincbtnatl Reds. Attending besides
Mrs. WUllams and Mrs. May of

Meigs County, and Mrs. Congrove
Ruth Cooper and Ann Porter, First
National Bank Waverly, and Kay
Nourse and Debbie Preston, Portsmouth Banking Co.

[jfiii~~~~~~il,~

Missionary group meets
'

IIAAiAIN MTINEES SATURIIIY
I SUNDAY- All SEATS $2 .50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

-

Mrs. Delphine Dale d lront0/1 ~.president: Dorothy Anthony,
talked about her trip -to Haiti and
treasur~r: Sara D. Owen, vice
showed slides taken there at
president of missions; · Beulah
Monday night 's annual fellowship White, vice president of Olrtstlan
tea ri the B.H. Sanlxlm Missionary development, and Rhoda Hall, key
Society ot the MJddleport First
woman to Cburch Women United.
Baptist (burch .
The love gift dedication was by
Eight churches were represented Janice Gibbs who used "WIIiit Is
at the meelingwiththe6l members That In Your Hand?". Scripture
and guests bebtgwelcomal hY June was from Exodus 4 and Ellzabeth
Kloes, president.
and Rhoda Hall presmted the
Cburches represm ted were Che- offering for the circles, Mrs. Gibbs
shire Baptist Cburch, Pom~roy
gave the offeratory prayer. John 1
Baptist Olurch, Trinity Olurch, Werner lliid chargP of the public
Presbyterian (burch of Middle- address system tlr the service.
port, Middleport Church of Christ,
Sandwiches and cookies were
Racbte Baptl&lt;t Olurch, Jackson served following the meeting.
Baptist 01Urch, and Old Kyger
(burch.
Group singing d "Stepping in the
Cbarlotte Smith was top loser at
Light" and prayer hy Mrs. Kloes
the
Monday night meeting of the
opened the meeting. Jean Eden
Points Class ot Sllnderella
Five
gave devotions entitled "Bloom
with
Crystal
Smith losing the most
Where You Are Planting Now."
weight
and
Amy Smith being
New officers elected were F..dna
runner-up
In
the
kids class.
Wilson, vice presloontofbtterpretaAt the Tuesday night Mason
tlons; Frala Hood, secretary;
Alwllda Werner, vice president of Class two new members were
Cbrlstlan service; Saral! Fowler, taken bt and Pearl Briles lost the
chalnnan ri the DJrcas Circle, and most weight with Joyce Brewer
Lillian Demosky. chairman of being runner-up.
Electa Circle.
r-----------L-----------~1
Other officers wtnse terms will
not expire untU 1987 Include June

Sandy Hysell was the hest loser
and VIcki Ferrell and Jo Ann Eads .
were runners-up at the recent
rneetbtgofTOPS OH 1ti6, Rutland.
Gerrl Lightfoot was the winner of a
recent weight loss contest and was
also the monthly best loser ror
March. '
At this wrek's meetbtg, Vicki
Ferrell lost the TTXJst weight and
Sandy Hysell and Jackle Justice
were runners-up. Llw calorie
foods were sampled and articles
read on tips for klslng weight.
Meetings are held at the Rutland
CiviC Center and those Interested in
btforrnatlon may call Sandy Hysell,
992-7467.

Wolf Pen notes
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
family of Racine were Sunday
afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank and
Sarah Beth were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hanbtg and
Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Olarley Smith
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Knapp, Kail, Charles, Kevbt ,
Michelle and Amy.
Ml;S. Paul DarneU, .ll'ff and
Missy, vi~lted Sunday with Mrs.
Dorothy Reeves and Bryan.
Guesls or Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bailey Sr .. Sunday was Christine
Bailey.

You Don't Have
To Bank Wi.th
Us To Borrow
From Us!
W.E'RE MAKING
*Home Improvement Loans
*New &amp; Used Car Loans
*Appliance Loans
*Real Estate Loans

Member FDIC

Pythian Sisters meet
Plans for Inspection to be held on
May 5at7:llp.m. were made when
the Rockland Temple 615, Pythlan
Sisters, Long Bot!Dm, met Monday
night at the community buUdbtg.
A report was given on altruistic
work and Mary Btse was reported
home from the hospital. A practice
tor Inspection was set fat 3 p.m. on .
Sunday, April aJ with officers being
urged to attend.

Peoples Bank
2nd Street
Mason, W.Va.
773-6&amp;14 -

2212 Jackaon Ave.
Point~t.W.

876·1121

6th Street
New Haven, W. Va.
. 882.-213&amp;

Dealhs ......... ................ A-7

Edlklrlai ...................... A-2
Sports ........................ C·1·8

tmts -

J

t

10 Soctono, 78 Pegeo 60 Cento

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, April 13, 1986

~~~~~=-~--

0
$1500°
CASH DISCOUNT
ON ALL CAPRICES IN STOCK
10 TO CHOOSl FROM

SJ20000
CASH
DISCOUNT
ON ALL CUTLASS SUPREME$ IN STOCK

$.120000
CASH
DISCOUNT

ON ALL
MONTE (ARLOS IM STOCK

3

S-1 0 BLAZERS
Discounted U To $150000
DE.MO

s• • .

EMO
1986 c·HEVROLEJ..
MONTE CARLO

SAVE SJSOO

1986
o'
v
-L·O
BILE
CUT.
.-o~uHAM
$j.,E
DEr.t,.
19''0·'·0
lLET
~ oSPORT

s
•
.
s~.f

DEMO
1986 CHEVROLET

DEMO
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RDORADO BIARRITZ

SAVE SJOOO
T

SAVE S3000

l'

Jim Obb
HOURS:
Mon .. Wed., Fri. 8:30 to B
Tun &amp; Thurs. 8 :30 to &amp;:30
Saturday 8:30 to 4

____ HEVROLET
OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC
(FORMERLY SIMMONS OLDS-CAD.-CHEV.)

PH. 992-6614
OPIN SUNDAY I·S '

308 E. MAIN ST,
I'OMEROY, OH.

Ohio weather:--Chance of rairt
-Page A-3

I

••

Copyrighbld 1sse

NOVA HATCHBACK

VISIT ONE OF OUR THIEJ CONVENIENT
LOCADONS, TODAY!

Buslneso ....................... D-1
Comics-TV ............... Insert

•

Slinderella meets

TOPS meets

Along the Rlver .... ....... B-1·8

'Vol. 21 No. 9

'

ri Kingston National Bank, were

Inside:
Classllleds ......... 0-3-4-5-6-7-8

The Meigs County Fair Board is preparing
for fair, BOb Hoeflich reports - Page 8-8

SATURDAY; APRIL 12th LAST DAY!

manner.

demonstration.
Also planned was the August
meeting to be held at the Ohio
University Inn, Athens. A shower
was held for a member, Ann
Congrove who wUI be married bt
May.

James J, Kilpatrick analyzes the ·hardtimes
f!!~d by the oil industry - Page A-2

9-.9.0/o
C
.FINANCING

Bank women coruluct meeting
Joanne Wlltiams of the Farmer's
Bank and Joan May of the Rutland
Branch, Bank One, attended the
weekend meeting of the National
Association of Bank Women. Southeastern Ohio Group, held at the
Clarion Hotel In Cincinnati.
Plans were made for the June 17
meeting when Janet Bolin, Rutland, Ohio Association of Garden
Club's first vice president, will be ·
the guest speaker. Bolin, an
accredited flower srow judge, will
give a flower arran~ing

C-1

Masters third round

· A Multimedia Inc. Nawopoplf

~=-~~~--~~~---------

RGC-CC planniqg for future

''How to Dght the powers that be?
Tum their weapons agalnsi them.
Publicize what Rio Grandle has
been and will be In the future. Put
up Rio's past history of concern for
studlenlll agalnsi just another state
~mlverslty," - An alunutl from

Columbus.
"I feel Rio Grande should do
e11erythlng wlthbt its power 1o
protect what han! work and
dedication has been able to
achle~~e."- A Jackllln alwnnl.

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlme&amp;Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Legislation
creating Sllawnee State University
and Its effect upon Rio Grande
College and Community College
has drawn an outpouring of suppor1
and commentary from the community and alumni, RGC·CC President Dr. Clodus R. Smith said.
Smith reviewed some of the
letters he has received this past
week bt the wake of Gov. Richard
Celeste's slgolng of the bill that
transformed the Portsmouthbased, two-year Shawnl't' State
CommunJty College into Ohio's 13th
public university.
"We received a number of lecters
and comments and we are encour-

aged by the support and the fact we
are very much In the hearts and
minds olthe people," he said.
Smith cited a supportive letter
written by a 1953 graduate from
Jackson County who btcluded a $10
check to help the colleges.
"What's Important Is, the lady
took the time to write" he said.
Smith and his staff ~oted that the
kind of mall they have received
have been broken down Into four
categories- those urgbtgRGC-CC
to change Its strategy and to
compete with Shawnee State· those
agabtst Shawnee State; tho~ who
claim the new university won't hurt
RGC-CC: and those who support
the new school but are sympathetic
to the local btstitutioti's plight.
Piannbtg a response
Because of the change bt Shawnee's status, former geographical
limitations lliive been erased and
the new university can reach
beyond the Portsmouth area to
attract students, Smith said. There
will also be no limit to what the
school can offer the prospective
college student In southeastern
Ohio, he added.
RGC·CC's response then, Smith
said, has been to take a good, long
look at Itself and utilize its

resources and "potentiality for
serving the higher education needs
of Its service area In Its new,
competitive environment," he said.
The first of three guest editorials
hy Smith discussing RGC-CC's .
plans begin today on PageA-2ci the •
Times-Sentinel.
"Rio Grande College and Com·
munlty College has been a positive
Influence and has provided needed
alucatlonal services for 11 de·
cades," Smith said. "And It will he
here bt the 12th decade."
Shawnee State University has
forced the college to plan to fit the
needs or Its four-county service
area.
"The stair has been bt a planning
prcicess for several months," he
said. "Efforts have been Intensified
and will continue to be the major
thrust of the administration for the
next three months. We wUI seek to
develop a long-term plan as well as
annualize a plan tlr the t:'Jrpose or
prloritlzbtg action, the etflclent
exrendJture of our Umited resources, and guide our activities In the
years ahead."
Freedom to recruit
Smith said the bill still protects
Shawnee State Community Col·
lege's service area - meanbtg

•

Area cable finn c
POINT PLEASANT - The signal from an Athens
public television station Is being ca rrled on a
part-time basts by Consolidated Communications
Group Inc., its general manager said Saturday.
"We do not Intend the schools to he deprtved !X this
channel, and to facilitate use of this e&lt;lucatlonal tool.
we have programmed !his signa l to be carrlal on
cable channel 11 every week day, Monday through
Saturday, rrorn sign-on until 6 p.m.," said Mar1y
Crawford.
Crawford said that at 6 p.m. Consolidated is
switching on its electronic program guide in place of

I,VOUB-TV, the PBS stat ion Consolldatal plans to
drop from Its baste service at the end of the school
year. The guide lists aU shows, times and channels the
programs are airing on and ellmbtates the need ror
weekly television guides, Crawford said.
The new channel will also permit communities
served by Consolldatal to make special announcements when needed. Consolidated serves Point
Pleasant, Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Middleport and
other toWns In Mason and Jackson counties In West
VIrginia.
Crawrord said the electronic (rOgram gutde is the

RGC-CC cannot recruit in Scioto
County, while the new university Is
free to attract students from Gallla,
Meigs, Jackson and VInton
counties.
"It (the bill! provides for a
rousing authority," Smit h said. " I
presume It wUI mean floatlngbJnds
for dormitories and providing
competition in the limitoo student
market in &gt;Outheastern Ohio."
The president said RGC-CC must
compete by focusing upon quality
educational programs, seek students with high achievement goals,
or those Interested In the type of
small, liberal arts college round at
Rio Grande.
"We will need to review our
academic programs critically, particularly bt the development of
programming flexible to the needs
of the community," be ex~alned.
"We may program evening classes
to meet the educational interests of
our older students. We would need
to consider the adequacy or housing
ror residential students, something
we would need to interest students
rrom urban areas."
~aching out to arm
Already, thecollegeshavelocked
Into a talented and gifted student
(Continued on A-31

g WOUB part-time
newest of satelllte feeds available to cable systems.
Consolidated announced two weeks ago plans to
drop WOUB from IL' system, primarily to eliminate
duplication and In part to respond to the needs of Its
West Virginia customers. When WOUB is droppal.
WPBY in Huntington will be the ooly PBS station on
Consolidated's station lineup.
Reaction to the decision by community leaders has
been adverse. Pobtt Pleasant City Council announced
possible legal action agabtst Consolldatoo at Its
meeting last Monday, with Mayor Jimmy .Joe Wedge
calling the move a "slap in the race" to the public.

Jackpot winners .
set for vacation
By MICHAEL O'MALLEY
CLEVELAND .(UPII - An
Indiana man who won $25 mUllan in
Ohio's Super!JJtto game says after
working seven days a week ror the
last 18 years, h(' and his wife now
are ready to take a vacation.
Walter Morgan, 48, and his wtre
Madgelbte, 54. Centerville, Ind ..
were the only winners In Wednrsay's game, becoming the largest
lottery jackpot winners in Ohio and
third In the nation.
A Newark woman said she had
correctly picked all six numbers In
the game, but lottery offlcia~
determbted . Thursday that the
claim was Invalid.
The Morgans will receive 20
annual payments of $1 million, after
taxes.
Morgan, who works at a bus
manufacturing plant in-Richmond,
Ind., and has a newspaper hauling
business with his wife, says his days
or punching time clocks and rising
at 3:30a.m. to make deliveries are
over.~

"I've been driving seven days lor
the last 18 years," Morgan told a
press conference Ft'iday. "I'm
going to start driving ror pleasure

now."

Morgan said hecamecloseto not
buying a lotto tiCket this week
because of the long lines due to the

largP jackpot.
"I had tried to go to several
lottery outlets but they were all so
packed," said Morgan. "And I went
all the way hack to Richmond and
almost decided not to get any.
"But she (Mrs. Morga n! said
she'd run back. She said If you give ·
me the money, I'll go back. She was
more lnslslant about going back."
Mrs. Morgan hought 10 tickets at
a oollar a play at a gasstationbt the
Preble County town of Eaton, about
aJ miles east of their rome. She
used the Autolotto to select the
numbers, a mechanism that automatically picks six numbers for the
player. The wbtning numbers were
6, 21. 29, 31, 32, and -14. ().,
The couple has been ~lied 19
years and has seven children and 14
grandchildren.
Because of an Invalid claim, the
Morgans weren't too sure uniU tate
Thursday that they were the ooly
winner.
Mary Jane Culver had claimed
the SuperLotto ticket she held with
the winning numbers was purchased about one haH hour before
the deadline, rut the ticket was
dated ror next week's drawing.
Lottery officials said that, acrordlng to their computer Informa tion, Culver's ticket was purchased
at 7:35 p.m.; six minutes after the

LEITERS OF SUPPORT - Dr. Clodls R. Smith, president of Rio
"Grande College and Community College, l'ellleWS leUers ol !lllppOft
received bt the wake of the planned conversion of Shawnee State
Community College btto Ohio's 13th public unlv..-slty.

"Several people have approached me on the streets
saying they would llke the station (WOUB) left on
because t~ like watching It in the evenlngs,"Wedge
said. "Most, If not all. the teachers at Ordnance
Elementary School said they wou ld like the channel
left on."
WOUB carries numerous educational programs
and offers a regional newscast on weeknights.
The Gallipolis City Commission, also upset hy the
decision, is tentatively set to meet with Consolidated
officials at Its Tuesday meetbtg.

Carriers poised,
awaiting orders

'•

.JACKPOO' WINNERS - Waller Morgan, winner of the mcord ~
rnDIIon SuperLotto prize Ibis past week, laugM along with his wife,
Magdellne, at a news conferenre Friday at the Ohto Lottery
Commission olflce In Cleveland.(UPI)

drawbtg was held .
"We have already Issued a
reprimand In the form of a very
public conversation · with Mrs.
Culver yesterday (Thursday),"
said Lottery spokeswoman Ann
Bloomberg. "The attorney general
has opened a flle oo lhls case. We'll

continue to lnvesllgate bUt al this
point we feel &gt;Orry ror Mrs. Culver.
Bloomberg said the attorney
genera l is complllnginlorrnatlonon
the case In the even I that the lottery
commission wou ld prosecute In !he
matter, but at this point there arena
plans to do oo.

By RICHARD C. GROSS
U orders were given to move
WASHINGTON (UP() - Ameri- closer to Libya, the task forces
can naval forces were poised either would go through the Strait ci
Saturday in the central Mediterra- Messbta, separating Italy and
nean about 400 miles north of Libya Slclly, or the wider Strait of Sicily.
awaiting developments In the war
The carriers' position added to
of nerves between the United States tensions that have grown slrice last
and the North African nation.
. month's U.S. maneuvers In the gulf,
The two task forces, which when Libyan batteries ci SovietInclude !he aircraft carriers Coral made rockets fired upon U.S.
Sea and America and their support fighter jets. The jets fired back and
ships, remained in a position they sank several Libyan ships and
have held since Friday north ci destroyed a missile site.
' Sicily.
__
Pressures btcreased after the
"Nothing has changed," Pen- April 5 oombing of a West Bertin
tagon spokeswoman Carole Drury disco bt which an American
said.
serviceman and a Turkish woman
However, Italy 's state-run televi- were klllal and 64 other soldiers
sion network said the carriers have were wounded.
moved through the Strait or Sicily,
The Navy presence north of
between that Island and Tunisia, · Libya was Interpreted as a prepara·
and were only "a day's saUbtgfrom tory TTXJVe to possible U.S. retrtbuthe Gulf of Sldm"- the cup-Shaped tlon for the bombing.
body of water that Libyan leader
President Reagan said at his
Moammar Khadafy says belongs to news conference last week he would
his nation.
rot decide upon military action
The network did not say where It against Libya until he had evidence
got the inrormalion. Drury satd she ri Khadafy 's involvement wit h the
could not confirm the report.
bombbtg.
Pentagon officials said Friday no
But Friday. White House chief or
order had been given for the two staff Donald Regan said there was
groups to form btto a single task consensus among senior admlnls·
force and the ships were awaiting
tratlon cificials that Khadafy is
further orders.
lbtked to the bombing.

NASA planners envision limited number of shuttle flights
By WIUJAM HARWOOD
UPI Science Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) -Space ;~gency
planners exploring options for resuming shuttle
flights have come up with one Ukely scenarkl that
calls for just four misSions in 1987, starting in July,
and the first launch from the Wesl Coast.
Two prellmbtary launch man~ests lliive been
generated, one basal on a, 12-month "stand down"
leading to the first post-Cballenger. tak€0ff In
February 1987 and the other based oo an lB·month
delay before a launch ·in July 1987.
The latter Is considered by many to be- TTXJre
realistic In the wake of the ChallengPr disaster,
dependbtg on how long It may take to Implement
design changes In shuttle solid- fuel rocket lx&gt;osters.
"Realistically, you can expect that (February)
date to slip oul some and that's wey I would say the

'

season probably won't start until next summer,"
shuttle operations manager Robert Sleek said in a
recent interview.
NASA plans to present Its Internal accident report
to the Challengerdlsastercommlsslonon Friday and
the commission will report to President Reagan In
early June,
In the 18-month delay scenarkl, dated March 'll,
four fllghls are listed for 1987. While the dates almost
certabtly will change, the overall picture may stay
roughly the same. The 1987 flights are:
-July 28: Atlantis; Launch site: Kennedy Space
Center: Payload: a shuttle tracking and communications satellite to replace the one lost with Olallenger, a
materials science lahoratory and an experiment to
explore heat rejection techniques for use In NASA's
planned space station.

-Sept. 1: Discovery; Launc h site: Vandenberg Air
Force Base, Calif.; Payload: unclassified mU!t11ry
experiments In Infrared tracking and surveillance.
This would be the first shu«ie flight from the new$2.5
~Ullon military shuttle launch complex where
spacecraft can be launched bttoorblts around Earth's
poles - Ideal ror rnUitary spy satellites.
-Oct. 28: Columbia; Launch site: Kennaly Space
Center; Payload: classified mllltaiy cargo.
-Dec. 1: Atlantis; Launch site: Kennedy Space
Center; Payload: nucleiu-poweroo Gallleo probe to
study Jupiter and Its moons. ·
The "prellmbtary IB-month stand-do'-"' opllon"
calls for 12 flights In 1988, 14 bt 1989, 191n 199:1, 23 in 1991
and 18 bt 1m.
01 the 90 flights listed, 29 are military missions and
11 o!thosecall for launches from Vandenberg. This Is

In keeping with long-standing NASA and Air Force
plans for the Department of !Rfense to chat1er one
third of all shuttle missions.
Space Shuttles are listed by serial numbers and an
"orbiter 105" shows up on both the 12·month and
18-month plannbtg manifests. This would be a
replacement for Challenger, but no decision to build a
new shuttle has been made to date. The project, If
approved, Is estimated to cost up to $2.8 billion.
The highlights of 1988 would Include the second
Vandenberg launch bt January and the launches of
the $1 bUIIon Hubble Space Telescope in June and the
European Ulysses sun-study probe lnJuly.Amllltary
Spacelab mission, thought to rea lure tests or "Star
Wars" trackbtg systems, Is on tap In December 1981.
Eight of tlie 14 ntghts listed f(lr 1~ are military
missions.

�.

'

13, 1986
The Sunday Times-Sentinel

...----Weather:--...., Nuclear

plant study warns of
deconllnissioning costs

A Dl~lslon Of

Alb

~m ~

~~

,..,.___,.._

""T" II"'T"'E! c:::l1.,.

82~ Third A~e., Gallipolis, Ohio

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 446-2342

(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L, WINGETT
Publls·her
HOBART WILSON JR.
Execulive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER or The United Press r nternallonal, Inland Dally Press '
Association and the Am(&gt;rican Newspaper PubUshers Association.
. LEITERS OF OPINION are ""'£'l&lt;'o nw . Th£'y should bC' less tha n .l JO "'ords
ion~ . 1\ll if'! IC'I' !) u rr .~ ~bj('(' fl o eel !li n~ and mu s1 be sl,e: ned wilh nam£', address and
l&lt;'lf'phonr nu rn bf' r . No un sig nl'd lcw•r s will b&lt;' pt.Jbllshed. Letters should be In
, .'lrlod tastC'. add resslnf.:: Issu E'S , not personall tlr s.

~io Grande College's

period of transition

Oil'S

liard~ times_·_______:::la=me=s~J:....:..K==ilc:..::.pa:..::.tr~ick1

NEW ORLEANS - The governor Is on trial for racketeering and
fraud . The unemployment rate has
ballooned to 13.2 percent The state
faces a soortfaU In its 1986-87 rudget
of ~million to l!IIllon. Otherwise
everything Is just lovely In
Louisiana.
Oklahoma Is suffering the same
pangs. Its unemployment rate
stands at 7.2 percent; a couple of
months ago, when the price d. oll
was $18 a oorrel, state officials
predicted a shortfall d S.S7 million
In the budget for 1986-ll'l. Every
drop d. $lin the Jl'ice of oil means a
"ioss of $11 million In state revenues.
Gov. George Nigh has warned that
If prices stabilize at $10 to $12,
essential state services could be
"wiped oot."

Texas Is hurting badly. The state
is so hugt&gt; and Its revmues are !JJ
broadly based that Its problemS,
painful as they are, appear to be

manageable - but in Houston,
Dallas and othermajorcltles, afllce
space is going empty and toousands
are being laid off from jobs affectel
by the crash In petroleum prices.
Michael Kinsley, edltQt or The
New Republic, has remarkEd In a
gleefully malicious editorial that"
New Englan&lt;Ers and other Easterners find It hard to shed tears at
the situation. Only a few years ago,
wben pU .Prices ~ere at $li to $40 a
barrer, the Southwestern states
were reveling In their good fortune .
In those days, the oil producers
were extlllllng the virtues r1 a "free
market." They had no syrnpat~
for Yankees wbo were protesting
the htgh prtce ri horne heating oil.
"Let 'em freeze," sneered the
rurnper stickers In Texas. Now the
same people wbo were so vociferously defending the free market are
howlbtg for an cil import tax and for

White House Intervention in the
Middle East. Kinsley's p:~lnt Is
well-taken.
All the same, the human hard·
ships are getting steadily more
Intense. One Louisiana editor could
testify from personal experlence:
· His 9Jn was graduated three years
ago from Louisiana State Unlver·
slty w1th a degree In petroleum
engineering. He was signed on al
rnce · by Atlantic Richfield. His
salary dbnbed to $34,cnJ a year.
Last month he was among ttl&gt;
unemployed.
The rippling effects are being f~lt
everywhere In the oil patch. In
Oklahoma, :bl banks have closed
since 1982, and more closings are In
prospect throughout the three-stale
area. Drilling Of new wells has just
about ceased. Many elderly per!Dns, dependent upon ollroyall ies,
face drastic reductions in their
Income. Home butldlng, auto sales,

:: (EDri'OR'S NOTE: With the creation ri the stale's 13th public

~lverslty, higher education throughout Ohio mtersanewera. Rio Grande

«;oolege and Community CoUege President Dr. Clodus R. Smith has been
611ked by the Thnes-Senlbtel to prepare a series ol commentary pieces on
llle local Impact ol this new educatklnal mvlronrnmt. 'l'be loDowmg Is the
lint ol three edltoriaJs.)
:: Rio Grande College and Community Cbllege Is facing a new challenge 1n
tile educational marketplace d. 9Jutn&gt;astern Ohio.
:: The recent creation of the state's 13th university - and ttl&gt; new
t'OrnpetltiO{t It represents- Is one of the many converging factors that will
~rce us to re-examine- perhaps, redefine- but. definitely, rffiew our
commitment to higher education.
:' Equity in lhe educational marketplace of the region wlll be disrupted
V.:hen the Impact of a new, public-supported Institution Is fully felt within
the next few years.
·: Cbrnpetitlon, however, is not lhe only force at work In our changing
E'!Jucatlonal environment .
Colleges and universities have been coping since the late 1910s with the
fact of a shrinking population pool from which to draw students.
· Rio Grande has been far more successful !han ·most institutions In
maintaining Its student population - In lac(, during a period of student
population decline, Rio Grande has registered constant and ronlinuous

DJl.

growth.
· We must, however, recognize that there will be fewer traditional
cOIIegt&gt;-age students available for !'!'Crultment at least through the early

-----

1m.

In addition , while the ·full Impact of the Gramm-Rudman blll cannot as
yet be determined, Its impact on student aid Is large and will grow larger.
As the budget-balancing provisions of the law automatically go Into
effect, two points are clear: the number of students receiving edUcational
a$Sistance w111 decline; and, the amount of aid available to toose woo do
qualify will be reduced.
.
: Given those factors- considering our situation and new E'llvironment
,. and competition - doing more of the same Is not the ans~r.
In ordinary ttrnes, doing better than what has been done before leads to
success; but, this Is not an ordinary time In the life d. Rio Grande College.
:A Rio Grande task force study of the conversion of Shawnee State to a
four-year, public university has concluded that Rio 'Grande could be
"devastated" by the existence of such an Institution a mere 50 miles from
our campus.
·It would be neither honest - oor responsible - for us to deny this
posslbUity.
The situation we face today can In ro way be attributed to any failure of
Rio Grande. Our failurew1ll he lf we do rot recognize the situation and act
to tum this adversity Into opportunity.
And, we must act accordingly.
Over the next few years, we face a potetllal bss of students and a
stnaller share of an already tight higher !'Qucation budget.
Shawnee State hopes 'o see Its enrollment increase from Its current 2,500
to 6,Wl. To meet that goal, it will have to pull students from areas rutslde
Scioto County. Rio Grande Is the most directly affected college or
university In the state.
A risk does exist.
. While much of the recent debate concerning Shawnee State has been
directed toward the politics of higher education, our current concern 1s
neither simply parochial, nor strictly self·JI'Otective.
· With Its unique blend of both a public community college and a four-year
private college, Rio Grande has a special place In this community.
. Our uniqueness allows us to offer quality private education to all
s!udents, whether enrolled in the private or public division.
• At ttl&gt; same tbne, this college has a special place In American hlghl'r
E(lucation; and , the nation Is watchbtg to sre what we do with our
opportunity. The opportunity that Is ours Is a result of a vision held by .
others at another time, but It Is ours to fulfill.
; As unique as the vision is for Rio Grande Cbllege and Community
College, our mission is quite clear. The Colleges exist to serve the
educational development, Interests and needs of this community.
, For more than a decade, the taxpayers of Gailla, Jackson, Meigs and
V.lnton counties have been directly supporting the community college. It Is
our obligation to insure that the development of their tax doUars is
PfOtECted by a strong, vital fUturP for Rio Grande.
• While Ihe Legislature does have the p:lwer to create a new universityi!/ld It has done so - a simple truth remains: Quality undergraduate
flllucation cannot he legislated.
. Only an effective and supportive college 'ystem that encourages and
r~ards excellence- coupled with a wttling response on campus- will
l~ad to successfu I programs of quality education durtng periods of stress.
• Positive change comes about when faculty, trustees and administration
\l(ork together to conceive and manage p~tabllshed educational goals.
:It takes all these things; no single group can elrect change.
. It will take Insight, understanding and hard work to assure the needed
n('w success.
wUI contlnu~ to take boards d. trust.eescornposed ri. indepemrnt men
and women wh&lt;Q!llderstand p:llicy and are committed to the betterment d
tlje Institution.
· Faculty members will need to commit to Institutional goals- directed
toward the welfare of the woole- that transcend the parochial roncerils a·
t!Jelr Individual disciplines and departments.
· Administrative planning must be goal directed - J t must focus
s(rateglcally on programs and policies &lt;Eslgned to ll&gt;tter serve our
srudents and the community.
·n Is only though strategic planning !hat we will be able to turn the
d(oveloplng educational environment from adversity to opportunity.
:Excellence in hlghe~:_ectu~ation requires excellence at all levels. There
must be a shift away fromlci&gt;ntrol for power, or "Rome will burn whlle we
fiadte."
:The chaltenge Is real - so must he rur reaction to it.
·The element s for success are present - only our !!~Lre an'd will Is to be
tested.
. .'flme will tell If a new lnltia tlve for quality education and service wUI
emerge, rather than forces that stltlethe required renewal of Rio Grande
C'pllege In the next few years.
· (Next: meeting Rio Grande'a challengoe.)

:It

.

foday in history
'

•

.

By United Pn. International
~oday Is Sunday, April 13, lbe 103rd day of 198&gt; with 262 to follow.
rtte moon Is moving toward Its first quarter.
:rile morning stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Sarurn.
!rhe evening star Is Venus.
'fo tOOught for the day: Thomas Jeffei"!IOn )VJUI€ In a letter to President
GOOrwe Washington In 1792, "Delay Is preferable to error."

.

'

Industrial construction and retail '
sales ail are being affected. Those :
wlll Hve by oil are dybtg by oiL :
Here In Louisiana, tl\e state '
governor appears to be floundering. :
The governor Is !JJ busy defending ;
himself on retrial thai he has '
largely washed his hands of ;
rudgetary leadership. He will sign :
any budget the Legis-lature sends ·
him. Edwards would like to raise :
new revenues from casino gam-:
bllng In New Orleans; he Is •
promoting a state lottery; he has :
propos!~!., about $00 million In 1
spending cuts; he has taken a few •
st!1'S toward cutting the stair's ;
payroll. His recommended econo- ·
mles range from
in the :
~partment of Cbmmerce (to :
eliminate a newspaper clipping .
service) to sro million for higher '
education, but their sum total would ·
oot begin to make tongue and
ruckle meet.
Oklahoma's Gov. Nigh has asked
hls Legislature for some spartan ·
measures. He bas put a freeze on .
state hiring; he has proposed that ·
the enUre $61 million capital
improvement program be eliminated; IF has ordered travel by
stale officials held to ."fuocUons
involving critical public service."
New road ronstructlon would be
forbidden until the fiscal picture
Improves.
Will the plc!llre Improve? This
corresp:mdent was born, bred and
brought up In Oklahoma and
Louisiana. The oil industry hlstori·
cally has lived by the rule ct. boom
or bust. Much ofthe romance -and .
the risk - has disappeared from
wildcatting, but many oil men
.remain high rollers. They are In or
cut of ttl&gt; money, top sirloin In June,
grits In July.
·
The oil patch has been rich, and
lhe oil patch has been poor. Rich, as
!hey say, Is better, but hard Urnes
can be borne with stole philosophy.
The tourists still are coming In
droves Ia New Orleans, and the
F)-ench Quarter Is as lively as ever
by night. Thlngsare lough oow, but
this too will pass.

u.cro

Arms COntrol poliCY---·-J=- a_ck_A_n.:. . .:de. :. .:.rs-.:. . :. on:. . . :&amp;=-D=-.;a:.:. :le:. . . .: ~. . : :a: . :. . n: .;:.:At:.:..: ta
WASHINGTON - President says that the tests ar~&gt; necessary to
Reagan Is convtnced·that the Soviet make sure the U.S. nuclear stock·
Union .wtll want to negotiate on pUe Is reliable.
arms control oo matter how tough
The president remains deeply
his administration's anti -Soviet suspicious of any olive !ranch
words and actions become. And he Gorbachev holds out to him. When
has high hopes of. . achieving an we asked Reagan recently If he
anns-control treaty before he thought he could "come borne with
leaves of/Ice less than three years an arms-controltreaty of some kind
from now.
before your presidency Is over," the
Reagan's critics are afraid he Is president replied':
deluding himself about Soviet
"Let me say I'm hopeful that we
Intentions, and may have missed can. And this does oot mean the
the chance for a solid anns treaty ' thing that we've done toomucb of in
between the two superpowers. The the past- believing th;lt ~. oh, we
White House has oot picked up only held out our hand and smiled
Sovlel leader Mlkhall Gorbachev's and were genteel that IIIey would
proposal for a summit meeting In have a change of he;ort, They're rot
Europe to negotiate a ba.n "on goingtohaveachange dheartat
nuclear tests- which some belle\'e all."
could have been a start toward at
" We'v~&gt; seen several classified
least a slowdown In the arms race. White House reports to Congress
Gorbachev continued the Soviets' that give the facts 1 behind the
8-rnonth-old moratorium rn nu- president's wary view d. Soviet
clear tests, even though the United lntE'Iltlons. The background against
States has conducted eight such which Gorbachev made his testing
tests during the Soviets' unilateral moratorium was the Thresmld
moratorium. The administration Test Ban Treaty, which ltrnlted

U.S. and Soviet nuclear tests to a
150-ldloton level. It was never
ratified by the United States, but
both sides agreed to abide by it.
(The United States has not violated
the treaty.)
The latest of the president's
reports, classified Secret, charges
that of approximately 100 underground nuclear explosions setoff by
the Soviets between March 31, 1976,
and last Nov. ll, about 21 "had
central value seismic yield es tl·
mates above 150 kilotons, the
largest with a central value of 315 k!
and nine others with central values
of m kt or higher."
In response to these violat ions of
the treaty, the secret Reagan
report, dated Dec. 23, 1985, disclosed that the United Stales had
made 18 "demarches" to the
Soviets. A demarche Is a formal .
communication between governrnents on an Issue of concern. In thls
instance, a State ~partment llngu1st explained, the &lt;Em arches would
II&gt; tantamount to formal protests

over the Soviet tests that were
suspected of exceeding 150 kilotons.
Interestingly, there Is a strong
Indication tha t Gorbachev has
stopped 'the thresoold violations In
his effort to sec ure an arms-control
treaty. The presidential report
notes that cl the nine Soviet nuclear
tests conducted since late 1984, only
one had a centra) .value of more
Ihan 150 kilotons- and that was 9J
aml:lguous that no formal prot est
was died .
"This ev ent ," the report explained, "which Is thought to be the
result of two slmilllaneous detona·
!ions, was conducted on June 15:
l985. lthad acentralvalueof160k1 . ·
No demarche was made to the
Soviets on this occasion."
It was probably the secret
indica tions of a serious Soviet
desire for an arms ireaty that led
the pres ident to explain to us his
chosen alternative lo wide-eyed
treaty hopes that could spell
appeasement.

By United Press International
.
Monday through Wednesday:
Fatr Monday, chance of rain Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs wtll
be in the mid 50s to mid titJs Monday and Tu~ay and In the ~s
Wednesday. Lows will be In the mid 30s to low 40s Monday and
Tuesday and in the 30s Wednesday.
L

State zone forecasts
Northwest Ohio:
West Central Ohio:
Central Ohio IDghituutl:
Cloudy with~ slight chance of showers today. Highs will be in the
mid 50s.
·
The probablity of prec ipitation Is ll percent today
Central Lake Erie Slvlre:
MosJiy cloudy today w1th highs in the upper «&lt;s.
East Lake Erie Shore
Northetllil Ohio lnl1111d
Moslly cloudy today with highs In the upper 40s.
Ohio Miami Valley:
Southwest Ohio:
South Central Ohio:
Central Ohio:
Cloudy with a chance of showers today. High s will h&lt;' in the upper .
50s.
The probability of precipitation today is 40 percent .
Ea.•t Central Ohio:
Mostly cloudy toda y w1th highs In the mid to upper :ils.

By LINDA WERFELMAN
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Consumers face a multibillion-dollar
"aftershock" of costs to dismantle
nuclear power plants unless utilities
develop savings programs to help
fi nance retirement of more than 350
facilities , a report said Sarurday.
Estimates of decommissioning
costs range from $50 mllilon to $3
billion for each reactor, and a large
share of Ihe bill is expected to come
due between. the years 2000 and
2020, said the report by Cynthia
' Polloc k. of th e Worldwatch
Institute.
"Unless nuclear utilities develop
adequate savings programs to
finance decommiss ioning, future
elec lriclty customers and 1aXpayers will suffer the 'afl ~rshock' of
paying for rellred reactors,'' Pollock sa id.
"After the tum of the century ,
demand for new large-scale gener·
ating plants of all types Is expected
to be weak, particularly In the
Uniled Stales," her report added .
"Thus, nudear decommtssionlng

RGC-CC plans for future
(Continued from A-l l
program In Vinton County, from
which It hOJl'S It can reach quality
students in the other three rount les
through similar TAG programs .
There are plans to open a campus
ou !reach office in McArthur, and If
It's successful, the colleges will look
at OJX'ning similar offices In other
locallons.
"Considerable" planning has
gone Into the creation o( a day-care
center by the rolleges. The proposal
was developed with Buckeye Hills
Career Center and Gallla-Meigs
Community Action Agency, Smith
said, with fundin g set aside and a
tentative site chosen.
Smith Is also encou raged by
enrollment figures for spring quar-

ter, compiled this past week soow1ng bolh colleges with the
highest spring student population in
Its entire UO-year history. Prelim!·
nary figures have 990 student s in
the community college, compared
to 961 in spting 1985, and 468 in the
private coliege, compared to 414 a
year ago.

"From a Hscal, faculty and
enrollment standpoint , this Is ttl&gt;
st rongest this institution has been and we are getting better." Smith
sa id.
"We have confidence in the
st rengt h of the facu lty and ou r
academic programs." he added.
"It is ou r plan to w ild on our
st ren gths and strengthen our
weaknesses. ''

BJaS( rocks area power plant
'A~NFIELD, W.Va. iU PlJ - A
transform er exploded at the John
Amos power plant Sa tunlay, InjurIng at least three employees.
authorities said.
A spokesman for the Puinam
County Sheriff's Departrnl'nt sa id
one plant employee apparently was
hurt by the blast's shock wave,
which "rolled him :.cross the
parking lot. " The other two victims
apparenlly suffer ed smoke
inhalation.
Samuel Reese, 34, Dunbar. and
Donald Walker, 29, Cross Lanes,
were taken to ThOmas Memorial in

South Charleston where th ey were
reported In stable condit ion. Their
lnjurtes were being chec ked In the
emergency room and it was not
known If they were admitted .
Th&lt;' third victim , whose name
was not available, was taken to
PuJnam Gl'neralln Winfield where
he appeared to be In satisfactory
condition.
The ex plosion at the Appaioc hlan
Powl'r Co. facility occurred at
abou t 8 a.m. The ensu ing fire was
con!&lt;lined w1thin 15 minutes but
firefighters were still spraying
water on the un it two hours later.

Products, fnc.; Gioool &amp;me Pro·
ducts, Inc.; Junior Careers, Inc.;
and Processing Sales, Inc. AU are
located In the oorthem New Jersey
suburlls ot New York City, where
Winters also Uves.
North Carolina Is typical of the
states that have sought In" vain to
control the sale operations. ''We
~re passionately committed to
getting rtd d them here," say~ one
official d. the state's Labor Depart·
rnent. "They flagrantly violated all
klnm of laws," adds another .
Among the problems cited by
tlllse officials:
- Although none of the money
collected from the candy sales goes
to any charity, the youthful sollcl·
tors often trnply that they are part
of a philanthropic operation,
through the use of names such as
the Student Ald Program or by
vague reterl!lres to scholarShip
assistance and trips to amusement
parks ilr deserving you~sters.
- Those In charge of the candy
sales d.ten tall to register with loci)!
d.llclals and obtain the required
9Jilcltation permits. In addition,
they regularly Ignore child labor
laM".
According to the Labor Depart·
ment alliclals, the children work
long hours, f'!!CE'ive little money and
are driven long distances Irom their
lllmes. In one case, they say, a
15-year-old from Greensboro was
abanwned by hi~ bo~~ In WinstonSalem about 2i nillesaway because
he didn't sell enough candy.
The candy Is purchased by .the
public for $3 per box after being
obtained from Winters' firins for
about $1.25 per box. The youngsters
receive 00 cents per sale and the
remaining protits are divided
among a network ot crew dlstrlbu·
tors, area distributors and district

distributors. Winters says the dis·
tributors are Independent operators, but the federal government
claims that he heads a coordinated
operatbn.
North Carolina and other states
have Initiated legal action aga inst
those operations, but the organizers
invariably scatter elsewhere before
they can be prosecuted .
In 1984, however, the U.S .
~partrnent d. Labor went into U.S.

Doonesbury

9l)l
PlCK-4
$~3.862,

ticket sales totaled
wit h a payoff due of

$91,937.

We WiH Remount Your Old
Diamonds in 14K Yellow or
White Gold - 4 to 6 Prong.

,.-~-..,o,

OR leAVE IT'

Grand Ole Opry
Fooluring: Tho Gtnoral la&lt;ktan

Showboat, Oprytand, USA
3 Dayt

.

Aflril 25-27
!opt. 19-21 O&lt;t. 24-26
.

Kentucky Derby

"Yht lun for the

lat~s"

3 Dars

May 2-4

Harpen ftrry &amp; tt.
Bavarian lm
May 6-7

2 Day•

Holland at Tulip TiiiNI
May 24-26

3 Dors

Diny W..td Sunmlr Extw•
'Tho

Yoa~tion

6 Dayt

lorgoin of lht Y-"

luns 16-21 Aug. 10-lS

Novo Scotia &amp;

PriMe ldwanl Island
U Dayo

. _ 16·29

Super Naihvitle/Mtmphis
5 Dayo
. JviiO 25-29
Glwtdfathtr Min. kottilh

Clans lllrilagl Ftllival
4 Dayo

Jvly 11 -14

1ht S,..._ Foster Story
2 Dayo

July 12-13

Canadian Metro Cities
July 21-lut. 3

California
August 2-25

Chautauqua Arts
4 Day•

lug. 6·9

Nags Head/Outer Ba'*s

1984 MERCURY LYNX L
4 door hatch back, medium charcoal metallic with cloth interior. automatic
trans., power steering and brakes, air cond., AM/ FM stereo, sport mrrmrs and
more. NICE CLEAN ECONOMY CAR!

5 Days

lut. 17-21

3 lhiys

lut. 22 ·24

~ant Opryland Hotel

Maire RISirYalions Now and

SAVE

ss,50000

. AS LOW AS

GIWII11

PAIII lOUIS

Dovid Lluftr
Rt. 3, Box 346, Gallipolis. Oh . 45631

SSOto SJS
GOOD

wam

for FlEE Catalog

24 Day•

517.
Ticket sales totaled $1.~95 ,005,
with a payoff due of $98.1,811.
PICK-I

Get away-CAU. or

7 Days

Dally Number

n• APIIL 20

Nme _________________

Address ---------------lip ___

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
421 SECOND AVE.
GAWPOLIS 1 01110

IF TIME IS
YOUR PROBLEM

Ribeye Steak Dinner
Shoney's tender Ribeye Steak . A thick , juicy cur
Charbroiled to sizzling perfection.
Served with toasted Grecian bread.
And your choice of rice or French fries. Or a baked potato after 5:00p.m.

Dist rict Court In Charlolteand tiled ·
a legal complaint against Winters'
q&gt;eratlons, alleging !hilt they vio·
la ted the child labor provisions of
lhe Fair Labor Standards Acl.
Judge Thomas B. McMillan ruled
last year in the government's favor,
rut Winters now Is appealing thai
decision to the U.S Court o1 Appeals
for the ~th Circuit. The outcome of
the case l&gt; certain (o have
nationwide Implications.

~.,,...,,,,"'"'"$5.99.'"'"'""''rukiW

OPEN YOUR

IRA
BY PHONE

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

•

Sunday, Monday, Thesday
• A generous platter of golden-fried shrimp 1 Choice of steaming ri ce or Frl'Och fri es
(or baked potato after 5 p.m.) 1 Cocktail sauce • Lemon wedge • Toasted Gr&lt;·t~ an bn:ad
Plus Shoney's all-you -care-to-eat Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar.

~
CA5H! TAXE fT

planl produces powe; , ttl&gt; bill wlll
be charged to future customers or
taxpayers who did ·001 . ~ the
electricity,'' she wrote. "fn the
event that regulators forbid the
coliectlon of decommissioning
funds from customers who did not
use the nuclear power, the exJl'nse
might bankrupt utllll ies or n~ uliln
decommissioning shortcuts that
could e ndang er fulur e
generations."
Financing decisions have been
postp:lned for too bng, she added ,
citing a 1!ll5 survey of 30 U.S.
utilities that showed 20 utilities
were using fund s ro llected fo r
decommissioning to pay other
costs, 12 had not performed specific
studies of decommissioning costs
and eight did not exJX!Ct current
funding methods to rover their
decommissioning expenses.
"If, instead of the haphazard
funding approac h now In place, all
of a utility's customers made
monthly rontributlons over a 30·
year period , decomm issio ning
might be affordable," PoUock sa id .

Ohio L&gt;uery

IRA APPLICATION
LINE.
f){JP(JIS~ liARRJ5 HE/&lt;£ I
7/{1515N7AN A/(.48 MZAAR
MA~r Mtlf! AlL l'YC (j(ff IS ' ,

of several processes to decontaminate radioactive facilities and
guarantee the public will be
protected from exposure.
. Most at the world's nudear pants
were built In what Pollock des·
cribes as a "reactor construction
binge" before 19!l1 and have Ufe
expectancies of about ll years.
None of the 26 nations using nuclear
power has ever dismantled a large
commercial nuclear reactor, and
none Is prepared for the task, said
the report, "Decommissioning:
Nuclear Power's Missing Unk."
In the United Slates. four small
commercial units and a number of
research and military rooctors are
no longer In use, and Ill&gt; NuclearRegulatory Commission estimates
that fJ7 large commercial units will
be ready for decommissioning
ll&gt;fore the year rotO.
Pollock recommended that utUI·
ties start setting aside money early
in a planl's Ufe to pay for its
eventual dismantling.
"If money Is not coUected from
ratepayers during Jhe years the

be the Industry,
largest expense
facing It
r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Wiiilii~
. could
the uWity
outstripping
plant const ruct ion."
Unless currffil policies are
changed, she said, most of Ihe bill
will be paid by a new generation
whO used little of the electrlclty
generated by the plants.
Under the decommissioning process, plant owners will choose one

Fagin, alive and wei.,._)____._,..._..:_R::..::..:ob=er~t~~a~lte~rs

CHARLO'ITE, N.C. (NEA) The scene Is repeated toousanm of
limes every day thi-oughout the
country: A chlld appears at the
front door selling cookies, candy or
similar Items and a sympathetic
homeowner makes a purdlase.
In many cases, the yru~sters
are scouts or members of other
reputable groups. In some Instances, however, the solicitors are part
of a commercial operation dedi·
cated prtmarlly to reaping profits
lor its adult organizers.
"Significant Income from these
schemes goes to out-11-state JI'Oflt·
eers woo operate through an
everchanglng, Interlocking maze of
companies," says North Carolina
Labor Commissioner Johll C.
Brooks.
"The common denornlnalor,"
adds Brooks, "Is the spirit d Fagin,
the villain In Charles Dickens' 19th
century novel, 'OUver Twist,' who
made a Uvlng by sending under·
privUeged boy.s rut to pick the
pockets of wealthy LondOners." .
The problem Is mt ilmltel to
North Carolina. Almost hall of the
states have reported strnllar questionable door-to-door sales operations Involving alleged deceptive
selling practice~ and violations of
child labor Ia ws:
Included In that Hst are CaiUornla, Oregon, Washington; Arlzrna,
Oklahoma, Texas, Cbnnectlcut,
New Jersey, Maryland, Nebraska,
llllnols, Iowa, Georgia, Alabama,
South Carolina and Florida .
At the center of many ol toose
operations, accotdlng to ~derlli
·and state officials, Is Gerald L.
Winters, who Is board chairman d.
and a stockholder bt bur ~rms that
specialize In childrm's door-to-door
candy sales.
The companies are Fund Raiser

THINK TOUR

,.

Ohio extended forecast

Junbau 'ira- )tntind

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

44-6-2631

[}()NE, ~. YCV
Ji15THIIVE70

·Be F(J?(EF(){.
I
.

TUESDAY, APRIL 15 IS THE DEADUNE

§'"J &lt;._/

$4.99
THIS WEEK'S LUNCH FEATURE
Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.

ALL-AMERICAN BURGER
Served with Fries and Soup
$2.89

four Con\'rnit'nt

Lo~ations

328 VIAND ST.

Americas Dinner Table .
PT. PLEASANT. W.VA.

I•

--~---..

-·

~ --~~--- --.~----!.-----------------..!_

�•

,..
P~e-A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

April13, 1986

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

Meigs County Court fmi~hes 44 cases this week
POMEROY - Forty-four cases Rober1 Griffin, Columbus, $ll and and costs; Mark Gr iffiih, Parkers· were Mary Fowler, Coolville, ,$700, Michal'! Mitchell, Gallipolis, $40;
were concluded this week In Meigs_ .costs; Cur1L'l Kester, Bridgepor1 , burg, W.V a ., $~ and costs; James DWI; Cletis Dallon, $375, overload; Stephen Gutermuth, Raleigh, N.C.,
County Cour1 by Judge Patrick SZl and oosts; James Gilmore, Butcher, Parkersburg, sa? and Raymond J. Mic hael. Pomeroy, $:-i),
Columbus. $:11 and rosts; Charles costs; Anttnny Grubb, Westerville, $45, !allure to yield; Harrison
O'Brien.
Fined were Danny Robson, Scott, Radcliff, $24 and rosts;
$23 and costs: Mark Kessler, Runyon, Nelsonville, $45, faUu ~ to
Pomeroy, $250 and costs, three Thomas Jacobs, Nelsonville, $20 Athens, $27 an d msts; Matthew carry registration of vehicle.
days i1&gt; jall· and 60 day license and costs; Deborah Sawyers, · Snyder, Gray9Jn, Ky., ' SlJ and
Forfeiting lxlnds ror speeding
suspension, DWI: $75 andcostsand Athens, $20 and rosts; .Meredith costs; Roherl Erbeznik,Athens,$24 wer&lt;' Waiter Arnold , Langsville,
three days In jail. driving. under Wolfe, Fayetteville, $23 and costs;
and costs: Terry Geddes, Albany, $50; Ricky E . Clark, Pomeroy, $50;
suspension; Charles Reltm1re Jr., Marvin Krider, Obetz, $21 and $21 and costs.
William D. DaviS, Ga lllpolis, $70;
Pomeroy. $250 and costs,ll days In costs; Paul Riggs. Pomeroy, $23
Forfeiting bonds In county rour1 French W. Hundley, Gahanna , $50;
jail and six month license SUSJX'n·
slon, DW1; costs only for left of
center; Charles Cleland, Racine,
$250 and costs, three days in jail and
In traffic cases, John W. Johnson, M. Reinhard, 41 , Columbus, $45;
GALLIPOLIS - Larry .W. Cor·
60 day license suspensio n with $100
ofline and jail time to be SUSJX'nded die, 43, Dayton, was fined m and 37, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was fined costs Ronald L. Thomas, 38. Columbus,
for ro motorcycle enoorsement; $45; Stephanie R. Solomon, 18,
li enrolls in -residential driving sentenced to 10 days in jail Friday
. school, DWI; Kenneth Gilkey, New on a DWJ charge in Gallipolis David J . Mooney, 18, Rt. 2, 'Woodhaven, Mich., $45.
. ..."•.
Ga llipolis, was fined $12 ror !allure
Larry A. Myers, 26, Charleston,
Haven, W.Va., S:JlO and costs, 10 Municipal Cou11. ·
\Vith
Cordle was also handed a five- to contml; and Robert E. Bums, 2!l, W.Va., $45; Daniel A. Sharrard, 42.
days in jail and 120 day license
suspension, DWI; Ronald Sanders, year driver's licE'nse suspension 2002 Chestnut St., forfeited $40 bund Essexvi lle, Mich., $40; Cornell M.
SCRUPLE.?
Timmey, 58, !Rtroll, Mich., $43;
Albany. $250 and costs, three days and placed on 18 months probation. fo r failure to cont roi.
Forfeiting bond for 5JX'€ding Donald M. Figgins, 32,552 Jackson
in jail. 60 day license suspension, He was fined Sl2 for fa ilure to dim
werE'
Steven C. Cockerham, ];, Pike, $42; Danny R. Thornton, 37,
lwo years probation, S100 of lineand lights and flpe and costs on a charge
The Unpermed ~ook
Jackson,
$42; Tanya M. Lowe, 18, Chrlsliansburg, Va .. $J3; Roher! J.
jaUtime to be suspended U attends of no operator's license were
Lees Summit , Mo. , $&lt;10; EdwardS. Sushka, ll, Rt. 3, Ga llipolis, $43;
residential dr iving school; Michael suspended.
~bs,m
Monison, 36. Morrow, Ul; Rachel Thomas F. Gray , 31. !Ill Spring
Non-is , Albany,
and costs. six
Valley Drive, "'$40; Robert L.
months in jail. two year license
Hussell, 36, Fairborn, $43;
suspension, DWL
26 Slltt Str111
Jeannette Lester, 24, VIrgin ia
ALo;o ~ined were Dwaine Allen,
&amp;ac h, Va ., $44; Richard Cotton. :!'i,
446-370!
Pomeroy , $:135 and costs with half
Marysville, $&lt;18; James F. Belville ,
the fin&lt;' SUSJX'nded, overload:
68, Rt. 1, Ga illpolis, $:II.
Brenda Johnson, Pomeroy, !()days
in jail wit h ali but four days
suspended, re&lt;tltutbn and cos)s
WA,RSAW, Ky. (UPIJ - Autopsy determined by the autopsy.
a.1d two ye•rs probation, pas~lng results released Friday on a
The description was released by
bad checks; Dean Whittington , partially decomposed body found in Kentucky State Police Investiga Pomeroy, six months in jail with all a roadside barrel in Gallatin County tors who appealed for help !rom
but 15 days susJX&gt;nded , restitution indicate the victim died of a gunshot anyone who might know the.
and rosts, two years probation, wound to the chest.
With asingle 90 minute group session. Without hunger or crav·
woman' s name or how she died.
assault; Gary Nor1hup, Mason,
inJs. You can, too. When other methods cost too much. Or have
The name of the victim was not
State Trooper Jim Mudd at the
W.Va ., $100 and msts, reckless determined immediately but she LaGrange sta te police post said
fatled . Stress Management. Self Esteem. Nail Biting and In·
opera! ion; S:!'i and costs, running a was described by state police as a invesliga tors "assumed " the vic·
somnia help included .
stop sign; Mary Fowler, Coolville, white woman about 30, about lim came from "uprxn1 h," possibly
NOTHING TO BUY - NO RESERYAnONS
$100 and costs. reckless operation; 5~·feet tall and weighing 1:&lt;ll-125 Indiana, Michigan (J' Ohio. He gave
Helps
you
control stress and feel good about yourself . Right
Alvin Lucas, St. Marys, W.Va .. $:II with dark blonde, frosted hair a bout nO reason for the theory.
away.
Renowned
Hypnotist MILTON H. BORTZ has been featured
and costs, !allure to control; Joanna four to eight inches long.
The state medical exa miner, Dr.
in
many
talk
shows
and newspaper articles.
Councll, Langsville. $10 and costs,
The woman was dressed in a George Nichols , ronducted the
improper passing; Dan Grueser, rose-cobred, waist-length coa t, au topsy Thursday night in
St. Louis Catholic Church
Thursday, April 17
Minersville, $25 and costs, no white print scarf, light gray Fran kfort .
4th &amp; State Sts.
LOSE WEIGHT h P.M.
highway u.&lt;e tax sticker; Robert cardigan sweattY, gray slacks and
Thr body was found Thursday in
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
QUIT SMO~ING I P.M.
Pickett Jr. , Pomeroy, $25 and costs, black pump sooes with two- inch a roadside barrel by a man loold ng
Milbor Siminars, Inc.
Only 13S/Stssion
left of center.
heels. The woman had her n·a tural lor scrap along Ky. 467 near the
Fined for speeding were Tamara teeth with severa l dental fillings .
carroll County-Ga llatin County
Eichinger, Pomeroy, $22 and costs;
The lim&lt;' ol her death was not line.
Paul Grandinetti,. Clarkliburg,

'

Indiana jury convicts Alton Coleman in murder

'.

By LAR&amp;Y LF;VINSON
· 1984 during a bloodY three-month
CROWN POINT, Ind. (UPil Midwest crime spree across .six
Alton Coleman Friday was con. states. Autoortlies in Ohio, Indi ana,
victed of murdering a ·1· year-old
Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin
Gary girl and r aping her young
helieve Coleman and girlfriend
aunt, prompting a heaming relative
Debra Brown are respJnsible lor at
ol the victims to say she could "pull
least eigh t killings in those states.
the switch" to electrocute him.
Both Coleman and Brown al ·
"I am so happy, " said Mary
ready have been sentenced to die In
Hillard, mother of the rape victim Ohio. Brown also has been charged
and grandmother of the dead girl.
in Tamlka 's death and will he tr ied
"! think he should get the chair. 1 separately.
think I could pull the switch
"I was disappointed,'' defense
myself. "
attorney Lonnie Rando lph sa id or
A straighMaced Coleman, clad in
the verdict. "I th&gt;ught it would take
a white long-sleeved shit1 and blue longer." But he said he !~confident
pants, stood with his fin gertips
Coleman can win an apJX&gt;al.
resting on the defense table and
Ju rors have been sequestered
showed no ennotlon when the throughout Coleman's nine-day
verdict was read after one hour and trial and were not allowed to go
45 minu tes ol deliberations.
home until after Saturday's sen·
Prosecutors. who decllnt'(( com· tencing hearing.
ment on the verdict. asked jurors
Spectators did rot k act vis ibly .in
Saturday to recommend the death the courtroom when Coleman was
penalty for Coleman in the slaying found gu llty, adhering to Judge
Richa rd Maroc's admonit ion
ofTamlka Turks a nd the attempted
murder and assault of her aunt, .. against outbursts.
Annie Hillard, ll.
"Since the jury still has to decide
Annie, whose testimony against a penalty : it Is not fair Ia them and il
Coleman was crucial to the proseis mt proper," the judge said of
cution's case, was not in the demonstrations in the cou11room.
cour1 room Friday .
But outside the cou11room many
The girls were altacked in June speclators congrat ulaled Hiii ard as

r-;;;;:;!:;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:-

Let us create
a NEW you!

Dayton man gets I 0-day jail tenn

TO Vti rr MEIGS - Slate
Senate President Paul E. GU·
bnor, ...,king the RepubUcan
· nomination to run lor governor,
will \'\sit Meigs County on
Thursday, April 2-1, at an open
meeting to he held at Meigs High
School.

GOP hopeful
Gillmor plans
Meigs visit
POMEROY - Pau l E. Giiin\or,
president of the Ohio Senate and
Republican candidate for the romi·
nation to run for governor, wUI
make an apJX&gt;ararice in Meigs
Coun ty on April 24.
Giilmorwill be gues t of the Meigs
County Republican Women's Club.
which is not only invit ing all
Republicans, men and women of
the county, but also Republicans of
the area Ia attend. This Is eXJX'Cif'd
to be Giiimor's only appearan"" in
lhis·area.
Th e open meeting will be staged
at 7::IJ p.m. in the Meigs High
School cafeteria and the club wUI
serve refreshments. Local, district
and state Republican candidates
will also be guests.
GUimor has been selected as one
of the 10 rrost outstanding legisla ·
tors. in the U.S. by the Nationa l
Republican Legislators Associa ·
tlon. He has been unanimously
elected Republican leader oC the
Ohio Senate fo ur times and also
served as president of the Senate
duripg the 114th General Assembly .
For his contributions to ed uca·
tion, Gillmor has received awards
from the Ohio Depart ment of
Education, the Ohio School Boards
Association, the Buckeye Associa·
lion ol School Administrators and
. the Ohio Education Association. He
has :received distingul'lhed sef\'ice
awards !rom the Disabled Amen·
can Veterans ol Ohki.'lfil. Ohio Civil
Service Employees Association.
the Medical College of Ohio at
Toledo, and the Ohio Department of
Ag ing. He has been honored by the
Prosecuting Attorney's Association
lor his cant rlbu tions to law enforce·
ment and also holds the prestigious
Gowroor's Award and the Phillips
Medal or Public Service. He has
been indu cted into the Cllio Stale
Fair Hall or Fame.
• Gillmor received his bachelor of
ar1~ degree from Ohio Wesleyan
University and his law degree from
the University or Michigan . An Air
Force veteran, he served as judge
advocate and atta ined th€ rank of
captain while on active duty.

•

SCULPTURE WAVE

m

Ky. authorities probe
dead womfln's identity

LOSE WEIGHT OR QUIT SMOKING

Mu!f·hY
Racine,
and Roher!
msts;
W.Va ., . $21
and $22
costs;

Irr~=============~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;::::::::::::~~

Published each Sunday, 825 Thlrd Ave.,
Gall ipolis, Ohln, by thellhlo Valley Publishing Campany / Multtmedla. Inc. Sf.·
cond class postage paid a t Ga ll!poUs,

O.hlo 45631 . Entered as second class
mai11nR matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
Office.

MembN : Un!tt&gt;d

Pres ~

FEATURING:
LEES and
MILLIKEN CARPOS

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

I US P 1!5-800)

In te rnational,

Inland Dally Pr£&gt;ss Associa tion an d IM
Ohio Newspaper As.o;oclallon, Na tional

Our carpet selection has been ex·
panded by 100% as Tope 's has been
chosen to be a Milliken Place dealer.
Milliken, along with lees. offers you
the two best carpet manufacturers we
have found.

Ad\·ertlslng Represen tatl\'e, Branham

N(lwspaper Salf'S, 733 Third AvE.'nu e,
Nt•w York. New \'ork 10017.
SUNDAV ONLV
SUBSCRIM'ION RAT~

By Carrier or Motor Houle
One WN'k ......... ............. .... .. 50 Cent s

Onl' Year ................................. 526.00
SINGLE COPV
PRICE
Sunday.. .. .... .. .. ...... ........... 50 Crnts
No subscrlpllons by mall permllted In
towns wh er(' motor ca rriN Sf't'\'lcr ls
3\'31lablt'

Come celebrate and save at
Tope's April Carpet Sale!
Great Milliken and Lees
Carpets are crafted for years
of durable wear and decorator
designed for looks that are ·
always in style! Come in today
and save with Tope's .

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Oaly
On&lt;' YPar ................................. 126.80
Slx mont hs ............................. $13.00

Dally and Sunday

Marriage license

.,

Veteran mail carrier
retires from route
GALLIPO LI S James
"Flipper" Robinson, a mail canier
In Ga llipolis lor :IJ y&lt;'ars. has retired
lroin the posta l serv ice.
Robin son began his ca reer as a
custodian and later changed to a
citY letter carrier. For the past 15
years he held the rout e extending
through the downtown area, out
Garfield Avenue and back to the
post offic~ via Four1 h Avenue.
He started as a city canler
delivering through Maple Shade
and Hedgewood areas. Later,
Kanauga was added to hi s route
wh&lt;&gt;n that post office closed .

SUBSCRIPTIONS
Imide Ohio

GALLIPOLIS - A Rt . I, Scot·
town nian was injured in a
two-vehicle accident on Ohio 775 in
Gaiiia County Friday, the sta te ·
highway patrol's GaiUa·Meigs post
reported.
P illard M. Sanders, 44, was
1l'por1ediy taken by prlvatevehirie
to HQizer ME'dical Cent er for
treatment. but the hospital had no
record Saturd ay or having treat ed
Sanders.
Thl' patrol said Sanci'1-s was
oorl hbound, lour- tenth.~ of a mile
south ol County Road 2 in Waln ut
Township, a t 1 p.m. when he
enoountered a southbound ,JI'ep
driven by Hei~n Neal, 70, Rt . 1,
Patrloi. that was reporledly left ol
center.
Sanci'rs' vehicle went off the
right side ct the road, causinR him
to los~ rontroi, come back across
the: road and go off the ielt side of

52 Wt¥k s .................................. 158.24
26 Wcfk s ............ ................... ... S29.12

. POMEROY - A ma rriage Ji.
cense ha s been issued in Me i~s
County Probate Cour1 to Kenneth
Lee Longstreth , 47. and Berty Ann
Lo~gstreth, 44, both or Langsvil le.

Hubbard's Greemouse

13 Wc&lt;'ks ....... .............. .. ........... SH .56
Rates Out!lldf' Ohio
~2 Wet&gt;ks .......... , ....... ..... .......... $59.80
26 Weeks ............. .... .............. S31.2{l
13 Wt&gt;eks .... ............................. 115.60

*

Robinson reca.llect delivering mail
on U.S. 3'i when it hoc! only 13.')stops.
He took the downtown route in !971
when Vern Moore ·and has held that
post until his retinoment.
Robinson sa id he will miss seeing
ail the people and especially
watching the childJtm grow up.
" In my job I delivered maU to
children who grew.up on my route
who now have places of thr ir o.vn."
he saiJ .
As tor the future, Robinson plan s
10 devote more time to gardening
Jmd developing a low handicap golf
game.

Patrol reports injury accident

, NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
(omplttt lint of Ytgttoblt &amp; Rower
Plants - Ha~ing Ba*ttt, Gt111·
· niunts, Rost lushts, Dogwood, tho.
docltndron &amp; Shn~bbtry .
SEASON SPECIAL
·*7 50 PER FLAT
MIX OR MATCH
. OPIN DAlY q. S; SUNDAY l · l

Tht&gt; Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnt&gt;J will not be
rt&gt;Sponslble for adva nre pay ments
madt&gt; to ca rrlt&gt;rs.

~MIL

LAST Dl\ Y - James "F1ipper" I!A&gt;bln!IOn, a Gallipolis mall canier
for 30 years, Is shown hlttilg the time clock oo his last day.

Btsufg Shop

SYRACUSE, OHIO

PH . 992 -5776

tt.&gt; road, strlldng an embankment
and heav ily damaging his veh icle.
There was no damage to the Neal
\ehlcle and sill was cited for left d
center.
In other area police news,
Gallipolis City Poilce were in·
formed Friday that a pair of front
hulx:aps were taken !rom a car
owned by John A. Keienburg , 16A
AirpJrt Rrod, while the car was
parked at the K Marl on Upper
Rlv~r Road.
Time of the theft is unknown,
pollet' said'

Minn. police hunting
Honnel strike leader
AUSTIN. Minn. (UPII -Strlklng
meatpackers a nd their supporters
gathered lor a parade and rally
Saturday and police searched lor
their leader with a warrant accusing him ol aiding a rial .
Jim Guyelte. president ol local
P-9 or the United Food an d
Commercial Workers Union, was
charged in a five count·warrant
with aiding and aix'l tin g the liot
lhat erupted Friday outside lhe
Honnel plant.
Pollee arrested 17 ot her peopleII of them !rom out of town - on
felony riot charges after about 400
strikers and sympath izers began
hurling rock s and ·Chunks or
co ncr~re at policemen trying to
open a way to the plant's gat~.
It was the first bloodshed in the
bit ter, eight -month·oid strlk~
against the Harmel company.
Following Friday's riot, Pollc~
Chief Don Hoffman askl'd the city
council to wittvlraw a parade
JX'rmit Issued for 5/at~rday ' s demonstration, but the mun cH didn't
meet.
"Sometimes ir L&lt;; better not to get
involved - not to meet:· said
Alderman Peter Grover. "This
would have opened up a whole IX'W
situation.' '

Loca I P-9 officials said they
expected more than ],(XX) suppor·
ters from around th&lt;' rou nt ry for th&lt;•
rally.
The " 'arrant issued Friday nig ht
for Guyette includes two felony
c har~ s - aiding and abetting a
felony riot - and aiding and
abettll!g fourth-degree assauil, said
Mo....,{ Count y Attorney Fred R.
Kraft.
Guyett e reportedly left town
Friday after issuing a statement
denouncing police, but was 10
return for the rally .
Kraft said additional charges
...-ould be fil ed Monday against
uruon strategist Ray 1\ogrrs, one or
the 17 people arrested.

LYNN ANGELL
Certified Publit
Accountant
Preparing Individual
and Business
Tax Returns

she told reporters, " I fell ~good r
could have ju st jumped up and
down and grabhed the prosecu·
tors." She was smilin g for ttv&gt; fi rst
time during Ihe trial.
"The electric chair is probably
too good for him, " she sa id. " He
cam e in and pul on an act - 'My Ule
is on the line.' What did he think
Tamika was ooing when she was
crying arid pleading for her ure"
Thomas Vanes, a deputy prosecu·
tor woo withdrew from the case
Thursday, said he was pleased with
the verdict. Van es withdrew after
he admitted leav ing a note for
Coleman, who viewed the message
as a tactic to keep him from
testilying, which he did not do.
"My conduct didn't have any·
lhlng to do with the case," Vanes
sa id . " I am glad I didn't screw it

on behalf or two little girls, one alive
and one dead," argued the viotlm's
identification of her assailant was
sound, and Coleman shJuld be
convicted and sentenced to die.

up."

Defense altorneys ciaimL'(( in
closing argumen ts hysterical aulhorities were out to get Coleman
and convinced the rape victim he
wa s lhe man who assau II Ed her.
Bul prosecutors, seekihg"lustice

m

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EVENINGS •FREE ESTIMATES

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MONDAY 9 TO 9
TUESDAY 9 TO 5
WEDNESDAY 9 TO 9
THURSDAY 9 TO 5
FRIDAY 9 TO 5
SATURDAY 9 TO I
PHONE 446· 8677
444 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS . OH.

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.
OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERTILITY
•Epidural Deliveries
•Tubal Repairs
Office Hours 10:00 A.M.-5:00P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri.
2:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Tuesday and Thursday E¥tnings

675-6700.

LO&lt;ATID: Suite 1I4 Medi&lt;al Offiu luilding, at Pl101ont Volley Hospital
Point Pleasant, W. Yo. 2Sll0

,I .'

STORE HOUIIS:
MON.-THUIIS.

FOOD

I

*

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- A-S.

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

April13.1986

STAMPS

9 am til 10 pm
FIII.-SAT.
9 am til 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAl

ANDWIC

COUPONS

.. Prices good thru April 19, 1986
GO

TO CHURCH EVERY SUNDAY

FRESH

TOPE'S CUTS
THE PRICES...
WE PASS
THE SAVINGS
ON TO YOU!

..
Biggtr, B,ll,, Mort Brtath-toAinR
than Evtr!

*******************
Thrills, Chills, Laughter, and
E&lt;crtement in lhe Hetzer Tradition
WED.. SDAY, "U 16th
P·'"· &amp; 7,30 p.m.
'

CATHY ROGERS
VIvacious Singing RINGMISTA ESS

RUTLAND ·
CIVIC CENTER

*

llmAND, OHIO

'

-·-

Flft'OlJCi
LEES AND
MILLIKEN
CARPETS
NOW ON
SALE

BREATHTAI(ING PLUSH

SMOOTH VELVET PLUSH

Reg . '19 .96
Walking on this !ne carpet Is a
pleasure because millions ol resilient
ftbers packed tightly !Q98fhe1cushion
you1 step and please your eyel lt's a
treasure you must see I By Lee a

$1599
$1399

40 DIFFERENT QUALITIESI

FURNITURE .
GALLERIES

Reg. '29 .95
Lees most handsome. most versatile
carpel Is now selling lor the most
ollordable prtce eveJI lhb carpet
too1&lt;s great and wears g1eottoo ...wllh
lust . on occoslona.l 110cuumt

LUXURIOUS PLUSH

MULTI·COLOR lWIST

Reg . '17.00
Try a carpet w~h a twlst...twlsled yams
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show tootsteps and Is a breeze to
COli! fOil B_y Lees

eYery moodt Use ~ In a totmal 01
casual set1tng and &lt;111IOV It 101years
and yeorst By Loeo

$1799

KAHN'S

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GROUND
BEEF
311!.
OR
MORII8.

$1399

Reg : '17.00
tmaglne ...a llllck plush carpet that's
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this stunning new ca!p(lt ~om Lees! A
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g1ea1sa.1ngs nowl By Millike~

$2 395

99"'
,.

... 99
13

featuring carpets of DuPont Antron®.Nylon

HOURS: 9:30-5 DAILY
9:30-8 MON. and FRIDAY

32

'·

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WIENERS

oz. 99&lt;.

12
PliG .

$

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•CARPET
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.

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18.

$199

18.

MULTI-COLOR CUT &amp; LOOP

MULTI-TONE CUT &amp; LOOP

Reg. '17.50
For that clean tailored look so much
In demand today, Lees olle~ this
handsome corpet. Use It anywhere . .
the soli, subtle tones blend easily with
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Reg . '20.76
A dellghtiUI Ca!p(lt to match YOUI

We Reterve the Right to limit Quanth:iet

$109 .

PEPSI, MT. DEW
PEPSI FREE
DIET PEPSI

$1 79
ROUND STEAK 11.
99
BONELESS
11 . $1

FUI.L CUI

IONIIISS

CHUCK ROAST

$1 .49

LB.

BONEIISS

ENGLISH ROAST

$169

18.

112GAL.

$189

MT. VEillON

:ns~' oz$:1 ~9

20fo MILK
GAL.
$149

CALifOllilA

!II.

ORANGES
~~· $159

CUBE STEAK

CELERY .
ITALIC

49C

$199

18.

KAHN'S PIE·SI.KED

BACON .

$129

LB.
CINIEI III

PORK CHOPS
CENTER LOIN
LOIN END •

11.
LB.
il.

S1.79
S1.99
$1.19

BOB EVANS
MILD, SAGE, HOT, ITAUAN

THIS CARD ENTITLES YOU TO
FREE CHECKING AT CIVIC SAVINGS!
ll you're 60 years or older, or handicapped your Golden Buckeye Card en lilies you
lo FREE' In leresl Earning Checking at C1v1cSavrngs. All you need rs a mrntmum
deposil ot S100 lo open your account. There'sno monthly se rvice charges. r.o :ees
no per check charges- and you earn inle resl on your-average monlhly balance'
jf you don't already have a Golden Buckeye Card. you can apply lor one a! Ctvtc
Savings. Slop by loday.ll's a golden opporlunily
' The urst 50checksare I'R££

SAUSAGE

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ICE' CREAM

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FRE511

Ill.
ROLL

$169
YAWl 1111

ORANGE JUICE
29
'I• GAL. -$1
HEAD LEnUCE
HIAD

59&lt;

Gallia (OINity Division of
Ohio Dept. of Aging wil
bt ho11 Friday, May 2
'""' Monday, May s. 9 a.
m. t~ 1 p.m. to holp pta·
pit to •91 up.

I

I

CIVIC.

I

I •

SAVllNG§
B

A

N

K

GALLIPOLIS, 441 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio45631 , (614) 446·3832

'

'
..

�Page-A-6-The Sunday rmes-Sentinel

April13, 1986

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

'

Racine ·Council briefed on village funds ,

--Local Briefs:---. Federal jury acquits suspected espionage agent
West Virginia awards contract ·
?piNT PLEASANT- Acontract for $79,8JJ has'been awarded to

West Virginia Paving Inc., Dunbar, W.Va., for paving .98 mUe of
W.Va. 2, W.Va. 62 and Sixth Street in Point Pleasant, the state
department of highways said.
It was one of 43 contracts awarded by the state lor resurfacing
contracts around West Virginia.

School observes prevention week
PORTLAND - Child Assault Prevention Week was otr;erved at
Portland Elementary School during the past week.
Per so mel from the Chlld Assault Progrtam conducted a program
for new students and a rev lew of the trQgram lor aU students. The
program is an assault prevention presentation Uhat involves role
playing and child participatlon.
The children rece ived review sheets so that parents may ask
questlons or them on what they have learned and students were also
· presented with "Be CAPable" stickers.

Meigs EMS answers 242 calls
POMEROY - Meigs County's Emer~ncy Medical Services
made 242 runs in March, Director Bob Byer rt"pOrts.
Runs made by units Included Pomeroy, 51; Racine, 26; Syracuse,
14: Rutland, 37; Tuppers Plains, 19; Middleport, 39, and 56 transfer
nms. There were 142 patients transported, with 00 going to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 23 to Holzer Medical Center; 14 to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and 15 to other insitutions.
All EMS vehicles were driven 7,935.3 miles during the month, an
average of 32.79 miles per call. There weretMJ Llfefllghtcalls, one to
Grant Hospital and the other to Meigs Mine 2. The latter call was
cancelled due to weather conditions.

ALEXANDRIA, Va. (UPI) Richard Craig Smith, acquitted d.
charges of spying' for tbe Sov]et ·
, Union, says be oow wants to "get .
back to my -famUy and just go

braced his attorney when the
verdict was read and his wife,
Susan, ret out a cry of Joy.
"My life's back. I can get back to
my family and just go home,"
home."
Smith said. "I'm a free man
A federal jury deliberated for tonight'"
about slx hours Friday before
Smith's attorney, L. Brant' Car·
returning Innocent verdicts on all ruth, called the verdict a "victory
five counts of espionage against for the country and a victory for the
Smith - a major defeat for Constltutlon."
government prosecutors.
Federal prosecutor Joseph Aron·
Smith, who faced life in prison If
madeandcomment
convicted, jumped up and em· lea
verdlct
stalked loUowtngthe
out d. the

oourtroom.
In closing arguments In U.S.
District COurt, the prosecution
depleted Ute e'K·Army counterintel·
llgence o!!lcer. as bankrupt and
desperate for cash; while defense
1awyers underscored Smith's as·
sertkln ihat hts work was part of a
CIA operation.
Neither the prosecution nor the
defense denied that Smith, 41, met
Soviet KGB agents In 1982 and 1983 .

and Identified six U.S. double
agents for $11,100 and promises of
$150,100 more.
.
Sinlth testified Thursday that he
was foUowlng Instructions tram the
CIA when he met the KGB agents.
"I guess y~·
~ can say I have been
(a spy) ... for the United States of
America," Smith said. "I've never
heen,a spy for the Soviet Union, but
I have sold secrets to the Soviets as
part of a (CIA I operation."

no
r---------------------Three Meig8 :positions posted
'

-,..--··

POMEROY -The Meigs County
Board of Education has three
positions open for the 1986-87 school
year, Superintendent John Riebel
said. ·
Positions open Include a speech
therapist, work·study coordinato~.
and a talented and gifted program
coordinator.
Persons interested In applying
for the )llSts may contact Riebel at
the county office in Pomeroy
VIllage Hall.
The county lxlard has accepted
tbe resignatio n d. Patricia Dud·

ding, speech therapist, who Is

leaving this area and has approved
a school bus driver certificate for
Bruce Steward pending oompletlon
of a school bus driver training
program.
· Rlebel has heen authorized to
submit a proposal to the Ohio
Department d. Eduction for the
esta bllshment of .an educa tlonal
center for viewing a seat belt safety
film. The Ohio Department of
Educatlon also wut conduct a
review of the Meigs County Schools
special education programs on
AprU 22 and 23.

Bloodmobile schedules visit
POMEROY - The next visit d. an American Red Cross
Bloodmobile to Meigs County wUI be Wednesday, 1·5:ll p.m. at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center In ~meroy. The Middleport
Child Conserva tion League will be in c har~ d. the canteen for the

Pain In the hands, in the arms, In the legs, stiffness O\ soreness

of the n~k. lnsomnill, leg or knee pain, severe headaches.
bide trouble, diZziness or nausea: all of these symptoms may
be releted to whiplash accidents. Approximately 25 miU!on
people are involved In car accidents every year. The
chiropractor Is the doctor of choiCe In finding and correcting
spinal misalignments and removing pressure on delicate,
11nslttve neJVeS. Hyou suffer pain that may be attributable to a
car occident, '1M' your chiropractor today and prevent further
suffertng, dlsablbty and expense .
,

vis it.

TOp hAT 'N' TAilsi

Court awards default judgment
POMEROY - Southeastern Equipment Co. Inc., has been
awa rded a default judgment of$!BXHn Meigs County Common Pleas
Court from Markel Mining Inc.

• When the. festivities call for 'black lie', '
put on our best! Our formal wear Includes
everything you '11 need to suit the
occasion ... elegantly!

Fund-raiser set for candidate
ATHENS - A fund raising breakfast for Garry E. Hunter,
candidate for state representative in the 94th House District serving
Meigs, Gallia and Athens counties, has been set for 7:30 a.m.
Wednesday at the Ohio University Inn.
Tickets are sro each and may be p.Jrchased at the door or from
campaign supporters.

HASKINS
..TANNER
332 Scond Avo., Goltlpotlo

Taylor

--.

.Chiropractic Clinic
715 MAIN SfflEET

Tarlor Accident•
Industrial Injury Clinic
715¥.1 ~AIN STREET

POINT PLEASANT, WI 2S550

448·0676

(304)675-1380

'.

Gallipolis merchants meet Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS - Appointment of bicentennial committee and
discussion of promotions are on the agenda for Ute meeting of the
Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association 1\lesday at noon at the
Down Under Restaurant.
Promotions Include the French City Run, May 3; Sidewalk JAys,
May 2·3: trophies for the old car show and the "Saiu te to GaUlpoUs."
The assoda tion wUI.a)so discuss getting volunteers for the city
cleanup campaign on May 4.

'

Graveside services will be held at
2 p.m. Monday In Morse Chapel
Cemetery, with the Rev. Charles
Bush officiating. Friends may call
at Ewing Funeral Home from 7·9
tonight. ·
In lieu- o( flowers, the famUy
requests that cjonations be made to
the Racine Er(lergeney Squad.

Edwanl Bush

RACINE - Edward Bush, 81, of
Valley Bell . Road, Racine, died
Friday afternoon in Veterans Mem·
orial Hospital.
Born AprU 1,1900, he was'a son af
tbe late Harry and Eva Ours Bush .
He was a retired farmer and school
bus driver.
Surviving are three daughters.
Garnet Johnston and Zana Middles- Leona M. Stewart
wart, both of Portland, and Dorothy
· Roseberry of Racine; one brother·
POMEROY - Leona M. Steln·law, Ernest BrewerofRaclne; 11 wart, 64, 255 Robinwood Ave ..
. grandchildren and · 12 great · Madison, Tenn., formerly of Pome·
grandchildren; and several ni&lt;'&lt;'l's. _ roy, died Friday evening in Metro
and nephews.
General .Hospital in NashvUie,
' ·
In addition to his parents, he was Tenn.
preceded In death by his wife, Edra
Funeral arrangements will he
Bush, In January 1985, and by three announced later by Ewing Funeral
brothers, two sisters and on~ Home.
daughter.

Ohio, W.Va. stores
say no to pom ban
bet~een pornography and crime
spurrl'd the move. Southland does
control several stores In the
Eastern Panhandle.
. Katchur said Friday the stores
S6R runs - 64 in Ohio, Maine and
West Virginia - will keep right on
selling Playboy, Pentoouse, Forum
and National Lampoon. SBR has
directed its stores to remove all
other adult magazines and lxloks
from its shelves, however.
She also said SBR, a Parkerbu rg
company which leases the name
7·Eleven fromSouthiand, wUI "take
under advisement" the larger
company's directive.
·

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (UPI I
- Most of the 7·Eleven stores in
West Virginia and some in Ohlo w' I
not follow a national ban
all
sex·orlented magazines, official
with the stores' parent company
said Friday.
SBR Inc. spokeswoman Linda
Katchur said SBR is a licensee of
Southland lnc., and does no! adhere
to Southland's corporate directives.
.Southland said in a statement
Thursday it would not sell adult
magazines in it s 7·Eieven stores.
The Dallas·based company said In
Its statement that a growing public
c9ncem over a )lltentia I link

RACINE - RaCine ViUage has a
balanceof$47,501.34in Its budget as
or March 31 with $16,618.35 in
general fund ; $2,046.07 in fire fund ;
$2,864.50 In state highway·; $8;731.76
In street: $6,330.66 in water revenue; $1,326.43 · In cemetery;
.. $1,627.10 In revenue sharing;
$2,453.47 In water deposits; and
$5,500 in cemetery endowment.
This report of finances was ~;iven
at last wrek's regular meeting of
Racine VU!age Council.
Also given at the meeting was the
mayor's report of $513 in fines and
· lees t'Oilected for the month d.
March.
,
Forfeiting
lxlnds
during
5
. and AprU 5 In the court ofMarch
Mayor
Charles Pyles were Tim Brinager,
$43; Debra Eberhard, $49; Laura
Griggs, $49; Joseph Wolfe, $47;
Gregory Garretson, $51; Roger
Daughetty, $52; Deborah Hensley,
• $42; Sonya Wolfe, $44; Mike Gheen,
$48, all for speeding.Fined for speeding were Charles
Curfman, $46 and costs; Roy Peck,
$42 and costs; David Landaker, $42
and costs.
The pollee report for the month
by Officer Joe Kirby showed 626
total miles driven, slx caUs. 13

POMEROY - Victoria LyM
Quillen, Middleport, and Robert W.
Qulllen, Mason, W.Va., have fUed
for a dissolution or their marrtage in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Granted a dissolution were Lisa
J. Grossnickle and Robert E.
Grossnickle.
FlUng for divorce were Patsy
Ann Stone, Pomeroy, from Carse!

POMEROY - Meigs County Holzer Medical Center; Racine at
Emergency Medical Service rt&gt;- 10:53 p.m. Jransported Ivan Powell
to Holzer Medical Center: Pomeroy
ports eight calls Friday.
Pomeroy at 3:19a.m. to Pomeroy at 11:21 p.m. was called for but did
Health Care Center fo r Lottie not Jreat Harry Reuter at the
Leonard to Veterans Memorial Country Home Motile Home Park.
Hospital ; Sy racuse at 3:26a.m. to
Second Street for Patty Lavender to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Check Out Our Great
Pomeroy at 3:29 a.m. to VU!age
Seledion af
Green Apartments tor Charles
Children's
Nlasetler to Holzer Medical Center;
Athletic
Pomeroy Fire ~partment at 7:03
a.m. to a false alarm at the
Shoes
Pomeroy Health Care Center;
Middleport at 10:02 a.m. to Leading
Creek for Elmer Sayre to Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at.l1:25 a.m. to Meigs
High School for Roltlte Clonch to

control on property owned by
Anthony Sola, Rt. 3, Gallipolis. No
damage estimate was given and
two trucks and 14 men were on the
scene until4:lJ p.m., officials said.

Veterans Me~rial
Admissions - Toni Hudson,
Racine; Jeffrey McKinney, Ra·
cine; Jeffrey Reuter, Pomeroy;
George Greene, Hartford, W.Va.;
Judie McNickle, Racine; Adam
Sheets, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Shirley Smith,
Howa'rcfThomas, Toni Hudson.

"';:==========:::::::::::::::::======~
LARGE SELECTION

Firemen werecaUedout aga in at I
a.m.

GTE: some billings
may be incorrect

Recreation board plans meeting
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Recreation Advisory Board will
meet Tuesday at 6p.m.ln the recreation department d.flce in the dty
buUding.
.
APLU

46

77C

URGENT
CARE

Our

96C

100 Paper Plates

CENTER
If your condition is causing you
concern, you'd better not wait ...

In handy 9" she.
. Great for parties or
snacks.

URGENT
CARE CENTER
Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In G;albpolis

P RI
OPEN SUNDAY 12-6: DAILY 10·9

Ste1m/dry iron, 2-slice
toaster, 5 spd.
Mixer, Can Opener or
8 Cup Percolator.'

PA~KS

10" Sauh Pan

Bedding Plants

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Monday·Frlday
5:00P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

Appliance Choice

2.97 ~~97
Aluminum; Non·stick
interior.

446-5287

8.88 ~;~97

Sl ~~~

Vegetables or
flowers.

POMEROY - Due to computer
programming difficulty, Phil Ra·
mey, dlst rict service manager for
General Telephone or Ohio, advises
thai some customers may have
been billed incorrectly for some
long distance calls.
.
It was possible under certatn
conditions for customers tocall long
distance and reach a busy signal or
no answer and stU! be billed for the
call.
Any customers experiencing this
problem are asked to ca II GTE 's
billing department at 1·387·7879.
This is a toU·free number from the
Pomeroy a rea.
Steps to correct this situation are
being taken by the company.

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

PHONE 446-3362

1986 SUMMER LEAGUES
The following leagues are now forming .. ...
Please check the league that you would like to
join and turn your name in at the front desk .

1:00
7:00
7:00
7:00
TUESDAY
9:00
WEDNESDAY 12:30
7:00
THURSDAY
7:00
7:00
9:00
FRIDAY
7:00
7:00
9:00
SATURDAY
7:00
7:00
SUNDAY
MONDAY

.

P.M. BEGINNERS
P.M. BEGINNERS
P.M. 5 MAN TEAM HANDICAP
P.M. \lADIES' HANDICAP (trio
P.M. MIXED SCOTCH DOUBliS
P.M. JUNIOR PROGRAM
P.M . MIXED HANDICAP
P.M. LADIES HANDICAP
P.M. MEN'S HANDICAP (trio)
P.M. CHURCH HANDICAP
P.M . SCRATCH (men &amp; women)
P.M. LADIES INDUSTRIAL
P.M. FOOD HANDLERS
P.M. SENIOR CITIZENS

•.,

P.M . MIXED HANDICAP

NAME: ................ .............. .......... .... ........... ................. ... .............. .
ADDRESS ............................... .................. .. ................................. ;.
PHOltE: ......... ................................... :........ ..... ............... ·······... ··.. .

I HAVE ATEAM

The Shoe Cafe

YES_

NO_

Ask About Our Sund•v famllv Special

300 Secand, Gallipolis

'.

I

- -.. -- - - . - ~ -- ~ - - -- ..... l.- -· .
JlAlck-of Ages offers yo11a choice of 6 different colored
granites. Whatever your requirements may be, complet e
satisfaction Is assured wilh Rock of Ages.
Winter Hours : Tues. 1· 4 and Thurs. 1·4
Olher hours by appt. by calling 693·1455

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTSGallipolis. OH.
352 Thi•d Ave .
PH . 446· 2327

Th~ Portable Computer for Business, Home or School

Model.lOO

Weekends &amp; Holl~ys

Stone, In care of Shelia Stone, West
Columbia, charging gross neglect
of duty and exlreme cruelty; Way,
Forest Clark, Tuppers Plains, from
Audrey Marte Clark, Coolville,
charging gross neglect of duty and
exlreme cruelty.
Granted a divorce wasTamml R.
Priddy from James D. Priddy on
grounds r:i grossnegiect d. duty and
ex Jreme cruelty.

Meigs squads report 8 runs

3: 3:l p.m. Friday when leaves
burning on Ohio 588, a half-mile
southPast of U.S. 35, went out of

so:-

SKYLINE
LANES,
INC.
R.F.D. 1, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Couple files ·to end marriage

Area firemen answer 2 calls
. GALLIPOLIS - Fire caused an
estimated total of $400 In damage to
an apaJ;Imenl at 8 Bonnie Lane near
Ga llipolis Friday. local fire officials
said.
Officials said the fire began when
a pan of grease on a stove caught
fire. When the pan was placed in a
sink, it ignited the cu11ains, window
frame, plastic, paint and a lig ht
fixture.
The Gallipolis Fire [)('partment
was caUed to the scene at 10:54
a. m., with .one truck and 12 men
res)llnd ing. The apartment Is
owned by Carter Plumbing &amp;
Heating Inc., Gallipolis, and is
tenanted by Delores Shelton. Fire·
men were at Ihe scene unt U11:

arrests and $425in oonds coUected . the end ot Peari·Street; alld council clrie Baseball Assoclatlon to lliie the
Glenn RIZer, street commls· decided to ootlfy Nancy Jasper~ !Ire house annex tor meetings and
sloner, reported that the motor on about the dan~rous condition of announced that a tree program wUI
Ute vUiage dump truck has ben window lfal\es.falling to Ute street l:e &lt;tiered Saturday, June 7, at the
overhauled, that grating on Sixth from the second floor of the old Shrine Club Park.
and Vine streets has heen replaced Nelgler buUdlng on Third Street.
CouncU wUI meet again Monday,
and that street patching has begun.
Council also authorized tbe Ra· AprU 27, 'at 7 p.m.
OJuncUman Bob Beegle reported
he has filed a survey lonn with , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - : - : - Gallia·Melgs Community Action
Agency in an effort to secure
summer workers lor the vUiage.
Complaints from residents regarding three·wheelers and dlrt
bikes being driven on vlllagestreets
and motorists faDing to st~ at st~
signs were discussEd. Council de·
cided that the town_![YU'Shall should
Issue citations to 'violators.
In other matters, Council Pres!·
dent Frank Cleland was authorized
to set the date for a special meeting
between councU and Herb Gibsoo ,
owner of Racine Gas Co.; CouncU·
man Carroll Teaford was authorized to check oo a tree J:rOblem oo
Fourth Street; the street commis·
stoner was authorized to apply
gravel to the boat ramp roadway to
cut doMJ on dust; Uhanks was
extended to Henry Bentz for
Installing steps on the riverbank at

J

Ready to Go to Wo~
The Down Under Restaurant
offers incomparable "Start to Finish" dining
with a glass of our selected Fine Wines
French Onion Soup Au Gratin
Roast Prime Rib or
Fillet of Sole Almandine
Vegetable or Potato
Salad, Freshly Baked Bread, Beverage
Sherbet

Anytime, Anywhere

2
FOR

$1

Training pants
Cotton terry
in sizes 2·4

Our

1.57

Baby Oil
Kmart 16 oz. size;
helps hep you and
baby soft.

7.97 ~~~97

1614) 446·2345

Sale Priced At:

$J99

. Reg.

499.00

Low As
$20 Per Month
on CiliUne•

Save 5100

$850
- Rerervationr Suggerted -

With 24K Memory, Five Built-In
Programs, Selr-Contained Phone
Modem and 40 X 8 Display

9. 97 ~~~97

Fresh Look Paint.
Late• Flat

Coaches' Shorts

Our Stmi Gloss ,..........8.97
Our Satin .................... 1.97

adulls

In color choice;

Use th e Mndl'l '100 as a pt·rsonal word
processor, address/phmw din•etory. ap·
. poinhnPnt calendar and trlq1hone au t!!·
dialer. Access oth l' r comp ui&lt;•rs or
information st•ryiccs \" · phone Yon ca11
t'Vf:'ll \\'rite vour uw11 programs in th e
BAS IC langL;age . Easy to expand . too . Add
. a printer. a cass e tte recorder lor storage,
&lt;'V&lt;' Il a har code wand. We1ghs JUSt .4 lbs.

rtad1e
/haek
300 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Served Mohday, Apri/14 through
Tbursd•y. Apri/17
5 P.M.. JOP.M.

,

____

__ ___________

:..._

_,;:_

&amp;

S~· ~tem

0YtJrview

\ficroproct&gt;ssor: H-hit HOC85 C\10S. 2.-t MI b .
Memum 32 1\ ROM. ;l.ll( RAM . expandahlr to 32K.
Keyboa.rd : Fu!l-sil.t' I~'Pt•w rH•·r-slylt• .
Di splny: 40·l·haru l'll'r b~ 8-linc l.CU. Upp t·~/
lowt~n·;m• ASC II dmrat· tt·r~ . 240 x 64 dot -matm

..::rap hies.
Input /Output ; Pan1 llt•l printer. RS -232[: wrial ·
t·mnmunicutiuns, t·a.m•U(' tapt' and bar t•mlt• n ·adN

I'm Mi chael Test. I was trying to pul a
stick in a peanut·butler jar to make a
perch for my wooly·worm when the jar
broke and cut my hand . That' s when my
mom took me to the HospitaL
We took Michael to the Emergency
Care Center at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
I'm Lois Test and we live in Mason. It
wasn't a major thing but the cut did need
stitches. Michael was very apprehensive,
he ·s t 0. When we got to the hospital the
doctor talked with him. He joked with him
and leased him about girls. The doctor
e~plained what he was going to do and by

the time he was ready for the stitches,
Michael was relaxed and it didn 't bother
him that much. + was grateiul that the
doctor calmed my son 's fear.
We went back later to have the sttl ches
taken out, Michael had already taken two
of them out himself. I was impressed with
the way the dpcior handled MichaeL We
always go to Pleasant Valley Hospi tal
Michael says, "It's the best 1"

No maHer the d,egree or nature of your emergency, you will always be treated with the
courteous and· professional, 24·hour service you have come to appreciate at Pleasant
Valley Hosp,ital.

i••terfn&lt;'t~s.

caMP~TEj:l
CENTERS

Check Your Phone Book for the iadle lllllek Store or Dealer Nearest You
• {:itil , ill! ' rt•\ nil in)( l'rl-'d il, l'ol}'lllt'lll mar \'~rr dt•rx•nd inl(
A DIVISION OF TANDY COAPOAATION

~ --·-·----· -·-- -....-,---------------------

11\lOil

bu l,nwt•,

l'f'IICEkAPPLY AT PNITICIP.ATINO 8TOfl£8 AHO Of:AlEAI

Located Bl P1eBsant Vall!!f Hosplt8i,Point Pleasant. WV

..

.
'

�Page-A-S~The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

April13, 1986

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

•

r1 er

S8Ctioni~
April 13, 1986

.

PIECE OF HISTORY- Tbil'
old ooloalal loom, brought to
Meigs County Ill the mid-1700's ·
by llOille · of MelliS Counly's
earliest settlers, Is now on .
display at tbe Melp Museum. :· ·
Annie ChapmlUI, who has lUI ·
lntenae ~rest In preservln1 •
the put for future geaentlool, •IUI!Ielllbled the loom fnllll parts
found In a hayloft and atUc aUhe : ·

ErroD Conroy !ann at Chelller.
Here she displays a woolen
blank8 woven on a loom 1111ch as
this one by Ellmbeth HoDeU, the
great.grMdroother of Mrs.
Nonna Lee ol Hantoonvllle. ·

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Comfortable with the 'old relics,'
•
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SUPPum;; - 'Dtls old wicker weavln1 baekel was
hrought to Meigs County from GennMy by Mceslors
of the Meigs County Genhebner family. The old

yam

wooden bowl holding
museum by looiie Eden.

By CIIAitLENE HOEFLICH
comfortable with almost anything a
Times-Sentinel Staff
hundred or two years old - It
POMEROY "Every time sometimes almost seems I've done
someone says, 'we've got this old It before."
relic that no one wants or like·
The Erroll Conroy family of
s' ... ,I'm just wild and screaming, Chester who got the loom from ooe
'Don't throw it out, don't throw it of their ancestors, gave it to
out'!"
Chapman and her daughter, now
An enthusiastic collector of any- Jennie Kleski. At that time Jennie
thing and everything of llistoric was a student at Marietta Colll'ge
significance to the county, Annie and was taking a class in weaving.
Chapman admits to having "almost She was involved in gathering raw
a compulsion" about preserving materials, spin.nlng tbern Into yarn,
things of the past for future color dying using mate~ from
generations.
nature, and the variety of patterns
That's why when she visited the which could be woven Into cloth.
Conroyson their farm near Chester
The loom. now on loan to the
one day and they~ talked about Meigs Museum, was brought here
pieces of an old colonial loom in the from Tidewater. Va . by some of
hayloft of the barn, she got all Meigs Cou nty's earliest settlers in
excited and couldn't walt to climb the mid-1700's ,
up there and take a look. • ; ..•" As Chaprmfn' explains, "Back in
Not only were most of the piecei thOSl' days in order to get things
of the loom there, but also a yarn across the Allegheny Mountains
winder. parts to a warping frame, and to the settlers' new lx&gt;mes,
and a warping reel. Some smaller everything had to knock down into
parts of the loom were found in the small bundles to be thrown into the
attic of the Conroy horn!'.
carts which they pulled.
Heavy and bulky and hard to
They didn't have co!ll'stoga wag·
handle, Chapman got her son. ons tlke we thlnk or when they
Mil ch, and ~aughter, Jennie, to moved west, but they had a lot of
, help move· .the loom to their hand-pulled carts and horse-drawn
'Pornet;ey home where It 's been wagons and carts.
stored ·for several years.
"So everytlling was'put together
Then oneda~ noll~ long ago, she with pegs, and everywhere you SI'E'
drug out the pieces, moved them to a seam, the frame comes apart.
the museum and began the process They had to be made that way so
of assembling IlK' loom fora display that they could be broken down Into
there.
rnoveabll' pieces."
Asked how she knew what piece
Weaving was an Important part
went where, she said with her it's of the Ufestyle of those early
"almost Instinct."
settlers, Chapman says. In that the
"It 's a funny thing. I know how to cloth lor everything they wore, the
Is being display at the
put all of this kind of·stuff together blankets for their beds, and! he rugs
and I don't know why. 1 feel for the floors, had to be made by the

women.
"II was very difficult to keep your
famlly clothed In those days. You
couldn 't go oot to the store and buy .
things. Rather you just went Into ·
your main room. sal down with :
your wool which yoo had sheared :
from the sheep, or your linen from
the flax you had grown, and got
busy. • .
'
"If you were an amtitious
housewife, and you took great I" I~
In . yoor family and in your _
accomplishments, your famlly was .
well dressed. But if yoo were a llttll' :
on the lazy side, or not physlclly
strong, or lor some reason didn't
have the means , then yoor farnUy
went practically naked and when II
was cold your family suffered."
Making cloth was a long tedious
chore, but as Chapman points out
"that was what the women did, It
was their job, and it was an
all-winter thing." ·
!falking about weaving in loose
days, Chapman said that every
woman had her a.vn rhythm at the
loom - "and boy, were they
fast. ... they could throw that shuttle
through there , back and forth,
quick, quick, and you'd hear the
clap, the repetitious motion, ana
know who was working by til@
rhythm."
Patterns, she ex~alns. are determined by how many sets of heddle5
are used and how they are rats~
and lowered. Changing the level r1
the heddle chan!;'!S the pattern.
The Conroys used the cid loom to
make rugs untll the late fortieS
when tt was put up In the hayloft
"j ust to get it out of the way."
Chapman contends that there
have been too ·many things rete'
gated to ootbuUdlngs and attics
simply .because prople do not
reellze their historical value.
"It's just that wben you get used
to s:&gt;mething, sometimes yoo don't
reallze how unique It Is;" she
commented.
The colonial loom, nowood isplay
at the museum for all tri enjoy, Is
'. certainly an example rJ. that.

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ROD FRAME - Frames lor
preparln' the thfeads to go onto
the loom can be either the reel or
the rod type, The reel frame 1s
up on a !!&amp;and Md 1008 around
llle a Olel'l')'·pround, while the
rod frame Is !ilatloiiU'y and the :
IJuead Ill WI'IIPped by hand. .

•

'

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.
13,1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

'

April 13, 1986

12.fh

,

Anni"ersary
'Sal·e!

We Ruerve The Right To
· limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat 8. A'M•lO PM
Sunday 10 Ar,t10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH"
PRICES-UFFECTiVE rHRU SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 19S6

Communiversity classes have openings
..

GALUPOUS- The Job Bank
located In the Senior Citizens
Center, 220 Jackson Pike has many
cpallfled applicants looking for
employment.
Communities need knowledge,
experience and energy that mature
workers provide. Since their job
performance and productivity are
equal to that of other age groups,

..

Skin tests set
1

~

.

.
.49&lt;
Whole Fryersa~....... .
IN!
· •••••... $1 29 •••••••••••••••
' Por·.·k L
1,4
o1n
$ 29
Lunch Meat ••~~...... 1 12 YearsTo OfOur
Customers... .
.
W
•••••••••••••.••• 89&lt; We Would Like

: ·Katie's korner
... .
By KATIE CROW.'

SUPERIOR

$ 39
Chuck Roast ~~ ...... 1
BUCKET
$
Cube Steak ..~~...... 199

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

...

••••••••••••••

Tom atoes .....~~ ••••.•• 59&lt;
BROUGHTO~
$ 29
2°/o Milk ••••••~A!~..... 1 ·
SHURFINE
.
•
Marg ar1ne •••••••••••••
3 LB. TUB

BANQUET

.

Pot · Pies···~···!~;... 4/

'

SUNLIGHT LIQUID

.

$

Dish · Detergent·:.:~.· 89( FLAVORITE
SNUGGLE
fabric Softener'.:~ $149 Ice· Cream ....~::~•••• $119
•••••
• • • • COUPm',• •••••.
•••••••

VELVET

•
"

PAPER TOWELS
• LARGE
ROll

At Powoll'• S,.oi'moritol
Sat. April 19, 1916 STS

1... .

TREET

•

LUNCH MEAT

3/Sl

limit 3 Por Customor

•

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:·nAVORITE SUGAR

: CLOROX BLEACH

•

•
•
•
••

$139

0

limit I Per C11tomer

•

Offer bpln Sot. April 19, 1916

.

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STS

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Offor ~pir11 Sal., April 19, 1916
.

Like to relate a message to you
from the Meigs County Chapter of
the American Red Cross In regard
to the next Bloodmobile.
"As long as there are people,
there will be a need for volunteer
blood donors. Blood, the magic
medicine, comes only from people.
"One unit of blood, beside being
used as whole blood, can be divided
lnot dltlerent components: platelets
and plasma to control bleeding and
red bloo(l cells used for peeple with
anemia or kidney disease.
"Thus It Is possible lor one donor
to save three or more lives with a
single effort. Adonation Is really the
gift of life more than ever before.
"The fnUowlng Meigs Countlims
have given the gift of Ule over a
mndred times, Richard s. Barton
159 units, Leo Vaughan 136 units,
Carolyn Jeffers Charles 124 units,

{&amp;e5~~

Walter R Couch ll2 units, Harlan
Ba liard 110 units and Robert
Vaughan 104 units."
The Bloodmobile wUI be at the
seni&gt;r Citizens Center Wednesday.
Aprlll6, from 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
On the lighter side.
Seems as though a four-year·old
ca lled his grandmother an idiot.
The gran dmother taken back
stammered , "You must oot say
such a thing, you don't even know
what II means."
A short time later the youngst er
told his grandmother "I know what
an kli&gt;t Is, It Is !Dmeone who pulls
out In front of grandpa."
A three year old left one of his
oottons on his shirt unbuttoned and
he was told that he must button all
buttons.
"But ·this Is the way grandpa's
shirt looks" the younster 115pJnded
" It got shot off In lhe war."
And 9:l It goes.

care-

BEST VALUE SPECIAl!

SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL!

Save Up to S76.00

SAVE-S3.00 Reg. S2S.OO

.

$22 *
·

$99

PU ROOM
•Minimum two rooms

Any sevtll nas With coupon. An area
1$ defined as a room. hall. bath, stancase or lar&amp;e walk-in closet

FRONTIER
CLEANING
SYSTEM
446-7470
P.0. BOX 1170 GAlLIPOLIS
@rnstrong

ca~e Lafa~·elte~lall

•
•

on every ~ytbing Goes!®CarPet .
Guaranteed not to mat or crnsh for ten full years!
PADDING &amp; INSULATION INCLUDED

I" OUR STORE

Armstrong .... nything Goes '

U'!'l! l'of any Item
(No ctgarettes or anytling

1st ANNIVERSARY
GIVE-A-WAY
.YOU COULD WIN A FREE
WASHER
· AND
DRYER
By Just Filling In the Coupon

else exempted by law)

SMORGASBORD

.
'

Below and Bringing It Into Dale's

..

.Gibson®

•

:, . '! .~ ... • • • • •
INAME
I
1ADDRESS
IM
I

~ •l!lf.!! .ti!LI!II!_..I!I !I!.J!I! .W ... ,. •

: PH~NE NUMBER

"'

•,

COLORFUL
IXbeautiful multitonemlors
in a sort, sculptured finish .

Reg.

Sale!

$3Q95

$2Q95
-

Armstrong An ything Goes'

ROYAL
A clean, tailorc, l, low ·lusl&lt;' r
fini sh for a soft, naturallmk.

1
1

Armst mng's thickest, most

Jux uri(1us saxt1ny plush. In 29
popular at'&lt;'P n l s and m.•utrc1ls.

Reg.

Sale!

Reg .

$3995 .

$2995

$4995

I
I

SavenQwon
ANYTHING GOES Anything Goes! Other
saxony carpets show ·
A ri &lt;:h, lu xurious saxon y
pha.-; h ill :1!) g.orgt•ous tolors. wear in just a few
months. But Anything
Reg.
Sale!
Goes is guaranteed
$3495 $2395 not to mat or crush
'---------' for TEN full years...
Armstrong Anythii1g Goes' ·or Armstrong will
FANTASTIC replace it, FREE!*
Armstrong

Lllftlh

.

•••
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Sale!

$3595

detail&amp;

.

@r•lStr'Ong

I

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.
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•r Also I'llIter

'

In Our Store

SILVER
BRIDGE PLAZA
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

•First five years, Annstrong will
replace the carpet Second five

years, Annstrong will refund purchase price. See warranty for full

'

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

'

ding anniversary.
Couldn't happen to a nicer couple.
May you celebrate many more.

fi'· ShoeThe--.:.

2 MINUTE
SHOPPING
SPREE

Whatever Your
Purchase Is
We Will - Refund The
Money!

limit 1 Per Customer
• Good Onl' At Powell's Supormoritet
•

'

.

'

:5 LB. BAG

limit I Per Custemtr

.•.

• • • .• •

•

99(

Good 0n1, At Pawll'•
• · Of!tr hpirn Sat. April It, IH6

.

!' • • • •

1m

~

3~
- DAILY
DRAWING
fOR CASH
REIMBURSEMENT

•······coup(li······.

*SPECIAL DRESSES
* MARABOU STOLES
*MITIS
*CRINOLINES

SUMMER

••••••••••••••

1

See Us For Your

ri'~e.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~

.•
POMEORY- Menu and artlvl· will be offered Thursday, 3:30 to 4 dinner, serving from 5 to 6:30p.m.
• ties at the Meigs Cou nty Senior p.m.
!'quare dance begins at 7 p.m..
Citizen Center has bEen announced
Friday, there will be a public concluding at 11 p.m.
lor the coming week.
. - - - - - - - - - - _ : __ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _-!
' On the menu:
•
Mohday - New England Boiled
: Dinner, applesauce, cornbread and
:• :ooney almond cookie.
: • Tuesday - Cook's choice.
OLDMAINE TROTTER S
• Wednesday - Baked steak, ·
T h t&gt;~t" t'J.t P!p liun,lll y cumft u t,tblt&gt; ht•t·I•·J ~.~u~.bl~
:: ·mashed potatoes, peas , ~ pple crtsp.
fn ,rn O ldrmin~ Trotten ~' .m • !oUr&lt;' hi bl·
:. . Thursday - Tuna Rice Casse~~r;:=~i .,..ultr w.1rm weath fr fripnds nu mJitl'r whNr yuu go
. • rote, stewed tomatoes, broccoli
f\ J t·cp UJS.IHuned .md ~C',P UIOt' h lo&gt;,o('~snf l lrJthP!r
mrlke thl'5t' Silnd o~ b d bun thl· tl rd mt~ry
• with cheese sauce. sliced peaches.
: Friday - Barbecue chicken,
~Summer m ~gic- .lv.tiiJHt · nuw in ~ urt•· h &gt;· ft t !.i7rs.
. lima lEan s, pineapple In orangp
: · )ella.
"DIANNA" in
· On the aclivltles schedule:
White,
Nary or IJ'aupe.
The Nutrition Education course
· Tuesday, 11 a.m. will be on Sodium
and tiE Diet.
I'
A Social Security representative
wlll be at the center Wednesday,
9:30 to noon.
. The Bloodmobile will . be at the
'c enter Wednesday, 1:ll lo 5 p.m.
:wu S1~ cond Ave .
• • There wUI IE a square dance
Monday; exercise Class Monday,
1'
Gallipolis, 0 .
a·:30 to 4 p.m.
Ceramics and and exercise class

DRAWING APRIL 26, 1986

VINE RIPENED

Sheriffs
Department.
He recently completed a
course ollnstntctlon
In crlmlnallnvesllgatlonttrough
lhe Ohio IUghway Patrol. It has taken Manley Mme
lour years to accumulate his coDectlon of colorful
shoulder patches.

Going To ·
The Prom?

, ·,

:: Meigs Senior Center activities named

WHIRLPOOL
CLOTHES
WASHER

'

Center lor the J188118 years, lonnerly was with the
Middleport Pollee Department and the Meigs

Do have a nice week.

l.

. ,r.-; '
.. ••

••••••••••••••

In the rose department we have
Nancy and Ed Neutzling who
, , recently.celebrated their a&gt;th wed·

i·

SIGN UP
AND WIN.

Beef .Liver ••••~~ •••.••• ·S.9(
'

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

OVP Comspondent
I have beeit under the Impression
.
•: . that the red light "i;:1:ti~1!1rt'
: . on Nye Ave.. (be- ll
fore you gl!t to the
three way Ugh! on
Main Street\ ml'
ant that you
should stop at the ~
first red light.
However, I have been lnfonned
: ~ that the red light ts simply a
-warning to drivers that a traffic
) ight Is just ahead.
I have been approached by truck
drivers who feel that cars should
stop al the first red light as It gives
truck drivers a wide enough swing
off of Main onto Nye to not cause
truck drivers any problems and
would aid other motorists In not
having to pun over or back up.

To Show Our
Attreelatlon.

lhe city of Barre, Wa&amp;hlngton Coumy, Vt. Manley,
employed with security allhe Athens Mental Health

At••

Sealnd

POMEROY -The Meigs County
Tuberculosis office will he conduct·
lng a community skin testing clinic
at the fire hall In Racine Monday
fr:om 4:lJ.G:ll p.m.
Joan Tewksbury, RN .. will give
the skin tests and urges all area
residents, Including food handlers
for churches, schools, boosters,
firemen and EMS personnel to take
advantage of this free seNice:
Children who will be en tering
kindergarten may also receive
their required skin tests at this

,•••

!,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~-===:;;:;~~=~=

Give the gift of life

-.

12 OZ. PKG.

SLICED

',Od·

-..

Ser~iee

Gro·und Beef~~ •••.••• 99&lt;

GROWING ":' 1be hobby of Raymond Manley,
Mlcldleport, Is oolledlng shoulder patches of pollee
departments In America and oCher countries Is
growing In leaps IUid beunds. Manley has received
nine patdles and a photograph of a Ioih which has
regulallonlllorblddlng giving an actual patch, to bring
his collection to nearly 500 patches. Latest palches
came !tom New South Wales and VIctoria, Allllralla;
Puerto Rico, Quebec and Toronto, Canada; Falr!lanks, Alaska; Honoluka, Delaware !Kale Pollee, and

:

LB.

le~Jers

will beTuesday,April15 to ZJ, 6:ll glass. wUI be held from. 6:00 't o9:ll
to 8: ll p.m. at 106 Ellis Hall. Those ·p.m., Tuesday and Thursdays.
attending will make birds, flowers, reginnlng April 15 continuing · to
complex figures and wall hangings. June 5, at Byard Street Glass ShOp.
For those Interested 1n deslgnlnjt An advanced glass blowing class·
and constructing a . stained glass will also be held at the same time
panel, an Introduction to stained and location.
.
A beginnlngwatercolorclasswllt
be held Mondays, April 14 to May
,
~· 7_}o 9 p.m.. at 503 Selgtred.
t!Firtalentsshould be utlllzedtothe~.ratlim deadline for beginner.
maximum.
and advanced tole painting is April.
Do you need a carpentet? Yard 14.
;
Man ? Baby Sitter? Someone to
For information or registration;
drive t&gt;r you? Or someone to live contact the OU office of Contlnutni
in ? Call 446-7000 and speak to the Education, Memorial Auditorium~
.bb Counselors for more tnforma- Athens, or call (6!4l 594-6876.
tion.

. J b Bank '.1$ avadable
,

•

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

ATHENS- Space Is sill! avalla·
ble·ln several of the Communlverslty's evening art classes, Including
Japanese origami, stained glass,
glass blowing, watercolor and tole
painting.
Japanese origami, paper folding,

SentOf 0

,
WI •
GRADE A

The Sunday

Ohio-Point Plaasant, W.Va.

8H
Pho11e

Ave .

••6·1•05

Calli pol ia

�Page-8-4-The

13.1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Times-Sentinel

Kindergarten registr~tion planned
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Local School District is announcing ·
plans ·for kindergarten 1111d first
grade registration for the .1986-87
school year.
Parents sboukl register their
child lor kmdergarten or as a new
enrollee In the .first grade (a child ·
who did not attend kindergarten
• lhls year In the Eastern District ) on
the following schedule:
L
All kindergarten entries at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary School
on Friday, Aprtll8, !rom 8: :.1 a.m.
to 3:00p.m. New enrollees, first
graders: at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School, Aprtl 18 !rom
8:30a.m. to 3:00p.m.; J:Uvervlew
Elem~tary, Aprtll8, from 9 a.m.

untn 11 a.m.; Chester Elementary,
Officials of the district are
• stressing lhat It Is very lmPQrtant
Aprtll8, !rom 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Children presenily enrdlled In that all parents ngister their child
kindergarten at Tuppers Plains do according to tbe schedule so lha t
oot nei.od to enroll for first grade.
plans can be completed for fall
classes.
Any diUd whose filth birthday
Parents can direct questions to:
falls on or before Sept. 30, may be
registered !'or kindergarten this .Mrs. Cindy Linter, Tuwers Plains
fall. Any child whose sixth birthday Elementary, 667-3310; Mrs. Debbie
falls on or before Sept. 30, may be Pratt, Chester Elementary, ~
3004, or the bear superintendent,
registered for first grade.
Parents areJo provide at regis- Richard L. Roberts, ~3004. Questratkm immunization lnducllng tions concenilng the avallablllty of
four DPT, four PQUO sabin, one Immunizations should be directed
measles,onereubellaandproofofa to the Meigs County Deparlment r:i
recent tuberculosis skin test, within Health, 992~. or to thl family
one year before ente-lng school. doctor.
The birth certificate also must be
p-ovlded.

Reunion planning

Arthritis class planned

PROCLAMATION - Pomeroy . Mllyor Richard
Seyler took time out Friday lllternoon to sign a
dowment proclaiming Apr1114-18 as tiE Week of tiE
Young Child. Each early chlldhoodeducallon group In
Meigs was represented at the signing. After the
mayor signed the proclamallon, each student added
his or her name to the paper. Pictured are, front from

.Melissa Hart, Carleton School; Eric Richmond, Head
Slari; Seyler; Jessie Uttl~, Tiny Tech; Brittany JW .Walburn, Gingerbread Pre-SchoQI; ( blwk) lnstruclors Dana Kuhre, Carleton; Undai King, Head Start;
Bonnie Baker, Tiny Tech, holding Tyler Uttle; and
Sandy Luckeydoo, Gingerbread Pre-School.

Job's Daughters
schedule meeting
MIDDLEPORT - International
Order of Job's Daughters will meet
Monday. 7:30p.m., at the MlddlePQrt Masonic Temple. Pop cans and
Watkins orders are to be brought ln.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Unit of the Southwestern
Ohio Chapter of the Arthritis
Foundation Is sponsoring a self-help
course designed for arthritics and
those who carb about them, the
knowledge and skUI needed. The
course -is meant to be a help to
people with variOus degrees and
different kinds of arthritis.
· Topics will Include: PQSture,
ambulatiOn aids, correct use of
joints, sex uality, housing - furniture and home safety, house aids,
travel and shopping, sources for
equipment, recreation and leisure
tim e a nd agencies a nd
organtza.t ions.
Classes begin Tuesday, 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. The first will be at
Woodland Centers, the remaining
five on Tuesd ay and Thursdays at
Columbus and southern Ohio
Electric.
Instructors wilt be Margaret
Cook Johnson , physical therapis t
and Betty J. Hairston . RN .

For Information and registration,
contact Jean Houck, 446-H10.

· POMEROY -Reunion plans will
be made at Thursday night's
meetbtg of the Meigs High School
class of 1971 at a meeting to be beld
at Meigs High School. Graduates ci
that class are urged to attend and
contribute to the planning session.

COME SEE WHAT'S NEW!

fJ

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Phone (614) 446-4084
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CARPO SALE
$ 51 800

Includes 100% Dupont

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sq.

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and Normal lnstalliUon.

Yds. ...........

-

April13, 1986

Wolfe - Smith

Goucher-Hall engagement

RIO GRANDE - Dr. and Mrs.
George A. Wolfe, Rio Grande, and
Dr. and Mrs. Ken Kulilk, Colum·
bus, announce the engagemel\t of
their daughter, Cora Jeanne Wolfe,
to Ke:vln Eugene Smith of
Pomeroy.
- Miss Wolfe Is a''graduateof Gall Ia
Academy Hlgh School. She attends
Rio Grande College, majoring In
Elementary Education.
Smith Is a graduate of Meigs Hlgh
School. He Is majoring In Sales and
Marketing at Rio Grande College.
The wedding wtll take place Aug.
2, at Trinity Unltffl Methodist
. Church, Pickerington, Ohio.

GALUPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Sweesy, Ga llipolis. announce
tbe engagement and approaching
marriage of her daughter, Brenda
Goucher, to Brian D. Halt, son of
Mr . and Mrs . James Hall;
Gallipolis.
Miss Goucher attends Kyger

· Color class set
GALLIPOLIS - The final session of Color, a color awareness
class, will meet Saturday, Aprl ll9
or Monday April 21 at the home of
Instructor Vivian Klrket, 64 Ham.
. day Heights.
· Fee Is SJ2 and should Iii' pald to
the Gallipolis Recreation Depart·
ment , 518 Second Ave., to participate. Phone 4&lt;16-17!6 extension 24
for Information.

,,

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COVERING
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lllntlngton, W. Ya.

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COMPLETE KITS
. 1x32-S2350

Can Cope speaker set

;

GALLIPOLIS - The second be lnfonnatkm on the diagnosis and
session of I Can Cope will hc treatment of cancer; outcomes of
Monday, 7 p.m. In the second floor canrer treRtmen t; patlPnl followclassroom of Holzer Medical Cen· up and rehabilitation, both physical
ter. It Is jointly sponsoml by the and phycosoclal
hospital and the Gallla County Unit
The class Is designed for peopl~
of the American Cancer Society. with canrer and their families. and
Featured speaker will be Dr. Lewis Is conducted by health care profesA. Schmidt Ill. on Learning More slonals. for lnfonnation, contact
• About Cancer.
Mi!ry Harrison, RN, at 446-5247 or
Kay Allbright, BS In social work at
Included In the presentation will 146-!i-1225. The•course is tree.

LifestV1e

by

0

AND

HOURS 9 :30-6 MON. -FRI.: SAT. 9:30 -2

POMEROY - Larry Edward
Klein and Norma Jean Hysell,
Pomeroy, are
announcing
their
forthcoming
marriage
tq be,held
on
June 'l/ at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness · Church. The
ceremony will be open-church.
Klein is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Klein, Minersville. He
gradl\aled from Meigs High School
and Is employed by Blue Streak Cab
C'o. in Pomeroy.
Miss Hysell , daughter of Mr. and

HOLIDAY POOLS - Ph. 304-429-4788

'
Mrs.

Norman E. Hysell, is a
graduate of Pt Pleasant Bible

Spring Sale
•Spring
Sportswear

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
John 3exton of Danville are announcing the marrta~e on March 29
ot their son, John Jr . to Helena
Huffer, Bremen, Ind.
The bride is the daught er of Mrs.
Lull a Huffer, Bremen, Ind. and the
!at&lt;" Tex Hnfl~r. Attendants for the
coup!~ were Margaret Nichols and
John &amp;-xton Sr.
The ceremony took place In
Napp.~nce, Ind. where the groom Is
emPQyed. They will reside In
Bremen,

including John Meyer, J.H .
Collectiblas, Tan Jay, and
Bleyle, in a rainbow of linen
colors.

.
fl;-•

.ghaw

95
FOR $29

AI ADY!ani!D
ON THE

PHl DONAHUI
SHOW

OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30. 1986.

'.'

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45 STATE STREET-GAUIPOLIS
HOURS 10:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.

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3 piece
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IT LETS ME CiET CLOSE TO LIFE.

: Tackett anniversary observed

~

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Wedding
announced

Mr. and Mrs. Melburn Tackett

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Brenda Goucher
Brian D. Hall

Norma Jean Hysell
Larry Edward Klein .

Cora Jeanne Wolle
Kevin Eugen~ Smith

including London Fog and
Misty Harbor.

SPRING VAllEY PLAZA
529 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, ON.

Creek Hlgh School.
·
.·
Hall ts a graduate of Kyger Creek
High School and Buckeye Hills
Career Center. He Is employed by a
local auto dealer.
The wedding will take place May
16 at Chapel Hill 01Urch d Chrtst,
Gallipolis.

FREE SOLAR COYER w/ln·Ground
SWIMMING POOL KIT or SPA INVOKED IN APRIL

Boring - Mills
POMEROY - The open church
· wedding of Robin M. Boring and
Thomas D. Foreman will tak&amp;
place Saturday, AprU i9, at 1 p.m.
at the Rejoicing Life Baptist
Church In Middleport.
The bride-elect Is the daughter ci
' Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills, Baum
Road, Pomeroy. He Is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Foreman,
Mason, W.Va.
The Rev. ·Michael Pangia wUI
perform the double ring ceremony
following a program of music by
Soloist, Karen Foreman, sister-In·
law of the prospective grooM,
Charleston, W.Va., an~ pianist and
guitarist Walt McWIII,IIims, Akron.
Marylu Riley of Portsmouth will
serve as ·matron of honor for her
sister. Rick Gaul of Middleport , will
be the best man.
A reception will be held at the
Senior Citizens Center ,following the
· wedding.

'

~

"ROLL POWER" Ill STOCK, REIDY FOI DEUVEIY
SESSION SET - Speaker Dr. lewis A. Schmidt ill, of Holzer
Medical Center and Clinic staffs, uses the anatomical torso In a recent
lecture. He wW address the topic ol cancer In the second session of I Can
Cop&lt;!: Monday, 7 p.m. at Holzer Medleal Center.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-5

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

GALLIPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Melburn Tackett were given a 25th
anniversary dinner and reception
March 00. at Camp Francis AsbUI)'.
The dinner was preparffl and
served by friends and relatives.
Prayer was given by Rev. Pl'arl
Casto.
They were married Easter Sun·
day April 2, 1961, at Patriot United
Methodist Church by the Rev.
Frank D. Fenton , who sent a card
read aft er dinner, along wit h those
from out of town relatives. A poem
was read by Jane Ann Miller, niece
of the couple. Music was provided
by nk'ces Dorothy Lu Miller.
aecompanled by Carrie Miller on
the accordion.
Refres tunents and cake, baked

by Rohcrtn Shriver was st&gt;rved to:
Jeff and Keif h Davies; Gloria and
Brent Davies; Ronnle 1 Anna, Rick
and Dtanna Pollock; Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Davies and daughter; Ruth
Burnette: John Burnette; Gary,
Mary, Justin and Shannon Fallon;
Bobby, Mary and Krlsty Crews;
Rev . Peart and Gladys Casto; Hope
and Buell Burnett; Ronnie, Cindy,
Jay J:X&gt;e, Raymond, Tanya and
Donnie Cochran; Ann Adkins; Jean
Beck.
Pat and Ketll Beth Elliott ; Lisa
Beck; John Gloss; Larry, Sheryl
and Rashel Fallon; Faye Fraser:
Garnet Jones; Mike and Chris
Pollock; Charles Cochran ; Roberta
and Sasha Shriver: Lewis, Ja ne
Ann, Carrie se'th and Dorothy Lu
Vllller.

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I

~-B-6-The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

April13,1986

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

]ames Sands:

Community cale,ndar /area happenings
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Allan Osborne
wUI be singing at Christ United
Methodist Church, Sunday, 10: 30
a.m.

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Lions
meet '!Uesday, 6:30p.m., Oscars:
election of &lt;tncers.
·

GAJ,.LIPOLIS - A Peek at
Nature'• Bt6omers. "1ldllower
walk, spon~red by 0,0. Mcintyre
Park District wUI be Sunday. 2
p.m., Racroon Creek County Park.
Meet In • apple orchard by park
office.

01UI'Ch.

LECTA -Rev. Earl Hinkle leads
Bible Study at · Walnut Ridge

TI!URMAN - Revival begins
Sunday, Vega United Methodist
, . Church, continuing through April17
~: with Rev. Merrill Kanouse; serv\:.::: ces 7:30 p.m. nightly.
~

· McCormick
:.
welcome. Road. All memebers

:
•
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DISCOVER AMERICA 1986
ANNUAL TRAVEL SHOW

I'

Students of yesteryear corresponded with author

By James Sands
Special CoiTespondenl
GALLIPOLIS - Some readers
wUI no doubt remember from their
school days observ'ances llke Washington's birthday, Lincoln ' s
birthday, and Arbor Day, but
:: school children
: 100 years ago also
·: celebrated Long·
:; fellow 's Day,
:• Emerson's Day and Whlttler's Day.
-: On these days programs were
. ;organized to famlll arl7.e the student
;. with the works of a particular
·' American writer. We have before
·: us the newspaper account of
': Whittier Day held In the Gallipolis
. Public Schools In 1881.
' "The training necessary to bring

out the tun meaning of the poet's
dream, the beauty of Its language,
Its terseness, originality and sweet·
ness, makes an everlasting Impressio n on the young mind, creating a
love for the beautiful In all !)lings, a
desire to know more of the
pernonallty and an unconsdous
desire to Imitate the virtues of the .
great one whose lines are analyzed
like a !Eautlful flower-picked apartleaf, stem, petal, closely !'Crutlnlzed
and Indelibly fixed .
For weeks, !XIPIIS and teac hers
have worked to perfect the programme to hold Whittier up to the
light. A talented young-lady of the
High School had written a beautiful
and appropriate poem to Whittier
at his home In Danvers, Mass. and
received In reply an autographed
letter from the white haired

'

Holiday Inn
Gallipolis, Ohio

1\1188 Merriman's poem was sent
to the poet John Greenleaf Whittier
and he responded to the poem of
Nell:
"! thank thee for a copy of your
graceful little (llem Intended for the
Gallipolis Public School celebra tion. Whlle wishing I could feel t.hat
I better deserved Its kJJid words, I
am none the less grateful for them .
In the late afternoon of !Ue It is
pleasant to be remembered by
those whose faces are bright with
the morning. With every good wlsh
for thee, I am very truly, thy
friend." - JOHN G. WHITI1ER

SUmmers, .Julia Phelps . and of
course Miss Merriman.
One student Lucie Walker also
b und some of Whittier's works that
had been IJJ!Iti musiC for the school
choir n sing: "See How Lightly" ,
"Our Hearts Are Light" , and "Seed
Time and Harvest".
Several of the poet's essays and
poems were read by the students as
well.
Whittier. who was born In 1007 ,
died In 1892, some l1 ~ - after
writing to the students at Ga"!.lllX&gt;ils.James San'/' ~ddr~ss.ls..~ North
Buckeye, Crooksville, Ohio .

Whittier also wrote a Jetter to the
principal of Gallipolis High School
Mr. J .H. Phillips In which Whittter
thanked the school lor remem!ErJng his oorks : "I wish, for their
sake, they were better tn a literary
(lllnt of view, but I trust they will
find them loyal to truth and duty,
freedom and charity."
Some of the students who partie!·
paled In the Whittier Day assembly
were: Lucie Walker. Anna Warth,
Clarrn oe Bryan, Clara Caverlee.
C.E. Graham , Katie Sheriff, Lewis
Shaw, Allee Atkinson, Ora Hebeard, Lizzie Weimar, Vadle

Age, youth, and beauty tum to
quaff
Sweet draugllts of pleasure from
thy hand:
Thy healthful stream of know!·
edge flows
.
So rich, so full thrcughout the
land
From neath the Muses' thrcne.

REGISTER TO WIN ONE OF THESE THREE
PRIZES FOR YOUR PROM NIGHT:
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3rd prize: Free Corsage For Your Date

COl&lt;. I:&gt; IN ~ SN\"[)fl&lt;.
fUI&lt;.NITURf CO.

Thurs., May 1, 1986

American poet." !Gallipolis
Journal I
'llle young student who wrote tlr2
poem to ~!t iler was . Nell Merriman who I ter llved with her two
sisters Ett and Daisy In the oouse
we featur today on, First Avenue
and Locust Street. That particular
house was begun about 1B79 ~
. Captain James McClurg who also
bull! the house next door at about
the same time.
Miss Merriman's poem begins:
"One simple offering I would Jay
Upon the altar of thy fame.
A single leaf entwlne·amld
The laurel wreath that decks thy
nameWhittier our own.

For the erring toou hast spoken
Words of courage and of cheer:
On thy downcast sorrowing
brotlr2r
Thou hast lavished many a tear
Of human sympathy."

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Canopy Swing ............................. S199
Sofa Glider .................................. SJ99
loveseat Glider ........................... s14 S
Ottoman ...... ~.................................. $4 S
End Table (whitt or vanilla) " .............S4S

romance and adventure.

SYRACUSE - Carleton Church
· on Kingsbury Rd. will have a week
~ long revival beginning Sunday
: evening at 7:30 p.m. with Rev.
·• David Curfman, pastor, speaking.
: Special singing will be featured
: each night. The public Is Invited.

MONDAY
'v1NTON - Revival services
with Rev. Tim Nelson, and Henry
and Hester Eblin singing, begins
Monday at Pine Grove Holiness
Church. Services begin at 7:30p.m.

advantage of this tree service.
Children 'who wUI be entering
kindergarten may also receive
their required skin tests at thls

~to 6:ll p.m. Joan
~a~t;tbe~flre;;h;all~ln;Ra~c;tn;e~oo;Mo;;nd;;ay;;;;;llrEm~~en~a~n~d~E;M~S~pe;rso;nn;
' ;el~to~t;a~ke~;t;im;e;.;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;~

PARK
TOURS
You are cordially invited for a taste of

RUTLAND - There wUI be a
dance Sunday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., at
Rutland Ell Dennison Post 467 of
the American Legion with music by
the Lone Wolf Band. Donations at
• the door wilt be $2 per person. The
: dance is spon~red by the Sons of
: : the American Legion.

Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
POMEROY
- fora
Preceptor
Beta
Sorority
will meet
tea, Sunday,
4: 30 p.m., at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. The exemplar
degree will be given to the newly
fanned Gamma Epsilon Chapter
XI of Bet a Sigma Phi.

home of lrene Browning: silent
GardenCiubmeetsTuesday,lp.m.
auctlonl·
.

Tewksbary, RN, wur be giving the
skin tests and urges an· area
l'!l$1dents, Including food handlers
lor churches, schools, boosters,

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:
:
:
:·

:
••
:
•
.:
•:
:

VINTON -

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Countv
GALLIPOLIS - Women's BoArthritis Self Help course begins . wling Association ooard meeting
Tuesday. Class meets Tuesday and Tuesday, 7 p.m. Columbus and
Thurnday for six weeks. For Southern building. Open meetgin
Information, contatt Jean Houck at follows at 8 p.m.
446-1410.
GALLIPOLIS- Lafayette White
.TI!URMAN - Cardiff Oub Shrine Installation, Tuesday, 7:30
meets '!Uesday, 7:30 p.m., at p.m. Members bring covered dish.
Thurman Church . Program, slide
pr~entation, by Bess Grace on
Public dinner
Wales. RefreshmentsbyThurman.
POMEROY -The Senior CitiGa Dipolls, Rio Grande mempe!J\. , . zens Center will ·have a public
· ·dinner oo AprillB with serving from
GALLIPOLIS - Interested pro- 5 to 6:30 and a dance from 7: 30 to 11
pte soould meet to plan the 50th p.m. Chicken and ooodles will be
anniversary reunion of Gallia served along with rolls. and slaw.
Academy High School, '!Uesday, 7 Dessert will be extra. Play1ng for
thP dance will betheStringDusters.

LECTA - Rev . Ernest Baker
will be at Walnut Ridge Church In
Sunday services.

·:; GALLIPOLl&lt;; - Field orienta·
· ~ tlon for American Legion Auxiliary
• Is Sunday, 2 p.m ." post home on Bob

Sldft le!IIDC clinic
RAC1NE - The Meigs .County
Tubercubsls ofl!ce wW be oooouct·
VInton Frkmdshlp . lng a community sldn testing clinic

p.m, home of BettyMcGtnness,449
First Ave.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B· 7

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

. ~pril13. 1986

.

oyd/Fiandsrs
~~;~~~~~~~7~:0~0~p~.m~.~to~9;:0;0~;~[~~~~~::::;:~~~~~9~5~5
446-1171 ~Se~c~o~nd~A~ve~-~~~!~
Golllpolls, Ohk
11

THIS HOUSE, located at First Avenue and l1lcust Sl., was bunt by
: , Capt. James McClurg In 1B'l9.

.· .

In the service

Marks
Sgt . John E. Marks, son of
•:Delmar R. and Helen K. Marks of
&gt; Rural Rllute 1, Ewlngton, has been
: decorated with the Army Achleve-: ment Medal at Fort Stewart, Ga .
:- The Achievement Medal Is
::awarded to soldiers for meritorious
&lt;service, acts of courage, or other
:·accomplishments.
• Marks is a sq uad leader with the
• :24t h Infantry Division.
: · He is a 1974
of VInton
: -County High
McArthur.

:

--- -

GALLIPOLIS- Citizens Against
: : Pornography meet s Monday, 7:30
: . p.m., Buckeye Rural Electric
:. building.

Drawing will be held May 16. No pur~hase
necessary. Need not be present to wm.

p eted a combat engineer course at
the U.S. Anny Training Center at
Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
During the course, students were
trained In the techniques of road
and bridge buDding, camouflage
and demolition. They also received
Instruction ln combat squad tactics
as well as In the use of infant ry
weapons.
He is a 1900 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, W Va.

Let Haskins-Tanner share in your special
evening. Stop by and see our Prom Win dow Display. and make your Tuxedo selec·
tion now.
).

S28

95
Prices Start At
Our 50 styles to choose from.

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second, Gallipolis

LOSE WEIGHT OR QUIT SMOKING

PATRIOT ~ Revival begins
Monday at Patriot Church of God.
Evangelist Amos Wll~n. Services
7:30 p.m.

With a single 90 minute group session . Without h111ger or cr-avings. You can, too. When olher methods cost too much. Or have
failed. Stress Management, Self Esteem, Nail Biting and In·
somnia help included.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty. will
. meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the rome
of Mrs. Ruby Marshall .

. ... .. ....

l'

NOTHING TO BUY - NO IESERVAnONS
Helps you control stress and feel good about yourself. Right
away. Renowned Hypnotist MILTON H. BORTZ has been featured
in many talk shows and newspaper articles.

St. louis Cotholic Church

POMEROY- The regular meet·
Jng of the Disabled American
Veterans will be held Monday, 6:30
p.m., at the post home. 124
. Butternut Ave, Pom·eroy. All
., membl'rs are urged to attend .

4th &amp; State Sts.
DOWNTOWN GAlliPOLIS
Millar Siminars, Inc.

Thursdoy, April 17
LOSE WEIGHT 6 P.M.
· QUIT SMOKING I P.M.
Only 135/Stssion

PINE VALLEY

NUIUII GUll. DWIIU

COLLECTION

'•
TUESDAY
. GAL LIPOLIS - Ga llipol is Ro·
·: tary ml'l'ts Tuesday, 6 p.m., bown
·. Under.
•

'

:\Quirks -in news

FOR ONE WEEK .ONLY, APRIL 14-19

, HONG KONG iUPII -A man
• whO blamed his uncontrollable
: right thumb for repeatedly pinch·
: Jng women's buttocks was jaDed for
·, nlne months for indecent assault .
.&lt; Cheung Yunfuk, 33, said hf' had
, · not been able to control hls
:; wayward thumb since chU~hood. In
·: response to charges that he had
· pinched a woman's buttocks while
: soliciting tips for opening taxi doors
: outside a busy subway station.
: • On St. Valentine's Day, Cheung
: : allegedly pinched a woman's left
·• buttock as she entered a tdxi. One
:: month later, Cheung repeated the
; offense against the same woman
• and was apprehended by the police.
: The magistrate said Thursday
~ that Cheung, who has six similar
:l prevlous convictions and was de·
::cJared to be of sound mental health,
··would be given nine months
: Imprisonment as "the best cure for
: tlis afOictions."

•
lJ

-

......

.

STYLE, ANY SIZE, IS WORTH Sl OO-S200
JOWARD THE PURCHASE OF ANY NEW
LA-Z-lOY CHAIR. CHOOSE FROM ROCKER
. RECLINERS, WALL RECLINERS AND
SWIVEL ROCKERS. DON'T HESITATE, FOR
ONE WEEK ONLY YOUR OLD CHAIR IS
__WORTH Sl 00 TO S200.

1

·• LONGVIEW, Texas iUPii - A
-;Longvlew·area- man who-rE
· oeen,tly--·1
_'bought an egp;-shapE:d sapphlre for
·$100 from a man who did oot know
: the value of what he had Friday
,said he expects the gem -to bring
'·him at least $1.75 million.
:: The man, who has asked to
"reellain anonymous for security
::reasons, spoke to r£1)orters by
,)elepooneduring a news conference
' ·Friday Ina Longview jewelry store.
: He said bought the natural star
:sapphire at a rock srow In thP
-western United States from a "rock
:hound who didn't know what he
'had."
: ·nw man claims the gem 1s the
:world's largest star sapphire and
1hat the Gemological Institute of
''America Inc. has called II "prlce:Jess." The stone has a six-legged
~tar efferl and Is a pale violet color.
: The man said he planned to sell
;the stone and a good starting price
-would be $1.15 milllon.
; "When It reaches a price I can't
;turn down, I'D sell it," he said.

:Gilkerson
··; Army Private Tracy. D. Gllker·
:son, !iln of Hilda L. Moore of Rural
:Route 2. Wayne, W.Va., has
·tnmpieted basic training at Fort
:pix, N.J.
: • During the training, student s
·1-eceived Instruction In drill and
: ~remonles , weapons, map read:f!g, tactics, military courtesy,
·uulltary justice, first ald. and Army
;!)!story and ·traditions. ·
: His wife, Rhonda, Is the daughter
·r:i Her!Erl Lambert of Rural Route
Chesapeake.

SPECIAL SALE HOURS
MONDAY-SATURDAY 9-5
CLOSED AT NOON THUR$DAY

If IT'S ALA-Z-BOY, WE'~E 80T IT

.

•

.:~wimnastics
•

'

•

••

•.

.

-

~--

-.

'

$799.

ManJ Other Three,
File &amp; Seven
Piece Sets To

•tt•••

PUIS AJDID IONUS! Fr ..
...... Sttri-t• .. Niftht..C.

Choose From.

OniiiOIOOI wntS fiKID '10M IS"

LIVING ROOM
Over 60 Suites
In Stock!

ALL 011 SAl£!

ITE SALE!

Now!=
Save on Gibson
"Peace of Mind"
Refrigerator

•EARLY AMERICAN
•TRADITIONAL

oCOUNTRY
•MODliN

ALL ON SALE!

......... ........ .. ~ · nl

-II' •••
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,..,
F. .. oe.Br

I'' I Pet. 2:22 ). was ahtc to fulfill the law of Moses which req uired

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

•fiord • f•nt.,r
, qu•lftr •nd r•lu•R•dtuon Dr

llliiiliJ

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.

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-·--·· ··-....---·- - ~ ·

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

4.- Redemption: This word signifies the payment of a ransom so as Jo

one out of ~lavery or bondage . It expresses the deliveran ce oF one out
uf the h~m Q_agc of sin and the wrath of God, through the vicarious death of
bu~·

l'hl'ist : I l1crci'orl'. Christ

has been made our redemptliJii: Byredemptlon.

the purchased possession of God . Serving God faithfully to the
end . we will rccc1vc eternal life.
Gr11uinc union. with all its blessings. is not of man but of God, and is
provided for us thwugh Christ. Being united in Christ and recipients of
! ht'Sl' hJcs.., ings. we will "glory ir1 the Lord. " Glorying in Christ will protect
ll\ from murmuring and ingrati1Ude, will motivate a happy and cheerful
attitude . will inspire us to worship in spirit and truth, and will encourage
us In tight triumphant ly asainst si n. We will "glory,., the Lord" in word
and in deed. doin~ ail in Hts name (Col. J: 17).
For Ff!e Bible Correspondence Cours~, Write ...
\\ t: hc t'll mc

&lt;

t.t ...,. h~ll
)II Iiili I ~ .

$139.

Chapel Hill Church of Chris!
Bul a vlll e Road • P , 0 . Bo• 308

·7.-,YALLIPOLIS - The final six·

..

~

perfc('t obedie-nce (Gal. 3:10;13). "being made u curse fo r us " (Gal. J :IJ).
Hi.\ perfect obedience and the perfect sacrifice provide the n"ghteousne:u
fur us. When we, through fai th. accept Christ as our r;ghteousne.Js and fi~e
&lt;I L't"nrd ing tn God's will . wc .)vill be able to be like Him m righreousne.ss.
.l ·Sanellncalion: Purification and mnsecratio'r are set forth in this
word . In Jmrijicutiu, , th e heart and life are made hofy. In consecration,
, thq arc s t•l tlport for the service of God. To be sanctified. we must be new
l'l"t·:1turrs in Christ {2 Co r. 5: 17), partaking of the divine nature, escaping
th ~ L'orruption th:.~t is in the world through lust (2 Pet. 1:3). As new
lTt'&lt; ltllrl· ~ in Christ. we . with a pure heart and life, are set apan to God so
&lt;I \ to walk in the newness of life. Our heart, soul , and body are devoted to
Gmi.

:}3utcher

742-2211

~~

He h. 4:

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~

-~,_ _ ...

r~. • ~t - lf" .. .,.,

ufk r the . , ;u:riticell to atone for sins. Christ , the sinless one (2 Cor. 4:21 ;

1.

:: Army National Guard Private
·Lawrence D. Butcher fl , son of
·:i.awrence D. Butcher of 2951 Poplar
:Fork Road, Winfield, W.Va., an d
·llarbara Butcher of 307 Upper
f.Uver Road , Gallipolis, has com·

o~:,

1.· Wisdom: Paul uses Jhe word Jo express the knowledgeofGod's plan,

Gat ..1:22J. Why? Because no one was able to keep the Jaw of Moses and to

.., ...

.,. . ,........,,, ....,.. , nt ._~,.- • &lt;!Mallln.r

/'f 'di'IIIJ11ion . What Christ is to us, we arc in Hi m11 hi1..·h had bt-cn hidden at one time. in providing sa lvation for all by the
dl':llh of Christ , "/u him un' hid u/1 lht' treasures of wisdom ancl know·
fedt.:t•" (Col. 2:J}. In Christ\ life. teaching, and atonement , the wisdom of
God o,; h in c~ brightl y. Christ. the author or ct'ernal salvat ion (Heb. 5:9) and
till i ~hcr nf our ta ith (Hcb . 12:2) , is the key that opens our understanding to
th1..· my,tcry of God . making us wu,. in the knowledge of God unro salva·
ti1111 . In light of rhi ~ knowledge. we learn what we must do to be saved and
th t• lik we must pursue to fcmai n in the fellowship of God. Having our
tn i nd ~ n.:ncwcd by the knowledge of Christ, we will have more wisdom. be
\\ i ~t·r. ;md have a l'lrJSt'r tmitm with Him .
2.- Righteousness: This word expresses the quality of beingrigh1 orj1~J!,
wul ll 'llS spelh•d "right..,.ist•neu ... at one time . It denotes the rightmusrteu
ur God being ma nifested in fhrist's deat h, and without Him , there is no
riRhlt•mmH-'J'J. Al l arc sin ners and there is none righteous (Rm. 3:10.23;

,-

~ (.

Dining Group

""'- '"
...rco.lfod.
, ...... ~ pl • .,..., ,.... .... ...~ ......'"*"'"

ENRICHED LIVES
William B. Kugh11
In order for our lives to be en riched with rhe heavenly blessings in Christ ,
Cod h il~ made Christ unto us wisdom. riglue01mress, su,cl~'jicatiqu, and

• Carl Weston Paisley Jr. has
resigned from the W.Va. Army
: f'latlonal Guards, and has joined the
: United States Anny .
· : 'Polsley Is now stationed In
: Aberdeen , Maryland, for his MOS
training as a tank turrent
mechanic .
·: After graduation, Pols ley \\1ll be
stationed In Germany for two
~Years .
• Carl W. Paisley Jr. is the ~n of
, Carl W. Paisley Sr. and Emma L.
:Paisley of Gallipolis. Paisley Is a
l984 graduate of Gallla Academy
: ·!"flgh School and l}uckeye Hills
: Career Center.

II
••
YOUR .OLD CHAIR, ANY CONDITION, ANY

""'" •••rlo·alf'l• "''""" ...,..,,

Mnon, W. V1.

. \ : ,- ..
. 4 Pc. Country
( ~ : :J ·;.l';/_.. ·r- ·.--

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A M''SS11J:(' Frnm Till' Br'hfe...

13041 773-$.592

2nd Sheet

........ ""'-· llldt~
Do!JilH "'"

Wl&gt;ek Women's Swlmnastlcs class
·_&amp;:gins Tuesday, Aprl122, 7:30p.m,
·th(!etlng two days a week. Regis·
:tr'atton fee Is $12 and may be paid by
.;.h~u or In per~n to the GalllpoUs
·tleCreatlon Department, 518 Se·
'rond Ave., Galllpolls. Call 446-1789
extension 24 for information.
·

Gall! polls, Ohio 45631
Sund.y J\1om1nJ1
Blblr Sludy 9rJO

Wot5hlp I01JO
.. .r.--- .

.

...-~. -l
~

Sunday E•~lnap
Wonhlp 6100

WedaadaJt

Radio
"A Me.&amp;aae fhlm

1be Btbleto
Dally•WJEH
ll 1S!ia.m.

waldr " Tht Bible Am"'en"• WowK- TV 13• Sanday11l0 1a.n~.

. I

,,

tiel U1 411

\._ nn"'

Bible Study
7rOOp.m,

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UYI UO.

.MASON FURNITURE CO •.

2nd Stteet

773-5592

W. Va.
•

�Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~Beat of the bend

Gallia Senior Center activities ·announced
-.;. ,,

·:Is fair .time nearing?,
~

By BOB HOEFUCH
'11me&amp;&amp;nUnel Staff
~· Members of the Meigs County
· Fair Board hang
lf_lght ln there for
·
:~ir annual ac·
'tlOii~ staging 1he
,fair 'In August
Jl'~ a year·
round , planning
situation for
.board members for that one big
.week.
: Each 'sprtng the board mo1·es to
•make improvements to the fair·
,:grounds and this year Is no

Kim Blower will chair the fifth
annua l fun run for heart sponsored
by the American Heart Association
and Veterans Memorial HospitaL
The raccfeatures a SK, lOKanda
fun run for kids 12 and under. If you
need infmmalion call Kim at
992-6125. 11tr tun has been set for 9
a. m. on June 7 and we will be
printing aii application and perm is·
sio n slip a litUe lat er.
All area goUers who are Inter·
ested in playing in a Tuesday or
Wednesday evening league are
asked to call Bob Fnrd at 992-~
or the Jaymar Golf Club at !92-6312.
Leagu~ play will start Aprtl ~for
the Tuesday group and Aprtlll for
the Wednesday group. However. do
r a U in now so the leagues can he
organized and ready.

:~xception .

,. The board has ent ered into
·:COntract wit h Bob Thompson for
iJ!xtenslve renovation of the grand·
~land and one of the commercial
~lldings will be reroofed. Th&lt;•n•
-should be a pleasant addition to the
!.grounds this year also. A log cabin
')Yhlch formerly sat on the F'rcd
;-Goeglein proprrty has been given to
Qhe board by Jay HalL It ha s a
'
'
'
;1Ustory and wtll pro1·idc a great
-setting for displays of ant iqmos
.:Whlch are ')lla nned for fair time.
'There wlll he a premium list
{Jeveloped prol'idlng prizes of rib·
·)lons and money for the he,
' 1111tiques displayed and of course,
; there will he ca t£&gt;gories. According
to plans of the fair board, people
' staffing the cabin during the fau·
' will be in old fashioned appareL
· Sounds like a good feature. The log
' cabin will he moved onto the
· grounds In the near future.
: The board has aIso made some
: other changes for the 1~ fa u·.
, Beginning this year, there wil l stlll
be three granges exhibiting and
. they will each receive $75 - it was
· formerly $50.
' The board has decided that all
· livestock can he removed from the
grounds at noon on Saturday, fin al
· fair day- they used to have to he on
: the grounds uniU 4 p.m. All still
exhibits and displays will remain on
· the grounds Wltillhe close of the fair
- the bitter end, that is, and
department heads will be in their
_..,respective buildings from I to 4
p.m. on Sunday, the day after the
fair closes so that people can pirk
up their displays.
In former years, these displays
were removed after 4 p.m. on
Saturday. That plan created traffic
ha2ards and also left nothing on the
grounds for peOple who came to the

GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
menus for the week of April 14
through April 18 at the Senior
Citizens Center, 2ll Jackson Pike.

fair on Saturday nlghtlo see. Thus,
the change.

.•

April 13, 1986

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

are as llUows:
'
.!Physical Fitness, 10:30' a.m.
Monday, Aprll 14 - Chorus, 1·3 ·
Wednesday, Aprll 16 - Vinton
p.m.
Bible Study I p.m.: Card Games,
Tuesday, Aprtl 15 - S.T.O.P·

Bookmobile routes announced .
Meigs County
POMEROY - Bookmobile 86'·
vice in Meigs County Is bmught to
you by the Meigs County Public
Library under contract with the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
Bookmobile Schedule for Monday, April 14: Burllngham (County
Mobile Home Park) , 3:35-4:05;
HarrtsonvUie (Church ). 4:35-5:05;
New Lima Road (1 mi. !lluthofFort
Meigs), 5:15-6: oo: Rutland (Depot
St. I , 6:Ml-7:10.
Bookmobile Scheduk&gt; for Wed·
nesday, April 16: Tupper's Plains
(Lodwick's). 7:25·8: 10: Rlggscrest
Add It ion, 8: 25-8: 55.

Chlldren's Hohne 12: 15·12:30;
Scenic Hills 12:40.12:55: Sun Valley
1:00.1: 35; Pinecrest U().2: 10: Rae·
roon 1raller Ct. 3: Ml-4: 00: Patriot
4: 10.4: 40; Cadmus 4: 50-5: 15; Gallla
5:30-6: 00; Centerpoint 6: 15-6: 30:
Centerville 6: 45-7: 15: Dons Copley
7:40.8: 00.
F'rlday: Senior Citizens Large
Print Day.
Saturday: LeGrande 10:00.10:30;
McGuire 10:35·11: Oil; Northup
11:10.11:30; Rodney 12:00.12:30;
Ewington 1: JO.l: 50: Allee 2:00.
2: 30; VInton 2: 45·3: 30; Morgan
Center 3: 50-4: ID; Cheshire 4: 455:30.

for the week of AIJ'll 14 to Aprtll9.
Monday: Rodney VIllage 3:31).
4: 15; Gallfa Metro Estates 4: JO.
5: 15; Kerr 5: J0.5: 55; Bidwell 6:10.
6:30; Harrisburg 6:40-7:00; Rlo
Grande Estates Vll:8: 10,
Tuesday: Gallla ChriSllan School
1: 45-2: 30; Roush Lane 2:45-3: 15:
Addison 4:1XH:30: Addavllle El.
4: Ml-5: 05; Bulaville '})', Ct. 5: 15·
5: 45; Georges Creek 6: 00.6: 30;
Kanauga 5th Ave. 6:35-7:00; Foster
Mobile Home PI&lt;. 7: 10.7: 30; K&amp;K
1raller Ct. 7: 35-8: 00.
Wednesday: No 'route main ten anre.
Thursday: C.RT.C. 12: ®-12: 15:

1·3 p.iT),
Thursday, Aprill7 - Bible Study,
11-noon: County Council Board of
Trustees, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, April 18 - Art Class . 1·3
p.m.: Craft Mlni·Cout·se. 1·3 p.m.;
Open 'Acllvftles, 7·10 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday- Salmon loaf. au gratin
p:Jtatoes, spinach, wheal bread,
pears.
Tuesday - Ham and beans,
cheese slicks, garden salad, corn·
bread, cru~ hed pineapple in jello.
Wednesday - Meal loaf, sea l·
loped potatoes, kale, spiced apple
ling, whole grain bread, ice cream.
Thursday - F'ried chicken,
noodles, green beans, tomatoes,
wheal bread , cherry cake with
icing.
F'rlday - Swiss steak, mashed
potatoes, glazed carrots, wheat
bread, buMersrolch pudding.
Clu)tce of beverage served with
each meal.

GaUia County

And lteginning Monday you can
cast your vote in the May6(J'imary
election via the absmlee ballot
llte Meigs County Board of

GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubr ary
announces Its Bookmobile schedule

E ler tion.~&gt;

Women] exercise
sessions planned

will even remain open m

•'

FOR THE SUMMER SEASON
I

1986 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN
"Perfeet for Trailer Towing"

Sa turday mornings for the next
lhr&lt;F weeKS!llthal you can vote the
at srnll" ballot. The office will be
open from 9a .m. to monon Aprlll9, .
GALLIPOLIS - Women's Exer26 and May 3 br this type voting in
cise will begin a sfx-weeksesslonon
addition to the regu lar Monday
April 21 for the Monday, Wednesd·
through F'J'lday hours of 8:30a.m. to
say and Frklay 10: 15 a.m. class,
4: .10 p.m. 'i ~r board office Is in the
and on April 22 for the Tuesday and
Masonic Temple b.l Udlng, Mul·
Thursday 7:ll p.m. sessions.
berry Ave., Pomeroy.
Registration fee IS $8 for either
Incidentally, absentee voting reg·
class,
with the morning group
ulations have been relaxed In
paying
an additional room use fee
recent yeat~. You can now cast an
to the lnsbuctor oit the first day.
absentre ballot if you are 62 or
Registration should be mailed or
older: will he absent from the
broughllo the Gallipolis Recreation
county on election day; unable to
Department, 518 Sl!cond Ave.,
vote on election day because of
Gallipolis,
before the first day of
illness or physical ability: in a
class. For informatlon, call446-1789
hospital for medical or surgical
treatment: unable to vote because · extension 24.
of religious belief. or In jail under
sentence for a disdemeanor or
awaiting trial on either a rnlsde·
menaor or felony . There aret\\0 or
GALLIPOLIS - The final ses·
three ·categortes there that I hope
slon of Danceaeroblcs for winter
you don't fall Into.
·
wlll be held Monday, Wednesday
and ~"rlday, 9 a.m., beginning April
We will rrove into daylight
21. and Tuesday and Thursday at
savings lime on the final Sunday of
5:ll and 6:30p.m., continuing for
this rronlh. When your clock strikes
six weeks.
2 a.m., It will, In fact, he 3 a.m. 1
Registration Is $12 for rrornlng
forgot to find out what you do If you
class, plus room use fee; and$10for
don't have a clock that strikes. I
evenings. Mall or bring In fee to the
tl\ink you )lst keep smlllng.
Gallipolis Recreation Department,
518 Second Ave., before the first
class. Call446-1789 extension 24, for
Information.

•Silverado Pkg.

Danceaerobics set

•Dual Air

•Power Windows
•Power Door Locks

•H.D. Trailer Pkg.

•454 Engint

Sports

'limes· ientmet

April 13, 1988

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AUGUSTA, Ga. iUPII - Nick Price of South
Alrlca shot the lowest round in the history of the
Masters Saturday, firing a 9-under-par 63 that
brought him from the back of the pack to within ooe
shot of front· runner Seve Ballesteros.
As Prk:e was making history over the Augusta
National Golf Club, Tom Watson, Jack Nicklaus and
Ben Crenshaw all jumped Into contention to brew up
the possibility for one of the great tournaments In the
Masters' half century of existence.
Price bogeyed the opening h:lle and then set a
tournament record by making 10 birdies. He
naJTO)IYly missed another birdie at the final hole when
his 25-fool pull spun all the way around the hole herore
silting on the Up. That left him at 5- under 211 for 54
holes.
Ballesteros opened the day ai S-under and moved to
.6-Wlder through seven holes - recording a birdie at
the par-5 second and !llaklng pars the rest r:1 the way.
4-WJder par
· At 4-under came Crenshaw, the Masters champion
two years ago who was 2-under for the round, and
first-time competitor Donnie Hamrrond, who began
the day at even par and had birdied rourof the 13 holes
he had played.
Watson and Nicklaus were both :!-under through 12
boles, as was defending champion Bernhard Langer
and Mark McCumber- who recorded an eagle all he
second hole.
Price, whose only American victory came In the
World Series of Go~ In 1983, took advantage of
outstanding scoring conditions. There was almost no
wind to stir the pines and temperatures stayed on the
mild side under c loudy skies.
The four -year veteran of the American lour had
given no hint early In the week lltal he was on the
verge of such a performance.

Price opened the tournament wllh a 79 and seemed
on the way to mlssing lhe cut, just as Curtis Strange
haC! it year ago before almost winning the event.
Price rebcunded wllh a 69 and made the cut by a .
shot - needing a 2-under 34 on the back nine of the
second round to do It .
Then he began the third round with a bogey to fall
·back to 5-over foy"the tournament.
·
'iY
He bltiited the ;;econd, fifth, sixth and eighth to
make the tum In 33 and then birdied the first four
ooles on the back nine. That put him at 7-under forthe
round, needing one more birdie to lie the course
record and two to break It.
He got the first birdie at the par-5 15th, laying up
short of the pond In front of the green and then hilt lng
a wedge to within five feet. AI the dangerous par-3
16th, ftice's tee soot hllln the mtddleofthe green and
then began torundownoneoflheslopesthat make the
Augusta National's putting surfaces so dlHicult.
The ball ttickled and lrtckled until It rested no more
than two feet from the hole. That birdie put him on
course for the record .
He parred 17 and then put his lee sbol on tbe par-4
18th left or the fairway. Price hit an excellent
approach shot and from 25 rt&gt;el almost recorded
another birdie.
Beats mark
Price beat the mark of64 first shot In 1940 by Lloyd
Mangrum and equaled In 1965 by Nicklaus, 1974 by
Maurtce Benbridge, 1975 by Hale Irwin, 1978 by Gary
Player and 1979 by Miller Barber.
~Ice's 10 birdies broke the record or nine set by
Mangrum and later tied by Player and Bob Gilder.
"I bogeyed the first hole and never kloked back,"
said Price moments after he finished his round . "I
wanted to make that last pun. I wanted to shoot a 62."

NEW COURSE RECORD - Nick Prtce

•3-spd. Auta. Trans.

And Much,
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For FlEE Catalog

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Complies with minimum standard laws effective 7-1-82
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Price carded a 9-under for the roWld to set a nerw
course reronl of 63 and put him at live-mder for the

tournament, just one stroke behind leader Steve
Ballesleros. UPI.

•

Junior Womeit's Club last year, Is locatedjmi ~~Ohio
NEW POOL AHEAD OF SCHEDULE - GallipoAvmue, across from the Galllpolls Developmental
lis' new $607,000 municipal swimming pool, Wider
Cente~'s Administration Building ( sho.m In back·
constuctlon since March Ill, Is !ilill ahead~ schedule.
ground), on land owned by the dly lhal was mcepart
'Ibis ~ was taken last week siMiwlng worker.;
' ~the GalllpoUs GoU Course. O!llclals hopetohavelhe
welding steel frames for the deep end. 'l1le pool, a
pool in operallon by Ute ftrsl ol August.
reality because ol the drlvln~ foree ~ the GaDipolls .

PfiTSBURGH iUPII - Johnny
Ray saw Lee Smith's Q. 0 pit ch
coming in fast and low Saturday
and realized he couldn't afford to
watch It pass through his favorite
·hilling zone. It was a good deciSion.
"He can he so overpowering. He' s
gilt a fastba ll that goes over 00 miles
an hour and a good slider. When you
gel one in your zone, you've got to
try and hit II ," Ray said after hitting
a three-run home run with two out
In the eighth to lift the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a l-1 victory over the
Chicago Cubs.
It was the victory In three games
this season for lhr rebuilt Pirat es
and the first major-league win for
their rooki e managN .. ! Jim
Leyla nd .
Ray's homer, which sailed over
the right-field wall. also scored
Rafael B&lt;&gt;lllard and .Joe Orsulak.
Belllard was pinch· running for
pinch-hitter Steve Kemp, who
started the rally with a one-out
walk. Orsulak hit a two-out single
off the pitching hand of Smith , IJ.L
The ra lly made a winner of Rick
Rhoden, who left the ga me for
Kemp trailing 1·0 despite a strong
efghl ·innlng performance. Rhoden
gave up four hil s - Ihree singles
and a solo fourth·lnning homer by
l.l'On Durham - and two walks. He
struck out fiv e.
Cecilia · Guanre retired three

straight in the ninth to earn his !f51
save of the year.
. . Phlls 9 Mels S
Meanwhile, in another National
League game Sarurday afterroon,
Steve Jelfz 's bases loaded s ingle
gave the Philadelphia Phillies a
C:ome-from·hehlnd 9-8 victory over
the New York Mets. New York had
taken an g. 7 lead going Into the
bcllom of the 13th but the Phlls lied
the game on a bases loaded walk to
Von Hayes which plated Mike
Schml~l who had led cif the inning
with a single.
During the five hour marathon
affair, the Phlls who rallied to tie
the game with three runs In the
ninth btnlng left ID mffi on base.
Charlie Hudson was the winning
pitcher while Randy Nieman was
charged with the loss.
Indians 6 Tigers 2
In Cleveland, Joe Carter and
Brook J acoby cracked two-run
homers and reliever Ernie Cama·
cho survived a bases-loaded scare
In lhe cighlhinningSaturd ay to help
the Cleveland Indians snap a
three-game losing streak with a 6-2
victory over the Det roll Tigers.
Ken Schrom , 2-0, went six
Innings-plus for the victory. Cama·
cho notched his second save by
striking out four batters In the ninth.
Jac k Morris took the loss.
With Cleveland ahead J.O in the

seventh, Darrell Evans singled and
Alan 1rammell hit his t!rs1 bomer,
knocking out Schrom .
Cleveland reliever Dickie Noles
walked Ul ve Collins to lead off the
e ighth, bringing in Camacbo. Lou
Whitaker doubled, sending Collins
to tllird, and Kirk Gibson then was
inlrntionally walked. The threat
died as both Lance Parrish and
Evans popped up and 1rammeli
forced Gibson at second.
In Cleveland 's half ct the dghth,
Carter singled and st ole second
before Jacoby's homer. Pal Tabler
followed with his first h:lmer, oH
reliever Willie Hernandez.
Cleveland took a Jj) lead In the
first oH MorriS. With one out, Julio
Franco walked ahead of Carter's
second home r. MorriS then walked
the bases lOaded, and Jacoby
scored· on a two-out wlld pitch.

Yankees win
NEW YORK !UPl l - With the
season not yet one week old , Butch
Wynegar has won two ballgames
with three-run homers.
He hit one Opening Day In a 4-2
victory over the Kansas City
Royals and Saturday he vlct lmiz.ed
Teddy Higuera in a four· run fifth
inning, leading the New York
Yankees to a 7-3 victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers.

South Carolina's director of athletics
got his start as Rutland football coach

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1ht S"sshtn Fomr Story

South

Pirates stop Cubs 3-1;
Indians defeat Tigers

1616 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

on this popular

~

Africa exalts after sinking a birdie putt on the 16th
hole durin,; lhe third round ~ the Masters Saturday.

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.

Grand Ole Opry
foaturing: Tho GoMral Jacksan
Showboat, Oprylanlf, USA

.

Masters recOrd set;
Bhllesteros keeps lead

Now at ELBERFELDS y_ou'U

S'roRY TIME - Chab Guthrie ood Angie Maynard oft he Dr. Sa~n~el
L. Boosanl Memorial Library In Gallipolis wall with some friends 1o
greet children lo the Teddyhear Chtb ( a,;es 2 ood 3) and the storybook
Hour (&amp;IllS 3, 4 and 5). Spring sessions begin on Tuesday. To register a
child, drop by or call the library at 416-READ.

Section

f tlmltltlt ·

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(~oo; o

co•tt

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GREENVILLE, SOUTH CA· when Bill Kiser, Darlington Race·
way' s PR man, Introduced them to
ROUNA - EDITOR'S NOO'E The foDowtng !!lory about lloh the appeal of the sport .
MmTison Is chief re lebrlty In Tim
Marcum, director~ at lietlcs all he
Richmond's
crew.
University ol South Carolina, Is
And
then
there l~ go~ . He and
reprtntro from another Multimedia
Morrison
are
golf nuts and the
newspaper, the GREENVILLE
cou
rses
from
the
mountains to the
PIEDMONT. Marcum's 81'!11 job as
sea
In
this
neck
of
the woods m~tdl
coach was as an asslslant In football
their
thlrat
for
that-Sport.--·
- ..
'lilfd IWk1!111lD Ulliler.nrrrvennarr
Professionally,
everything
has
at Rutland High School durtng the
fallen
into
place
for
Marcum,
who
195!Hll 1ie118011. Vennarl, MID was
head coach at RutllUld from 1947 ca me to he South CaTOllna's first
through 1982, described Marwm as fulltlme AD bt over tWo decades
being "creal help" lUld recalls the nearly four years ago. There have
foolbaD team wmt undeleatul the been contrpverslal moments bt his
season Marcum was hi• asst.tant. lime at the wheel; he fired Richard
Bell at the close of a 4-7 season and
has had his moments with ti'E
executive
end of the Gamecock
On stock car Sundays in the
Club.
Carolinas, the ~ace to catch South
But Marcum IS credited with
Carolina's athletic director Is along
landing
Morrison and ultimately
pit road. sporting Ill' oolors that
IY'long to Harry Cant and his Skoal providing ' the Gamecocks with
their only trip to football's pent· .
Bandit crew.
On those weekends, Bob Marcum house. Last year' s 10·1 regular
Is as much a part oft he Bandit team season record and No. 2 ranking
before the Navy defeat were high
as Is Cant His offlclal title Is head
cheerleader, but he has at occasion water inarks. The 21·14 loss to
seJVed up an occasional Gatorade Oklahoma State In the Gator Bowl
to Cant on his trips In and out of the could just as easily have been a win .
"Last year was Black Magic ..
pits.
Marcum, and his football coach, Morrlsan wore black~ the players
Joe Morrtson, became Instant fans wure black and the fans dressed
'.

like Morrison while watching 10
Saturday's of magic that had lo
have seemed forever coming.
" Last year everybody was
caught up In the Idea of black
magic, the confidence of Coach
Morrtson and the way the team
played. When you have all those
rome·from·behlnd victories, It puts
.some type of m.Y$19!le aro~!!d y~r

team," says Marcum.

"Everybody would llke lo have
consistency In their program and
when you gel rtght down to It, Coach
Morrison and his staff have done a
better c,oachlng job than a year ago.
Looking at some figures. we play
45·50 people and 24 of them are
freshmen and sophomores, and the
great thing about Joe Is that he
ooesn 'l make any excuses. We're a
very young team and everybody
lmows that. The senior class
consists of 12 people and he brought
· In about five of those," says
Marcum.
Impressions of high degree have
come slOwly to Marcum the last
eight years.
In 1971, the day before ThanksgivIng, Bob and Cecil Marcum lost
their 18-year-old daughte-, Mart
Lynn.
On a snowy winter morning just

outside Ames, Iowa , where Marcum was associate athletiC director
at Iowa Stale University, Matt
,.
Lynn Marcum was In a head-on
collision that claimed her life late
that night , following an ail day
battle oo the qJerating table.
. "It was obvilllsly a very trau ·
matjc expertetice," Marcum says.
It haJ)pened that I le!t ea!:)y_!!Ji! t_ _
• '~ \
morning to make arrangements for
us to play in the Peach Bowl. I was
f
:x:;.: .
on my way lo Atlanta and our
daughter was on her way to junior
college.
· "She lost.control of Ill' car and hit
the other ca r. It killed tll' woman in
the other car outright. It wasn't
untU I phoned home thai I was told
she had been In an accident.
"Fortunately, I had flown In on a
prtvate jet, and It got me back to
Ames In a hurry. What a helpless
feeling !halls, 10 be away and have
someone tell you you need to be
home.
·
"It was a dllflcult day because
she died that night abcut 10. We
knew all the doctors and they had a
Iough fight all day klng. It finally got
BOB MARCUM, Unlvenlty of South Carolina's atlietic director, • ·
down to t h~ l evenbtg when they ran
began
his career as head coach~ lhe Rutland Red Devils rmreth1111 a
a brain scan and .. .there was
quarter
o1 a c:entury aco. He also roached In too SEOAL at Logan High
nothing there.
School.
Continued on C-2

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Peg a C-2- The SW~dey Tm&amp;~-Sentinel

South Carolina 's....__eoo_'tn.....,ued_tro_m
•....,
'I

c_
-1 _

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"ltwasdllflcult. Wetl!dwbatwas
IUjuired. We made up 01.1r mlnds
111at weweren'tgoingtostq&gt;.So, we
burled our daughter on a Saturday
at1ermon and went to t~ basket·
baD game that night. Some people
said that we slvlild bave !Jltlen
away, w t wettnugtn It was best for

•
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••'•

11!1 to

continue."

and we'd talk t&gt;otball. He was
always Interested In helping a high
sdlool coacb IPmme a bener
roach. When llOII: !be jOb at Iowa
State, we talked about aOOptlng his
delellse Oil one r1 bls trips. Lou
wouldn't IPt us bave his play book,
wt be did say we could loo~ at I
overnight.

It was a longtlllll' lrlend, Lou
"We took It tq.J~ IDspit.al- tm&gt;y
McCtlUougb. wOO was resJilnslble had the only ropytng ~hllll' In
ilr lanc!tng Marcum In atbl«k' town - and we pllotocoped 11. The
admlnlstratlon and tt was for neX1 year, he was looldng at !llme cA
McCUiough wlx&gt;m Marcum, was our D1m and bad no 'trouble at all
woridng at the tlllll'.
"""'lJllzing tbe defense."
: Growing up, and dunng a high
As much as Marcum enjoyed
!Cioolcareerthatearnedhlmthree coaching, however, ~ turned
lfotters aplecl&gt; In ilotbaD, basketba:\ _J!l\'(ilfd tbe mechanics 11 publlc
and IDseball In high school .at sdlool administration. While eamKuntlngton, W.Va., Marcum ans- lng a masters degree at !be
weml to "Kayo," alter one of tbe University of Akron, Marrum kept
characters' In til&gt; Moon Mullins his hand In roaching by ~lplng
comlc str1p. Kayo t~ character, recruit lor Ollio State.
slep! In a drawer and Kayo, the AD
Alter a coilple 11years11steerlng
1935 lora!~! ID sleep In a drawer problemldds-meyearMarcum's
after II&gt; was hom tx&gt;cause his big offlre handled UOO rtferrals;
sister IOOOidn 't. give up ll&gt;r bed to students sent ID his otl'ice i&gt;r one
baby brot~r.
probk'm or another - In tltP r1ght
He answers ID it today and had It direction. Marcum turned Inward
not beEn for a ca!'El'r-entl!ng knee athlellc adminiStration. McCul tnjury ;u; a lreshman at Marshall , Iough had wa~ed !be lllwa State
he might have wound up as Kayo assistant 's job in his face.
Marcum In the pro ranks. Despite
South Carolina is no different
his knee Injury. Marcum was glvm
than Iowa State, or Kansas, where
a tryout "1th t ~ St. Louis Cards as Marcum was AD for four years
a punter and placekicker. The
before taking ttl:&gt; job at USC.
wobbly knee, though, cost him his
"You know, I was aware of til&gt;
chance.
Unlversiry of South Carolina be·
"I f.elt like I could have held my cause ;;~ c1 my lril'nd&lt; - Alex
own," Marcum says, "1111 back
Hawki;;.;;:iake Bodkin and a few
rhen they expected everybody to ot~rs- played here.
~fay and I'm sure t~ condlllon of
"Anyway, In the athletic world,
my knee was what ll&gt;ld me baCk.
peopletalkbarkandfonh.Overthe
When it happened, t~y said It
years, I guess I'd heard things tike
didn' t require surgery, 111t today South Carollna bas great facUlties
they would havl' cut on II."
rut seems like It's always In
Alter Marshall , Marcum
turmoil. "
~ached at Rutl.and, Ohio, a small
He Is now a strangertothatllneof
1Dwn on the banks or til&gt; Ollio. At thought.

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$2399

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But dreams rarely rome true by
luck, especially at the tender age r1
W, and StWweU wUI tell you in two
words lx&gt;w he Is turning Ills dream
Into reality.
" Hard work," he says.
" It 's dedication to something I
wanted. Dedication going back to a
very young age. I'm sure a lot ol

r

;.CINCINNATI IUPI I - The
p(aymaker lor the NCAA women's
~baU champion Texas Longhqms Friday was n.amed recipient ct
the Margaret Wade Trophy.
.
::f&lt;amle Ethrldgl', -a senior point
guard from Lubbock, Tl'xas, said
~ Sl'lection over Southern Ca iUorrita's Cheryl Miller, considered by
many to be til&gt; best lema I(' colll'ge
plllyer ever, came as a SU!llr!SE'.
; 'Being til&gt; same age as Cheryl, I
i!Ssumed sll&gt; was going to be
~t lng everything, and rightfully
5o. I'm very SU!llrtsEd and very
hOnored to be considered a player d
tier ability," Ethridge said.

Celtics make it 30 in row at home
. BOSTON IUPI I- KevlnMcHale
scored .ll points Friday night to lead
tl)e Boston Celtlcs to tll&gt;ir .llth
CO!lSECUtiVe home victory, a lln04
decision over the Cleveland
Cavaliers.
The triumph enabled the Celtlcs
to extend their own record for
Consecutive home victories. Boston, 66-15 overall, which last week
set Ill&gt; league mark lor consecutive

Youth swim lessons

Catbirds win title with 101-93 win
LA CROSSE, Wis. (UP! ) -The
La Crosse -Catbirds, in their first
season In the Continental Basliet·
ball A$0Ciation, won the Western
Division tltle Friday night by
beating Cincinnati, 101·93.
They won the best-ol-seven
playolf 1n sbc games to advance to
the championship playolfs. with
Eastl'm Division champion Tampa
beginning Wednesday in Tampa.

WHEEL .HORSE
POWER

Herb Johnson led La Crosse with
32 Jlllnts and John Schweitz. had II
for Tampa.
·

to start April 22

1985 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
SUPREME
BROUGHAM
2door
dari&lt; blue metaiUic wi1t1

·: GALLIPOUS - Youth Swim
Lessons begin on Tuesday, April 22
6:\r the Parent/Tot Class at 6:30
p.m. and til&gt; 4-6 year old beginners
at 7:00p.m.
• On Thursday, Aprll 24, classes
begin for Beginners at 6-6:40 p.m.
and Advanced Beglnnersllntermellates at 6:45-?::Kl p.m.
• The fee tor til&gt; Tuesday classes is
il and for the Thursday 'classes Is
$10. Registration must be sent to the
Gallipolis Recreation Dept., 518
Second Ave. before til&gt; first class to
P.artlclpate.
- All classes are held at the GDC
P&gt;ol. Phone 446-1789, ext. 24 for
more Information. Class size Is
limited .

tllUpe,
matching veklurinterior, Laooau1D!l. v~
engine, au11rnaoc trans., power steering and brakes. air cond., AM/FM stereo,
ti~ wheel. cruise control, power wind~w.;. 00/40 split bench seat sport wheel,

Need So111ethi•g
Eleetrieal?

sport mirrors &amp; morel SHARP CAR!
"

West Virginia
Electric has it•••
PHON£ 446-6225
IllS EASTERN AVE.
GAUPOUS, 01110

Point Pleasant to
have summer loop

FWWS.:a.UIE.
tO HP Kohler engine • 8-speed
Uni·Orive ·• transaxle • NotOOl Tach·a·matic •• hitCh system • Voltmeter • "Low Oil'
light • Front &amp; rear turf tires •

"~ . • Wins award
Ill

lucky."'

run In &lt;rder to work on my game. I
didn 't take chances oolng some
things because I didn't want to get
hun .
"Even now, in the df- seasons,.!
"'Ork on my gaml' every day, for.
hours a day. I enjoy It, tx&gt;cause this
is where I want to be."
To be a major league shortstop at.
ageW, you've obviously gbt to be a
sUck fielder, wt Stillwell also can
hit the ball with a lot more authority
than you might expect !rom a
5-loot-11. 165- pounder.
" I'm not a power hitter, but I ca n
make solld contact," sa id the
switch-hitter. ''I'm not an easy out.
I can run a little bit, too."

WITH 42" SID£ DISC:HARG£ MOWER

f1
u

!:l '

CINCINNATI (UPI I -If you've
ever daYdreamed about trading
places wlth saneooc~y,!Jy Utls me;
Picture ywnelt as a ~t .
frillndly, lresMaced. ~year- old
jusl stanlng a major league
basl'ball carees- that experts say
will be l q aDd glorioUs.
Thlnk about the exhilaration ol
scooping up a ground ball, Or1ng to
llrst and hearing people say, "He's
got a cannon lor an ann."
·
COilslder !be thr1ll rl smacking a
triple and sliding into tblrd base to
the roar lit the crov.d.
Try punlng yourself 1n the spJJces
ol Kurt StWwell, who stands wll&gt;re
many would love to be - at tbe
threslx&gt;ld cl a career In basebaU.
'1bere's no doubt about lt,"
smiles Stillwell, the Clnctnnati
Rros' rookie -Shortlllp, "I'm llvlng
the dream Utat a lot cl peq&gt;le bave.
I hear It all the Ume, 'You're so

By Tom BelviOe
of weeks ago and had my curtoslty
Special Co,.MpOntlent
satlslled by catching 3 large GALLIPOUS - Tile warm moutbs. The warm temperatures
sumrnerllke weat~r we bave been bave oortalnly heate:l up the water,
having ill&gt; past f.ew weeks ha~speclally til&gt; smaller water 00·
certainly Inspired area fishermen
les. The warmer water temperato get out the rods and reels and try
res cause Increases In !Ish
tll&gt;lr favorite fishing lx&gt;le. I have activities and Uterelore betler
noticed many boats being towed or llshlng JllSSibllltles.
hauled and I have seen a l:lt ol ·- At til&gt; Gallipolis Illcks, wll&gt;re I
fishing rods sticking up In the back stopped brtelly last Saturday, there
seat rt ca rs and occupying gun were about lJ flsll&gt;rmen Jl'esent. I
racks In pickup trucks. Flshing saw several stringers ol fish along
season Is nigh at hand.
the waters edge. It appeared most
A few fisll&gt;rmen I 1.&gt; 'e talked ol til&gt; fish being caught were white
with have had good luck on bass. One lucky ftsll&gt;rman reeled In
largemouth bass In !arm ponds and 2 white bass on one line wblle I was
strtp mine ponds. I ventured up to present. Besides til&gt; whltl' bass I
the little Jllnd on our place a rouple understand that sauger and drum

slOpped til&gt; Class AA leagues and
was promoted to Class AM last
~ar "1th Denver.
This spring, he "·as Invited to his
11rst m!ljor league training camp
and easily made til&gt; Reds' 21-man
roster. He is being groomed to
replace \'eferan shortstq:&gt; Da1·e
Concepcion. StWwell's pri'Smce at
sp-ing training rmtlvated Concep·
cion Into (II(' olthe best sprlngs he's
E.'\'er had in order to hang on to his
job for tm&gt; start of this )ear.
"I'm suf1ll"l';ed I've madl' it ID til&gt;
majors already, " said Still.,.tlll.
"But I kmw it's til&gt; hard work
paying oft.
" In school, I gave up a Jot of
things thaI ot IJ&gt;r kids wereO?ing for

POINT PLEASANT - Mayer
J .J. Wedge announces that the City
R£ocreation Department is now
lonnlng a summer basketball
league to be held at Ordlnanre
Basketball Court.
The summer k'ague wUI be
playing each Tuesday and Thurs·
day even ing beginning at 6:30 p.m.
starting May 13, running through
July 25.
Individuals wishing to play or
form a team can contact the City
R£ocreation Department, Director
Brian Billings, 675-23ro, or Brett
McCormick, League OJ-ordinator,
675-liro.

Structural steeltrame • Pinion
&amp; sector steering • Greasable
spindles
Modei31G-8

36 INCH 01 37 INCH IOWO lVAI.ABLE
NO FANCY GIVEAWAYS 01 GI-CKS- JUST A
GOOD PIODUO AT A GIIAT PIICE

CHErn I

BAUM

SALE PRICE

$1,099

ER

915-3301

Junior high track team wins . ·.

Fishing time

Reds' rookie Stillwell turping dream into -reality
people think what I bave Is natural.
that It's beEn a piecl&gt; d cake. \\'ell.
I've worked my tall otf."
Admittedly, Stlllv.oe!J did ba\'e a
good place to start. His fa!ber, Ron.
once bad 14 at-bats with tbe
Washlngton Senators and is a
collegl' baseball roach.
But much more than a baseball
envlrorunent Is needed to (ll'llllua' a
ballplayer. StlUwl'll'solderbrother,
Scott, 23, got the same paternal
encouragement as Kurt. but didn't
have the desire to purslll' baseball
as a ca.t"eer.
Kurt, though, bas been eagerl)•
playing baseball lor a decade.
"When I was alx&gt;ut 10 :,ears old, I
knew I was a Jl'elty decent
athlete," recalls the native 11
Tlx&gt;usand Oaks, Calli. "I was able
to Play against guys older than~
was. When I was a freshman ln ligh
school. I was playing varsity."
Stillwell batted .!D2 his smi:lr
year and til&gt; Reds drafted hJm oo
June 6, 1!&amp;, two days after his 18th
birtlllay and eight days before he
graduated from hJglt school.
His rise to the m.ajors was quick.
At age 18, II&gt; played for Billings It
til&gt; Rookie League and batted .324.
At age 19, II&gt; did so well In Class A
ball with Cedar Rapids that II&gt;

are also being taken .
The white bass spawning runs
will begin In a lew weeks and til&gt;
action can really be last andlurtous
at that tlme. Catftslt-act!on should
. also be plcklngup.ll you Hke to fish
lor them, ca!ll are blllng ~II now.
Winston Sheets of Gallipolis, told
me he landed a .10 pounder a rouple
of weeks ago. Carp may not be the
sport-fish tbat some ljl'e, rut tbey
certainly cannot besoldshorl oo the
fight they provide. They are
definitely fun to catch.
One good thing about fishing til&gt;

Ohio River is the abundance cllish
and numerous nsh species. H ooe
kind of fish Isn't tiling at any
certain time then another species
might IJe.. There are also some
mighty big Dsh occupying the
Ohio's waters. We would allllke to
IDok into one 11 tll&gt;m.
Many flsll&gt;rmen today are aware
ol til&gt;' great amount of llshlng
pressure on water$ throughout the
rountry. It Is a good Idea to keep
wbat you can use and return otll&gt;r
fish to the water to be caught
anotll&gt;r day.

DeVincent hold_s. _lt;.~d in tourney
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (UP!) Storm DeVIncent, Tamarac, Fla.,
held on to his lead Friday night and
will be the top seeded player for the
finals of the $125,(0) Long Island

42 games and a plnlall total ol
10;325,
Palombi, 23, seeking his second
career title, was 155plns hehlnd the
leader with 10.170,

home victories with 28, extended It s
record to 39-1 In games at Boston ~n.
DeVInrent will need to win just
Garden and the Hartford Civic one more game In the nationally
Center. The Cavaliers have lost ~ televised llnals this afternoon to
straight at Boston Garden.
capture his llrst career tltk' and
With one game remaining, at $l8,00J. He has finished second In
Boston'Garden on Sunday with til&gt; both of hi s previous TV
New Jersey Nets, Boston could appearances.
~
ea rn the best home percentage In
Also qualifying tor,th~ llnals were
NBA history.
Ron Palombi Jr., Erie, Pa.,
Cleveland, which las! won at second; Peter Hakim, Forest Hills,
Boston Garden on Oct. 13,1978, was N.Y., third; Doug Wallace, Por·
playing without point guard John tland, Ore., fourth, and defending
Bagley, out due to an ankle injuJY. cbamplon Mike Aulby, IndianapoCleveland was led by World Free
with 28 points and Roy Hinson's 22. lis. fifth.
nevtnrent made his big move In
the fifth round, when he averaged
•
better than 253 for eight games to
Program continues
take the lead.
GALLIPOUS _An open fitness
swim, SJilnsored by til&gt; Gallipolis
Recreation Department wlll con·
tlnue through May 17 at~
Activity Center Pool. Open s.l!'!rn
hours are 1·5 p.m. each Saturday.
There Is no charge lor partlclpatlnglp tbe activity. CbUdren under 10
years old must be accomJlanled by
. an adult. For more lnlormatlon,
call 446-1789, ext. 24.

Chris Bailey won the 1600 and !W
PEDRO - The Gallipolis junior
high track squad won the third meter events. LaRon Close won the
annual Rock Hill Invitational 100 meter dash.
Thursday. Gallia 'bad 106 points, . Although he flnlsbed second,
Rock Hili had 93and Fairland 59\S . Brian Morris set a school mark In
the shot put wllh a toss oi42-\S .
Ba iley captured the top scorer's
Toledo results
trophy with 22 points.
The lunior high girls team wUI
TOLEDO, Ohio IUPII - Sugs
Hangup, driven by Jim Mullnlx, put take · .part In the ChesapeakE'
on a strong stretch drive Friday Invitational Monday. The junior
night to win the tealUred trot by a high boys wlll take part In the
neck over V. Anna Trick at at Fairland lnvltalloi)BI Thursday.
Toledo R.aceway.
r;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Mullnlx guided Sugs,. Hangup II
over the mile ln'2:041·5with Annies
Child finlshllng third. Sugs Hangllp
was llfth most of the way, and sixth
at the t.op of til&gt; stretch, back by
four lengths.
Ata Gary P. and But rams 'Girl
1637 EASTEIN AVE.
won the first two races to return
GAWPOLI5, OHIO
$113.20 on the dally double comb ina.
446-1961
lion of 4 and 8.

AUTO TRIM
CENTER

r.~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ SUNROOFS INST AUED
-CALL FOR PRICES-

HowAboath?

WINDOW
TINTING SERVICE
SPECIAl
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$6500
$7500

Compacts

Th e

Full
Second ,\ ve.
La fa)·ette ,\ !all
Gallipolis, 0 .

:1,1111

ShOe C3Ie
£

Size

TINT AYAllBLE IN
4 SHADES
CALL FOR APPOINUINT

,:~H~eif§tn~ished~~w~it~h~a~235~av~e~ra~g:e~fo~rl::::::::::::===============::l_~~~~~~~~~~~

THE COST OF BEING A CAR FANATIC

JUST WENT DOWN!

Bird to attend meeting
GALLIPOLIS - Joyce Bird, field
representative· of the WBA, wlll
attend Tuesday night 's Gallipolis
Women Bowler's Association
Board of Directors meeting, slated
to start at 7 'In the Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co. office.
An open meeting willlollow at 8.

MOTOR
OIL
10Wo30 or 10YI-40

AC or MOTORCRAFT

YOUR CHOICE

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FI:IERS
FOR 11011' CAlli

Ellcessor top scorer

OUR SALE PRICE .... . ...... . ..... S2.i9 11.
MAIL·IN REBATE •.....•••.•.• , •••. 11.00 11.

. PARKERSBURG - Cbrls El·
lcessor, son or Mr. and Mrs. Deryl
Ellcessor. leading scorer. was
mnored at the annual athletic
booster's Sports Appreciation
Dinner at Ohio Valley College
recently.
Jim Hinerman , coach and in'
structor In physical education at
OVC. presented the awards In
basketball tbata reg!ven each year.
A w slness major, Ellressor
plans to gradua te In 1987.

Rtbllt Limited to
1 Motortrtft Of 2 W:.

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ka ADeal!"

Let's

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.
1616 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS

446-3672

18 Hp Indu strial Commercial Engine
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23·1nch Rear Tires
Huge 5 Gallon Fuel Tank
Atlachmenl ~~~~~~

' INVITE
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No shopper can grappl e intelligently with all the va·
riables influencing the long·term return from annuities.
· Happily, analys ts at an independent rating service,
Comparative Annuity ReP,orts (5127 Roy ene Ave., Albu - lf-·-querq ue, r&gt;r.M:-87110; montl11Y.' $75'a)'l~lrrr. -do the Job tor
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current yield and make a more useful composite judgme nt, which they call "value to the consumer.'' Into this
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Gallipolis

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Sunday 9 to S

SILVER)BRIDGE PLAZA
PH. 446-933sDAVE MICHAEL
MANAGER

.

254 JACKSON

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NET COST AFTER REBATE

A.P.R.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- C-3

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

Wildlife news

~tl.andtheycoachedaslnglewmg ~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;;;~

:attack tbat averaged 52 points a
-jame.Since II:&gt; was paid only S3,!0l
4111nually for his part In that act,
:Marcum was swayed by a call from
P&gt;l:an, Ohio. j() mlles up til&gt; liver.
. _ Mai'!.'Um eventually moved to
McKJnley High School. In Canton.
Ohio, wll&gt;re he met and worked
"!!th McCullough , an aid to Ohio
:;ute's Woody Hayes.
: ' " Lou used to come through town

April1~. 1986

April 13, 1986

Ponl8iOJ'-Middleport-GaK)olil. Ohio-Point Plea11111t. W. Va.

,.

�•
~age-C-4-The

- _. ...

~.

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

__

.....

,.

..

Sunda·, Times-Sentinel
,.._._.~.

--

.._

April 13, 1986

Pornerov:-Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleaslint. W. Va.

··- .

_;:;,; ~

,'

•

Ballesteros in top spot at halfway point ·
By DAVID MOFFR
UPI Sports Wrller
AUGUSI'A, Ga. (UP!) - Seve
Ballesteros· Is playing down the
notion he considers the 50th Mas·
ters his perl!Onal possession.
"I never said: this was my
Masters,'' · the dashing Spaniard
sald 'a fter takinglhe mid_!\'ay lead in
a bid for his third title in this firs! of
the four maJor golf championships.
"I said only thaH came here to try
·to win 11\e Masters."
Ballesteros. who won the Mastet·s·
In 1981 and 1983 and lied fo r second ·
last year behind West Germany-'s
Bernha!Jl Langer, acted Friday
like this was his personal Masters.
He forged into a one-shot lead over ·

'

Bill Kratzerf.
Ballesteros ofiset a couple of
bogeys with a 25-foot eagle putt
Friday and another 25-footer, for a
birdie at the final hole, gave him a
4-under-par 68 for the day and a
'·under 139 total.
Kratzert, who had a 68 Thursday
when ·he.shared a one-stroke lead
with Ken Gf!"'n• played par golf
Friday to make him the 36·hole

his play Friday.
and Ballesteros oogeyed and the
Japan's Tommy Nakajima went two were Ued going into the llnal
into Saturday's third round in third, hole where Ballesii'I'OS tett a S-iron ·
at ~41, and three other foreigners- shotl5 feet from the l.'llp-andsent
defending champion Bernhard It home.
'- ' ·
'
La nger of West Germany, T. c.
The ortglnal S&amp;man field was
Chen &lt;1. Taiwan. and Greg Norman Jrtmmed to 48 Mter Frtday's round .
of Australia, were at 142andtledfor and It took a :&gt;over-par 149 to stick
fo urth with ,Americans Ben Cren· around.
shaw and Danny Edwards.
Five·time champion Jack Ni ck'
Lan._ger also had a fl! Friday and laus made it handily With a 71 -145.
· runn~ rup.
said he also felt better than he did on But tllree ·tlme champ Gary Player
' '1\lliink I shot what! should have Thursday. "If I can shoot two more · was edged oot at 73·150 . and ·
shot." said Kratzer!, who had three rounds in the OOs, I think I will have fow··tlme champ Arnold Palnier •
· wasn't even close at 76·156. ' ·
birdies and tlu·ee ·bogeys. "I don't a chance," he said.
The Masters lead rode a roller·
John Mahaffey and Calvln;Peete,
think I could have gottm a ny more
coaster Friday. After nine holes, . the top two money winners on this
out of the round. "
·:
Krat7.ert admitted that being in Kiatzert, Chen and Norman were year's PGA Tour, were back in the
the lead probably had a bearing on tied with Ballesteros. Kratzer! held pack at 118 and 146 respectively.
. the' lead alter 13, where he birdied .
' '

may watch the 19!!1i Masters
Tournament on television, talk with
Architect Jack KldweU, and tour
the new goH course ske, located m
MID Crmk Rd., just oH State Ri. 7.
There will be snacks and refreo;h·
ments.

LYNE CENTEII SEHEDIII£
WEDI OF 1\PRIL 16, 19111
IMTE-CI'MNASRJM
POOL
Apr. tl12-3 p.n1. Op('n RPt' ...................... ..................... ..... ... .......... .....Open ~ tm

.............. .... ................ ........... ... .6-8 p.m. College Swim
...... .... ......
..7:15-8:15 a.m. Early Bird Swim
Il; » 12: :J&gt; Fitness Swlm
CJosro
(\pr . l'i 6-~ p,rn . Collrgf' Rrc ................ ....... .
11: :IJ.l2:al FIIO(&gt;Ss Swim
6-8 p.m. College Swim
..\pr. 10 i~!ol p.m. C'ollf'l2:r RPC ................................. 7:15-8: 15 a.m. Ea rly Bird Sw im
11: ll12: al F1tnf'Ss Swim
&amp;8 p.m. Olllegc !Ire.
~pr . 17&amp;R p.m. Coltegf' R('(' ...
.. .................. ... ......... I 1::1).12: :JI FII,.,.S Swim
6-8 p.m. Co llege Swlm
Apr. lfl i;-R p.m. Oprn Rer .. .. ....... .... .. ................ 7: 15~ : 15 a.m. Early Bird Swim
11:»12: al Fitness Swim
&amp;8 p.m. Open Swim
Apr. lq C.1ast:&gt;d .. ............ .... .. .......... .... .............. ...... ......
. ... .. ........ .... Closed
Apr. D 12-3 p.m. Open RE'&lt;' . ............................... ........... ............. 12-3 p.m. Open SWim
ll-8 p.m. ColleJ:E&gt; Rer ...... .......... .. .................................. ... 6-s p.m. COllege Swim
HOME ATIILIITJC EVENTS
1\les.. Apri l 15- Baseball ~· s. Ottlo Dominican; 1:00 p.m.IWu bleheader
Wed.. April 16 - Softball vs. Unlv. r:l Charlestoo: 2: 00 p.m.IOOubleheader
Sat.. April 19 - Baseball vs. Malone; 2: 00 p.m .lcklubleheader
•
li-!1 p.m . Collf'J!E' Rf'C
Apr. 14 CIOSf'd ...

.

.

'

"

Eastern boys,
girls track ·
teams win
WATE RFORD - The Easl!'rn
Eagles' boys and gir ls track tea ms
swep t to a pair of victories In a
boy-girl track doubleheader here
Tuesday evening.
'Eastern won the hoys' competJ.
tlon with 85 points, while Wat€l"ford

PARKERSBURG, WV :._ The schedule durtng,the "19E*i season.
Ashley, formerly of, Mldclleport
Short Track Auto Racing Series,
and
president rl. the ,-.w group, said
started two years ago by Pennsboro
STARS
would now stand for Short
Speedway's Carl Short ID promote
Track
Auto
Racing Stars and the
Bengals offensive coordinator special events at dirt tracks
Bruee Coslett, who supetvlsed throughout the United States , has group would be incorporated as
Thursday 's workou t, said Schllcii· been sold to a group of thrre such in the state of Ohio. Gross will
be secretary-treasurer and Willi·
fer "looked pretty good."
promoters which have hosted
ams
vice president.
''We brought him in, gave him a STARS events.
Asllley
foa ld that Short decided to
Asllley,
promotional
direc·
Dave
physical, then we took him out and
sell
the
organization
he began two
tor
at
West
Virginia
Motor
Speedwat.ched him throw, " Coslett said.
·
years
ago
due
to
the
serious
Uiness
way
In
Parkersburg:
Don
Gross,
"He threw for aoout half ,an hour to
of
his
father
in
South
Carolina
and
owner
of
I;luckeye
~eedway
in
some ~our receiver s. I'll say this,
his
father
's
need
for
constant
care.
Orrville,
Ohio;
and
Roger
Wllllams
he looked pretty good."
There are already about 17 events
Schlichter opened last season as of Brownstown 1IN) Speedway
listed
on the rn86 STARS schedule,
have
purchased
the
STARS
organithe Colts' starting quarterback but
Ashley
said, beginning with a
za
tion
and
will
run
a
complete
suffered a broken thumb In the .

he was given his outright release .
opening
weeks later,
Gilmangame.
Kirk,A few
Schlichter's
ad·
viser, said Schlichter has workouts
With one other NFL team and a
USFL squad scheduled for next
week . Kirk said two additional
clubs are also interested in
Schlichter.

·

1

· .

(0 UR

•.

.

. .
'

..

ApriiiWI2D.....
UI

The versatile

5-in-1 Lawn-Boy.
1"1-ll~&lt;•llt· l...l~ ll • l\. o\

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hi!;: rt•iiJ" !);!~ . lllLII• h .tnd , ~ft ·rl ~ ,11,.,

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CARPET

:-oo!Jil- ~ rah ·r,._,.rn ~ •rr ., ,Ill bu r~o·r l•"ll'

fll• ""''Ill• ~ - ~ ... - .~ul pnllo• r • .trl~u , 1• " '
1 11-tk1•~ II !jURI-. till) d!'IJI" IIIf,rl~t I•• ,[,lf l

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Carpet A~~es;ive

3"x5"xB' Treated

LANDSCAPE

3

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Size

99sq . yd.

TIMBERS

2"x6"

-

5.99

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TOOLS

Pole Vauk - King. W. 10.0.
Hlltt Ju~ - King, W, &gt;~ .

Your Choice
j4 t 6-DDj.toiiiVIIDI J66 1·02) or LOIIQ

LOn1 Jump - Phillips, W, 17-4 &lt;lid~ ­
-Relay - Won by Shf&gt;nan doah In 9:37
J181Da:h Hurdles - Marlin . E, 194.

Hllllill !JUol

•• -Clay, E. :IH

Pol~

Shonlj4tl-85j

1661 ·04)
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5 Cubic Foot Contractor

. . Relay - Won by Eastern In :49.R

- Ma:&lt;SOO. E. :55.7.

1111 nom~~ .. - Schad. w. : ~7.2.

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~-

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OR

f7.S
/oi
A~~~:ln~~~:~:.Gf
0

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Soon, equipment owners will be abte to take advantage
of a complete new line of Caterpillar Equipment featuring:
• Unequalled parts/service availability
• Competitive prices

It's only from Walker Machinery Company! Come see us
at Expo '86 March 12·13 at the Charleston Civic Center,
- and discover the deal of the century for yourself!

I

room lor a family
•

;.~ass&gt;c. Small with
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getupandgo

ea .
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--Cillo!
24~

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484
each

Mailbox Post

•

1490·01)
to· White

DOORS

;iiWx"ted

Jlt0·881
4"x4" Treated

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31!~1

!H (541·711. lK

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For On the Job Security!..

j54t-711
30" !H 1541·991. ~
LH 1541·06! . . . . .
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4'X8'
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PANELING

OR

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3 5 ? ach
1344·211
2'x4'

go/o~
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Chaperone

1\~l£ flltfiMCIMGt ~I

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' Whichever comes first. Limited warranty. Restrictions apply. Excludes im ports and non-Gold Key leases.
See copy at dealer. tFinancing is for qualilied buyers through Chrysler Credit Corp. Dealer contribution
may aHect final price. Mu$t take delivery from slack. Ask for details.

;.'l!:,:f:!¥/t&amp;tl!f .
:'"'""', .CARROLL NORRIS DODGE inc.

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300 THIRD AVE. ·

446-0842

3~ret

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CEILING FAN

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llii•~--·•"• "Dealer's
· · s . price e•clud~ tax &amp; dest ination charges.

NEW SHIPMENT - 10 NEW CAR TRADE-INS

42" Almond

DELIVERY AVAILABLE AT REASONABLE RATES

fiMMU~l p[I\C[~ll\
f 1ont-whe 91
value.
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II The great p.merican family
True p.mericonomy. I drive.seats s~&lt;. t PRO'I'EC'I'IOM PL~M'
5 ~E~R/lill.lm MIL• • • • • •

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GUTTER

12"x12"

84 Colt 2 Dr. luWQ •••••••••••• $4200
84
Ford Tempo 4 Dr.\iim$5350
Cruise. AM/FM casse"e.
.

,,

(710·421

White H231

SPECIALS

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GAS

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CB are Tradcmarksc iCatorplllar Tractor Co

Racine, Ohio

76 Mustang, 78 Dodge Omni, 80 Olda 88, 77 Buck Skylark, 77 Ford T : sir~. 77 Buick Skylalk, 79 Dodge Diplomat, 79 Chev. Mahbu, 79 Ford LTD, 80 Ford T-Bird.

3 Tr~ 3376

24"
Interior

[81 Y OUR CATERPILLAR O EALER I
Carerptr!ar Cal aM

J'iiJiO:m

17l5·5Dj

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CASHBACK
- Third &amp; Elm ..

RATE fiNANCINGt

!J!!

40 Pound Bag
S4 4 Cubic Foot
Top SOii !&amp;OB·OZJ. l ,., Peal MOSS (641 -DB)~

1984

48" htgh galvamzed steel Sectton
includes 50' at fabnc. 5 top ratls
. ~ fine posls, 6 loop caps and 80
11e w ~res FllUnys and additlooal
la'bfic exua . Minimum order: 50'

00

Your Choice ...... . ..

PICNIC
TABLE

UNK

FENCE

Nine Passenger, rrmium camel metallic with cmtrasting cloth interior, V-8
engine, auiDmatic trans.. air cond .. AM/FM s1ereo, tilt wheel, cruise control,
llJWer seal!XJWI!r windows, llJWer door locks, Quartz cklck, lu~ge rack and
morett LOCAL TRADE-IN

4!!

~~~:~8ed. Flower.in~ ...

6'

98~-l~Ol

1980 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
. CLASSIC ESTATE WAGON

GARDEN PLANTS

SFfl!ldiiiJ &amp; UpriJ~I hxus. Globe Arborvllll.

Wheelbarrow . .. .... .. ~

·CHISTII

• AHractlve financing

We're Not
FANCY...
.But Neither
· Are Our
·PRICES!

.ANNUAL)

· ·- l' ..'

NowThru
SundC_Iy,
. .:-.,.,.

(IIOVSi
~ - Robrrlson , Sk, 121-ll iJ.!.
' Sllol - Ray Maxsoo. E. :11-4.

.

,

r;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;:;;:~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;i
II

IIIII - Wal ker, SH. 2:21.1.
til - Mu KSO!l, F., :25.5.
!1110 - Etlloii,Sh, U:32.
111101 n.to,y - Woo.byShenandlah In 4: ()1.~
Team !!K!Orin&amp;- Easte,-n Rl, Wateriord 01,
ShE-nandoa h 67 and ~I P.W '!1 1,-7 .

having high paying races through ·
out the season rather than sacrlflc ·
ing the indlvloual race purse
structure for a point fund which
many driver s do not compete
-regu larly for.
However, As IIley said the new
STARS Is pursuing new SJ)onsors
for both point fund monies and
contingency awards.
More information on the circuit ·
wlll be released soon thi"oogh
Asllley. The temporary STARS
phone number wlli be (614 ) 423-6758.
Ashley said a permanmt olllce
n4mber will be Installed within the
next week .

~-~;~~~~----nr~:;;:~~:~==~~===~=~:~~=~~~;~:::i
LUMBER &amp; HOME CENTER

'

•

wrekend ol twoevents in Tennessee
the last ·weekend In April. A
complete schedule will he released
soon.
Ashley said drivers and fans
following the circuit won't find too
many changes other than a change
In the top brass. Most of·!"') tracks
which have hosted events in the
past will do so agaJn in cluding the
tracks of the three new owners.
At this time, STARS Is not
offering a 19~ points fund but will
Instead contlnue toofler hlghp ayln g
minimum purses lor each event on
the ctrclllt. Ashley sa id rc felt
drivers were better served by

.

$3,400

The Sunday ·fimes-Sentinei- Page- C-S .

Middlep"o rt ·native new track co-owner·

'

~----..._

'

CINCINNATI (UPI\ - Former
Opio State and lndianapolls Colt
quarterback Art Schlichter has had
an extensive workout with · the
Bengals, and the club is considering
signing him to a free agent
contract.

'

MOTOR CAR BROKERS

.'

Bengals .consider
signing Schlichter

and Shenandoah both had IJl and
SJ!Ywe scored 2014 points. In the
girls' ,meet Eastern had 76, Shenan ·
ddah 61 a nd Waterford 'll.
·:non Maxson of Eastern had three
fiFst places lor a tota l of 22 points to
leild the Eagles.
Eagle Ron Maxson won the Shot
)lit, while Joe Runyon placed
g¢ond In the Discu s. Don Maxam
easily Won the 200 met€!" an d 400
meter runs , while Mike Martin won
~ UO high hurdles.
·In the gi rls meet, AIJ'll Ritchie of
Eastern had two first places and a
to!a l of 15 points. Ritchie won the 100
hurdl~s. and llO bw hurdles, while
plllclng In several other ev mts .
;susan Baum haq 9 and :V. points
as did Bev Wigal. Amy Shrivers
hild 6¥, points, Melissa Nuller 6,
1.,1rlssa Long 5Y. , and Darien
~urn, Jenny Lee 4'4 points.
SJther Eaglettes scortng points
Included Jayne Ritchie, Ruth Nut·
ter, Tamm Leachman, Bonnie
Kownig, Ginger Hayman, Donna
C)irtls, Tina Bissell and Delani
Baker.

Qpen House planned today by golf club

~ n .. April :!)- Baseball vs. W.Va . State: 1: 00 p. m.lcilubleheader

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

,.~.,.:... ~

: FISHING DERBY APRIL 20 - The 19111 Gallipolis Area Jaycees
Fishing Derby will be held Sunday, April 1!1, from I wt!O 3 p.m. (rain &lt;I'
shine ) at the Bob Evans Shelter House pond. RegWratlon beglm at
•12:30 p.m. Youths 12andunderareaskedto participate. TherewUJbem
'charge. Prizes will be given lor the. biggest, smallest and most fish.
1ndl\liduals need only to bring their rod, rml and bait. Above, Jell
Roach, right, chaiJman of the 1986 derby, and Gene Grabtec, president
of the Gallia County Cooservatlon Club, shake hand§ alieF the
conservation club's annual donation. "'The funds help keep the
succes...rul project going," Grablec said.

:GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
GoH Oub •wUI sponsor an open
house and preview the city's
proposed $1.1 mlllion golf murse
beginning at 2 p.m. today at the
Elks Club on Seoond Ave.
,Open to the pubUc, lndl\llduals

April 13, 1986

GALLIPOLIS

~LUMBER &amp; HOME CENTER ·
CATLETTSBURG,KY
606· 739·4121'
' MILTON, WV
304· 7 43·9484;
Weekdoy • 7am ·Bpm

•

~ ~WEACCEPTCHECKS

..••

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV

•
•

304·675-4584

HUNTINGTON, WV

•'

304-736-8484

••

Satl(rday Bom · 5pm

Sunday I Oam·Spm

'

.

�-

~pril13,

1986

The Sunday Titnes-Sentinei...:.Page- c :7
I

-

Jim Cobb

CHEVROLET-OLDS-CADILLAC

,

..

\

rlghl;

mJRD

Miley J1111e Cun-y 1111d Sarah Hannon, back row
left to rlcht, coach Palty Hays, Davkl Karr, B8l

PlACE - Meigs County's Carleton School River
Racers finished third In the Senior Male DlvlBlon IU
section of the 1986 Speelal Olympics Stale Tourna·
ment held In BowUng Green by deleallng Mereer
Count)' :J&amp;.36. Team members are, 11'001 row left Ill

SATURDAY, 'APRIL 12th LA11 DAY!

plaque.

e

•••

,

••

,

, ,

$

•"

en

'"

BUY YO. UR NEW CAR -AT

M~~~~J}G~~:'S
StandlniOI ""' April ;, 1!186

..Team
\\1
P.aplr's Bank ...... ...... .................. . Ill
Tolt&gt;r &amp; Tok-r lnsuran('l' .................. 81
Jrnklns C'oncrrtf' .
.. li
Flr('Stonto ol Mlddlt'POt1 ................. ~
Trl&lt;:ountySpoo1sShop .........
......... ?.\
G &amp; .J Auto Pa z1s . ..... ....
. .. . .... .. 1)

Motor Oil Savings

SMITH-NELSON
M.OTORS

L
ti

,m

52
~

11
~
J&lt;-ri&lt;'ho Inn ..............
. ... .. b7 61
Spark.!&lt;' Supply.... . .. .. . . . ......... ..... t1i S2
... 8J fll;

73
Central Trust Bank ....... .. ... .......... 40 fll
Napprr Truck l n ~ .. ....... ................. 39 ~

Peopl£'s Bank. High txlwler for Spark!(' was

D. Hanf'l· .,.1T hh 611. D. SwlshE&gt;r wit h 571 was
lop boY.•Iff lpr Proplcs.
Jenk.lns ConC'f!'f&lt;' won slx PJIJlls trom Toler
I murancro. 5B5 b_v R. SprnC\' v.~d.S th(' td~
Sff'les for Jrnkin s. J . T yrf't''s 55 1 was ltv&gt; 1~
SC'I'ie; for TOI(&gt;I'S .
Fin~ lom• won six poin ts from Mason
F'um il urr. Hig-h bow k'r for FirP.'lli iCJlf' wa!i H.
Clatwor th.V wllh 577. 6.l8 by .J. Gratr was the'
lop Sf'rics for Mason.
J&lt;'rlrho Inn and G &amp; .1 Auto Pan s !led with
four poin t ~ L~Pim:' . 533 by C. Hrnson of Jericho
. Inn and .'l.'t2 by F.. Star lln~oro f G &amp; J A ut o Pans
' "'"t:'rf' 1tr h l~h OOwlf'fS for their lf.'ams.
· Carroll Nortis Dodge won six Jl)lnts from
C('fltral Tru st Bank. J . Da\'ls wi th 517 was top

0
$1500°

l'rl-C'o unty Sport s Shop rJ I:'d with Nappt'r
•dth four points aplf.'('('. 517 bv R .

Elliott ww: thf' hl.ch S('fi&lt;'s for l'ri.County". 522

by thf' Blind was lhf' 1~ series for Napper s.

$~,,

Event slated April 27

"' c._,,, -

C4e~k wl#. U1 Blfo~t

SOO EAST MAIN ST.

·

POMEROY

We Have the ·Kaye to .• Better Deal

lapco Oil Filters

for most import application ft
Reg . 3.95

Pennzoil 10W30

-- ·-·...........- .....
I -·--_ ...
10W·30

. ~,!"'..!... -- ....·-

___:__

3~99
fapco Filters

Reg. 99e, limit 12

84¢

'

Air

Pennzoil 10W40 ·

for most import applications

. 1.09, llmll12

CASH
DISCOUNT

992-2174

·2.99

Valvoline 10W40

$120000

y, B•g

Sate 2.88. Reg . 4.89

Kendall 10W40

....

Allermtr·s
1.00 rebate

Purolator
Air Filters
1or most domestic appllcalions

·

Receive mfr's 3.00 rebate when you buy 12 quarts

~

Smith-Nelson Motors

The Fairgnoens Country Cl~b,
JacksonWellston. will hold its
annu al open house on Sunday, April
'l:J, fo r memlx'rs and guests. The
event starts at 4: ll p.m. Ron Hayes
will prov ide entertainment lor the
evening. Reservations may be
Jllilde by calling 2B&amp;4315 or2!li-2235.

74¢

10 TO CHOOSE FROM

1'ru r kl n~

•

Because your car Is special

Reg . 940, llmil12

ON ALL CAPRICES IN STOCK

WITH
APRil 4 AND APRI 30 AT SMITH-NElSON MOTORS
YOU WILL BE GIVEN 50 FREE OtiO lOTTERY
nCKETS.
HURRY, SUPPLY IS liMITED
AND EXPIRES APRI 30TH

thr!Cf! S&lt;'Orr for Cf'ntral Trust

1 88

Valvoline 10W30

CASH DISCOUNT

BE
A
WINNEREVERY NEW CAR PURCHASED BETWEEN

' 00"''1Pr fo r Carroll Norris.. ~9by R . S haw was

Purolator Oil Filters

tor most domestic appliC'!Iions
Sale 1.99, Reg. 3.69

Kendall 10W30

S]5,QQQ

four llQintsn p!f'('f'. J Ewtngwilh 534 was ~ gh
IXWll£lf" for Thl? MOOS('. Top OOwler for
M tCulrT'S w;ts R. MrGu irf' wll h 510.
Sparklr Supply v.oo six !l)int s from

1.OOrebate

Receive mfr's 3.00 rebate when you buy 12 quarts

. .. $

M ocsl' LOO~f' 11'7~ 1 and MrGu!r('S Tied with

Afte r mtr's

68¢

AND POSSIBLY WIN

MrGu\res ...
.. .. ... :b 72
Mason Furn ltu n• ...... ............... .... :!) 73
MOOSf' Lo:ls.!f' #'731 .

While, Ray LawlennDt, B11 Neutdlng, Hugh RoU8h ' ·
and Rffllstant coach Dee Brown. Each pla.yer ·
received a thlnl place medal. The sdlool received a

r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...-l
..

Local bowling

Carroll Nonis Dodgf:'

.

.

SCHOOL CAPTURES

9.9°/o 'G C
FINANCING

59¢

Challenger BaHeries

Autolite Non-Resistor

44.88

24.88

Lawn and Garden
A1111. 29.95. #U1 1

Marine BaHeries, 1o.oo

Spark Plugs

o11
The blhery tt.slgned to start your boat In stan tly .. no
meuerwnetelze. Reg. 54.88 . .t6·24M

Rog. 87e

79¢

49.88

Deep Cycle BaHeries, 1 o.oo ott
Reg. SUI, 16-240C

Autolite Resistor

ON ALL CUTLASS SUPREMES IN STOCK

59.88

a.slgntelapec:lflcany tor eppt lcations

such lllrolllrlg motors, running lights. and AV "s.

Reg. e(u. • .fi.27DC

$1200°0

;Jli-- SOMETHING

.-.f ~fr.

(

~ ~ !:.11,

,_

.-

.

'

.

.
).

FOR
EVERYONE

CASH
DISCOUNT

=

t--E~~~[:MA~t;l···~~
..:o;.K;:M:;:-~.,-: ctiU•
RE\IOI,VIfll!ll

.

. --

... -..... .22UI ' -

.......( ·~-

"'\.:. · - -·-· c,...............
,:. .. . - ""
.

L
tA--:-r...-- - -:;;; Mlh t:..n .Jta'IIM Call.

.

l •

.

'

Solder Seal
Puncture Seal
Atg. 2.4$, IMI1 · 11S

Carll Medic

ON ALL
MONTE CARLOS IN STOCK

.

$69"

(\,_,

•

sproy or pour

Reg . 1.89 &amp; 1.99, MM48- t4 . M48 -16

Titeseal
Undercoating

Turtle Wax
SuperHardSheiiWax

Your Choice

1.48

lliiil.....99. .1116-16

Euy louse Instructions. Over 40
dlll•rontrldi11oono In stoc:k for moat mok•tur"m&lt;&gt;delo•

In lktYtd or Pille
Reg.J.n. #T22J. T123

JetX
Power Washer ·

I

2.77

Rust Eater

WffH XT11A MAG CYUNDm

2 e75 fan Belts
Aeg. 3.95&amp;U9

..•

Hoyt/~USA

3

qAMfljtTTf.T&lt;®
INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL

22 Magnum

1 WEEK ONLY

aMd; ,.w..l

Discounted U To

~

_.._. r&amp; ,.._..hmd ,_ thP .22 •""._, lim. . ~ "- .....,.....,..,.. . . h .., .... .22 I!'Mridp.
. . ldlelll ih•..AI ul«y1 l'f'd ~-- hlktl..- .22"' ~ wth
'ikn-C-t. ....... ~ 'I'"' ,_. """' ""'P ,..... tlrflhL
A• ·

.....,,.. "'"".... ..,.., • .,.,. - · "•'•.....Wwd h..........._
..,.~~~, ........ pw.1 .,-~p ... . u,. ..... tv-s

...t ,_.ll'llll...,c-Mo
T.... !ltlr-!hWd ~

$15999

With lcoPe
&amp; Mount

..........

·

•9999

DEMO
1986 CHEVROLET

r-

20:%oFF

'

.,.)!

llllmoo

r~~~~p

Ulam• -rr..-...4 ...,..cl. C...

•m
. . . 10.(.. 106pt.h t-(ltJ

LCR • 4000
99

" "!C!l~ .\ ~

I" ~·

;,.I'",

1'11\I"P' P, :W'!!HIIt I
I",. I ''" ~
I H id ,.JI,' W, T ll !llJio\ ~ :l' o!no·, ·o• t• l •l loll
1 •
"/nUtl l- .1

1111" 1• 1 1'1' olll l"lll:, WO'It" h11 !nt

$39"

'

.~TOIII

Sot.

HOUIII: Mon. t111u Fit. I :J0-7:00;

$299

SAVE SlOOO
'"

LCR • 2000

$1

Jlffi

Afi'm~

nutactured

, ..,, ___ Motors

Fron·39•

w o!P'I N &lt;h .lnqr

off

~eg .

12.88

DEMO
1986 CADILLAC

Suzuk i, or Yamaha

1.00 oft, Rag . from 2.49

From1.95

R•g . 84 95 &amp; 97 95

Cycle
Tune-Up Kits

Reg. from 79.9S

speaker HI Reg . 23.96, IISK 410

54.88
From15.75
Clutch Assembly
with eachange

R,g. from 20.75

From13.95

Clutch Disc
with ex change

Rea . lrom 18.95

OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC

209 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

,,II-;:'&gt;

lor Honda, Ktwlllkl.

Compact Stereo

SAVE S3·000

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From1o49
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Cycle Oil filters

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301 E. MAIN ST •

rrorn 32.95

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10.00 cfl

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lnterpart Louvres

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SunRoofs

Obb,

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15.00 oil

OPIN SUNDAY 1·5

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PH. 992-6614

614·4jl6-2ll35
Sprint ValltV Shopping Plaza
GIIIII)OIIs. Ohio 45631
ITOIII HOUIII: Mo... t11nt ,ri, 1 :30-7:00:
;let. 1::1().1:00; lun. ·u :00-1:00.

Super Star

h ~&lt; 'f

Sottr 1 99 RC'q -l l -1

Reg 16.59&amp; 1995

NOVA HATCHBACK

HOURS:
Mon ., Wed., Fri . 8:30 to 8
Tuaia. &amp; Thurs. 8:30 to 5:30
S""turday 8 :30 to 4
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OPEN
Located next to Mason County Falrtrounds
Point !'lruant, WV 25550
\
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Anco Wiper Blades "·""
Refills
• P•"
All t" r mlr o; .,Oc rl'll.llt" wrwr 1 w
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DEMO
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SAVE Sl500

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CLOTHING

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Complete Car
Stereo System

wHtl AMIFM stereo cauette Reg . 69.95.

69.95
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AMIFMIMPX r•diD with IUIO reverse
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tor Honda, Kawauki.
Suzuki , or Vamat'!a
Reg. from 3.95

1.99 .

face Shields

'" ctear. amokt, or amber
Aq . 3.49. #21-4830 . 21 ·4113! . 21·4840\\

18.88

Motorcycle Helmets
ope(' face . Reg . 24.95

121 ·4515, 21-4535

31.88

fulllace. Reg . 3~. t5

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lrom4.95

lf!lqtor~:"c'~'• SaHeries
us

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Store hDilra8:30 a.m. to 8:00p.m. Monday through Frldav,
- - - • - -00-,;:.IUrdiY and 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sunday.
a.m. to 6: p.m. ""
.

�•

Pomeroy.,....Middleport-GaUipolis, Ohio-Point

April13. 19~6

W.Va.

.B usiness

. Reds lose 4-3; errors costly
Ma""' 21 ~~~-~:·•
;
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Majors

.

PlllsbU"Ah IMISLI ~ Mtn~nt:'ed II ' Is
«"Ulrtgop!fllllons m~atf'l\1 .

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linescores

WLPd.GB
J 0 ].(Jl) 2 ou:m
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Montreal

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K'•r n 171, f"am~ho 191 and Flan OO
W- TtTwll II· Of. L-Nirkro ti).l \.

t~'s Kftluh
Chic a~~- Plnsi:Jnl}!h 4
Nt•w York 9, Ph!la~:\r!phi ;t 7
St I. NJL~ 9. ~'k:m m•;tl I
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Star! diu!!
Hom• Rune;

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Sra&amp;Ot . . . . . lllt-L HI
. . . . . .Jl! • ·~ Ill
Wllrox. Gut'tlt'fm&amp;n 141 and Kt&gt;an¥Y :
Blyk'~:m. R. i)e\'ls t81 and Salas. W-Bly ·
lf'l.'m tl · 01. L-Wlk:wl: 10.1 1. HRsMini"I.'SOia. Gat-.llt\ 1, Br11nanskv 111 . - Btmr ID1Ma-4l02
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Tei:M -·1--I..KS
Olwls, T. Mantn('Z 111, AaSl' 181 arid
DfmJlM'Y: Mason. Ro1.L'I1\a 111. Wl\llams
111. R. Wl'lghl (!h and Slau¢'11. W-R.
Wr(J:ht l.-Aaw . HRs-Tt'us. Md)F,I,.'f'll
!II , lnravlglla (1\ .

ltl-Ot'

•rfl•ld tl.U 1. St. l.ooJS.

Forse ll 11.01 S,m f1(Q.(ST\XIda rd !l' Oi. S;m
F"r:tooiSCO. Ii obln!:lon 11· 01.
S.vftt

Nf"' York,O r~ i l i. Ollcaii'J. !o&gt;ml! h 111 .

Hou!oo"10fl. Smllh 1\ 1 San Franrtsco.GOII 1] 1

AMDlK'AN LEAGUE

ret. GB

WL

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Ton.mlo
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ford , Altw:onon rtH.OnUvmlS (71, Btrtsas !91
and'fl&gt;ftlrlon. W-Romanlrk II .Ot . L-Lana·
ford 10.11. HRs-('aWornia, G11t'h !21,
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t91 and CarTer. K. G~ . tAn&lt;t'rstTI ~11.
Rurk('f 1~ 1. Karma n 171. S t~·a rl (91 and

Frldlly':t Retult.'l
Toronto !i. Kan&lt;;as City 2
Dl&gt;1 roll7. f"lr'\" t·~mrl 2
Nl'w York .1, MIJv,·allkr'f' 2
Fa!Ton 7. ('hlca~~U 1
Mlnf"K'!IQ!a ~. Sranlf' I

Daulton .
HRs- N~·

Tt'X&lt;! .~ ~.

flaltlmon' ~
Ca JHornla 10. Oal&lt;land .1
Surday 's G&amp;mf'S
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A.tlula

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Mei)J.I•PII 1\1.

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Sl.
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McGIIffl ~~:an 1141 il nd Nlf'lo: Focsch. Br.w
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!I .(I I. lbiton. OriTK'ns H-fl 1. r.;N·

Dl'ni\V. F'r.nro 191. Powf'r Il l I and Dlaz:
·
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1111 and l&lt;mlll"d)·. Ellrh)·. W- S!odd;m1
t1.0L L- POI'·tT t0-2 1. HR ~ -Ci ndMB l l,
Parkfor t21. Dla7 111 . San O:rll(). !lok"Rl&gt;!o'·
nok:ls 111

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11 -0 t. Tonmlo. ClarK'\ 11.01. faiHornla .
ttnm;.nk"k 11· 61
Mln~a .
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Pall"nl'r. sunw !81 and \·1rj:lll: CK&gt;Shak's.
Kl'rfrkl 111. Smith 191 and Ba 1 k~·. WKf'rlekS 11.01 . 1~-Patrn&gt;r tO-l l. HRs-A
1lanl&lt;t. Ram tnr1 111. Housto11 . D;wh; 121.

x · DI:M· nln~ t.l l

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HCIUI&amp;oa 118-lh:-l_$1

MIMC'r;o!a. c:ar trl tl l. llruMru;ily I l l.
I~ T on . Au.'"lor 1~ 1 ClllcaRIJ. Fisk 111 . f'J(&gt;
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1\ 1 ('a llfon\1:1. Cr·irh 1 ~1. .lark.o;on lh
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W-Oj1'rl&lt;t . L-K .

'l'ork, C3 11C"r Il l. Phl ladf'lpNa,

IIIIYl'S 111. Dllulloo (1 I.

[k&gt;T roi t HI Ck-.·dund
Sl&gt;anN• a t Mln~t a
Toronto at Kans;t!\ Cit\·
Ebo&gt;To n 111 ChlraRQ
A.a!Timorr at TvK.t ~
C:tllfOn\Ja at 0Jkland

Tf'XU ~.

._."I 2
llaller 1'71. Smlrh 191 and Davl5:

McWUitams. Robinson (H. Gwnl£' 191 and
Pfon.a. W-1'roul (\.(] J. L-Mc\\11Uams (0·11

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ltoMoll 114•1&amp;-LU
Clllup Itt • ltt-t. 1 o
Clrmens. Sambllo ~~ ~ ~nd Sultl\·an;
Ray lor 121. Chtogo Fisk 111.

nokh, O t S;J n f'ranrl!'('(). Lronard 121 . Lo.~
An.'!I'IC'S Swt.Jt.r; •h
"lru*lr l'kt.&gt;hl&gt;ni
NN&gt;· York.
C'hlci!J,'O. Tmuf

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Bann!S1er. NeiKin tiJ l and Hlll, Skin ~r.
W-Cimwns. L- Ban nl&lt;ik&gt;r . HR ~ -Bo6ton.

NN· YorK Cat lf'l' II• . Pl'lllalk' l pft~1 .
ll;t vt'!i 1l t. r\tul ron 11 1 Atlanta . H&lt;~.min•!
tl t. Houston. UJ\b 1~1 . St. Lools., M('('o('('
!1•. Clark t l l . L.andt1Jm tit Clrrl nn;HI.
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bury, Snin)' (8) and Has.~·· W- Tf'l''ks·
bu 11· !l · 01. L-Wewnan ti).l \. HR-NMI·
York. P~llan.ilo f.! L

AtlaniLI at Houstoo
San F"rancl&lt;ro at Los AnRf'lt-s

t1 ou~ to n,

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11-llt

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Mtwtft
NV

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sw.a.y's GIIIMI'

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Gutli.C'J.' J , Htlfllt!!'hi&gt;IIT'Il'r 1 ~1 . Hutsmann 1111
and ~OObtra . W-Ciancy tl01 . I.- Gu·
blela 10.11 . HR- MOSPby il l.
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121.

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NBA results

!12 illnlrt,OI
..Ja MI-·1-J U! I

SF

lA .11Gtl3~1.1·
Ma!IOn, LaiJo&amp;s 471 , M. Da'"!s 181. Minton
1R1. Rllbin.'ll n 191. CJ11tl 1121 and Meh'ln.
·Gu}d('n : RNAA, Dial 141 , PoY.·rU j!'i l, \'ancl'
&amp;&gt;r!! 1i1. Howf'U r9t. N\Nk'nfu(lr 1101 and

NATIONAL M.liKET&amp;\U. ASSOC.
.f..aNk.mf~

1\dMik• Dtv!Mib

.

W L Prt. ClB
f.ti I ~ lllfi ~ r. .fi6i 11

Scla;cia . W -Robin~n II.O• . L-:\'k'drnfllt'r
10. 11. HHI.-.fian F ranr!J;((), Lronard t21. LQ!.;

..&amp;Rl 'Ii

:o1 J't'f'W .111'

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l"'rw York

2.1

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~

(I 1.

.2R-I -1.1

SAN ~!EGO (UP!)- San Diego win thegamebuthegroundedoutto them," said Reds ~ager Pete
Padres manager Steve Boros long~ .. .en!i the Inning.
Rose. "They goi two chances and
tor the day when he can sit back and
"JeJTy Royster came up with the took advantaged them.'Really, we
enjoy an easy victory.
blg hit In the bottom of the nlnth·IO should be 3-0 and we're 1-2. That's
After defeating the Cincinnati tle the game,'' re said. "I had a what really bothers me."
Reds 4.J In U Innings In the Padres'
chanre to oo something In that
Denny, traded to the Reds b).o ,
home opener, San Diego~ a 3-2 inrung but 1 couldn't."
Philadelphia In Decemb!r, pitched
record. But all five games have
Tim Stoddard, 1-0, pitched the 81-3 Innings tn his 191l6 derut. The
· been decided by one run - and 11th Inning ilr the the vlctory.
fonner Cy Young Award winner
Boros has done enough pacing In ·
Bo Dlaz put Cincinnati ahead in allowed six hits, !truck rut nine and
the dugout to wear out the cement.
the top of the ninth with a solo walked ooe.
"It was another great ballgame,''
homer off Craig L.e!!erts, who had
Denny yielded a two·run homer
he said, "but there has to he easier relieved Eric Show an inning to Kevin McReymlds In the third·
way to win. Jdo remember winning earner.
that tied It 2-2. Cincinnati had taken
. by two, three, four runs lh Oakland
"We had enough opportWIItles a 2-0 lead In the third m Dave
(where he mimaged the A's) so I rut we didn't fake advantage o! Parker's second homer r1 t~ year.
know It can be done." ·
After grounding out with a
chance to wtn the game In tre
bottom of the ninth, Tlm Flannery
singled With one out and the bases
loaded In the Uth toglvetre Padres
the trtumph.
"If I had blown It in the lith, I
might have just tom off my jersey
and called It a day," he said.
Marvell Wynne opened the lith
with a single. Jerry Royster was
credited With an Infield single when
reliever Ted Power, 0-1, fell trying
to field his bunt. Power then threW
Wildly to first, allowing Wy!Ule to
reach third. Garry Templeton drew
Ask one of them, then give me a call.
an Intentional walk to load tre
bases.
Bruce Bochy grounded to short·
CAROLL SNOWDEN .
stop Dave Qmcepclon, who threw
•11 Second Ave.
to the plate to force Wynne, but
Gallipolis, Dh.
Flannery followed with his single to
PhoneUHHO
Home44HSII
center to score Royster with the
game- winner.
The Padres tled It 3-3 In the ninth.
Terry Kennedy singled and Blp
State Fwm Mutuat
Autcrnobile ln&amp;uf80Ce ComJ*tY
!Wb!rts ran for him. Dane Iorg,
Homo Office' l!loom&lt;ogton, Illinois
hitting for Cannelo Martinez,
reached first m Ron &lt;lester's error.
Reliever Jolm Franco then replaced starter Jom Denny and
allowed a pinch-hit RBI single to
Royster.
Flannery then had a chance to

LOGAN

TAMPA , Fla. tUPli -Fonner
Cincinnati Reds slugging star Ted
Kluszews kl , awaiting heart
surgery, was listed in stable but
guarded condition Saturday In the
coronary care unit at St. Joseph's
Hospital.
"Kiu" was admitted to the
hospital for testing Thursday and It
was decided by·pass surgery would
be needed on his heart. He had been
complaining of chest pains.
"There:s no heart damage, and
there's ·no muscle damage," said
Kluszewskl's wife, Eleanor, "but
doctors have recommended that he
have by·pass surgery."
A decision will be made late
Sunday or Monday morning on
whether to return Kluszewskt to
Cincinnati or have the operation
performed In Tampa, she said.
Kluszewsklls currently the Reds'
minor league hitting instructor.

.

•

MONUMENT=:
invites you to see
their dispjay of
monuments at
OUI POMROY
AND VINTON LOY$

Beautifully

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Why do so
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Big Klu stable,
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Whiter Ho•rs: 8:00-5:30

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Pf'PIJ:' I'diiY' - f:)(lf'fldNI I ~ · rontr&lt;trl d
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52" Antique Brass ·ceiling Fan Jlo.&amp;,JM.tt.Now S49uS H.P. Chain Drive Tiller ...•.•..Jiu.!~U.tl. Now S32995
3 H.P. Chain Drive Tiler .••.•.... Au.!1l.t~. Now S269's
XR-20 Gas Weed Eater ••.•.....•Jiu.!JJ.t.\1.. SNow S78U
Mister Jllurmer 2 handle Kitchen Faucet ..... Now s19•s·
With Sprayer.............................. Now S2895
Single lever Kitchen Faucet .................... Now S329S
With Spray ................................. Now S39t5
19 in. lawn Mower.t...............IN..!ll~"- Now s11411
22 in, Self-Propelled Mower ••tM..!lf'-"- Now S22911

l .ouls\•l!k' of TIY' ,\mpfiroiJI t\ s.o;(J('i;t l ion

Dl'r~r~.:.u'd

GalllpoH1, Ohio

TRUE ~ALUE BAROAUI OF THE MONTH

k'aJUI' !&gt;QUad.
Sl . Louis - S\},'llo'l pil&lt;'lw·r R;•r UuTTl" to a
m lnor·J('aJ.,I\Jt' runl r:K"T and a.... ~nrn hi m to

f't\ lladdphl il -

TIUE VALUE HARDWARE

lhinl tmd Court

Plt1.'01 1)!h- 1\i'Quln'd QUt f~· IQ.&gt;r Dill"id
l.NlX'I" from 1hr K:! n~s &lt;1 1 ~ H.l!-:11!\"
ornuh a furm It "lUll lut rij!hl hanik'tt pilt'hi'r
MITrh Md{ i •l\1";&gt; ~ Pi llsbu iJ: h · ~ CIJAA AAA
Hawa ii farm 14 ':tm and tu lndd!'r n ndn •
Ford o l tht· Pl n.l h..,· f\-~dnHon. ~,u .. ltDkl~'

tMA I.

WOMELDORFF &amp; THOMAS

'I

Door Prize 8lv111 Away W11kly

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

1985 Buick Regal

S8990

SALE PRICE

Was 19900

legular Hours: Mon. thrv Sat. 9:00 a.m.·S:OO p.m•

lb&gt;.lon Ui. n&gt;~or~;~nd lrlol
Ph lhKldptua 1:11, lndi;lM 122
Ol•troll 1Cf\. ti:N York !f'&gt;

~~ , Jf'•~o;.

SALE PRICE

$8990

Only 16,000 miles. Was 19980.

10.25%
Interest
on all
Used
Cars
Belie~e

It?

$6980

15,000 miles. Was '7695 ·

1983 Buick Skylark 4 Dr.
Can You

Sunday
Shoppers
Welcome.
Come In
And Brows
Around.

1985 Chevrolet Cavalier
SALE PRICE

ONLY
We sold it new!

$2995

1983 Buick Regal 2 Dr.
~~~5
NOW S648Q·
Only 33,000 miles.

1977 HONDA

"$340

.

,

April13, 19Bd

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio 'Valley Bank shareholders
: were infonned at the annual shareholden' meeting
: April 2 that the bank's board of directors would
• approve a 33 and one-third percent stock ~lit.
· The stock split means shareholders of record April
: 2, 19!ll, will receive one additional shareforeach three
' shares owned as of that date. The board's Intention
; after lhe e!!ect of the stock spilt Is to Increase the cash
'dividend by approxlmatelyJ4.25 percent.
Chalnnan Morris E. Haskins welcomed tre large
, crowd of shareholders to tre ·bank's 113th annual
meeting. Pr~ldent and Chief Executive Officer
James. L. balley ·pointed out that when Ohio Valley
Bank moved to the present location :!5 years ago, total
assets were $8.9 million• with 30 employees· and
directors. Assets have IncreaSEd 15 times to $135
million while total personnel have lncrwSEd three
times.
Dailey reported that the ban)l had another record
year with net Income after taxes &lt;l $1,044,&lt;XXl, or $5.42

per share. The qet return on shareholders' Invested
capital was 12.15 percent. At the same tbne, the bank
was further strengthened by a one-quarter million
dollar Increase In the allowance for loan losses. Dalley
also reported that 00 organlz&lt;ltlons received rona !ions
totaling approximately $,ll,OOJ last year and the bank
increased Its total assets rmre than $!3,1ro,txXl.
Madge Boggs reported on income and ex(X'nses for
1985. Real estate . and comiTK'rclal loans were
discuSSed by Wendell Thomas. "Retail Banking:
Today's Changes and Tomorrow's Opportunities"
were covered b)i'Michael Berridge as well as a rev lew
of the "10% Percent No Gimmick New Car Loan"
campaign. C. Leon Sau nders reported oo growth on
discount brokerage, whlc h had a 41 percent Increase
In customers and trade; and the trust department,
which ended the year with total assets in excess of ,
$6,txXl,(X)Il, reported a 42 perce nt Increase from last
year. Je!! Smith discussed customer service.
Final speaker for the evening was Amy Heaberlin,

a member of the Internationally-known Rio Grande
College Students in Free Enterprise team . Heaber.
lin's speech explored the Issue of free enterprise.
Shareholders eleeted tre following directors to
serve on the board of Ohio Valley Bank for 191l6:
Morris E. Haskins, James L. Dailey, Frank H. Mills
Jr., John McNeill, Keith R. Brandeberry, Sel"jjn R.
White, Warren F. Sheets, Merrill L. Evans and Carrol
H. McKenzie.
Following the shareholders' meeting, the board
elected the following for 1986:
Monis E. Haskins, chairman mthe board; James
L. Dailey, president and chief executive officer;
Je!!rey E. Smith, executive vice pn&gt;Sident; C. Leon
Saunders, senior vice president, cashier, trust &lt;fflcer
and secretary to the board; Wendell B. Thomas, viCe
president and senior loan o!!lcer; Madge E. Boggs,
vice president and controller; Joycelyn M. Barlow,
assistant vice president and director of training and
customer services;

Michael L. Benidge, assistant viCe pres'ident and
consumer' loan manager; Larry E . Lee, assistant vice.
president and head teller; Richard D. Scott, assistant
vice president and trust o!!lcer: Phyllis P. Wilcoxon,
assistant vice president and director o! personnel;
DeIsle J. Burgess, assistant cashier and trust
administrator;
Mjchael C. Davis, assislant cashier and manager,
Rio Grande branch; Patty Davis, assistant cashier
and manager, data processing department; KatrlnkaV. Hart, assistant cashier and man~er, Jackson.
Pike branc.h; ·Bry8J! Martin, assistant cashier and
assistant head teller; Kilthryn .Massie, assistant
cashier and manager, mllit-bank; Billy Meadows,
assistant cashier and manager, bookkeeping department; Jenntter L. Oshome, assistant cashier and real
estate lending officer; Linda Plymale, assistant
cashier and manager. proof and transit department.
Emerson E. Evans was named consultant to the
execu tiVe committee.

;T ack shop opens
~in Mason County
' WEST CO LUMBIA - '"There
'just wasn't any tack shops In the
•area, so I decided to open ooe.Tve
·had ponies since I was 7 and I have
·shown quarter horses fort he past 10
.years. Recently I have started
"training harness racers, " said Joe
·Roush.
: Roush owns Roush's Tack Shop
Jn West Columbia, which opened
· M~rch 10 with English, western and
harness tack and western wear.
Roush also makes dog collars.
"What's best about this shop is
tha t we can beat the prices that
people would pay If they ordered
the same thing from a magazine.
We are about half the price mthe
magazines. We also can custom
make anything that a person could
want.
"We are going to expand Into
horse feed, cattle feed and oog
food, " Roush said.

"What's best about this shop ls
that we can beat the prlces that

people would pay I!they ordered
the same thing from a mag'\·
zlne."

The shop canies brushes and
horse care Items, standard har·
nesses for racers, English bar·
nesses for walkers, jump horse
Jiaddles, western show sadd les,
saddle pads, blankets, breast col·
Iars, bits, halters, thoroughbred
and quarter horse supplies, medi·
cines, linamen ts and vitamins.
"I hope to expand into western
wear Uke belts, boots and hats later.
In two to three years I hope tore in a
bigger buDding with a larwr sign ,"
Roush sa id.
Walklng around the shop, !nme of
the prices on tack itclude a jump
saddle for $95. A magazine might
advertise this for $130.·A western
show saddle Is o!!eriii for $:Jl5,
compared to the S:JJO or $400 In ·
magazines. A bridle goes for $25
and would have been advertised for
$75 In a magazine, according to
Roush.
"We also have boots for barrel
racers, snaps and buckles, Navaho
blankets, shoeing equipment and
we wUI make carts for horses and
IX&gt;nles. We even have a synthetic
racing harness that we get from
ClrclevUie, Ohio," he added.
Roush's Tack Shop Is In til! red
rulldlng on W.Va. 62 south of West
Columbia. The phone number Is

TACK SHOP DISPIA Y - Joe Roush ol Rou!lh's Tack Shop In Welt
Columbia shoW!I some olthe Items available lor sale. 1be smplealure!

Engllih,

welllern

and

~ !IUppUes at !rices less than those

J¥lverti!ied In spedalty magadnes.

June conference details Ohio~s Edison program benefits

1985 Buick Century

PHO•: 216-1322

Par:lfk· o .... ~
\"LA l.kr~
til
)1-Porrlnd
.-1
LA n p!)'· ~
:n
Phom bl
:II
Gldn Sl311'
.l l
Sl'&lt;!!lit'
,1 )
y-dlnchHI cli'IIWof'l lttk•
·~tlnciW'd p..)'off ht'Ttb

MUSHROOM COMPOST

·.

.·O hio Valley Bank board approves stock split

713-5'}1)7.

1"4ttlr.ll Dh&gt;Won

)( ·1\llan ra

,me.- tmlind seCtiOn··D·

•

1981 Dodge Challenger
~~§5
ONLY $2995
Extra clean and sporty.

1979 Ford Thunderbird
WAS

2695

1

NOW
Clean.

$1995··'.

1981 V.W. RABBIT

$14gs

NEW BUICKS AND
PONT lACS ·1N STOCK

. · COLUMBUS - Clarmre D: can also take advantage of the
Pawlicki , director of the Ohio program's I'I!BOurres.
: j;lepartment of Development, has
The Thomas Edison Program Is
Jlnnounced that a conferenre en. a $67.9 million effort to stimulate
. titled "Leverag ing Your Technol· technological Innovation In Ohio by
. "ogy: How Funds from Ohio's providing furding to academic·
]homas Edison Program Help business partnerships w1t h com.
Accelerate Innovation," will take merctal potential. The program
·place here June 3.
bullds on the state's exis ting
· The afternoon co nferenre will strengths In research and develop·
· presen t case histories of Ohio ment to create new job opportuni·
' ent repreneurs, major COJllOrations ties and produce long-term eco·
and universities that are using tre nomic growth In Ohio.
Ed ison Program to turn new Ideas
Featured speaker at the conferinto profitable products and IrO· ence wUI be Neal Pelrre, author
cesses. It Will explain how others and nationally syndicated colum·

nlst. Peirce Is an ex pert on
government policy Issues and
frequ ent writer and lecturer oo
state and local strategies for
economic development. He Ls the
author of "The Book or America:
Inside the Fifty States Today" and
"The People's President."
Gov . Richard F. Celeste and
Pawlicki will offer Introductory
remarks. Also featured wUI be a
member of Ohio's Industrial Tech·
nology and Enterprise Advisory
Board and tre JX"esldents of Central
Ohio's three Edison Technology
Cent ers - Rtchar,d Dick of the
Applied Information Technologies

....---Business Briefs e-..., Yeager
A rea insurance agent honored
GALLIPOLIS - Cat'Oll K. Snowden, a State Farm Insuran t'!'
Companies agent In the Gallipolis area, has been named a Bronze
Tablet membe~ . one of the firm 's highest distinctions.
Only about 6 percent of Sta te Farm 's agents qualify for t he Bronze
Tablet, which requires five consecutive years of (thigh standards In
ali aspects of the Insurance business.
Snowden has been a Stale Farm agent since 1964.

'

OU hosts real estate forum

Research Center, Ronald Reeve r1
· the Edison Welding Institute, and
Thomas Wagner of the Edison
Animal Biotechnology Center.
Other speakers on the program
include: Joseph Jolllck, vice president or Diagnostic Hybrids, a
blotoclmology !lrm In Athens;
F!Dg~?r Marting, general counsellbr
Ceram Physics, and industrial
research firm In Columrus; and
Herman J. Elckel, . president of
Chartwell Technologies Inc., a
medical research and development
company In Columbus. Jolllck and
Marting will discuss their firms'
involvement with the Edison Seed

Development Fund. Elckel wUI talk
about the assistance his startup
firm received from the Edison
Incubator in Columbus.
The "Leveraging Your Technology" conferffire Is designed for
company executiVes seeking to
maintain or establis h a technologl·
cal edge, university fac ulty
members in sctenre or engineering,
members of the financial SI'IV!ces
and professional services commun·
Illes (banker,· venture capitalists,
la"jjers. accountants, consultants),
ffiglneers or scientists with Ideas &lt;r
needs for new products &lt;r (rl)·
cesses, and members or ecooomlc

development agencies. The Co!um.
busconferenre will be the second In
a series of "Leveraging Yoor
Teclmology" conferenres to be held
around the state.
The conference wlll run from 1·6
p.m. 'In the Hyatt Regency Colum·
bus at Ohio Center, 350 N. High St.
Parking Is available In the adjacent,
garage. The tax-deductible regts.
!ration fee of $50 per person.
includes briefing materials and
refreshments. For rrore lnfonna.
tlon or to register by phone, please·
call Edward Howard &amp; Co.,
ronference coordinator, at (216)181-:MOO.

Foundation given $500,000 gift

HUNTINGTON. W.Va . - A
$JOO,&lt;XXl contribution !rom a south·
em West VIrginia rusinessman has
booste.l the enrowrnent for Marsha ll University's S:lciety of Yeager
SchOijlrS to $500,000 In Its ftrst
tnllnth of fund -raising ac tiVIties.
' Ji•. Paul Kizer, president of
M,A.E. Services Inc. of Beckley Is
fiX&gt; latest major contrlrutor to the
Yeager Scholars en&lt;lowment. Mar·
shall Foundation President Willi am
F. Agee said.
Kizer's firm operates eight coal
mines and two coal preparatio n
plants employin g about ffiO tn
Raleigh, Wyoming and Boone
cou nties. The mines produce about
three million tons of coal annually .
A 1961 graduate of Mount Hope
High Schoo l, Kizer received hi s
bachelor's degrll' from Marshall in

ATHENS- "The Whys and Hows mBuying-Selling Your Home"
is the title of a real estate forum Thursday from 7::ll-9:30 p.m. atli5
Morton Hall on the Ohio University campus.
Offered through OU's Communtverslty program In cooperatloq
with the Athen s Board of Realtors, the forum wlll focus on financial
options of buying and selling a home, Ups for changing and
upgreding a home and ad)ustable mortgages.
.Jim moom of Sole &amp; Bloom Realtors and president of the Atrens
Board of Realtors will coordinate the forum , along with Brent Fry of
Athens. Local professionals in real estate, law and home finance will
COLUMBUS, Ohio iU PI 1 provide Information pertinent to today's market.
Ohio's certlllt.od public accountants
"The actlvlly level and the market Is the highest It's been In about
overwhelmingly favor llmlts on
·- · - 11-"--pto•ht years;-baslcally· ctue-to"'the low-lnterest'Tlltes,"-Bioom-said:- 1- -n!rm:lge'-·!IW!rrds and - lawyers' -·
"Eoronomolccondltlons are the best they've been lnqultesome tbne."
contingency fees to solve the
The lee for' the forum IS $5. For more Information or to sign up,
liability insurance crisis, a poll by
contact the OU Office nf Continuing Education, Memorial
the Ohio Society of Certified Public
Auditorium. Athens. Ohio 45701, phone 004-6876.
Accountants shows.
•
Ninety percent of the ~ CPAs
polled said the size of damage
awards by juries is the primary
cause of the liabil ity insurance
problem, while 67 percen t also cited
ATHENS- Ohio's ability tocorilpete wlthother states for job; and
the practice of paying lawyers on a
, industry wUI be discussed on "Issues: Ohio Special Report," airing
contingency basis.
,, Thursday at 8 p.m. on WOtJB.TV.
However, a substantial number
'
George Zimmerman of Ohio Public Television will preside (Wer
(63 percent) also said the curren t
the debate and will be assisted by Jlm Otte·of Ohio Public Radio.
situation In some way grew out of
: · Participants Include Ohio Development Director C!armtP
· actiQns by Insurance companies
• · Pawlicki; J6hn Mahaney, chairman of tre Ohio Council of Rel1lll
themselves.
.; Merchants; Sen. Robert Burch, IJ.New Phlladelphla; and Rep.
The CPAs polled strongly en·
: ; Robert Corbin. R·Dayton.
dorsed the solution of limiting
; : The panel wUI discuss such issues as workers romoensatlon,
damage awards and contingency
• : business taxes and wage rates In an attempt to discover
some
fees. Nearly 77 percent enrorsed ·
: ·businesses thrive In Ohio and others are forced to close dom~ and
legislated limits on awards as a
: : Jnove elsewhere.
solution; 69 percent end:&gt;rsed
changing the contingency fee sys·
tern and 48 percent endorsed

1966. He has served on the
university 's College of. Business
Advisory Board for the past two
years.
"We're very pleased with Mr.
KJzer's action for sevE!'al reasons,"
MU Prestdent Dale F. Nltzschke
said . "First, It Is a significant
response to the Yeager Scholars
program from stUI anotrer Mar·
shall alumnus and second , It
represents the first contrlrutlon
from the coal Industry. Finally, this
gift allows us to reach the first
milestone In our efforts to establish
an enrowment fol" the Yeager
Sc holars.
"We have a long way to go, bu t
the response during the first rront h
has been both rewarding and
encouraging," Nltzschke added.
. . --

Nltzschke, Gov. Arch A. Moore
Jr. and retired Atr Force Brigadier
Gen. Charles E. "Chuck" Yeager
announced esta blishment of the
Society d Yeager Scholars at a
national press confermre In Wa·
shtngton, D.C., on Feb. 10.
Named in honor of Yeager, a
West VIrginia native and the ftrst
man to pilot a plane faster than the
speed of sound, the Society of
Yeager Scholars Is designed to
attract aJ m the nation's most
ootstanding students to Marshall
each year . All their rollege ex·

penses will be paid and they will
receive an Intensive, enriched
academic program during their
four )lt'ars at Marshall.
MU VIce President lor lnstltu.
tiona! Advanrement Keith L. Scon
said funds contributed to the
Yeager Scholars m&lt;lowment will
be Invested and annual proceeds
will be used to meet the students'
expenses. Each $100, 1m tn the
enoowment Is expected to generate
enough fUnds to cover the costs of
one Yeager Scholar each year, he
added.

I
I

Accountants favor award cap

Program eyes Ohio business

why·

·.·
...

uniform product-professlonalllabll·
ity standaftls.
About half of those responding to
the ·poll said they or· their largest -'-".
clients had difficulty obtaining
llablllly insurance in the.past )lt'ar.
The problem was most oftffi
resolved by paying Increased premlums and&lt;Jr reducing insurance
coverages.
Slightly less than JJ percent a the
CPAs said their finn or company
changed Its manner of operation
because of problems oi:A:alnlng
llablllly coverage arid the Increased
costs of less protection.
"What this shows us Is that the
problem Is more than just ooe ofnot
being able to get lnsuranre,'' said
OSCPA President Roger Yeley.
"The responses from our
NEW - Buckeye Gas ~ Co. Ia now operatnr; In penn•ent
members show they are tnllvlng to
quarters, part of the Ashland Helbling Co. tiructure In Mlnem1De. An
protect themselves from the lawoflice has been remodeled and redecoraled lor the promscts com.-.y, '
suits by refusing to take some
which deals In bulk propane 11111 sales. Previously m111y C:UIIIIIIers
business, Increasing the fees they
dealt through an ofllce n Kentudly, rue mw are belnp; dlmneled
charge for some services and
throusb the local.olllce. Pictured In the new office are Iva Slsaon, plant
drOPping some business Unes
clerk, and Rooon Sheppard, dbtrlct mana&amp;er.
altogether.

.
&gt;

�/

April13, 1986

April13, 1988

Page-0.2

Public Notice

,.

PUBLIC NOTICE
N\llllll R~ DMoion
of Fortltry, Faum.in Sqtilfl.
Coiumbut. Ohio 43224, up to
and lnclldlng Tu-,, APrl
28, 11188, 113:00 P.M.Ior on
oodmotit:i 10.488 beord fool
lntomlllonol '!.'' Rule of hard·
WOOCio and 47110n0 of pine on
14 .... In~- •.
Shodo R"'"' Stoll For011, Ql.

May I last. day to organiU 4-H Clubs
awards and wUI receive only a
participation ribbon and partlclpa·
Coutiy Eldenslon Agent
lion premium.
4-R
Most 4-H clubs have reorwnlzed
GALUPOLIS - Tre lime Is
almost up for organizing or re- or are In Ire process c1 reorganizing
organizing 4-H clubs. In or&lt;Er for for tre comlng year. 4-H clubs
lhelr ~~Embers ro stut be eligible lo membership Is open ro all boys and
exliblt their projecls al Ire 1986 girls regardless of race, color, .
national origin, marital status,
Gallla Crunty Junior Fair.
May lis the last day for 4-H dub physical condition, or social ecoAdvisors Ill turn their Enrollment nomic status woo are age 9, as of
Sheels Into the County Extension Januacy 1, or In the third grade cr
O!llce In order for their club to .be • have not passed their 19th blrttxlay
eligible ID participate In the Fair as of Jan . 1 of the current )'O!ar.
Youth may join 4·H anyllme
and otrer project judging actlvttte_s
-·durtngtre year; but to be eligible to
this summer.
Clubs may be formed after May exliblt at tbe Gallla County Junior
1, but their members will not he Fair, they musl be enrolled In the
eligible for special premiums and
By Fred J. Ileel

club and have their projects assume responsibilities as an of·
selecte1 by May lsi. So, now Is the fleer, COmmittee member, or Olher
time to join a 4-H club for 1986.
positions ct leadership In tretr local
This also Is tre ttme for 4-H clubs.
members to start lhlnldng about
In June and July 4-H members
the exciting things trey wlll be have tbe (4)portunlty ro attend 4-H
doing In 4-H this year. Some are Camp and to enjoy the vast number
already thinking about showing tre of activities &lt;?I the 4·H Camping
cattle, sheep, oogs, or borses al the program. Swimming, hiking, dancJunior Fair; while &lt;tiErs are Ing, crafts, campfire, vespers, and
looking forward totreStyleRevlew sports are just a few of Ire many
or Rocket Demonstration. These things to do al 4-H Camp. 4·H has a
are. just a ~w of over 180 project lot to offer, but only II youth lake
(4)portunllles that4-H has ID ol!er. advantage of whai4-H has to ol1er.
The pro]eels are just part c1what
For more Information OOil&lt;Prn·
4-H offers; 4-H meetings are Urnes lng 4-H contact a 4-H Advisor In
to gel logetber with friends and your area cr caD tre Gauta County
learn new thingS and also Ill have Extension Office at 446-7007.
fun. Members have a chan&lt;P Ill

lve Townohlp, Molgt County.

MYSTERY FARM - This week's IIQ'slery !ann,
felllured by 111e Gallla SoD and Waier Conservation
DIMrlct, Is localed eomewhere In GaDia Counly.
IDdlvlduala wishing fo parilclplte In a new weekly
code1lt may do 80 by suesstnglhe !ann's owner. Jusi
maO your resuls lo llle GaDipolls TribUne, 8'l5 Third
AYe., Gallipolis, Ohio, 411631, or the Dally Senllnel, Ill

Farm flashes

Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 4$789, andyoucan win a Sil
cash prtze from llle Ohio Valley Publllhlng Co. No
telephone calls wru he accepted. In cue ol a lie, the
lndMduaJ whoae letter hall the eat1le8t postm.,.k wru
he declared lhe winDer. Next week, a Melp Coonly
!ann will he featured by 111e Melp SoD and Waier
Consenatton Dlstrtct.

Spring seeding continues

By Ed VoUbom

omy Guide".
The average rate of gain for the
Coolly Extension Agenl
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
205 head of bulls In this years' Ohio
GaiUa Cowiy
Bull Test al Belle Valley was 3.74
GALUPOUS- '!be basic rule Is IXJUnds per day over the 140day tesl
:to make spring forage seedlngs as period. Approxbnately one fourth
-early as possible. Spring seeding of of tre buUs gained above tre 4
.fOrage crops has been underway In pound per day mark. One buD
Gauta County during the past rompleted the test with a 5.16
oouple weeks and wUI oontlnue average daUy gain for tre entire 140
through early May.
day period. Some 150 bulls met the
Seedlngs made Into a small grain minimum standards mal!lng Irem
.has been the traditional way 1&gt; get eligible for tre Aprill9 sale. U you
.ground back Into hay, Becau&amp;e of wouldllketoS€elhed:&gt;talledreport.
higher producing small grain varle- please caU the County Extension
ties and good fertlllty programs for Office .
small grain , 'many producers have
Cold nlghls this time of year are a
experienced II'Qblems In establish· rmlthreat to both fruit and lobacco
lng forages Into small grains. growers. Irrlgalion of frull during
Alternate rnetbods of gelling the lhe ro'ldest early morning hours
seeding estabUshed Include: 1) makes tre difference of a few
early removal c1the small grain for &lt;Egrres.
a use other than grain; 21 spring
Slrawbercy flower buds are
seeding witboul a small grain; and susceptible to frosl anytime after
31 summer seedlngs.
bud brea k. Unfortunately, the first
Summer seedlngs are usually Dowers In mJst fruit produce the
made In August and ctfer an
lar!J'sl fruit. A 5% first bloom kill
advantage of avoiding weed (rob- could end up 15% loss of the total
lems. Fewer weeds germinate and crop volume. The start of irrigation
cause problems In late summer. · · for frost protection shouldslart at 34
In Ohio ooe c1 evecy live acres c1 &lt;Egrees F. and continue until Ice
forage Is seeded no-Ullage. I feel
melts.
sure the proportion rere may be
The type of rover has a difference
eyen greater. Calli he local Soil and
1n keeping tobacco plant beds
warm. but current overnight lows
Water Conservation Office for
lrilonnatlon on rental ri. tretr druts
are a worry. Beds with canvas tears
;tor making seedlngs. Complete or edge openings tend to sul1er cold
.Information oo forage production Is
ftrst. Straw mulch relps keep
ayaUable In the new "Ohio Agron - covers off c1 the new plants.

Cold injucy In vecy young tissue
affect lhe green coiortng mauer of
the leaf. New leaves a1\d the
you ngest portions of partly·
&lt;Eveloped leaves become while and
ronstrlctro. Later symptoms may
give Ire appearance of a mild
mosaic Infection. A common prac·
tlce Is ID pul Ire plastic used for
gaslng the bed back over the bed
and rover.
This provides anotber layer ot
thickness and may prevent freeze
damage. Caution should be given to
remove Ire plastic as the wann sun
romes out.
Reminder! .The County Ext en·
slon Office will be open this Sunday
(April 131 trom 2-4 p.m. to receive
soli samples. It Is hoped this wUI be
a convenience lor IInse who have
work schedules that conflict with
Extension Otfice tDurs .
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACOTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo. Ohio
Morch 28, 1986
Contrect S1la1 Lege!

Copy No. 88· 387
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sooled propooolo will be
rocoivod ot the office of tho
Director of tho Ohio Depart·
ment of Tr1nsponetton. Col -

umbuo, Ohio, untll10:00 A.
M.. Ohio Stondord nme.
Thurtday, April 24. 1988,
for lmprovementeln:

Soil erosion trend
must be reversed
'

\

By Robed L. Flrsl
.Dlrllrlct Coltllei'Vationlsl
Sol eo.--vatlon Senlre
Melp County
:POMEROY - One or tre pro·
grarm Included In the 1985 Farm
Bill passed by Congress last year
- Wall the- GonseNatlon- ReseFVe
Program (CRP). This program Is
ctestgned to take highly eroding
clopland out of row crop (roducllon
and plant It to a grass-legume cover

.or to trees.

· :The national slgn-up period was
held the first two weeks of March .
'Ibis Involved a lan&lt;Dwner signing
up his offered acreage and submil·
ling a bid m what annual pa;ymenl
llf would like to receive lor ~X~ttlng
ground In tre reserve. Ellgtbie land
· hid to meet the criteria rt being In
row crops two out of live years In
the ~rtodof1981througll19~andll
hid to haveasolllossolthreetlmes
the tolerable sou loss level ("T 'J .
:Meigs County .had ·a total olll
bids submlttro lor 257 acres durtng
the first sign-up period. Ott his total ,
tWo bids for Ill acres were under the
$40/ acre maximum acceptable
payment established by the USDA
'I1Ie Ill acres of cropland that went
ll!to the Conservation Reserve had

an average annual soli klss of 34
tons/acre/ year, and after seeding
this ground to a grass-legume
cover, soU loss will be reduced to
less than 2 ton/ acre/year.
It surprises pmplewho have been
farming for . years or renting
cropland lo farmers when they lind
out that they have soli losses
exceeding a! and lJ tons/acre/year
on tretr f.anns. Something, nreds to
be done to reverse tre trend of high
soil erosion rates year after )'O!ar.
USDA tDpes to put«&lt; to 4'i million
ac res nationWide Into tre ronservatlon reserve over the next Dve
years. A second sign-up perild Is
scheduled for May, andtreUSDAis
hoping for a higher rate of
participation with bids In the
acceptable range.
The Conservation Reseive Program Is • only one answer 1o
reducing' soU loss m cropland.
Conservation practices such as
OO·tlll or minimum tillage, crop
rotations and contour stripcropping
are all ways to re:luce soU loss on
our. cropland base. Wise land use
and conservation of rur soil today
wUI provlde a resource base lor
tuture generalklns.
·

'

P1rt1 1 to 231nclutive are
offered as one oontrect and
will bo oonolclared on tho bo ·
sis of the totll tmount bid .

Porto 1 lhru 23
Athena, Golllo. Hoclllng.

Meigs, Monrot. Noble , Vin·
tan and W11hlngton Coun ties, Oh io. on twenty· three
bridg11 on verlous routes
1nd sact~nt, by cleaning
and painling. 1nd other
related work.
Field p1lntlng of eJCilting

No-till yield contest
open to area growers
GALLIPOLIS - Area fanners
are being cha llenged to conserve
soil while reaching for rrore
profitable crop yie lds by partlclpat·
In g in the No-Till Plus Yield Cont est
sponsored by Chevron Chemical
Company.
The conlest is open lo corn
growers in Indiana. Ohio and
Michigan. an d soybean growers In
Indiana and Ohio. Entrants will
compete for cash prizes at boih the
county and stale leveLThe top corn
and soybean growers in each stal e
will be awa rded a Ca ribbean Cruise
for two. Special bonus prizes wUI be
awarded lo all winners planting into
an approve cover rrop.
Coni L'St plols mu st be a minimum
of five acres. with tre yield en II'{

power

lhift

Fdly

w /integral

torque converter.

del ermined from a minimum of one
ac re ha!'lested by machine. There
is no entry fee .
Entcy deadline is Sept. 1, with au
yield entries due by Dec. 1. All
entran ts will receive a rontest
summacy booklet, which summarIzes the s£1'!1, chemical, fertll lzer
and otrer crop in~X~I data, and I be
resultant yields. for all rontesl
entries.
Complete eligibility and rules are
contained In a contest brOchure and
entry form available from tre
Gallla County Extension Service,
Soli Conservatio n Service or Cbev·
ron Chemical dealer, or by wrttlng
to No-Till Plus Yield Contest, Box
381, Jefferson. WI 5l&gt;l9.

OTHEA COLORS AVAILABL E
BLUE- 40 Squorooln Stock

Oougo.
LIGHTS : i21 Head - i21
Stop and Troil - 121 BackUp - Turn Signals with He~

zord Sw)toh - i21 Blodo 111
Roor Working.
CAPACITIES: F"ol Tonk
{70) Gallons -

Hydraulic

Syotom (281 Gallono.
OPERATING . WEIGHT.
29.000 lbo.
SPECIAL EQUIPMENT:
Beck· Up Alerm -

Engine

Protectktn for v1rious fluid

fill end check points - SMV
Sign - Ant;·Gretle - Reer

Tow Hitch.
DELIVERY TIME: 46 days.
ONLY MACHINES MANUFACTURED IN THE U.S.
A. WILL BE CONSIOERED.
OFFERED AS TRADE IN:
Gallon T400 GM -02092 .

I would like to

&amp; Vicinity

·

-............... ,............·.: .. .
fill Mtrktt- ChUIIcotht M ..
Shopping Center April 18 -18 -

20.
Mtcflig1n Stll 50 Ntil,

c~lr

cle, drtpn, clotha, beddtng.
llerto, rkwtre.

-

3 Ftmlty Ctn..,.iry TownhouN.
Monday l Tuetdty. Rototill.,,
ck)tt!• . dlah• . home Interior.

....

Mewing Salt Furnltu re, car,
refrigerttor, cloth.. , toy1, tn·
tiqut dr.-ur, pool, rttisc. Must
MI. Ctll&amp;1•·387·7895.

.. ..... Pom·arov...._. ··· ..

Btdder to 1ubmlt det1iled

opoclllcationo of equipment
offered . The Boerd of
Truateea reaerve thf right to
reject 1ny or •II bids.

BY ORDER OF TilE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
OF SALEM TOWNSHIP

tal.

1 Card of Thanks

Bonnie Scon, Clerk

John Colwell,
Cociel Stocy.

&amp; Rober1 Be•ver,

Tru11ee1

A111111 till t: e111 cnIs

11 'H~Ip Wanted

23

Oov.-nn.nt Job1 . •1 8,040 ·
n8i ,Z30 • Vf •. Now tUring, C1ll
808··7-11000 EICI. A· 980&amp; tor
cun.,1 t.cterellilt.

Wright Witt Berwlct. We gu1r1n·
tM Wlter II' ,., 1111t to you . Ctll

h•v A."mbly Workl teoo .oo
pw· 100. OuerWitMd p~yment .
No •perlenOI•No ...... Dttlllt
..,d Htf-lddr•ud ltlmpld
onvllcpo: Elon VIlli · 71 I· 3418
Enterprtll Rd, Ft. Plttet, Fl.
33482.
ASSEMBlY WORKI
t714.00 per 100. Gutrtnttld
Ptym.,t, No 111n. Otttilt.
Send ltamptd tnYtlol)t: Elan1847, 3418 Enttrprl••· Ft.
Pierce, Fl. 33492.
EASV

Govtrnnwnt Jobt . •15.040 f58,230 -yr. Now Hiring . Ctll

1 ·808-887·11000 Ext, R·980e
for current ftdtrtllist .
FedNel. State lhd Civil S.rvice
)obs ftlw lvtillbleln your.,...
For iltormttlon ctll 805-M4 -

H33.

WANTED : Prior Militlry Servict
Members. Th1 Army Gutird
ne.cll your axperltnOI . Join now
for 1 p8r1-tl,.,. tab wl1fl btntflts
llkt rttirement and educttlontl
....aten01. ll4-675 · 38150 or

1-800·142-31119 .

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Mo11ing 11le: Mllc . houtenold,
sport1 ltem1; ctnn clothing ,
Alto doghouse, child• tltctric
Ort~WI . toboggan. Trombon1 .
S.la April 12 · 13, b1cll porch .
213 Unton Avt .

·······p·t ..Pieasiiiif .....
&amp; Vicinity

Fuel Geuge - Articulation

Hood Sldoo - Vandoliam

1 Card of Thanks

......,GiillTpolls..........

Vottmeter -

{4110. 11. 13, 3tc

Ctlart11ton. W. V1. b1sed distrib utor seeking 4 ptrt-timt and 2
full· tlr:ne 11111 coniUittntt for
.the Gallfl)olit lrN. No Pftvlous
e•perienct ftletsury; will trtln
comp l•tely . Flu.ible houri .
Chance for 1dvtn&lt;:em~tnt . Average wag a t7 .DO hour 1nd up .
lntarvl.,..l wHI bt held on
Wedn81dly tnd Thurldty, April
18 end 17, In lhe Gtlllpolls,
Point PINIIRIIrH . For tppoint m""t and moralnformtllon ctlt
304·n8 ·2234 from 9 :00 AM
10 2:00PM ONLY .

Vsrd Stle. sponsored by Rutfl•
tnd Ftourilhn Baton Corp ..
tcrou from Bob's Qu ick Shlkt,
Mtton, W. V1 . Stt, April 12 ,
9 :00 to &amp;:00 . Clothing Infants to
edufb and v~riety ot ittms.
Fltl Maritetttl Curley'• Exxon. 2
milll out Send Hill Rold , M1y 3
tnd 4 . Wilt llkt and want
consignrntntl, for mort infor·
matlon ctll 304· 875-3128 tfttr
5 :00 catl304 -676·3916 .
Vltd Stlt, httf mUtoff Rt 7put
Tern 1p11. on lulttvilltAddiaon
Road . Lots of b.tly clottl" tnd
item•. 12th Wid 13th. 9:00 till

6 :00.

9

Grttn Acr• RtQ6onel Center,
Inc. hes an aptnlng for 1
pert-time LTN In Point Pl1111nt.
lnternted ptrsont should call
304-7152 ·2522 . "We 1re an
E.O.E.".

12

V1c1ncy for ~n or woman,
fl'ivlte home, hot me~ It, TV, lge.
room, btttl . ratsonlble. Ctll

W~ ply Cllh for Ittl modtl cl..n
Uled Clfl.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oidt Inc .
Bill Gtne Jotlnson

Back hoe work. S26 . per hour.
Enquire It ••tlon •croll from
Mtaon Cttv Flrt Dept.

814-448-31172
WANTED TO BUY uMd INOOd &amp;
co1l h11t•• · SWAIN'S FUANI·
TURE , 3rd . 6 OINt St. O.lllpo·
lit. Ctltl14 -448 -31 159 .

1------ - - -

TOP CASH patd lor "83 mod ..
1nd nMIIf uHd Clrt. Smith
Buic*-Pontllc, 1911 Etlltm
Ava.. Gallipolis . Ctll 814-441·

2282.

Eaptrl«\oed parson setking emptoyment •• 1n tulstant m•n·
"0• or m.,11.,., r..ttur~nt or
service station . If vou lfe
••king exptrienc;:e •nd rellabl ity
call &amp;14· 448· 2474.

'N1ntld to buy 318 Oodgt
motor. Call 614-448 · 4114.

Dependable Ytrd strvict . Ltwns
mowwd. g~~nnl Ylfd work, light

U1ed mobil• homts . Call 814-

&amp;t4-992·22B9 .

448-0t7&amp;.

BuyW,g dtlly gold , silver coins.
rings , ltwtlry, lltrllnt wtrt, dd
coln1,
currtncv. Top ptl·
c11. Ed. Burkttt Berbtr Shop,
2nd. Ave . MiddltpOrt, Oh. 814·
992-347&amp;.

18 Wanled to Do

Ill•••

hauling, m.,u,lltbor. Bill Sitek

Finanwl

.'
...

Master Mix®
Range Kubes.
Grass Tetany can be a kill~r to brood cows and
baby caves. Daily intake of Magnesium is essential. Ultra Mag Range Cubes 20% all na·
tural protein with 6% magnesium and Hi Mag
mineral free choice will help prevent GRASS
TETANY . Ultra Mag Range Cubes help your
brood cows get the most from grass and rou·
ghage. Help your calves get off to a fast,
I
healthy start.

loyone of you.

Mrs. May S. Blair.
Ja mH F. Blair
&amp; Family

neighbors for their

many kindnesses at
the death of
Charles 'Chuck" Butrf.
• Aspecial tha!lks to
Rev. Roger Grace, the
: : Racine Eme11ency
· Squad, Veterans
: 'Memorial Hospital and
: · membeiS of the
Racine Legion Post
602 who setved as
pallbeareiS, and Eli•ing
: Funeral Home. .
Wife, Marge,

Out Commiii!IIW To You 11
Quell/~ ewd Smioe

RIVER CITYFARM SUPPLY
GAWPOLJS
446 -29 85

.
.'' ..
'.
..
'.
•
' .
..
..
... .
.
'. .
.
'.
&gt;•

NOW ONLY

S39!o~•D.

"

985-3301

CHESTR, OH.

.•
.

I •

.'

BAUM TRUE VALUE LUMBER ::
1 W. MAIN

Topptr for Datsun trudc, NliJ
loom, 2 or 4 Mm111. coal stoke
IU"liCI!I. 304·116 -&amp;851 .

21

'
'

.
..
•
•

•

..
•

CARD OF THANKS
'The hlmily of Bob Bill
l ee wanll to expreao
our deep apprecielion
.to all who co~tributod
in eny way to help ue
during our time ohor·

Business
Opportunity

Will place dgarene m1chines.
Good commiuions. &lt;:;•II 304·

22 Money tf Loan

3 Announcements -

HOME OW~EAS · Ref l nanct to
low fixtd r~tl Uteequltyfortny
purpose. Lllder Mongaa• Co.,

' 11 · Help Wanted
SWEEPER end HWintl mtehlnt

Cleantr, on1 hslf milt up
Gtor,_ Creek Rd . Call 114·

44&amp;·0214.

SINGLES . Mttt th11 IPtcill
penon t FrM tppllcetlon . Pef.
10n1l 1ouch introductions. box
1531 , ·charluton, W. 't/1 .

2&amp;302. 1·304-727-8434 .
Notl'tiPMtlngon Plclr.ensftrm,
Flttrock. All vlolttore will bt
""'IOCIItod .

4

00\ltmnnt ;obt '1 e.040 .
U9,230 yr. Now hirin g. C1lt
&amp;0&amp;·1117·1000 IKt. R-46&amp;2 fo•

23

eurr~~nt f~tr•llilt.

81ngt. lntrvductions, tr.. •ppll·
cttlon, P•rsontl TouOO lntroduc·
tlon . P. 0 . Boa 1531 , Chtrl•·

Giveaway

1· Smo. old mtleGoldtn Lib. to
ood homt. Call t14 ·388-

Wanted

malntlfl•nC. perton,
will contlder
10,.. r•t In •chtngtforwol't! .

good

,.,.,.,~, ,

Coli 814 · 448 ·0108 .
Mtrdl~r~dlltr nttdtd . Part-tlmt
bPIS. to wor• in G1tlipotis
dtp1rtment stores. Experlence
hllpful. lf inter•tld write to: N.
Beck. 2812 John1town Rd .,

Columbul, Oh

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
rtdilcovaryour plano 's be1utiful
tone, caH tod•v. W1rdt Kayboerd, 304·$75 -5600 01 876 -

3824 .

Help Wan1ed

PART· nME EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
OF

fem•l• Rot Wyltr G~rrmn Sh•·
phtrd, 11 months old, frien dly
but good prbttction , with dog
hOUN, 304-8715·1882 .

Window Tlntln9 . Auto. comme rcill. re1identlal. FrM estirnat11.
Call 814-448-934&amp; .

SHELTON POOL CO . Swim·
ming Pool 8•1•• · ln1t1ll1tions ·
Rtp-'n. Your friendly pool
11 ,200 PER MONTH
DELIVERY, DRIVER , SALES
, builders. 8ufftlo, W. Vt. 304 ·
Loc.t co~any h .. optning for 937-2475.
ltvlrtl ptoplt fuM time only. - - - - - - - -Ptld trtlnlng progr1m1, ,ptld Hou• P1inting, Indoor or out ·
VICitlon flrlt yHr, major m.:ll· tbor , renonlble price•. Phon•
e~l btn•flta. csn Mon . orTutt .
304· 876· 1242 or &amp;14 -992 oft« 10AM 814·448 -7441 .
5603.

11

892 ·7424 .

Profeaaional
Services

43219.

l 198 .

0 cut• mlxtd breed puppies.
Contect JUI Wllli1m1 It 1 14 -

IIIEIG~

IIG IIOTHEitS/IIIG SISTEIS
GAWA, JMK!ON .,d MASON CO UNTil!

SALARY : Commensurate with education end e~eperi ·
ence
,
Position involves progr1m ldminis1ratton and case work . Some-fiscal mer.egement. personnel.,d public
relations required .Prtfer Maner) Degree In Social

Fsmlly Ptt - Ptrt lab ., grett
with kid I . Moving. Good Homt,

Work, Counullng "' Counoellng Psychology, or

S.,ldod. Phono 304·182 · 3488.

fiekl desired.

Two whits tllk., rvo11.,,, 304·

Send resume 1nd three letter's of recommendation by

&amp;98·3872.

related field . Two y11rs profe11tonal e~~:perience in

MiV!8';"'1988 to-:-

-----

P.raonnel Committee

3 Announcements

•oteff of Ploaoent Val·
Jey Hospital. to the
Point Pleaunt Emor·
gency Medical Ser·
vice, Becky Ward and
family , apocltl frNndl
.~at tho hoapltal who
provided ltranglh end
:aupport . Aloo, • ope·
-clel thtnka 10 Rev.
l'eul McGuirt: to Ill
·1hoae who provided
;food. flowen, cerdo,
'IIIOn&amp;y, word• of kind·
your love tnd
-preyera. and Ewing
:Funeral Home. God
.. len. y~ all.
; Bob, Mtrthe, Becky
end Amy Beth IAa,
Grendmothtr
Ethel Orr

:n-.

-NOTICE·

MEN&amp;WOMEN
17-82
TRAIN NOW FOR
CIViL SERVICE
EXAMS
G.E.D. Available II Needed
Positions Start As Hi~h As
HOUR

$9:22

• POST OF'!CE
o CLERICAL
o MECHANICS I INSPECTORS

K. .,._,.,.,...,.,.,_. t I lot
Aflfome,.,O.•IfllfltMffOIINI
Write &amp; Inc lude Phone No.
Noda11l Trtililll S.1Vicl i•~

lOX

T3U

In Caro ef

Gollpoll• Dalr T,....,,
IJS'Snl An.
.
GllllpoN1. 011. 45631

-

Outlnt, oldlf home. Vlnt St.,
Rtclnt. 3 bldroomt, b1th, living
room, n.w ldtch1111. dining room.
Price 135.000. Phont814 ·949 2&amp;40.
.

btnMJ1. tcr-.ntd porch f1clng
river . Mlddltport. 6U-992 ·

1343.

Big Brothoro( Big Sl11or1 of Moigo. Gollio.
Jeck1on 1nd Mll.on Counties

P. o. Bo• 1030. Golll olio, Ohio 45631

*Managers
* Assistant Managers
*Trainees
WANTED
For Progreulve Growth
Oriented
Food Service Company
Send R01umo lot

Box V·ll
c/o Point "'-1 Hepler
200 Main Slfttel
Point PI-t, WV
25550

..

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

35 Lota &amp;, Acreage

1980 Llberiv t4~el54. 2 b.ct·
room, unfumlshld, vinyl undtr·
pinning includld . Mutt •II. C1ll
304·n3-BB73.
·

2 .4 1cre bulldfflg lot. county
w1ttr, city sehoole. C1ll 114·

19715 Camtron Mobllt Hom• for
1111. 12.1110 . . Call 11.14-992 -

6e24 .

'

1978 Buddy Mobll1 Ho!'fte. Totti
eltetric. 1 '11 btthl. 3 -btdrooms.
14x7o . t81500. Ctll 614 ·247·

NEW LISTING: 2VJ ICrM , whh 3
btdroom, A.-Fflme home. 1'4
blthll32.000. 614-992 -8739.

985·4227.

2 bdr. &amp; yr . home, mtnt condl·

Go\ltrnment Hom•• from f1 (U
r~t~~ alrl .
AIIO delinQuent tax
proptny, Ctll 1 -SOti-1587·1000
EAt . GH-9805 for lnformttlon .
New tJou1e for ule. Rochpring• . Ohio. C1ll 1514·992·6566
tfter 6 :00pm.

1972 12x60 tt . 2 bedroom
Olympic Trtiler. Furnished. new
w11h11 tnd dry~r . 16000. Call

1244.

tlon . Rntrlcttd lubdivition. 9
mlln from Gtllipolia. C•ll 114·
251-15200.
7 roo,.,. &amp; beth, 1 tcre more or
lt~s, carpeted throughout. vinyl
skiing *215,000 . 12 N . Main St.,
Chnhlrt. c.. 814-448-3793.
6 rm . houte: Ewlngton. OH. 1YJ
lot. · U .1500 . can 814-875-

Outtlty built t % ttory Tudor
style homt on 6 wooded 1cres,
10 mlnut• from Point Ple1sant.
Stnd Hill Rotd, 188,000 .00.
304 -89&amp;· 33&amp;3.

9489 .
brick hom•. lg1.
kitchen S. dining arta. Lge. LR ,
1"h bath, Yt ba.. ment. Located:
Kygtr Creek Sch . 0111 .

9248 .
Govwnment hornet from •1 . ~ U
rtp1ir). Also deliquent ta• prop erty. Call 806 -887-6000 1111.
QH . .fl512 for inform1tlon .

e. 8 tcre• for N le,
127,000. Coli &amp;14-2&amp;8 ·8663.

Hou11

2 blldroom, lg. livingroom, tg.
kitchen . 1 b1th, utility room. 2
porchtt . ln1lde ctty limits
116.000. Cell614·448 -1458.
1

rhree ttn1hl •ere iltt lot on

F1lrfltld Ctnt•nary Rd . With
197ft 141170 2 bdr. mobile home
with AC , t19,900 . C•ll 814·

.

3 bdr., 2 battls, vinyl tiding ,
r~nctl rty l1, soltr uni1 , hetttd
pool, 18x32 l1rge lot, 1 1h mi.
from hotphll on O .J . White Rd .
Ownar retiring, moving to Flor·
idt. Ctll 814-448 -9756 . 1·

12xl0 mobllt horrn1 . 12x25
built-on sun mom. C1ll 1514-

Sele or rent. New Haven. 3
bedroom•. 2 bath•. fireplaca,
gartge, 138.500.00 or t300 .00
month plus deposit, 304 ·273 ·

&amp;14·949
-2179.
•.

1982 Venture Vil li, 14.1168
mobile nome . 111 electric. 3
btdrooml, viny l undarperm ing,
su.ooo.oo . 304-&amp;75-e606.
1975 Ptrk Avenue, Hll70. 2
porch twnlngl , l 'h batfls, new
c1rp1t, 304-875 ·2868 or 304 ·

REDUCED EXTRA NICE HOME

Now displ1ying our new apring
model• In •ingletnd doublew lde
home• 11 reduced prices . W11t·
wood Homn , 5898 Rt. 60 E..
B1rboursvillt, W. Ve. 304-736 ·
3888 open every day .

- 3 bedroome, ready m move
into. C~tntral air. pool-deck .
chtin link ftnCt', gardtn plot.
Lo11 of extr11 . Ctll tfttr 5 p.m.
tnd weekends, 304 ·72151 .

3 room cott1ge with battl, full
be•ement, out buildings, tot
60x150 , Ctmden Street .
U4,000.00. 304-67ti-7771 .

1970 12x50 mobile home with
18x24 g~r1ge on half acre lo t,
fenced yard , very good cond,

304-675 -5171.

'3 btdroomt, 2 bttht, flnlthtd
b1semtnt. 1tt1ched 2 Clf gar·
e.ge, h81t pump and otherextrll.
Mayo OrNe, Ntw Haven , 304·
882 -3487 or 304-675 -1816
tfter 5 p.m.

1978 14x70 mobile home, 3
bedroom, 2 full bath1. applian·
ce1 included . underpenning .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

304-675-5551 .

6PM .

1972 Buddy 12.1160 furnistled .
w11her·dryer. 2 AC '•. mull MIL
being transftrred next week ,
t6,000 . C1tl 614 ·245·6830
tfter 5PM .

Sp•ciout 4 bedroom in town ,
2'11 bsth, gsr1g1, &amp; much mort .
f84 ,800 . C•ll 614·446 ·2174
tfter 5 :00 we•kdayt.

12.1160 New Moon with 2 Iota.
Air cond., MCurhy lights &amp;
building. Just olf Rt. 218 . Ctlt
014·246-6049 eve1.

1974 Vtnture and lot. 14x70
with exptndo. 2 bedrooms, 1YJ
baths. Mitchell Rd . Ctll 614 ·

Tr11ter for 11 le 1972 Atltntic
good cond. If interf[llted . in
seting call6 14·388-9602

304·675· 1418 .

70x1 00 lot. 11h 11oryhou1e. 3 to
4 btdroomt, dlshwuher, dOuble
rltlge IIOVa, fully Clrplfed ,
wood tnd cotl burning ttove .
Clote to ac:hool and hoapital .

128.&amp;00. Coli &amp;14-992 -eoeo.

8

33

Farms for Sale

29'12 1cre1 tenced , b1m &amp;
tobtcco bt ... 3 btdtoom, 2
•.tory hou11 . liv ingroom, kit·
chen. b1th, diningroom, en·
cloaed ba ck porch , utilities
room, shown by appt. onty. Ctll
after 7PM , 614-256-8606.
1•2 1crn with houN, b~rns , 2
lge . ponds. lim• tone. C1ll 814246 -9248 .
72 sera farm. 2 ponds. gp ¥Yell .
12 •ere tlr strip, shed for plane.
Shown by tppointment only.
Call 614 -742 ·2677.

614·446·4113. 8·5 PM
1975 Ridgewood 14x60 2 bdr.,
2 blth , pan latly fumithed. Ctll
&amp;U -44&amp;-4851 or &amp;14-3&amp;7 -

8

1 1cre. S1lam Ctnter, County
Road 1. 10 mlnutn from Mine
No . 1 , H11 tltctric. wtttf, tnd
11ptic tank . Callt1•·992 ·29159.
&amp;0 acr... small barf), tobtcco

allotment. miner1l right1. ru,.l
water, 304 -875-3828 .
1.3 acres, Leon-Btden Ro1d .
304 -468 -1920 tUer 6 p.m.
CamP Site, Addison, Ohio, river
bank , 1eptlc system and tlactric.:
12,000.00. After 5 p.m .• 304-..

896 -3638 .

8

Trtilar with ont acreltnd , ••king
116,000,op or b.. t offtf. Call

PHONE 614 -448 -7274 .

1973 Buchan11r f%200. Ctll

4 bedroom home for sale. Good
Hunting tnd good fishing . Can
bt n~;otltled witt! owner. Ctll

1

5350.

675-5755.

Betutful brick rtnch , 3 bdr.• 2'h
btth, f1milyroom, with fire·
pl1ce. 2 car g~rege , 5 mil• from
town. Clll 81 4 -.\46·0388 tfter

In Mlddlepon, 3 bedroomrtmodtltd home. Air conditionad,
vinyl 1iding . insul•t!Mt , fenced-in
back yard , ttoragt building,
clo.. to schoolt . Show by
appoint,.,.nt only . Call 614·

2'h tcr• wUh mobile home,
along Rtccoon Cr.-. Juit of(
Rt . 218. Owner mdv!ftg mull
sell. Call 814-388 -9981 btfor•
8 :00PM, or 814 -441-8229 tfter , ,

14x70 mobile home. 3 bedrom1,
total g11. Must Hll. Prict
rtduced. t6600. C•ll814 -843-

2471 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESS~L' S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALE5. 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS , RT 35 .

139 .000 . Cell514·446 ·3179.

C•mp1it1 at Big Foot. ak)ng
Raccoon Creek t2,300. 40s100
ft . 6 tcure. ptacaft.ll. privati. C. II
814 -441 -1171 or 814 ·448 -

lured, rea1onebte rstes, Call

Stttle eltatt 3 bdr., ranch , 2
bath, firtpltce , gartge. Oeslou·
r~ble Gallipolis area. Walk to
school or town. hill top view .
Call 614 -44-6 -0388 after 8PM.

3 btdroom hou• tee Mildred
Rice , n 09 Adri•n Ave .,

3 1cret epproa. 1 'h mi. 1 from
hosplut on hwy 110. With
terms . Call 114-448· 7322.

430&amp;.

1972 Vlllagtr , 2 btdroom .
U200. Cal1811l·949-2896

4PM .

446 -1194.

Two PlrCetl ofltnd· ont W-•lf
•ern 1nd ont w-30 acr.:s.
locat~ on hwy . 180. Tllms
IVIla.bll. C•ll 8U.. 4olt·7322 .

304-676 · 2~38

149,000 . ~111614·387 -7238 .

Largt 3 bdr. houM. 3 mite from
town, 2 full b1th1, CA, gu h11t.
price reduced . (fall 614·2.. 5·

3en.

379 ·28&amp;5 .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·

e acnts. 3 BR.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Registered
Angus
Dispersal
Form Machinery
Auction
10 A.M.
Saturday, May 3

GOEBEC

ANGUS FARM
COOlVIllE, 01110

CALL 614-667-3831
EVENINGS FOR FREE
SALE BROCHUR_E

0397.
1976 Mucot \2 x60 good
cond., hn dlnttta set, m1tctling
couch &amp; chtir. 2 ltmpa. AC .
wuher ·dryer, underpinning.
e7,000. Csll &amp;14-446·2462 or

&amp;14-44&amp;·n49 .
19715 Dodge chu1ic 22ft., fully
equipped. U .OOO. Ctll 614-

448 -1727.
For ale 1974 Frtldom sptci•l
mobilt home 12•66. underpin·
ning.' refrig .. stove, new carpet,
locttlon Kin -Harrisburg Rd .
Call 814 -"8 ·4410 or 614-

882·6876.
14~t70

mobile tl ome2 bedroom,
2 b1th. 12•8 1.11pando llvin ·
groom, 1 acre. rural Wlte.r.
septic. utra c lent, North Galha
sctlool. For tppo lntment ctll

614 -379·2529.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

&amp;t4- 592 ·3051 .

reptlr, ptrts, end suPPiin. Pick
up tnd dtllvery, Davl1 Vtcuum

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom houM for 1111.
flrtpiiCe. 3 mi. aouth of Galllpo111, Ul,900. Call days 114·
4411-1115 or nights 114-448-

9 room1, 2 baths. Can be m•da
into duplu. loctt~ on Fourth &amp;
Palmtr in Middleport. Clost to
schools 1nd lhopplng . Asking
know , and NOT to Mnd money prlct U4.000. 0Wn4tf wilt '"'
throut#l the meU until you htn 1 on ltnd contrlct. Ctll814 ·582 ·
invntigtt.:lthe offtring.
5518 tfttr 4 p.m.

row.

Aopeciellhlnk•1o tho

Homes for Sale

614·986-4392 .

773-5051 .

fmploy;nrnl
Sl! rVICI!s

W . Vt . 25302 .
1·304-727 ·1434.

CARD OF THANKS
We would like to
thank friends and

31

• I

2 bedroom-flrtpltce. 8 IPPIIan ·
en, g11 furnact, Qlfdtn fruit

' .

I NOTICE I
W~nt.:l 111'11llow wttl pu"t) . ., , THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
good condition, Phon• 304 · lNG CO. rKOnvnendstha1 you
do bulin•• wtth ptOplt you
4e8-1042.

ton .

MasterMixt

TJIIID AND 5YCAMOII

• :oo.

&amp;14-742-2148.

992-2012 .·

WWit to buy Mt of ueed la:Un
golf clubl, 304· 882-2038 lfttr

· CARD OF THANKS
The famitv of Edwlrd
J. llllir will'el to •·
. pr-. thenkl andappr•
ciation to all thole cor&gt;tributing with (l'eyerl,
flowaw. Cllrdl. food
and 11f!11V kind wordiiO
18inourtirneafiG10w
- aapecialy the doc·
1011, nu,_ and IIAiff af
Holzer Hoapilll and tilt
ininiltn. lingers .,d
funeral homes htnl and
In Paintavle, Ky. May
God blell each and tN·

31

814-2!16-8608 .
Wtnted mlddit ~-' · lldy to
1h1rt hon. with 1clive 1lderly
lady. c.n 614 ·446 -9679 .

Wanted To Buy

Profeaalonal
Services

446-24&amp;9 .

Situations
Wanted

•ru•

Louisa Johnson

-

Thit- -ector """"'' the

Hourmeter -

Grass Tetany Season
Is Here!

•Corrugated Phosphate Roofing
•Goes directly over old roof
•Fast. easy Installation
•Won't rust or corrode
•Provides added insulation
STOCK COLORS:
White, Brown, Black.
Tan. Green. Red . Silver

Plono ond opoclllcotlono
ora on flloln tho Deportment
of Tronoportotlon and tho of·
fico of tho Dlllrlct Deputy
Dlroctor.

INSTRUMENTATION:
Mounted In lighted panel -

to everyone who
remembered me
with their prayers,
cards and visits
during my recent
stay in the hospi-

event more tNn ftfty

Codl.

freme .

Tr1111mission Oil Preuure

ailglo loft or right {no1 lou
then 17 "1 Ooclllotlon IOtol
inotlou then 32 dog.( .
TANDEM OAIVE: Doell·
loting woldld Ileal box ooc ·
lion whh oil tight houoing

I '

b~.'"':ndo::::d~:~~~

Cab articul1ted with front

r===============;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

10 llvo por cant of hlo bid, but

Cheptor 151525 Ohio Roviood

-·

Jdjulting hydr1ulic torque

with no epin differentlll.
FAONT AXLE: To be oolid
ber construction welded
steelaections - Wheelltln

..

lions et le11t ten d1yt prior

BJ.ADE RANGE: Lift
ebov0 ground 19" - Pitch.
anglo 38 dogroo; Bonk cut·
ting angle 90 dogroo. Cut·
tlng dlpth 28 ".
CONTROLS: Hydroulic.
SCARI~IER : Cutting width
48" - Mounted behind front

lndlcotor - Engine Oil and

and Son, Bill.

poyoble to tho Olroctor.
Blcldoro mull apply. on tho
proper forma, lor quoiHico ·

.c:on.tructlon 8"x·

. qRAKES: 141 Whool ooll·
convener.
REAR AXLE : Spirolg~oro

8 A.M. TO 6 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURAY

ten per cent ot h is bid,

herdened

fl1m1

express my lin·
cere appreciation

American grain
sales to USSR
said sluggish

thouund dolloro, or • bond

section

8.88"d8" .

tor - Dry lype air c ..tner
with pre-cleaner, 11 0 voh
block heater.

Giveaway

ter ISO" w ( ~ructurel steel ch•t. rid6ng l»tttry cars. trk:y·

ol. 1 Nlow Atllculotod Motor
CAB: ROPS w / ~ntod
Grtdor.
glue-Sound IUppreukm ·WITH MINIMUM SPECIFI· i21 Fon 40,000 BTU Heator
CATIONS AS FOLLOWS:
- Oefroit:er - Front &amp; Rear
• ENGINE: i81 Cylindor wl· Wipers - Inside Mirror Not horoopo- of 138 - Air Suaponolon Soot - Ad·
with Accalerator/ Deca)ara- iullablo Stoor Podootal TRANSMISSION:

1n emount equal

right to reject ony and oil
bid a.
WAA REN J . SMITH,
DIRECTOR
APRIL 8 ond 13

CIRCLE: Outoido dlomo·

~rll. 1888 tor tho purch-

Work Length- 0.00 ioet or
O.OO·mMo.
"Tho dolo 101 br comple·
lion of thlo work oholl bo u
oat forth In tho bidding propoul."
.
Each bidder oholl be ro·
qulred to lllo whh hlo bid o
oortlllocl chock or caohlar'o

tor

tho Shode Rllltt St... for·
... Hoodqulr'IOrt, 12637 Jop·

.LEGAL NOTICE
Tho BDifd of Solem Townlhlp. Moigo County of Ohio,
wll NOOivo bido until 10:30
o:cloc:k A.M., tho 28111 dly of

or 0.00 milt.

In no

Shill- 2 PoworTih Cyclin·

Public Notice

noel:
Project Langth- 0.00 foot

check for

Redlus w/Hydr1ulic Power

~ded

being an
excellent
for . 1.
youth
to learn
rroreopportunity
about rabbits
' and 4-H rabbit projects, this would
also be a good opportunity for 4-H
member's parents and Advisors to
become belter acqualnte1 wii h
what Is Involved In the 4-H rabbit
project.
For more lnformallon concernIng the 4-H rabbit project, either
attend the worksoop, scheduled
April 19 or give a cau to the Gail fa
Cou nty Extension Office at 446-7007,
or stop In at the office. loca ted at
1502 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.

WASHINGTON (UPI I - Amerl·
can grain sales lo the Soviet Un ion
are sluggish as Soviel grain Import s
appear to be the lowes I In six years.
The Agriculture Ilepartmenl
Thursday fo recast' total Sovlei
grain Imports al31 mUIIon Ions Ihis
season, 3 million tons less lhan
forecast a monlh ago and eq ual lo
1979-l!O Imports.
American grain sa les to lhe
Kremlin are only 6.2 million Ions so
far lhls season and "are likely lo fall
below earlier ex pectatio ns:"· Ule
department said in a monlhly
report oo Sovlel grain.
The Sovlels Imported a record
55.5 mllllon tons In 1984- 85.
The Agriculture Departmenl re·
duced lis estbnale of Soviet wheat
Imports for the year ending In June
by 1 million Ions. The new total of l7
million rons Is 11 mllllon Ions less
than last season's Imports. Estimated coarse grain lmporls were
reduced by 2 million tons to 13
million tons, less than half of last
season's record level.
The other 1 million Ions are
miscellaneous crop Imports.

FRAME : Atllculollon (Mi·
nlmum 20 dog.I Righi Of loll
ooclion woldod unh 11.60''
•11 .75" .
MOLDBOARD: Typo 17''

4'f&gt;'n2: lllophont i&amp; 141 378· · IDoth - Hydroullc Control
380 dog.
11118.
DRAWIIAR : T·ohepod,
(4)13 , 14 , 2tc

TilE ANNUAL no-lUI yield oontest Is underway and onre &amp;«aln Is
open to all area growers.

GALL!pPUS - On Saturday,
April 19, from IDa.m. to ll:30a.m.,
therewW be a Rabbit Clinic held for
4-H members enrolled In the rabbit
project, conducted at the 4-H Food
Kitchen oo the Gallla County Junior
Fairgrounds. II will be conducted
by Sally Weiland, woo Is scheduled
to judge the 4-H Rabbit Show at the
Gallla Coonty Junior Fair at the
end of July.
l'lls. Weiland Is a member of Ire
American Rabbit Breeder's Associ ation and has had a great deal of
ex~rience In soowtng and raising
~X~rebred commercial rabbits. This
clinic will &lt;Eat with selecting tre
proper anbnal, feeding and nutri·
tion for rabbits, preparing an
animal lor show, and exhibiting t re
anbnalto Its best advantage during
judging.
This wUI be an excellent opportunity for 4-H members presently
enrolled, or for an Individual wtD
would like to find out more about
what is Involved In completing tre
4-H rabbit project In addition to II

24'4".

For lur1hor inlorm.tion and

PI Rood, Rood-. Ohio

4

fNI . Tr. .. lying down, puthed
20 ''~8 " - Sprocket Drlvo
ov1r by dOaer. Olk, ~cll:ory.
Choln 1.26 ''.
TIRES: 14:00•24,10 Ply plno, eo . ra 78 lo_,,, Cell
R lmo - Fllmo to be In· 304·878·&amp;882
lorchonlll!«ble.
STEERING: Hydrollltic - -::;,....--,Y:;:a:-:rd::;-;;S;:a-;:le:-Minlmum IUmlng rodluo 7

linlber iniPOCtlcln;· contocl dort, 12'•24'•75".

Rabbit clinic
set Aprill9

•

Public Notice· ·

....... ... bo !OCiivod
II'/ tho Ohi!&gt; Dep-t o1

Gallia 4-H comments

•

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page~D-3"

ANTIQUE AUCTION
THURSDAY, APRil 17r 1986-10:00 A.M.

The following very brief listing of anttques from ~heW~ .
Darling Estate of Coalton . Oh .. plus a few chotce add• ·
tionl. have been move&lt;l •nd will bft sold in RAILROAD

HALLiocolod at 62 E. 8ro1d.!IIV on Rt. 35 In Jackson .

Oh . The Darling family owntn l'generalstorein the ea~ly
part of thlt ceritury Numerous items fromthllstoreare mcluded in 1hi1 sale .

FURNITURE: Selection of Victorian. country a~d country store
pieces. CHINA &amp; GLASSEARE: Patr of RARE 22 Me1ss~n Snow·
bill ums; Rm Pairpoinllamp (as is I;olhtr lamps, quai!IY solet·
tion of art &amp;lass. panern aim, and ch1na . STONEWARE. b/ wwa·
ter cooler. umbrella, bowl. cannisters. J~p· and crocks wtlh
many sitned (Colta&amp;eville. W. Va .. John R11d . Wheeiln&amp;. W. Va ..
C. H. Keller, Ironton . Oh .. W. A. Ellis. Reine. 0.). b/w&amp;llnilo
ware. 9 QUILTS. TOYS: 2 early Teddy Bears, sttaw filled push
horse on Wlleels. push do&amp; on w)ieals. line TIN toys {Marx Busy
Bride•. llorx Tank. Toylands m1lk &amp; c1eam h01Se d r~wn aeon .
Morx Gin&amp; Busters car, lim Rockel Racer. ll.m loop••&amp; plane.
plus other toys. 24 Pc. American Art Pollery lo tn cludea Woller
Oickensware Indian; watches. ~elry, sterhn&amp;, hne early Amen can COIN COLLECTION (bust helves. two cent P&lt;! .. half and larae
cenls. flyin&amp;llll• and Indian held cents. half dimes . stlver dol·
Iars. much more ).
Plan Ia attend for a larga quality sale.
Tho DINING CAR will be open.
TERMS: Cash or &lt;heck wilh prio!. approvol

AUCTIONEER-MIKE CLUM INC.
Thornville, Ohio- 614/246-6851

ESTATE SALE

I HURS D~Y; AP.RTn7 r -1986
FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1986
· 10:00 A.M.

Antiques &amp;Collectibles of Maury Miller, D.B.A. Mil ·
ler Antiques. Located at 32521 Wagner lane, Po meroy. Ohio. off Rl. 7 bypass.
Mills high top slot machine. several cash regislers. oak show ·
case w/ mirrors . walnul organ . oak organ, wardrobe . trunk s.
oak &amp; walnul chests. I pr. of cherry doors, player ptano. oak
china ca binet oak chaise loun ge. botlles, books. chatrs.
dooiS. beds, wood , iron, brass. radios. vtclrolas, st,one ;ars.
milk cans, old tools. ox yoke, ~ n gle ltees , wagon wheels. 2
Maytag wringer washers lvety goodl , large Coca -Cola stgn.
oihe1 advertiSing signs. Many olher tlems too numerous to
' list.
- YEHICLESWill be sold 011 Frid1y, April 18th - King Midget Cars
(made in Athens!. 1967 Harley David son molorcycle · Spnnt.
1974 l-Ion Ford truck, 1979 Dodge van , Slant 6, standard.
Cm No. 25001
.
lunch

MILDRED MILLER, EXECUTRIX

ESTATE OF MAURUILLER

J\l1~~~~~tG·~~~~~~~R·.

Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.

PATRIOT
AUCTION BARN
From ciallipolis, take Rt. 141; turn.
left onto Rt. 775, turn right onto
Cadmus-Patriot Road . Watch for
signs.

ALL NEW CARPET &amp;
FURNITURE SALE
All COLORS, SIZES &amp; STYLES

THURS., APRIL 17, 1986
7:00P.M.
Marlin Wedemeyer
Auctioneer
614-245-5152-614-388-8249

PUBLIC AUCTION

Saturday, April 19, 1:00 P.M.
1135 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Owner: Mr. Tom Saunders- Phone 446·4145
THE FOLLOWING WILL BE SOLD

·
ANTIQUES OR COLLECTOR ITEMS:
Dayton Biscuillin, ca. 1900: Knights ol Pythtas parade he!·
met ca. i880; Misston Oak galltree w/ mtrror, ca . 1930; Mts·
110n. oak hat stand (needs hooks). brass child's wh istle. ca .
1900; rosier bed w/ LJn fi nals, ca . 1940: newel post lype
lamp , 920's. 30's. 40' irameable adve rttsements. 6 place
setting oll937 Wm. Rodgers silve rplale {ftrsl Love pattern I
w/chest om ate fram e mirror. ca . 1945 . RCAporlable Clank
Vi ctrola .'pal.. 1904 (rough I; smok rng stand ca. 1935; butler
padd le. n~ ce 4 pt ece blond Wateriall bedroom sutle. (posler
bed. van11y w/lg. etched m1rro1 &amp; bench . chesl ol drawers
w/eiched mtrror ). ptcture frame s. grantte ware. 1947 Hull
vase. Well er vase. unu sua l ogarette holder &amp;lt ghler (dated
19 28-ma!e to look like gold certilrcaleone do llar btl!). school
sl ate. ~ethng meda llton of Panama Canal(dated 19121. eel ·
lulotd mtrro r, od postcard VIews of Gallrpolrs. watch iob.lew
co in s (stlver &amp; whe al pennies). oak flalwall cupboard
. wt drawers. pnmtltve table, ~ictortan . me!lalfiOft b.ack_parJoJ _
chair, ca. 1865 ; cord bed , (pop. &amp; cherry) . dipper , brass rnk
well. ca. 1890. and more.
ART DECO ITEMS (1930's era I:
Ashlray slan d, ashlrays, lamps {ch torre. ~ac k amethyst.
glass). wall clock case. etchoo dtesser mtrrors.!leveled rr~~ror ,
shteld mirror. bud vase. candlell older . ftesla saucers. B·day
Gilbert clock. dresser accessortes. patr benl chrome cha11s.
bookends. chtome erg box. green ~ass clock. and mrsc.ttems
HOUSEHOL D
Tall oak fern sland . 3 beveled sq. mtrrors. 2 beveled rd mtr ·
rors. pall map le and rattan ch a11 s. sel ~ack Iabies. silverpiale tlem s. table lamps, fancy whatnot shell, sel4 occasto ·
na l chairs w/ oak lrtm, bra ss w / ~ ass lops collee &amp;mdlable
set walnul book rack table. pr. etched irumpel vases. TV
sta~d , htd e-a.·bed sola . pl. fan cy ~and lab les w/ ~erced ga .
lary &amp; claw feel. ca. 1940; potlery vases. barstool.G.E. mrxe r
w/attchments. Duncan Ph;yle tea table. blender. statr less
stee l can alum. ice tea set. &amp; other mtsc.
.
MISC .:
Lamp parts. back bar mirror. ~ee p in g ba g. Sm1th.Corona ly·
pewriler.
NOTE: This is a nice clean group of household furni ·
ture in good coadition.
·

AUCTIONEER; DAN SMITH
PH. 949·2033/992·7301

Not1esponsible for accidents or loss of properly.
Terms: Cash 01 Clleck with Positive Identification.

�Page-D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel
36

Real Est1te
Wanted

SRIDGE

51 Household Goods

James Jacoby

Sofu and chlifl priced . from

~ ------'--

: Wtntld to buy ICfiiOI In KYttr
.. C,_. Khool din or Mtftl
• County pref1Jably with ..ptlc

• 0522.

--

By James Jacoby

Houses lor Rent

~ Good 6 room hou11 in country .

• C111111 4 -2515 -8813.

• 3 bdr.. ttl carpeted, wtter &amp;
- lrMh p1id. U25 mo . plusd11p. 1
~ mi . from hoapfttl. C•ll614·4•6·

. 1354.

a.

. &amp;,.·448-026 •.
~

Nlct 3 bdr. houufull b11emern.
c:tntrll t ir, tenl*i y1rd. on Rt
141 , 1325 plu1 depotlt. C1ll
S14·862·2818 tfttr .&amp;.

, 3 bdr . Qll hut, pay your own
utiUtl•. Ctll 814-4.a&amp;.Q131 or
- 614 -441 -7437 .
• 3 roomt &amp; btth, JeHenon A.....
Pt. Pln11nt, WI/ . Nice k)cttton ,
•dulta.
no plfl. •nd references.
Call 304·675-30&amp;2.

Po,.roy. 2

8JI0 967

t A

t 43

+A Q 6 2

'"'""'m mod ..n 43 Farms for Rent

44

20 terM of farm ltnd. 114 mil•
below Riehle Bridge on ll&amp;..
:;~·. Bend. ~all 11 4 -843 ·

3 bedroom houll tor rt~u.
10d0 mobile home tor rwnt.
Cell 814-949-2424.

Wes t

44

1-218-83&amp;-3952.

Pass

2 NT

Pass

Pa~ s

814-448-1802.

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom tpt. ttove, rlfrfglt'l ·
tor, garage. Highland Ave., P1.
Pleuent. WV. Ctll 81 4 ·448 -

Solid wood bedroom 1uhe DB ,
with mtttrett. 2 ntght lttnda,
drnaer W·mioor, t100. Ctll
814-245-9497 after 8 :00 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

45 Furnished Rooms

5388.

For rent Sleeping Room1 tnd
llgnt houM keeping room1. Ptrk
Centrtl Hotel. Call 1514·446·

Furn . tpt . 919 2nd. Ave . Gtlli·
polit. tnare bath. alngle male.
1136 mo .. utiliti .. paid . Cell
448 -4418 .tier 7pm .

. 2 bdr . til electric , w ·
woodbumer, Clfl)ettluoughout,
. AC. deck w~.wning, 21h mi.-Rt.
588 . No children or Inside pets.
, Call 114·446·4807 or 614·
446'-2602.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St.. Gtllii)Oiil. New&amp; uted
wood ·COelttovN.Ipc:woodLA
tultt 1399, bunk bed• 1199,
tnlron reclln1r1 t99, new &amp;
uted bedroom
rtngea,
wringer
washers.aultea,
&amp; ahoM . New
llvingroom auitll 1189 _, 699 .
l1mpa, 1110 buying coli&amp; wood
ato\lea. Cell 814 . .. e.3169 .

APARTMENTS. mobila homH.
MoUMI. Pt . Pte•ant tndGtlllpolia. e14 -448 -8221 .

AtdecorttM api., 2 bdt .. 1115
only. Call 304·875-5288 or
304-8715 · &amp;104 or 304-676·

2· 2 bdr. lrtllen. 1· 3 bdr. trtller.
' Ctble IYtillblt. Call 814·448·
052 7 tfttr 3 :00 .

2 bdr., nNr Silver Bridge rlut .
Nice carpeting. weter &amp; g~reb·
l(lt paid. Cell614·"1·7025.

,_

54 Misc. Merchandise

.• -'514-992-5858.

~ : .:__-~~;;;c--;-~

54 Misc. Merchandise

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRICES?

OFFERED AT SACRIFICE PRICES
IMMEDIATE SALE
•Residential Properties in Middleport
•Excellent Business Bldg . in Middleport
•Country Home- Gallia County
•110x140 ft. Lot with sewer&amp; water in
Middleport

f'ttO MONEY
' "\DOWN

$50.00
A MONTH
*Your Own
Boat Dock
*Bath House
*Ell[, &amp; Water
*Private
*Never Crowded

DIRICIIONS...

Ohio II.

7, 6 milK bt~w
Gallipolis - cross lt&lt;·
coon Crlc lridgt, turn

POMEROY
992-21 B1

righ1 and follow lit••·

:·:, ..---------.....1..-----l....---.;~

KESSEL'S QUAUTY MOBILE HOMES

·~~3· ~~PRICE BUSTER~s•,
1986 HOLLY PAIK

~:

~5-.0 -r:,G::--1-_:- 1-

9l' J
28x48

9 '

"I l oo~:

: U

:

'

~'/ •"':. .-

:

: '"n ; \.10

' 0

•

.

: (

'

)

'"

~

Roof Dromer
.·• Vinyl
Lap Siding
Steel

Completely f~rnished
Bm-3

'. ·. · "'- l/ _
/ :_ ·--'- --- ·- - -f'..

1 i ,_._,

Walls

g

-.....

/

' '
:

~

' : n
•

~HI / A

• Lin •

•

8/n-2

'
'•

==o-===•J..JU....:..

I I

'

Delivered and 111
~ an hoUSI·Iypo
foundation
Patio Door
Free Waliler alii
Dryer- April Only

financing Available
Double Insulation
Pkg.

11 cu. II. Frost F11e
Ref.
House

'

Front Door 1.-

~

...-

;

. i r-'\.--; Iii 0 11

.:· 3 Bedrooms
.. 2 Full Baths
' 6" Exterior

·

-~- · B- ~- 9-B----j

- - ; ~ ·;"''l' '~, ·.

• :--..- '-"\.
=-

1-- - 12·&lt; - - 2'0 _ __ _ _ , . , _ _ _ _

- - - 12 · •

=l

lypt Win-

dows
Self-storing

Storms

~4~B~2~
8 ~3B~ft~R~Z~
B ~I~IP£2y
09~-- •• · o ----------~~

$29,200

•

+TAX AND TITLE I

-~----~~~~~~~~~--~----~
"Where Quality Makes The Difference"
547 JACKSON
Gallipolis, 011. 45631

(1

nilt West ol Hobtr Hospital, Rt. 351

Aefrigerttor tvoctdo amen 195,
rlfr~flfetor whhe frost free
116 · refrigerator lide by lide
harvnt QOk11195, tir condltlon6•000 STU •••
en dltlo
I I .. tir
18 000 Olll'li1
eTU
con
n•
•
t160 .
Wllhlf 196 , dryll' 196, electric
renge40ln . t96,gaarenqel75 .
Skagga Appllan~t. Upper River
Rd ., 614-448-7398 .
White PtovlnciGI bedroom auite.

Coli &amp;14·448-&amp;594.

5853.

G.E. Freezer. 15 cu.ft ., t276 . 4

tutometic: Wllhtrl, 3 electric
dryers. 3 , .. ranges , 2 tide by
aide refrigerators. fir81tona
Mktdlepor1.
·

HOURS: 9:00-7:00
CLOSI:D SUNDAY

PHONE
(6141 446-7274

"Will Claudia survive the
operation or will the actress
•
portraYJ.Jlg·
· her refuse our
producer's latest wage
o"er?,
n
11
1

54 Mise, ll!lerchandise

54 Misc. Merchandise

F01 11le rototlller. in good
condition. 6175 . Ctll 8H-25S·

Prom drusea. 1i111 9 thru 13.
Excollenl condttlon. 814·992·
5742 or 614 ·992-2094 .

1251 ,

Locust post for 11le or 1r1de.
Pickup or delivery. C1ll 814-

446-4298.

Hotpolnt htevy duty wett'ler
1100 . Double door cedar Wlf·
drobe tntique 8126 or beat
offer. Ctll 814·446·9fi15 .
log etbln. Call 614·448·0885
tfter &amp;PM.
Fllhlonable Prom draa. Wom
one., IIJI 7 -8, IJIC . cond. C1ll

814-448·009" after 3:30PM.
2&amp;" color GE TV. 11&amp;0. Call

114·446·2310 .

1979 Buick LISabre 4 dr .,
lotded. like neW, rettll t3.000,
1111 11;800. VIking 19' pop-up
cemper, 2 dlnntttu. aleepa 8 .
n~ tirea, first 11 ,500 . Celt

614-448-7019.

Firewood tor ltlt. Call Tony
Wtllltmton, 814·441·0273 .

Metal Letne amat1 horlzont1l
milling machine, Mig welder,
redial 1rm drill prnt, 304-468 1920 after 6 p.m .
SuRPLUS . dtnim ·trmv · r~nt1l
clothing, aho•. boots, mlli1try
packs. ilema. Sem Somerville'•
1ince 1984, Etlt Reventwood,
junction -Independence Road ·
Old AI. 21, Friday elltningt, Sat.
Sun. 1:00-7 :00 PM . (Whole~tle
to dealer• only, no\ltlty lm·
printed Clt)l, 304-87&amp;-3334 ).
Seara 8 hp rid ing mower. King
coal end wood atova witn
blower. like new c:ond. 304-

896-2683.

Fltt bed treiler tor pickup truc k,
with loedlng rempt, 4 ,000 lb1
ctpaclty, tamden ult ,

02,500.00. 304·878-2072 .

King ·O ~He1t wood coli burner.
IC:C:HIOtlll. t100 .00 . Ttpptn
g11 rengetnd oven 180.00 . Call
304-676-8623 ofter MO PM.

Pl11tlc c:l1tem state IPPfO\Ied
l)llltic · septic ttnka, plutl~
CUI\Itrtl, met:al culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock·

Wln, Oh. 114·288·5930.
1.000 gel. wetertanltwith pufl1l
6 ho ... Ctll 614·843-0068.

0 ·4 dour, 150 MF tractor
PtoWI·dilc - mower It bush hog

Coli &amp;14·245·9248.

,

66

Pets for Sele

. Draoonwvnd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Hlmalay•n, Ptrtlen end
Sltm•e .. lttena. AKC Chow
pupplall. N.w p.rppl• l kittens.
Ctll ·441-3844 1fttr 7PM.
Tlaldltld Kermelt . All breed dcg
grooming. Obedlenot trtininv
lnttructlon. AKC German ' wire·
Mired Painter pupplet. Ctll
814-318· 11720.

Blue ftmtlt Doberman 3 yra.
okl, full 1tock, •so or belt otter.

Coll&amp;l4· 245 ' 15040

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Male Fox Terrier wormed, lhota.
nouN broken, good dot wltn
acc•10ri•. e&amp;O. c .. 814~ 446 2287.
'

Goo. S. Hobsteller, BroUr

Pure brtd whitt Gtrrntft Shtperd r~male pup1. 10 wkt. ok:l.

NEW LIME RD. - RUTLAND
- Nrce ooe and han ~ory
tame home, Wl1h lllee bed·
moms. lami~ room, liv•ngroom
and large knchen. tun basement one cat garage. !its oo
one acre. Asking $26.000.00.
CONDOR ST:- POMEROY
- Nice b11ck two bedroom
home. wilh living room. din ing room, k•lchen, full basement . central air. Call for deJails.

•eo, Co11814-992-2582.

· Pin Bull Dog. 18 monthl.
female , 160 .00 . 304 · 8?6-

. 5512.

Form

Supp lie s

JUST :AAArvED awHt onion

planta, and iiiO ubbl!ge pllfltt.
&amp;wisner Implement, Upper Rt .
1 , 814-446-04;1.

Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
w..t. Jtck1on , Ohio.

U.S . 35

614-281-6451 '

Mat..., Fergu10n, New Holland.
Bush Hog S11t1 &amp; StNice. Over
40 taad htctor t to choost from
&amp; coli'plete line of new 6 ueed
equipment Lergnt Mlection in
S.E. Ohio .

3020 John D1ere Trtc:tor. Exc:el·
lent condhion. 2 u l" low boy
trtller. Cell 614·992 -7401 .

-

:lll-:ll·36:86·136-186-240-271i-240•275 GAS, DIESEL

DEXTORS-GAS 8o DIESEL
JOHN DEERE-620- 2010 • 2030
FARMALL-M • H ·A- CUBS
2 AXLE TRAILERS
NH - GRINDER. MllCERS 362
BAILERS - MF1560 ROUND MF #3
J .D. 24T - 336- NH 273. OLIVER 620
BACKHOES AND D07.ERS
NEW KING KUTTER FINISHING MOWERS
. GRADER BLADES- 6, 7., 8t 8 Ft.
ROTARY CUTTERS 40"
4, 5, 6 &amp; 7FT. - BOX BI,.APES - DISC
PLOWS - 1 &amp; 2 BOTTOM
CULTIVATORS - SEEDERS
DOZER. CAT 7-F MODEL .
PICKUP TRUCKS -CARS
ROAD TRACTORS- TRAILERS
PARTING - FORD, FERG.. I. H., and Others

'
'

Dour, T.O., 15 8 , power th ift.
wend! , good under ctrrltge,

Pic:fl·up c~p . Front 1lider win dow, aide bubbl• end windowt
that open. ltddtr reck. like new

or 882·2271 .

steer~ng wheel e ·Low or
light • StrUctural steetlrame
1 Pm10n &amp;sector steer1ng

oGreasable spmdles
Modei312·B

fARM Eq!~!s~!~J1

New trom

KING 0

KUTTER, INC.

, You know you 'ihould planl &lt;oeveral hybr1d., to spr cdd your rto:,k
, But you don 't haYelo senJe tor seco11d ~ ~ :1? lt11 ~our rctrnl)d ruon
hybnd needs . When you c hoost ll1cSC' Furl&lt; s G Hvhrrds vou il
I hf') ha.. e tht-' 11·(nrd .. to .
prov(' they perlorm 1n thP tor rant\ r.. o! 1ne1r mdtu riiiE.'!l ., ~ u:•!:.e
; hybud5 w1ll lit perlt-c tly 1n to Y'Jur p ro!:JI &lt;.Irrt bt·c t~u'&gt;t:" lhcy 11 w·· ll
adapted to th15 ar~;a Plact:" your ur dt"l nuv.

BILL BUSH, DEALER
NEW LISTING - ONLY MINUTES FROM OOWNTOWN.
FRAME RANCH WITH ALUM. SIDING. 3 BEDROOMS, NICE
DINING AREA , BEAUTIFUL ('APfTING DECK, GARDEN
S P~ E . 1 I'AR ATTACHED GARAGE. NICE PRICE $37.~ 0 .

OAM Hill, OH. 4S6S6

eAlL C'OLLECT 614-612-6602

l• nc lutttt's ""' FREE~ FlOAJI NG rtN ISHUtG MOWER le!ds !he war m perlvrm1nct o;nd Qu .tilt' Con
llruc!ed .-llh heA vy ]/ 16" riKk mal t r • al . llta w~ du ly whet'IHn~ hell !luted •r · !hft k blad~ . l h• 1 •tru
hie ffi 6 C h 1 n ~ mo "' ~ on :eve I 01 untfPn ;;round rnclud rng d•lches Sttndilri.l cqurl)mln l on !ltllmi 1\ulle r

fA[[ FlOATING fiN ISHIN GMOWERS i f! Ci ude ~

1

40 H P ge ~rbo1 and ~h1elde d PTO ~ tu !l

••
••
•e
•

NEW USTING - 2 bedroom .

l1 n1 Kulltf's ~peer ally dtS1 ined Mt h .tiiOYr~ ones1de ot Ihe mowe1 10 ra1se Ill allttRtll ot up to 16" (15 5
deRrml wh•k the olhtr stde rema• n~ on t!'t e ~rounO IM s ~t•.!i te1Mes leli Ihe fA([ ~lOATIIC FIN·
ISHING MOfrU lollow the conlou r o' tile j;IOund e~en while g0ong, lfllo or 0111 ol dti:C:h~5

- Kin&amp;Kuttt(S ntw FRE£ flOArtNG fiNISHING MOW£ Acomes

tn

SE£ THIS MOWER AT

8N Ford flfguton trtctor, e11c:
cond. 304-882-G115.

Rt. 35 Wesl

room, 20'x30' shop. Other wtbuildilgs. $55,000.

e

•
:

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Located alwner d Second •
Ave: and Sycam~Je St. Call lur more ~nlormation.
•

•

COMMERCIAL BUILDING klcaled abng Court St in Galipolis ••
3,500 SQ. ft. plus \ ,20() SQ. ft. apartrrfnl Call br more '
rnformat~n . PRICE R£DUCED!
•

•

4'. ~·. a nd 6' s•zes

•
•

KING 0 KUTTER, INC.

John D11r1 7000 oom pltnter.
Four row minimum t ill witn
nnlt1r. Call BU-992·7301
9·6 Mon .· Set.

stuated on approx. I acre

wrth~ the city of Gallipolis. f~Jrntld~ilg room,cherry IJinelsl

family

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT

3010 J D OieiM. &amp;85hre . Cream
p.Jff tarmar retiring . J D Grttlr
Bllde, t185 . 3 bottom J D
Plows, 1395 . J 0 894-A Atilt,
IA96.J 014 -TBtlw. 1896. C1ll
e ·, ... 286 ·6622 .

••
••
•ee
••

Jlvicllll'l 't F1rm Equipment 814·
4.a&amp;.1676 . Spring Sale on til
long lractor &amp; Vermee r hay
IQuip . witt! 6 % flnendng t\11111 ·
bit. A good \llrlltV of uttd
~ uip . In stockl
CENTER . SA 36 W. Qelllpolit,
Ohio. Call 114 ·448·9777, tvt.
614-446 -3692 . Up tront trac:·
tors with warnnty DVer 75 used
tr~tora . 1000 tools .

•••
•

Ovetloo~ng the beaublul Oho Rrrer. lnckl~ river frontage
and small 2 bedrm cottage Pnrrf de'leklpment ~nd. CaH for
• • roore inlormat~n.

6261 .

be plantiny to p y •t"'d('r~ all r.1e ......,)

~nt

HOME-Ux:atsl in Galtipl&amp; Ftil msentmt
IL. nat gas furnace. firepO.Ce. House 1Sin excel~tcondnion.

Complete Li ne ol

For 11l• ro1otllltr, in good
oondltk~n . t17B . CaU 11 4 ·256·

I

IllS MORIAH RD.

•10.000 firm. 304·882-3358

oH•qh·back seat • Padded

bldg . 1111.: 30 ' •40'xll ',

-

I

HALF PRICE! Fl .. hirlg anow .
signa t2991 Ugnted . non-tnow
t2791 Nonllghted 12291 Free
lettertl Only few lef1. See
lo c: elty . 1 (800 }423 -0183 ,
tnytime.

46789.

!em • "Go" indica!or hghts •
Head ta1111ghts 1 Hourme1er

Farm Equipment

N.., lne of l.wn mow.rs and
tlller1. Troybilt dlltfa. M1lnline
tltltrt. MTO mowen. Snapper
rnowtra, Slein• trtcton 1nd
lmplementt. Swisher lmplt·
ment, Upper At. 7, O•lllpolla,

Utility

wortc. '"' ttrvice. 304- 675~

814-894-7842 ... 894-5008.

Un1·Dr1ve ·• 1r"ansaxle • No-

loot Tach·a·mat•c" hitch sys·

115',.,8' sliding door 6 3' llfV.
door, t&amp; ,2S8 arac::,t ld . Iron
Horae Blcftl. 114·332-9746 .

4831 .

Used R·e&amp; ditc:h Witcn Trendier
and 450 John Deere Doztt,

FEATliRES iNCI,UDE:
t2 HP Koh~r engme o8-speed

Oh. 114·441-o475 .

TONY' S OUN REPAIRS , hotdlp
rebh.J1ing. til type~ of gunamith

00 Frh:k Stwmtll. wtth lntemt·
tlonal trtc:to r. All rebuilt. Write
P.O. Box 12 , Pomeroy. Ohio.

without mower

L.----...JW.:!.!!:.~.!..J!!:...____.JJ LJ~~~;~~;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;::~Pa~rt~s~~n~d~Se~rv~ic~e~. so just "move •n". Price $49. ~0.

WewHi do til typ• ofcuatomfar
machinery work . Call for rates,

HOMES. FAR'MS &amp; COMMERCIAL P1!0PERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4S621

Gnvely -wtlk behind wi t h
mower tnd dull wh1el1. 1800.
Ctll614-992-5853 .

SAVE $300

FORDS- USED

Cultlv11ora for Ferm1ll Cub
tl'ector 111ry r.od cond. Cttl
814·446·810 atter 7:00PM .

Real~y
446·3636cA~_

7 HP Wiaconairl Georglt Buggy.
38 lnch electric: range . All wood
coff11 ttble. Typewriter. Hy- '
drtu~c cytlndll'l and purf11t.
Enquire ICfOII from Muon City
Fire D1pt.

.Power

FREE 100 UNCH PINS WITH PURCHASE OF

- - - ·----

4440
1404'

Velma Nicinlky, Assoc.
742-3092 .

"'In

BN ·9N -880...!000-2810-:ll00-"1000-15000-6600· 7000

61

6.1 Farm Equipment

Pole Building Spec:lat, mtny
International Htr1111ter 91&amp;
colora lfld lizn. call . for low . Combine. 783 Cornneed . 1 5 ft.
prlcn, 814 ·246·9141.
ttbt., 304-717-8577 .

M]!1n.apolia Moline UB trec:tor.
VI ctor ·lthr. 114-881-4240. 3
mi!M north of Chottor.

UP FROM' TRACTORS WITH WARRANlY
OVER 75 USED TRACTORS
1000TOOLS
'
M FUSED

STACK THE ODDS
; IN YOUR FAVOR
61
j WITH THESE IDEAL
;
COMPANION .HYBRIDS. I

50 acres wacan t land. Onehalf cleared, rest woods,
free &amp;as. Asking $22.000 00

Farm Equipment

.PH. 614-446-9777 Day- 614-446-3592 he

Fruit
8t Vegetables

,.----------'- -

Sl. RT. 143- ACREAGE -

61

Ferm Equipment

S. I. 35 W., GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

1-800-123-2890.

58

61

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT CENTER

monthly peymen1 on modem
ttylt pltno, like n.w condition.
Can be seen loCally. Ple.. e c.ll.

Fartll S upp l11~ s
&amp; Lt veslock

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING - LANG$.
VILLE - Corner lolllith three
oodroom horne. living room,
dimng room , new ijtchen.
lewel lol and Jwo storage
sheds. Askmg $16.000.00.

114-18&amp;-..SU.

614·211&amp;-115 35 .

Gorden wolor
akla. l76. Ctll 814-742· 2142.

Electrolux \IICCuum dean••
A-1 condition -attechmtnta:
A111lllbh tt t72 .00 . Cuh or
ttrma arranged . Call 114·24&amp;·
9118 or 304-1178 -&amp;798.

PilnO For Sell: At.unw tmtU

.

neW tl,..

Klmbal Fru...OOd Pltmo, 4 y.. rs
old artist coneo11 with pldd_.
bend'l, uc. con d. Ctlll14·388-

9883.

304·182-2222 .

Farni Equipment

N8 Ford trtctor·gtldtr blede. 4
plut triller. ~•-II

'

Real Estate General

64 Misc. Merchandise 2 .... Cypr"o

Coll614-256-8261 .

'•

eonrv tuppli. .. Mountlln Sttte
IJku:l, A1 . 33, New ' Hav~n , W.

- ~0 -

61

.Musical
Instruments

245-51.21 .

Pichns U1ed Furniture. Good
qualhy used furniture . Open 9 to
8 or cell for appoirltmtnt.
304-875 ·8483 or 675· 1460 .

Ctlllhan't Uud Tire Shop. 0"'
1,000tirn, liru 12 . 13 , 1.a . 15.
18, 11 .5. 8 mil• out Rt . 218.

67

'Block. brick, morttr and .,. .

Building Meterielt
Block, brick, ttWer pip•, win dows. llnt•la, etc:. Cleudt Wtn ttrt, Rio Orende, 0 . Cell 114-

King tlze water bad ligh t woo d.

Bar tnd two ttools with ahelt and
minor. 1100. Ctll 614·992·

Goi!Jt&gt;ollo &amp;look Co.. 1231; Plno
St., Gollloollo, Oh~ Coli 114·
441-2713.

304·

66 Building Supplies

Colll14-387·1237,

•
•

Jim's Farm Equipment Center
Gallipolis, Ohio

FOR RENT - Two 2 oodrm. apts. 2nd fbor near JJ&gt;H oourse.
$175 and $200 plus depost. ADULTS ONLY!
FARM - 150 acres. Green Twp. $79,000. Terms.
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS.....

•
•
•
•

' C.t ll Wo o d RPd lt y lr H
l/ l'H IJ',\ St

(J,tll•i•' II

44b 1066

NEW LISTING IN CHESHIRE - VERY COhfORTABLE 3
BEDROOM, 2 STORY. HAS FORMAL DINING ROOM, HARDWOOD FLOORS IN UVING ROOM. SMIU DEN. GARAGE HAS
WORI\S~P AREA. EXCELLENT BUY AT $32,0001

•125. Coli 614-949-2919.

Real Estate General ·

m
L..J3

:.;o

MGM Farm City

CAll 992-3267
Or US-2516 Evenings
. ' L..--,;;,;...;.~;;.:.;;,..:.:.:;;:;;.:!;:....____J

.-

446·7444 . Crlldlt evtilable to
qulltfied buyers.

ALL cAMPsiTEs ! TEAFORD
1
SHADED &amp; LEVEL I Real Estate
PLEASE STOP AT I
. IIAUDI
216 2 81
OFFICE FOR
n:d
PRIVATE SHOWING I· ! ·i6141 -992 -3325

BULK OR BAGGED

:-;

PARK

LETS YOU OWN
YOUR OWN
SHADED
CAMPSITE
CHEAPER THAN
RENT

BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS

eM odem Commercial Bldg. in Gallipolis

'

BIG FOOT

Tr~iler

Fumiehed apt. , utili1ill paid,
1235 mo . Call 614-448-9244 ..

~ ...: 2 bedroom. Raci ne area. Call

GIVE YOUR
CAMPER 'A
PERMANENT HOI'tl

46 Space for Rent

1-:----,-...:____

814-441-7548.

G'and Openlnl ·

0756 .

1p1ce for rent In Mercer·
_ &amp; miln from town. lduht only,
ville on At. 218 . 170 mo.,
including rurtl water. Call col·
· ret. tnd depotll. Ctl1614 -446· Apart,.nt for ,.nt. OUIIItT, 2
BR . 2 bt1h apartment In prme · lect 814-983 ·4814 .
.; n&amp;a.
downtown locttlon with off· - - - - - - - - 1 or 2 double hailer loll, scenic,
.. 2 bedrooml•rgaprivttelot 1110 rtf'H'f p8rking. Kitchen h.lrnllhed
wooded. Space for tamily tnd
• mo . plul deposit. Clll814-448· witt. refrig ., telf·CINn 0111n.
OW, gtr. dlap., hoo ..up tor
1)111. Clote to to wn . County
: 2238 Of 814-448-2581 .
Wtther/ dryer. For non· tmOidng
w1ter . Call 814-245-5855 Of
614 -.US-0239 .
:..,2 bdr. unfumithed, 121110. aklgle or couple. No children or
· wuh• &amp; dryer nookup, 'h mi. pets . All eleCtric. UOO per
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
~ put HMC. Coli 814-448-4389 month . Includes wtterl llw·
.!tr11h . A one veer ,..., it
Route 33, Nonh of Pomtfoy.
_:;,or 304-875-9750.
,.quired . Call 114-446-1694
Large lots. Ctll 814·892 ·7479 .
2 bdr. trtller. tdultt only, no 9AM to 6PM.
~ .: pitt, t200 mo. utillti• ptid.
Treller Jpec:es, tmlll c:nildren
Furnish_. ll)t .. 1 bdr .. 701 4th tccepted , sewer and wttet
- Coli 514-258-1187.
Ave .. GelijpOlil. U35 mo . utili· furn ished , Locust Rd. btc .. of K
For sale or rent. 14x70, 3 bdr .. tlea p1kt . Cell 441 -4418 efter &amp; K, 304-&amp;75-1076.
1Y. bath. cklll to town . Ctll 7pm.

'

1 North. Oolllpollo. Oh. Coli 814-

miiM,

304-&amp;78·HI2.

~;:;;,~:;;;:;::;:::::::;;::'1":::::::::=:;::;:=::::::::::::"1

High prictt
you Fum
down?
cneck
ut out. got
Mollohan
.•
Appl. Gibson &amp; Kelvlna10r, Rt. 7

Building met.e rltlt, cem.nt,
blocklllllllll. ytrd or dellvllf'Y.

FrH. Tr ...· lyiftg down. P&gt;llhld
over . by do1tr. Otk, hickory
Plnl. 10 to 71 told1. Cilli

Coun1y Appli..,co, Inc. Good
used appliances and TV seta.
Open 8AM to IPM . Mon 1htu
Sot. 614-448-1199, 827 3rd.
Ave. Golllpollo, OH.
I
Vtllty Furniture, new &amp; uted .
Ltrgt MCtian ot qutllty fumltu re. 121 6 Etuern Ave .•
Cbltipolla.

1984 .Hondt Motor Scooter

HALF PRICE I Fltlhlng ' e'fOW
lklnl, 12181 Ughtld, no -1rrow
•2791 Nooll11htod U291 F.ree
letters! OnfV few IWt. See
locelly, 1· 800·423 · 0183
anytime.
'

r1 ngea . Skaggs Applienc:u,
.u.p.. At'"'' Rd . boolde sron.
Crnt Motel. 614 ·446· 7398.

51 Household Goods

Furnithed Apt . 2 bdr .. t195
n1o ., wtter pd . 1136 2nd. Ave.,
G•llipolia. C1ll 814-446 -441 I
tfter 7PM

Apartment
lor Rent

033e.

614-258-1291

-

~~~~o. u:~.A~~~~~!

murd ermg the hand .

5 Court St. 3bdr. 1Y.I b1tn, t250
mo ., plusCutilitiet, rerorenceo g•.
no pets. ell614-448 ·•926 .

Nicely fumltnec:t mobile llome.
eff. tpt ., ctntfll elr tnd n11t in
c:ity, adutta only. Ctll 814-44S·

· In Eurekt nice. clean. Ptrt. fum .,
llduHt only, no pets, 1180 mc:i.
Dep. req . Call 814-2&amp;8 -1838 or

~

Pass
Pass

second lime the suit was played.
The verdict should be that South is
guilt y Call it an error in judgment in
the play . if you want to look at it
through rose-colored glasses. I ca ll it

MENTS (Equtl Hooting Oppor·
tunlty) monthly rent tttrtt 11 3016.
I 171 for 1 bedroom tnd 1212
for 2 bedroom, depoart 1200, 1 bedroom apt . for rtnt . Bttic
loe~~ted neer Sprirlg Vllley PIIJI
rent starts 1216 . a month that
tnd Foodl..,d. pooltnd Ctbte TV in c:IUdu ell utilitiet. Oeposlt
e\ltillble, office houn •• polli· · required of 1200. Conttct VII·
bit 101m to4pm and 7 pmto 9 ltgt Mtnor Apt. Mlddlepor1 .
pm Monday-Frkll\'. Ctll S14· 814 ·992-1787. Equtl Houalng
44S·2745 or INvt m•11g1.
Opportunity.

Fumlthed. ctble, betutiful rhfer·
view. in Kentuua. no ci1y!lxtt.
Fos1ers Mobile Home Park. Call

.~

I NT
3 NT

Opening lead: +.Q

: 2~· ~u:.leca~:S~Y:~:r~~t.;g

JACKSON ESTATES APART -

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

. ~

East

Norl h

or814-U8 -702 4 uktorKeren.

40 acr11 tilllbltllnd, Genhlimlr
bwklt Pomeroy Httltn
cFerm
Center. Conttct Betty
ttl
Knight, 304·6715·3276 .

3 two bedroomhoutH for ,.nt in
' Mlddiii)Ort. 1180., 1110. tnd
, UOO . per month. Depot It re ·
quir~ . No pett. Specify em·
ployed or retired . Key1 at Teaford Realty or c:tll

.--

So uth

UHdfl.lfniture ·· Dr...er.&amp; bid.
Tnmdle bed , mltll offica desks.
3 mitn out Bultvllle Rd . Open
9tm to 5pm, Mon. thru S1t.
614 ·44 &amp;·03 2 2

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

rii:;;;;,;;T,;;i~;;::::-r~::~~~~~·I:'&gt;8:'6:'NE:'W~SrPA~P~ER~E;N~TE~R:I'R~r;SE::A;SS~N:;:~;:-

r

t

.

'I' A 10 2

have ducked. A'nd so declarer should
have put in the nine of diamonds th e

. houM . G11 turnec:e. b ... manl.
hetted .... ,.ne. NHd 3 referen·
c... Good lo~ation . Rtatontbll.
Write Box 729 Otlly Sentinel.
. PotNroy, Oh io.

·

+K

• 753

8 A K H6

When East showed out. there was ·rio
play for nine tricks. So. Your Honor.
what is your verdi cl?
Although diamonds will spill 3-2 68
percent of the time. that possibilit y
should b&lt;' ruled out. Part of the fun or
bridge is trying to f1gure out what
your opponents arr up to. Usually you
hav e to assume lhat they are tryin g to
do the righlllti"g. When East won the
first diamond, It wa s certain t~ a t he
had n6 sma ll one to play . or he wou ld

.. 2 bedroom houll. 120SuteS1.
Retrlg. stove fumlahed . UOO
: 1 month depoalt required . C1ll

'I'K Q75

SOUTH

mond to another honor in, dumm v.

• 8 room house in ci1y. t260 rno ..
, 1100 d..,. c.ueu-u&amp;-0924.

HZ-II

• Q J 10 9
'1' 98 61

• 10 3 75

plus a 10-spol, South aulomallrally bid
three. When t he dumm y was tab led.
declarer groaned inwardl y. The di a·
mond suit was nice. but cerl ai nl v no
opponent was going to win the arc im mediately. Still, South won the ki ng or
spades and played a d~a m o nd . Wonder
of wonders. East took the ace! Back
came a spade. Declarer ducked but
won the third spade and played a dia -

- 3544.

up to 112&amp;. Hid••·bed•. t310 .
tnd up to 1550:, 10fa bed•
t141 , Recllnert, e220 . to
un. lAmpo from 128. ..
*125. pc. dln.-tt• .fmm t109 ..
to435 . 7pc. 111111'1dup. Wood
tlble with llix chlirs t285 to
t145 . Otak tue up to 1375 .
Hutchea, 1550. ·sunk bed complete with m~ttru. .. 1275.
end ~ 10 tJIS. Baby btclt.
1110. Mattrene1 or box
aprlngt, lull or twin, 183 .. firm.
t73. ll'ld 183. OuMn seta,
12215. Bid fftm•. t20 .and
125 ., 10 gun ~ Gun ctblnttl.
u~.o . a.. or electric rtng•
1375. BtbV mtttr•HI. t35 1.
1415 ~. bed frtm .. 120, t215. a.
UO. king htme . 1150. Good
telection of bedroom tuitea.
rodltrt. mettl cabinets. hHd·
bolf'dal38 6 up to t85.

EAST

WEST

vi te game In no· trump. With t i pmnts

: Two- 3 bdr. 1p1Rrnent1: in tDWn.
off JtrHt p.rklnQ, all utlliti•
• p~id . ..f . &amp;. dep. reQuired . Cell
The Witemtn Aaeney, e14-4411-

~

NORTH

55 Building Supplies

0·5

W, Va.

Ohio- PoinJ

54 Misc. Merchandise
AoiG 12&amp;, 1,100
875·2185.

021&amp;. to •st5. TobiN, no ond

• 42
., J 3
tKQJ 962
8 543

A lot of people might say South was
unlucky . You b&lt;' the judge.
North traded on his long suit to in·

LAFF·A·DAY

LAVNf'S FVANITUIIE

Bridge court
in session

•.tank 6 wettr tap. Ctllll1 4 -317-

13. 1986

. April13, 1986

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

NEW LISTING - Trailer
park wilh 20 spaces and
several ac res near Pomeroy.
City water, natural gas and
view ol r~ver. Only $70,000.
NEW LISTING - 120 acres,
roore or les s, in Rutland
Township. Good barn and
lois ol outbuildings. Minerals, trees, pasture &amp;
meadows. 6 rm. ooe II. home
with balh &amp; forced air lu r·
nace. $45.000.
NEW LISTING - 62 acres~
Chesler Township on good
country road with the mi·
nerals. $17,500.
NEW LISTING - Good 3 BR
,.;th rNer v~. New gas fA.
lurnace, carpelil&amp; 2 ]Jot:hes
and garage. $29,!ll0.
EASTERN - 9 acres, 3 BRs,
T.P. water, bath, full basement, woodburner &amp; other
buildings.
POME~OY - Good 6 rm.
horrf w1lh view of nver,
above all floods. Asking only
$12,000.
BAUIIS - BHevel, 8 rms, 4
bedrms., nice kitchen, car·
peting, sundeck and large
lot. low heat cost &amp; J!Pkeep.
SYRACUSE - 7 rms. on 2
lois near the school for
quick sale.
HANDYMAN -~- 2 st~Jy ie·
wei of a home with al uiime
illld large level kJt, trees &amp;
shtul1lery. Repairs needed.
BRADBURY - One fl 3 II!
home. Rural wat~ bath, neal
&amp; dean. Askinl ~2 .000.
NEAR CHEST R- Modern
ranch,- quality constructed .
3 lovely BRs, nice kitchen
with dining, full fin ished basement with stone lireplace,
ba r, lots of storage, 2 car
gm ge &amp; over 2 acres.
Sellin( Problems
Call 992-3325
91\% Fiud lnl. Rat•

Housin y
H ea dqu ;:n t f'rs

606

E:r_ain

'\"'ME ROY, 0.
9q~· 22$9

NEW LISTING
LONG
BOTTOM - A 3 bedroom
home with unlinished family
room on approximately 8'h
acres. mostly wooded. Gar·
age- close to State hunt·
ing and park. $15.500.

LOOKATTHIS GREATBUY NEAR RIO GRANDi. NICE 3 BED·
ROOM RANCH HAS EAT-IN KITCHEN , ATTACHED GARAGE.
ABOVE GROUND POOL. PRIVACY FENCE, AN ABSOLUTE
SIEAL AT $30,000.

NEW LISTING - CHESTER
- A newet, 3 bedroom
ranch wilh full basement,
garage. Equ pped kitchen .
cen tral- air. Well insulated ,
electric heat pump, approximately 1 acre lot. $40,000.
NEW LISTING - BEECH ST.
- POMEROY - Eliminate
maintenan ce with I his brick
ranch house. 3 bedrooms,
1 ~ baths. lirepl ace, basement, garage, on approximately I acre olland. Many
n~ce features. $35.000.

NEW LISTING! WALNUT TWP. - 28.8 zoO ACRES MI L FRONTS ON RACCOON

OORGEOUS SETTING! RANCH WIT HOVER3ACRES WITH
CESS TO RACCOON CREEK FOR FISfl NG OR BOATING. 3
BRS. 2 BATHS. LR AND FP, DR. FRWITH WET BAR AND BIG:
GARAGE WITH II BATH. WELCOME SUMMER IN STYLE.
PRICED TO SELL AT $59,000 .
~~

,.

h•

:,

.

NEW LISTING - CHESHIRE - Extensive remodel·
ing has added comfort and
beauty to this 3 bedtoom,
1~ story home. Slid~g
doors from dining to nice
backyard and ga rden space.
New 2 car block gatage.
Must be seen! $28.~0 .
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedtoom, one
floor home on 50'x 120' lot.
location co"venient lo
stores. Garage. $14.900.
NEW LISTING - Nice 10 yr.
old brick ranch home in a
good location. Over I acre
. and 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
lull basement, large patio,
equipped kitchen, many
leatures. $49,500. ·
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Jsan Trussell 949-1660
Dottie Turner 992·5692

&amp;
...

rn·

ACRES.M/ l : nice home offers 4BRs. bath.
krtchen. livin·groom, dining room. lireplace
&amp; oovered rear porch . Tobacco ba se. barn.
'sheds and garage. Owner may cons1der f1·
nan cing. Call lor !)lOre details.

CREEK - Approx. 65 acres tillable and 135
acre&gt; woods. Comlortable Jwo story home
offers 4 BRs, bath, k~chen. living room.lam1ly
room, two lirep~ces. bam, 2 ~rge screeened
porches. Lovely QU~t' sening.

EDGE OF TOWN. RIVER FROMTAGE - Th~
home features LR. eat-in kitchen, nice fam 1~
room with hearth ol woodbLrner. balhs, gas
heat, large unattached garage, cnv schools.Call
for an appcintrnent.

6100 SQ. FT. BUILDING - Sol1d concrete
walls, 200 ft. lrontage on SR 7 ~ Crown
City. Formerly used as furniture fa ctory.
Ideal for retail sales or manuf•cturing
business
YOU'LL LIKE LIVING HERE - 3 BR ranchjust
m~utes from town on Rt 141. Other leatutes
include krtcQen ,.;th range, relrig., 1111, d5pt.,
and. oven. LR wnh fweplace, bath. lull
basement, deck, lenCed backyard, gas heat,
central !If, city school distr~t.

DANVILLE ARIA - Close to llti&amp;S Mines 67 acres m/1,rice home oHers 3BR~ 2 baths.
ktchen w/1111, d~pl., oouble oven. elec.
lurnace. carpetil~ Bam oo property 24x~
wntt loft. Callto:fay for m!l'e information.

'

GE~ READY FOR SUMMER! THISHOMEHAS A BEAUTIFUL.'

16X321N-GROUND J'!)Ol. NICE FENCED BACK YARD. 3 BED·
ROOMS, FAMILY ROOM. 2\1 CAR GARAGE. 10' DISH SATEe·
LITE SYSTEM. GREAT LOCATION. KYGER CREEK AR EA
$58,000.
'

DON'l smLE FOR JUST A WOODED LOT! FOR ABOUT THE
SAME PRICE YOU CAN GET APPROX. 40 ILRES OF WOOOS.
UNBE LIEVABLE $10,500.
•·

LAND ~ A~PROX. 160 ACR ES, QJYAN TWP. SOME TILLA-·
BLE, ROAD FRONTAGE. $50,000. OWNERWILL SPLIT LAND •
AND SEll 77 ACRES FOR $20,000 OR83 ACRE TRACT FOR-,
$30,000.
• .'

.

'

FARM - ROUTE 218 - APPROX . 82 ACRES. 2 BEDROOM :
FRAME HOME, PLUS MOBI LE ~ME HOOK-UP. BAR~ ::
OTHER BUILDINGS. TOBACCO BASE. $39,000.
.; •

.
~ AUDREY F. CANADAY; REALTOR · . " ':
1,&amp;1 MARY FLOYD, REALTOR , 446·3383 U1·
·.~.~ 25 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS. PHIQ ,.,.,-~ :
•.'

lllliOI

,.

GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 35 ocres m/1, m~
tillable 3 miles rorth of Rodney. Spring. well
and cOUnty water, fenced and CHES Jenced.
tobacCO base. Very nite 3u 4 t:edroomranch
style horne wnhk~chen , LR, bath,)ueezeway,
woodburning lirep lace. Call lor an
appointment

DO YOU WANT LOIS Of ROOM PWS THE
CONV_ENIENCE'OF LIVING IN TOvtft7 - This
home offefi IRlth. tocated on Second Aw.. this
home has 3 or 4 bedrooms, LR, dinilg toom,
large ~lchen wnh pantry off kitchen. small
back porch, large !toot porch, full kll wrth
plenly of room for garden and kds, gas heal,
unattached one car garage. Call today lor an
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE - 14x70 fleetwood appolltment.
Broadm01e. 2 BR. 2 baths, kl chen v.fth range
and refrig., carpeting, lOxll metal ~orage
$8,000 - II ACRES - atESHIRE;TM' b~g. Call f~J more detar~.
Vacant land. Septic tank an If~. Call.lor
more mlormatorn.
CEIITRALLY LOCATID - GRE'EN IWP. 22.11 acres m/1v.fth !rootage on St Rt 141
and Neighborl'ood Rd. ,!Jso adit~s Sanders IW:COON CREEK HOMESITE - .Oilers
Hin Subdiv. Ownetlnancilg avai~b~. Call lor 5\Vtmmrng. ·boatltg and f5hlng. Lot SIZe ~
more delai~
IOOxliOO and has electr~nv. water tap and
·
septic tan~ Call for roor6 detai~ .

IDOK AT THIS! 10 ACRES M/ l ONE YEAR
OLD RANCH - $39,900! - This Ill me offer&gt;·
1584 sq ft., 4 BRs. 2 baths, knchen, family
room, 12x24 LR. d1n1ngroom, carpeting. elec.
Ill heal, Andersen lherroopanes county water
SrV sch~ distr~t Call today and make a~
apporntmenl to see lhis me.
PERRY T'M'. - 21.8 acres, m/ 1, dder home
offers 2 BRs. LR, krtchen, bath, full ba5e~nent,
st~Jm windows. Wi!ll, rural water avai~ble. Call

lor more detai~.
WANT TO DO A LITTLE FARMING THIS ·

SPRING! - We have a new ii;ting ,.;th 11.4
acres m/1, small tobacco oose, nice rilllch sJyle
home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baihs, ~rge lR.
krtchen, fulL basement, hardwood fklors, froot
porch and rear palio Just off Rt. 35, near
Rodney.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - PERRY TWP. NEAR CORA -0000 sq. ft.steel b~g . idealfor
anyonemlruckilg, drilkngor min~g bus1ness.
O.ner may consider leasing or f~ancing. Call
lor mdre i~lormation .
ATTENTION INVESTORS!! RENTAL IN·
COME OF $485 PER MONTH - ASKING
PRICE $29,900! - 1.5 acres m/1, 5 rooms
and bath home, l ~x 65 mobrle home an d
mobile home pad. C!ll lur more details
today.
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SEll - .HAS REDUCE~
THE PRICE BY$10,000 - 132.9 acres m/ lin
Walnut Twp., I ~ st!JY home has 3 BR, balh,
42x94 barn, large tobacco base. Cltll for ill1
appointment.

QUALITY IN EVERY DETAIL - 3or 4BRbr~k
home offers a 20•&lt;10 family mom, 3 baths.
klcl1en \lith OW, d~pl .. mcrowave and trash
compactor, dining room. mtercom system,
central air, 2 car garage, deck and a 20x&lt;IO
pool Over $100,000. Call lor appointment

THE FAMILY WILL IDWE IT HERE! - Thil
home offers 1728 SQ. H. 3 BRs. I ~ baths. 1M
shower in basement, gal~y krtchen 5
comp~te~ ~uipped, LR, fam ily room. dining
room, carpeting, central a~r/heat pump. rear
deck overlooks RacaJOfl Creek. Call ~r an
appornlmenl.

VACANT FARM LAND - Mllgan Twp. 84
acres more u l!ss. level and rdling land.
CLOSE
TO
TOWN
N1ce
ooe
story
horrf
103 ACRES MI L. SPRINGFIELD lWP . Approx.
33 acres lillab~. Rem.,nder v.oods.
Approx . 96 A. lillable, older hOrrf has 5 lealur~g klchen,LR. family room,dming room,
BRs, bath, LR. kitchen. oounly water lull basement, carpetmg, gas l'eat, c!y water. 2 COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL - This rine
40x60 ~ole bldg., 40x00 tobacco barn: car unattached blx:k fllrage.
room IW_ostory home !~lures Jwo mlhs, d~~g
various ot her outbuildings.
EDGEMENT DRIWE - CLASSY CAPE COD IN room, krtchen v.fth new cab~et;. d~lrovasher
PERFECT CONOfliON - This home offers 3 carpeting, firep~ce. full ba semen~ gas heat'
GREAT LOCATION - REDUCED PRICE, NICE B
Rs. krtchen llith OW, displ.. range and refrig.. bklck 3 car llilrage, ~nyl sxlit&amp; Levellol ,.;th
NEIGHBORHOOO - Alllhese ttin&amp;~ describe dil~g
room, living room Wl1h woodburning highway kantage on Upper Rt 7.
this all br~k. ranch slyle home just off Rt. 35.
lirep~ce, family room , woodbumer. two mlhs.
This home offers 3 BRs, Ill baths, lR. FR.
gas heal, cent air. maintenance kee
equipped kru:hen, lulL basement, covered foyer,
!ld~~ garage, almool new mol, • mmed~le BEAUTIFULIIIIICK RANflll can be purchased
palio, nice l~t lenced backyard. Call today. possession.
With 79 acres or 2 actes. rhis IJvely home
... offers 1800 sq. ft. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths county
THIS COUlD BET HE OME FOR YOU! - l ovely BRICK RANCH -:- ROUSH LANE - Th1s styie· eal-in kitchen. Jlflrng area, 12xl4 liv1ng
br~k ranch offers a 14x24 lR, krtchen viJW, lovely home offers 1378 SQ . II. plus a lull :x""· o;,OO stove, carpel~ &amp; full basemen~
dopl., eye-level oven, oounter lop range and basement. Three bedrooms. LR ISl -shapoo ' 1nt. aIf/ heat pump and ~nach ed 2 car
breaklast bar, dinette, fami~ mom, 3 BRs, 2 with fireplace and dining area, woodburn · , arage. There u 42x54 bam on the prope~Jy
baths, lull basement, paoo, 2 ffeplaces. 1ng stove m basemenI, I ~ baths, garage
for an appoinlment.
·
attached 2car &amp;a rage wrth e~ctric openers gas Call for more inlormalion.
heat. cen~al air. pat~. interoom system. Jusl YOU CAN OWN AliTTLE Bll OF COUNTRY minutes from tlliln on Debbt Drive. Call for an 5 acres m/ 1, on Sl Rt. 141. Nice one story
appcintment.
I!Jrrf has afamily room wlhwoodbumer. lull ADDISON lWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
basemtlll, heat pump, cent air. ciltem, well acres m/1, all woods. Old barn on Jfoperly
.
nd county water. Green school. Call IJr an $21,00(1
f«lRTH GALUA ESTATES - Mlt&amp;an Twp. a
appcintment.
I OOxllO lot. Asking U!OO. O.ner ,.;11
consder financilt
COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL - RESIDEN-·
_ ~ acres, JOOre or less. mant land GREEN TOWNSHIP - 150 acres m/ 1, ap.
24ACRES M/ L HARRISON TWP .. CLA~ UCK TIAL
~eal f~J O!vestmenl or any type development prox. 40 acres tillable, lobec o barn, dnveibAb - Rolling land, well oo pr~erty. barn lbad !rootage us 351Jld Mlcheil Road. thru shed, metal cattle barn. Approx. 11
00
aoo tooacco DaSe. (;all ror more oeu•s.
· ·
· acre lake on pr011ertv.

"'II

•

,

�/

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

13, 1986

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

71
82

Wanted to

Now

buylrtg

thlll

l!uv

com

! 1d ii SJII II !.III llll

or 111

71

oom. Colllorl_t.,..D1M. RI-

71 ·

72 Corwttt, Call 114-441·
9441 oltor itOQPM.

Livestock

7&amp; pt,.to 1300 . C1M 114-25t-

...... lemba for

Nit.

CaM

114·141-2411.

1180 Citation f2. 185. CoN

Grain -ted tMreford yutllng

114 · 24~ · 1140 .

I I I )

ltWrl fur Ale. 1·1 .00 per lb.

;;o;r.1 WOight. Coil 114-992-

1184 Nilun
5 - MPO . Air

. M""'' Orov lull ~ yrs. old. Puro
Bred. 11 Laylnj" ' H.ns! Can

114·1112·1114.

•.

HE
19H'T' A
CAR WI'THOI)T

' .

l

· 13 yoor old Stondo;d Blld
Aiding Mare. S~dle, bridle.
hlhor. UIO . .Coil 014·1492181 .
~r

~.1.-....l-J-'-.Ll''""'"---'---'

I I K ()

4-H CLUB LAMiS: Lergl IIIIC·
tion . Silffollts , Hampshire.
Htelthy, q.talitv ltock. 175 . Ctll

, ·304· 773 ·1191 .
R'lllt•.t Polt.t Her.ford bull,
4 Yllfl old. ton MSU Protpector
808, McCoy Polled Hereford•.
O..,wood. W. Vt. 304-li71 -

llt41 .

64

Hay

&amp;

A HO~N I!I!CAU~E
HE 171DN''T' THIS,
Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surprise a11swer. as sug·
gested by the abovt:~ cart oon.

Prlnranswarhem:[lll)A[
. I Jumblos: AI DED

DA ISY BEACON MOTHER
Answer: It yo u don't succeed at first, you'll never
10 lh ls - SECON D
·

.'

Grain

TC-3,
1111 Ply.Muth H.. low m1111ao, u .ooo.- Col 11 4·
441·1110.

1114·111 HQttzon vooy DDDd
DDncl. U71 Ford Movrlc;lo very
- d. loth for tl,200 .
CoM 114-·1·1140 .

tli200. Colll14·111•·4143 of·
t•II:OO pm.

1174 Chwt lmPIIa. New ilrn,
front and new , b,.k• pldt rww.
rebuMt vanaml11~n. Body fair.

M.ke good work Clr. 1410: CaU
114·115-3188 .

1113 Plymouth ,Rollont 4 dr ...
wto. llr, ttw.a. CN6H, wire
dmo,- U ,llll. 1113 -- Ch•y
lmplla 4 dr., auto, alf',
e3,400. John 's Auto Sal•.
lui-Rd.

•*•·

Fri. 8 ., I . ln. I to 12. Col
114·441·1100 . ...._ , Morlo
...~• . 1880 luldl ·-yltorll 4 1112 PII'IIO ODOd NMing cond ..
cyl, outo, 4 clr., llr. U,211. - o bottory, noo. Coll14·
.
1110 Ford FelrrnDnt z dr.• 4 cyl .. 211· 8170.
o~. t1 .1111. 1111 Ch..,Y
' Ch-.o 4 dr.. 4 oyl., outo. · 1177 Clmoro t1 .000. Coli
11.000 mll11, only t1 ,111. 114·:1111·1271.
1112 MollluCioalcdlolol4dr ..
f2,411. 1171 OlclomolllloO.IIo 11ai Meroury Z.htr Z-7, auto,
B8 4 dr.. Nno [IDDCI, 1111. 20 t~lr, II:._,, IPOrty, 13,481.
twenty more to ohooH.from.
Jalllt'oAutolllll. luloviHoRd ..
O.Hipollo, Olt

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

CENTURY ,21

CENTURY 21

lllf!M,ICid"

a1 eodteniiiNitl

rclltd

•1110

1.

SOUTHERN-HILLS R.E., INC.

Fa&lt; Ill" 1871 FordT·IInl . VlfY
~ aondtdon. Alto Motor
cyclo. CoH 114·111·3131 or
114-1111·3131:

f450.

304; .

448-04~8

RFA I. fO R

wh•l drive

~
.. --~-~~------- ·
1880 Q_otoun pickup King Col&gt;
auto. , tow mUuga, flbtrgl111

..,~ ... oh0111 13 ,100. Coll814·
441·2310.
1980 Tqyott truck 5 spd.,
AM.fM. bldliner, IDw mlletgt,
excellant condition, U,&amp;OO.
Co11114·441· 1815.
1917 Ford Reng.r 250, 4-WD.

(:ENTURY

ID~

::11.

-~ ·

...
"''

446-7881
446-2230
675-3968

for Sale

71 "lord F-100 1h ton pickup.
Clll114-3118-1418.

1874 SuP., - . . fllr CDndl·
tion , leGO or bllt atflr, phone
304-171-4220.

388-8155
379-2184 REALTOR"

Broker
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor

Tn1cke

1978 Dqdge 4

1877 Chl¥ftlllt Com.- Roily 1881 Oldi Cutlaoo lu~;
8poot. Auto, loldld. lllr condl· V·l, loldld. f4.200 . 304-87f·
tlon. •1200. 010. Clll 114· 2881 .
Bl2-:i133 Or 114·1112· 3711
· 1811 MDftll Corto. 4100 mllol,
_ B ,QOp.m.
lo.tld. •~a~nwloan . 304·117~1173 Cldllllc: Coupe do VIUo. 1112.
VlfY aoOd oondUion. CoM 114· -----~---'1112·fl03 « .30.. 888-3112 .
1181auld!Rivorio,olltncllln,
30._178·7478 .
I

Judy' DeWitt
J. Merrill Carter
Becky Lane
Jim Cochran
Phyllis Loveday
Liz Long

Rllloy whoolo, :104·118·4210 .

• 1,800. Coli 114·246-8248. .

1811 Oltlo. 304·171·1112.

CENTURY 21

cond, PS, Pa, AM·FM coo•«.

72

1871 Ronouh Lo Cor. IIOO.oOr
1114 Chwy Couoll•. 304·112·
3141 .
. '

446-4206

Vanr

8o 4 W.O.

1974 Chtvy \lin I cyl., ntw
bll)ory, good to • . fl500 . Call
614· 44&amp;·1101 .

..
U73 Dodgt VIr\ . 318 motor,
runs good . NNds work done on
ltMrlng boJC , 1800. Cell 114·

llt7-2111 .

Motorcycles

78 v.,..,, 400. uoo.oo i'l
good condition. C•ll &amp;14·448·
4184.
1982 Hondt NU-&amp;0 motorbike.
13&amp;0 . C•ll
814-441-7109 tftlr 5PM .
like brtnd nll'lfl

zz.;r, .

••ed.

Vena

a. 4 W.O.

1 4"' 0odge C•rn-en 8

NI.W USTING - OWNER TUIISfERRED ·
Anxious to seHthis newly remodellld 3 redroom
home with full basement fieplace, dinng room.
l'l pkls O'ler I acre. located off SR 554. $37 .~0.
!ll
•2055
2

..,

HOME WITH AHEART - Well constructlll f1111ily
home with !replace, eat&lt;n ktchen,attached 2 car
~
l!ilrage. Covered ded, heat·IIJI11l, central air, flat
"' lawn. conven~nt locaoon. Within 2 miles of
hosprtal. $54.!l&gt;O.
112031

1:
:II

..

REDUCED $l,IMXl - &amp;Jx 12 mobile horre_21J 3
bedrooms, washer and dryer, central IC, !M,
sofa, tri-steps and mOfe. $6,250.
.2005
$39,1MXl - Recently remodellld 41Edroom home,
2 batt6. family 1110m. firepLlce, basement, deck.
above ground pool. Mobile rome space
.1063

REDWOOD FRAME - 3 lx!droom ranch, 2 Ill
baths, nice ktch'en, livingroom with fi'e!ilace, flat
lot. Located at Bula~lle Rd. City schoo swem.
82007

NI.W USTIIIG - BRICK RNiat - $40s 3
bed!OIJI1S, bath, living room, ~'RI! dnin g room.
()lerlooking the Ohio River.
'
#2047
AVIEW 'LIKE NO OTHER! -Cedar stn ·shaped
ranch. Great room. cathedral ceilings, stone
fireplace, fully equpped, kitchen, forma l dill~&amp;
formal entry_21\ baths. Satetl~e d~h and free gas
heat ~eluded. Can be purchased Mth 2 or 22
acres. WHAT AIIALJ
#2028
SUNKIST - Location Jjus charm pus value. 3
bed!OIJI1S, I 'h bath, formal dnn g room. 2 car
l!ilrage. Range, refrigerator, d~lwlaster, waster
and dryer inc~ded. Mom vi ii love !Eng
convenient to everyth in ~
112Jl37
OWNERS MOVING OUT OF STATE - love~ 3Of 4
bedroom, tri4ewelll1 4.7 acres near Bob Evans
Farms. Flleplac~ AoodbtJrf'j!f, 2 baths, !ami~
rcom, 2 car garage.
#1086

redea~rated

1980 ChiYY 4 x4 Va ton step tid•
I XC- condf1ion . Ctll enytime

&amp;14·379-2701 .

78 Oodgt custom wtn, V-8.
auto , PS , 11 .460. 79 Ford
Aangtr XLT PU tuto , tir, tilt,
cruil•. PS . 12 ,89!5. B &amp; D
Motort, Hwy . 110, 814-4467322 .

VINYl SIDED IWiat - I yr. ~d. 3 ll!drcoms, 1
bat~ k~cllen with eating area, iving room, utilty
room, FA electric heat. nice lot.
112004
THIS IS NO HANDYMAN'S SPECIAl - 3
bedroom one• fklor plan oome in excellent
condilxln. Large eat·rn ~chen , iving room, bath,
partol basement, carpeted tiTougtlout. Approx. 1
acre lawn. Private country settil~ $28,500.
.2033

2
....
1:
=·

RtDUCED - Brick lri·level, 2'h acres, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. f1111ily mom, 21\ car garage,
I'm 11Jmp, central aw.
11070

.

"' 11 .:RES ARE INCWDED WITH TIIS SMART
- BRICK &amp; FRAME IWiat - 3 spacilus
bedrooms, 2fullllths, l4'~22' liv~ grcom, kitchen
includes disiwtashei, countertop ranl!l!. fweplace,
fuU basemen~ atbctied garagl!, paoo, woodburner.
Home on~ 5 yrs, ott S59.!MXJ.
12002

WANTS All OFFER - 3 bedroom db1·wide,
woodburner, .70acre lawn, ilcated on pal'lid road.
OWNERS HAV£~VED (XJTIJ STATEANO~T
SOLD!"
81098
NI.W USTlNG- VACANT lAND - 95 acres m0fe
or less locatlll in Green Twp. Tollcco base. Slme
lrmber, rural water available.

~

WANT A REAL HOII INSTEAD OF' JUST A
HOUSE? ~ ~ so, take notice to thf; 2 Slrry, 4
bedroom. 2 batt6, formal dining room, lee. room,
plls a lot more.

litE RIVER - Nice big farm house, 7 acres
more or less at river bottom, klls ol road !rootage on
SR7.
. •
H1087

HAPPIIIESS IS RlUND THROUGHOUT THIS
'IIIIIACULATE HOME - 31Edrooms, livr.g room,
formal dnilg, 2 rut batlll, ktchen includes
appliances, basement, garage. Oak trim tiTougfiout. In ilwn locatim m wa.~g di&gt;tance to
downta.vn a1ea. Call lor an appointment ~ls

(IC

12'85' MOBILE HOME -lnc~des 2ll!drooms, 1
ail condli&gt;ning washer and dryer. Bu• in
ch ~a hutch.
#2038
BRICK RANCH - .73 acre lot. ilea ted in Addison
ta.vns~. 3ll!drooms, bath, I 011 attached gar~e.
tuft basement, 24xJJ unattached garage, central
air. Priced in the 50s.
#1099

bat~

NI.W LISTING - INVESTMENT PROPERlY lOOIUNG FOR EXtRA INCOII7 - Nice wplex
located at NeiRhborl'ood Rd. Apartments hawe
INingroom, kitchen, IIlith and2ll!drooms II!Ch.
This coold be just for you Call for an appoi'lllrent
today.

--

THIS BEAUTY- Owners IJIYe this ooe the IPiden
touch! 3 redrooms, 2'h b~ . family room,forma l
living and dining rcom, plus eat·il kitchen. !time
has alllte extras.
!12014

WOODED SfTTING - Beauti1ul bricl&lt; chalet. 3
bedrooms, 21uH lllths, fu! ll sement2 ireplaces.
Not your everyday oome. Fantastic ~ew and 6
acres surround this oome.
. 112016

7768.
1974 Sportl t er. 304-896 ·
3530.
1984 Honda motor scooter Aero
125. 1.100 miltl, 304-176·
2905.
Hond• Expreu, like new . phone

304 ·175 -21135.

. Home
Improvements

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO .HEA~INil
Cor. Fou-:th lf'CI Pine·

1971 Gr1nad•
ft .. 70 HP
Ev.nruda, lktt • lkl .,.."
Included. nHds minor englna
rtpaJr. 11.400. Will tlkt smell
IIUmlnum flshlrlg bo•t•• pertltl
l)tymll'lt. Ctl 11,4·388-9844 .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconcli11ontl lifetime gutr• n·
11a. Loctl rlf.,.nCII fumlahld .
Fr11

Mtirnt1ftl. Call coll•ct
1-614·237·0418. doy or night.
Roger• 8tsemtn t
Waterproofing.
J.....
H•rdwood Floort. ·s anCUng •
refinishing . Plfket and tounge •
groove. Free • tlm.tee, ref•n·
Cll available. Willtrd &amp;: Dtvkl

OolloDIII. Ohio
Phone 814-tUt -~188 or 114·
448-4417
.

83

R &amp; M Furntturt Manut ec:turing,

12ft. Star• fishing bott, 7'1.1 HP
motor. Ctll 814-258-1348 .

P•intlng, carpentry, remodeling,
17 y811'1 exp. lnsurlkl. Reason•·

cl1tem1, pool• end wtlerbeds
fill~ . Ctll 814·367-0823 or

114-367-7741 or 304-875·
1247.

~~~~~======r=~~~~~~=~ removtl.TrHCell304-875-1331
Trimming, atump
.
RINOLES'S SERVICE , expo·
nencod ca 111 ont... electrlclon.
muon. painter. roofing {includ·
lng hot ttr application) 304176-2088 or876·7308.

fatty

79

M owrey' s Upholstering 11rving

trl county1re1 21 vttrt. Ttlebut
in furr'ljture upholstering. A:ll '
work guartnteed visit our modern shop et M••on County
Feir;roundt . Phone 304-176-

79

Motora Homes
8t Campers

Motors Homes

&amp; Campers

Auto P•rt~ ; ... '
&amp; Accessoruls ·

For .-_..le: ,. 1.&amp;81 -v ~1la:watone·­
Country Club ·Travel Trtller.
lollded witt! t lltrel·excellent

9448.

types uud 8t rebuilt

condition . Phone 814 -8.92 1973 Oodgt motor home, fulty 3102 tfter 15 :00 01 on week1tlf contllined, AC . priced right. end•.
Colll14·448 ·0146.

CHRISTIAN'S
.COJG'OUCDON

ldt1 • tork converter~ . All typ•
lir compmtort 1 to 50 HP , 15
HP -2 ltlgl t1,29&amp;. C•ll IU.379·2220.
•
1978 HI-Lo trtvel trlillf, 22ft.

Mp1t wells completed ••med•y.

895·3802
Roofing, pelnting, hou1es •nd

Real Estate General

ltlf contelnld, undam ••de,
hyd . lift up , 81r. 8tllehed iKkS.
twnlng, two 30 lb bOttiM. """
equelinr hitch . electric water

9 ft . truck c.mper. fair condition, *50 or bMt offer. Call

814· 245-S040.

1 . ~~~!~!lC:~~.,

Pump 11111 end 11rvlce. 304-

rocfs. gener•l repai"' in Otillj)O·
Ill tnd Point Pleuant er11 for
a1tirnetn ctll 304·876-5688.

lennox Heatin&amp;

Motors Homes
&amp; Campere

1974 Sllrcrtft foldout camper.
sleeps 8. coff1'llte witt! ltov•.
Ice bo1C,IIght18t tink, tJCc. cond .,
like new. Cell &amp;U-388-9756
tfter 8PM .

CALL 985-4294

t_oday ....

446-4514

SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER LINES ·SEPTIC
TANKS · CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS • MOBILE
HOME SETUPS · ROAD
BUILDING · FOOTERS · LAND

HOUSE FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE

V. mile from Chester on
Route 248 .

CoH

•BACKHOE
•BULLDOZING •END ·
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE

Real Estate General

Reduced price,
three-bedroom house
on 4.4 acres. private
and shady, central
air. woodburning
stove, low fuel bills.
double car 211rage.

GREAT LOCATION FOR A
101.8 by
Spnng Valley Sutxf ivision. Twolarge lots.
171.2. City water, city sewer and natu ral l!i!Sare available.
, .,
ij456
Special this week. Call now.

lfADINGHAM REAl EST

IF l«l AN!WP CAU,

367-7560 or 367·7671

\

.:,_ 446-7699

'

l'l ·
!ll·

lOVELY COUNTRY HOII - 3ll!drooms, modem
equipped ktchen. All on a shaded extra laH'2o~

2•
-1 '

~=

=
-&lt;:·

AS PIIIVATE AS YOUR THOUGHTS - Secluded
. among trees. !hi&gt; 4 ll!drcom,.3 bath ranch liters a
great view of the Oh~ RNer. Equ1p_ped ~tcher1. 2
firep~ces, 2 ~miy rooms. lormal d~~g room, 2 car
carport. 2.3 ac. $59,!l&gt;O
11401

Hll6

DELUXE 3
81-LEVEL IN THE alUNTRY Very nice home inc~des su per krtcllen with all lhe
extras. Uving rcom,dinilg area andlarl!l! famiy room.
Master bedroom has d ress~g area and bath wrth
skylight. 2 car garage, 1 acre of fllJnd . Owf'j!f viii
trade IIJ mobi~ home 01ciluble·"de and w111 consider
!inane~~ Call lor mme inlormaoon.

mo

...

HUNTERS HAYEN - liB .:res Yith several feet
01 road hontage. land rnoslly wooded:811811Jrt~g
cabin,drilled well, good f6hingp1111t. Priced in the
20s_ 9 miles hom c~ .

FAMILY PlANNED - On Oelily Dlile, 3
dfm 3 BRs, i batt6, ~'&amp;!! eatin kitchen
area and lR u[Eiairs.ltJ!I FR lilwnstars lor
.
~~ ~ room, 1 car IJirage and \\OOd deck in back for
cookouts_$55,!KXJ

N·

ON 1ST AVENUE
RIVER
An outsrand~g 1840 er~ 3 ll!droom brick. This Ill me
has been comp~tely rehabibted. Everythingwas new
6 years ago. New .. 1~. new klchen, neo heating and
p ~mb~g systems. 2 new tun bathl, new carpet
Includes large living room overkloking the river,
beautiful master bedroom, 2 fireplaces, fami~ room,
utility room, beauti1ul k~chell. formal d n~g. 3 car
carport Price cut from$135,000 to $114,000_MU ST
SELL NOW!

NI.W USTING - HIDDEN AWAY ON AWOODED LOT
- Foor bedroom b1i:k111d frame nestled among tte
trees ro 21\ ac. it in Green School Distric[ but ~~~~
about 3 miles from ta.~n. Master bedroominckldes
walk-in cllset andlulllllth. Formaldinllg fami ~ room,
large fi'eplace in iv1ng room: lDts of cabinets n
krrchen. Full basemen! at !l'lllnd ~vel n back.
Woodbumer hooked ~to real due~. LOWFUELBILLS.
Kids vii never 1!1!1 tirlll of p ~y1n g in the elevatoo play
oouse. Offered al $89,!KXJ.

PRICE RtDUCED - Attracl:ive
School D~trict- !nlb~ lot inexcellent reighbortood.
Well arranll!d. 3 bedrooms wrth 1\\ baths, trep ~ce.
handsome ktch en,diningarea, paoo, utility room.~rl!l!
stiJage room and 2 car IJirage. !hi; home is ~ !Pod
conditi:ln-mininlum ma~tenance illd la.v fuel bil~.
Not many like rt on trxlay's market. $63.200.

JUST WHAT THE DOCTOR (JWERED -love~ 411!
home in a qu~t wooded location. Equipped eat-in
krrchen. FR wih !replace, 3 batt6. Excelent
neighborhood. 4.65 ac. Mdrtilnal acreage avai~be .
$99,(XXJ.

#101

POMEROY/ CHESTER - l'le are ll'llld to offer this
oulstandng spl~-level ln an area of f~ e oomes it 6
exceplilnal in i~ quality, mint condliln and setting.
Professional~ decorated, CO«dilated l ~hl f~tures
this QUad4evel has 2500 SQ. ft .. 4 bedrooms 3'b8ths'
cathedral ceitmt Proper1y als() includes 31andscapa/
acres, tong concrete dnve linlllw~ hp ~esa n d a 32x40
3-yr-okl mu ~·purpose buikling (same material as
house), hea~ concrete lbor llith cokl.rmed porch.
.
~I

#132

112045

LOOIUNG FOR AFARM? - We have a 147 acre
general farm. Two siOfy farm house, ltlree [pXi
barns, drilled well, illllcco base. Many tilab~
acres, pasture and \Wlods.
81076 .
co•ERCIAL METAL BUILDING - 1.200 !11-ft.
Electric in buildng. rural water avaiabk!_Located
111 two lots. Rt. 7, Crown City.
#2011

MORE OR LESS - 3 bedroom txlme, 2 baths, LR. FR w/ woodburner.
good condition. New 24x24 garage and a smalll:l!rn.AII is fenced _Garden
' ' "'''"'· P1iced at $34.!il0.
11 111 - Owner needs to sell. Uil Oacres, more or less. 3 bedroom ranch, 2
JUUD_L.Iitw. in. g11• ,.,m, formal dning room, lamily room, 1,920 ll( . ft of livi"{ space. 21arge
patios. City schools. Priced at $38,000.
ESTATES - Beautiful brick ill me. Formal111try, LR. dining, mod. kitchen.

.CO.ERCIAL - Formerly RCBottlingCof11)any
Corner ~ 3 dfi:es, farl!l! garage doof, cty water
and seoer. 12,448 SQ. ft.
81060

n

NI.W USTING - HOME AND lliSINESS ~ - Beautiful home overkloks the river and mollie
~: oome park rncludes 10 spaces. Basement
apartment in home or use lor II'Wate use, centr~
~ sewage, street ~~~ and large 40'x&amp;l' bui~~
~

=

lOVELY 2 STORY !liME n lhe city. Offern 3
bedr!m!S. 11\ bath, family room, natural gas teat.
1m&lt;! in tl'f 40s.
112048
RENTAL MERTY - lower Rt. 7. 2 redrooms,
bat!1, kitchen, alum. sidn~ Ali!Jrox. 1h a cre~

.

YM:AIIT LAND - 127 acres more or less. Mineral
ri~ls. frontage on Little Paregon Rd.
112029
P\JWING GAS WELLS - 2 wei~ in IJoducoon.
26 acres, Addison Twp.
81062

$46,000 - li acres, extra nice 45x75 metalbarn,
doulile Wide with add-oo. Owner llil fi'l ance.
#1090
VACANT IMD - 2\\ acres, road frontage, ideal
sle for mollile home Of home. $3, ~D.
#1054

3 ACRES LOCATED AT THE IDGE OF TOWN Septic system, city water and natural l!iiS tap
alreedy installed. Ideal fiJ your new home. Owrer
filancllg available.
•
#2017

.

PRIVATE LOCATION - 10 yr. Old mu!i·level
horne, 4 bedrooms, 92 acres, bam,celar, toiEcco
base. $48,500.
NlD78

IIACB OPPICB 181NDI!lBNDIINTLlOWIIID AND OI'IIATBD.

CENTURY 21

redroom ranch rife~ Ill batt6, eat·in
basement. fam ily room w~h 1100dburner, garage.
IOsee tooay.
#201
'

("l •

~-

-1 .

~
:.~ ·

TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE - Two 12'x 00'
mo~~ oomes set up on appro•imately one-hal
acre lot with~ three miles d ta.vn on St. Rt. l41. 2
bedrooms, tiv1ng room, bath in each. Both
complete~ underpinned, stOfage building, concrete patios. LIVEIN OOE ~0 RENTTH£ 0Tf£R
$19,500.
.

-

•w16

55 ACRE FARM IN S.R. 141 All~ - Doubilwile
home w~h 3 ll!drooms, 2 bathl, living room,
kitchoo with dinllg area, covered 1)1100. Bam, 2
sheds, land ~ pasture. lnckldes range, relr~.
window air unit
.1096
.

-

REIIODELED HOME - New bath, aerob~ septic
system, plumb~~ roof. f~or coverin~ litthen
improvemoots.Large f~t lilt. 14&lt;3Q.iparate build ~g.
Rniihed i!Wde, surrab ~ !Of oll~e. ljl!ll' one ca1II! rage.
Locatlll just off St. Rt. 160. 4 miles hom Ho~er
Hnlpitat Askng S3t.m .
#3 18

N·

82026
147 ACRE SECWDED FARM - !Dis d pasture
land and wooded acreage. Two story country OOIII!
complete set of btJildllgs, tobllcco lllse, good wal~
system., $58,000.

CENTURY 21

LISTING - DAY OREAJIHOIIE yoor
heart ID th5 2,000 sq. ft. lri·fevel with wonderfu l
leatures such as 4 IEdrooms, 3 lull baths, equipped
k~ch en, formal d ~ing famiy room wrrh \\OOdbumer
and 2 car garage. Terrrt~ neighborhood. $69,!ll0.
#237

~

.

() 1985 Ce!IIUI')' Zl Real Estote Corporalion " tru11ee for 1M NAF. ~ ond•-troolonwb otC.ntul')' 21 Ji.,.J Esl&amp;le Corporation. Prlnled In U.S.A. Equal HOU!Ing Opportunlly Q

CENTURY 21 CENTURY 21 CENTURY 21 ' CENT(JR • '21

.

•Roofing *Siding
*Continuous
. , Guttering
•fencing
* Remodeling

CaU 446-8515

Auto Repair

Auto ptlnting and body work.
don• to your lltitftctlon, receive 10 Plr c.nt off 111¥ }ob
IChtdultd bltwHn now end
M•v ht. lnsur•nce claim•.
detailing and tome miChMIIc81
work, tr.. lltimet•. Ctll fo r
appoinlmtnt 1-304-875 -2613.

Air

Condilionln&amp;. All lypes
Insulat ion. Eleclrical Wirin&amp;.

puf11) , IIMPI I , forced tlr
tllltlng. used very little. very
cl ..n, t3,950 .00 . Ctll 3048111·3440 .

8 f1 . truck topper. taO. C•ll
114·317·0447 .

4154

Services Offered

Sl8rkl Tree •nd Lawn Service,
1972 T-u ~A - long 18 ft. trliler.
Very good condition . 114~6 . · lar,d·c~p~ ~.l·. 304-576-201 o.
Coli &amp;14·912-1173 or 114·
Rot•rv · r-o;r ··'C'able tool drilling.
~92 · 1201 .

tran1ml1110n1· tr1n1fer Cllll
t oo. Overdrive. front wheel &amp;
retr wheet drtve. Transmi11ion

79

St. Rt. 7 , Crown City. Oh. C•ll
014·261·1470. coli Eve. 614448 - 3438 . Old &amp;: n•w
Uphostered.

=======;;;;;;;;;,1_________

981· 4143 olt•I,OO.
17 fool FlboriCrm, d~ &lt;rim, 115
hp Mlrcury motor with t r•ller.
304-675-224fi
'· · ·
r.

77

Ken :a Wtter Service. Wtlls.

c·o·t. llm•ton~. grevel. .-tc.
RON ' S Television Service . Dallvered 1 1on •nd up . Jln1
Llnler, 304-871-1247 or 678Hou11 nils on . RCA, Ou•ur.
QE, Spoclollng In Zonhh. Coli 73117.
304·178-2318 or 814-441 · I
2454.
""

hou"', Uh new , Shoretll'ldar
out-board
. Fully
equlpptd.
188H-0 Tralllf,
t7500.
Call 814

All

General Hauling

81568 or 614-245-94411.

1179 G...,ron 11ft. Bow Rider.
140 M•r Crulur. 1.0 in · bo•rd,

76

Upholsterv

Oood· 1 EllCI'IIttlng, baMmentL
footlrl , drtwweya. eeptlc unkl,
ltndiCliiPir'V· C•ll anytJrM 814·
441·411537 , J .mtt L. Dtvtaon.
Jr. ownlf'.'

85

18ft. M.F.O .• 80 Evlnrude. New
sut1, tletvY trtiler. Excellent
condition . 11900. 814-9921 or 814·892· 7000. 11k far

J tmti loyt Wlter Sarvt~. Alto
paola llllld _Coli &amp;14·2U·1141 ·
or 814·448- 1 17115 or 814-441791-t.

87

81.,kenahip, 814-441-0286 or
614-441-4047. Commerc:lel Ill
retldtndll.

bit. Free lltlmttM. 8 &amp; W
Constru ction. Call 81 4·448·

General Hauling _.

EKcavating

17 ft. Larton fibergltn V-hiiUI
bott &amp; trtller. 1560 . Call
814-317·0447.

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER
Clyde B. Walker. 245-5276
David Wiseman , 446-9555
B. J . Hairston, 446-4040

fll•

#1093

#2012

81

86

1&amp;1/r

446-3644

.

l"'l·

room and livO.g room. coontry eat-in ~ch en .

. PltCE IIDUCED "' SHOPPING CENTER - 3
• with an extra lot ·

1981 CB&amp;OOF Hondt tuptr
aport, 11 , 500 .00 . 304-678-

.

Times-Sentinel- Page- D· 7

REAL ESTATE

oome on 2oo

$39,!MXJ.

1983 Hond• XR 100. • • celltnt
condhlon; 1982 Hond1 CM 450
E. excell..,t condltlon. 304·895·
3442.

su~..tav

WISEMAN

VINYL SIDED 3 bedroom rancll rlf Rt. 7 near
CrrNinCity.famity room . din~ g room. large stDr
_ age
buidllt Home in good cood~iln . $42,9)()
.2043

~venue. 3 bedrooms, lui~ carpeled, formal dOing

RmUCED TO SEI.L - N~te 2 redroom home,
iarl!l! V(Ooded lot. firep~ce. backup teatingsystem,
spacilus 2 car garage with rcomfor WOfksillp.

AC ,

7811!11fter e:oo.

CANT ~T THIS PRICE 111 this 31Edroom home.
living room, dinllg room wrrh frepLlce, \\ mile
~om city. $39.000.
#2041
UPTOWN - Nicely

p1111 ••

18: ooo mllol. t8960. 15 Ford
~ . ton 4x4 PU , 11 ,750. CtM
&amp;14-441·0419 01 114-446·

·
Motors for Sale

1980 16 ft . Pontoon float bott.
Indoor-outdoor c1rp11 on 111 th•
htrdtop . Good condltlon. 12100
decka. r•lllng 1round tldu.
080 . 114-141·:1l30 "'" . ,oo btendtd dtckl out front to go
pm.
swimming off of. Nice condl·
' tlon, ·e1,100 firm. Mt~ canaidar
trede. Ctll 614-2151-6671 .

74

The

St: mr:t: s

'N' CARLYLE ®by urry Wright

8oate and

For S•l• 1978 Jeep CJ -7

euto, air, radio, topper, hewy 81 ce 760-K Hondtboutttt new
dLJty window, 13,489. John' s In 81, 700 mlloo. Colll14·218·
Auto Sal•. BuiiYillt Rd ., Gtlll- 1348.
pollo. Oh.
;_-:-=-:-C""'--:-:--;_· J1981 Honde CB 750 custom
1973 GMC Al1:to- Aluninum exce.l ltrit condltlorf, t1 ,·200 .
c.6tvlt 310 Detroit 13 ~peed . Ctll 814·4411·41&amp;1 or 1114·
OC!Pd rubbt&lt;. 1171 Eot1 30ft. 317-0397 .
diJrt'f) ••ller. Good condition.
Good rubber. Ctll 814-848- 1978 710 Vtmah1 . Fully
2437 .
dressed . Priced to tell. Ctll
014-742-3061 .
1874 lnt1m1tlonel Sert11 2010.
Flfttl whHI. slngl1 nel. Low 1'979 Yam1ha )(T 500 Enduro.
mUIIQe. 904 gasoline tnglne hc ..lentcondltion. Can bt11en
with updrlft Cerb. Con\tentlo"al •t RutiU~d. Ohio or C•ll 814clb. emron. 2 tone maroon P•lnt. ~42 - 2588 anytime.
E,fcelllnt condltlon. All orlglnet
Pr)&lt;ld to 4'11 orooll i l tl500. 1981 K""Hfk1 '440·KZ . 0600.
Cen be '"" et Old Boo ~mobile Coli 814-992 ·11853.
building In upplt' Pomeroy, or
Colll14·1112·111117.
For ule or tr~e: 1981 VIIS
M10num 1100 Hond• . B•clt
1 9pll ChiiYV Pldi·UP INck P.S., r11t. luQOtgl rtck, •nglne gerd.
P~. V8 . •uto ., 8ft. bed. 17900.
3100 mll11. 13300. Still und•r
Only 2000 mlloo. 014·949· Wlmnty. Conlk:tlt' trede tor
21110.
PontiiiC, Buick, or Oldtmobile.
Coiii14-742·Z087.
1911 ChiVY C 81, tlndem axle
d.l~. 15 ft. •luninum duft'1J,
1884 Honde Atro 80 Scooter.
427 911 engine, 8. 4 Ulnlmll- Wlndthllkt, frontbllklt, roosttr
lion. 304· •2· 3358 Of 882· Ulll. halmet . 700miiM. EllCell.,t
condition. 17150 . Cell 114-9492919.
1974 OMC 8500. tand8m ul•
du., , 18 ft . ••I Mel, 8-V 71 1982 Hond• CX 500. Stl•ft
D . ~ . 10
28,000 ,...,.,, drive, wat" cooled. wkld1hleld.
:1)_4·1112· 3318 .. 112·2271 .
ger•ge kept. 8000 plu• m11n
11000. Colll14·149· 2969 .
19=72 .Chwy 'h mn. n .ooo.oo.
:Jl4·•8·1120 lft•r e p.m.
1985 Hond• XR250. EJJCellent
condhlon. Call 814 ·992-5747 .

73

76

'

1178 MaUbu CleuiC; ,al!to . tlr

Put Nntttber 1to work for you.

BO:V.V/£ STITES - BR OKER
s nn;~ -

1111 Ch....,lot lmpllo. Now
ond lllllull. [IDOd wort.
oor. t400. Coii14·111Z·I234.
1t74 AMX Jovolln. tiOO. Coli
114·141-2201 .

"

CJI', Am·Fm, AC ,

o...

~

73

1173 Mercury Atdon wtgon,
'29 motor VI. lllll!l.op or best
otter, ctll tfter 1:00 304· 871!1~-

23.000 IIIII"'. I•QOII"'t -dl·
lion. C'llll1 4·1112-5747. · ·
, 171 oOda•
1111·3UI.

Autos for Sale

..

Autoa for Sale

1114 ~-rt

1811 Toyota Ctlci OT Uftbllck.
iunroof. IMoy wtl..... •1100.
Coli 114·1112-3214 ,,oo
p.m.

446-6610

STUTES REAL ESTATE
/lM

71

Autos for Sale

CENTURY 21 CENTURY 21

'

JU1101t loollND.II .. _.... .. for $1 .H put 55c.n1Jpoldlll Md tllftdl lng from
.urtllll, CIOIIIII ~r, fi .O. IGII43M, OrllftOo, fl :12102..QJI. lntl~t ~ r

Mixed h•y ,l!t'i' IQUiri balu.
11.211 . 304-1711 -5179 .

71

I I I)
(A nS ~eiS

Yesterday 5

con~:Utioned.

Autoa for Sale

1874 VW lolllo DDDd oond.,
1111. Coiii14-371-ZIII.

Mlllo'o Auto IIIII. hotjrs Mon .•

Centre Ol•e4

71

1112 eo~ Y·l , &lt;11&lt;. t-top,
oooc1 oond. Colll1._,...•• zno.

71 a.-lot M - Coriomotlo, Y·l , N;. 77 ChovyMCodp, ill. AC, PW. Col 114·
:111·1221.

1417.
~H

Aut1;11 (or Sale

...

Autos for Sale

~" ·Flr: lupply, 114-441;

83

Ohio- Point Pleasant W. Va.

13.1986

~ :::

.

flo &gt;

CENTURY 21 CENT\ ·_

IN MlOUGAII WAlliS liS
, - Clean 3 IJ! IJick ranch .inc~des
.Jarge
lrilchen, living room, famly room w~h
woodbu1ner and one car garage. locatw rn qu~t
: neighborl'ood aft Rt 141 ..on~ 5 miles tom liMn.
lmmedilte pa;sess~n . AskNlg $41,000, wrl ronsider
. any reasonab~ offer.

.

~~

YOU'Ll,ABSOWTELY lOVE Til INTERIOR! - Here's
a beautiful~ dea~rated home that yoo can afford.Don't
just drivt by, let us show you the interi&gt;r of this
charrring3BRin Rio Grande. Everything's new -the
wal~. !iring. pllrrbing. fumace, kitchen. It's on a
double lot with large !ll&lt;age. $54,000.
#102

If you have not received your
Spring Homebuying 8uiae,
please stop in to pick one up, or
call and we will mail one .to you.

•'

"

�Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .
•

I

·Hondura8, Nic8ragua ~set up
soldier,
fishe~en exchange
.

Q .

II

ACCIDENT INJURES· 'DIREE '- A two-vehicle
accident at the Intersection of Third Avmite and
: Spn~ee Street In Gallipolis . Friday sent three
· Galllpo&amp; residents to Holzer Medical Center for
· treatment of Injuries. Helen Harris, 62, 90 Cedar St.,
• Willi lldrnJt1ed lor a scalp laceration and was In
~ satlafactory oontlltlon· Saturday, HMC r'l'orted.
,_. Trealed and released lor minor injuries were Shonda
: Harris, 21, and Joel Harris, seven montffi, both o190

April 13, 1986

Cedar St. City poUce said Shonda Harris was
northbowxl on Third at 6:08p.m. when she ooDided
with a vehicle driven by David J . Mooney, 18, Rt. 2,
GalllpQlls, wbo had reportedey failed to stop at a stop

sign while eastbounl on Spruce. Both vehicles were
severely damaged. Pollee cited Mooney for reckless
operatloJ! and Shonda Harris for no chDd restraint.
Helen Harris and Joel Harris were passengers in
Shonda Harris' car.

~Out of court pact CQncludes

By TRACY WILKINSON
civUian clothing, appeared to be In
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UP! l- good conlltlon.
Honduras returned six Nicaraguan
In another development, the
soldiers ·captured In Honduras In Contras said Congressional approexchange for Nicaragua's promise val of the $100 million military aid
to return 12 Honduran fishennen package, Including ground-to-air
whose boat was captured when It mlssUes, wUI allow thenr to "comventured Into Nicaraguan waters.
pletely eliminate" the Nlcaragan
The six Nicaraguan soldiers air threat.
arrived In Managua Friday aboaid
In a broadcast on rebel Sepa Nicaraguan air force jet and were tember 15th Radio, Contra mllltarv
met by Alr force Commander leader Enrique Bermudez prtiEmmet Lang and anny official dicted the aid package would ~
Hugo Torres.
'
approved In an upcoming House
A seventh Nicaraguan soldier. vote.
recovering from a bullet wound In
"With the new weapons we will be
the chest, was to be returned when
he recovers.
Nicaragua was to return the 12
fishermen to Honduras Saturday.
"This is a show of good wUI and
can improve relations between the t7.-~
two countries," Torres told reporters at the Augusto Cesar Sandlno
Airport.
The Nicaraguan soldiers were f-7hi-hi-~b.
captured shortly before Easter
durtng a raid on Contra rebel
camps In Honduras. The raids
against the U.S.-backed Contrasfighting to overthrown the leftist
Nicaraguan government - triggered U.S. warnings that Nicaragua was expanding the conflict to
Honduras.
Nicaragua said 40 of its troops
were killed In the lncur.;lon into
Honduras but Washington said the
toll was much higher.
IT.+-=it-7~
One returning soldier told of how 1-7+-Tih
his unit was pursuing Contras In the
"border territory" when It was

receiving, especially tile grou nd-toair rockets, we will he . able to
completely eliminate the Sandinlsta's airborne weaponry ." Bermudez said.
President Reagan has Insisted
tbat the Contras need themlsslles to
00"11 Soviet helicopter guns hips,
considered a principal factor in
Nicaragua's advantage during the
5-year-old war.
Bermudez Is the milit ary he~td of
the Nicaraguan Democratic Force.
the largest Contra organization.
The group has its main camps In
Honduras.

POMEROY - An out of cou ti

-All residents shall be encour-

: agreement has been reached in an
·:InJunction action brought by David

aged to dress In appropriate
daytime and nighttime attire.

top and bottom sheets.
-Floor coverings are to be
tightly secured and tacked down

su NDAY' p Uzz LER __

Tu nru

1986

HORIZON
10.75

Cooper

..

Chrysler • Plymouth • Dodge, Inc.

JOIN THE

FUN

CLUB

JAY MAR
GOLF CLUB
Make up your mind NOW to
get some exercise - soak
up the sun· and _enjoy the
summer. Leagues are now
forming.

SPRING. SALE ON ·GOLF CLUBS
~6E9G5. -$395
SPECIAL
•
3 Woods, 8 Irons and Bog.
1

JAYMA.R GOLF CLUB

POMEROYI OHIO

992-6312

Vot.35, No.253

,-----=-------_:===::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~
j

FREE-FOR-ALL - Gov. Richanl Ceiesle prt.'dicts a "bare
knuckles ln.-e-lor·all" campaign
II former Gov. .James Rhodes
win the May 6 GOP Primary.

Celeste
predicts

dog fight
COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPli- GO\·.
Richard Celeste predicts a "bare
knuckles free -for-all" campaign ~
former governor .James Rho&lt;l&lt;&gt;s
wins the May 6 Republican primary
to face him In tho general election .
Speaking before the Ohio UP!
Broadcasters Association Saturday, Celeste said regardless ·of his
opponent. which could be Rhodes or
senators Pau l Pfeifer or Paul
Gillrnor. the campaign likely will
contDin "a fair nu mber of
negatives."
Celeste called himself a better
campaigner than any of the thret'
Republican co ntenders.
He said voters will remember
Ohio's economic turnaround and
his hand lin~ of the savings and loan
program a year ago when tiv'y go to
\ the polis In November.
Asked about the impact radical
politician Lyndon LaRouch e will
hav e on the elections, Celeste said
Increased publicity about La Rouche and his candidat es wlll help
eXIJ'se them as "cockeyed and
dan~rou s people."
"The more people know about
them. the less sua:essful they will
be," Celeste said.
UPI V&gt;'hitc House con·espondent
Helen Thomas was the keynote
speaker fo r the broadca s t
association.
· Thomas said presidential news
conferences provide Americans
with the only opportunity to sec
their president publicly questioned
about his policies.
For that reason alone. Thomas
said, televised news conferences
are an indlspenslble institution.
Thomas said Reagan ha s become
Increasingly isolated in office. while
access to him Is tightly controlled
"He likes being president, and in
a wdy tltat Is refreshing, especial!~·
after ·other presidents have hemoaned it," Thomas said .

1 Section, 1 0 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, April 14, 1986

president ... a gentle person who In
MARION, Ohio (UP))- Former
his day reflected the will of his
Gov. James Rhodes hurled a slow
country,"
said Rhodes In a leadoff
curveball at his two Republican
speech
consuming
only five
opponents during a rare joint
minutes.
appearance over the weekend, then
Rhodes
said
Harding
understood
left the assembly to escape any
that ·"unemployment is a great
high, hard ones delivered in hi s
destroyer,
and some politicians
direction.
don't
understand
tllllt."
Speaking at the annual Harding
He said Harding's heirs recomDay Dinner Saturday evening,
Rhodes confined his remarks to mended highly qualified personnel
God, country and the late President to serve in the Rhodes administraWar ren G. Harding, rather than tion In the areas of mental health
bringing up the three-way fight for and retardation .
the Republican nomination to face
Rhodes also used the ~portunity
Democratic Gov. Richard O&gt;!este. · to reflect on the success and the
Ohio Senate President Paul reverence of President Reagan .
" We're hctter Ohioans tonight
Gl!lrnor, Pori Clinton, told the
gathering of 350 loya l Republicans because of Ronald Reagan," said
he wants to end the "mismanage- the former governor. "The only
ment and. scandal under Dick person to use the name of God so
Celeste," while state Sen. Paul many times was Abraham
Pfeifer. Bucyrus, attacked Celeste. Uncoln."
Rhodes and Gilimor In varying
pfeifer, speaking in his home
Senate district, took 16 minutes to
degJt'eS.
Pfl'ifer said It was the first time outline some of his programs.
"Rather than just criticize Dick
all three ca ndidates have appeared
on the same speaking platform, Celeste, I've t lied to point out how
except at co"nty party endorse- we can do things differently," he
ment sessions.
said.
"Warren Harding was a great
Rhodes already had left the haU,

NEW INDUCJ'EES - These Melp Hi&amp;h School
students were inducted Into the school'schapter C'l the
Nlllional Honor Society in ceremonies held Sunday
· afternoon before parents, friends and faculy
members. They are, front, Ito r, David Beegle, Jenni

By United Pm;s International
Eleven people, including two
motorcyclists, were killed In accid&lt;'nts on Ohio roadways during the
weekend. the state Highway Patrol
reported today .
The victims died in 1t separate
accidents, Including three Sunday,
sLx Sa turday and two Friday night.
None of the auto crash victims was
wearing a seat belt and neither of
the mot orcyclists was wearing a
helmet . a patrol spokesman said.
The patml tallies fatalities resultIng from accidents on the state's
public roadways each weekend
between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Sunday. .
KU!ed were:
Sunday

Springfield: Timothy L. Buford,
22, Sprtngfleld, In a one-car accident on a Sprtngfleld street.
Akron: VIrginia Parrish, 53,
Akron, in a one-car crash on an
Akron street .
Canton:• Martin Smote, 22, Wadsworth. in a one-car aa:ldent on Ohio
21 In Stark Cou nty.

but Pfeifer said he ooesn't believe in in the Ohio Senate and carried ·
the former governor's often- . through on promises to cut taxes
invoked lith commantiment of and fully fund education.
There was an oblique reference to
politics - Speak no Ul of another
Rhodes'
longevity: "We need leadRepublican.
ership
with
a vision to the 1900s and
"He didn't always believe in it
beyond."
either," said Pfeifer, recalling the
During the dinner, GU!mor and -.
1970 Republican primary for the
Pfeifer
iYorked the crowd. accomSenate when Rhodes went after
pan
led
by their wives. Rhodes
Rep. Robert Taft Jr , R-Ohio.
already
had
shaken hands with the
"He and Taft mixed it up pretty
guests.
All
three
candidates stugood, and it didn 't divide the party,"
diously
ignored
ooe
anott-er.
said Pfeifer. "As a matter d fact, it
The
audlena&gt;
seemed
divided
stimulated the party and Taft went
among
the
candidates,
though
the
on to defeat Howard Metzenbaum
location
in
Pfeifer's
district
gave
for the Senate.
"I believe you have an obligation him a clear edge.
"I was impressed with all three
to fight hard for an office, and to
speeches,"
said Ruth Stevens of
give it everything you've got, " he
Marlon.
"I
know
how Gov. Rhodes
said .
feels
about
a
Jot
of thlngs, . so he
Glllmor, In a 10-mlnute offering,
ooesn'l
have
to
tell
nne. It was good
said he wants to he governor
that
the
other
two
did."
because "Ohio cannot stand four
more years of misman agement
and scanda I under Dick O&gt;leste."
"I want Ohio to have leaders that
they can trust for a change," he
sa id.
Gil!rnor dispensed his stock
campaign lin es: He led a resurgence ct Republicans Ia a majority

HURlS ct.iRVE AT OPPONEN'nl - Fonner Gov. James

Rhodes has hurled a slow
curveball at his two GOP
opponents Saturday night at
l\larlon.

Military strike
decision due soon

Couch, Darla King, Michelle Peterson; back, I w r,
Donia Pooler, Mark Smith, Melinda Smith and Kris
Sexton. FacuKy member, O&gt;lia McCoy Is advi!tor for
the Meigs Chapter.

WASHINGTON !UP! 1 - A top
administration official says "time
is getting short" for President
Reagan to decide on a military
strike against Libya but one
lawmaker says Congress must be
consulted before any orders are
given.
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind .,
chairman of the Foreign Relations
· Committee, said he expects to meet
with Reagan today at the White
House an~ .has u~ed)he president
not to commit U.S. forces without a
full consultation with Congress.
Deputy Secretary of State John
Whitehead, intervieWed Sunday on
CBS's "Face the Nation ," said a
military strike against Libya was
possible but, "The president has not
yet made that decision."
Asked U there Is a deadline for
action. Whitehead replied, "There
really isn't a timetable, but the time
is winding down. Timr Is getting
short."
VIce President George Bush,
speaking In a taped interview on
NBC's "Meet the Press," said he
has "always favored retaliation on
kind of a surgica l basis."
"l believe !hill the United States
has an obligation to protect it s
citizens living abroad," Bush said
Sunday, "and to bring to justice In
any way possible those who

.

"

threaten the lives or take the lives ct
Americans."
Amid questJons over whether
Reagan would follow through on
threats to strike back at terrorists
- specifically " mad dog" Moammar Khadafy- U.N. Ambassador
Vernon Walters visited European
capitals to Une up allied support.
His visit reportedly won Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher's approval of. the US!' of British-based
U.S. F-lll oombers ina prospect tv~
attack.
Five Americans have been killed
In the past two weeks bY terror
al1acks U.S. officials have !Inked to
LibYa and its voiatile leader. NATO
commander Gen . Bernard Rogers
said last week there Is "lndisputa·
bit' evidence" Khadafy was behind
a West Berlin bembing that killed
one GI.
Senior adminlstrat ion officials
were widely quoted last week as
say ing military action against
LibYa was fort !'Coming, with only
the time and place to be set. But as
days passed wit hout action, the
offlclals became mum .
Nonetheless. a Sixth Fleet armada, Including two carrien; in volved In last month's Guif of Sidra
cla~ h . was In the Mediterranean
nearSicUy and In a position to carry
out any retaliatory strikes authorized by Reagan .

Western workers ordered to Libyan army camps
TRIPOLI, Libya (UPI \ - LI- been moved onto the bases.
There was no independent confir·
bYan leader Moammar Khadaty
matlon of Khadafy' s claim and
orderro Western workers moved
Into military camps In an apparent . diplomats said Sunday they were
attempt to deter U.S. retaliatory s~tlcai. They said the claim
st likes on the installations, Western might have been made to discourage U.S, forces from attacking the
businessmen said.
Khadafy said . he turned the bases.
"I can't believe I wouldn't have
mUIIary camps over to foreign oil
and petrochemical companies "to --. gotten even one phone call," said
he used as residences for workers" one Western diplomat, adding that
and that about 1,1XXJ Americans had a large nunnber of people from his
country would have been Involved
in such a transfer.
Another high-ranking Western

11 people ki.lled
on Ohio high~ays

'

' I

enttne

Gubernatorial race wat'lns up

:.L Jackson, director of the Ohio -AU residents are to be encour- and actions are to be taken to I ---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~::::=.
: Department of Health , agamst aged to participate in planned correct any fire hazards noted by p-Joseph and Polly Bowland, opera- act ivities and bolilles.
the county fire marshall.
: tors of a non-licensed nursing home
-AUresiden ts are to be provided
-Costs were charged to the
· at 674 Plum St .. Midd leport.
with a caU system for help.
defendants and the. court retains
-AU residents are to be provided jurisdiction to enforce the order.
: The action, filed on March 12.
89 Carouse
DOWN
SO Surfeits
: requested a preliminaty and per. with sufficient bedding inCluding
90 Vegetable
82 Weary
92 Roman road
manent Injunct ion to stop the 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -----l t Alit
1 Rebuking remark
83 Part of
7 Tibetan priests
94 Tender
operation of the nu n;ing home In
2 Region
fo rtification
12 Quarrels
95 Foot levers
question without a nu n;ing home .
3 Japanese drama
84 Footing
t 7 Stitches
96 Cognizant of
. license as required by Ohio Revised
4 To make (wood)
86 Chess pieces
97 Sharper
2 t Incite
88 A set of twelve:
smooth
.Code.
22 To the left
99 The tetter z
abbr .
5 Brother of Jacob
· The def('ndants admit none oft he
tOO Untt of trantan
23 Jury list
89 Rule
6 Belonging to
:-allegations set forth In Jackson's
24 Real estate map
currency
baseball's Bucky
90 Couples
; complaint or aqcompanying docu25
Selenium
symbol
101
Hostelries
91 Proprietor
7 Los Angeles:
ments and the plaintiff neither
102
Forget
to
do
26
Prohibits
93
Compensation
abbr.
retreats nor withdraws allegations
103 Fruit seed
28 More unusual
95
Clergyman
8
Follows
Mar.
In the complaint.
105
Plan
~0 Mrs., in Spain
97
Stay
9
Bewalt
MONTH
The parties do agree that the
107 Mother
32 Every halt year:
tO Tapestry
98 Oulflt
&amp;
.defendants, oc agents acting on
109 Blushing
abbr.
102 Servant
t 1 Cubic meters
· '· behalf of the defendants, are
EXCWHD
33 Fedora
110 Beer ingredient
104 Narrate
t 2 Spanish: abbr .
· permanently enjoined from operat35 "The Mormon
111 Ranted
106 Dry, as wine
t 3 Dance step
. ing a nursing home, rest home or
t 13 Observed
State"
14 Dlllseed
107 Pattern
home tor the aging at th? Pluln
t 14 Watch pocket
37 The nostrils
15 Occupant
108 Encourages
Street location, or at any other
39 Record
115 Senior: abbr.
110 Principal
16 Incline
location without ll!license.
116 Bucket
40 Greek tetter
t 11 District
t7 Health resort
II any aged Individuals j'tlmain a1
41 Similar
1t7 That woman
t 12 Food program
18 Spanish article
t18llhm
43 Strike
!be Plum; Street home. they are to
114 Lean meat
19 Cleaned
45 Denominations
120 Cesium symbol
. be transferred to appropriate mediwithout bone
20 Blemishes
121 Assistant
47 Neon symbol
cal facilities.
27 Experienced
116 Recreation area
122 Foray
48 Hold on properly
saltor: colloq.
t 17 Meeting room
When operating a licensed facil 123 Epic sea tate
49
Having
weapons
119 Dock
29 Advises
l!y, the defendant s are to consent to
52 Rubber tube tilled
124 Hawaiian wreaths
121 Son ol Adam
31 Concerning
Inspections by the Ohio Depart126
Lozenge
with
air
122
Peruse
AUJO.,
A.,
PI,
PS,
UI~FM
STEREO
34
Deal
secretly
mt'llt of Hi'alth and shall maintain
128
Strict
54
Most
painful
123
Therefore
36
Call
the following policies:
QUALIFIED BUYERS
56 Pays attention
130 Courteous
125 Go by water
38 Emphasis
-Ali residents determined by the
57 Most mature
132
River
duck
127 Hebrew month
40
Baker's
products
APITAX&amp; 11BE60 MO.
Ohio Department of Health to be
!34 Chimes
59 Oodles
128 Declared
42
Prophet
capable of self-care, shall adminis61 Encounter
135 Hard-wood tree
129 Delicate
44
Urge
on
ter their own medications and shall
"THE ~0 IT ALL DEALER"
62 Chickens
136 As far as
130 Bustle
46 Observes
bathe, dress, and feed themselvrs.
63
Above
!37
Cuts
of
meat
131 Diplomatic
48
Period
ol
fasting
WE SERVICE WHAT SE SEU!
64 Running
!39 Disturbance
49 Got up
agents
Correction
66 Period
!41 French article
50 Body ot water
133 Clayey earth
67 Editors' concern:
t 42 In addition
51 Dysprosium
136 Name
'I
Mary A. Erwin of Albany, who
abbr.
143 Rl- Islands
symbol
138 Mediterranean
was involved in a one vehicle
68 Harbor
145 Original
53 Short jacket
vessel
69 Bromine symbol
!47 Fat of swine
·accident Monday afternoon near
140 Lock of hair
55 R·U ltnkage
7.1 Indian weight
t 49 Playing card
·Carpenter Hill Rd .. was not injured
56 On earth
143 Article
72 Pintail duck
152 Grid six-pointer
In the accident. Erwin was wearing
58 Nightshade plant
144 Antitoxins
399 S. Third Street
74 Facial-feature: pl.
153 National hymn
146 Jump
a seat belt. The accident was
60 Han
76 Underdone
155 Informal fetters
Middlep ort, Ohio 45760
62 Antler
148 Attract
CHRYSLER
Investigated by the Meigs County
77 Female ruff
157 Simple
65 Final
ISO Paradise
·sherUfs Department. No citations
(614! 992-6421
78
T
eutonlc
deity
159
Fulfill
68
Separate
151
Bows
were Issued.
79 Freshets
160 Lampreys
69 Climbing species
153 Snake
81 Writing
162 Tree snake
of pepper
154 Feb., Aug., e.g.
implement
164 Long tor
156 Theater sign:
70 Walks unsteadily
82 Gull-ltke bird
166 Sank In middle
abbr.
72 Malice
83 Ceremony
168 Let fall
158 The sell
73 Weirdest
84 Part of fireplace
169 Wtpe out
161 Behold!
75 Baltic or Caspian
85 Collide
170 Indian soldier
76 Retreats
163 Te •lurium symbol
87 One who takes
171 Faints
77 Competitor
165 "The Empire St."
drugs
79 Masts
167 Proceed

CLO EOUT
S15682

•

at y
Copyrighted 1986

farea nursing home injunction ln;;~re~~:gH~~:~d~:.:~ ~~~
.

•

European diplomat said held a
meeting of businessmen Sunday
night and no one had any word on a
move of foreign workers.
Two Western European businessmen , however, said Sunday Libyan
officials summoned them to an
evening meeting and ordered them
to move their workers to the
mllitary install a tlons.
"We are not sure what we're
going to do but we're stalling for
time," said one of the two, a Swede.
The businessmen, wboaskedthat
their names be withheld. refused to
name the companies involved.
""

GJAIU

Khada fy told United Press Inter· future ."
He said about !,[DO Americans
national Saturday he had informa·
were
rmved to the camps. That
tion that the United States planned
number
coincides with Western
to attack a number of Llyban army
camps and responded by moving diplomats' estimates d the number
his troops out of the bases and d Americans stU! in the north
turning them over to Western African 1)8tlon despite President
Reagan's order for ail U.S. citizens
companies.
"We have closed all the military to get out or the country bY Feb. l.
Khadaty said the transfer took
camps specified by the United
States to IE attacked," Khadafy place Saturday. He would not say
said. "We have handed them rNer which bases or which companies
to foreign companies to repair and were Involved or how many
maintain to be tl'led as residences workers were Involved. He said
for 11o0rkers ol the oU fields and soldiers from the camps had been
petrochemical companies In the moved to " unknown locations."

OHIO

Satunlay
Canton: KyJYnn K. Shaw, 21,
Canton, in a one-car crash on a
Stark County road .
Dayton: Daniel R Kittle, '!1.
Huber Heights, in a motorcycle
acciden t on a Mont!J)mery County
road .
Delaware: Victoria D. Schrlmi,
25, Columbus, In a car-truck crash
on a Delaware County road.
Delaware: Daniel S. Linn, lB.
Ostrander, In a one-car accident on
Ohio 'J!J7 In Delaware County.
Wapakoneta: Esther L. Hegem·
ler, 87, Wapakoneta, In a two· car
crash on a Wapakoneta street.
Cincinnati: James A. Judd. ~.
Falr1ield 1 in a motorcycle accident
on Ohio '!I In Hamilton County.
Friday Nlpt
Portsmouth: Cheryl A. Turner,
26, Wheelersburg, In a car-train
crash at a railroad crossing of a
township road In Scioto County.
Cleveland: Stanley Macbniak, 21,.
Cleveland, In a t11o0-car accident on
a Cleveland street.

•

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS - Aooeptmg lrvplHs "r leflllle
chjmplolllhlp tNme Sldllrday eveulllg cllrtog !be SVAC AIJ.Spctrilt
Banquet a&amp; lluc*eye IIIII Career_Cealer Ill Rio Gnade were Melodl
Gallamore C'l Oall HID; Kelly RDush and Lemaa Nibert fnlm K3'1!1.'r:
Shawna WIIIiaan!, Lori Folta-, Carol Leleedy, Gretdleu Ondera, and

'

.

l'honda Frenm li Oak 1111. Back: leDey Gn~J!lMll', David Amllur&amp;ey.
Todd Adams, Scott Wlcldlne, AnJny Wolfe, Pete Rouah 111td JeH
Coomo11:y of Southern. league dlampio118 Included Southern in
Bulttelbd md Footbal: Oall HID f!lld K)'ger Creek co-champs tn
VolleybaD; and Oak mn Ill girls' Baskelball.
;

.

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