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                  <text>Poinerov-Mkklapoj.t. Ohio

.Paga 12-The Da!'Y Sentinel

Judge O'Brien finishes
37 court cases
.

Plan flower project
Area mom's can look forward to frEe Mother's Day !lowers !rom
sane of the Racine merchants. 1be tlqwer giveaway was discussed
at a recent meeting of the Racine Merchants' A$;ociatkln. As the
holiday approaches, an announcement wW be forthcoming as to the
times and locations where tlowers may be pcked up.
The merchants' are also sponsoring a giveaway In conJunctkln
with the upcoming Southern High School Prom 111 May 3 and a box
will be placed at the school for ertlrles..The glveaway wlnner wUI ,
receive a certificate good for two dinners at The Club Restaurant, a
prom picture from Rupe Photq; and a corsage.
A suggestkln from Ruth Brooks tn have a town flea market was
discussed but no action was taken.
The merchants also discussed having a farmers' market and local
farmers will be contacted to see If they would be InterESted In such a
·
venture.
Racine merchants are reminded that dues to Join the assoclatkln
are s:fi a year and should be paid as ooon as possible to Tom Wolle at
the Home National Bank.
New merchants to Racine - Tom's Pizza, Racine Motors,
Backstreet Video and The Gun ShOp- were welcomed to the village
and Invited to attend the next meeting of the merchants' association.
The next meeting will be May 19, 7 p.m., at The Club.

Lucille F. Seelig
Mrs. Lucille Fern Seelig, 78,
former resident of both Pomeroy
and Middleport, died Thursday at
Shreveport, La.
Mrs. Seelig was born March 31.
1!0! at ,Markm, Ia.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Eugene Seelig in 1962.
Surviving are a sister, Dorothy
Reed of Markm, I a.; two daughters,
Geraldine Thieman, Sheveport,
La .. and BoiUiie McBealn, Mesa,
Ariz., and a son, Jack Seelig, of
Starke, Fla. Also surviving are nine
grandcblldren and eight greatgrandcblldren.
Services wUI be held at the
Murdock Funeral Home in Marion,
Ia., Tuesday morning.

Edna F. Walker
Edna Faye Walker, 86. 162
Hamilton St.. Middleport. died
Frtday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
She was a daughter of the late
Albert B. and Frankie Starkey
Rupe.
Surviving are a daughter and
son-in-law, !'leva and Richard
Russell, Springfield; a daughter-inlaw, VIolet Long Walker, Pomeroy;
a brother, Alva Rupe, Athens; a
sister, May Cuckler, Lenorr City,
Tenn.; a half brother, Wilbur Rupe
of Columbus, and a half sister,
Myrtle Wolfe, Fort Pierce, F1a.
Also surviving are three grandchildren, seve n greatgran&lt;Xblldren and several nieces
and nephews.
Mrs. Wall&lt;Pr was a member of
White Rose Lodge and the Carpenter Baptist Church.
Besides her parEfl ts, she was
preceded In death by her husband,
Lawrence W. Walker In 1915; a son,
James Walker, and a half brother,
Perley Rupe.
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Monday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with Rev.
Earl Eden dficlatlng. Burial will be
ln Rlvervlew Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday.

Wallace (Connie\ Morris, Brenda
Anderson and Lort Ann Anderson,
all of Racine; one sister, Martha
Belle Meadows of Portland; one
brofher, · Raymond Teaford of
Racine; and three gran&lt;Xblldren.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by one sister
and one brother.
Services will he Sunday, 3: ll
p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial will be in Letart Fails
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home form 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m. Saturday.

Harold E. Triplett
Harold E. Triplett, 65, of 401
Lasley St., Pomeroy, died Thursday evening at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mr. Triplett was born Dec. 31,
1920, in Cabell Co., W.Va .. to the late
William and Dora Woodrum
Triplett.
He was a retired electrtcian for
the Kaiser Aluminum Corporation
and was a World War II army
veteran. He was a member of
Pomeroy Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, the
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Pomeroy Chapter Ill of the Royal Arch
Masons, Ohio Valley Commandery
24 Knights Templar, .Bosworth
Council 46 Royal and Select Masons, and tte Disabled American
Veterans.
Survivors Include his wife, Edna
Kitts Tliplett, at home; a daughter,
Rebecca Jane Triplett, Pomeroy; a
son and daughter-in-law, Euooone
,.
and Karen Triplett, Pomeroy; two
grandchildren, Michelle and Russell Triplett of Pomeroy; four
sisters, Reba Deprtest and Mrs.
Sherman (Evelyn) Rogers, both' of
Ironton, Mrs. Vernett (Macy. Lo.ul
Rogers of ~ro and Mrs. Robert
(Myrtle) Smith ot Fostoria; four
brothers. Thomas Triplett of Law rence, Kan .. Orban Triplett ot
Bellfonte, Ky., Earl Triplett and
Merril Triplett, both d Ironton.
In addltkln to bls parents, he was
·
preceded in death by two brothers.
Servlces wUI be Sunday, 2 p.m.,
atEwlngFuneralHome,wltbRev.
Liston Halley olllclatlng. Burial

.
Thlr1y-seven cases were con- lk:eliae suspension, lhi'ee days Iii
eluded Wednesday In Meigs County , jaU, twQ year's probation, OWl;
Court by Judge Patrtck O'Brien.
Glenn Vance, Middleport, $2iO alld
Fined wei'\! Donald E. Russell, costs, six rQontha license suspenPomeroy, $676 and costs, $Dl of slon. ll days In JaU or attend
tine suspended, overload; FranCis resldelltlal treabnent center, OWl;
WOOd, Tuppers Plains, $!m and Michael Pleri:e, Rutland, $100 and
·costs, three days in jan, ffi · day costs, swpencled ll day jaU sentlicense suspension, OWl; Gerald ence, lleeing an officer; Robin
HEfldrlcks, Zanesville, UMJ and Southern, Pomeroy, restitution and
costs, ill days In jail, slx month costs, six months In Jail with aU but
license suspenion, OWl; $75 and five days suspended, one year
costs, live days in Jail, no driver's probation, passm, bad checks.
llcense; costs only tor left of center;
Also fined were Terry Downard
GeOrge Cundlll, Racine, S:ziO and Wellston, $10 and oosts, no reglstra:
costs, three days in jall, ffi day , lion; Steve Burke, Worthlngtoo, $10
license suspension, OWl; Daniel and costs, no registration; Juanita
Sublett, Pomeroy, $:zi0 and costs, Lambert, Rutland, $10 and costs,
three days in Jall, ffi day license improper .backing; &amp;Jmle Rowsuspension, OWl; Jodene Wyatt, land, Stockport, $10 and rosts, lett ot
Belpre, $250 and costs, ffi day center; Tlmoti\Y r.H&gt;anlel, Che-

shire, costs only, tailed tn display Mason, W.Va.. $26 and costs;
registration; Susie N. Abbott, Sheryl Bush, Racine, $25 and oosts;
Shade, $5 and costs, detective Alberto Campos, Parkersburg, ·
exhaust; John Scarbrough, Long W.Va., $23 and costs; Larry Rider,
Bottom, $10 and costs, lett of Pomeroy, $40 and costs; M. Scott
center; Ronnie Eblin, Middleport, DUUnger, Athens, $22 and costs;
$10 and rosts, tailed to display valid Brenda Darst, Pomeroy, $M and
license plates; Cbarles Cochran Ill, costs.
Athens, $25 and costs, Improper
Forfeiting bonds wereJeflr~ D.
passing.
Newell, Syracuse, $50, speeding;
Fined forspeedlngwereOiftord, Cletls Dalton, Albany, $177, overCOI'Inolly, 'Racine, $21 and costs;
load; Keith Cline, AsbvUie, $.1), no
Mlshla Hayman, Long Bottom, $23 registration; ilmblhy M. McDaand costs; Una Chuang Clark, niel, Cheshire, $251, overload; Jack
Wllllamsburg, W.Va., $23 and Jones, London, $170, Illegal deer;
rosts; Carl Mace, Davisville, Billy J. Mltch.e_!l'l, Pomeroy, forfe ·
W.Va., $24 and costs; Ronald !3. lted a 20-guage shOtgun for trans·
O'Neil, Glen Easton, W.Va.,$21 and porting a firearm In a motor
costs; Becky Amberger, Racine, vehicle.
$23 and costs; LancU Morris, ,--..:....:.:..::.:_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Akron, $24 and costs; Ba_rryTaylor,

Emergency squads kept busy

Winning lottery numbei"S

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports eight calls
Thursday; Syracuse fire depart·
ment at 12:51 a.m. to an auto fire on
Church and Hubbard Sts.; owner
Andy Patterson; car was total loss;
Middleport at 5:48 a.m. to Ash St.
for Robert Cundiff to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers
Plains at 9:33a.m. to Success Rd. fr
Lort Baker to St. Joseph'sHospital;
Pomeroy at 12:50 p.m.. transported
Cheryl Ferguson to Veterans Mem-

nomination, received $113,907 and
sPent $101,469, leaving a balance ot
$12,437.
Attorney General Anthony J.
Celebre-ae Jr., a Democrat unopposed tor the nomination, reported
a campaign fuoo balance d. $1.174
million. His Republican opponent,
Middletown attorney Barry Levey,
also umpposed, reported a bllance
r:t S50'9'!!.
11lese other ba !anres were reported by candidates with no
primary opponents:
Secretary of State- Democratic
(Continued _from page 1)
Incumbent
Sherrod Brown,
the board approved expenses of
$346,tlXl;
Republican
Vincent Cam·
participation.
oanella. $10.!89.
Band camp at Camp Crescendo,
Rio Grande College, July 20-26, was Veterans Memorial
approved, and the board acknowledged a cOntribution of $500 from
Admissions--Alice Balser, RaIn
the Student Councll toward in\· c e; Harry Watson, Pomeroy.
case
Discharges--Wilma Anderson.
Provements on the trop""
'"
·
The board accepted the reslgna- Jamboree cancelled
tlons of 1-i!rbert and June Matheny

State Treasurer Mary Ellen
Withrow, a Democrat, received
$115,61i0 durtng the reporting period
and spent$44,124, leaving a balance
of $197,961. Her opponent, Bryan E.
Icard of Bowling Green, did not file
a report since he raised less than
$1,0Xl.
The Republican candidate for
treasurer, Jeffrey P . Jacobs ct Bay
VU!age, who Is unopposed lor the

Academic

~~e:~an:m~l U,:d ~~~·

dA Jamboree wblch was to be
sponsol'!'d Suooay by Ell Denison
Post 4EiT Sons of the Amertcan
Legion has been canceled. The
Jamboree will be rescheduled at a
later date.

resolution of commendation for
heir rk
I
wo there for the past nine
years. Also given commendations
for their work were Martie Baum,
who resigned as cheerleadlng
squad advisor; and Dennis Eichin·
ger and his health class for their
efforts in establlshlpg an alcohol
abuse program In the high school.
Reports were given by Susie
Heines, board president, 011 the
sign-in procedure for personnel
established earlier, the merits ot
joining the Ohio School Boards
Asrocatlon's legal assistance fuoo,
and the STAR (State Treasury
Asset Reserve) investment aiterna·
tive a
f In
sin
· s a way 0
creo g
revenues. ActiOns were delayed

wUI
he Inmay
Meigscall
Memory
pending
luthermeeting
lntormatkln.
Friends
at theGardens.
funeral
A special
was set tor
homelrom2to4p.m.and7to9p.m. May 1• with the next regular
Wilma c. Anderson, 61, of 22728 Saturday.
meeting to be held at 7:30 on May
Bucktown Rd .. Racine, died late ,------------,----_;28::::_
.
Tuesday at Ohio State University
Hospital In Columbus.
A homemaker, she was born
March 9,1925 in Meigs County tot he
late Harry imd I:.ena Badgley
Teaford.
SurviVors Include her husband,
James A. Anderson; four daugb·
ters, Mrs. Theodore !BoiUiiel WU·
lford of Long Bottom. and Mrs.

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Ohio Valley Publishing
Company's weekly mystery farm
winner Is Paula DUion, 33100 Pine
Grove Rood, Racine.
The mystery photo which appeared In the Aprtl20 edition ot the
Times-Sentinel, was the farm of
George and Harry Guthrie located
in Sutton Township.
·
The photo was furnished by the
Meigs SoU and Water Conservation
District
.
A $5 prize is being malled to the

I

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dentsenteredthecontestwitb22ot :
them correct In their klerltlllt~at~ln l l
ot the Gutllrli! farm.

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Fireman of
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The lax refor~ movement isn't dead, says

_Page B-7 1--J_a_m_es_J_._K_ilp_a_tr_ic_k_ _Pa_g_e_A_-2----~
Bob Hoeflich describes how youngsters can
get free admission to the state fair - Page B-8

I

r

Inside:
Along tile River ........... 8-1 -8
Business ............... .. ...... D-1
Comics-TV ............... lnse; t
Ciassifieds .... .. .. .D-3-1-1).6. 7-8
Deaths ........... .............. A-7
Editorial ...................... 1\-2
Sports ........................ C-1-8

Set your clock
one hour ahead
at 2 a.m. today

•

tmts
12 Sections, 76 Pogn. 50 Cents
A Mut~modia Inc. New111111•

Vol. 21 No. 11
Copyrigh18d 1986

Reagan reafrmns U.S. presence in Pacific
By HELEN THOM.-\S
UPI While House Reporter
LOS ANGELES (UP! l - President Reagan ,
moving on to the second leg of his journey to the Tokyo
summit, said Saturday the United States can play a
role as a Pacific power In seeking withdrawal of
VIetnamese troops from Cambodia .
The president reiterated one general theme of his
slow-paced two-week trip - U.S. participation In
Pacific aHairs - du1ing his weekly radio address.
taped Friday night at the Century Pia7.a Hot el in Los
Angeles.
Reagan and his wife, Nancy, left Los Angeles on
Saturday for tre second stop of his 22,00J.mile
Journey, a weekend rest stop in Honolulu. His
ultimate destination is the seven-nation Tokyo
economic summit May 4-6.
In Hawaii . Reagan planned to telephone his "good
friend," former Philippine President Fet·dtnand

Marcos, who wit h his wife, Imelda, now lives in
Honolulu.
Thursday, before leav ing the Whit e Hou se, Reagan
telephoned new Philippine President Corazon Aquino
and invited ber to visit the United States this fall.
Before the summit, Reagan will visit the
Indonesian spice island of Bail to meet with tre
foreign ministers of the Association of Sout~ast
Asian Nations and Indonesian President Soeharto.
In his radloaddress,Reagansaid: "Durlngmytrip,
I'll be emphasizing to our ASEAN friends and the
otrers with whom I'll meet that the United States Is a
Pacific power.
"We expect to continue playing a mnstructlve role
In shaping the turure of tt'eir vibrant and vital part of
the world," he added.
On his journey, his longest as president , Reagan
hopes to reaffirm the U.S. standing as a Pacific power

and to persuade a!Jies at the t&lt;:onomtc summit to sign
on to a joint effort to fight international terrortsm.
In remarks upon arrival at Hickam Air Force Base
in Honolulu , Reagan praised the U.S. military for
serving as a front -ltne defense against "t ~ world's
dictators and terrorists."
"Today. America Is standing tall ," he said. "We're
rebuilding our defenses, setting In place innovative
weapons programSandgivingthe pay andequipment
you need... .
"And , yes, we're showing the world'sdictators and
terrorists that when they perpetrate their cowardly
acts upon the citizens of tre United States, trey had
best be prepared lor the consequences."
Secretary of Sta te George Shultz, who is travel ing
with Reagan, said in an Interview publisred Saturday
in the Los Angeles Times that the United States should
consider covert action and t ightereconomic sa nctions

Exposure derailed
assassination plot

ODOT plans work
on 4 state routes
By KEVIN KELLY
Thne&amp;-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Nearly $2 million worth of resurfacing work
should make traveling four state
routes in Gallla County easier lor
motorists.
Standard Materials Inc ., Ports·
mouth, bas contracted with the
ObloDepartmentclTransponatlon
for the jobs, scheduled for this
construction season and expected
to repave more than. 20 miles of
highway.
Theprojeetsineludethewtdening
of Ohio 325 between Gage and RJo
Grande, and resurfacing otohlo 564
between Porter and Cheshire, Ohio
141 from the intersection with Ohio
233 to the Galllpoils corporation
limits and Ohio Jffi from the Vinton
County line toatPiferHUioutsldeof
Vinton.
0001' District 10 ciflcials In
Marietta said the four jobs were
sold as a package of two, the first
covering 160, 554 and sections d 160
and Ohio 124 in Vinton Coo nty.
Standard bid $1,518,tlXl on the
project, 0001' said. The second
included the 141 and 325 jobs and
Standard offered !ll93,000.
The most ambitklus of the group
is the widening of 325, covering six
miles In Raccoon and Perry
townships. 0001' p~t the Jobonthi s ·
year's scheeduie because that
stretch of 325 has the highest
accident rate In tte district,
clflclals said.
GaUia ·county ODOT Supe rin -

tendent LaMie Burger said crews
from the local garage have been
doing the widening and crrotlng
space for new berms since last
year, but were delayed by cold
weather and resumed work this
spring.
"The widening had to do!Vo tefore
we could sell tre Job," beex(ialned.
"We think we can get it done In
three weeks.''
Standa'rd will pour one foot d new
pavement after the widening is
complete. The project calls for
two-to-three feet of paved berm on
each side, Burger said .
The 564 and 141 proJects cover
more than 10 miles of highway and
will not include sections paved in
1984, Burger said. These areas
include the elevatoo part of 554 at
Cheshire and the .stretch of 141 at
Centenary. The 551 project was
announced lor 1005 rut was delayed, Burger said . Officials noted
that 233 from the Jackson Cou nty
line to 141 was reswiaced In 1981
and a new surface was put on 160
from Gallipolis to Porter a few
years ago.
Officials couldn 't say when some
oft he projects woold start . although
Burger noted that Standard has
done preUminary work on the 160
job and was already working in
Vinton County from the Appalach·
ian Highway to the Gallia coun ty
lin&lt;'.
" It won 't be too long ·tecausc
trey're coming our way;' Burger
said . "Maybe by mid-month."

against Libya.
"We have a lot of different tools in oorbag, and we
need todevelopmoretools, " Shultz said,adding that if
covert action is to be successful, "We need to have in
this country a greater appreciation of tre Importance
of being able to do some things secretly.''
In his radio speech, the president said the Asian
alliance "has demonstrated examplary responsibility
and leadership concerning Ire Vietnamese continuing occupat ion of this country tCambodla J."
"America, along with our ASEAN friends, believes
that Vietnam should withdraw it s forces from
Cambodia and permit tre Cambodians to determine ·
their own destiny.
·
''The United States has made it clear that it's ready
to particpate in constructing an overa ll settlement,"
he said. "The communist government of Vietnam,
however, to the detrtment their own national
interests, remains intransigent ."

'.

WIDENING WORK - A crew !rom the Ohio Department &lt;1.
Transpor1atlon Gallla County garage Inspects some of the widening
work done on Ohio 325 for a wider highway and new, paved henn, one of
tour projects involvlnR stat• routes In tile county.

By mt 1\NDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPil - A
Libyan-directed assassination plot
using "professional students" that
was uncovered last year later was
traced to the Libyan mission to the
United Nat tons, State Department
officials say.
A department official, speaking
on the bas !son nofurtheridentifica·
lion, said the plot was short·
circuited wher the United States
revealed its exlstence last June.
"We headed It off by going public.
which scared therg (the potential
assassins!:· the o!Dciai said. "But
then we got caught tn a box: Wheli..
you pre-empt a plot by exposing it,
you prevent it from happening and
you don 't have any proof that It
ex isted without exposing your
intelligence sources.''
.
Friday, Britain · banned 334 Li·
byan aviation students from work·
ing on aircra ft at British airports or
flying solo, a new ·security move
that wlll force most ot them to leave
the country.
Another 22 Libyan students and
businessmen who earlier were told
to leave Britain fo r alleged revolutionary activities departed Friday
on a flight to the Libyan capital of
Tripoli.
In revealing the plot last June, the
Stat e Depariment said lt was
directed mainly against Libyan
di ssidents In the United States, but
officials said they learned that
Libyan plans included attacks

aga in s t U.S. o!!lciais and
installations.
The information came about six
months after tre administration
received reports, through an intelllgence source In Switzerland, that
"Libyan hit &lt;quads" wiore assigned
to carry out bombing attacks
against "a target on Pennsylvania
Avenue," presumably the White
House, and otrer Washington buDd·
ings, In c luding the State
Depart ment.
That alert led to the White House
and the State Department being
fortified with temporary barri·
cades, inciuding!Uleddumptrucks,
' anciTater permarnnet barriers.
The State Department oHicla l
·said of those In the p ot: "They were
'professional student s,' Libyans
who never seem to graduate, and
they're still In this country. 1
presume that the FBI Is keeping
more than half an eye on tt'em.''
He had no estimate on how many
Libyan "professional students"
were in the country.
After the alleged plot was
discovered , a diplomat attached to
Libya 's U.N. mission, Farhat
Tibar, 32, was declared persona non
grata an~ expelled from the United
States.
State Department offlclals said
about 12 more Libyans were
Involved In the same case and some
of them quietly left the country on
treir own.
(Continued on page A3)

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BEGIN APRIL 29
BEGINNERS CLASS
CARLTON SCHOOL

1

THE MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
WELCOMES

Identifies farm

KARATE CLASSES

+~~~~P~H~.~~~-~~~~n~s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

AND

1be probability of precipitation Is
near zero tnday, 20 percent tonight
and near zero Saturday: ·
Extaded Forecast
Sunday througlt 1\Jesday
· Fair Stmday and Monday; with a
cbamce of showers m Tuesday.
HJchs wW be between 75 and 85
Sunday ud Monday and Ia the lis
'1\Jeaday. Oveml&amp;ht lows geaerally
wW be In the 50s.

· MEIGS CO.
KARATE CLUB

Waiting In Line

MIK OR MATCH

01'111 DAlY t-5; !UNDAT 1-5

-------------4

Partly cloudy today, with highs
between Ill and 85. Partly cloudy
tonight, with a low near ffi. Mostly
SUMY Saturday, with highs near Ri.

.

ortal Hospital; Pomeroy at 1:53 •
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Thursp.m. to Wetzgal Rd. for Harry
day's
winning Ohio Lottery
Watson to Veterans Memorial
numbers:
Dally Number
Hospital; Llfefllgl!t at 2: ill p.m.
1()7.
transported WUrna Anderson !rom
Ticket sales totaled $1,309,388.50,
Veterans Memorial Hospital to
with
a payoff due of $843,941.50.
Ohio State University Hospitals,
PICK-4
Columbus; Middleport at 5:54p.m.
5S87.
to Mill St. for Valerie Laudermllt to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Ra·
cine at 10:12 p.m. to Trouble Creek
for Mary Kerns to Holzer Medical
Center.

~i)lrrt()r•••• __(~C-on_t_in_~__fro__m~pa~ge-1~)____________

Wilma C. Andei"Son

Weather forecast

Friday,April26. 1986

·w

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIODI.EPOIT

.

20°/o

NASA blasts media accounts
alleging disregard for safety
By WILLIAM HARWOOD
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
1UPll - NASA claims critical
stories In The New York Times,
raising new questions about how
well the space agency was managed and how important it regarded safety warnings, were
"misleading."
"The NASA-industry-university
team has put together an unrivalled
28-year achievement recMd
through tre dedication and compe·
tence of proven professionals,"
NASA said Friday In a five-page
response to this week's stories in the
Times.
" It Is In this context that the
Challenger tragedy and The New
York Times allegations, many of
which are misleading and taken out
of context, should he assessed ."
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration said many of
the "allegations" involved problems 10 to 15 years old and that
corrective action already has been
or Is being taken. The agency also
insisted It always made safety "the
first Consideration."- ~The Times obtained more than
500 Internal and exiemal audits of
the space agency under the Free·
dom of Information Act that the
newspaper said charted an apparent history of waste, safety compromises and poor management.

"The New ¥ark Times' artie les
are inaccurat e in alleging that
NASA disregards audit reports and
neglects proper testing and safety
procedures ." the space agency
said .
The Times reported Thursday in
tre second of a two-part series that
NASA short-chan&amp;e&lt;J the shutlle
program $500 million In safety
testing, design and development ,
despite years of warnings from ·
federal auditors and aerospace
experts. The NASA sta tement
addressed both stories.
The Times said Thursd ay audl ·
tors and experts reported ly warned
NASA that cutting or delaying the
test and development funding
meant equipment wooid be as·
sembled tefore parts were tully
teSted .
But NASA refused. terming the
eliminated testing procedures "not
cost-effective" in the face of
ever-tightening budget restrtcttons,
according_ to audits by the General
Accounting Office, the investigative
arm of Cong'ress, that were obtained by' the Times.
The audits indicate NASA began
withholding the safety testing,
design and development money
from the beginning of the shuttle
program untO tte Challenger's
explosion In January -and some of
tt'e money has stU! not been spent.
The Times said the experts and

audit ors warned that witbolding tte
money would make it very difficult
and costly to mak e changes later,
and ultimately would compromise
reliability. making t be shultie more
dangerous and expensive.
The report said while NASA was
refusing to spend the extra money,
federa l inspectors were warning
the agency It was wasting more
than $3.5 billion through faultY
management practices - waste
that ultimatelY helped create the
very budget problems NASA management cut the safety funding In
order to solve.
Space experts inside and outside
of the government , Interviewed by
the Times, generally confirmed !he
audits, tre newspaper said. The
Times a !so said NASA officials told
tte paper that the audits had been
fair and were generally accurate.
But NASA said Frtday It always
has viewed the audits , both Int ernal
and external, as a valuable tool and
said by paying attention to them the
agency had been able to save $749.3
mUllan between fiscal year 1978and
1985. .
"In fairness , it should also be
noted that many of the audit reports
deal with research and develop·
ment .proJects, proJects which, at a
point In time, must identify a highly
desirable complex technical objec·
live several years Into tre future,"
the agency said.

SCOUI'.Q-RAMI\ - More thalll,OOO Meigs, Gallla
and Mason County Scouts participated in Saturd_!ly' s
TrJ.Stare Area CouncU Scout.Q-Rama at the Gallla
County Junior Fairgrounds. Bob McGinness, Hun·
llngton, head ot the Tri-State Area CouncU, said
approximately 15 trl-oouuty units exhibited dl'lplays
this sprtnc. Besides local packs and troops displaying
crafts, lldl1s and·gamesn-hlp for the pubUc, the
MGM Dlstrlct·Cub Soouts put on a "Pinewood Deri\Y"

~ ·

race. Point·Pleasant scouts were In chiU'&amp;e fA that
event, and in- the abo~ photo ~Icy and Bn100
Adllltl8 o1 Pack 258, Point Pleasant, are seen
prepansg lor the race. Troop and pack members !itt
up booths Inside the Activities Building. Demolll!ltratlons o1 knoi.tylng and dutch oven ciloldng were
amt111g mme of the hlghllgtfs along the "midway."
Order of the Arrow Indian Dance Team wu alllo a
Saturday feature.

�-.

-

April 27, 1986

•

·c ommentary and perspective
•

•

~ Sunday Times-Sentinel

A Divisio n Of

~~

_,_-,-,~doo=o

,...,.-._

April 27. 1986 .

~v

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-23i2

Ul Court St., Po.meroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant ?ubllsher-Controller

A MEMBER o!The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatlon.
.
LETTERS OF OPINION are- welroi'I"'E' . They should 1x&gt; lPSs than D:1 words
: long. A.ll lett.e rs ares.ubj ect lo Kll t!ng and must be siR ned with name- . addr ess and
. lflrphone numbt&gt;r. No unsigned l«.&gt;llers will tx' published. Lf&gt;tters shou kl tM' In
. good tastP , addressing Issues, not pE&gt;rsonalifiPs.

Looking to the future

Don't give up_________
estimated to produce about the
same n&gt;Venues over the next five
years that would produce under the
present system. AD such estimates
necessarily are shaky, rut respectable data suggest that this purpose
can be met.
A reform bill must be "fair." The
president wants chan!J!s that especially would benef!J lower-Income
familles, that would not benefit one
part of the €C'Onomy at the extiense
of anotll!r, that would not counterproductively soak the rich.
A third goal Is "sln\pllflcatlon."
The existing Tax Coli:! often Is
unfairly maligned. In many highly
specialized Instances, yes, tiE tax
laws are baffling. The Internal
Revenue Service Itself cannot
explain certain provisions. For
most Individual taxpayers the
mazes ar~ not as haffllng as they
are made out to be, rut even !ll,

:: (EDrroR'S N&lt;YJ.E: WHh the creation ol the state's l3lh public

I!Diverslty, higher education throughout Ohio mters a new era. Wo Qrande

cpJiese and Community College President Cloclls R. Smith has bEen asked
~ the 'Jbnes.Sentlnel to prepare a series of comllll'lllary pieces on tile
)!~tal Impact c:lllti new educational mvlronment. 'lbe foDowlngls the last

&lt;J41hree edltor1als.)
:·The more uncertain we are of the fUture , the more we must plan ror It
·:Rio Grande's need to plan Is not a question. II we are to prosper In the
~anglng and challenging environment of the l9!lls and 1!ros, we must
I)lan.
:: Changes In the demography of enrollments, In competition from other
C9lleges, In levels ri financial support, and In the e&gt;&lt;pectatlons ri students,
J)arents and employers are only a few of the e&gt;&lt;ternal pressures Impelling
U$ toward change.
::This challengingenvlrohment brings wlthlt the realization that a college
iS shaped at least as much by outside fOrces and markets as by Internal
~terminations.

:An action plan that focuses on the demands and opportunities of the
f\lture must be developed. Strategic planning and marketing guides the
~Ming and direction of the Institution In a oomplex, changing environment.
;By planning strategically lor the future, we can master chan!J!, we can
make It work for us, not against us; and by doing so, we will be better
pfepared for the future.
:The student is the most Important person oo Rio Grande's campus. The
stu,dent Is not a statistic, but a flesh and blood human being with feelings
and emotions - and hopes.
A college is In the business of marketing hope. 1baf's what we do.
Colleges are in the human resource development business.
:One of our prtmacy responsibilities Is to prepare students for initial
employment and a lifetime of a changing array d positions and careers. To
d6 so, our educational programs must be llexlble and broad-basal.
-'This is particularly essential In light of the !l'edlctlon that by the year
~half of the career oriented knowledge and skills d today's technology
stlldents will be obsolete; and, hall of what he or she will need to know then
has yet to be discovered.
:Further, during thls decade, while the rumber of 18-24 year olds In Ohio
w)ll decrease, adults between the ages of 35 and 44 wlll Increase by :ll
~rcent. These facts are significant as we consider academic programs
aDd cuniculum.
.
;Our success will depend upon rur ability tb provide needed educational
oeportunltles;not only for the diminishing number ri traditional students,
but also lor this growing population of non-traditional students.
;Planning and marketing our programs with Integrity and proficiency Is
~tlal to the college's continued growth and development.
.·
.The college must generate a high degree of sophistlcatl0n about Its
pOtential constituents and markets. By so doing, we may proceed to take
major strides toward the renewal ct. the Institution.
:For colleges, marketing can be a successful toolandnotjusta classroom
s\lbject. The social, economic and human needs of our service area can
~t be served by a marketing oriented college.
.OUr college serves - and therefore must maintain positive relations
With- various interests lnoorcommunity. Theroleofmarketlngln higher
education is io Identify the needs of Its current and potential students; to
encourage the avallablllty of appropriate services to match
and, to
a(range for their efficient distribution and communication.
Jl'lte unemployed, the underemployed and the unemployable certainly
hiove needs that can be served by the J)ubllc responsibility ri the
cqmmunlty college dimension of Rio Grande.
•Rio Grande College needs to become a more responsive Institution to tiE
c6mmunlty and Its needs: economic development, literacy, arts, senilr
c~tzens and other oon-traditlonal students. Each oft lEse groups and areas
d. Interest represents new constituents and potential students .
;Our goals for the future must include:
'"
'-a competent and comm!Med faculty;
•·
:-erthancement of the tradtiton of strong liberal arts programs;
:-recruitment and retentkln of lxlth tradittOnal and oon-tradltlonal
students;
.-nexlblllty in curriculum design and Integration of degrEe and
BID-degree Instruction to enhance student progress;
.-periodic, planned academic program review to ensure that there Is a
match between community needs and educational opportunities;
;.:...Unkage lletween the college and local businesS and lndustty; and;
--creation of a mutually supportive resource network io assure
alnslstency in statewide delivery ot comprehensive occupational
•
educatiln.
:Working with other local educational providers In job ~lng and
eConomic revllallzatlon, we can develop customized, occupatilnal and
a~tlceship programs.
.E:ducatlonal renewal is our goal. Cooperation. not competition, must be
ooni€'\V direction.
·Faculty, staff, administrators and trust res must work as equal partners
tlio a strategic planning and marketing effort to be successful. No member
&lt;(the rollege comrm:tlity Is exempt from the responslblllty of making the
~ltutlon more invlti.1g, more responsible and more caring.
;ruo Grande's success in the Immediate years ahead wlll result from
~tlng a little niche In the marketplace -- by setting Itself apart tr&lt;m
oilier colleges.
:the college's Identity will be defined and reinforced by the choices we
m;ike. I am confident that It we act in unity and coneert with the rorrect
d9lce of constituencies, It will continue to thrive In the fUture.
;There are just three things to remember: First, there Is opportunity in
adVersity. The times have never been better for Institutional renewal.
~nd, the best solutions to today's !l'Oblems -- demography,
I.'Qmpetltlon, finances and the rest - will be achieved through education.
'I!Ilrd, dreams are potent. With challenges Ilia&gt; the present, shared dreams
can dramatically strengthen a college.
.
:In the decade ahead, It wlll be difficult to lnldonto Rio Grande's dream o1
cqmblnlng liberal arts and technical training; but, only through challenge
do'we grow.
j am confident that Rio Grande College will be vtable In the 12th decade
ot ~ts life. 1 am confident that It can buDd upon Its strengths and take
InCreasing pride In Its shared commitment to serve llllre tuny with
etihanced quality programs for students and citizens of southeast Ohio

neeas;

•

:Those

simplification is a goal worth moved his bill to the lnteilslve care
lllr.ming.
unit he!ore his Finance Committee
Finally, tax rearms slnuld rould get to one proposal that has
provide incentives for capital for- great proll)ise. This Is the package
matlon; they sl'ould not Intolerably· · aafted by Delaware.'s Wllllam
burden states, cities, or such Roth, one ol tiE ablest members of
depressed Industries as stEel and the Senate. Roth recommends a
farming; and they slnuld benefit major refonn based upon adoption
U.S. producers In areas of lllterna- of what he terms a "Business
tiona! trade. .
Transfer Tax" of. 8 percent on the
None of these goals Is beyond net n&gt;Venues of businesses with
reach, but the Senate btU that gross annual. receipts above $10
abruptly was wittdrawn on Aprlll8 mUtton.
was not a workable answer. The bill
Roth's package has great appeal.
was being riddled by special It would produce an estimated $364
roncessions. For every old loophole . billion In new revenues over a
that would be eliminated, a new five-year period. About 40 percent
looplnle would be created. So many of that sum would be paid by foreign
advantages were being brokered !lrms. As an dfset against Income
that at one point the measure was from the transfer tax, Roth prosomewhere between $29 billion and poses cuts In Individual Income
$."Al bUllon short of meeting the goal taxes of 13 percent or more. He
of revenue neutrality.
would provide tax-exempt "SUper
Oregon's Sen. Robert Packwood Savings Accounts" as a new pool of
needed capital. He would preserve
the deductibility of state and local
tal&lt;es. Morigage Interest deductions would not be touched. Because
of the $10 million Door. under
transfer taxes, all but a relative
handful or American farmers
woold be exempt. Business and
Industry would benefit from new
sc he dul es of accelerated
depreciation.
In the nature rJ. things, much of a
business transfer tax would be
passed along In higher prices to
consumers. Imported goods especially would be affected, but that
prospect leaves Roth unperturbed.
~ Foreign firms now enjoy a great
~ advantage In the U.S. market.
~ Roth's reforms, In his phrase,
;;!&gt; woold tend to "level the playing
~ field."
~ It probably Is unrealistic to
suppose that in the time remalnlnl!
before Octoller adjournment,
Roth's package could be sold as a
substitute for the Hawed btl! passed
· by the House last December.
Nevertll!less, Roth has his eye on
tiE fundamentals of tax reform. He
means to be fair at home and
competitive abroad. He seeks to cut
taxes for individuals and to raise
capital for Industry. Who could
reasonably ask for anything more?

Remember those threats ____
WASHINGTON - The IDstDe
response of most Western Euro·
pean governments to the U.S. raid
m Libya puzzled and an!J!red
many Americans, woo supported
the mllltary strike as a longoverdue attempt to cool Libyan
dictator Moammar Khadafy's ardor ror International terrorism.
Libyan oil money has· financed
anti-government terrorist groups
from the Pl\lllpplnes to Irerand and
most trouble spots In between.
Our associate Lucette Lagnado
has reviewed classified State De·
partment cables obtained through
the FrEedom of lnlormatlon Act.
They might · well serve as a
reminder to our querulous European allies of the threat Khadafy
has posed to their safety and pwce
of mind In recent years. For
Instance:

- Italy. An Intelligence team
concluded that Italy was "a country
which has witnessed the largest
number of Libyan assassination
anempts." One d the violent
lnci!Ents occurred in February
1981, when "at least two but
possibly five · Libyan gunmen
opened fire In .. . Rome's Flumlclno
Airport, wounding a numher ol
Arabs." The cable noted that
"Libyan assassins have killed or
wounded a number of Libyan
dissidents In Italy."
The Intelligence summary Went
on to describe several other
attacks, which Italian pollee be·
lleved were "part ol a campaign r1
lntlmldatlon launched by Khadaty
against p611tical opponents
abroad.''
Later In 1981, the ronsulate In
Mllan cabled : "Italy's mllltary

Intelligence service ... turned up
evidence at end of May that Libya
and Palestinians have supplied
weapons .. to Italian terrorists.''
The Italian pollee had uncovered a
plot by terrorist leader Oreste
Scalzone, woo was "thought to have
received funds from the Libyans to
establish a radio station and
'cultural centers' In Rome/Naples
vicinity."
The Italians, of rourse, later
made a S£Parate peace with the
terrorist community, allowing as·
sasslns unhampered transit
through Italy In return llr a
promise to let Italians alone. Even
after this pact with the devll was
brmched by the seizure of the
Italian cruise ship Achllle Lauro
and the bloody attack on the Rome
airport, Italian leaders still managed to express sl'ock and dismay

Ohio extendec,l forecast

Monday through W~esday
··
Chance of showers Monday through Wednesday. Highs will ~in
the70s&lt;Monday and TueSday and In ttv&gt; ros Wednesday. Lows wlll be
m the 50s Monday and Tuesday and in the 40s Wednesday.

State zone forecasts
Northwest Ohio
West Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today wilh a high In the mid OOs.
The probability of precipitation is W p&lt;:rccnt today.
Central Lake Erie Shore
Mostly sunny today with a high between 8J and &amp;'i.
East Lake Erie Shore
Mostly sunny today with a high betwen 00 and 85 today.
Central Ohio Hlghlwuls
Mostly sunny today with a high between 00 and 8.1.
Northeast Ohio ln!Wid
Mostly sunny today with a high betwe!'n 00 and &amp;'i .
Ohio Miami Valley
.
Southwest Ohio
Partly cloudy today with a high betwe!'n 85 and !Xl.
The probability of precipitation is W p&lt;:rccnt today.
Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today with a high In the upper 8Js.
Ea•t Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today with a high in the upp&lt;:r 8Js.
South Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today with a high near !Xl.

Snowstorm sweeps into Rockies
By United Press International
A heavy snowstorm swept out of the Pacific Northwest into the
Rockies Saturday, thr~atenlng to dump up to a loot of soow In the
higher elevations, while severe thunderstorms lashed the Plains
with rain , high winds and hail.
Winter stonn warnings went up across parts of Utah, Wyoming
and Montana, where a foot of snow was forecast at higher eleva tions,
the National Weather Service said .
Cold temperatures combined with rain, snow and brisk winds
prompted livestock advisories In the Dakotas. Wyoming and
Colorado. Th&lt;&gt; elements could cause excessive stress on young and
newborn livestock. the weather service said.
"It 's chilly in the Northwest and much of tiE Great Basin, and the
cooler alr wil l be spilling over Into the Rockies and tiE Northern
Plains," said NWS meteorologist Scott Tansey.
But warmer weather was forecast !rom the Great Lakes and
much of the Plains to the Mississippi Valley and the"Southeast. "It' s
going to be fairly mild to quite warm at least through tiE weekend ,"
Tansey said.

-France. It's probably Wlfair to
suggest that France's refusal to
allow U.S. planes to fly wer French
soU reflected sympathy lor statesponsored terrorism - which the
French government practiced In
the fatal bombing of the nuclear
protest ship Ralnoow Wanior In
New Zealand. But surely there Is
little to sul:tilantlate the French ·
leaders' claim that the reason they
didn't support the U.S. attack was
because It wasn't tough enough.
In January 1981, according to a
State Department cable, threatenIng letters were received In tiE
West Berlin offices of the Associated Press and Agence FrancePresse with "a message to the
French people."

The following are Great WarnIngs In American History.
"The British are coming! The
Brillsh are coming! " (Paul Re·

vere, 17'15).

of Alderman Roman ?uclnskl, a

member ot the City Council's
anti-Washington bloc. was rejected
by black voters In favor of
LaRouchlan Jan lee Hart br secretary of state, 74 percent to 26
percent.
How could blacks vote for a
candidate wlnse pollcles spew
some of the most rancid antiSemitism .to crawl out of the sewer?
Unfortunately, easily.
Voters hear what they want to
hear. Each special Interest group
listens lor the rolE words dear to Its
electoral heart. This Is as .true for
·blacks as It Is ror farmers, National
rune Association members, antl.abortlonlsts, Gramm-Rudman
b.Jdget-balancers. backers of Nicaraguan contras, senior citizens and
lnmophobes.
After LaRouche's outrageous
press bashing perfonnance at the
National Press Club, It's lair to
speculate that he's not playing with
a tuD deck.
Yet labeting LaRouche a "nut," a
"fanatic" or an 'jextremtst"
nettll!r defines the Issues nor solves
the !l'oblems.
. I'm as guilty of this as anybody,
but argumentum ad lnmtnen ooly
klwers the level ol clvlllty In debate.
Jolll Stuart MID put It succinctly:
"The worst offense of this kind
which can be committed by a
polemic is .to stigmatize tlnse who
IDid the contrary opiniln as bad
and Immoral men."
A USA TOilaT edltoftal IOOaned
that LaRouchians "exploit fear and
prejudices." Who has become more
adl'pt at pitting races against each
otll!r than the Reagan-MeeseReynolds troika?
LaRouchlans "propose polltlcal
'solutions' that could cause chaos,"
continued the edltorlal. Reagan's
policies In C"central America and

CLEVELAND t UPl l- Friday's
winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
Dally Number
6M
PICK-4

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GIVES YOU PLENTY OF
TIME TO PLAY GOLF
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i\ssassination plot

JAYMAR

(Continued from page AI&gt;

GOLF

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In today's Circular t e il·
lustration of the Flowers on
Page 4 were inadvertently
switched.
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Libya are doing an exceptional job
Getting back to history this
of sponsoring confUsion.
countJOY'S political system ~odl­
Right oow, LaRouche's move- cally !Emands a political castor ul
ment is a sizzling media event, · catharsis to shake It out or Us
matdllrig Cllnt EastWOOd's election two-party moribundity.
as mayor of Walden Pond-by·the·
Meanwhile, Lyndon No. 2 Is
Sea.
.
complying by inoculating analysts,
But one Dallas columnist Insists rolumnlsts and editorial writers
that LaRouche's appeal ·rates a with a finger-waggling serum they
"belch and a yawn.'' Texas DellXl· haven't enjoyed since Richard
crats·are taking no chances and are Nixon discovered, to hls dismay
issuing "LaRouche Alerts" !or their that Watergate was not some slulc~
May 3 primary. Republicans can 1¥ the river Republican.
hardly contain their glee.

Doonesbury

ble by aS:aJ,OXl fine andfiveyears In Tr'easurer Ray Kest farced Kest to rJ. the nation's lar!J!st in six year's.
prison.
drop out of the Toledo mayor's race
Frlday!s·arrest.s were made after
In addition, Wilson was charged last year.
warrants were Issued In Cleveland,
with racketEering, Interstate and
The FBI has tenned Wllson;s Griffin said.
·
foreign travel to aid racketeering, lsipo;rt;s;·boo;;km;;ak;;ln;g;;~;;;;;on;;e;;;;;A;II;t;he;su~spec~t.;s ;ar;e~fr;e~
e oil:bo~nd;·~
evading Income tax and it llng
fraudulent returns from 1981
througlll981.
Granberry's other charges in·
elude interstate and foreign travel
to aid racketeering, Illegal posses·
skln of a firearm, and !allure to file
tax returns In 1981 and 1982.
The focus of tiE Investigation
centered In the Toledo area, rul
extended Into Florida, Alabama,
New York, Massachusetts, Michl·
gan and Nevada, Griffin said.
Last May the IRS and FBI last
May conducted raids at three
Toledo homes and a business.
Including a tavern owned by
CALL JAYMAR GOLF CLUB OR
Wilson. Wilson has been unsuccess·
CAROL CROW AT 992·631 0
ful in seeking tiE return of ll'operty
and money confiscated In that raid.
Wilson, the tar!J!t of a federal
grand jury investigation In Cleveland, was arrested in February on
charges of extortklil In oonnectlon
CALL JAYMAR GOLF CLUB OR
with the Investigation, Griffin said
In a news release".
BOB FREED AT 992-2041
Wilson Is scheduled to be tried
Tuesday in federal court on the
ex tortion charges.
FBI officials charged Wilson with
MEN'S EVERY MONDAY AT6
extending credit to a Boston man In
WOMEN'S EVElY THURSDAY AT6
1981 and threatening violence to
harm him If the !Ebt was not
CAll TO R~GISTEI OR JUST STOP BY
repaid.
Wllsoi!'S name has been linked to
PRIVATE LESSON AVAILABLE
several prominent polllicians. His
ON APPOINTMENT
association with Lucas County

Ohio Lottery

-=..;;Ja=ck...:..=..:An:..:..=.de=-=rs.=..:..:on

when the United States decided to
try a different anti-terrorism tactic.

By JIM SIELICKI
TOLEDO, Ohio iUPil --Federal
agents have broken up a sevenstate ·bookmaking operation In
Toledo with til! arrest of 10 people
on a variety o! gambllng and
racketeering charges.
Armed with warrants Issued by a
special federal grand Jury In
Cleveland Friday, the agents
charged the suspects, including a
Toledo gambling figure and a radio
sportscaster, with Illegal gambling.
The suspects were taken to FBI
headquarters in Toledo before
being taken to U.S. District Court
· for arraignment before Magistrate
.James G. Carr.
Joseph E. Gr~fin, Toledo FBI
special agent In charge, said the
· FBI and the Internal Revenue
ServiCe have tracked the now of
gambling money Into and out or the
United Statl'8 for two years.
The grand jury returned the
21-count indictment Thursday.
Among the nine men and a
woman armted were Donald King,
52, a sportscaster for WCWA radio;
lavern owner Paul"Butch" Wilson,
45, who had been convicted of a
pn&gt;VIous gambling charge, and his
sister, Joan Ward, 49, who works
lor the Toledo Board of Education.
Also arrested were: John R.
Op Jr.. 39,MaumEe; Roger Deill\
MShler, 36, Napoleon; Thomas E.
Clark Jr., 47; Stanton M. Eeaver,
57; Leonard Phillips, 39; George R.
Granberry, 57, and CUtford E.
Jeakle, 49, all r1 Toledo.
All tiE 1uspects were charged
with bookmaking, which Is !llnisha-

Shaking things up ________:,__...:::.:.Ch==uc:..:.:...:kS=to=ne

"The .Russians are comlng! The
Russians are coming! " (Nonnan
Jewlson, 196'7).
"The LaRouchlans are roming!
The LaRouchlans!" (Democratic
politicians after tiE March 1986
Dllnois primary).
After the ftrst warning, Amerl·
can n&gt;Volutlonarles defeated tiE
Bri tlsh. After the socond alarm,
American llXlvle buffs enjoyed tiE
cold war spoof. The third distress
signal hasn't congealed a natkmal
response yet. But It the history of
polltlcalmovements Is any barometer, American Voters will take a few
specimen tests from Lylllon H.
LaRouche before discarding his
National Democratic Polley Committee on the ash heap cl for~nen
political causes.
In the meantime, LaRouche Is
proving that his NDPC rull has the
~wer to run amok in thechlnasiDp
of two-party politics.
Voters In the llilnols Democratic
primary were almost casual In
their blithe ablllty to Ignore LaRouchlan analysts straight out o1 Allee
In Wonderland, solutions concocted
by Dr. Strangelove and phrasallaHke.
ogy that blends the ~try of
right-wing dinosaurs and tiE social·
Ism of le!t-wlng jackasses.
A potpourri d special Interest
groups seemed to be protesting. a
:TfldaY Is Sufl!lay, April Zl, t1Je-117th day of 19~ with :M8 to bllow.
Democratic Party that had lost
·The moon is moving toward Its last quarter.
touch with its soul, or as Mr. Dooley
:The morning stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
lamented, "ain't on speaking'
1'he evening star Is Venus.
born on this date .a re under the slgn of Taurus. They Include terms with ltsUt."
Black, vo~ In Chicago espePbr:tu~ explorer Ferdinand Magellan In 1400; English historian
Edivard Gibbon In 1737; Samuel F.B. Morse, artist and Inventor of cially smote anybody woo walked,
rri~Jgnettc telegraphy, In 1791; UlyssesS. Grant, Civil Wargeneralandlater · ran 1r smelled antagonistic to their
pi'e$1dent of the United States, In 1822; Wallai:e Carothers, Inventor ot beloved May&lt;r Harold Waahingtoo.
Th11s, Aurelia ?uclnsld, daughter
Nylon, ~ 1896;. actor Jack Klugrn311,ln ·l922 (~e 641.

foday i~ history

~_i_K.....,:ilpa=---trw_·k:

J_(lm_e_
·

' WASHINGTON - It has to be
said ol the cause of tax refonn that
If the movement Isn't dead, It's
awfUlly sick. One school of ~Inion
says, pull the plug and let it die.
Another, more hopeful school says
a worthwhile blll could ~t be !lit
together -If. The !Is are monumen tal, but lt's spring and hope springs
eternal. Let's not give up .
These are among tiE big Its: If
Congress could just agree. to tiE
fUndamental purposes oft~ (l'esldent's program, If members woold
suspend just a little of their
parochial concerns. If we don't run
rut of Ume before tiE October
adjournment - If all of these
things, tax 'reform rould yet be
accomplished.
What are the fundamental purposes? Mr. Reagan has asked fora
· tax blll that would be "revenue .
neutral," that is, for a package

r----Weather:--·- - - FBI cracks-seven-state bookmaking ring·
-

:. Pa9e-A·2 :
tr=================~F==-===============================~~====··
jlttlh~U" ~hnts ... jtnfittd .

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page A-3.

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

, The Hot One-Pontiac Fiero GT
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Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

Pomeroy-Middl8port-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plull!'lt W. Va.

'

.

,

.. ,.

.~

-

April27,198~

'
Ohio-Point
Pleasant, W. Va.

Reag8n labels accusations against .fonn~r . aide ·'ridiculous'

Accused killer finds self on jury
MOTOR CAR BROKERS

.*",...

1985 MERCURY COUGAR

the college was set aside by the late Izaac Carleton In
IS&amp;Ilandtheoollegewaslnexis181ceunlll933whenll
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CARLEI'ON - This Is a I!Mil photograph of
Carleton College In Sy,.,use which belonged lolhe
· late Avery Roberts, a MelgsCountyteacher. Landfor

.
• d
d •
d
C
'. onvtcte spy entes wrong 0 Dig
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•

svp':f.~~~-~7~~10

~~~::~::====::~---------------------­

: LOS ANGELES tUPIJ - A recy charges. Her husband, who Is was innocent, her two lawyers,
convicted Soviet spy has recanted serving eight years, made a similar Brad Brian and Greg Stone asked to
her confession and told the judge In move late last year but thecase has withdraw because of a "conflict of
the espionage ret tiai of her former not been heard yet.
Interest."
lover an(j FBI agent Richard Miller
Kenyon said Jhat as a result of
Kenyon denied the request , saythat they are both Innocent.
Ogorodnikova's Insistence that she Ing he found no such contllcl.
U.S. District Judge David Kenyon read aloud Friday a transcript rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-;;~
of a poignant and powerful statement Svetlana Ogorodnikova made
to him during a meeting in
chambers Thursday.
The startling developments also
prompted Kenyon to threaten one of
Miller's attorneys with jail for
contempt of court for allegedly
trying to influence the selection of a
new attorney for Ogorodnikova.
"Your honor, we are not guilty of
these crimes," Ogorodnikova told
Kenyon In a combination of transJAted Russian and broken English.
. . " I want to tell the judge the truth.
Richard is not a traitor. of his
country. I am not Russian spy.
• · "(want to tell the judge I pleaded
guilty and my life is finished. If I
come back to the Soviet Union they
Will anyway kUI me. I am living now
j~st to help my son (woo U
ves In

7 CADILLACS IN STOCK
The tradition continues.
The 1986 Fleetwood Brougham.

'MOSCOW I.

Emergency runs

-

~ "I will take all the sentence I am
~ven bu I ... I don't want oomeone

.woo is not guilty to be In prison too.
J• My hanm are clear, I didn 't take
$Y documents.
:· "It's hard when they accuse you
o'f something you didn't do .... When
everyone points at me and l!BYS I
. am Russian spy, it hurts ll'l!'. ·... My
'lilul hurts.
··' "But I don't care oow. I just want
. tO help him. It 's hard to help a man
who put you in jail, but he is not
guilty.
• "This man 1Millen lied a lot
about me, butlt's not his fault . He's
a very emotional man. They were
~ ttlng stress on him In his dflce. I
know that."
· ' Testimony came loa sudden halt
, Thursday when Ogorodnikova requested a private meeting with
!(enyon, woo unveiled the behind. the-scenes epiSOde Friday by read·
lng her statement.
:: Ogorodnikova. :fi, said she he·
: Il'eved she and her husband,
· Nikolai, and Miller were arrested
~spite their ln1100'nCl' a' part c1 an
''FBI plan," but did nol elaborate.
:- The dramatic Jurnaround promp!ed speculation that Ogorodnikova,
,qho Is serving an 18-year prison
J~rm, will makeaformalaltemptto
her guilty plea to cons pi·

• POMEROY - Meigs Crunty
I!;mergency Medical Service repdrts nine calls Friday.
Rutland at 11:09 a.m. to Hysell
Run Road for Carrie Moore to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11:57 a.m. to Racine
Elementary School for Jason Lawoon to Holzer Medical Center;
: Racine at 2:04 p.m. treated but
dld not transport Barry Allen from
Antiquity; Rutland at 2:46p.m. to
Iiiain Street for Julia Stewart to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 2:57 p.m. to Stonewoocls
Apartments for Sherrie Frazier to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
ai 4: 11 p.m. to Beech Street for
Richard Hawley to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 4:56 p.m.
transported Harold Herchenson to
ijolzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
at 5:28p.m. too Rock Springs Rbad
for Gerald Gllils to Holzer Medical
center; Rutland at 8:55 p.m. to
Ohio 1?A for Pau l Schuler to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Veterans Memorial
· Admissions - Carrie Moore,
P.'omeroy;
Julia Stewart,
Middleport .
•
Discharges - ~thony Willis,
Edna Lee, Lottie Lronard, Mabel
Hetzger, Paul Michael, Robert
Qualls.

rfw ·wtnd(M' r wo~rrno.·nl .1nd rhr i£1:t"l)(i,lfy

H N t ·', .11 .If lhill ~'' muu • Clf"IU,l\lf'
t'&lt;ll h I'IW hv rl'nlillnm~ !rut·IO th rr.rrh -

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•

WICHITA, Kan. (UPI) - When a , - - - - - - - - - ' - - -- - -- - - - - - - - jury or 10 men and two women was
. seated to hear ' Q rape case, Greg
Chlsin of Wichita - charged with
first-degree murder- was on It.
Autholitles said Chism, 39, told
his la\Yyer Monday afterooon he
was surpr1sed to he arrnrig the 40
prospective jurors and eJqressed ·
,);~
even greater amazement Monday
",¥1-. "
~"-'
I
evening after he was chosen.
. ~11
Chism sat through Tuesday's
proceedings In the rape trial of
Kenneth Hood, and It was not until
Wednesday morning that Sedgwick
County Dlstrtct Judge David
Kennedy was made aware that
Chlsm·was free on $&amp;l,IXXJ bond on a
first-degree murder charge and
had his own preliminary hearing
scheduled Friday.
Kennedy Immediately excused
Chism from Ihe jury.
Rnishtrl in darll sable brown wrth tan cloth interior, hard to fioo V-8 engine,

By 'ltMOO'HY BANNON
Russell' said It was "too early to while serving In the White House, $105,!1Xh;ontract with theCanlila to department's public Integrity s~- D-Dei.. Paul·Slmott, D-Ill., Howard
WASHlNGTON (UP! l -Justice tell" if Meese will have a role In the Deaver met In February 1985 with represent Its Interests In the United tlon, and Meese has D days to Metzenbaum, D-Ohlo, and Patrick ,
Fred Doocet, a topaide to Canadian States.
l1!!lpllrxl.
Leahy, D-Vt., requested that the ,
Department dficlals have reee!ved Justice Department Investigation.
aPrereqlduestt. Recalled "lifodlculolilus" by '
Meese, while serving as White Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, to
Deaver, facing inqulr~ by the , u It ·I$ detennlned • there is inquiry focus, in addition to the
s
~
aganran
·
qulry
House
counsel,
was
among
a
dose
discuss appointing special envoys General Accounting Office, a House auBiclent evidence, a special three- contract with the Canadian govern1
nto t.., appoinlntrnent of a special circle of presidential advisers that to deal with acid rain problems.
panel and theOfflceofGove~nt Judge panel appoints a special ment, on Deaver's: .
.
~~secultHtor totdevMiestlghate Deformer Included Deaver and Treasury
Five tronths later, after leaving Ethics, has denl.ed any prosecutor, known as an independ-Involvement with Rockwell ,
e ouse a
c ae1 aver. Secretary James Baker, IOJ'Rler the White House and opening his lmproprlet~.
· --.. · •
ent counsel.
International and his participation
Atito~eylhGeneral Edwfln Meese chief of staff.
Washington public relations firm 1n
The Inquiry request wUI he
The letter from Sens. Robert '11 meetings concerning federal
r,ece
v,.. e request rom the
It was disclosed this week that May 198i, Deaver signed a one-year
Byrd ·ow v
Jo h Bide
procurement of the &amp;1 bomber.
____________;____;_::___.:.___ex=a::.:min=ed=-.:bY::._,::Ia:.::wy:.:.:ers~. .:ln:....the:::......:·::::.:.::·~:..·:....·_:a.::_·•__.:_:.:s:..~::......~,;_n.:.,. . . . : . - - " - - - - - - - government ethics office and five
1
Democrats on the Senate Judiciary
Committee, Justice Department
spokesman ,John Russell said
Friday.
The request triggers an inquiry
Into whether a special prosecutor
should probe conflict-of-Interest
411egatlons swirling around the
former Wbite House official and h1s
11-month consulting venture.
Deaver has been the target of
allegations that In his consulting
work he may have violated a
federal law t.hat bars senior officials
who leave government from lolilylhg for one year on issues they
handled.
Most of the questions center
around Deaver's representation of
Canada after leaving government
and a subsequent agreement betWeen Canada and the United
States on acid rain.
· The Washington Post reported
Saturday that Canada had refused
lollelp congressional Investigators,
possibly jeopardizing their Independent probe of Deaver.
: ~d the New York Times re~rted Saturday that Deaver, in a
report filed with the Justice Department April 18, said he represented
l.hf Korean Broadcasting AdvertisIng Corp. at .a meeting with a
National Security Council dflcial.
According to the report, the
meeting took place five months
after he left his job as deputy White
House chief of staff.
Reagan, whO has had a ~-year
political and peroonai association
with Deaver, defended his friend
·.Friday, saying: "I think the whole
thing is ridiculous."
At a news confer"'ce last rrnnth,
the president said Deaver "never
put the arm on me."
Five Democratic members c1 the
Senate Judiciary Olmmlttee invoked the Ethics in Government
Act late Thursday and requested a
Justice Department Inquiry into
whether a Watergate-style prosecutor soould be appointed. The Office
of Government Ethics joined the
lawmakers Friday in their request
for an Inquiry.

Adve rll sl n~

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�April 27. 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.

r--Local Briefs:---. Dexter resident suffers· head· injury
•

N.C. man fined in area fatality
GALLIPOLIS - James A. Winstead has been fined roJ and
sentenced to 10 days In jail for negligPnt homicide in a .Jan. :D traffic
fatality in Ga llia County.
Winstea d, 46, Graham, N.C .. was also handed a onecyeardrlver's
license suspension and given 18 months probation by Gallipolis
Municipal .Judge .Ja mes A. BennetT. Winstead entered a no contest
plea.to the charge. court records Indicated .
......_
Winstead was arrPsted and jailed by the state~ghway palrol aft er
his lraelor traiiPr rollidro with a ca r driven by Gary A. Porterfield.
21. Dayton. on U.S . .1'&gt; near Rodney . Troopers said Winstead
allegedly tried to pass a vehicle ahead of him when the crash
occunrd . Por1etfield was dead at the scene. tlle patrol said.

City
income tax deadline set
•
GALLIPOLIS- Aprilll is the final day for payment of tiE 1985
(;allipolis city income tax to avoid penalties and interest on final
rotums. the city tax depanmrnt sa id Saturday
ThPdepartment advised thai I he first quarter Income tax p~ymen t
for 1!!86 is duf' on the sa me date. A prnalty and Interest of 1 per·oent
p&lt;'r month will be charged on all late quarter payments until
nwiw'CI by the department . Declarations must be made and paid
qua rll'rly u1stead of paying the total a mount at the rnd or the yea r,
rho dPpartment sa id .
Those nN:'!ling assis tance with city income tax forms are urged to
cont act the tax department and .bring W-2 forms or a copy of a
frdr ral Income tax filing . The department reminded residents that
total ea rnings must be broken down according to earnings from Jan.
I through Aug. 7. at the rate of 1 percent, and from Aug. Sthrough
Dec. 31, a t 1.5 per-cent .
Payment s on net profit s must be paid the same way as earnings,
til&lt;' depar tment said.

Accident causes power outage
POME ROY - Most o! Pomeroy was wit tout electricity for 6¥,
hours Saturday morning.
Pomeroy Pollee reponed that a vehicle driven by James Earl
Ferguson, 32, Racine, struck a utility pole in front of Pomeroy Home
and Auto on East Main Street at about 1: ll a.m. Saturday.
The pole was shared by both Ohio Power and Columbus &amp;
Southern Electric companies. Damage left customers In the
downtown Pomeroy and Llnooln Hill area , and from Butternut
Avenue down 10 the Pomeroy -Mason Bridge in the dark.
All hough Ohio Power customers had Iheir pJ~~~&gt;r ll'Siored about 8
J .m .. the company was forced to cut the pJwer again around 10 a .m .
and until about noon on Saturday to complete repairs.
C&amp;SOE's power had not beenn 11'stored by 10 a.m. Saturday.
Ferguson, who was cited by Pomeroy pollee for faUul1' to control
and DWJ , was taken !rom the scene by Pomeroy EMS to Veterans
Mrmorial Hospital whel1' he was admitted for observation.
Ferguson' s condition was listed as stable Saturday.
~

GALLIPOLIS - A Dexter man
was in serious condition Saturday in
St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, for
a head Injury suffered In a two-car
accident near Rio Grande Friday.
Charles E. Schad, 72, was
transferred to St. Mary's trom
Holzer Medical Center, a hospital
spokersperson said.
The state highway patrol's
,Gallla-Melgs post said Schad was
southbound on Ohio 325 at tile
IntersECt lim with County Road 57B
at 8:25 a.m. when his car coUlded
with a northbound car driven by
Kelly A. WIUiamson, 17, Wellston.
WIUiamson was turning left onto
57B wiFn the two cars crashed,
forcing Williamson's car Into a
ditch . Both cars were severely
damaged .
WIUlamson and Schad were
taken to HMC by the Gallla EMS,

where Williamson was treated .and
released for a head ooncusslon.
WUilamson was cited by the patrol
for Improper tum.
·
Kenneth Burchett,17, 910 Fourth
Ave., was treated and released
from HMC Friday for an abrasion
to the leg caused In a car-bicycle
collision at the lnters&lt;£tlon of Third
Avenue · and Spruce Street In
GaUlpolis.
.
Oty pollee said Burchett was
riding the bike eastbound onSpruee
at 5:45 p,m. and reportedly faDed Io
yield to a northbound car on Third

Buy classifieds

driven by Marie Rlcharm, 60, !43
Jerry Drive. Burche,tt struck the
lett rmr ol Richards' car, causing
slight damage to the car and the
i:jke; poUce said.
The J!lltrol cited Brian L. Burke,
18, 11 Basdanl Drive, for !allure to
control In a one-car acclden t on
County Road 5 In Green Township.
Troopers said Burke was fiorlh·
bound at 6:50p.m. Friday wllen he
reportedly lost control on a curve,
went oil the lett slde of the road and
struck a ditch, moderately damagIng the car.

•Fast 2.8 Lens
•Fully Automatic
· · •3 yr. Warranty

Elnora E. Price

Elnora E. Price

Bom ssoo Film Coupon
Book, FREE with
every V-4 35 Outfit
purchase.

Tawney Studios

SPIING YAI&amp;EY PlAZA
S29 Jack1011 P••• GaHipoh, 011.

424 S1&lt;ond, GaHipolls

afternoon.
Pollee also cited RDger L.
John!Dn, 34, Bidwell, for attempted
theft.
Cited for assured clear distance
in a two-vehicle accident on Eastern Avenue Friday was Polly A.
Hudson, ll, Rt. !, Gallipolis, pollee
said.
Hutlson reportedly was unable to
stop lor stopped traffic ahead at
11:44 a.m. and struck tile rear of a
vehicle driven by Michael C. Fulks,
'!:1, 451 Hedgewood brive.
The collision severely damaged
Hudson 's car and caused moderate
damage to the Fulks vehicle, pollee
said. ·

If You Love Her Without Rmrvations
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MOTHER 'S DAY
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THE DOWN UNDER RESTAURANT

ALSO FEATUI?I NG
OUR CLASSI C DINNER MI:'NU'
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16141 446 ·2345

@)

Fire causes damage to car
GALLIPOLIS- Flre caused an estimated $100 to a car owned by
Janice Freil1'ich, Rio Grande, when an electrical short Ignited
wiring and insulation, Gallipolis fire officials said.
The car . a 1975 Chev rolet, was being driven by RDby Moore, Rio
Grande, when the fire occurred at 12:12 p.m. Friday. The car had
been parked at General Rental Center, JO Sycamol1' St. One truck
and eight men went to the scene, o!!lcials said .

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DRIVER EDUCATION
CLASSES

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MAY 5-8

GAWPOUt &amp; POIIEROY
PHONE 446-0699

100 SI:'COND A l 1 /:"NU J:
GALLIPOLIS . OHIO 4H• ll

@)

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GALLIPOLIS - Elnora "Nora"
E. Price, 61, 148 Ponsmoulh Road,
GaUJpolls, died at 6 a.m. Saturday
at ' her .residence following a
two-month lllness.
Born May 6, 1924, at Owosso,
Mich., ctaughter of the late Frank
~rry and Gertrude Watson
Sperry of Corum a, Mich .. she was a
194!i graduate of the University of
Michigan School of Nursing and
was a nurse In Chicago, Ill.
She marrted Dr. Tom Price, who
survives, on Sept 18, 1946, at
Owosso.
She was a member of St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, Episcopal
Church Women, St. Peter's Choir,
the Altar GuUd, Pembroke Club,
Planned Parenthood of Southeastern , Ohio and the University of
Michigan Alumni Assocla tlon.
Also surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Michael (Shelley) Corbin of
Gallipolis; three sons, Thomas
Price or Modesto, Calif.; and
Richard Price and Phillip Price,
both of Gallipolis; six grandchildren; two brothers, Ralph Sperry of
MOo, Mich., and Brion Sperry of
Midland, Mich.; and two sisters,
Mrs. Joseph (Joann) Wager of
Owosso, and Mrs. Wtlllam (Mary
Loo) Lawson of Owosso.
Services will he 1p.m.Tuesday In
St. ~ter's Episcopal Church, With
the Rev. Albert MacKenzteo!!lclatlng. Burial wUI be In Mound Hlll
Cemetery. Friends may call at
W~ugh-Halley - Wood
Funeral
Home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Monday.
In lieu of Dowers, contributions
may he made to St . Peter's
EJllscopal Church In care of the
Rev. Albert MacKenzie. ·
Pallbearers will be Mike Corbin,
Rlchard'Prlce, Phillip Prlce,·Raiph
Sperry, Brion Sperry, Dr . .Keith
Br1111de)lerry and Dr, Oscar Clarke.

T-S classifieds pay off

COOL VILLE - Mary C. Dobbins, &amp;J, Coolville, died Friday
evening in Arcadia Nursing Home.
Arrangements wUI ·he announced
later by White Funeral Home,
Coolville.

Coy T. Jackson
GALLIPOLIS - A surviving son
of Coy T. Jackson, 59, Rt. 2, Vinton,
who died Thursday, was Incorrectly named In the obituary
appearing in Friday's Gallipolis
Dally Tribune.
The son Is Dale C. Jackson.' not
Bill C. Jackson, as reported .

Garnes was also given a six month driver's license suspension
and 18 months probation, court
records said . She was fined costs for
!allure to yield.
The court lined Luther D.
Flannery, Oak HUI, $25 and handed
him a suspenped six-month jail
sentence for unauthorized use of a
motor vehicle. Flannery also received 18 months probatlbn.
Allen C. Dotson, 19, 46 Mill Creek
Road, was fined $17 for disorderly
conduct
.
In traffic cases, Ronald D.
WIUiamson, 19, Rt. 2, Crowll City,
was fined $12 for unsafe vehicle,
and Richard L. Henry, 38, Galllpolis, was lined $12, given a suspended
six -month )au sentence and six
months probation.
Fortetung bond tor speeding

Rt. 2, Crown City, $«); Clifford E .
Hlll, 25, Columbus, Sll; Stanley D.
Schneider, 5!, Toledo, UJ; Jona than W. Mills, 38, Columbus, $42;
Wlllle P. Sanders, 35, Columbus,
$38;
Mary R. Barton, lli, Yawkey,
W.Va., $40; Scott A. Janey, 22, 91
Garfield Ave., $44; RDbert L. Crong
Jr., !2, lewisburg, W.Va., $38;
Louanna M. Simmons, 40, Huber
Heights, $40; Wlltlarn H. Masters,
44 , Rt. 1, Gallipolis, $41; James E.
Massey, 60, Malta, Sll; Nlchole B.
Metage, 56, Rt. 1. Gallipolis, $J8.

L.

McGHEE

Candidate For
94TH DISTRICT

OHIO HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
367 Debby Drive

1984 PONTIAC TRANS-AM

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Finished in silver sand gray melanic with cootrasting cklth interior, 5.0 litre H.O.
V-8 en~ ne, auto. Ci'lerdrive trans., factory T-tnps, air cond., tilt wheel, cruise
Cl)'ltrnl. AM·FM cassette stereo w~ digital clock, rear defogger, aluminum
S!XJrl wheels, raised white letter tires &amp; Just 19.000 low, klw miles! This car is
eKtra clean &amp; has never been smoked in! R111l Nice locally Owned C,.!!

r-;::=::;:=======:;1
It

Finished in cream color with darlt brown vin~ top and velour interior, baded
IWth all the extras including dual power seals, AM-FM stereo tape, custDm
aluminum wheels a00 full power acceS&amp;Jries. Th~ i~ aOne Owner local car ;o
excellent condition!

,

MEIGS CO.

KARATE CLUB

HDUS£ OVERFUIWING?
ClEAN UP m
CLASSifiEOADS

KARATE CLASSES
BEGIN APIIL ·29
BEGINNERS CLASS
CARLYON SCHOOL
SYRACUSE

83_· ··$ ·..
.... . .

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CALL 992-6139
01 992-5196

You Could Win A Brand

New Bicycle!
-----------------------------------------------! AVisit To The Emergency Care Center !
1

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$10 900

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This letter win serve as an introduction to ' you of my candidacy as State Representative
for the 94th District of the State of Ohio, and my solicitation of your support in the
Republican Primary to be held on May 6, 1986.
a~o,

'

Professionally, I am the Gallia County Treasurer; an&lt;!, in addition, I am a licensed
real estate · broker and an auctioneer, having frequently volunteered my services for
charitable organizations. For many years, I was associated with the Evans' Packin~
Company (French City Brand Meats) and I have taught at Rio Grande College. My
hobby is sports broadcasting. My wife, three children and I attend. church regularly.
.
I am an avid Republican·, and I support the Party both financially and by working for

other candidates. I IIE!lieve in the old axiom that "the best govemment is the least
gove"!ment" and that honest, hardworking people like you and I represent the majority
of the people in this District.
Thank you for allowing me this introduction. I would be most proud to represent this
District and to carry your ideas to the State House.
Sincerely,

Myron 1•• McGhee
•··

~· ~

•.

P.S.: Don't Forget to Vote

)

Paid for by the Galli a County Repu hllcan Club
Mark Kiesling, Treasurer, ol56 Second Ave., Gallipolio, Oh,

'

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, •Color the picture, complete the infonnation and bring or
mail to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Public Relations
Department, Valley Drive. Point Pleasant, WJ 25550.

pJeading guilt

our State Representatives from the 94th District were all folk
like you and !-ordinary people, hard workers with a lot or' zest for life, and a real
grass-roots feelinrt for what their constituents felt and needed. This is the kind of
Representative that I intend to be. It would be my pleasure to meet with the people
of this District on a regular basis so that each of you could communicate your desires
and needs. The responsibility of a Representative is to carry your concerns to Colu111bus
and to strive for legislation that is meaningful to this District.

·---· ~

Follow These Rules:

•

A few short years

......

ChUdren Ages 6 • 11

MAsoN- Mable E. Johnson,~.
Clifton, died Friday In Veteran s
Memorial Hospital.
Born Oct. 26, 1897,daughter&lt;it~
late, Zoah . and Ida Edwards Bass,
she was a member of Clifton United
Mefhodlst Church.
She wa~ preceded In death by her
husband, Harry E . Johnson In 1975,
and by three Sons, Harry Leo
Johnson, Denver Johnson and
Freeman Johnson.
SUrviving are six daughters,
Ellen Tober of Toledo, Josephine
. Caldwell of East Liverpool, Mas II

ESM officials
Dear District 94 Volers,

··· --~

'

~ . ~---- - -- -

C,:NCINNATI (UPII - Two
ESM Government Securities Inc.
prlllclpals have pleaded guilty to
federal charges, saying the company hkl losses of more than roJ
ml1llon throu g h phon y
bookkeejllng.
EsM co-founder Ronnie Ewton
Frl!laY entered a guilty plea to one
count 'of mall fraud and three
counts of wire fraud and faces a
maximum sentence of 20 years and
a $l,&lt;XXl fine. Former auditor Jose
Gomez pleaded guUty to three
rounts of wire fraud and faces as
much as 15 years In prison.
ESM, based In Fort Lauderdale.
Fla., went bankrupt last March,
causing the failure of Home State
Savings Bank In Cincinnati, which
had Invested about $1!0 million In
ESM. Home State's ooUapse trlg·gered the Ohio savings and loan
crisis that forced Gov. Richard
Celeste temporarily to · dose 70
privately Insured savings and
loans.
·
J;!wton told the court that ESM
had suffered over $lX) mUllan In
losses by last March and that those
losSes were hidden by deceptiVe
bookkeeping. .
"By . giving the appearance
thrOugh others that our course of
actjon Indicated ESM was oolvent,.
my- actions deliberately deceived
Home State depositors, the Ohio .
!:JepOOlt Guarantee Fund and officials for the Ohio Dlvtsloq of
Savln~d Loans," Ewton said to
VlslttDg U.S":"DlstftcrJudge CharlesJoiner of Ann Arbor, Mich.; In a
prepared statement.
TWo other ESM officials
co-founder Grorge Mead and
former vice president Charles
Stretcher- are scheduled to plead
gullty to slmllar federal charges In
Cincinnati May 5. ·

•Elementary school children between the ages of six and
eleven are eligible to participate.

•All entrants will receive a free t-shirt.

'

•One grand prize winner will receive a brand new bicycle
and an invitation to cut the ribbon at the Grand Opening
Ceremony 10{ the Emergency Care Center on June 1, 1986.

•

Name:----------'---- Age: _ _ __

•Entries must be received by May 30, 1986. An
independent juciing group will ·select the winners.

•

Address: ___________
Phone: _ _ __ J
________________________________

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•

GRAND PRIZE - One brand new bicycle and an invitation
to cut the ribbon ·at the Grand Opening Ceremony for the
Emergency Care Center on .June 1. 1986.

..• .
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The following priz1111 will be aw•dad for eech 11!J8 group, 6-11 :

1st Prize - Trophies
.,

2nd Prize - Ribbons

3rd Prize_..,. Certificates
(All prizos and t-shirts will be awarded at the Grand Opening

Cllrernony b the PVH EIT18f(I!IOcy Care Canter June 1st from 2-4

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1978 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Mahle
E. Johnson
'•

MYRON

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page--A.7'

GALLIPOLIS - Fined $on) and were Richard B. HaD, 33, Columstlntenool to three days In )all t&gt;r bus, ' $41; liohby E. Hersman, 22,
-DWl In GallipoliS Municipal Court Gallipolis, $42; Dale E. Reed, 33,
Friday was Madonna M. Garnes, Plain City, $37; VIcki E. Vogel, 33,
Dayton, $45; .Kevin L. Mooney, 24,
49, Rt. 1, Bidwell.

Mary C. Dobbins

Certified by: U.S. Dept. of Haith· and Human
SeJVices. CLIA 1nd Ohio Oept.of Haith. Approved for Medicare &amp;Medicaid.

GALLIPOLIS .,... City pollee bave
arrested two people for theft In
separate Incidents.
Officers cited WIDtam F. Betz, 25,
244 ·Fourth Ave .. on two counts of
theft with three prior convictions
after Betz allegedly took a sldll
cordless drUI from O'Dell Lumber
Co. on Vine Street Friday morning.
Betz was placed In the Gallta
County JaiL
Marsella L. Darst, 21, Rt. 2, Leon,
was arrested at Murphy Mart In the
Silver Bridge Plaza for tile alleged
theft of Items from tile store Friday

,.._ ·
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Model K-12

Cole of Sylvania, Charlotte Roush of
Owensboro, Ky., Irene F1sher of
CUlton, and Donna Glaze of Middleport; three sons, Eugene Johnson
and George Johnson, both of
Clifton, and Patrtck Johnson of
Middleport; two sisters, Icy Bland
of West Columbia, and Mary
Kearns of Cllflon; a brother, Carl
Bass of Toledo; and 'l:l grandchild·
ren, 51 great-grandchildren and 15
great -great -grandchildren.
·Services wlll be today at t :ll p.m.
In Foglesong Funeral Home, with
the Rev. George Hoschar and the
Rev. Terry Alvarez officiating .

Pleasant. W.Va.

DWI fine, sentence
issued in area court

Area deaths

KODAK V•R 35
CAMERA

FULL SERVICE
CLINICAL LAB

Police an est two

Pomeroy~Middleport-Galllpolis. Ohio-Point

April 27. 1986

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�Paga A·B-The Sunday Tlmea·Santinel

Pomaroy-Middlapon-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Phnant. W, Va.

Bri~ish restriction ~ects-~Libyan a~ation . ~tude~JS
By ROBERT MACKAY

Dr. John Peter Minton

Cancer ·expert
,~1~\address
OS~

agency ofllce In Beirut ana appeared to be an "Arab bomb."
LONDON (UP!) ....; Britain read a brief statement taking
The blast came several lx)urs
banned 334 Ubyan avlatlon stu- resPJnslbiUty for the p!'e-{lawn after U~an ofllctals 1n Tripoli
dents rrom working on aircraft at blast that lipped through clflces of prediCted a terrorist strike 1n
British airports or flying solo, a new Brtttsli Airways, American Airlines Europe. The u~ans. said u.s. and
security move that wUI force most and American Express.
,
. Israeli agents would be responsible
of them to leave the country,
"We chose the early hour of the for the attack · but would try to
authorities said Friday.
morning to carry out our bombing blame It on Ubya.
News of the new anti-terrorist attack because We wanted to spare
Brttaln has lightened security at
measure came as 22 Libyan the lives of Innocent people, but the its airports, government buildings
students and businessmen who U.S. and British governments and tourist sites against possible
earllej" were told to leave Britain for should reallzelhat our action was In terrorist attack since the u.s. air
alleged revolutionary activities de· rePly lo the crlmi!S committed by raid on Ubya on AprU 15.
parted on a flight :to Tripoli. They them against our Libyan and
U~an leader Moammar Khad·
left giving clenched-fist salutes and Palesllnlan people.
a1y has threatenril retaliation
shouting slogans denounclngPrbne
"They should also understand_, against Britain for Prime Minister
Mlnlster Margaret Thatcher.
that what we dld was only a Margaret Thatcher's declskm to
In Beirut, a previously unknown warning," the statement said.
allow the United States to use
group lp Lebanon Friday claimed
No . me was Injured In ' the British b8ses 10 launch its air strike
resPJnslblllty for a ThursdAy bomb explosion, and Scotland Yard ofll· against Ubya.
attack in downtown London.
clals said they were Investigating
Transport Secretary Nicholas
A man speaking on helialf of a aUclaims about tbe Incident. One
Ridley Issued an order banning
group calling Itself "The Revolution PJllce !Duree said the device Libyan engineering trainees from
Continues" telephoned a Western
neWs

working on all'craft at p~bllc ot
private British airports and Ubyan
trainee pilots ttoni !lying solo.
The order affecting at IEest 318
engineering students and 1£ student
pilots was i'&gt;sued Thursday but not
made p~bllc untU Friday.
"Well, It's entirely a security
decision," Ridley said on BBC
radio. "I don't think It would be
right and 1 don't think lhe public
would understand It ~ we allowed
Li~ans to train oo dvUian aircraft.
There's always a risk there."
The !IIJW move wUI ilrce most of
the studeniB to leave Britain within
six_ to eight weeks, when their
six-month student visas expire, an
Immigration SPJ!yi!sman said.
Thatcher said Home Secretary
Douglas Hurd woold use his PJWer
to curtaU the students' stay If they
do not leave voluntarUy.

Twenty-two Ubyan stlllll!!nts,
businessmen and visitors WhQ·were
picked up this week In a series of
pollee raids tju'ougbout England,
Scotland and Wales and .told to
leave the counlry departed--on a
filght to Tripoli Friday.
A Home Office spokesman ·said
Iiley lett London's Heathrow Air·
PJrt aboard a regularly sched!iled
Libyan Airlines flight. They were
accused ofleadlngstudentagltatlon
groups in supPOrt of Khadafy.
'1•
Among those deported )l'llS .a.
23-year-old trainee pUot, Mel Masaoud Saad, who telephoned a
Tripoli radio statim and said he
was wUIIng to carry out a kamikaze
style attack against a U.S. military
facility.
TheLlbyancommunityln.Brltaln
Is estimated at about 7,fXX), ·

alumni

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. John Peter
Minton, profes!Dr of . s~ry at
Ohio State University College of
Medicine, will be guest speaker at
the annual meeting of the OSU
Gallla County Alumni Association
set for May 8 at the Holiday Inn.
The evening begins at 6 p.m. with
a social hour and wtll be followed ~
dinner.
Minton, a specialist In cancer of
the breast, colon, liver and other
gastrointestinal problems, also
holds professorships with OSU's
zoology and microbiology depart·
ments. He was awarded the
American Cancer Society Profes·
sorshlp r1 Clinical Oncobgy al OSU
and has been reapPJinted to this
PJSiti:m through 1989.
A fellow of the American College
of Surgeons, Minton is among the
first to Investigate the use d. lasers
as a surgical tool and was a leader
in the use of carctnoembryonlc
antigen testing to detect recurrent
tunors In colon cancer patients.
For more Information, call Dr.
David K Smith at 446-3191.

Purchases made
LANCASTER - Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs Division has spent
almost $2 million so far this year In
purchases from vendors in sou. theastem Ohio, with everything
from electronics to mining equipment bought In Gallia County,
officials said.
General Manager Jim Tompkllls
said that with a combined workforce of about 1,650, the division
produced 5.1 million tons of coal in
1985 from its two Meigs County
mines and Raccoon No. 3 Mine In
VInton County. The company Is a
dlvlslon of American Electric
Power Service Corp.

EmpiM, ''"' 73

gestt, 11 11111 the
~•Ius l••d•' in
Noms Futnltblnfl in
,,, O~ID

v.,,,

TII·Countg ''"·
Ws'te ptorlnflt
•l•ln Jn Ap1U wllh
ftemsndout '''Rslnt ·
··~ dllll.

er
Deck Hand Todd Smith, of Pomeroy said.
EDfrOK'S NOTE: nus Is the llrstln a C!lnllnulng
Elder worked his way up -from deek hand to mate
series ahout people and the dUfermllhlngs they do
" and llnally to pliot In 10'h years. The only move
to 'make a living.'·
above pilot Is captain.
"You have to have at least three years ex perij!llce
By BRl,JCE CABI'ER
OVP Slalf Writer
on the river before you can take the Coast Guard's
"Someone-described the job as 90 percent
• test for pilot. The test Is ftve hours long," Elder said.
boredom and 10 percent aa;olute terror. It Is that
"The deck hand's Job Is easter on a young man,"
ten percent that they pay us for."
Elder said. "A young deck hand does the work; with
·~u seems Uke you wake up either In a lock, getting
the mate acting as a working supervisor."
' ready for a lock or justcomlngthrough a lock almost
The crew of the Lela c. Shearer changes
every time you begin a shift. It Is hard to 'Imagine
completely every 21 days, as does the crew on each
putting a 00 foot wide load In a 54 wide opening,
of the towboats AEB runs. Ac'rew member wm work
especially when the far end Is huJXIreds o! feet away
21 clays on a boat and accumulate 21 days of
: tf&lt;m you."
vacation. This was a favorite benefit with the crew.
That Is how Dan Elder. of Michigan described his
"I really Uke the lime rJ.f." said Deck Hand'Tony
; job as a pilot with Appalachian Electrtc Power's
Sowards, of Ashevllie, Ohio.
· River TransPJrtatlon Division In Lakin.
The Individual crew members are on different
. "Most of the time the job Is just keeping It In the
rotation schedules, so that one handmlgbtworkwlth
; middle (of the river). You can sit back kick up your
a crew 10 of his 21 days before moving to another
· teet and drink coffee.'' he said, while piloting the
boat. That waY they work together sometimes for
Lela C. Shearer with his feet propped up drinking a
· the whole 21 days, or just for part of lt.
The hoats have two crews, each working two six
cup of coffee.
The time between picking up barges, dropping of!
hour shifts each day. A shift has six deek hands
barges and locking through Is spent talking about
(lncludlng one mate on each shift), tWo pilots (a
other crews, how they did hunllng or !lshlng during
captain and a pilot), two engine ( a chief engineer
their time off, working on hobbles or reading.
and a striker) and only one cook for the whole crew.
A loaded tow boat and llarges wtiJ be longer than
"The cook Is the most important crew member. A
an aircraft earlier. The standard barges are 175 feet
crew can put up with hard work ar!d cold weather,
long and 26 feet wide. They can hold 900 tons o! coal
but they won't take a bad cook," Elder said.
when they are loaded with nine of their 11 feet
The cook that day was Clara Adams. She cooks
draught uiXIer water. A tull tciw Is :10 standard
three meals a day for the crew. A crew might ~a&lt;rbarges, lined up In five rows !our barges wide. The_ . $1,00) to $1,400 In food In two weeks.
barges alone are 875 feet long. A jumbo barge Is 195
"They are all good boys and don't
feetlong and 35 feet wide. Jumbos handle up to 1,500
said,
' tons ot coal. A full tow of jumbos wtii be 15 barges
trooble. One of them didn't
coocerned about a crew
with three across. This would be 975 feet long.
later," she
Towboats wtiJ run from 1.28 to 150 feet In length,
"He was probably tired
making the entire length 1,003 to 1,125 feet long. The
said.
the radios to know
. U.S.S. Nimitz Is 1,096 feet long.'
The pilots
the
rtver
Is. When two
where all
coming down river has the
"It takes the whole road on the Kananwha River,''
lloats
•:Elder said when discussing the jumllo barges.
you can stay In one place
: • "When the front clthetowisoo:lleetln fronttfyou,
pushing against yoo, but when the
:·that makes for a blind spot a couple hundred feet In
pushes you you have less control," Elder
&lt;tront of that and these things can't exactly s101:1 on·
dlme. It amid take a mlle or more to II!OP
••even It we can only go 3 to 14 miles per
: ·llands become your eyes out at
When they are going to meet, they call each other
:.'Jbey tell me how far I am Iran
and decide which side to pas on. There are some
·ilre Locking through, picking
SPJts too narrow . to meet another tow, If this
. :·barges;" Elder said.
happens, ~e boat coming up river has to stop at a
•
wide sPJI and let the other pass, Elder said.
The mate, Sid Glbbeaut, of POint Pleasant, has
the summer and a ski
been working the river for 10~ years also .
are pulllng the whistle,
and skier wW disappear In
;;;~~~~HopefUlly ltwW PJPUpou~of thebllnd
·•
It really scares yoo," Elder said.
are always plckingupordropptngof! barges,
empty somewhere," Elder said ·
..,..,,,.,.. really work when you are working the
~~'wha River. When you work the Ohio, you get a
for a while after the load Is put together,"

How To Cut .
MowlnaTI•e
In Half:

· "When I starled, I was laid of! and there was no
other work avaUable. I knew a captain and he got me
my start. lllketheslx months ott each year the best
about the job. You get to go hunting and !lshlng a lot
·when you are off.'' d ibbeaut said.
·
Sowards comes from a river famUy, "I kind of
Inherited the job. Most of my family has worked the
rtver, so I just folio~." he said.

Section [lli
April27.1986

WORKING AS THE PILOI"S El'ni TO
GUIDE THE BARGES TOGE'l1lER • First Mate
Sid Glbbe!U, of Pobtl l'lellll8llt, fells the piW how
mmy feet he has before he meets the group of

bal'll'l!ll· WhDe he directs, deck lauh 'l'lldd Smith, of
Pomeroy, and 'l'llny Sowards, of Ashevme, Ohio
work to secure the tow lor the trip up Jtver to the

The worst time for the deck hands Is wtnter.
"In the winter the lines freeze and the hands have
to use kerosene to thaw them out," Elder said.
"Winter Is alrtgbt. Its colder and the work Is
harder. I like It better than when It's hot. When It Is
really hot you don't stay out there long," Smith said.
"In the winter Ice and snow coats the steel barges
and you really have to watch yourself. Sometimes
you just crawl along the barges," Sowards said.
The striker ' Jim NevUle, o! Point Pleasant,
joined
.
the company after retiring from the U.S. Navy.
· "It Is the same job I did when I was in the Navy.
There Is noconiparlson to the Navy. Wbenyouarebt
the Navy you stay out tllere, here you are off every 21
days," Neville sald.
The job has good security, good food, good pay and
benellts and the company keeps the family
tntonned, the crew members said.
There are hazards, especially for deck hands,
thrEJ! years ago Smith almost lost his leg.
"We were dropping six (barges) near Kenova
when I got caught between two barges. They popped
my knee and would have taken my leg, but 1-was
saved by a piece o! driftwood," he said.
Smith was also hurt when a line snapped. "The
line popped and hit my leg. It scarred It and took the
hair off. You really have to watch yrur fingers and

stuff out here." he cal d.
Sowards has had some close calls, but never been
hurt.
"I've been lucky," he said knocking on the waU. _
"A' line dld break and hit my lite jacket In the back,
almost hitting my head," Smith said
.
"A couple of days· ago a boy fell In one of the
empties. He broke his arm, his wrist, a couple of:
rta;, separated his shoulder and got a gash In the:
head," Smith said.
- -"
"You have to be careful out there. You have to
watch yoorselt and everyone else," Smith said
"In the winter you have snow and Ice to worry
about, there Is also high water and drlttwood that
can hit you whlleyoare just walkingondeck,''Smlth
said,
The company has safety meetings to make the
crews aware of different dangers.
'We just had a safety meeting about the dangers
of girls In bikinis. They can sure be a dlstmctlon," ·
Smith said.
"We were Dashed already this year by two girls
and a boy In a boat. We were just going along and
when I looked over the girl just gave us a fiash,"
Elder said.
"This gets lonely sanettmes when you are out
here, but yoo like the tbne at home," Elder said.

Winfield lodls. (PH&lt;YI'O BY BRUCE CARTER.)

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•

•

SECURING DIE BARGES •
Fll'!ll Mate Sid Glbbe..t, of
Point Pleasant and 'l'llny Sowards, of Ashevme, Ohio work
to seeure lhe low before head-

AS '111ELJ!J;AJIC.SJIEARERCOMES UPTOTHEBARGES·

'lbeded!bllldllwal'lltoaecJ~rehertolhe'-Jullheyareplcldaii'•Pat

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�·' '

27. 1986

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

Community 'ealeridar I area happenings

.

SUNDAY
LEerA - Rev. Ernest Baker
wUl be in servl~ at Walnut Rklge
Church, Sunday.

GALLIPOLIS· - Sincere Gospel
Quartet at Chris! United Methodist
ChuTCh, Sunday, 7:JJ p.m.
·

GALLIPOLIS - Mlna Chapel
will have the Sanders Quartet and
Mark Sanders In services, Sunday,
7:Jlp.m.

467 &amp;Ins of the American Legion

Auction set

will sponsor a " jamhorre" Sunday,
starting at 1p.m., andfeaturlng llv~
entertl!lnment.

CHESHIRE - An auction to
benefit Gallia Christian School wUI

RU1LAND - Ell Denison Post

GALLIPOLIS "- Grubb Family
singers will bt&gt; at the Christian
Brethern Church, Sunday, 7: JJ
p.m.
ATHALIA - Revival begins
Sunday at Dillon chapel with
, evangelist Charles Turley.
~

''
Rose and Victor Genheimer
j

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.27. .1986

..

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

' ; -,

'

ht&gt; held May 3, 1 p.m. ·

POMEROY - OH KAN Coin
Club meets Monday Riverboat
Room of Diamond Savings and
Loan Co., Pomeroy, 7 p.m.

The Sunday

Thursday- Meat balls in tomato
sauce oo spaghetti noodles, tossed
vegetable salad, gelatin with trult,

Revival bel!in.S
.
..
GALLIPQUS FERRY,W.Va. ~..
Revival beglDs Sunday, ,continuing
throug!t W~esi!ay, at Faith Gos·
pel Church, with Dr. !.el"is Arnold.
SE-rvices 7:.30 p.m. ·

brownie.

'

Friday -Salmon pattie, brussel
sprouts with cheese sauce, apricot'
halves, bran muffin, pudding.
Choice of milk, coffee, tea, and
heverage with meals.

~~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

The following week on Friday,:
May 9, the 'Center wtll spo1110r a·
j:Ubllc dinner with serving from
6:30, following the dinner Tbe•
Gabriel Quartet wtU sing at'7.
•
On Saturday, May 10, a round aDct
square dance wtU be held from 8 to·
11, with music by tbt&gt; Ol1lo River:
Drifters from Long Bottom.
•

'to:

•

ATHENS - Dlstrtct !Rputles
and Dlstrtct Past CouncUors Club,
Dlstrtct 13, Daughters of· America,
will meet at 12:JJ p.m. Sunday at
Ohio University Inn, Athens; any
membt&gt;r ct. the organl1.atlon Is
invited to attend.

THURMAN- Sunday, Thunnan
United Methodist Church, Spagh·
ettl dinner, 5 p.m., talent show at 6
p.m. Cost involved .

.

Genheimer
open house planned
•
~

POMEROY - Rose lhle and
:Victor Gf&gt;nehelrner will celebrate
their 60th wedding anniversary on
~unday, May 4, with tt.&gt;lrchlldren,
;{.ucille and Victor Gf&gt;nt.&gt;Imer Jr.of
tolumbus, and ott.&gt;r relatives and
Xriends at the roadside park on
Route 33 nor1h of )'omeroy.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Gf&gt;nhelmer were
rnanied on May 5. 1926. They have
three grandchildren and one great
granddaughter.
An open house will be held from 1
to 5 p.m. with all lrlends of the
lannily invited to attend.

•

CHESHIRE - FamUy Circle
Singers at Old Kyger Freewill
Baptist Church; Sunday, 7:30p.m .

SAY( NOW AT THE FABRIC SHOP

20°/o Off All Panels for Pillows,

9pen meeting to fearure herbs
GALLIPOLIS- The open meet·
ing of the Gallipolis Garden Club
wUI feature Peter Borchard of
Athens, speaking on the p~paga.
t1on and cultlv~Uon of herbs,
according to a club spokeswoman.
. .Borchard and his' wife own and
operate Companion Plants, a mall·

order herb nursery, and exhibit at
lhe Paul Bunyan Show in Nelson·
ville and the Bob Evans Farm
Festival in Rio Grande.
The meeting wUI bt&gt; May 1, 7:30
p.m. in the basement of St. Louis
Catholic Church in Galllpolls.

~----------~------~
"

I'm cutting 'li~ir ·
at Across ·the Street

Detach~. . ~
..

,...

;

,

.Come in and
see m e!

by&amp;acd~~

Arms art 101ily dttadltd for
, entering 111d leaYing the
chair from tither side.
'

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two grandchildren, Sammy and
Terri Levy, one great grandchUd
Crlssy Levy all of Columbus .
. ' Frances and Laban Burrow
moved to Gautpolls JJ years ago.
He retired !rom construction Iron·
work in 1917. She Is also retired.

c!rrek Road were married 50 years
f;o April ~ In Milan, Tenn.
• The will celebrate tt.&gt;ir golden
~nlversary . Sunday with their
tpmtiy - one daughter, Joyce Ann,

•

lA

; tt"'
'

BEY
FERGUSON

We honor VISA · M111er
Chorgo • Golden Buo;l&lt;oya Compensation Cleln .

to be noted
.•)3urrows anniversary
. .

: GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
!laban Burrow of Route 1, Georges

'.

Rentals &amp; Sales

Mr. and Mrs: LWan BumJws

I Ina
alllnatiJII•
HIUCIIST PlAZA
HOURS: MON.-FRI . 9

GAWPOLIS, 01110
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the Street

•

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mN Otl CI S- CHARLES ,;uRALT
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MEN'S

. RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Henry ·
D. .Hill arc announcing the. approachlngmar,rlage of t heir da\Jgh·
.tcr. Melinda. to Terry Patterson.
son of Jim antl Linda Patterson,
,Racine.
The open church wedd ing will be
held on Saturday, May 3, al 2:30 ·
p.m.' at t~e Racine United Met ho·
dist Church with the Rev. Roger
Grace performing the ceremony . A
reception will follow in the churcl)
social room.

. TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY, ·
APRIL 29 &amp; 30 - 7:30 P.M.
'MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM

'

Janet Kulm,

Roush ·Frederick
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs .
Manning K. Roush, Racine, arc
·announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
· daughter, Klmbt&gt;rly Magdelena, to
Milford Scott Frederick, son of M r .
and Mrs. Milford Jr. Frederick,
Racine.
An outdoor wedding is bt&gt;ing
planned for June 22 at 2:30 p.m. at
tlldden Lakes In Forest Run.
· The brid.,.elect is a graduate of
Meigs High School and is employed ·
at Baer's Markel In Syracuse.
Frederick Is a graduate of
&amp;luihern High School and is
attending Rio Grande College. He Is
~mployed at Powell's Super Va lu.
Pomeroy.

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•'••

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April27,1986

April 27, 1986 '

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.
.i

4:40-5:05; BulavUie Tr. Ct . ..5:155: 45; . Grorgii'S .CreeIt 6:00-6: in;
Kanauga 5th Ave. 6:35-7: 00; Foster
MoWe Home Pk. 7: 10-7: ll; K&amp;K
Trailer Ct 7; 3!&gt;8:00.
Wednesday : No route matntenanoe.
Thursday: C.R.T.C. 12:00-12: 15;
Children's Home 12: 15-12:30;
Scenic Hills 12:40-12:55; Sun Vall~·
1:00-1: 35; Pinecrest 1: 40-2: 10; Rae ·
coon Trailer Ct. 3: 40-4: 00; Patriot
4:10-4: 40; Cadmus 4: 50-5: 15; Gallla
5: 30-6:00; C'Rnterpolnt 6:15-6: 30;

CentervOle 6:45-7:15. · ,
. Friday: Senior Citizens Larg~&gt;
Print Day.
. Saturday: LeGrande 10:00-10: ll;
McGuire 10:35-11: 00; Northup

11:10-ll:ll; Rodney 12:00-12:ll:
Ewlngton 1: 30-1: 00; Allee 2:002:30; Vinton 2:45-3:30; Morgan
Center 3:50-4: 20; Qoeshlre 4:455:30.

Wonn

POllnCAl AD

POUTCAl AD

IT'S
FOR
STATE REPRESENT ATIYE

Copley .

300 Second Avenue,
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis, OH.

Pvt. Jeffrey S. Cnpley, son of
Robert and Ruth A. Cnpley ctRural

Route 1, Thurman. has completed
an equipment s1orage specialist
course at the U.S. Army Q&lt;Jartermaster School, Fort Lee, Va.
The course provided students
with a working knowledge of the
federal supply system, storage
operations and packaging proce·
dures. In addltlon, thl.&gt;y received
driving lnstrucllon on such
.materials-handling equipment as
conventional and rough terrain
forklifts and warehouse tractors.
He Is a 1985 graduate of Gallia
Academy, Gallipolis. ·

Spring Sale
•Spring
Sportswear

POMEROY - Michelle Ellen · veil. She carried a bouquet of pink
Capehart, daugllter r:J Ms. Patricia and white roses mixed with blue
Capehart, Racine, and Paul Ed · carnatiOns and white streamers.
Ward Wlll Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Tammy Capehart served as her
Paul Will Sr., Pomeroy, exchanged sister's maid r:J IDnor. Phillip Hood
vows In a double-ring ceremony on was best man, and ttl? ushers were
March 9 at the Full Gospel Michael Will and DoMle Waugh.
. LighthoUSI' Church, Pomeroy.
Guests were registered by Gina
The Rev. Tom Kelly officiated. Gibbs, cousin of the bride. A
The church was decorated with recepton was held at the home of
thrf!' candelabra adorned with Mr. and Mr. Frank Newsome. The
pink. blue andlavender flowers and wedding color seheme was carried
white candles. In each window was out In decoratiOns at the reception.
a brass candlestick with a white A four-tiered wedding cake, gift of
candle and a pink, blue, and white SheUa Curtis, was served by friends
• carnation arrang~&gt;ment. Music was of thl.&gt; couple, and ttf&gt; bride 's uncle,
: provided by Mrs. Rita Chapman, GrorgP Bing , Lancaster. took
-:: pianist.
pictures.
Given In marriage by her
The groom is a graduate of Meigs
o
grandfather, Oarmce Jordon, the High Schol.
The bride is a student at Eastern
.• bride wore a lavender ftoor Jtongth
gown and a sheer shoulder Jtongth High School.
J

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including John Meyer. J.H.
Collectibles, Tan Jay, and
Bl.eyte, in a rainbow of linen
colors.

•Attooney. aae 36 .
•Grsduott of The Pbins Hiah School in Athens County, Ohio Uni&gt;ersity and The Unimsity of Tolodo Coiit&amp;t of llw.
•lltmber. Ohio Boo local Gomnmont and ubor law Committee: llunicipll l114UI.
lluniciPIIllloaut Lsbor tow CommitlH snd llunicipalleaaue Attorney 's AssociatiOn:
Otlio School Bowels &amp; School Bo11ds Attoooe,·s Associotlon
•ll110ber. Tho P1oins United Mttho~ist Church: the Bo11d ol Oirecton foothe Sllvotion
Ar~~: snd tht Public Policy CommittH tor the Centrol Ohio Cystic Fibrosis founds·
tion.

including london Fog and
Misty Harbor.

•Eiocled Athens City Law Oirettor in 19n, 1979 and 1983.

20°/o-2 5°/o Off
All Spring Suits
20~/o-3 3 ~3 Off

Garry Hunter believe• it il'time to elect 1 State Aepre~entetivewho
will listen to the mncerns of Southeastern Ohio . Asaeaslng local

economies in need of revitaliution to provide jobs and job ltcUrity
is a high priority with Gerry Hunter u is the effective deliverv of
heatth cere services, primary , secondary end htgher education.

touriam and transportation fllciHties .
•Piid for b• Hunter tor Stalt Reprtuntltiu . htrett Ridct lrMSlll'tr . 22 S. aliy Ave ..

Athens. Ohio 45701.

'IOUCAN'T·DO.BETTERTHAN....._

C::. r ' •

*~/liMe·

Flowers add that special
touch to any prom. And
we'll individualize the flow·
ers with your outfit and per·
sonality.

/

GAilY HUNTEI
(IEPUILICAN)

20°/o-50°/o
pring Jackets
and Coats

We Specializ.e in the
Personal Touch •••

10·9~
· --- ' - · '
Sunday 12-6
VIS4" \~~

Open Daily

-..

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SALE STARTS SUNDAY, APRIL 27-TUESDAY, APRIL 29

~

.Cot...s eBoutonnien •No•gays
.'

.POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Pl. Hl-2039
Or •tt-5721

2.17 -!"""

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106 luHemut Ave.
Po1111roy, OH.

.... 1.17

Wt Autpt All Mojer Crttllt Ca.Ws &amp; Win f ..wtn ~nrrwhen.

86¢~

•'.

i

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•

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'

null*. SOiled, unsalted, cocktail.

oz.* halnpay.

WHY THE CHURCH IS IMPORTANT
William B. Kughn
Aceo.Wina To God'• Wlldom

'

1.67

ReOOM
Dly-ta IIIMd peG-

lale l'llce Ea. ,.

A Mmuge From The Bible...

Many formulas.
~ . or.

''Tv l~f! iirtf'nt thur now unto tht principtJ/ities and powers ira heavenly
places nught be known b~ tht church the manifold wi•dom of God " (Eph.
J : I 01.
·'/ment ·' expresses design. The creation of the physical universe and
the creation of the spiritual realm were designed by God. The act of creation was not merely a manifestation of God's perfect work in the fleshly
world . suppl_yin~ m~n with his physical needs; but characterizes His divine
work of perlect1on m the spiritual world. supplying man with his spiritual
need . redemptmn. ''Now .. is at the present time . God's divine arrange·
ment .conrerning the church. "the /tllowJhip of the mymry. which from
the hegmnmg of the world hath bten hid in God " (Eph. 3:9), was then, in
the lirst century of the Christian Dispensation. being revealed. "Pn'ncipalitie&lt; and po~m '.'are the a~_gelic h~'.'; "heave'!IY" is the sphere of activity
ot the angelic betngs: anrt known ts to take 1n knowledge so as to com·
ptetely understand. The angels in heaven not knowing all things, had the
"desire tu look into " (I Pet. I: 12) the things in re~ard to the church so as to
hO\·e a complete understandin~ of this mystertous fellowship with God.
"Church .. is the one spiritual body of Chnst on eanh (Eph. I :22,23: 4:4)
•·herein both Jew and Gentile would be made one (Gal 3:28). fellowship·
p_ing and bei~~ ~t pea~~- with each other. "Manif~ld_" is many-folds or vangated: and .-,.dom IS the true nature of Gods mtelhgence. The existcn« of the church reflects the many-folds pr features of God's wisdom:
His wisdom in re~ard to a well devised plan; His choice of the Redeemer:
Hi!\ way of salvation: His glace of wonhlp and work . The true nature of
God's intelligence was an is displayed by the church. The church being
the e&lt;pressed pesign of God's wisdom. makes the church important!
Aeeonllq To God'o Ellmal Pa,_
·'AccorJ;,g to the eternal purpost which he purposed in Chn'st Jesus
our Lord " (EP,h. 3: 11).
· £,~nul · den~tes . "ages ," ':':h.~le "purpose " signifies "a setting fonh ;
to set belore: as bemg mtended. Eternal purpose' ' embraces God's plan
in re¥ar~ to the church that origl.~ated. within H_is great mi~d from eternity,
that ts, before the world began (2 Tom. I :9). 'Purposed means "which
was made" and refers to the execution of the .. eternal fonnation" of God's
original plan of the church "i~ Christ Jesus our Lord" throughout all ages.
The church. definitely be1ng aceordmg to God's "eternal purpose. " is
not thc .product of chance. Neither is it an afterthought of God being
chosen by Hom at r~ndom. We cannot change God's "eternal purpose .. for
thiS u~moveable km~dom (Heb. 12 :28), minimizing the essential part it
plays '" the redemptton and salvation of man . The church is important
bc_cuuse. !I ~s accordmg to Y?&lt;~ ' s ..eternal purpose. '' therefore, we must not
t_hmk ol1t m a casual or triVIal manner bur seriously, respecting her eternal
teuturcs!
·
For Free Biblt Co,.,.,spandtnce Couru Write ...

Bulavlllc Road • P . 0. Box 308
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
1
SuM,. M.,..11
BlbkSC.d) 9,.10

w-.., to,.JO

,.

S••IIIIJ Eu;.i;;J~
Wo.,hlp 6otl0

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Bib!&lt; Stud)
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49.88~~88

52" Ceiling Fan

Beac" Towels

4 wooden blades, 3
speed, reversible. Light
adaptable.

Soft and thirsty 24x64"
towels of cotton jacquard terry.

'.

Stover
Carl W. Stover II, son of Carl W.
and Marvella Stover of Rural Route
4, Oak Hill. has been promotfd in
the U.S. Air Force lo the rank of
airman ftrst class.
Stover Is a survival equipment
specialist at Fairchild Air Force
Base, Wash., with the 92nd Field
Maintenance Squadron .
His wife, Rebecca, Is the daughter of Bea 0 . Luckett of Rural Route
2. Palrlot.
The airman Is a 1984 graduate of
Southwestern High School, Patriot.

Rippey
Mark W. Rippey, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Rlpp.zy of Gallipolis,
has enllstfd Into the United States
Navy. A 1983 Kyger Creek High
School Graduate, he wUI attend
recruit training at Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, 111., In April.
FoUowlng recruit training he wUI
attend the Navy's gunners mate
class "A" school. Navy gunners
mate are responsible for thl.&gt; repair
r:J all types of Navy guns and gun
mounts to include both smaU arms
and all types of shipboard antlalr·
craft weapons. Included in his
· training wUl be electrical theory
and repair of electrlcal gunmount
systems, and hydrauUc types of
gu nmounts systems.
He ts also a veteran of the West
VIrginia National Guard having
sErVed for thl&gt; past three years as a
small arms speclallst.

Marine file. Dennis L. Rodgers,
son of Dan L. and Jean B. Rodgers
of 1915 N. Main St., Point Pleasant,
W.Va., has completed the Infantry
Combat Training Cnurse at Marine
Corps Base, Camp Penclleton, CA.
During the six -week course,
Rodgers received classroom In struction and participated In field
exercises Involving infantry lac·
tics; the construction and carrou flage of fighting positions; and the
use of mines, demolitions and
Intra-company communications
equipment.
A1985 graduate of Point Plea san I
High School, he joined the Marine
Corps in Augus11985.

Lucas
Sgt. Wendell A. Lucas, son of
Jane A. Queen and stepson of Hollis
S. Queen of 10'.!61&lt;, Second Ave..
Gallljl!ll~. has completed a U.S.
Armfprimary leadership course In
West Germany.
Students received training in
•1lpervlsory skills. leadership principles and small unit lralnlng
techniques or administrative
environment.
Lucas Is an Instrument calibration specialist with the 523rd
Malntenana&gt; Company.
His wtle, Dawn, is the daughterr:J
Richard Woodward of 912 Sixth
Ave. and Grace E. Lewis of 914
Sixth Ave., both of West Belmar,
N.J .
He Is a 1971 graduate of Hannan
Trace High School, Crown City.

Morris
Pvt. Daniel J . Morris, son of
Lavell Morris of McDougal, Ark. ,
and Eleanor M. Thomas or Rural
Route 2. Crown aty, has completed
the basic fteld artlllery cannoneer
course under the one station unit
training (OS\!1') program at Fon
.Sills, Okla.
During the course, students were
taught the duties of a howitzer or
gun sectiOn crewman. They also
received lns1ruction In communications, maintenance and the han dling of ammunition and
ex )ioslves.
ost.rr Is a program tha combines
basic training with advanced 'lndl·

vidual training. ·
He ..ls.a 1~81 graduate of Hannan
'!'race High School, MercervUle.

Counts
Sgt . Jeffrey L. Counts, son of
VIctor and Kitty Counts of Syracuse, has· completed a U.S. Army
primary leadership course In West
Germany.
Students received training In
supervisory skills, leadership principles and small unit !raining
techniques essential to a ftrst-llne
rupervlsor In a technical or administrative environment.
Counls Is a mlssUe crew member
with the 9th Field Artlllery
Regiment.
His wae, Melinda, is thl.&gt; daughter
ci. Alvin and Mildred Barnett of
3.l520 Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy.
He Is a 1971 graduate of Racine
High School.

Hatfield
Marine Pfc. Michael R. Hatfield,
!On of Charles R. Hatfield of Route
1, Rutland, has completfd recruit
training at Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
During the 11-week training
cycle, Hatfield was taugllt the
basics of ba tUefleld survival. He
was In traduced to thl&gt; typical dally
routine that he wlfl e&lt;perlence
during his enlistment and studied
the personal and professional ~ taruh
ards traditionallY. exhibited by
Marines.
He particlpatfd In an act ive
physical condlt Ianing program and
gained proficiency In a variety of
mllltary skills, Including first aid,
rifle marksmanship and close
order drill. Teamwork and selfdiscipline wer e e mphas ized
throughout the training cycle.
A 19SS graduate of Kyger Crf!'k
High School, Cheshire, he joined thl.&gt;
Marine Corps In December 1~.

Parsons
Randy L. Parsons, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Parsons of Route 1.
Norttllp, has enlisted Into the
United States Navy. He Is scheduled to attend recruit training at
Naval Training Ceiner, San Diego ,
California In April 1!)8;.
FoUowlng training he has been
guarantf!'d as ail aviation mach!-

The difference 'is comfort.
The olille rl'llt l' is com fori in IIH'Sl' surnm••r
coolers from Hush Puppit&gt;s s lwt•s - (' om hin i n ~
cool sophistication wi th d ~c p down comfort .
Prom the airy upprrs In tht• lightwf'i ght Sl ii Ps .

in Navy action against Libya

nts( mate In Millington, Tennessee.
Aviation machinist mates are the
Navy's jet engine, reciprocating
mglne, and heUcopter mechanics.
He wUl be trained In all facets of
aviation E!lglne repair to Include
malnlenanoe and repair procedures, emergency repairs, power
plant theory or operations ana
aerodynamic characterlsttcs.

Greg Mitchell, a 191':i Gallla tracked and located the Egyj:(lan
Academy High ·School graduate airliner who was carrying PLO
was recently Involved with the terrorists who had hijacked the
hostUe actions against Libya during crulsellner Achllle Lauro and kllled
an American citizen . The Yorktown
March 19al.
Mitchell, an cperatklns specialist wlfl also be participating In thl.&gt;
first class In ~ U.S. Navy, was rfdedication d thl.&gt; Statue of Liberty
personally Involved with the sink· during July o! this year In New
lng of a Libyan patrol-craft that had York.
tbreatened his ship, thl&gt; USS r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Yorktown, a guided mtssllecrulser.
The Yorktown was part f1 the
two-earlier battle groupthatsought
to promote freedom o! the seas tt
International waters while cr~slng
Libya's line of death. A!the U. e of
the mlssUe laUJrh, Mitchell was the
surface warfare supervisor respon·
slble for the accurate targenlng of
~ship to ship missile and part of
~team that successfully thwarted
the aggressive Libyan action.
MltcheU is a seven year Navy
Reg .
veteran and was also aboard the
4
CARAT
'375
Yorktown when. shl.&gt; successtuUy

Johnson

CLUSTER SALE

Seaman apprentice Troy John·
son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Jomson of· Gallipolis, Is now
stationed on ~ USS Bluerldge at
Yokosuka, Japan. The USS Bluerldge Is the flagship d the Navy's
seventh fieet which Includes the
Western Pacific area ot operatiOns.
He Is a 1985 graduate of Gallla
Academy High School. Address
Mall to: Sa Troy Johnson, First
Division, USS Bluerldge (LCC 191
FPO San Francisco, Ca 96628-3-'m.

69•97

2.97

UlflssnJ.d

'Strider' 10 sp. lice
26" men's or women's .

The Moll!&gt; Coonty Shepherds ~H Qub ""''
on March 10 at the 000'1! o1 Eric ThorEll. 12
members and 2 advisors werP ln attendancE'.
otttcers were elected, re.v rules were
discussed, and tbe prke of tx:dts, dues, and

Gregory G. Cunningham, son of
Gerald G. and Darlene L. Cuio·
nlngham ci New Haven, W.Va ., has
teen IJ'O!lloted 1n the u.s. Air Forre
to the rank of airman first class.
Cunningham Is assigned In West
Germany, with the 26th Civil
Engineering Squadron.
He Is a 1977 graduate of John
Marshall High School , Glen Dale,
W.Va.

pictures were also dlscuue::l . Rro-eshments

The next meeting of thPclubwtll beonAprll
1st at the horne of Eric Thoren.

TAWNEY JEWELERS

were S[!'Yed by Danny Leonard.

Ran~

...,..,.,
Pre-pasted,
scrubbable.

22 Second, Gallipolis

4

News Reporter

.COME SEE WHAT'S NEW!
Britannia Bygones International

I

Jll F~aruring

r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

:lJ

LOGAN

MONUMENT

.'1!!rcp'!c.'1 F'!!m;sn;ner;
and Co/lecliiJIJ:;
Specializing in Victorian/Edwardian Eras

Open Daily I 0-6

Rt. 7 North of Gallipolb, Ohio 45631
Phone (614) 446-4084

·invites you to see
their display of
monuments at

DEALER PRICES 0 1'1 SELECTED ANTIQUES

FOODLAND

OUI POMROY
AND VINTON LOTS

.

Beautifully
carved from
select
Granite.

. .

AD CORRECTION:
THE CORRECT PRICE SHOUlD BE:
U.S. NO. 1

Logan
Monument Co. IrK.
I'OMIIOY, OIIO.......SS COUitlY

Hush Puppi~s

Tlo .,ltll• ·n'" •' I"'~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 1.

$129

20 LB.
BAG

u•

DISPlAY
NUl
I'OMUOT -IMSON •DGE
LEO L. YAUGIIAII, MGI.

WE ARE SORRY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE '
THIS MAY HAVE CAUSED OUR CUSTOMERS.

PIKINE "2·2511
YJIITOH, 01110-GAIUA COUNTY
DIWYYAIO

JAMlS 0. lUSH
MANAGE I
PHotiE Ul-160)

Augusta

_,

~ ~J 'OJl-Shaz o

Lifestvle
FURNITUR E SHOWCASE

{
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Video cassette tape records
up to 6 hours.

llt•1

&amp;rkc

MAINE ·POTATOES

I 'I~

Navy Fireman Recruit Jeffrey
C.Shifiet, son of Jack H. and
Elizabeth Shlflet of Route 1,
Rutland, has completed recruit
training at Recruit Training Com mand, San Diego.
During Shlflet' selght-week cycle,
hi&gt; studied general military subjects deslgnfd to prepare him for
furthl&gt;r academic and on-the-job
Jralnlng In one of the Navy's 85
basic fields.
Shlflet's studies included sea·
manship, close order drill, Naval
history and first ald. Personnel who
complete this course of Instruction
are eligible for three hours of
rollege credit In Physical Educa. tton and Hygtene.
.. A 1982 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, . he joined the
Navy In September 1985.

., ,000

"No phony mark ups . No
phony mall&lt; downs. Truly
super special values."

these coolers arP surf' tn ~U P il('h your thirst for ' tyl(•

Shiflet

1 CARAT

S249
$429
S750

Rog .
'595
Reg .

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Gemini VCR Tapes

1/3 off

117 CARAT

4-H news

Cunningham

Our 4.97

Ow 111. Price

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

Roogers

Pvt. 1st Class Bryan C. Wonn, son
f1 ·Earl L. and Karen F. Wonn of
Rural Route 2, Crown City, was
IJ'esented the Air Assault Badge
up:&gt;n graduation from the U.S.
~y·s alr assault school at Fort
Campbell, Ky.
Trainees learned to rapidly and
safely exit a hl.&gt;llcopter from a
variety of dllflcult situations.
whether descending Into tree tops
or lowering themselves or injured
S'oldlers down shl.&gt;er drops.
.
Wonn Is an Infantryman with the
502nd Infantry Regiment.
He Is a 1985 graduate of Gallla
Academy High School, Gallipolis.

HUNTER

Michelle Capehart weds
Paul Edward Will Jr.

Page-B-6

__...;__;,;.;..___ In the·service------- Are.a serviceman participat~s

GALUPOUS -The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubrary
announces Its BookmobUe schedule
l:lr the week of April 28 to May 3,
]986.
Mmday: Route 35- Jordan's Gas
11:00-2: 00; Rodney VIllage 3:304:15; Gallla Metro Estates 4:305: 15; Kerr 5:30-5: 55; Bidwell 6: 1().
6:ll; Harrisburg 6:40-7:00; Rio
Grande Es1ates 7: 10-8: 10.
1\Jesday: Gallla Christian School
1:45-2:al; Roush Lane 2:45-3:15;
Addison 4:00-4: 30; Addavllle El.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul E WW Jr.

The Sunday Tirnes-Seritinei-

Pomeroy-Middk!Poft-Gallipalis, Ohia-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

1.37 f.97

Oil Filters

Many U.S .• foreign cars.

' ---1~,..·.
-./J '
~ ~

OVCS

~·

offers a full day kindergarten program including:

PHONETIC READING
NUMBERS
BASIC MATH
MUSIC

D'NELIAN WRITING
BASIC SCIENCE
BIBLE
ART

i

.,

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

.'\&lt;--·

~.

·:.
____ .....
,-::- -:..·

• J

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I

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'
.
'..

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/

'
I

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.

-- ~- ;·- -·- -- - ·
--- "''.:
/

J

I

lEG. '472.00

I, I J

'·

_ /

/ '

,.
/

/

'

"

/ I

SAlE
-"

$3]]00

CALL NOW FOR 1986-87 INFORMATION - 446-0374
liG-G 0111 101M YEAI OF EDUCATIONALMINISIIY
Ohio VIII~ Christian

School is a minislry of Fim Baptist Churth
Third Avenue at Locust Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

OVCS admits students of any race, color. r~li&amp;ion. national
and ethnic ori&amp;in to all rights. privileae, programs, and activi·
ties generally accorded or made available to lhe students at
the school.
Member of The American Assoeiation of Christian Schools

STOP IN LIFESTJLE TO SEE THE MOST BEAUTIFUL SELECTION
OF PATIO FURNITURE IN THE AREA! ALL SALE PRICED!
•FREE DELIVERY
•FREE PARKING
OPEN MON. &amp; Fll. 9·8
TUES., WED., YHUIS; &amp; SAT. 9·5

''

�Page-B-6-.The Sunday Times-Sentinel

April27, 1986

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

April

27, 1986

~

'

Leading r~-~ _f~ctq~s: sede!ltary
lifestyle, non-us~ of seatbelts

--Annwl Cancer Crusade
begins in Gallia County;
leader packets distributed
GALLIPOLIS - The Annual
Crusade for the Galll&lt;l County Unit
of the American Cancer Society
lACS) is oow In progress, and
should be completm before Satur-.
day, May 10, according to Pat
BoYer, executlve director of til&gt;
lQcal unit.
Many captains In the county Ill! • ·
crusade leaders from Galllpol ', ;
have their official Crusade packet&gt;
However, those who did no;
attend the kickoff meeting earlier
this month, did not receive their
packets and are urged to pick them
up at the Ohio Valley Bank main
office Information desk as soon as
possible, Ms. Boyer said.
She pointed out the ACS, through
the contributions of the public,
makes possible the largest number
of cancer research grants In the
United States,_ with nearly $3
million In Ohio, alone this year.
It is through resrnrch that better
chemotherapy becomes available
for use by cancer patients , she said.
The ACS Is hopeful a break through
on prevent lng cancer will come
soon, she added.

The other lmporlant use of the
ACS cancer mmey, In addltkm 10
helping all Gallla County patients
who ask for _help at the local dllce,
Is for education, with excellent new
films and updated litera ture that
can be easily uilllzed by,- both
students and adults, Ms. Slyer
said.
During this year's Crusade, a
pamphlet, "Eating to Uve: What
Food May Help You Reduce Your
Cancer Risk? ", Is being given to
each household In GaUia County
when the crusade volunteers call at
individual homes kl ask for contrl·
buttons 10 the 1986 Crusade.
During the past year, :ll3 services.
were provided ror 89 cancer
patients In Gallla County. accordIng to the most recent an nual report
of the Gallla County lJnlt.
Services Included Transportation, RehabUitatlon, Referrals and
Information, Medications , Gift
Items, Equipment Loans and'
Dressings. Available In the Loan
Closet are wheelchairs, hospita l
beds, walkers, bedside commOdes,
oxygen regulatDr and a suction
machine.

Rutland Alumni banquet planned

RODEO SET FOR WEEKEND - The Ohio Hlgh
:SChool Rodeo Association will be havmg Its annual
;_apparance In GaiDa County May 3, 7 p.in., and May 4
:at 2 p.m.. In lhe Bob Evans Fann outdoor arena.
;Events will lnclu.fe boys call roping, bareback riding,
'steer wrestUng, buD riding, sadille bronc, cutting and
:

•

'fEEPS,

a

Quote of the day

team roping. For lhe girlS, lhere wiD be bam!lls, pole
pending, breadaway roping, goal lying, cuttlng,team
roping and a queen coolest. Pictured Is gim roping
lrom last year's oompeltkm. 1be students compete,
and work toward run and partlul scltolarshlps.
Admission ls $3, with no advance sales.-

Douglas Larche, who wrote
"Father Gander Nursery Rhymes"
in an attempt to remove any
reference to violence · or sexist
stereotypes from Mot her Goose:
" In Mother GoOse, girls may be
flower tenders, frightened curd
eaters, or imprisoned pumpkin
shell residents - never winners,
rulers or even successfu I candle
stick jumpers."

Gallipolis Diary:

Genealogical book due in May
to
include 2,000 local names
.

, By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
; GA LLIPOLIS - Henriett a
E!vans, 638 First Ave., Gallipolis,
flidlted a Iener to Roger Morgan,
"lhlm Peeps wrote about a few
dllys ago. (Catch that Indite! It's
oor ftrst ClJportunlty to use the word
ll]dlte as a symnym for write, and
tllough It's a sound-alike for Indict.
tlje two words, Indite and Indict,
h!'ve entirely different meanings).

Henrietta and a friend have been
abstracting for some time al
thedeath notices, obituaries, and
marriage licenses from 1825 to 1875
and providing them In book form,
which will be available for pur·
chase In 'May.

Cherokee Rockers
The ultimate
in

There was no obit lor Mercy
Marla, and Fred's Is briel: FrederIck Bovle, age 70, died on Wednesday last and wa.~ a citizen ol
Galllpolls..... thls was found May Ill,
1872.
'

comfort:

And a happy April 'll to ewe, 2!

: Anyway, Henny showed us a
mpy ol the leUer she sent to Roger
1\lorgan, 1625 Leisure Drive, Brattntown, Fla. 33Ml. Mary Ann
Wood and she are having published
~ - to be ready in May - of
'!!Ore than Z70 pages and over :aHJO
sllftlarnes kl lhe inde&lt;.
•
·This book Is called "Death
1'-kltlces, Obituaries, and Marriage
l'tJtlces taken from the Galiia
C«inty newspapers 1825 to 1875."
•
;:Jienny told Rodge that she saw
the Morl!l!:R letter in the Peeps
"!'imm of April 00, this year and
has Immediate access to the
sOUght-for obituaries. Copies are all
~ath notices, obituaries, and marriage licenses In the old GaUia
cOOnty newspapers lor a haU~tucy - 1825 w 1875.

I

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Ohio Arts Council

Cov~t_f_.Y

AuetlON

&lt;o-1:00 P.M-S"c~t

GALLIPOLIS

-- - -Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 dllfercnt colored
.

- ------ - - · -- ~

...

granites. Whatever your requir ements may be, complete
satisfaction Is assured with Rock of Ages.
Winter Hours : Tues. 1-4 and Thu rs. 1-4
Other hours by appt. by calling 593-1455

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTSGallipolis. OH .
352 Third Av8 .

THREE DAYS ONLY
Sl Million Diamond Jewelry Sale

PH. 446 -2327

50°/o OFF ALL-- ITEMS

SALE STARTS MAY 1ST .
AND EXTENDS THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 3RD
Never again will you find such quality at such a generous discount.
Antong the many diamond pieces on sale are:
ladies 7 diamond cluster rings Now $49.95
Ladies 1/4 carat diamond wedding band SJ49.95
ladies 1 carat diamond round duster rings SUOO.OO Now SS79.95

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, MAY 1ST, 2ND, 3RD

20°/o STOREWIDE

Also included in the sale are: men's
diamond rings, bridal pairs, wedding
rings, diamond and opal rings, large
· diamond cocktail rings, diamond and
colored stone rings, eternity rings and
many more.

INCLUDES LEE, LEVI'S 9 CHIC
LAYAWAYS WILL BE HELD
DRAWING FOR
UNTIL MAY 15th FOR THIS SALE

..

Across the Street
Counterparts
Eva's
fountain of Youth
Head Quarters
Michael and Friends
Mane Designers
Shear Pleasure

The300 Shoe
Cafe
SECOND AVE.

DAN'S
2th
'

s;ons-oRS:

&amp;

LARGE SELECTION

•

RUTLA:ND - T he annual Ru- and guests will be $9 each.
Reservations are to be sent to tht•
tla nd Alumni ba nquet will be held
on Sa turday, May 24, at the Rutland Rutland Alumni Associat ion, Box
Civic Center.
125. Rutland, by May 16.
The dance is open to the public
The diMer will be catered \&gt;Y
Circles of Gallipolis with serving to and admission is $6 for singles and
begin at 6:30 p.m. Dancing will $10 for couples. Advance rfi'Serva ·
start at 9:30 with Gary Link of Fort ttons for the dance may be made by
Myers 1, Fla. entertaining. Cost for ca lllng 742-2854 or 742-2795 aft er
thl.' dinner and dance for alumni five.

$250

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

IN MERCHANDISE
CERTIFICATE

SIDEWALK -SALES

1-S100 Gift Certificate
S-5200 Gift Certificate
S-510 Gift Certificate

MANY OTHER SAYINGS OF
UP TO

·•
T

EXTRA POLICE SfC..ITY

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Fireman of the Year announced;
banquet held to honor volunteers
Plymale and has since rtsen
By KEVIN KELLY
through the ranks . Hamilton was
Tirnes-Senllnel Stall
chosen
Fireman d the Year In 1981.
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis volunHonored
was Gallipolis City
teer firemen chose a veteran from
Pollee
Patrolman
Gregory A.
the ranks to become the 1986
Frazier,
recognized
for
his early
recipient of the Gallipolis Fireman
detection
and
warning
to the
·of the Year award.
department
cia
stru
ctureflrcat
:M8
James W. Sa unders, a form er
Second
Ave.
on
Jan.
5.
Frazier,
a
Gallia County sher~f and cun-ently
-member
of
the
pollee
department
manager of the Gallia- Meigs Regional Airport, received the award since September !900, was praised
during the annual firemen's ban· In a letter to Pollee Chief Joe Owen
from Bush citing Frazier's efforts.
quet Friday at the Holiday Inn.
" I appreciate being honored by
Chosen by a committee of
the
fire department," Frazier said.
department officials and fellow
The
mle of the city pollee and area
volunteers, Saunders was cfted by
law
enforcement In fighting fires
Fire Chief Ray Bush for his
was
cited
by Northup .
numerous aclivltles. service and
Northup,
In remarks to the
contributions to the department.
volunteers,
praised
them for being
Saunders joined the department on
"really
excellent
al
what you do"
Dec. 3, 1957, and has been affiliated
and
said
the
department's
major
wi th it on and off over a 14-yPar

contribution and minor cost to the
city Is at limes overlooked.
"Speaking as a taxpayer, do you
know of any government entity to
obtain as fine a resuit for a 5 or 6
perce nt Investment ?" he asked.
Bush concluded the banquet with
a discussion of the department
training grounds and the Importance of training In fighting fires
and reducing property loss.
Bush recognized retired volunteers John Taylor and Doug
Runyan, and Introduced Steve
Beaver, a new member d the
department and also a member of
the Guyan Township Volunteer
Fire Department. Other new
members introduced were Steve
Sa lisbury, Jerry Haner and David
Scouten . Recognized was Bob Cox,
recently elected second lieutenant.

-

-

POMEROY - Roger and Sharon
Bailey of Richland, Ind., former
Meigs County resident s, recently
observed their 25t h wedding
anniversary.
Joining their parents for the
observance were Craig and Brenda

$249 &amp;UP
Ridenour·

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
985-3307

CHESTER

Ge_!l away".CA1l or
For FREE Catalog
Grand Ole Opry
Featuring: The General Ja&lt;kson
Showbmt, Opryl_and , USA
3 Days
April 25 -27 Sept. 19-21 Oct. 24-21&gt;

llentucky Derby
3 Days

MOTHER'S DAY

2 Days

AND

3 Days

"The Run for the lot11"

May 2· 4
Harpers Ferry &amp; the

Bavarian lm
May 0· 7

Holland at Tulip Time
May 24 -21&gt;

Diny World Sllnrnlr &amp;pr..

GRADUATION

'"Tho Yaartion Bargain of tt. Yoar"
6 Days
June 16-21 lug. tO-lS

WITH A

Nova Scatio &amp;
Prince Edward Island

14K GOLD TRUNK SHOW!

14 Days

Juno 10-n

Super Nashville/Memphis

50°/o OFF

5 Days

. Junt 25-2'

Grandfather Mtn. Scottish

CJans Htritagl Festival
4Days

ON

July 11 -14

1he SNphtn Fomr Sfllry
2 Days

July 12-.TJ

Canadian Metro Cities
7 Days

July 28·lug. 3

California
24 Doys

ONE DAY ONLY!!

August 2· 25

Chautauqua Arts
lug. 1&gt;-9

4 Days

MONDAY, APRIL 28-9:30·5:00

Nags Head/Outer Banks

Special ~alues:

CXE 141 WA

STARTING AT

1986
Legendary
Vacations

THE MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
WELCOMES

LARGE SELECTION

5 Days

Aug. 17-21

Elegant Opry land Hotel

24" Rope Add-a-Bead Choi.n .......... 528.99
18" Herringbone Mecl. Wt . ••••••.•.•••••• 588.00
7" Herringbone Brcxelet Mecl. Wt .... $35.00
4mm Ball Earring .............................. sa. 99

3 Days

lug. 22 -24

Make Rete;vations Now and

SAVE

REMEMBER

4401•;tll94
Ill Wll'lt

ONE DAY ONLY--MON., APRIL 28

PlRII TOURS
David Laufer

AT THE

Rt 3. Box J.\6, Gallipolis. Oh. 45631

Middleport Book Store

Name - - - - -- - -

83 Mill ST. .

992 -2641

MIDDLEPORT

Addms - - -- - - - -

Zip__

City

••
'

For Mother's Day, May 11th

Casual Outdoor Furniture
Perma Wicker ® by Lloyd/Fland ers

Roses damaged
by cold weather

~
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7 COLOR
SELECTION

COLUMBUS - While ' rmst
woody plants fa red well this winter,
a lot of roses received an tJVerdose
of Mother Nature's wrath.
"This past winter. Injury to roses
was ~tremely severe," says Elton
Smith, Extension landscape hortl·
culturlst, The Ohio State Unlve··
slty. "In fact, It was as severe as the
wjnter of 1983-81, one of the rmst
devastating to plant s In recent

I

Venoy and Brian and Lindsay
Ba iley, Pomeroy, and Mclanil'
Ba iley, Kentucky . Also joining the
group for the celebration was Beth
Tompkins, niece of the Baileys, and
now rfi'Siding in Richland with
them.

Chains, Charms, Earrings &amp; Beads

ON ·19 INCH COLOR TVs

.

risk- fac tor sutvel llan ce by the
states In 1982.
"Virtually every state has shown·
an _irnprovemenl of from five to 15.
percent from 1982 to 1981," he said.
He credited the improvement to
new state laws rtquirlng the
wearing of seatbelt s and ad campaigns depicting non-useofiJe beltsas a bad health habit.
_
Hagelin also said there had been·
"a sl ight down wdfd trend" in '
uncontrolled hy pertenslon. "·The .
medical community Is doing a
better )Jb of cont roUing high blood:
pressure In patients," he sal~. as .
indicated by a ll percent improvement In stroke dmth.,.
.
He said cigarette smoking con -·
tinues Cfl a downward trl'fld but that:
this data was not reflected In the ;
surveys by the I' sta les.

Bailey anniversary observed

~r-~~~;;~;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;~:-il

Saunders was one of five recognized
period. by · the department for
contributions to the department.
Bush presented a plaque to Shirleen
Wiseman of the Wiseman In surance A~ency of Gallipolis, which
has sponsored the banquet s for the
past six years In recognition of the
volunteers' ellorL&gt;. The plaque
thanked Mr s. Wiseman and the
agency for its continuing support
for the department.
The JamPs A. Nm1hup DistlnguL•hed Service Award, named for
the ret ired fire chief, was presented
by Northu p to senior Capt. Evan 0 .
Plymale Jr., voted the Fireman of
the Year In 1982.
The award, Nort hup said, Is
presented to volunteers with 25
years of distinguished service.
Northup praised Plymale for "a
Jqng tenure as a volunteer to the
community" that began on Oct. 26,
1955, when he jo ined the
dfpartment.
· He was clPC ted secretary In
March 1962 and trcasw-cr later In
tile year, serving as secl·etary for
twi&gt; years and five years as
trea surer. Volunteers elected him
~ond Urutenanl In 1971l, first
lleiltenant in 1983, captain later In
tlie year and senior captain In
.January 198.1.
During those 30 years, Nm1hup
estimatoo that Plymak• answered
rrfore than 4,000 fire alarms.
Recognized was A,;slstant Chief
SUas Hamil ton, who joined the
department at the same tim e with 1

Roses have a long growing
se;ison, Smith says. They grow until
several hard freezes ocrur, usually
In November. Then, growth stops
arid the plants begin to accUmat~l•
the cold and become dormant.
In the extremely wet November
of last year, roses didn't become
dJrrnant as they normally dJ and
were In filii leal when temperatures
plummeted the first week of
December. The plants weren't
ready for this cold and were
severely Injured .

992-2635
290 SECOND AVE.

Fire

.

OPEN
ALL DAY
THURSDAY
BUY EARLY
AND
SAVE
Low B"k Spring Base Chair ..........S6S
High Back Spring Base Chair ......... S7S
Spring Base Lounger ................... S139
Canopy Swing "........................... S1 99
Sofa Glider .................................. 51 9q
Laveseat G&amp;der ............. :............. S14S
Ottoman ........................................ ,545
End Table (whit~r varillal .............. ,S4S

roses.

MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPO'RT. OH .

James W. Saunders, voted Fireman of the Year for
1986. Also lu the picture receiving recognklon are,
from left, ·Assistant Fire Chlel Silas llamllton;
Shirleen Wiseman of Wiseman Insurance Agency;
GaUipolls City PoUce Patrolman Gregory A. Frazier;
and
Chief Ray BlL'Ih.

November rain and Decemtrr
cold. This unusual and severe
change In weal her damaged many

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY

50°/o

FIREMEN ISSUE HONORS - Retired Gallipolis
Fire Chief James A. Northup, 'lar left, presmts lhe
distinguished service award named for him wsenior
Capt. Evan 0. Plymale Jr. Friday at the annual
Fireman of the Year banquet. To Plymale'ij left Is

ATLANTA (UP! I - A sedentary
llfE'Style and non-use of seatbelt;
are the two behavorlal risk factors
leading to premature death that
most often are violated by adults, a
survey by 15 state health departments showed Thursday.
Of adults surveyed by telephone,
large percentages said they didn't
get much exercise and did not use
seatbelts.
An Individual who gets less than
20 minutes of leisure time physical
activity at1east three times a week
· was defined as having a sedentary
lifestyle. People who sta ted they
used seatbelts sometimes; seldom
or never when riding In or driving a
car were listed as non-users of
seatbelts.
fllf)
The percentages of adults living a
sedentary lifestyle ranged from a
low of 39.5 percent In Arizona to a
high of 60.9 percent In TennesseP.
Non- use of seatbelts varied from
51.2 percent in California to 75.9
percent In West Virgin ia.
Results of the surveys were
published by the national Centers

The culprit -a one-two punch of

You will never find these
pieces priced lower ...
Anywhere.
Just In time F~r Mother's Day

for Disease Cont rol. The 'urveys
were conducted In 1981 by state
health departments In Arizona,
Ca l~omla , Idaho, Illinois, Indiana,
Minnesota, Montana, Nort h CarolIna, Ohio, Rhode Island, South
Carolina , Tennessee, Utah, West
VIrginia and Wisconsin.
An average of 8lO adult s In each
state were caUed once a month by
telephone Interv iewers using randJm digit-dialing techniques.
Other behavorlal rtsk factors
Included In the surveys were helng
tJVerweight, uncontrnUed hypertension, smoking, binge drinking ,
heavier drinking. and drinking and
driving.
The 10 leading causes of prema ·
ture deat h among adu lt s are heart
disease cancer, accidents, motor
vehicles' mishaps, ' strokes, hom! ·
cides, suicides, diabetes. infl uenza
and pneumonia.
Gary Hogelln, chief of field
services lor the COC's Center for
Health Promotion, said that despite
statistics showing hlgh non-use of
seatbelts. there had been improvement In this category since the first

ByCHARLIS~TAYLOR

umes."

'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 8-i

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

C()I&lt;.~IN ~

STOlE HOURS:
Mon. I Fri. 9:30.8

SNY()(I&lt;.

fURNITUI&lt;.( CO.

Tue1., Wtd., Thurs.
&amp; Sat. 9:30-5

'.
' '

1111!!1!11.

955 Second Ave.

llllliiiill

44•-nn Gallipolis, Ohi(·

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gal~lis.

Sunday .Times-Sentinel
.

: Beat of the bend ·

-~ Fo-r-the

"B_
uckeye Girls State participants
"
orientation teas are scheduled
Home on May 18, registration also

faithful

.

By BOB HOEFLICH

We wUI ooon be printing an
.application and a waiver form for
Never having had-perfect attend- you to completPand smd to Kim so
·
ance at anything,
tha t" yoo will be properly Jogged in
I'm always been
for the day's activities.
Impressed . by
We S('('m to haw a gondly
those win are sil
faithful - be It
number of bands in this area and
perhaps, some of them will be
school, church,
the club meE'ting
interes ted in tQmpetingina$100,00!
or even work . •
Battle of the Bands contest sponThls year students from klnder- sored by Service Merch&lt;!JldiSe.
garten through 12 can get fi"l'&lt;'
There wilt be local compt•tltions
admission to the Ohio Sta te Fair ~ from July I ttu-ough Sept. 30 with
tbey held a pertect attendance mch winning band to go into
record for either semester of the reg ional compel it ion - some eight
ll!8S-86 school year.
of those. The eight regional winners
All they have to do is pr= nt their wU I go to tbe finals to be held in
report cards with the attendance NashvUie. Tenn. on Nov. I.
· clearly marked at either the Ohio or
The competition is opPn to all
the Buck(')'!' gatcduting this ymr's bands fi"om COUntry to lOCk 'n' roU.
fair.
Ba nds interested may contact
Ms. Abernathy. 50 Linds lfo~ Ave..
The Ohio Department of Trans- NashviiiP. Tenn .. 37210.
portation has awarded contract s
How about it Lone Wo~?
. totaling $18,811,395.23 on 38 highway
Improvement proj&lt;.'Cts.
MPigs Local Supt. Dan E. Morris
Meigs Is one of several count it's must grow weary revising the
, Used for fast dry paint to br applied closing of classes this vear in the
. to lane lines on varklus mutes and district. Everything appeared to be
· SECtions with wotl&lt; to be done by rosy with no more closings exChemi-Trol Chemical Co. of Gib- . pect£d and tilE' final calendar
. sonburgwhich bidSZ76.580.46on the rev ision appear£d to be done.
. project.
Then. a water pt-o~lem developed
The same firm has been awarded in Pomeroy throwing the Salisbury
a contract for applying herbicidal School out for a couple of days . spray to vegetation on variou s thu s, another revision was necesroutes in Meigs County as well as sary. And how about those spring
· S('Ven other counti&lt;&gt;s. The bid on vacations which are planned every
: that job was $32,373.68.
year but then go up in the bad
weather?
Before the end of the current
school year, sixth grade students at
The Meigs Local Band Boosters
the Salisbury, Harrisonville and wlll sponsor a walk-a-thon begin· Pomeroy Elementary Schools will ning at 9 a.m. on Saturday, May 10,
receive a gift book titled, "The Way starting from the Meigs High
to Go" provided by Ben H. Ewing Sc hool.
and Sandy Iannareili.
The event is open to the public
· The attractive bound book, illus- and participants can ·pick up a
trated in fuU color, is a collection of sponsor sheet from a band student .
eight short stork's written to appeal at the Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy or
to young people of today. The Dan's in Middleport. Cash priLes
- stories reinforce traditinal moral will be awarded to the top three
· values.
walkers collecting the largest
amount from sponsors.
: Kbn Blower is urging all of you
·.runners to get into shape in
It ha s been a free Wl'E'kend at
preparation for tilE' upcoming Fun Royal Oak Park with a variet y of
Run for Heart sponsored by entertainment having been pro·Veterans Memorial Hospital and vided and even dinner last night.
. tbe American Heart Association.
You still have tbne to get in at the
There wUJ be a !OK, a 5K run as act - there wUi be gospel singing
·well as fun runs for 12 and under between noon and 5 today .
:-races and the events have been set
for 9 a.m. on Saturday, June 7, in
!':very writer in America must
. the area of General Hartinger have ex pressed at least one opinion
Park, in Middleport. And, of course, on Libya by this time. I spared you
there will be awards to close out the that. Aren't you lucky! Do keep
smiling.
event,

Gallia Senior
activites
planned
i&gt;Dows:

POMEROY -Those who wUJ be
attending Buckeye Girls State at
Ashland College In June must
attend one of the orientation teas to
be held In May.
The first one wUI be on Sunday,
May 4, at the Lancaster Post with
registration at 1p.m and the SECOnd
one wUI be at the GaUipoUs Post

p.m.

Thesday -

S.T.O.P .!Physlcal

"Fitness. 10: 30 a.m.

' 1'

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Dr. and Mrs. Ed Sofranko

Emotions topic of session
on dealing with -cancer·
GALLIPOUS - The fourth of fir loss .of health wUI be covered.
eight wrekly $eSSions. of "I Can
Sofranko received hls Ph.D. from
Cope," co-sponsored by the GaUta Ball State University in Counseling
County Unit of the American and Psychology. For the past 15
Cancer Society (ACS) and Holzer years, he has been an associate
Medical Center, wUI be Monday, 7 professor of Psychology at Rio
p.m., In the second floor classroom Grande College. Mrs Sofranko will
at the hospital. Featured speakers r~reive her B.S. in Social Work this
wtll be Dr. Edward R. and Judy L. year and Is Ex~rutlve Director of
Sofranko. Their topic will be Big Brothers and Big Sisters in
"Understanding your Emotions."
Gall Ia , Meigs and Jackson Counties
Dr. and Mrs. Sofranko wUJ talk in Ohio, and Mason County In West
alx!ut how to cope wlth emotions Virginia.
and feeltngs, including the psychoThis summer, t!Jey plan to open a
social aspects of cancer and the family practice in Galltpolls, the
common emotional reactions of "Center i&gt;r Healthy Living".
patIents as well as their family
This course is designed for people
members.
with cancer and their families. No
The Importance of effective char~ is made for these educainter-communication at times .of tional classes. For more informastress and ways of overcoming tion contact Mary Harrison, R.N.,
communication problems when at 446-5247 or Kay Allbright,
with cancer

: Wednesday - Vinton Bible
&amp;\ldy, I p.m.; Card Games, 1-3
p.m.; American Literature Class, 1

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

Fork it over

DETROIT (UPIJ - Pinch-hitter
Jerry Hairston's sacrifice fly wlth
one out in the 11th Inning Saturday
scored Carlton Fisk from third base
to gtve the White Sox a 5-4 victory
over the Detroit Tigers, extending
Chicago's winning streak to four
games.
Bob James, 1-1, pitched 2 "1-3
innings of hitless relief Cor the
victory.
Bill Campbell, 0-1, came In to
start the 11th, his first appoearance
since AprU 9 because of a sore right
elbow, and walked Fisk. Bobby
BonUia bunted but Campbell
lx!bbled the bali for an error on the

1986 CHEVY

S-1 0
PICKUP

Mon . Wad . rd A :101 o ll
T,.., A. fhun A,JO 1115. 30
S~tturdtY

A·J O l o &lt;4

Waddell

... 1-IEVROLET

(JLDSMOBILE CADILLAC
!fORMERlY SIM'f! 0 J'U Ol m!\· CAO · CHf'l I

Pll. 'l92-6614

E?l==-t!
==

~UNDAY

1-S

J08 I. MAIN IT.
POI!IriOf, 0".

Thursday. May I - Bible Study

:: Wednesday - Frted chicken,
6rocroU, cranberry sauce, wheat
IJ'ead, oatmeal cookie.
.- 'nluniday - Sloppy Joe 011 a lltn,
civen Frmch lrles, cole slaw, sliced

geaches.

It

•

,' Friday - fish Hlet, buttered
tiJtatoes, caiTOts, wheat bread.
&amp;aploca p!dding.
~ Choice of beverage served with
~hmeal.

·.••

Meigs
bookmobile
~hedule
''-·

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srored on a single by Dan~Q~ Keep. New York went oo
1D post its eighth straight victory. UP I.

deck in len with his fourth home run
of the season , in the eighth with a
runner on, to give the White Sox a
4-3 lead.
Back·to-back homers by Harold
Baines aand KJttle off Walt Terrell
in the sixth gave Chicago a 2-llead.
Baines' fifth homer and Kittle' s
third came on consecutive pit ches.
Reliever Dave Schmidt served up
a pinch home run to Darrell Evans
with one out in the seventh to tie the
score 2-2. A pinch two-out double by
Lou Whitaker and Dave Collins'
singl e gave Detroit a 3-2 lead.
The Tigers broke a scoreless tie
in the fifth on Tom Brookens' RBI
single.

Taxes- no one likes to think about them until they have to.
But, if you put off preparing for Apri115, you probably paid more
than you should have. H you're serious about minimizing this
year's tax liability, the time to act is now.
At The Ohio Company, we'll take the time to review your
portfolio, taking into consideration your financial objectives.
Then we'll recommend what we feel is your best course of
action.
Whatever we recommend, it will be designed to put you in
the best possible tax posture as far as your investments are
concerned.
Our consultation with you is without cl!arge or obligation,
so act now and set up your private meeting for a review of your
portfolio from a tax standpoint. Please feel free to bring your
accountant or tax attorney along, so that we can coordinate our
efforts.
To set up your private consultation, fill out and mail the
coupon be!ow or call.

rP--~---------------~
- contact me, rd Ulle to bave you Jevlew my portfolio from a tax - I
3005 1

I IWidpolnl.
I

I

:Address

:

After Mike Heath runted into a
fon~out at third, Jesse Orosco
relieved and got Terry Pendleton to
hit a bouncer up the middle which
second baseman WaUy Backman
made .a diving stop on and turned
into a 4-6-3 g;~me-ending oouble
play. Orosco, wbo threw one (itch,
earned his third save.
Fernandez struck oot 10 and
walked two to helP the Mets take
their third straight over the Cardi nals. The Mets wUI be going for a
four-game sweep Sunday.
Danny Cox, making his first start
of the season after coming off the
disabled· list with an ankle injury,
took the loss. He lasted just three
innings, allowing seven hits and

lour earned runs - aU in the first
inning.
Len Dykstra greeted Cox with his
second career homer on the fourth
pitch of the game. With one out,
Keith Hernandez and Darryl
Strawbery singled. Gary Carter
doubled home Hernandez, and
Heepstngled home Strawberry and
Carter to make lt 40. A double ~ay
got Cox out of tbe Inning.
The Cardinals scored In the first
when Vince Coleman walked, stole
second, went to third on Herr's
single and scored when Clark hit
into a fielder's choice.
Reliever 11m Conroy retired the
first 13 batters he laced after Cox
left tor a pinch-hitter In the third
inning. He did not allow a hit in live
innings.

drawn due to minor muscle pain in
his ri b cage.

Tabler's bases- loaded drive ali
the r ight field wall scored Joe
Carter and Andre Thornton while
knocking out Shirley.
Brett Butler began the Inning
with an opposite field double to left
and sec red 011 Julio Franco's single.
Aft er Franco was throon out
stealing lor the first ou t, Carter
singled, Thornton was hit by a pitch
and Brook Jacoby walked to fUJ the
bases ahead of Tabler's double.
New York's only run off Schulze
came in the second . Mike Easler
and Mike Pagllarulo si ngled before

Willie Ranoolph walked. Bobby
Meacham hit Into a force out,
enabling Easler to score .
In the eighth, Ken Griffey
doubl£d with two oots oiiBaUesand
scor£d on Don Mattingly's single
that finished Balles and brought on
Ca mac ho.
Yankees manager Lou Pinlella
and ca tcher Ron Hassey were
ej ect£d in the fourth inning by
rookie umpire Tim Tschida , work- .
ing only his second major league
game, after Hassey was called out
on strikes in the fourth inning: It
was Pinlell a's first ejection of the

season.

Bengals look for defensive players
CINCINNATI iUPl i - The
Bengal s, owners of eight picks In
the first four round s, will attempt to
bolster a defense that fin ished 22nd
in the league last year at Tuesday's
NFL draft.
The Bengal defense, which surrendered 437 point s in 1985, cou ld
stand improvement in any area , but
perhaps most pressing Is the pass
rush. The Bengals recorded only 38
sacks -last year, and consequently,
the secondary was oft en burned on
long plays.
Despit e these needs, Pete Brown .
director of player personnel, said
the club will not necessarily selec t a
defensive player with its fi rst pick.
the lith overall.
"Our preference would tx• for a
defensive player, but if there is an
offensive player of di scernable
greater ability we will be delighted
to pick him." Brown sa id.

The Bengals are certainly In a
position to help themselves. In
addition to the 11th pick, they also
have lhe 21st pick in the opening
round as a result of a trading 1984
No. I pick Ric ky Hunley to Denver.
In the second round , the Beng;~ ls
have their own selection and in the
third round they have three picks:
their own, Atlant a's lacquir£d in a
trade for Turk Schonert t and
Denver's (the Hunley trade !.
Thl' player possibly most suited
to filling tiF Benga ls' pass rushing
needs Ithat may stilt be avaUaltl' at
the lith pick ! is defensive end
Leslie O'Neal from Oklahoma
State. He has elusive speed for his
si?P (6- foot -3~. 245 pounds I, something tilE' Benga l defense is sorely
lacking. O'Neai' s la r~ st drawback
is his abUily to stop the run.
O'Neal Is expected to be the third
defensive player chosen. behind

Tony Casillas r1 Oklahoma and Jon
Hand of Alabama. If O'Neal is not
available to the Ben gals, tbey could
instead turn to a tlltz inglinebacker,
such as Kevin Murphy o!
Oklahoma.
Murphy, 6-foot -2, 226 pounds,
su!fered a toot injury his ju nlor year
and did not play as well his smklr
year, but scouts are Impressed by
his speed and strength.
The Bengals, known ilr their
ability to hide tirlrdraft in tentions,
could confound the SO{;alled experts and opt lor an offensive
player, such as tbey did last year
with the se\ectkln of wideout Eddie
Brown .
A strong possibility bere is Ohio
State's Keilh Byars. Bya rs, from
nearby Dayto", saw Hmlted action
his sen klr year due to a 1:.-oken bone
in his foot, but his wlk would
romplement Ja me; Brooks In the
Bengal backfield.

Maine visit means healthy return

!raining.
"I got pplaced on the 15-day
disa bled list at the end of spring
training, but I' ve tieen throwing
regu larly, " he said. '' My arm feels
great now."
When Dickie Noles was diagnosed as having a hairline fracture
in his left foot last .week, Waddell
went to Indians Manager Pat
Corrales and pleaded for a chance
to pit ch.
"I told him my arm felt fin e, that
I was ready to go," sa id Waddell.
"But Pat said no.
"He said he didn 't want me in the
bullpen. He sa id he want s me to
start in the rotation, and lha t the
on ly way for me to do that was to go

to Maine and get 15 to 18 inningsout
of three starts ...
Waddell initially balked at the
demotion. but has resigned himself
to pitching for the Guides.
"Corrales said I'd on ly get jill
inning or two with tbe Indians untn I
proved I could pitch," he sa id. " I
don 't want to be bounced around
from reliever to starter Hke I was
last year. I'd prefer a constant
role."
After a 7-4 rookie season in 1984,
Waddell went 8-61ast season wilha
4.87 E RA He started nin e games.
going 4-1. and notched nine saves in
14 save situations .
"I had· some really good starts,
beating both Ron Guidry and Qlve

ARE YOU PAYING
TOO MUCH TAX?

17104127

: POMEROY - Bookmobile serYtce in Meigs County Is brought to
·Y,OU by tir Meigs County Public
i.ttrary tmder rontr.act with the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
· Bookmobile schedule lor Monday, Apr1128: Burlingham (Coonty
f!foblle Home. Park), 3:35-4: 00;
Harrisonville (Clrurch), 4:35-5:00;
lirew UmaRoad (lml. south of Fort
filelgs) , 5:15-6:00; Rutland (Depot
St.), 6:40-7:10.
: Bookmobiles schedule for Wed·
~esday, Aprtlll: 'fupper's Plains
(Lodwick's), 7:25-8: 10; Rlggscrest
~dltkln, 8:Z.8:55.
'
-·,.

Gill)' Carter slaris hhi head first slide lor the plate in
the first inning of Saturday's game at St. Louts. Carter

sacrifice, which came after Fisk
stole second on a missed swing.
Bryan Little popped to center fOr
the first out and Hairston then
stroked his game-winning sacrifice
fl y to deep tight on a 1-2 pitch .
The Tigers tied the score 44 with
two out in the bottom o( the ninth
when Chet Lemon Uned a 1-2 pitch
through tbe hole to Jell to score
Darnell Coles, who had singled and
advanced on a groundou t o!f
reliever Bill Dawley.
Ron KJttle hit two home runs for
Chicago for his ninth career
tWo-homer game, and drove home
three runs. He reachfd the upper

hope~

CLEVELAND (UPII - Last
Wednesday, Tom Waddell left for a
three-week vtsit to picturesque Old
Orchard Beach, Maine.
During hjs stay, Cleveland's
27-year-old right-hander plans to
enjoy some lobsters. some fishing
and even some baseball on a
rehabilitative basis with the Maine
Guides of the International League.
"It sounds like a contradiction .
but to stay in Cleveland, I have to go
to Maine," said Waddell. " I suppose
this Is part of recovering from
Injury."
Waddell underwent surgery last
Sept. 23 to remove bone spurs In his
right arm , and subsequent soreness
lbnlted his efforts in spring

Olll)

OP'JN

HIGH '111ROW -St. Loul!i Cardinals catcher Mike
Heallt leaps high Into the air lor a throw from
outllelder 'l1to Landnun as New York Mets' catcher

White Sox drop Tigers, 5-4

PII

Swt&gt;rtheart

NEW YORK (UPI I - Pat
Tabler's two-run double capped a
three- run first inning that lifted the
Clevland indians to a 3-2 victory
over New York Saturday, snapping
the Yankees' six-game winning
streak.
Don Schul7.e, 1-0, scancr£d fou r
hits over the first six innings before
being relieved by Scott Balles.
Ernie Camacho replaced Bailes
alter the Yankees scored once in
lhe eighth and pitched hitless relief
to earn his fourth save.
Bob Shirley, 0-1, was a surp rise
starter for the Yankees. He replaced Ed Whitson, who was
scheduled to start but was with-

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Weekends &amp; Holidays
Monday -Friday
5:00P.M. to 9:00P.M.

bunted for a single down the llrst
tiase line.

Indians end Yankees' streak -

446-5287

MONTH

JIll)

Fernandez, Z-0, entered the ninth
inning with a one-hitter and _a 4-1
lead but was relieved after giving
up a Jeadoff single byTirn McGee in
the ninth.
Roger McDowell replaced Fernandez and gave up an RBI double
by Tom Herr down the third base
line. J ack Clark then singled off the
Jell field wall to score Herr and
make It 4-3 and Tito Landrum

LQcated at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

$11900

...

ST. LOUIS (UP! I - Sid Fernandez allowed two hits over eight-plus
11'\nings and Danny Heep drove in
two first- inning runs Saturday,
lifting the hot New York Mets to a
4-3 victory over the slumping St.
Louis Cardinals.
The Mets won their eighth
straight game while extending the
Cardinals' losing streak tQ six
games.
.

URGENT
CARE CENTER

).1-noon.

J(&gt;Jio.

Mets stop Cards, 4-3

For those times that you can't foresee the
future ...

'
p.m.

Friday, May 2 - Art Class 1-3
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.
pPm Activities, 7-10 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday -Cubed steak, mashed
JK&gt;tatoes, caullflower with cheese,
wirat bread, fruit cup.
; 1\lesday - Hamburger patty,
goodies with cheese sauce, buttered
jleas, wheat bread, .pineapple In

April27,1986

If you could look into your crystal ball, you
would always know, in advance, when you
would need a doctor.

LAST OF THE

"

300 Second Annue
Gallipolis, Oh.

..

at 1 p.m.
Delegates and alternates and tbe
AmeriCanism chaii'Ulan from the
sponsoring unit are'\lsked to attend
one or fir teas.
The district summer convention
will be beld on June 5, Thursday, at
Junction City.

SALE PRICE 16699.00
'1100.00 Cash Down or Net Trade-In Allowance. Tax &amp; Title Extra. 60 Monthly Payments
of '119.00 Per Month.

The Shoe Cafe

.

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URGENT
CARE
CENTER

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UOUR~

. Monday - Otorus, 1-3 p.m.:
Q!nter Blood Pressure Check, I

Sports

'

Seatllnel Slllf Writer

GALUPOUS - Activities and
menus for the week of April 28
through May 2 at the Senior Citizen
Center, 23) Jackson Pike, are as

Apri127. 1988

Ohio-Point ~sant, W. Va.

Stieb," he said. "But t wonder
where I'll fit In , considering our
rotat ion now."
Scuttlebutt around the Cleveland
clubhouse has Waddell poss ibly
replacing Neal Hea ton as the spot
start er.
Corrales waves aside such

JerS(') and graduated from Manhattan College in I!J!lJ.
He was signed as a free agent by
Hank Aaron, and spent three yea rs
in the Atlanta organizat ion before
being drafted by Cleveland at the
1983 winter meetings in Nashville.
Tenn.
"At the tbne, I was a little
rumors.
"We only want the best rotation disappoinled because I'd hoped to
possible," sa id the man ager. "We make it to the Braves in 'Sl ," he
feel Tom makes a better st arter.
said. "I figured I'd have to start all
"In Maine, he'll be able to get over with the Indians.
some work . I don 't expect he' Uhave
"But I made the major· league
to stay the entire ~ days. But I dO roster, and I've lea rned something
want hbn to show the arm is fin e since - you have to keep proving
again."
yourself on a game-by-game basis.
Waddell Is a native of Du ndee. It' s the only way to keep on your
Scotland, but wew . up in New toes."

Tom Waddell
_crevelr d tndiiUlS

Parker's agent Reich has
surprise for Pirate ·owners
Dip 'em in our spicy cocktail sauce. Cover 'em
with lemon juice. Or just eat 'e m plaint
You get a big pile of tender, bite-size shrimp, served
with your choice of rice or fries. Or a baked potato
after 5 p.m. And toasted dinner bread.
Pips Shoney's aU-you-care-to-eat
Soup, Salad A Fruit Bar.

$4.99
MONDAY-FRIDAY

This Week's lunch Feature
1\vin-Beef Burger
Served with Soup and Fries
II a.m.-3 p.m.

~~m•-------------------------------- 1

$2.49

8!t~

I City --------------- State - - - - Zip ________ I
I
.I
I~M
I
I AlX:ount ExElC\ltiVe (tlany) .
.
I

-~

Dinner Table .

L------------------J

ATIILEI'ES' CHECKUP- Checkups br studenh
In the Gallla County Local School District planning to
panlclpate kt sporis this coming school year were

-*

held Sa&amp;Urday
the Gi.wa County HeaMh
J)epaiVneat. 'lbe depariment checked 242 potential

.'

.

•

·athletes, said Barbara Shelton, supervlslnl! oorse. In
the above photo, Dr. Gerald E. Vallee, GaDla County

beal\h , conunllltooer, checks Shawn McNeal, an

et,.'th crader at Soulhweetem Elementary and tbe
SU.i of

Mr. 1111d Mrs. Fred McNeal, Rt. %, PalrloC.

He signed as a free agent with
PTITSBURGH (UPI 1 - The
agent for Cincinnati Reds outfielder Cincinnati following the 1983 seaDave Parker says the Plttsbl) rgh son, and last year fi nished second in
Pirates are in for "a bundle of the balloting lor the NL's MVP
surprises" as a result of thei r award after ba !ling .312 with 34
breach of contract lawsuit aga inst ho mi'S and 12'\ RBI.
During the coca ine t ra ffl cklng
him over his admit ted cocaine use.
Pittsburgh Associates, the new tria l of Curtis Strong in Pittsbu rgh
. owners o; the Pirates, filed suit last summer, Parker admitted he
Monday cla bning Par ker breached began using the drug in 1976 and
the flve-y~&gt;ar contract he signed became a regular user in 1979.
with the club In 1979 because of his Parker testified be stopped stopped
admitted use of cocaine. The using coca ine In 1982 becau se It
Pirates are seekin g to void de ferred a d ve r se l y a ff ecte d hi s
payments of more than $5.3 million performance.
Reich sa id Parker violated no
to Parker, wh ich are scheduled to
begin in 1988 and run through :nn. provisions ol his contract w(t h the
·
"I guarantee you that if this club Pira tes.
"For them to get rut of this
thinks that they had nothing to Jose
because they owed the money and co ntract, Parker would have had to
figured If \bey lose, all they have to be convicted of a fe loey and
do is pay the money, they are going released," Reich said. "Parker
16 be In for a bundle of surprises,
test ified under bnmuntty."
which I wUI not get Into at this
Reich said he would dlscu~ the
tbne," Tom Reich told reporters matter witil basebaU Commissioner' Peter Ueberroth next week.
Friday.
Parker, 34, led the National
-"We are reviewing our options
League in batting whlle with the with counsel an\1 I am going to
· Pirates in 1917 with a .338 average consult with the &gt;layer's associaand 1m when he batted .334, hii ll tion who have a t ~ mendotis vested
home runs, drove in 117 runs and interest in this pn ceeding," Reich
was named the National League's said .
Most Valuable Player,
,
"This case is ~ very significant
case.
If iii1Ybase9 .u payer- or for
By 1983, his final year in
Pittslltrgh, his average slipped to that matter anyq ·ctY in team sports
- doesn't think/ .hat this case can
.279 with 12 home runs.

\

mortally effect them is missin g the
boat. This is a ,·rry, very serious
ac tion. this bu siness of trying to
take back monc)' that was alrea dy
ea rned.
"We arr go lng 10 consi&lt;k'r en~rv

alternative that I have airea&lt;IY
thought of illld any ot be r that
anybody else thinks of because this
is, 'Katy. bar the door," ' he sa id .

Montreal tops
-Chicago, 4-2
CHICAGO IV PII- Mitch Webster singled home Tim Raines from
second base in the eighth inning to
give Mont real a 4-2 victory Sa turday over the Chicago Cubs.
With one out in the eighth and the
scone tied 2-2. R.1i nes walked and
stole second , Wd&gt;Ster then blooped ·
a single to C'l'nter off reliever
George Frazil'l". 0-1. Webster's
third game-winning RBI madr a
winner of Mont real reliever Tim
Burke, 1-0.. Jeff Reardon pitched 1
2-3 innings fo r his first save.
·
Mike Fitzgerald, who was recalled Friday from Indiana polis of
the American Association, homered In the ninth to gtve Montreal
a 4-2 lead.

�Pomeroy-Middlepod- GallipQiis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

April 27, 1986

~~+===~~========~~====~====~~~~~==~

. Ohio-Point Plea1111t. W. Va.

-Waham--a 1•....,...
Buffalo Bisoris

Wildlife news
~Emeka-.Dam

--~--

area fishing .
.results good, student say·S

'-/II.J

By GAR\' ClARK
'11melt&amp;otlllel SWf
:::MAsoN - Matt Thompson
· ~llected thrEe hits and Matt Jewell
:ahd Mitch R®sh drove In lour runs
;each as the Wilham a White Falcons
·tetu1111!d to their winning ways with
:a five Inning 13-3 triumph over the
;Visiting Buffalo Bisons .of Putnam
·.J;ounty Frklay.
:• The Falcons, after seeing ·their
:i&gt;lght game winning streak stopped
· ~ Thursday by Hannan Trace,
;st ruck early. WHS scored six first
·Inning runs, then added two morP In
:each ol the second and third frames
:with the HnaJ three tallies crossing
·~ plate In the fifth.
Matt Thompson continued to
:vteld a sizzl ing bat for the White
)"alcons with thrEe hits for the third
: o:onsecuttve game. The senior
'ntlelder has now hit safely In nine
)f his last II official plateappearan·
~ to incrPase his batting average
:0 .490 on the season.
: Riehle Clark had with a pair of
tingles.
, Matt Jewell and Mitch Roush
enjoyed a grPa t deal rl success
: alnst the Bisons by driving in four
· · i1S apiece with two hits each.
: ~well smacked a single and a
: uble while Reust~ stroked two
es In the WHS offensive
rrage.
• ·"rhe victory improved Wahama's
~son rPCOrd to 134 on the year
and moved White Falcon head
coach Gordon Spencer towithin two
victories of his !75th win at the
Mason County schooL Spencer's
at Wahama Is mw173-97·1, a
.638 wtnnln2 oercentalle.
· : · Buffakl took a 2.0 advantage in its
: lritttal ollenslve effort on the
:strength of a Darrell McCoy homer
·Into the left centerfield bleachers.
:1\tcCoy belted a Robbie Grimm
:pitch Into the stands after two were
·wtwlth Smith on board to stake the
'fiisons to an early 2·0 lead.
Wahama quickly erased that
advantage by sending nine men to
.!J8 tIn Its half oft he Inning with six d
: tl)e nine scoring. Clark, Thompson,
·:Jewell and Roush all had hits In the
·}VIis rally with Buffalo aiding the
e~use with a pair of walks and an

rerord

&lt;

.

'

·error.
. •; The White Falcons made It 8-2 In

:;6.9%. Financing ~

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S49DD(OYER DEALER INVOICE COST)

combination returned $li.

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6.9% Financing - 6.9% ·F,inancing -6.9% Financing - 6.9% Financing

THESE UNITS ARE PRICE PROTECTED - YOU WILL NOT PAY
GENERAL MOTORS' PRICE INCREASE EFFECTIVE 4-14-86
ON THESE UNITS.

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Pme. Frame 4· 1/ 2w jamb with WP180 Brick Mould •' flp; rl . Door \Milt:&gt; l-:-

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Sturdy, bronze-toned ex truded heavy -duty aluminum tr am~ :,e re en wit h
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with stainless .steel rollers spring loaded fm '",, ..' ~. ..

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Hardware furn ished with Atrium Door Unit . Pol1she,1Kr . , ~· ·..

rt 1u· Joe~ l l·r

swing door; screen !atch and pull for slidm g srr ~: 1 • n

AU PRICES EFFECTIVE TlfRU MAY lOth, 1985

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675-1160

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Store Hours: Monday thru Friday ·8 a.m. to 5 p.m:o
Sat. 8 a.m. to 12 noon · ·
l

2 + 2 Crupe, finished in medium blue metallic wrth ckith interior, fuel injectm .
six cylinder engine, auto. trans.. ]Xlwer st~ring &amp; brakes, air cond., AM·FM
cassette stereo, cruise control, rear defogger, )Xlwer _windows, all gauge~.
aluminum s)Xlrt wheels, raised white letter rooiaf bres. -Nict locally Owned

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OUR SA LE PRICE .

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MAIL-IN REBATE . ........ .. 2se qt.

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166 80R ·13 .... .... .............. ...... 36.50
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186 76R ·14 ............. .... .... ....... 39.00
195 75A ·14 ............................ 39.50
206 76R ·14 .............. .. .. ........ ~ 40 . 60
215 75R ·14 ............ .. .... ......... 42.50
206 76ft.16 ............. ............... 41 .60
216 76R·16 ...... ........ .......... .'... 43.60
226 76R· 16 .... ............ ............ 45.00
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scorer with 32 IX&gt;ints. Janey won the
200, 100, and long jump events.
Gallipolis also won tJlc 3,200 and
l,ll)) relays. Angie Holley won the
l,ll)) and 3.200 meter run~.
Gallipolis will now take part in

RIVER CITY-

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honors with 157% points. Gal lipolis
hiid 117, Fairland 64, Hunting!gn
High 58%, Southe~stern 44, Point
Pleasant ~. · Barboursville 8 and
Hannan Trace 5.
Gallla's Kim Janey was top

163 7 EASTERN AVE:
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

A'cHRY~LER

•

.,.,

AUTO TRIM
. CENTER '

• RICHFIELD, Ohio fUPI I Cleveland Cavaliers' guard John
Jlagley underwent successfu l
surgery Friday to remove thrEe
bone spurs from his right big toe,
the third player tohavesurgerythis
week, a team spokesman said.
. Bagley, who averaged 11.7 points
and 9.4 assists last year and tota led
735 assists to break the team record
he had set In 1981·85, " 111 be on
crutches for two weeks.
.
. He then will be able to resume
light workouts, the spokesman said.
· The surgery was performed by
team physician Dr. John Bergfeld
at the Cleveland Clinic.
Bergfeld also operated on Cava II·
ers forwa rd Roy Hinson (feet) and
Edgar Jones (kneel Wednesday:

WE SE~VICE WHAT WE SELL!

NO WAITING TO ORDER

CHESAPEAKE Gallla
Academy 111gb School's girls track
and fteld ~quad finished second in
the 1986 Olesapeeke Invltatatlonal
Friday evening.
, The host. Panthers captured top

•.

the Charlestoi\.Gazette RelaysMay
2·3:
Earlier in the week, the Gallipolls
junior high boys and girls tracll
teams remained undefeated In duB:!
meets after beating Meigs.

CAll SIIVE AlL YOUR GRINDING NEEDS

~urgery successful

I

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Tub
and

"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"

.

I am a bit of a nostalgia buff. I like
things from the past. Things like ''57
Chevys, corner drug stores, baggy
baseball pants, and mu zzleloaders.
You are probably wondering what
does that have to do with fishing.
Weli, you see, my grandfather on
my mothers side helped buUd the
Galllpolb Dam. Often when I drive
by that hug~o&gt; structure or at times
while fishing the re, I contemplate
that fact.
I wonder If he ever thought , while
working on that st ructure, "some·
time In the future some of my
g r a ndc hil dr e n , or great·
grimdchlldrPn wUI probably enjoy
some good fishing herP", He
probably did. After all, that Is why
people In the past did many of the
things they did - for the future.
Lucky tor sportsmen today that
past "ildllfe and fishery conserva·
lionlsts had the fo resight to do the
many things they have done.

Jot of young hunters and fishers out
!here taking part In clean, whole·
s:.me activit ies that can provide
enjoyment throughout their life·
~me. One such young fisherman Is

HIJRR.Y, TH/$ I$ ALIMITED OFFER
•

larry Saunders of NOrthup. While
bass nshlng In a farm pond last
week; Larry landed an 18" lar~ ·
mouth. That is a bragging stu&gt; ooss
for a 16 ye~J old. Congratulations
Larry.

GAHS girls finish second in Chesa

It is nice to know that there area

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TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Tim
Buter had a rather unusual night
0
Friday night at Toledo Raceway
..
399 S. Third Street
Park - driving both ends of the
dally double.
CHIIMft
Middleport, Ohio 45760
~e
ButerscoredwlthJulii&gt;Poohln
(614)992-6421
the open lng
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and Fireworks
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In the
The
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By Tom BelvOie
Special Corrt'!!pondent
GALLIPOUS - U you prefer
catching fish to just fis hing, now Is
the time to try the Gallipolis Da mat
Eureka. According to Scott Phil·
lips, a student at Hannan Trace
.High School and who lives near the
:dam, sauger are being caught with
•great regu larity at this tlme. Scott
'told me he has filled a·few stringers
'In the last couple of weeks. That Is
yretty good fishing.
, The sauger are running in the one
.jnund to two pound class which can
'provide the angler with plenty of
:excitement. Of course, there Is
always the chance of ca tching
.~omethin g bigger, too. The sauger
:ca n be readily taken on "liver
shiner" minnows.
• Drum or white perch are also
being taken and a few while bass.
J,11e white bass spawning runs
should be beginning soon. When
tha t happens I understand a man
:Jor woman 1can get downright tired
of ca tchin g fish. I guess that Is
jJossible but I've neve!· been In that
situation yet. Maybe during the
white bass runs I'll llnd rut.

-

ISS THIS?

. J•

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AFFO D TO

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the second when Jewell doubled
hOme Clark and Thompson whO
had reached base via a base on balls
and a single. Amther two runs
came across for Wahama In the
third Inning with Thompson driving
In Gress and Clark with a two run
single to make It 10-2.
Bullalo completed Its . scoring
with a single tally In the fourth when
Smith was hit by a pitch to lead off
the Inning and latercame around on
a two base hit by Hescht.
Troy Tucker's two run single and
another RBI safety by Roush In the
fifth provided the locals with their
10 run lead and brought the game to
a close with Wahama clalnnlng a
13-3 decision.
Besides Thompson's thret&gt; hits
Clark, Jewell and Roush had two
each for the White Falcons while
Billy Marshall swatted a double;
and Todd Gress, Troy Tucker and
Matt Fisher au had singles.
Buffalo obtained a hOmP run
from Darrell McCoy; adoublefrom
Hescht; and singles from Arthur;
Smith and Fenton for their five base
knocks In the contest.
The winning pitcher was sophO·
more righthander Robbie Grimm
who nOtched his first varsity win
with Todd Gress working the final
frame In relief. Walbrown was
tagged with the klss with Hesch!
aiso tolllng on the rround for the
Bisons.
Wahama has a full schedule of
games on tap lor next week
begtnning with a visit to Spencer
slated for Monday, HaiTisville
visits m Tuesday followed by a
journey to Point Pleasant on
Wednesday. Thurs.:lay finds Wa·
hama closing out the week by
hOsting Eastern.

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The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Paga-C-3

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The place for car fanatics.
" ....--HO-=uR~s__,-~' SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
Mon.lhru Fri. B to B
PH. 446-9335
S.tunlay I to 6
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DAVE MICHAEl
MANAGER

�'
April27. 1986

April 27, 1986

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

:Page-C-4-The Sunday -Tmes-Sentinel

Gallipolis, Jackson wi'l ~ove up to Canadiens, ~a~g~rs advance .
c,t J!ip
• le--A next~--y.ear· - 0-ak HI.II. -l·n AA - -victorte~when they took 2-lleads ln

CI!NI'EII !!IJIE UIE

Wee!&lt;~

Atlanla, ·webb~ eliminate.De.troit five
. ___ _
ByBDLWOUE

UPJ Sports Wrller
Spud WebbwascutbythePistons
last summer. Friday night. he
played a key role In endlngDetmit's
season.
·
Webb sank a pair of free thi'OWS
,with three seconds left In til!' second
ovenime to help the Atlanta Hawks
eliminate Detroit from th!' NBA
playoffs with a 114-113 victory at
Pontiac. Mich.
Atlanta, which defeated Detroit
3-1 in the best-of-five - serle~. advanced to the second round for th!'
first time since 1979. The Hawks
open a best-of- seven Eastern
Conference semifinal series Sunday in Boston against the Celtics.
In the other game Friday. the
Dallas Mave&lt;icks eliminated the
Utah Jazz with a 117-113 triumph.
Tonight , the Houston Rockets
host the Denver Nuggets in th!'
opener
of their best·Of·Si'Ven
West ·
ern
Conference
semifinal series.
On Sunday, the only wmalning
first -round best-of-five series concludes in Philadelphia. ~1th the
Washington Bullets and 76ers tied
with two victories each. Also
Sunda,--, the NBA champion Los
Angeles Lakers open their best-ofseven Wl'Stern Conference semifinal at -home against the Mavericks.
:webb. at 5-foot-7 the league's
sitmllest player, was cut by_Detroit
after a rookie ca mp tryout. With six
seconds left In the first overtime,
thE' rookie from North Carolina
StatE' missed 1 of 2 from the line to
send the game Into another extra
period tied 103-103.
With Detroit leading 113-112.
Webb drove the lane on Joe
Dumars and ran straight Into kelly
Tripucka, woo was called for a foul .
Webb then swlsh!'d both the
-- :game-tying and game- winning
shots.
• Detroit was out of timeouts, and
Kent •Benson In bounded the ball to
Earl Cureton, woose soot from just
tryond halfcourt hit the backboard
and banged off the front of the rtm
as the buzzer 90unded.
. "Oh no, I wasn't nervous," said
:Webb, woo has said he has no Ul
·feeling toward Detroit for cutting
·him. "It's big pressure and Jlove to
be In that typed situation."
Webb finished with 9 points.
Atlanta 's Dominique Wilkins led all
scorers with 38. including 10 In the
: third quarter, and Randy Wittman
: added 21.
; The loss did not sit well with
- Detroit.

"That's not th!' kind of call that
should decide a great ball game."
said Kelly 1)-ipucka, who stood In
Webb's way when he drove the lane
and was whistled for a foul wht&gt;n he
grabbed th!' ball. "Noroo a guy that

we dld.lt 's hard for anyone torose."
Bill Laimtrer added 'll points for
the Pistons and Trlpuck a had :M.
Mavericks 117, Jazz IJ3
At Salt Lake City, Sam Perkins
scored 29 points and Brad Davis
size.
!Jed a postseason r€COrd by hitting
"He Wt'lll up In th!' air and I
3-polnt goals to send Dallas Into
graobed the ball." Tripucka said. five
the second round . The Mavericks
"That's oot the kind of call that captured th!' best-of-five series J.l
sho~ld decide that kind of game.
to earn th!' tight to face th!' Lakers
"Not to let a guy 5-foot-5 and In the second round .
maybe !50 pounds go to th!' line and
Mark Aguirre added :!8 points for
shoot it."
Dallas and Rolando Blackman ~
Del roil got just 6 points from the . before he fouled out. Perkins also
three substitutes It used, and that grabbed 12 rebounds.
lack of depth wore out·the Pistons.
Dallas used a 12-1 run late In the
"tWebbi is so llttle they don't third quarter and ea riy In th!' fourth
want to hurt him and he plays on It to grab a 93-S!Iead. The Mavericks
and h!' knows it." sa id Isaiah tll!n slowed the tempotorunout the
Thomas, who led Detroit wit h 30 clock rn Utah.
'
points. "When you play a ga me like
Utah . playing witoout sco1ing

Apr. :1&lt;-&lt;'LOle&lt;L ,_.,~., "" "- Apl'. ~--4)- ~ p. m .Coll~~· HN·.. ... ...... . .

leader Adrian Dantley for the fltlh
straight game. received 211 point s
from Thurl Bailey. Bobby Hansen
added 22 for the Jazz, Mark Eaton
al and 12 r\'lxmnds, and rookie Karl
Malone had 17 points.

May 1-CI&lt;lll"'I"Speciol OlvmpJ ~ .. .

May 2-&amp;8 p.m. Open Rif ........ .. . ......... -

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'

GALLIPOLIS- Pre-registration
· closed Saturday for Ill!' 191li French
: City Run.
: This year's event Is scheduled
· Saturday, May 3. Runners may still
· panlcipate by registering on the
: morning of the run .
· The races are sponsored by
: Holzer Medical Center's Recreaiton Committee and the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co .. Ga llipolis.
Activities will be conducted In
downtown Gallipolis, beglnnlng"" in
the Public Squa1'e area.
The first event is the 5-J&lt; 15,000
meters, 3.1 miles). slated for9a .m.
Second race, or the main event,
the 10-J&lt;, will start at 9:30a.m. This
is a lO,&lt;XXJ meters, or 6.2 mile
contest.
During the 5-K, the annual
Dinosaur Dash (one mile run l will
be held. beginning at 9:45a.m.
Age groups wlll apply to the 5K
and JOK races. They are:
Fourteen and under; 15-19; ~24;
25-29; 30-34; 35-39; 41l44; 50-54;
55-59; ~ and 65. over.
The Dinosaur Dash will not be
divided Into age groups.
' Cash awards and plaques will be
awarded various winners. Gallipolis merchants will donate gift
certificates.
: Registration star1s at 8 a.m. on
May 3. Cost wUI be $7. • The
registration desk will be located In
the Gallipolis City Park. All runners
tnust check In at the registration
llesk to receive a runner's package.
• Runners are required to come
dressed to run. No dressing rootns
or shower facilit ies are available.
Restrooms are available at th!'
start and finish area. Medical care
will be provided.

P«M£ROY, OHIO

I t"af" 11f dqtt•tFia h~· ~ · 1 1"\"1

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CHESTER

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of completing Its first year In UK&gt;
SEOAL, is by far the lat!ll'st school
(boys and girls) while Warren
Loca l will be the smallest.
Here is the complel&lt;&gt; classificatlon grouping for the teams in two
area leagues, and the Southeastern
Ohio district.
SEOAL Boys
School
p U p11s
Marietta .... ...........
___ .... 550
Loga n
. .... .........
478
......
..
Athens· ····
··········· ... 392
Gallipolis ..
kso

J

3C •

. .... 367

0 •·· ···•••••••• ·•• •·•· · · ·· ··• ·

Warren Loca l....... ,...... ,........ ,

SEOAL Gir'"
0

359

:ws

School

Puplls
Marietta .. ................... ...... .. .. 537

Logan ... ......... ..... ..... ...... ... ... 446

A1)xlns .. .. ....... .. .................... 339
G u· I'
336
"lpDIS .............................. ,
Jackson .............
. ... 336
Warren LocaL ....
______ 331
SVAC Boys
School
· Pupils

Oak Hill ............. .......... .. .... . 184
Nort h Gallia ................ ........ 134

.Symmes V3 II ey ,, ... .. ,,., .. ...... , ]'29

SoutJ'xlm .......... .. .. .... ............ 124
E 1
Ill
asern., , .. , .. , .. ,,.,.,,,, ,,, ,,,,.,,,,
Kyger Cra?k .... ."....... ·•.... .. .... 96
Hannan Trace .... ,.... ............. . 93
Sout hwestern . .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. ... 82

SVAC GlrL'i

School
p UplltitOak Hill ...... _ _ ___ .. _______ ,.. l&amp;'i
Eastprn .......... ... ................. 114

: Pre-registration closes for
: this year's French City Run

"'bp. 4·30-86 I

Smitt. NoiSOfl Motors

Thl' ' '1"1\" (..111 Jl· Bu\ Sus:m·ul&lt; 'I• o\\ c· r , ~n d•• I
l&lt;"••rk ••f he·~ t11n111 JVId ~pro:od d1ppu1~~. '111!:

Aml tht· ~1n~ ou~ dur;tbl.· La·,rn · l ~ '' en·
~h· mftl.t· ~ II ""' 'f ill and un l11r t· ~tr~

official enrollment figures submit·
ted in October the previms year in
the freshmen, sophomore and
junior classes.
Marietta, which is tn the rrocess

ADDITIONAL PARTS &amp; LABOR EXTRA

"'~- 4-30-16

______________________ J

m;J,,.,. 11 tjUh ~ and tk·p,_.ntbblo. .to ~t art

. A school's classifica 1k&gt;n in both
• boys and girls sports is based on

$1995

$1495
rt·ar b.1,11., mukh a11d shn·d ~: alh

during the 1986-87 school year.
The OHSAA determined 358 boys
or less in the uppPr three gradC's
would place a schQOl in AA status.
J k
·
3.59
ac son comes tn at . , just onC'
over the limit.
·
. th So
Other boys tc·
ilmS In
e
Utheastem District changing d ass
competition this fall will be Oak Hill
and Rlchrnondale Southeastern.
.The Oaks .and Panthers will both
·. ·move up to Class AA.
· Oak Hill. Cl member of t~
Southern Vallev Athl t" C nf
•,
~
.J
(I IC
(1 er·
.; cnce, is the only Class AA school in
' 'the eighf team teague
,·
·

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SY-STEM SERVICE AT SPECIAL VALUES TO

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JACKSON - A "new look'
Soutll!astem Ohio Athletic League
((I 19aJ.87 will feature five Class
AAA schools and only one AA
member under new standards set
up by the Ohio High School Athletic
Assoclation.
Most notable changes will be at
Ga llipolis and Jackson. The Blue
Devils and Ironmen boys teams will
move up to Class AAA this fall .
Warren L?Cal, who will become 3
be f lh SEOAL J
mem r 0 c
n August.

Apr. J)-Q-8 p.m . CoUt&gt;gC' R1'C..

••

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April !l, 19111

U&amp;Me-GjmDIIIum
Apr. 77-2-5 p.m. Opt&gt;n Rl't'.. ....
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Tournament planned

For additional Information. contact Dawn Meadows, hospital
maintenance, 44&amp;-S:m, or Brenda
Keefer. neurology department , 44&amp;5176.

The Gary Putman Memorial
Softball Tournament will II' held
May 3-4 at Federal Hocking High
Sc hool aiStewart. Entry fee for the
first 16 teams is $65 and two
softballs. For Informat ion call
667-694li or 667-6484.

Byi,JIAHARRIS
playedlntheAdamsDivisionflnal
UPI Sport$ Wrlrer
their respective best-of-seven Stan· series . .
The spate-of upsets In the ear)y_ F ~ey_Cup qu&lt;lrterflnals aga inst the
The Canadlens. on th!'.strength of
going of the playoffs set people to ' Canadlehs and Ellrnonton 011ers. - a 16-B soot adva ntage, jumped to a
wondering If the Stanley Cup would _ But In the two previous nights, the 3-() lead during the first period·, a
go to some brash, young team.
Oilers lashed back with vengeance novelty In the series and a txmusfor
Now, after Frk!ay night's games, to tie the Smythe DivL&lt;ion scrles)-2 Montrea l's top-flight defense. ·
the tide may be turning for sorr.e and reclaim home advantage from
Guy Ca rbonneau, Montreal's defvery traditional, established teams. the Flames, and the Whalers have ensive specialist, scored shortThe Montreal Canadlens and been put one game away from handed and Mats Naslund and
New York Rangers, rivals since the elimination. Canadlens 5, Whalers 3 Claude Lemieux added power play
NHL had onlv" six teams, moved a
At Montreal, the Canadiens goals. Carbonneau, the cent_er
step closer Friday night to a dominated the opening period for whose primary duties are shadowshowdown In the Wales Conference the flfth time in the five games
Contlnued on C-6
fi I f
h lgh
I
r
h
na or t e r t to pay or t e
.,
Cup.

Each team took a 3-2 lead ln its
best-of-seven Cup quarterfinal Friday night and can advance with a
victory Sunday.
The Canadiens defeated the
H tf rd Wh 1 53 1 th M l
ar o
a ers · a
e on ·
real Forum, and the Rangers

downed the Washing1onCapltals4 2

Botti series will resume Sunday,
at !he Hartford Civic Center and
Madison Square Garden. SUes
would switch lfGame7 is necessary
in ei1her series.
Both Campbell Conference series
are tied 2-2 heading into Game 5

.

CAROL LSNOWOEN
411 Second Ave .

Gallipoli'i, Oh .
Phone 446·4290
Home 446·4518

sites
Monday for Ga me 6.
Q
nly a few nights ago, the teams
setting off im&lt;;tgination were the
Hartford Whalers. brash survivors
of the World Hockey Assoc iation;
and the Calgary Flames, refugees
from an NHL expansion team that
Atlanta abandoned.
Both appea red headed to upset

II UI

r•o•

IN \U U. N C~

State Farm Mutual
Automobtle Insurance Company
Home ou.ce Bloomtngton , IllinOIS

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7:00 P.M. LADIES HANDICAP
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_ Ask one of them. th en give me a call.

tonight The Edmonton Oiler s host
'
•
the Calgary Flames in the Smythe
Division, and the St. Louis Blues
host the Toronto Maple Leafs in the
Norris. Both series will alternate

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State farm?

1986 SUMMER LEAGUES

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SKY-LINE LANES INC.

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-

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The Sunday Time$-Sentinei-Page-C-5

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

26~

Third Ave.

CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE. STORE
Phont 446-3314

The Commercial 8r Savings Bank

Gallipolis

to Eliminate the Hard Work From Yard Work

.

-

25 Court Street

.,

•

. '

....

Silver Bridge Plaza

Spring Valley

Member FDIC

•

'

~
CARROLL
NORRIS

\

..

\

MIKE
NORTHUP

DALLAS
WEBER

TOMMY
SPRAGUE

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE inc.
YOUR CHRYSLER-DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER
441»-0842
300 THIRD AVE •

GALLIPOLIS

·-·•
•

•

..
1

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. w. Va.

April .-7. 1986

Canad ";ens' Ran.u.ers
• "'l:l
••

..

~

T

'

continued rro1~ c.:.
··----~:::,:::::.:::_.::::.:;,;_;:..:,___

three games, Sandstrom has scored
In both Games 3and 4.
Maple Leafs at B..e11
At St. Louis, Bernie Federko,
~!'Jllally a peaceab!L_man on tile_
Ice, said the St. Louis Blues will tvready ilnlght If the Toronto Maple
Leafs Insist on rough-and-tumble
hockey.
"We have to do whati'Ver we can
lo win this series," Federko said.
"lfthat'sthe way theywanttoplay,
that's the way we'll play. They lrled
to Intimidate us. We had to play that
way."

lng .ottv-r teams' top players and
penalty- ldlllng; and rookie Le·
··"' mleux, promoted from the minors,
are Montreal's sw-prislng postsea·
- ll:ln goai.SIXlrtng leaders withJlve -·
each. Ran~n 4, Capitals 2
At Landover, · Md., New York
goalie John Vanblesbrouck stop~
the final 26 shots he faced and
Tomas San!Etrom scored the
' '
game-winner at 13: 49 o! the second
perl:ld against the favored Capital§
lo draw the Rangers within a game
of IIS first conference ftnal appear·
ance In sev'en years. In 19~. the
Rangers lost to the Canadlens 4-lin
the Stanley Cup finals.
The Capitals led by 2·0ooa palr&lt;t
power-play goals 34 seconds apart
only 3:34 lnio the game, but
Vanblesbrouck was perfect In the
net the rest of the way, as the
'
and country club. 'lbe compleK wW be auwtructed on
ACC.EI'TS CHECK FOR FW.'D-RAISING PRORangers scored the final tow- goals.
the old GSllalrnland, located on MlD Creek Rd., oil
JECT - ,Jeff and Vera Snedaker, of The Shakf
The Capitals outshot the Rangers
Slate Rt. 7. The proJect Is expected to be up lor bid In
Shoppe, present Ron Toler, right, ol the Gallipolis Golf
32·Z7, tut New York exploited a
the next lew weeks. Groimdbrealdng ceremonies ttr
Cluh, a check during current lund-raising project for
sloppy Washington defense, which
the IS-hole course Is slated sometbne In June.
Ill(' orglUtization's proposed $1.1 million golf coursf
was rated No. 2 ill the NHL durtng
the regular season. New York has
rebounded from two-goal deficits In
each of Its three victories In the
W-Lcffens 12-01. LMln ton tH 1
series.
181 . Mlmon 19• .md BIT'~·. M!'l\'ln:
Ant~ •Mun l .r~t'
HRs-san Frandsco, Maldonack&gt; Ill : San
1'hunn.md . Sialdard ,;"· Wah('l
161.
f 'h.lrttl ll!O 01) lUI - 3 i I
After helJ1g shut out In the Orst
DIE'j!O, Ne!tlf'S Il l, Ll'ffi&gt;rt!i Ill .
COO.'iil~t' IS1 , l.i'ffcr1s , )}! Hnd

The Sunday n~s-Sentinei- Page-C-7

April 27, 1986

Federko, tre St. Louis Blues'
leading scorer each of the last eight
seasons, Friday signed a three-year
contract.

FlameS at Ollen

- The Calgary Flames' misslon-~ ­

to end tfie Edmonton Oilers'
domination. The Oilers want to tv- a
dynasty .
With a series of brawls breaking
out In the third period of Gam? t ,
tre BatUe of Altv-rta Is finally
everything It was hyped to tv-. UnW •
then, the fighting took a lllck seat to
tough, fast playoff hockey.

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Arter mfr's 3.00 rebate

Monroe
Gas Magnums

Sal• 22.88. Reg. 29.95

LowAI$20
Per Month
On Cltlllnt•

Big 10" woofer, 2'/•"
tweeter, 4' mid·
range. Walnut ve·
neer. 23'12'' high.

From

19.95

12 wans per channel, digital tun. , fils in dash. H12·t916

H40-4033

SteerinG Stabilizers

EQUALS

COMPLUI·
LINE OF
PARTS

FACTORY
TRAINED
ME(HAHICS
15 YURS
UPERIIHU

Reg. lrom 25T5

Value For Your Dollars

- - Cut

tBetween new and May 17. 1986. take $1 ooo.oo
off the retail price on any new Gravely 8000
Series Riding Tractor. Combine this with Gravely's
5-Year Limited WamJnty (parts &amp; labor) andyDu've
got the best value for your dollars.

~

------

2415

' 5-YEAR LI MITED WARRAN'TY. Warnnty

Dual alarmsl Banery Backup if
AC fails. LED dlaplay. l12-1555

may vary depending on equipment purchased
cmd actual use. Details on request.

Offer not volid with any other promotion.
FINANCING AVAILABLE

~GRAVELY.
"Y/;,-,,rg 1.916 ..

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES
&amp; SERVICE
MANNING .OUSH-OWIIR

204 -Condor St. ,

992·H75

P-roy

Walkie-Talkie

Nova•-52 by Realistic

Cut 33o/o

HALF PRICE

29.95

5915

;:.:.

Reg. 119.95

Priority switch leis you instantly
go to Emergency Ch . 9 or High·
Ch. 19. "21-1511

Fold-Up Headphones Cassette Recorder

TRC.as by Realistic

19!.!

34.95·

HALF

29% PRICE

Reg. 34.95

gas

Mlnisene•-9 by Realistic

HALF

PRICE
Folded

29!!59.95

I "
f
.

'

.... - ;

.
@

. '

~

•

•PROGRAMMABLE TOUCH-TONEIP\JLSE pltones wollton llollllone onclpjjle lines. Tltorlfore, iol arouhaYing onlvpulse (rolary diall 6roes, you can 51111

.

.

use services requiring tones, hke thllliW tona·distti'ICt systems irJd c:ofl1)Utlri21d services. FCC ~red . We service what we sell.

A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

revolving credit from Citiblnk. Payment may vary depending on baln:e ..

Reg. from ~9.95

5.00 oil

•

Qualco Repair Products
8ondo Cream Hardener

for lightweight bOdy IIIIer Reg. 1.39. #9 13

Windshield Mirror and
Auto Trim Adhesive
Reg. 1.89. A'994

Qualco Gas Tank Leak Sealer

Reg. 1.69,1110

Radiator l.eak Sealer

Reg. 1.79. 1820

. Windshield Sealer

Muffler·llfeld Exhaust Repair

Reg. 1.69. M914

Reg. 1.69. W!Ot

Plasfic,Spreaders

Muffler·Casf Exhaust Svstem
Bandage Wrap

in3sitesReg . 1.19. M357

Sanding Block Sandpaper

6 sheets per pack. in assortedgradtsAeg. 1.79. 1826

SuDer Glue

Check Your Phone Book for the l&amp;llllllll&amp;eiC Store or Dealer Nearest You

Variable Rate
Coil SDrings

,:1

Reg.) .l9.n11 ·

•C~illrte

6 .00 oft

From

Chronomatic:S·248 by Realistic

Blckup blttery utra

Gravl'ly tour wneel tractor Wlttl t ne e~c l uSIVE
all qeard1rect cJnve. 8-spteel transmiSSion
Instant fmwara/reverse, Mower5 available m
40. 50, aM 60 1n&lt;h w1cJtlls.

Save I 0.00

49.88
59.88

Mr. Fix Rivets

6 oz. In over 100 colors

5-Vear Warranty·

Delco Dura Power Batteries

l.everActfon
Grease Guns

Save '60

low As 120 Ptr Month on Cltlllno •
LeHer.quality printing at over 200
words per minute! #26-1278

Offt

lapco Alternators

for mostforolgn lppllutiono

all the

IBM• PC comfalible! Ready to use with versatile DeskMate S.in-t software package featuring
text processing, electronic liling and telecommunications. #"25-tOOOn021

GRAVE~

$1000.00

two year ll,)fr warranl y

Reg. 84c, limit 12

Low As 120 Por Month on CHILina •

Reg.179.95

- tl J t

Premium Alternators

wMhexchange

Reg. 1.09, llmK t2, #183

11995

GENSTAR

lmlln ~l

om 012 001 -

10W40
Motor .Oil

·Because your car
is special.

•ao

Get a CM-4 Color Monitor AI No Charge
When You Purchase Our T1ndy 10001

!._;;;;;;;;;;;;;;&lt;===;\

JU{~- l .cr-

ti t

."-r!

\\'

-. John~n

1.H h .
Aner-1&lt;''. fli'Ofk
.:!• ; ,\l l.•ni.J, \\ a-.tlln'-"on 11 • l\1:\olurph~ 14•
I~

wfth exchange

one year free replacement

Save $100

JUhll'oO.Jn umt \ 'l rWI . \\o •k·h. \',m~ BN~

1k1 .mtl
1. - \\ ('lf h

Integral Alternators

Tradco

Save

Reg. Separate
lteme1298.95

Do It yourself
quickly and easily.

PUJ;hr

RnJ..,· r.---1 t2Z,

with exchange

4Guard
5W30 Motor Oil

gggoo

REPAIR POTHOlES WRH
SAKRETE· BLACk lOP MIX.

and 1\h·lo. Bll nrrlf&gt;ll(&gt;: Edu&lt;rS ~'\ . F'ru.-\!'r
1g '. Kt'Ollf.m 1ll r a nd Da,·J ~ . w- Ht•ardon

•11·\ 1
1.11. \\ allart1 t21

Reg. 1.t9

one year free rat~laceme.fti

'29995

ancl Tt'ltlrton \\-Haa.'&gt; t l Ill . 1.-Yount::
t:!-'l• !lit - S4 •.ti!IP, A Da1·is 151
Nl6doru&amp;ll£ar;ur
11 Innings •
Mnl 100 001 001 ft.! - -1 10 2
Ok· .OOJ tollm 00 - 'L ~0
Tlt:bi . 1\Lirkr 11 1. fU~· 1f11 . Ri' ttrOO n 1101
L-1\Pu~ h

Resistor
Spark Plugs

Remanufactured
Alternators

Model14

Save

Ullllld MKIIllH:~ - II II I
'IOU!l!, S~~o· lfl 1! 1, Mlra!:wllla 161 and
Y• •m!l~ . 1\i 'diU'~ . Ha a~ . Orll i\"Nfl'&gt; 1ti 1.
t\lt'l' I'To n til. ~l'f Iii . MtxJ IW'j' ~larTl 17 1

Rnit!k..~

Air filters

VHS VCR With Wireless
Remote Control

Tandy® 1000 Computer
With Color Monitor!

WI 0011100 - - 2_ K1

12 11

Motorcraft

,:~&gt;.

Everyday Low Prices
on Alternators

ltH-TI ' Kii~. S Jau¢11

St:lll\1

COS I

finll

.

•

,,,.,,

lor most Ford oppllcations
Reg.4.95

Tf'la.o; 1m 1m n10 - L 5 J
H i ~:u• · •·,, .md Mc•1n ·. r;wm1m. It \.\. rll!llt
' ~ '· I!Oto·mn 1~ 1 . H t'fl l) 1''11 . Mahit'r r9 o and
r l .l •

Reg. 3.95

Reg.94e

Office Houri 10:00 A.M.·S:OO P.M....., Will., Fri.
2:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Tuesday and lhursday Evenings

( 10 lnnlnn J
Tnmn1 OOUOI DIU I - 29 J
lltmr MJOOtlfllfiR - 1 9 1
,\11 ' .\lln l ~ ' l' . F:lrhhorn 1 ~1 a nd lh •ar mn.
M:u·tlnt •t. l),o&lt;'ls. t\11"'' 1 ~1. Bot'di i\fl1 ,mrl

\\ - ll ij.,'\11'1'.1 1:! ) I L -

2.4 9

you•

Non-Resistor
Spark Plugs

·

•Epidural Deliveries
•Tubal Repairs

101 Otl 001 - ~- H I
00! 0412 :rb -- ; I ~ 0
Slaton. Fm~ h 161 a nd llri:Jr~~·. l~hk"!'n
~It !\.ilol '&gt; \\' - Rl\'kVrt1 12·01 1.--Siollon
rl l ' lll l~-Mi nB."' OIJ , Srnallfo\ .:! 1; C1 1lfor
n1.1 .. L1r k-.un .~,

S1, n~hl

Oil
filters
tor most Ford applications

OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERTILITY

~nst

)t)wk

3.99~
- 1.50 ~g~,.

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

( 'alll

•

Motorcraft

AC Air Fillers

K&lt;

1\-&lt; 1 I - ! )111 tl o1 2•
Br..t! 1!1 :\lutk'\ ,,],

f .50 mfr'a rebate!

Autolite

Allor mtr's t ,50 rebate

Sa.. 3.99, Reg. 4.95

.\ni lk'ill r l ! 1

- t

"1.49
2.49
2 49
3.99
AHer mlr'a U)t) r-e

Sa.. 2.49, Reg. 3.95

RIO. 1.49,1151

Exhaust Svstem Joint &amp; Crack Sealer
Reg. l.lt, #160

209 UPPER RIVER ROAO
GALLIPOLIS, OH~

Your.,

88

11.88

Choice • •

Body Side
Moldings

18" Stainless
CoolinG Fan

5·1' wkt1h, tolldor
~tonp ,

in lotlolcolors

Reg. t6.9S. 1'1080

or Wheel Well Trim
In chrome or black

#4e2001R. 412014R Reg. to.t5

7.95

9.88

fan SDacers Kit
#14536, 1~548. 14556

Novaaoflj
Side Moldings
111· _ ,

Everyday Low Pric•

•·

RIO. 13.4t

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
•tore hour•ll:30 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Mondar through Friday,
8:30a.m. to 8:00 p.m. lti~y ·llld 10:00 .:m. 111 5:00
Sunc!av·
'

p.m

�~··.

Ohio-Poirlt

.,

- MajOni

,_....._kiM!

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NY

W L Pti. GB
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9
7

Sr. Lou
PhU.

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Pl~¢1

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Hw~10n

11

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-.: San [")fro

10

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Monltl'ill t Olk'ago 2 1!1 innUlJ!" 1

Phrladl'tpttia fi. fllrt sbu il!h .1
:0.:1'\t· York 9, ST l.ruls u

All.ilnta 4. Los An,l!f'I('S 1
San Dit'fl{) 9. s,l/1 Fr;Jild&gt;;(.U " I 1.! inninl&lt;!- 1

Scn.. IQ '!!!Gan-

,\llanlil 011 l.o.• Anp-IN; S.m Fr.utd.&lt;c:'O 31

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5\0..Ul-1

8

9 .471

f'ridl.r'• Rertub
~· ' 'ork 10. C'\&gt;\'f'11111d :l
Cl11r&lt;¥!0 9. Drfmit 7
Toronto 2. BaiTirMn" I , IJ inninRS

--·

. Blacktop maintenance
now can sa~ you many dollars
later. .. and you can do it you!'
self with SAKRETE Blacktop Milt
Everything is in the bag. Just
place and tamp for smooth,
professional results,
To beautify and protect
JOUr blacktop surfaces, use.
SAKRETE~ Blacktop Sealer. ·
SAKRETE• does the job,,or
the SAKRETE product is FREE.*

~a r kma l Lc&gt;agur- Wrk'h. LA 3l: Hyan.

llw ~: Gooc:f&gt;n. NY S'ld ~lciUfc, Oil 'll;
Smllh, All nnd Valerv.LI."'a, LA Zl
Amf'rk'an LraJlU~- RI)O, Oak 39: Hunt ,
Bls 33: H!gtrni. M il and VIola. Min li:
Monis. 01:1 !I

.....

Natk&gt;nal l.e8111&lt;" - Smith. Hou 6: Woi'T'ell,
SIL J: llt'\'('n pltdi&lt;"'"S lll'd Wilt\ 2.

A.ml'rican U&gt;if!U(' Rl!!:hl&gt;lll. N"r'
tif'd with l

Milll':lu)l(&gt;fo 11 . Tl'!lt~ S I

FUTURES' IIICUIDE:

~:

Jtrorna~ . ~

and

Aue, Ba h 4: live p\ICho:&gt;rs

Kunsas Ciry G. Ba;ton 0
Mlnir.'iOia 7. C:1lllornli:l 4
ClBklimd 11. !'.NI1!1l' 2

&amp;uii'-Y'I GIUIW!I
Cllk'aRO al Drrroil

_...

(l(o.·f'land a1 ]'1.' 1'\'.' ' 'ork

Transactions
,.

Toronto at Rot l!lmor~ •
rallbrnia \JI Mlntw"&lt;ooOa

fb.ton at Kansas Clly
Il l Tr~a ~

1 Ra ~od

,l!aml'S

...

..,

on .1.1 ptal('

«':t~:'h

Ita.&gt;. Pill
Kn l,ithl, ~ y
Mrllt\', At!
Uunru. SF'
~mdt . P

Carrrr. f\.'Y
Morlnd. Cll

Parkrr. Cn
Smllh. STL
D.yblr. N

O'BI'In . n:

Nal«' ~~ rrom
1M:lna I l..i&gt; llflUf'.

Cb lca,(olO

Rochesl('&lt;r"

rAL 1 -

1~

Relnstaled seaJnd

a p~&lt;Jr&lt;Ul{'('S

11 no. of

t&lt;'am 1\as p1ay1'&lt;11

NM...-LI!JIP"
t•hrllpt'l
L2 oUI ~ 22 .4~
9 JJ 10 IJ .J!K
I ~ .'to! I ~ 21 ..EI
16 6J JJ l2 .349
1.l ~ 7 \8 .:wti
12 47 II 16 .JfJ
Hm719.:m
13 M 10 18 .Jil
Ll .e 6 15 .333
11 40 9 lJ ..125
Anwric.n ~.e.~ 5.'11&amp; %1 J96

Yoo nl, Mil

H 56 722 .:m

Tabk&gt;r·. Cl\'

1556 7 2J .m

1~ :

M&gt;nl pltch£'1" Juan

~~10 I Q BWfakl

SWodlotp ... April ~ -

Teom
PI&amp;
Blmla's Boullq.................... .,......•.... ., lll
tl1.ney WlrK&gt; (WMPO I ......... .. .................. !II
Dan's....................
.. ....... 54
Fran ct.!\ Florist. ......................... .. ... .... !W
Simmons Ollis. Cad. &amp; Chev ......... ,. ....... .41
PIZZa Dan ..•... .................................... ..41

Pools Plus ..... .- .......... ........ .................... .(1

11j;,f~:h\s:'C~;;;&lt;::.: tifib;;'fiii~: i9ii!
H ~h

Ind. G.arnf' - SandY Butcher, 189: lrd
HIS&lt;h Ind. GaiT\I' - Sand)! H)'S&lt;ll.l8l IS High
lnd. :IGamES- Bmtda H:IAA)', IDI: 2nd Hi!!h
Ind. 3-Games .;_ Shirley Slmrrons, '193; 3rd
H~h lnd. 3-Games- Sandy Folmer. aJ.
"1st H!Sth Tf'am Gam£&gt;- Plxl.a Dan, 1019:

H~ h Team Camr -:.- Brenda'S ib.itiqUf',
lOJ5; 3rt! ~ h Tram Gamt' - Brmda·s
BouUquf, 1007; 1st High T(lam J.CarT'I('S Bn'lllla's Boullque. 2942: 2nd HIR!t Tmm

2nd

_L

Chek ru• •• ..,,,. toa hy

- " ' lor

April

~

111111

PI&amp;
Hlnl'Y ~lrw rWMP01 ........................ 6&amp;
Brrnda "BoutlqUf" . ....
.. ... &amp;!

Team

Dan's...................

...... ....... &amp;!

Francl'l Flortsl .. .....

.. ........................ M

stmrnon.c; Olds ... ...

......................... ~

=

b!.u; :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::
11fstH~h~c,~~~r -~- Fhin ·Maii tKWs:·i9~

2DdHigh Ind. GJmf' - DonnaGr:uc,l95; Jrd

r

._h lnd. Gam&lt;'- Max\n(l Ro!Msoo , 193; lsi
lnd. 3-Ga~ -Maxine Rotin."oo. $1:
H l~h Ind. J..Gamf'! - Fran Ma.HI"PA·s.
l~ Hl~h Ind ..l{;omrs - Junr Lambl'rl .

••r••er•l

ER

BAU LU

see )'0111' local SAKRETE pmductJ dealer NOw.

Chester. Ohio -

SllJ'N.' ClU b.

NN York INLt- ~IYa tf.'d oolfk-ldt&gt;r

Mookk' V.~ tsor~ and a•~an«~ 1\lm to
TI!Pwat£'r c:ltlP lntematklnal Lf.~.

""""'

-

.
K&lt;'ftt Sta tE' - Named OlfKI~t· CUinfllw!orGQMuonbr.dfootblll coach........
Grt'E'n Bay -CRiterBI&amp;e-Moore-rrtlrrd.
~

Louis -

Signed forward 8Prnk&gt;

F'cdrrkD 10 11\rol'-),.ar oontrllt't .

Htllh Team Game- Dan's &amp; Hiney Wlnt&gt;
~\VMPO) , 1(0); Jrd Hlp:h Tfam Ga.Mf' Dan's. 917: 1st High Team 3-Galll('S- Ql.n 's.
;JJJ7: 2nd Hll!h Tmm WarnE!!- Pools Plus.
293): 3111 High Toam 3Gamos - Hlney Wbl•

run all
overt e J!lace. ••
One lace has it all•.

Plan tournament

.....•

MUSTANG LX

1986

.
ONL1 S17 593"• MTH.
STOCI 1714
S.._ f•• &amp; ntlo food •••
9.9!'/o A.P.R. 41 MTHS. '1200.00 DOWN oa Nn

~.

-~

,....

:r· ,•Low
Prices

PHONE 446-622 5
IllS EAmRN AVE.
GAWPOUS, OHIO

*low Finance Rates
•Low

AS LOW AS
,,

7.9°/o.
48 MONI'HS

A.P.R.

1986
ESCORt

ON THE SPOT

BANK FINANCING!!
STOCII7U

ONLY

1986 FORD
CONVERSION VAN

'1,8,90000

S148 21

,........ , .. s... &amp; Tltlo
sm10.00 DOWN Ga NET TRADE

PAT HILL. ,
FORD, Inc.
'

MIDDLEPORT,,OHIO
992-2196
,,

CHARLESTON, W.Va. !UP!) -Key Centurton Bancshares Inc.
announced earlier this week It had lirst quarter JrOfits ol1mre than
$3 million. or double Its peJ1ormanre In the same period a year ago.
The ea rnings amount Io 71 cents per share, compared to Ul cent s a
year ago.
Key Centurion Is !he parent company of First Huntington National
Ba nk, Charleston National Bank, Clfizens Nalbnal of Point
Pleasant , the Nallonal Banko! Logan, Citizens National dSt. Albans
and Ca rdinal State Bank of Beckley.
Key Centurion reported net Income of $3,!Xl3,00J for the first
quarter ended March 31. compared to$1,579,00J fort he first quarter
of 1985.
The banking COilJOration reported net assets ci $11 billion,
compared to $547 million In 191l5. Total depos it s were at $885 million,
compared to S448 million.

Speed control, power locks, AM / FM caaette, Pre,
sound system:

West Virginia
Electric has it•••

Cusloo1 Cooversion by starcruiset, finished indesert tan metallic Yti1h ligllttan
&amp; brown .:cent stripes &amp; brown velour ilterior, ~uiJ!POO with fuel in~b!l
302 v.a en~ne. auto. werdrive trans., PS, PB, dual front &amp; rear ir cond, &amp;
heat ~er wildows &amp; door locks, tin whee~ cruise cootml, delay wipers,
AtMM cassette stereo,CS!llllo, weilead TV, t.Yo·lokl rear couch, 4 captain's
chairs, 3large vista-ooy windows, curtains &amp; binds, lii:k boards, sn~~:k trays,
rear comer cbset. ice chest, cus1om whrel covers, running boards,oontinentat
spare tire kit plus much more!!

MASON - Wahama High School students captured four honors at
the recent Future Business Leaders ol America oonventlon lor West
Virginia held at Marshall University, Including first place In state
project and Who's Who In FBI.A .
Stacy Reed won third place In the Entrepreneurshlp l.oompetltlon,
whlle Myron Fields was cited in the first place posltlon for Woo's
Who In FBLA . Wahama was third In the competition for Qlapler d
the Year, wit h Wlrt County High School taklngftrst place and Brooke
High School second place.
For the top spot In the state project, Wahama's chapter bested
South Branch Vocational Center arid Brooke High School. In the
Who' s Who In FLBA, Crystal Paxton of Walton High School placed
second.

Key Centurion announces profits

ed Someihl•·l
Electrical?

• 1st Hl~h Team GamC' - Dan's, :Hll1: 200

GALLIPOLIS - Advanced Cleaning SeJVlce of GaU!polls has been
named as one oil he first certified applicators of a new carpet o&lt;lor
and stain control product from Dow Corning CollJ.
·.
The certiflcallon came folk&gt;wlng a speclallralnlng program. The
new product Sylgard, Is applied to existing carpets after routine
cleaning. The treatment works by checking t~ growth of rrold.
mildew and other germs caused by food spills, pets, high humidity
and tracked·ln dirt.
Once Sylgard Is applied to a carpel,lhoseproblemsare "virtually"
eliminated, Dow Coming o!ftclals said.
•
Dean Barry of Advanced Cleaning said the treatment is invisibly
tlound to carpet fiber and remains effecllve for one year following
application.
Located at 2m Klneon Drive, Advan&lt;Fd Cleaning has been In the
professional cleaning business In the Gallipolis arl!l! for 13 years .

Area sclwol captures honors

POMEROY- The Gary Putman
Memorial Softball Tournament wUI
be held May 3 and 4 at FedPral
Hock.lng High School, Stewart.
Registration Is $65 and two balls for
the first 16 teams. For lnfonnallon
call 667-6946 or 667-6484.

161.

,,

.'

!WMPOI, 2!1Z.

3-C;tn~ - HI~ Win&lt;' !WMPOI. ~11 : 3rd
Hl~h Tram J..Gam£'!'1 - Plu.a Il:m . 2ml

SK\'l)NE RO~UNG LAN EN
MOR~1NG GWRitl!

Area firm tries new procesS

110

=-1 . . -

worldwide, and Is approaching $1
billion In sales.
The oon1pany makes metallic
and rubber oomponents and re·
plocement parts lbr more than
lO,!XXl cusiomers In the auto, ·
maclllnery; farm and construction
equipment Industries .
Ga!Ua County Commissioners T.
Kall Burleson, J .E. "Dick". Cre·
meens and Verlln Swain, Saturday
extended "a slnrere thanks to the
lndustrtes In and around Gallla
County."
'
The oommlssiorers have pro·
claimed April 21·28 as Indu strial
Appreclallon Week, and April 28 as
Industrial Appreciation Day for all
area plants, both large and small.
Commission President Burleson,
on behalf of the commission, In a
statement to the Times·Sentlnel,
said, "Many tlmes, tiE ecommlc
and social impact of Industry Is not
fully appreciated to the succes of a
community. It Is tiE intent of the
commissioners to publicly display
our thanks and gra titude to' our
Industry . We hQpe to make Ga Uta
County and a ttractive and gro wing
community."

Tlll"'l'EAR'S HONOREE - Federal Mogul Corp, will he signaled
out during the 1986 Gallla County In&lt;llstrial Appreciation IIIUier

,----Business Briefs: - - - r SIFE

SELECTION ON GOOD USED
PRICED TO SELL.

of

American Association I AMI .
Mlnnl'90UI - ~ pltdwr Roy Ln_.
Jack!on 10 a m1n6t k'a,lUt&gt; ('ODtnrc:t.
Montl'l'llt - OpmnNI catdk&gt;r Tom N~o
to lndt811.11pl1b (( th.&gt; Am eric an AssociatiOn:
recaJkod calcht&gt;r M!kf&gt; Fh1p111ld rrom lbP

Local bowling
SKY~0~~~'frm

Model 416-8

product at a

IJittrna -

tJ.a!!(&gt;man Julio Cru1. rrom l!klay di.S.blf:&gt;d

t6 HP Kohler engine • B·Speed
Uni·Driw ·• lransaxle • Hour·
meter • Voltmeter •·HaioQen ·
headlights •t5 amp Charging
system • t5" Steering wheel •
Tach·a·matic '" hitch system •
Structural steellrame • Wide
front &amp; rear turtlires • Delu&lt;e
·. seat &amp; trim • Greasable
spindles

'Set )(lUI lOCAl iWirn dealef b dettik.
SN:J£rt is I~ trademaltt o( SAKR£TE. K

Bil ltlrrort• - Pltia&gt;d ltofl· handed retle\&lt;'.,Ttppy M an~ on rtv&gt; 21-day dl.sablfd llst
rff('('ll\'(' April 21: CaJJed up ,_t\t·hllnlle'r

S(&gt;atTt&gt; al O:~ kland

Leaders

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpoll&amp;' Fed·
eral -Mogul facility, 2160 Eastern
Ave., will be the 1986 honoree
durtng Monday night's Gallla
County Industrtal Awreclatlon
banquet at tile Holiday Inn.
.The Ga!Upolls ·plant was built in
1967·70, and encompasS(&gt;S 22 acres
of property within the d ty llmlts.
The plant buildings contain
128,400 square feet of floor space, of
which 96,00J square feet Is used In
the manufacturing process.
The Slnta Forge proces'S Is used
at the Federal Mogul facility. With
this method, metal parts are
produced by the hot forging or alloy
steel JXlWders lnlo high density and
high strength precision products.
Approximately 319 Individuals
are employed at the Ga!Upolls
plant, 229 from Gallla County.
The plan t has an annual payroll of
more than $6 million and pays
Gallla County more than $125,00J In
taxes:
In addltbn, Federal Mogul con·
tributes to various community and
county organl7.atlons as part of !Is
community development.
Founded in 1899, Federal Mogul
Corp. employes 14,00l individuals

With 41" Mower

Do ~~ yourilelf
quickly and easUy.

Section
.

D.

'127. 1986

council's' honoree

HiUIS, O!lk 4-0:

1\l' 1.29: O~&gt;da. ~y and W;l lk . Pltl 1.46.
Arrwrkun l.Rli.Rur - l.ronatd. KC 0.82:
Dillon. &amp;II O.!W ; D.lviS, Ball l.Ll: Hus, Onk

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

Feilera11\-ogul~­

I

SAVE $500

Ryan, lbl :u .

Arlll'rtciiJl l..l'~ -

~ ' ·~

~ ­

i

KfMW'r. Hoo. K ru ~GJ\!.•. SF ~nd 'nMbr,
J~

j\:alloi\II J lt'ajlUI'- Drav«'~· , SO fill :
RobitNln. Cln O.!i'i: Burke&gt;. Mtl Ull. Gooct-n.

''' '' ,"' '
•
'
' • ·""
"'
;
7

All.

:J •-~

[kolltJII

ru trt

-

EaiTI'd Run .\\ftllt" rBa!lt'd on 1 lru\lnp: x
numtx&gt;r af ~am!!!' rach rpam lias pla~·fld 1

~

Cll:lnd
Toronto
Mtwl«

--

GB

-

1'\)'

Rt"'"'
flos ton

)antS, J0

f:=:::::::::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::========::,

(;Jadd(&gt;rl , SF and ll\ompiotl, P1111 5.
Amf'rk'M LC'aj!Ut' - Hf&gt;ftdenon, l'o1' ll;
&lt;:anJ!f'll!'i , Chi': Fl'l"'r. Mil. GIIR:ln. Drt.
~tw-It~.- and WI~. Rail !\..

SJI.

~-·

t'imes- ientintl

Ryan also drew the praises of
Astro manager Hal Lanier,
"Nolan really struggled early~·
Lanier said, He got himself lnfQ a
few jams-:-- but· lie's lti.nype at ~.
pitcher woo can get dut of thOse . •

1

Clfon-.ms. FlaL C::uldl)·. r-."' ar~d Ut•brandt.
hT .l {l: \ 'lola. Min and ~hrom . {'Jr\' J. 1.

.\MEJUfAX l.Ei\GlJE

MIM·~:~ ui«'f'

lmpl'l)ve his an· time leading
strikeoui total to 4,112.
I really had good stu!! tonight,"
.Rl@l saj d.._:_:My.break)!!g ball \VIIS
as good as It's been all season, but I
couldn't seem to get II over the
plate."

.
1\ntlonal l .i'a,ur - (;ood(&gt;n , NY. John.'IOn,

Montrrtl i ,11 Chr a~l
1\1w , .ork Ill S1 I.OU l~
Clndrtllill i ill Huu•mn
Siln O ~

HOUSTON (UP)) - Last year · they finally sta11 to hit , we' ll Start
'l ' ~~ _C!Inclnnsltl Reds SUJllrlsOO a lot winning some games."
of folks by staylrig In contention
For the.flrst lll;le In 13 games this
~!1914.5
GIIIQI, Dt
until
the
final-week
of-theseason.ln
•
.season;
_the Reds_JaQecj IQ _hit _p.
u
':1'1'1 Jac:~. Ov '
14 49 1 11 .3&amp;1
the. off .season·, the Reds bolstered home nm. Cincinnati leads the
R!Jbkb , Ml
t-. !Wi 5 19 .3.'ft
Fk-11. TQr
their starting pitching by adding a NatiOnall.eai\lewllhl7bomeruns.
t7 63 1~ :n m
pair
of veterans to shore up their
Reds third baseman Bilddy Bell
"""""·r..'Y
0&gt;
Grf~·.
136 7 16 .377
H4'T'rltn. Dl
12 Mi ~ J.'LU
pitching staff.
.
.attributed Friday's hitting woes to
Htmf! .W.
· Manager Pete . Rase has , no the Astros Nolan }o/an.
Nutlonu l ll'llf!IJI' ~ 1\niJhl. !\\' &amp;:
Manhal. L~ and Pa1'k'r. Cltl ~: lla~·fiOn.
qualms about the Reds pitchers,
"He's ml exactly the type of
&amp;111. Garnrr, H~. Lronard , SF. M~· . A tl
but
the
Reds'
lack
of
offense
!ilcher
a team wan is tn face when
and S' hmldt , PhU i.
•
through the season's firSt three they'rehavlngtroublehlttlng."Bell
Atnrrk'W1 Lt'aJ!Ut'- Otn1!i. ~·a. DownlnJ:
11nd Jac k!iOn. C11J and Puc kl'll , Mlnn ~:
weeks has hlm perplexed.
said, "He's a helluva pitcher and a
r k' \'t'fl pla)t'~ liN! "A'ilh t
"Again,
ll
was
just
a
lack
of
helluva
competitor."
RuM Ba&amp;l4'd ..
NatiOna l l.rill\11' - Lronard, SF'' Hi:
timely
hilling,"
Rlil;e said Friday
Ryan,
a.~. allowed the Reds only
Ca11c-r. 1\'\' 1 ~: PMJW&gt;r. Cln and Ra~· . PIMlt:
following
his
team's
fifth
loss
In
the
five
hits
In notching his llrsl
Sdlmldl , P h lll~
i\mt'Linm Lt'UJ.'IU' - ('a11Sf('O, Oak .md
last six games, a 3.1 setback to the complete game of the season ..:The
DcM· nl~ . Clll 11: Bt&gt;ll, Tor and PIUTt§l\, Tp,;
Houston Astros. "We've got the J9.year old rjght hander walked
1:'!: ~laUJltll, Tl':&gt;~ and Tllrt11WU, St&gt;a 14.
right people In the lineup, and when lhr~r and struck ·oot seven to

........

l"&gt;ltll;t&lt;k'lphla ar P II L~ bur)l;:h

'

·beaten; ·Iack .of offense concems Rose

. '\utimal Ll'ilJNf' - O.vls, Cln 8: Doran,
Hoo Li11d D.inran. LA 7; Ht•rr. 'SIL 6:

Houston l. C'lOOnnati I

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

W. Va,

-~- 10 ~

NA.ft)No\1. 1..&amp;4.GlJF.
ly UIIIIH

.

Phone service reports earnings
•

HUDSON - Alltel Corp. has reported Its eamlngs for the firs t
quarter are the best In I he company's 25·year history.
The lelephone service, which serves the eastern pari of Meigs
County,earnEd $3.~. per. share lor the yea r ended March 12. This Is
up from the record ea rnings of $3.12 per share a year ago, tiE
company said. Net income Increased 14 pen~nt to $73,213,00J on
revenues and sales of $6133J 78,00l- a 6 perrent increase from the
comparablP period last yea r.
Al llcll Chairman Weldon W. Case said "tiE results are
particularll:J'JICOUraging, because they afl' being achieved at a t !me
when the company Is positioning Itself In a number of high-growth,
non· regulated areas, such as fiber optic transmission and cellular
mobile telephone."

Mooday at the Holiday Inn, Acllvltles begin at 6:30p.m.

chapter places in regional contest

RIO GRANDE - The Rlo of economic principles through
Grand? College and Community projects and presentations to
College Students In Free Enlff· schools, civic and business groups.
prtse team was selectm for one of Adviser Beverly Wilkins said, "The
the first four places at the regional achievements made were excellent
co mpetition held April 17 at Indicators of student interest and
personal progress."
Cleveland.
1be team will participate as a
In addition, students partlclpalm
finalist In the lOth Anniversary In media related activit ies which
International EX[lOsltlon at Mem· Included appearan res and taped
phis, Tenn., In May. SlFE Is an performanres oo radio sto"" In
International organization formed Ohio and West Virginia.
to promote economic understandCommunications Consultant Nita
Ing or the free enterprise system.
Coo rdinator of Business Manage· Dally sa id, "This Is an excellent
ment, Dr. Krishna Kool said, "I'm experience for our students and
proud of the SIFE team's accomp· they did a fantastic job of present·
lls tunents. Originating from the lng their acoompllshments to the
Emerson E. Evans School of judges. One student delivered a
Business, the team's win makes us speech that she had written and Its
was very impressive." Amy Hea·
all proud:'
In Its third year of participation, terlln presented her speech, "A
the Rio Grande membersdedlcatm System of Promise," to several
themselves to create an awareness area groups. At the regional

oompetltlon she presented a copy of tlve comments to benefit future
It to liE International SIFE organi- oommuillcatlon and leadership
zation located at Bol_ivar, Mo.. to be skills.
Vlre President lor Academic
used as a standard speech for those
wishing to Involve themselves with Affairs Dr. Ray Boggs said,
"Students Uke the SIFE members
tiE !J"Omollon of free enterprise.
Each year the team ha~ extended make our Institution proud and
Its rooch , This year the tea m reflect the quality of students here
reac hed more than 5.5 mlllton, at Rio Grande College and Com·
significantly mofl' than axJ,IlXl the munity College."
Each of tiE top four teams was
Drst year and one mllllon the
awarded $1,0)), and the Rio Grande
second year.
At the regional competition the team will use Its prize monies lor
Rio Grand? SIFE team defeated ex penses Incurred at competitions,
The SIFE organization will send
teams Hke New York Alfred
University, University of Detroit tiE college president. the faculty
and ottErs. Judges from national advisers and students a formal
lnoostrtes and COilJOrations chase recognition lor their efforts.
Representing the SIFE team at
tiE top . four teams to become
finalists rattEr than designating tiE regional competition were
[iaces this year. At the lnterna· students, Kevin Smith , Valerte
tlonal oompetltlon, top oorporate McElroy, Amy Heaberlin and Jeff
executives will evaluate the stu· Lawler. Wilkins and Dally alsii
dents' eHorts and provide oonstruc· attend?d.

Analyst targets right-of-way as burden
By HARDlAR KRISHNAN
UPI Business Writer

DALLAS I UPll - Railroad
companies can grea tly Improve
their seiVices and profit s by
relinq uishing their rtghts·of·way to
the government or a private
agency, suggests . a business
analyst.
· Warren Rose, a profes!&lt;lr of
busin~ss at the Texas A&amp;M Univer·
sity In College Station, said malnte·
nance of right s-of·way has become
a major financial drain on the
railroads, accounting for as much
as 25 percent of lhe total cost
sll11ctu re.
While In the pasl, rlgHts·ofway
helped the rail system gain a
mono[lOIY in the transportation
business, their upkeep to&lt;lay has
become prohibitively expensivg.
preventing the system from com·
petlng with other carrtcrs, said
Rose, a transpOrtation economics
expert.
Rose said he has studied the
fea sibility of the government or
some quasi public or private
organization taking over I he rights·
of-way, leaving the rail system to
pertonn actual operations.
He said the rlghts-of·way will
include all physical facilities like
the tracks, · bridges, and signaling
and communications systems
which are fast deteriorating be·
ca use or the railroads' Inability lo
maintain them.
"Today. the railroads will be
lucky lo get fi ve percent return on

their Investment and they don't
have I he capital lo make improve·
ments on these physical facilities,"
Rose said. " If the ra ilroads got rtd
of them, they would also save a lol
on property taxes."
Rose said the motor and water
carriers enjoy a compel itiveadvan·
tage over the rail system because
the former do not have to worry
about rlghts-of·way.
"The competition is Inequit able
because In the case of motor
carriers, the rlght ·of-way Is pro·
vided by Uncle Sam's highways
and by nature in the case of water
catTiers Uke barges. Railroads
have to build and maintain the ir
I racks. It is true the railroads have
exclusive use of tiE tracks but
today the cost of ow ning the tracks
has increased dramatically.
• "What I am pro[lOslng Is tbat
Uncle Sam treat the railroads the
sa me way as the trucking and
barge indu slrtes. If ttx&gt; goverrunent
or oome ottEr agency took over the
tracks, the railroads could compete
morr EIJUitably with the other
ca rriers." Rose sa id.
He said Initially It would cost the
governmenl or a prtvate agency
about $25 billion to purchase,
rehabilitate and mod?mlze the
railroad facilities and about $2
billion to $6 billion annually thereafler to maintain them.
He said fuoos for the Investment
could come from government
appropriations or from private
investors who could make a return

on their Investment from user
charges both lor lreigh t and
passengers service.
"The compelling argument In
favor ci the railroads Is thai there is
oo other trapsportatlon mode to
replace it. The rall system is lhe
only mode available to move large
quantities of goods over a long
distance at klw unit cost. Motor or
water carriers are cost effective
only for stort hau ls. Rallroads st lll
account for 36 pertl'nt of all
tOn·ml les o! freight, that Is rrovlng
one ton of freight over a mlle. Who
would move all that coal and grain.
for example, II we didn 't have the
railroads?"
Rose said he sees op[lOSitlon to his
plan ooming from railroad man·

agemenr which may perreive il as
an. attempt at natlonallza tbn , or
from the unions who may fear It
would mean loss of jobs.
"Rallroad management thinks
oobody stould be taking over Its
business but our research soows the
railroad companies have plenty to
ga in from it. The plan also will
mean additional jobs through new
constructiJn and rehabllllatlon of
the tracks and so the unions need
rot be conrerned. The public also
will benefit becasue there will be
Improved service and lower unit
cost." Rose said.
"There is already a precedent for
this. Conrail currently Is owned by
Its employees and the goverrunent.
There are some private groups who
would like to buy Conrail."

AMC, union wrangle over fate of Toledo plant
which assures payback to the
people for their fuU Investment, If
we don't have tbal, I'll bend every
effort. to make certain Ills moved,"
Calmes said,
Calmes held out an olive branch
to the ' union, saying AMC will
.. • sharing, AMC wUI not consider . reconsider plans to eliminate some
produclbn from the Toledo plant ~
, • Toledo as a site for !Is new plant.
Richard Calmes, vice president the union reverses Its decision to
lor lndustrtal fl' lations, reaffllmed seek repayment under the ~a Bed
:. AMC's intentions to cut production • wheel·tax.
"I'm perfectly wllllng to return to
at the Jeep assembly plant If the ·
• union insists $Z7 mUllan in worker the bargaining table," Oilmessald.
No production has been moved
concessions be repaid wlthln three
tx&gt;r have jobs been eliminated yet
; years.
·
Calmes told reporters In Toledo as a result of the rejection of the
AMC ca nnot be competitive with proflt,sharlng plan, he said.
Calmes·warned that AMC Is In
other aulomakers and would liave
to transfer operations to other the course of detennlnlng !Is futu re
production needs.- and while It Is rot
plants to save money, · ·
The union wants repayment too late for a reversal, union leaders
• based on. vehicle output ·while the must act quickly, he sa id.
The contract called for the union
company insists II must be based on
to
decide by April :D how It wanted
profit .
"II we don't have the spirit of the morey repaid, Calmes said the
Wllon also rejected hls suggestion to ·
I. cooperation that Is demonstrated
. •. by selection of the profit-sharing exrend the deadline to allow more
formula for the Iierlodthroughl991, lime for negotiations.
By JIM SIELICKI
TOLEDO. Ohio (UPil - An
•• American MotorstCOfl). vite president sa id earlier this week that
unless lhe United Auto Workers
union shows a "spirit of coopera·
tion " .and changes Its mind on profit

••

Da nny Wilson, chairman d UA W
Local 12 representing Jeep
workers, was unava ilable for
comment.
"The company would like to stay
In Toledo lf Toledo can be a
competitive place, an attractive
place to put work," he said .
The wheel-tax repayment me·
thod demanded by tIE union
rQPresented an added cost to Its
product !halls not being paid in any
of its other plants, or by any other
United Stales automaker, he said.
"We're not In a ~Ilion to say
we're gOing to pay an extra, a
premium If you will , to stay In
Toledo, Qr to stay In a !acUity whlch
ls not competitive," he said.
The first production llne thai
would leave Toledo ls the Grand
Wagoneer, which Jeep produces at
a rate of 90 units a day at Its plant
here, he said.
Calmes would not gtve a tlmeta·
ble lor that rnove.
Calmes said' AM C wants to make
a decision by June on locating a new
vehicle productlori plant to replace

its Kenosha facility and until that
tlme all oplbns are stU! undecided.
The Kenosha, Wis., assembly
plant, which Calmes said. bas a
competitive labor agreement, Is an
attractive allernallve lo Toledo
because of Its lower labor costs, he
said.
The company agreed to · give
workers the option oil he wheel·tax
or profit-sharing for repayment
because It was a negotiated llem
sought by the union, he said.
All othe r plants and uni ons \11th
the exception of Toledo have gone
along with the company to delay
repayment, which Calmes said
would provide for a run payback.
"Going Into to all of our discus·
slons (with the union! was the
assumption that we would have a
competitive labor situ a tlon,"
Calmes said.
Toledo and Ohio officials have
been lobbying AMC to bu Ud Its
pro[lOsed plant In Toledo, but
Calmes said AM C will not consider
Toledo If the Wllon does not drop I~
demand .

'
TRAVEL READY -AircarsopaekageshoundforGreatllrltalnare
•
seen clroppmg down specially conslruded chutes at Emery ; ;
Worldwide's newly expanded Superhub In Dayion, wllere they are ·: ·
packed for Emery ovenqbl; lllg!Q, Every night, 00,000 pieces rrove •
through lhe bulkllng, w!dch 18 lhe lllze of five footbaU ftelds. Emery Is : ·
celebrating lis tolh anniversary, (UPI)
· ·· •

�'•

..

.., ... ..

•'. '

~~

'

... .. ' ' ..

....

..

.

-.

.

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

April 27, 1986

11

The

17 Miscellaneous

Help Wanted

23

f llldtii.J.t l

Page- D-2

National groundwater
survey on '86 agenda
By SONJA HILLGREN
UPI Fann Editor

:: .USE 8IIJIUII fljleCies to provide more kmclll of bird
•feelk to balance landscape spaclna;, and toiW In along
.:
•

Birds

like

~

.•

~

h

•

c

Oice;
By Patty Dyer
GaiHa County
District Conservallonlst

llllllllllllde llnldurea. J'lant!np 011 the conlelir adds
beauty In PleaUic pMllrDII lad belps control 8011
erosion and water nmoll.

·

variety,

PI

uive them
e-.
' '

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
newest environmental challenge Is
assessing how· much agricultural
chemicals have polluted the nation's groundwater, and an Important new tool In that effort wUI be
ground·penetratlng radar.
Scientists 11re only beginning to
ask questions about complleated
_routes rl chemicals through the soU
l!fler crop application.
SOme stateS test groundwater for
agricultural ·chemicals, and the
Environmental Protection Ageney
wUI embark on a national groundwater survey this summer, provldlng the nation with a better data
base to study an emerging envlrQnmental Issue.
Charles Benbrook, of the Na-

face lakes, and radar can tell
whether water stays In the lakes or
enters aquifP.rs.
A classic case that highlights the
key Importance of chemicals In
ground water paved the way for
banning of &lt;lllnoer- causing ethy- ·
lene dibromlde In 1984, almost a
decade after tt was found to cause
cancer.
The EPA had gradually phased
out use or the chemical,' but
permitted Its continued use for soU
fumigation for citrus, pineapples,
soybeans, cotton , tobacco and over
30 other crops.
Soil fumigation did not appear to
cause human exposure. The agency

recognized EDB had potential for
contaminating groundwat.er, but
there was no Information that any
such contamination had occurred.
In March 19trl , residues of EDB
were detected In groundwater In
Georgia. In June 1983, It wa~ found ·
In California. Then it was found in
Hawaii and Florldil,exposlng a new
route of dietary exposure to. the
public. By September, E P~ or·
dered immediate suspension of use
of the chemical In &amp;Jil fUmigation.
Scientists began increasingly to
tum their attention to dangers and ·
prevention of groundwater contam 1na lion fro m ag r le u It ur a I
chemicals.

-

e

Cwr&amp;yA~=~Agent

8

ge;:!~lo~a~r~e~~~~!o~~=

and controlling potentially dam~- search Laboratory In Tifton, Ga. Is
POMEROY - With the vegeta· methods to apply to lessen the
lng water runoa. By knowing the so Important.
ble gardening seasori just barely problem with this pest Is to remove
wildlife value of the pants you now un~eu::;~r:t:~~ ~tcr:osuesra- mofleludntnedd under way, we have already had grass and weeds from around the
have, you can plan additional
a
two calls regarding onion maggots. house foundation by clearing a strlp
plantings for added diversity. Ad- sends radar signals that bounce Onion maggots oorrow Into !level· 18 to 24 Inches wide. especially on
ding to the diversity ot plant forms, back from various depths of the oping bulbs of onion and cause the the south, !lluttJeast and east sides.
adds food producers and shelter soils, providing clues as to where plants to tum yellow, wilt, and die.
Insecticide sprays of Dursban,
plants that would ot!Erwlse he andhowagrlculturalchemlcals are
Cool, wet weather favors the Dlazlnon, Kelthane or malathion
missing
·
likely to move underground .
development ot serious b1festa· may be applied to the muse
~
Birds ·like variety _ rememher
His research team Is developtng !Ions. Use Spectractde (Diazlnon) foundation and a foot or so of the
this when deciding what plants to data foracomputermodelthatwlll 25% emulsifiable concentrate at 2 soil. Indoors use aerosol sprays
use In your ronservatkm-planned predict potential effects of pest!- teaspoonfuls per gallon of water oontalnlng pyrethrln or resmethrtn
.
·•
landscaping. Create a varied part- cldes on groundwater. Tests are and apply a liberal amount Into an as as direct knockdown.
By Edward M. VoDIDm
tbat the most popular bull or this em with an Intermingling of being planned w1th the Agriculture open trench In which the bulbs are
Dribble Applications or Nitrogen
Cwnly Extension Agent
years' test now lives In Galila species sizes and shapes Give Department's SoU Conservation to be set, or dlaztnon 4% dust at 6 Solutions for Corn - Drlbbllng N
Agrlcuhure &amp;: CNRD
County. He Is a ptrebred Slmmen- birds a' 'c hoi~ ot places to~ their Service and the U.S. Geological tbsp.llOOfoot &lt;1 row, orSpectraclde solutions through drop tubes or
~GALUPOLIS- The major topic tal with "signal" on the top side and
activities_ from the crowns oltall su.~ey. ,
.
OOXJ (5% dlazlnon granules) 4 hoses Is a practice which may be
of ooncem last week was ookl "extra black" on the oottom side rl trees down to low-growing flowers . Radars role IS vital in account- oz./500 square feet In the seed advantageous to many farmers. It
~ather. Full extent of damage hts pffilgree. He gained rlghtatflve and grasses. Give them a choice &lt;1 rng for , agrlche~\cal movement furrow at planting time.
can Increase the speed ofsldedressn)ay not be known for several days. pounds per day on the 140 day test. food !llurces such as seeds nuts that can t be seen, Leonard said.
Four Ways 11l Tell A Termite tng, a practice which can Increase
AI present It seems as though low Several other bulls were also fruits, ben1e~. and flower ~ectar:
David Farrell, national program From An Ant - Thts Is the time of N efflelency on more poorly
glowing plants may have been less purehased for use In GaiDa County. Many !llnghirds combine these leader for groundwater research year that bOth termites and ants • drained soils. It also allows farmers
s~erely damaged because of the I am sure they will have a positive
plant foods with animal ilods Hke for the Agriculture Department's leave their colonies In great w use N solutions safely for
soU temperature as a result of the effect on the local beef Industry.
Insects worms and spiders
Agricultural Research Service, swarms. The winged forms are the no-tillage corn production, either
l$rm weather a lew days earller.
Intmnatlon provided through
Ev~ In sm~n yards, t~ rtght said the work wlll help scientists reproductives and they aret he ones ~arty In the season or as a
Cjlld Injury typically causes a Jot &lt;1 the O.S.U. Dairy, Science Depart- choice rl plantings can meet many devise ways of keeping chemicals tha t will start new oolontes. Do you stdedresslng. This Is a fa irly easy
stile effects to plants which may not ment takes a look at a critical of the simple needs wHch birds out of groundwater.
know how to tell a termite from an practice to accomplish and equip.
sbow up untU next summer. problem rJ. use rllarge round bale have. They look for places to fEed
First of aU, radar lets scientists ant ? In termites antennae are not ment modtllcatlons are generally
~Com ylelds decline substantially haying system. Recent work at the sing, court, nest, rest, and hide. y~ map the contour of incredibly elbowed; they have two pair or Inex pensive.
!~; planting Is delayed Jl""l the first
University of Mlssourt showed a can provlde these places With a complex und er gr ound soil wings of equal length; and they
Timing aild Hose Spacings ~k In May. It Is therefore good, If 15% storage loss and 25% feeding
mixture of trees shrubs vines and fonnations.
have a thick walst.In ants antennae Drlbble applications can be made
field conditions permit, to have loss lor lariJ' bales stored ool!llde other plants. '
'
Watertight soli layers can form are elbowed; they have two pair of before planting, lmiriedlately after
rilost or even all ct the rom pantEd and not covered. Alfalfa hay stored
When panting for birds you need channels that direct pJIIutants to wings of unequal length; eyes are planting, or as a sidedresslng after
al near to May 1 as possible. Com within a bam had a 3% storage loss to consider such things as soil aquifers, groundwater reservoirs present; and waist Is thin.
corn emerges. For applications
pjuducers sbould also ronslder and a 12% feeding loss . About one slope draln~~ge exposure aspects' tbat provide one-half of the nation's
Tiny Brownish Specks Invading before planting, bose spacings of
lr(creaslng planting rates l7y liP- halfolthetotallossfromstortngthe and 'climate ~s well as you~ drlnklngwater,ortootl'erbodies of Homes Now - Clover mites have ll" or less will reduce changes of
pioxlmately 2,&lt;XXI kema1s per acre bales outside could be prevented l7y personal wishes
water.
hatched and are crawling up the salt Injury If seed rows cross
~ com Is planted In AprU as covering tbem with plastic. Dry
In general, tr~s and shrubs that
Radar can show the location a~d walls of homes and entering tl'em fertilized bands. Planter attach·
cqmpared to later dates. This Is ilrage Intake was reduced l7y attract birds grow satisfactorily·on thickness t;1 main aquifers, thetr around wtndo~W and doors. The ments can he mounted to feed each
because the rom planted In AprU Is feeding the ootstde stored hay. Use well drained, fairly fertile some- geologic fotrnatk&gt;n and ability to mites are soft bodied and if you try row Individually (approximately 6"
lfi;s likely to II&gt; under moisture of plastic was ronsklered margl· what loamy soils not particularly store and transfer water. Other k ~ to brush them off a wa ll, they will from row) or such that 1band feeds
s~ during pollination. Popula- nally feasible unless It could be
suited for vegetables and flowers.
fonnallons lnlude perched aquif- leave a brown to blood red streak. two ro~W (60" hose spacing In row
tfllns on the more productive soils reused several times or hay value
For more InformatiOn on plants, ers, channels above main aquifers. Infestations are usually heaviest at middles for 30" seed row width).
stlotild be higher than tboseon more exceeds $70 per ton. The Missouri soils, and ronsei-vatton metiDds
Radar can show if water flowin g new home sites, or new lawns and For apJ)IIcatlons after emergence,
dfouthy sites.
study reports that the reduced contact your local Soil and Water laterally In a perched aquifer heavily fertilized a d lawns.
particularly delayed sldEdresslng,
tPopulatlons of - alfalfa weevil losses with bam stored alfalfa hay Conservation Dlstrlct office. The eventually goes to a main aquifer. a
It Is probably advantageous to band
dl)rtng the early part of the week could be expected to cover bam Gallla Soil and Water Conservation sprtng, pond or stream.
e1~
N 6-10" from each l'Q~.
we-e at high levels. Hopefully the bJfidlngexpense,lncludlnglnterest Dlstrlct stUI has a few evergreen
It can help sclentls~ select
e~
There Is Utile evidence currently
cGtd weatber slowed them dowri. 11&gt; 5 to 6 years. Something to think and hardwood trees fo r sale of a optimal sites for observahon wells
available to Indicate the best time
~n possible, early cutting should about.
first come flrst serve basis. You
to monitor llucuatlons In water
1•
lor sldedresslng In Ohio, but the
~ done In place of chemical
Mark yoor calendar to attend the may contact the Soli Conservation tables and to collect water samples
Ray D. Little, Goldie v . Little good chance for dry weather In July
tft'atment. This could present a real Southern Ohio Sheep Festival on Servlee/Gallla SoU &amp; Water Con- for chemical analysis.
to Hera ld 011 and Gas c o., right and August dictates that sidedressp{oblem this year If weevn popula- Saturday, May 24, at 9 a.m. at the servatlon District by calling 446Radar units, when carried In of way, Salisbury.
lngshould not be delayEd past early
lions remain high next week, since Hocking County Fairgrounds In IQ7 or by stopping by the dOce at boats, can measure lll w much
Clifford E. Whittington , Bar- June If possible. The most lmpormost alfalfa Is still very soort as a Logan. A IUD program Including a 529 Jackson Pike In the Sprtng water Is In a pond by sending bar a Wh ittington to Herald 011 tant factor In sldedress timing Is to
r~ult of dry conditiOns. U more Market Lamb and Breeding Sheep Valley Plaza
signals to the.¢nd bottom.
and Gas Co., right of way, Rut· hegin at a time which will Insure
than me larvae Is found per stem a Soow will be held. CaU for a entry
·
The signals can IDive problems of land.
tha t the entire acreage can IJ&gt;
r~e treatment may need to be
form or program schedule.
tracking groundwater movement
Roger D. Bro wn, Louise Brown fl'rtlllzed. Any sldedresslng pro.
cqnstdered. Extension Bulletin 545
A new ooUetln "Vegetables for
In regions underlain l7t Itrnestone. to Herald 011 and Gas Co., right of gram sbould include 25-50 lb. N/ Aat
1151 severalinsecticldes and rates &lt;1 Ohio Gardens" Is now avaUable.
Its signals can pick up fractures In way, Salisbury.
planting, to nourlsh the crop until
atiJllicatlon. Call If you need more The bulletin takes a look at varieties
ODOr OUts laD
limestone through which water
Willi am A. Gibbs, Sarah Gibbs the bulk of N Is applied.
tnfonnatlon on weevil control.
most likely to yield satlstactory
fanner m' Datura) pours.
to Herald Oil and Gas Co. , right
Equipment - Most farmers and
!rhe . Ohio Pertonnance TestEd results under Ohio's growing oondiIt can probe sinkholes formed of way, Salisbury.
custom applicators can modify
sqU .Sale last Saturday, April 19, !Ions. Included are "All America CODSe""a(J'on
when limestone dissolves and
Da vid D. Pr ice, Mary V. Price existing sprayers to accomplish
featurEd some 141 head of tested Selections", Oriental Vegetables,
&amp; ..
collapses. Sinkholes filled with to Herald 011 and Gas Co., right dribble applica tions at a reasonable
t.llls. They sold for an average Miniatures and Giants. Stop In at
drainage water can become sur- of way, Salisbu ry.
oost.
$1ll36 per head. I am happy to report the Extension Office tor your copy.
GALLIPOLIS - Much or the
;
news about farmers In the last fe w
years has been negative, focusing
on low oommodlty prices, bad
••
weather and tarrn foreclosures. In
usually caused by mental factors : spite ofthesefactors the majority of
1
The Ohio Stale University
frustration, dlfflcult decisions, oon- Ohio's fanners have survived, and
)C!operallve Extension Service
filcts, delays, Insomnia, or even
• Farm FarD)y Stress Series
of these survivors make the
•,GALLIPOLIS - Fanning has ooredom. Review your dally WOf · many
conservation of soli, water and
;$-ays been a physically demand- r,k:s. Try to resolve some and get relatEd natural resources a comerIDJ! occupation with a high polmtlal advice on others. Be sure to get stone of their Uvellhood .
for accidents. This Is partly due to some tension reducing activities
The DivisiOn of Son and Water
.t1f oomplex machinery and unpre· Into every day.
Conservation ot the OhiO DepartMany people wbo suaer from meJ1t ol Natural Resources
dlctable livestock. Another reason
fatigue
have develOped poor bealth (ODNR) and The .Ohio Farmer
ts;the fatigue causes by klng hours,
bablts.
They
eat In a hurry, get tittle magazine have Initiated a program
d~mandln g work, and ti me
exercise,
and
have few hobbles. to m:ognlze fanners wJn are doing
p-sures.
.
They
aver~~ge
less
than 6 oours or an ootstandlng job &lt;1 natural
;Fatigue Is a wea rtness from
sleep
at
night
and
bave few tree resoun:e oonservatlon.
e)!ertlon and/or nervous e&lt;hausweekends.
Make
time
to exercise
tlon. Doctors report fanners' fa"In general, the most successful
and
develop
hobbles.
Eat In a agricultural producers are the ones
tigue falls Into thrEI' categories:
'The first Is physiological fatigue. relaxed atmosphere.
wbo Incorporate son and water
Emotional upsets are another conservation measures Into their
It :romes form chemical reactions
tn; healthy people that leave the factor. Studies have demonstratEd routine farming operation," said
muscles exhausted. Lack of sleep, that a great majority r1 fatigue Larry Vance, chief &lt;1 ODNR's
' I
'
loud noises, poor working condi· cases not due to Illness or &lt;1/erwork, DivisiOn of SoU and Water Consertldns, or extreme temperatures are are caused by eqtOtlonal up;ets.
vation. "Eftectlve conservation
!· 1 •'.,..
Negative emotRlns - depression, requires good planning, manageIYPtcal causes. Review yoor work
ertvtronment to eliminate· pxcess guUt, frustration, resentment ment and foresight. It naturally has
n::tfse, Improve llghting, and keep bring on tensions that reduce the a positive Influence on the entire
.:me·•·
body's enj!rgy· and produce weari- farm.·
regulations.
. '&gt;'''? ""' -cf·l '"
:t'he second Is pathological fa · ness. Anger, fear oc r~~~:e send
MYSTERY FARM - This week's IJ\Vslery fann,
adrenaline through the body, affect
telepoone nemher with your card or letter. No
tlgue. It Is an early sing rt an
"The men and women who
!~alured
by the Galla SoU and Water Conservation
breathing
and
make
tiE
IEart
IF
at
telephone calls wUI be accepted. AU cont.est entries
uriderlylng Blness such as heart
practice sound, cost-effective soil
Dlslrlct, Is !ocated somewhere In GaDia County.
deJect, hypertension, or anemia, If faster.
should
be turned In to the newspaper olflce by 4 p.m.
lndlvldual!l wishing to partlclpale tn the weekly each Wednesday.lll case of a tie, the Individual woosc
After the adrenaline has ;tq~ped, and water ronservation on alia's
chl-onlc. In many diseases, such as
fanns are doing a good job tor all ct
coOlest may do so by a;uesslng the farm's owne~.Just
letter has the earliest postmark wDI be declared the
dljootes, fatigue Is often a clue. U the fanner Is lett exbausled. Don't us - and they deserve oor
mall,
or drop off your guess to the Galllpolls Tribune, winner. Next week, a Meigs County farm wW be
your
angry
feelings
~
up.
Find
let
y~ !AII1er from chronic fatigue (3-4
8211 1blrd Ave., Galllpolls, Ohio, 411631, or Dally featured by the Melp SoU and Water CoJlllel'Vatlon
ways to talk rut )OOr ll!ellnp. support," Vance concluded. ·Gallla
weeks) see your physician.
residents
should
contact
Patly
Sentinel,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 411'1118, and you
Practice
slowbreatl*lgandgulded·
Flnally, . there Is phycbologlcal
Dlstttct. Winner of the APril :al contl!lll was Paula
Dyer, SoU Conservation Service,
can
win
a Sll CMit prb:e from the Ohio Valley Dillon, Pine Grove Rd., Racine, The Meigs myMery
relaxation
to
let
go
r1
Intense
ta(lgue. or "nervous" fatigue. It Is
Gallipolis, 446-8687.
Publlsldng Co. Leave your name, address 111d !ann belonged to George and Harry Holter.
'
emotions.
.
.:
··
··
'

FJ.ar.m flashes

•
eat
er
main
area
W h
:opic· past .ew d ays

'

M • property
lraDS£erS

Program Will
h
d

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
- Columbuo. Ohio
April 11 , 198e
ControctSoln
legot Copy No. 88·392
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sooted pmpooata wilt be
111C0iliod at the offico of tho
Director of the Ohio Deponment of Tr.,sponetton. Co·

lumbuo. Ohio, &lt;.ntit !OliO
A.M.. Ohio Stondord Time,
Thurodoy, May 8, 1986, for

ing

Farming and -fatigue

..

,,

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and s ~J~Ning mechlne
repair. parts. and supplies . Picll
up and delilo'try. Davi1 Vacuum
C lunsr, one half mile up
George. Creek Rd . Cell 114441 -0294 .
C ontrol H'unger and lou weight
with caffein tree New Shape
Diet Plen. Fruth Pharm1 cy.

The Melgil County Fish ..,d
G ame Club In c. will not be
re~ponslble or liable for lnY
ac cktent or damage to tnyone or
anyth ing on their PfOp.rty.

irT"f)rovementa in :

Athono, Gallill. Hocking.
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Vi\ton and Washington
Cbuntiot. on section• ATH-72.06 on State Route 7 i1
Athena County. and variou s
rout81 and sections in Athens,

Gattia, Hoelting, Meigs, Monroe. MOI'lJ8n, Nobte. Vinton
and Walhi1gton Counties, by
fumtshilg and installing raisEd
PIN&amp;ment marker materials.

Project length - 0.00 feet or
0 .00 rrilo. Wor1&lt; Length -

~::f~/~a~:~~~u~~n=~
~h~ - Tips
given on how
to fight
become the predominant natural
•
h.
.
resource Issue In agriculture.
ORIOn mag.,.ots t IS spnng
That's why Ralph Leonard 's

Annuunee men Is

Public Notice

Meigs County agent's corner

I
k
p ~cemen1 ey~~~·s ~~~e!f~~~~~~ .

ant
GALUPOLIS _ Would yru tike
to attract birds to your home while
providing shade, stabilizing t~ soU

.

variou s .feet or various miles.
Pavement Width - varies.
"The date set for COJ'Il)letion
oi this wOfk will be as set fonh
in tho bidding propooal."
Each bidder llhalt be required
to file with hill bid • oonWied

dleck or cashier's check for an
amount equal to five per cent
of his bid. but i1 r1:1 tMW'It more
than fifty thou send doH an, c;ra
bond for ten per cant of his bid,
payable to the Diroclor.
Bidders muot apply, on the
proper form s, for qualifications
at least ten days prior to the
date Itt for opmi'lg bids i'l
accordance with Chapter

5625 Ohio

Revised Code.

Plans and specifications are

on file in 1he Oepartma1t of
Trlf'IIPortatkm and the office
of 1he

Dis 1rict Deputy

Director.
The Director reserves the
right to reject any and all bids.
Warren J . Smith.
Director

April 20 . 2 7

Announcing a n~M~ book release
by Irene Brand, " Where Morning
Dawns", t2.50. Willa' s Bible
Boo k Store, 409 Main St., Point

pteaaant, W. Va.

Roultl 's Tac k Shop now hal
lenering machine for cep1 and

halters. Phon• 304-n3-5207.

WANTEO . Witn t'tls to acc ident
tha t occured April 18. 1986 at
9 :00 AM nor1h of Fletrock
Gro c erv. Flatrock , Muon
Cou nty At. 2. 1nvolved ' 81 bf.:k
Nluan pickup and late m :idel
C adallic . Call 304-676-4030
informatkm appreciated .

4

Giveaway

white . Good home only . Call

5 14-448 -1364.
Black mal e puppy . Call 814·

'

'

(

•

814 ·445·3730

9 : 0 .0

5 :00 . Lou of

till

&amp;14-445-336e .

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

Baby.itter

The Melg1 FMa Fair and Big Bend
C. B. Club, announces thefr 10t h
Annual Coffee Br .. k Flea
Market . Flli Mtrket Fri .. Set..
Sun. SAM to IPM M•y 2 , 3 ~d
4 . Coffee bruk on Sund•y May
4 , wilt feature lever~ I ceth pri1"
up to 1200 . 00Troptd~ . Special
reffles .. door prlzn··IO · BO mo·

ney hit.. jail . Live 1ntertainmtnt
by:· Clrcte 0 . Wrenglert. C.B.
information: Phone Draoon Lldy
(8141 992 -7224 . Free e~~n1pklg
from Thursday noon to Sunday
evening . Come camp tnd flll
market with ua . Set up •e .oo a
dav hot thowers end flush
toilets . No charge for t"Ookl-upa
where avtilabie. CorM earty end
c:la im your epot. Flea lnforma·
tion: phone (8141 446 -7037 .
Rocksprings Ftirgrounda
Routtl 33 &amp; 7, Pomeroy, Oh .

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid tor '8 3 model

f nd newer u!Md

car~ .

1911

Smith

Eaat.-n

2282.
Wanted junk autos. Call 814 ~

388 -9303.
URI mobile home . Cal 814 ·

Buying dally gold , 1llver coins,
rings, jewelry, ltarllng war~ . -='d
coins, larue currency. Top pri ·
cu . Ed. Burkett Btrber Stlop,
2nd. Avi. Mlddloport , Oh. 814 -

Full Bk&gt;odftd Boxer, male , 1 VJ yr.
old . Call 304 -675 · 7640 .

992 -3475.

T1me Bleckbarrv plant s to give• ·
way . Call 81 4 -949 -2272 .

Wanted to buy: Mobila Home.
Priced reasonable . Call 1114 ·

CARD OF THANKS
Perhaps you sent a lovely card ,
Dr sat quietly in a chair.
Perhaps you sent a fu neral spray,
If so we saw it there .
Perhaps you spoke the
kindest words,
As any friend could say;
Perhaps you were not
there at all ,
Just thought of us that
day.
Whatever au did to
console u ~ hearts ,
We thank you so much
whatever the part.
THE FAMILY OF

W hite fe ma le ca t. an gora. 3

.

wanted , Gree n

0492 .

992 -6858 .
Wented old ch ikl •tnl plyalng
marbln, send dasc:riptlon and
phone number to Box P- 21 cart
of Point Plaeunt Register. 200
Mein St.. Point PIHaant, W. V1.

Dotson Trae S&amp;rvloe , frM asti·
m1t10. 304-575-2897 .

~l'::~~: ~~~~~•In St .• Po int ·

""1"'
8--;-;
W::-a-n-=-te- d.,..t':""'o-=
o-o----

12

Situations
Wanted

Bookk.-par~ with

I 1.200 PER MONTH
DELIVERY, DRIVER . SALES .
local COr11Jihy htl opening tor
1evertl people full time only.
Paid G'llnlng programs, paid
vacation first year. major medical benefits. Cell Mon ., ar Tun.

after 10AM 814-448-7441 .
EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI
•71 .. .00 per 100 . Guar11nteed
Payment. No ul... Details.
S1nd atemp.t anvelopt : Elen·
5847 . 341 B Enterprise, Ft.
Pierce, Ft. 33482 .

Dependtblt yard service . lawns
mowed , g1nw11 y•rd work, ligtlt
1\aullng, manual jabor. Bill Slack
Now have 2 Dplflings for an
elderly or diaabled woman or
men f'l my home at Tuppers
Aalns. 10 yeare axparience,
pl'"ty of TLC. rae10nebht rat11.
good references. C1ll 814-887·
3402 or 8,4-887· 8329 .
Room 111d board for elderly
retir.:l gentlemen . Cell 614 -

992·8022 .

Govem..,.,t Jobs. •16 ,040 ·
•59,230-yr. Now Hiring. Call

8t Auction

1 -1105-887-8000 ht. R-9806

tor current ted'ertllltt.

s..rch : I would lib

_, t.ar from anyone havin g

informat ion on the fem iliat of
Aluendtr Ctlaney tnd wile
Hannlh Lw.~il , or Jtcob A Mlllllf'

and wlft Nancy Ann Clark, ell
for,.r 1111idtnts of tl1 i1 area .
Wrlta to Jeen Chaney Law10n.
Route 4 . Box 401. Hurricane.

wv 26526 .

The G•llie-Meigs Commu nity
Action Agtncy's Job Training
Partnership Aet (JTPA ) progrtm
hM an ape:1 in9 fora bookkeeper
at t11 Centrtl Office in Chllhlre.
A minimum of 2 year1 upa·
rience In booldleeplng required,
including inputting fin•cialln ·
tarm~tion Into (Dtgibil) eo,..,u•••· Experl1not In Flderel pro·
gram l' ptlftrred. Post high
lldloollduetdon dtslreble. Abll·
ity to work wtth ot 11efl 1 mu st.
Sind ,_.me to Gallla· Mtlgs
CAA JTPA. Box 272, Chnhlrt .
Ohio 411620 by Mov 12, 1988 ,
For furthef Information call

16141 367-.7342
11829 . EOE.

Of

1514 1 992-

WANTED: Prior Millttry Service
Mamber1 . Tht Army Guard
needt your UPI'Itnce. Join now
far a part-time Job wtth btnaflt1
llka retirement and .tucttlonal

8

8 weell oLd pert ·co llie puppfes ,
304-87 5-6093 .

ESTATE AUCTION

THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1986
10:00 A.M.
The Howard S. Ebersbach Estate located at
54297 Portland Rd., Portland , Ohio. Watch for
sale signs.
Amana freezer, Sears refrigerator, table &amp;4 chai rs.
couch, cha irs. coflee ta ble, end tables, beds, dressers.
lam ps, stand s. misc . cha irs. pols, pa ns. dishes. other
misc. items.
Hospital bed, hospital lift, lift cha ir.
1969 Ford station wagon, Snapper lav.11 mower,tilti ng arbor saw, wood lath e, 'A&amp; ll drills, cic urcular saw, assorted
hand saws, pipe vise, misc. garoen &amp; hand tools.
Case No. 24983
lunch

HOWARD EBERSBACH ESTATE
HOWARD EBERSBACH, JR .-ADMINISTRATOR
JIM CARNAHAN. AUCTIONEER
RACINE, OHI0- 614-949-2708
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.

•••tence. 304· 87&amp;· 39&amp;0 or
t · 1100-1142-3111 9

'111'1\M.-"5

Public Sale
8t Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1986
4:00 P.M.

6 Lost and Found
legged

Beeglt.

Vic inity of R io Granda . Call

814-446 -4249 .
LOST Reward . lost i1 Smoka
Row . Rt . 775 , or Patriot Oh .
a rea, 2 bla ck, tan &amp; white
IP Otted male coon ho u nd s. If
seen c all Wayn" Harri10n, 614·
258-65§4 .
LOST Blick face , white o n faca .
Lost on Honeysuckle Oriv e &amp; Rt.
588. Call 614-446-3870.

7

Yard Sale

Gijllipolis &amp;Vicinity
Vard Sale May 1 . 2. 3 . Bidwell.
Turn left II R.R . trackl , ,.,
trnilar on left . U rge ael ecdon

it ems.

-- ·· ·--p·c;n;·€irov......... ..
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Ga rage S a le · M ay 2 . 9 to 4 . Dala
Ha rt•· Racin e . Bassin et. c loth es.
Knick·knackl , tarp a, to ys, and
C:Ur11in S.

May 111 and 2nd Ho blon
Cro11ing a t l a"ll Ca rpet and
Outlet Mills . 9:00-4:00. Clo ·
ttling . dis hwara. misc .

3 Announcements

OPEN HOUSE
APPALACHIAN
LOG· STRUCTURES
Appalachian Log Structures and your
area representative, Dorie Workman,
will have open house at the new National Sales Heardquarters and Mo·
del Home on April 26, 10:00 A.M. until 5:00 P.M. and April 27, 1-5 P.M.
Location 1-n. Exit 132 . Riptey-Fairplain, WV.
For more information phone 304 -755-8912.

MEDICAL SECRETARY
AND

BILLING CLERK
NEEDED
SEND RESUME C/0 GALLIPOLIS DAILY
TRIBUNE, BOX T-1000 MEDICAL, 825
THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631.

located at 434 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis , Ohio.
Next door to the State Highway Patrol Station.
Due to the death of Edgar Rutherford the fol lowing will be sold: ·
HOUSEHOLD; RCA color lV, G.E. VCR, 2 nice bedroom
suites, electric range, G.E. wa~er &amp; dryer, Gibson re·
frige rator, pra ctically new 16 cu. ft. upright deep
freeze, couch, oxygen tank w/ regulator &amp; hose.
kitchen table w/ 4 chairs, end tables, living room
chairs, lam ps, chest. 2 vacuum cleaners. rockmg
chair, small drop-leal table , sewing mach ine. small
desk. se wi ng table, radi o. dehumid ifier.
TOOLS : Power pul l, Homelite weed eater, 6 &amp; 12 vol t
ba ttery charger, 2 wooden tool chesl, wooden exten SIOn ladde rs, P.A. speakers, a1r hammer, bench , vise,
carbide , light, gall clubs, large selection of hand tools
and miscellaneous ilems.
Terms: Cash or Cteck with J.D.

VIOLA RUTHERFORD, OWNER
Auction Conducted by Century 21 , Southern H1lls
,...-. ,
Real Estate . lnc .
)/
. lee Johnson
~-: ~~':'/: 1
AUCTIONEER
\- t •J'=-1
~
Crown City, Ohio
_1 ..
Pone 256-6740
L
Not R6spons,ible_lor Accidents or Loss of Property

:j

J

'11·"'j .

-

Jlzr~·;~~~s~~~~ldRt. 160 to Porter,
st
on 160, I 'I• mile
Watch for sign .
Reason for selling, o•ner moving to Florida . The fol lowing will be offered for Auction :
HOUSEHOLD - Like new Sin ger 2000 sewin g
machine !cost $600.00), king size bed, nice _hope
chest, nice end table , nice gu n cabi net hold s 12, Magic
Chef ele ctr ic stove. table &amp;4 chai rs, some carpet, n~ e
firewood ra ck, stereo w/ la rge speaker. whatnots.
lamps, other misc.
TOOLS, ETC. - New Jog lift. 3.7 cub i:: Montgomery
Ward chain sa w, Victor culling torch , aerialor septic
tank pump, wrenches, pipe wrenches, cresenl
wreches, etc.; Black &amp; Dec ker work bench w/vi se, lead
melter for muzzle loader, (Baker) tree sta nd, log
cha ins, gas ca ns, metal shelf, 265 -243-30 ol 6 dies lor
reloading, compo unmd Jenny's Twinslar II bow w/arrows, 223 shel ls, 44 mag. shells &amp; etc., assorted pamt.
LAWN MOWER ATTACHMENTS - All parts fit Allis
Chalmers, Landlord, Simplicty, front mower deck,
power tUe-oH snow blower. scraper Dtade, rototil ·
ler P.T.O., fits riding mowers . Gar.ree full of mic . &amp;
etc.
OWNER - PHILLIP MIDDLETON
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.
LON NEAL- 614·li7-7161
No• bookin&amp; sales br month of June.

trr';

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1986
AT 10:00 A.M.

From Gallipolis take Route 160 to Porter. turn richt
on Route 554 to Eno-Vinton Road and turn left. Go
to Morgan Center and go st11ight on Roseville Road
to 2nd house on richt (white block house). Follow
signs.
HOUSEHOLD AND IIISC.
'4 bed, corner chest. 2 work tab les, 12" (B&amp;WI TV, stereo 8
track player and tapes, asst. picture frames, mirrors, makeup mirror, macrame plant ha ngers,glass flower oolde rs, can·
die holders, metal mu ~c boxes, electric cookie cutter, fan s,
newcroch eted afgans and cusllions, dishel,.curtain s, kn itknacks, toys, briefcase, blower an d pipes for fireplace, bas·
kels, 36" meta l door, wood screen, wood glass door, screen
fo r storm door, 50 gal. wood barrel, 450 red brkks, upright
hangingchicken Ieeder, 500 gal. water trough, i614'x4' skylights, 8 foot fluorescent.light, sdlool drinking fountain , 121
compound bows, sled, nu ts, bolls, 15" tires, 15" Chevy
spoke wheels, 15" aluminum whee ls, hubcaps, truck bed
liner, and numerou s other it ems.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
131railroad lanterns, hand seed planter, 121 hay hooks, wood
barrels, chair, coffee table, crock ju&amp;l and bowls.
GUNS AND CARS
22 bo lt actioo Remington !Model 512·PI. 22 semi auto Ma rlin, 22 magnumMarlin, 22 cal.auto Ka iser, 30 -ll Savage, 50
cal. muzzle loader, 12 ga .Smge 30" full dloke with deers·
layer, 12 ga. Remington 26 " modified !Model II), old Fren ch
military pislol.
1971 Plymouth Duster, 1976 Ford Elite,
· 1980 200 CC Yamaha 3 wheeler.
CHAIN SAWS AND TOOLS.
CHAIN SAWS- 14"' Stihl, 14" Home lite, 16" Crattsman, 2'0 "
Remington, 20" Pionee r.
TOOLS- Imitation Binks paint gun, air coll1lressor. heavy
duty impact, D.A. air sander, cutting torch, set of Oxide weld~g torches, 225 Lincoln welder, welding helmel

NANCY McCLASKEY, OWNER
Positive t.D.

Au CT I0N

THURSDAY EVE., 5:30 P.M.
MAY 1ST, 1986

Free puppiu and free upright

elecn lc cook stove, 304 · 115 ·
7319.

°1-D

Cash
Food
AUCTIONEE~~ FINIS 'ISAAC
ClERK: IIIUIILYN ISAAC
PIIINE: 1614) 311·9370
Licensed 111d Bonded n Fl'l« of tt. Stilt of Ohio
"Not rtsponalblt for accidlltts or loss of ltttwl."

Farm Machinery Auction
SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1986
10:00 A.M.

Discontinuing farming and leaving state so will sell
the following items. Located approx . 4'1• miles on
Dexter Rd. (Co. Rd. 10). Watch for auction sign on
!Jingsville, Ohio on St. Rt. 124.
"TRACTORS"- 12:00 NOON
I.H. 706 Dw/ T.A , two valve hydraulic system. 3 pt. hrtch .
34" rubber.
M.F. 175 D. Remote va lve, power adjust wheels, 6 speed.
good rubber.
Ford 641. gas 4 soeed w/ washer loader w/ hvdraulic bucket.
"MACHINERY"-11:00 A.M.
605 F. Vermeer large round ba ler, 469 N.H. hayb1ne, 273 N.
H. baler, l60 M.F. PTOma nure spreader, Uniconwh eel rake.
Vermeer bale move r, 12' J.D. trn sport disc. M.F. 3x16 plows.
12' J.D. sp riQgtooth drag, 13" Dunham cutt1packer, 5' Bush
hog, 5' pull type brush hog, 132 N.H. bale elevator w/tran "sport unit, 12' 120 Eze Flowlertilizer sp reader w/seeder,
750 Herd seeder, 6' scraper blad e, small tandem stock
trai ler, haywagons. balespear, mund bale feeder.call creep
Ieeder and other misc.
"MISCELLANEOUS"- 10:00 A.M .
Walker Tu rner 6" IOinter-plan ner.llle changers. O!ygen-acelylene oL tfit, Ashley C60 wood stove, 100 ~ anVIl, chain saw,
10 H.P. Ha nns rid er, 200 and 250 gallonluel tanks.'" wire
rop e, electric fencers and posts, locust JXISis, 8116 galvanized culverts, kerosen espace heater, hand too ls, 6" Ibeams.
telep hoepoles. wood cabin ets and metal shelf un1ts, Lots of
pi pe, electric trolling motor, Wards 12' se mi-U. boat and
Ward 's tilt tra iler and oars.
"LIVESTOCK"-1:00 P.M.
7-Biack-white face cows w/ 8 calves
2-Hereford cows w/2 calves
2-Burrow - bot h ia,ks
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"- 10:30 A.M.
Burnside stove, wood and kin dling box, hand hewn 1800
wooden ba rrel made fromSycamore tree, grindston eon pedal stand, corn sheller, license plates trom 1932, Wurlilzer
spinel pian o, ice tongs, railrooo lanterns and oil ca ns, oval Ia·
ble, cha irs, oakrocker, gra in cradle, trunks, Wala Walagreen
wood boK, and othe misc.
Cash
Eats
Pos itive 1.0.

Owners-Gary and Karen Aspin
DAN SMITH: AUCTIONEER
949-2033 or 992-7301
responsible for accidents or lou of property."
'

.

21

Buaineea
Opportunity

Wright WlllllfVIoo. Wt-lft-

1" wettr Cl" rD ~-'to you. Cel
114·742· 214• .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . reconmtndl that you

do buelnea1 Vtlth people you
know , end NOT to Nnd money
throuWl tt1t mall until you hllva
inv estigated t he offering .

.PIANO TUNING AND REPAiil."
rtd llcover your pl.no'• Mtutlfui
tone, eel Ddt¥,

w. .

Kl¥·

boord. ~4·f71· 11100 oo 17'3824.

R1:.tl I ·.t.d1·

0820 . Rates, referlllf'IOIII on
requelt .

I have vacancy in my home for 2
elderly people. Pl.-.ty of expa·
rlance 1nd TLC . Call tnytlma
814 -1149-3014 .

25550.

ki"ens . 304·675-52 n .

Female long

5 'flilrl expe·

rilr'ICB income tax pr.para t ~n .
Taking new cllenta. Bua{nMHI~
farmers, truckers, rtntels . Rill·
mabla rat H . Ctll e14 -992 ·
2318 after ol:OO p .m .

Go in g somaplece ? Vou go · I'll to
ney in your home or drop In dilly
ID fttd your p111 , weer plants,
ge t ReWIPIPffl 6 mail . Call
Ann a M.. Halley , 814-4'6·

814 -992 ,2289 .

Gent~logy

9

peopl11. Ca ll

SdiQOl District Must have refar·
lin I» . Cell .. ter IIPM, 814-4411-

Blue femeleDobe rman, 3 yr. old.
good natured. Call 814 -.246·

6040.

11tH

AVON Sail Alo'()n.meke 60%. Call

ev~rything .

448 -0t75.

J

~ ~.t ~ ~ ,. ~- ·-

T~ephone

Marquatte Aw., Frl and Set,

268 -603B.

;==::;:=====::;

LOIS RIGGS
• LEONARD

6 f.mily Gerage Sale, 2018

Ave., Gallipalill . Call 814 -4411·
Oumplld , 1 male smell cute dog.
eppro x. 1 year oM , black, tan, &amp;·

1 1 Help Wanted

304-176-3915 .

Buick-Pontiac .

&amp;14 -44&amp; -n95.

41ong · hai red nicek i"ens . Phone
304 · 675-6784 after 6 p.m

The family of Waid Leo•rd wishes to express
their sincere thanks to
neichbors and friends
•ho prepared food. sent
rards and flowers and
for the many prayers.
Special thanks to Vera
Weber, Nancr !Jirkins
and Elizabeth yons who
stayed at my home and
prepared food for family
and friends after the
setvice.
Also a special thanks
to Rev. Bob Purtell and
White, Blower Funeral
Home in Coolville , Ohio.

Flea Markatlll Curtay's Euon, 2
mil11 out Send Hill Rolld, Mef 3
and 4 . For morelntormation till
304-875· 3126 tfttr 5 :00 cell

-814 -441 -3172

35 88.

DICK HARRIS

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

Bill G.,t John .an

2 - 8 month old female black &amp;
tan Walker CI'Oas ooon dogs , Call

Fmpluyllll'li l
SI'IVI LI:S

&amp; Vicinity

We paycat h for 1111 modal clean
u1ed cars .
Jim Mink Chtv .·Oids Inc

5 puppi es all m ale. mixed breed .
7VJ weeks old . Call 614 · 985 ·

1 Card of Thanks

··-----Pt 'Piiiasii-nf .....

Medical • tcr.tlry, billing cterk.
11nd r•ume.end picture to Box
P-21 cere of Potnt Plea11nt

Profe•Jon•l
Services

HOME OWNERS ·Rofln.,co to
lo w fhctd rate . Usa equity fanny
p.uposa . Leader Mortgtge Co.,

814·692-306, .

43b1;d,;;H~o;;-mt;B;;;I;f;:-Oiir;;S;i;I:Je::.

a:

4 tt.droom hou•, ftt _ IIDt,
mi. .auth of Gel~. 1rE1,100.

Call dayt 114-MI-1111 OJ
IYtnlngo 114-44e-1244 .

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

From Gallipolis, take Route 141, tum 'left onto
Route 775, turn right onto Patriot Cadmus R01d.
Watch for signs.
Looking for merchandise? Try the Patriot Auction
Barn! We have all types of new and used merchandise - a,ppliances, furniture. antiques and collectors items. Something for everyone!
SALE EVERY SATURDAY at 7:00 P.M.
Door Prizes Given Weekly
Consignments accepted from 1:00-5:00 p.m. on Sll•rdly.
Have something you want to still Contact lla~in Widemeyer. Auctioneer. Arran&amp;ements for pickup service available.
Barn and Auctioneer available for Public Auctions on contract. Contract includes haulin&amp; and transportinl all
merchand ise.
Resident and Business Auction SeNice also available.
Marlin Wedemeyer- Auctioneer
614/ 245-5152 - 614/388-8249
OTHER ACTIVITIES:
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT, COUNTRY IIUSIC SHOW
CLOGGING &amp; SQUARE OANCE
flU 2, 7:30 P.M. I'IAIIIIIS.

IIVII JUNC110N IWIGIASS liCITS

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1986
6:00 P.M.

LOCATION: 530 First Avenue. Gallipolis. Ohio lttht
French Art Colony.
Treasures from some of the finest homes in Gallipolis and Point Pleasant:
ANTIQUES: 1890 handmade qu ilt, small Australian mirror,
green glass candy d1sh, Bicentenn ial Plate !Point Pleasant!.
old doll bonn et, curling~ron s, ~l ver bowl,oak cflairs, pclure
. frames. china cups and saucers. books, silver cig. case,
wicker chai rs, brass and glass lamps, Erick Stauffer and
lna rco l1gu rm es, silver silent butler, handpa inted plates
(Germany). kraut cutter, Jen ny Lynn bed, brass and crystal
can dlehold er, cut crysta l goblets. wood turned bow l, Fenton
bud vases, pottery ern.
HOUSEHOLD: Sofa, chairs, lamps, tables, R~ color TV,
paintin gs, Panasonic stereo &lt;11 dspeakers, wrou~t iron can·
dleholders. pottery, roomsize wool rugs, wool throw rugs,
wa ll plaques, woven mats. 1965 Gall ipolis ftag.
NEW: Hamilton Beach slowcooker. Mist curler iron, Oster
lond ue set.
MISC.: Avon bottl e, wood wall plaque, wood serving tray,
brass figu rin es. tea pol. vaporizer, tent, lamp, memo.
machine Zerox copy machine.
CRAFT ITEMS - NEW: Baskets, wood lolk art items, woven
rugs, needlework, wood carving, ceram ics, tin punch, jewelry, teddy bea r. ho memde butter.
Many more items still conin1 in oot istld...
Bob Evans County Supper served at fAC by Bob EVIns
Steak House Saturday, llay 3, 1986 , 4:30 to 6110 P.ll.

LEE JOHNSON,
Auctioneer
Crown City, Ohio
256-6740
French Art Colony
446-3834
Not responsible for accidents or loss of prOflllty.

AUCTION

SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1986
11:00 A.M.
SALE LOCATION: 21842 S.R. 124, Wellston,
Ohio. From the Appalachian HighwaY,. tum •st
on old S.R. 124 and go approx. 8 mtles to salt
location. From Wilkesville, sale location iupprox. 12 miles. Old S. R. 124 intersectswith Appalachian just outside Wellston.
REAL ESTATE: Three bedroomhouse with dining room and
utility, one ba th, newl ennox gas furnace and electric heat
pu mp with centra l air. new windows ~ house with triple
glass and new carpet throughout house. House is located on
8 acres of ground wrth a p pro ~: 5 acres tillable. Property has
county water lo be available. Term; are lO'IIr on real estate
the day of aucticn nd balance with delivery of deed , taxes
prorated. Real estate will sell at 1:00 p.m. lothe highest bidder upon owners' confir mation. Property may be inspected
anyti me after 9:00 a.m. the day ot auctKln.
HOUSEHOLD: Sofa. iw o arm chairs. wood arm ch11r, end tables. wood desk, Beacon Grands_on wall clock, lamps, stere1l,
29 gal. acquarium, Vitamaster exercise bike , two queen s~e
wale; beds with dressers an d chest drawers, metal shelves,
Spiegel sew ing machine, small tables, huiTidifier, ch ild's
wooden desk, two kerosene heaters, Sears clothes dryer,
Whirlpool auto. washer, Maytag wringer washer, Harvest
Gold side-by·side refrigerator lreezer, di nette table and
many more household items not ment ioned.
CERAMIC, CERAMIC IIOLDS. AVOII COUECTION: Approx.
1000 plaster and ceramic molds ~ us all kinds d ceramic li·
gurines, lots and lots of paints and brushes for ceramics, a
la rge collection of nice Avon bottles.
.
.
ANTIQUES : Very ol d 7 ~- wall cupboardwith glass doors, hall
trees. wooden wardrobe, old dressers, small fern tables,
ot her small itemms.
GUNS: Remingtoo 22 auto. rifle with scope. H&amp;R 20 ga. ~n.
gle shot, H&amp;R 32 cai. pistol, gun rack.
TOOLS AND OTHER ITEMS: 220 water pu 111l. four key
machin es with an assortment ot keys, wheelbarrow, power
lawn mower, ai r comp ressor with 20 gal. tank, hot water tank
lor camp er, 6000 btu air conditioner, metal windows, camp
stoves, water tan ks br camper, kits of hand tools ltiCh as
shovels, mattocks, post holt diggers and also power tools,
many many more items too numerou s to mention .

PFEIFER AUCTION
947-2013 - 947·2576

OWNER, WARNIE ALLEN

Terms: Cash or Cteck llith proper J.D.
L111ch Seved
AUCT.: C.' W. PFEIFER
Fran Francis, Rultor; Ron Pleifer, Auclio111tr
and Sales Associate

•

�..

'

..

•

•

Page-0-4-The

Times•Sentinel

Hom" for Sale

31

LAFF-A-DAY

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

li1 Household Goods

7 rooft'lll • betll, 1 eere n"tON or - - - - - - - -- ....

'-1.cwpl'tedthrouDhout.Wnyl.

Chtlitllre:
Cal 11•04MI·371!.
""""121,000.
12111. .MM,oln St..
oo-,....,,._ ln&gt;m n . 1u

-1-A l l o - t ... -

1'2.10 turnlahed.
A , bladl.a, -un rNdy to move.

r~~~~~~ ~~=

8

814-379-2115.

-

erty. C•• 101-117-1000 1111.
GH-4112 for lnformetton.

:-

Sp.doue 4 bedroom In town,
2\t: b.ch, gerege, much more.

a

tN.IOO. C•D 114-UI-2174

'"'

lfttr 1 :~

buylfl.
Rlfrlgerator frost fr• t?lli. 2
rtfrlleretors frost frtt whitt
t1 110 et .. llide by tkft r.trlglft·
tor t17&amp;, 30 ._ _ eltc. r~nge
ct~ppenone *76, 30 in . elec.
rtnge gold t150, 40 h . elee.
rtnge whht f98 , Whirlpool
w•sher t95, GE Wllhtr huvy
duty 1150, Kenmort w11h11
•m.. l t95 . 6 dry1rs your choice
176 ••· while they 111.-:, 3 tir
condltlonen 5,000 BTU. 195

1180 Ubefty 14x64, 2 bed·
raom, unfumlahed. vinyl under·
1*\n"'tlnctuded. Mutt Nil . Call
304 -n3-l873.

1- - -,----.,.,.---:-:--:c1t71 . 12al0

...w..,..

Mobile

NMhUt

Homt In tJlceUent condltk)n.
lnclud• Ito.,.., ~efrigen~tor, dla: .. ~ 3 .bdr.
3 mile hom hweahlf, 10•1il ston~ge build•-!h a. ~
~· - Gill ho at, lng, . .nin~ concrt~N steps.MIota
~ .. town. 21v. ..
.. ... .,... rectuc«t. Cell 814-245- of utraa.
mov1ng. ust
~ ; tl41.
MltDippdei • . Ctlll14· 592 ·
15151 an'(timt.

hou•.

wn•

:

lnga. Locoiod 1 city block fnlm 304-571 -2331

'"

bumlng

~ . '*"'City pool, ICIOIIIIrMtfr'om
.... of ntw golf COUrM . Call

114· 3118·1·11'1 or 114·388·

1515.

.•

••.• 1 8.000- 2 12 ,000 llr
condition-. 1128 .. .. 3Q in .. 1111
r~nge t7~ . Skaggs AppiiMon,
Upper Ra'ller Rd .. IIU -445 ·

I :-:M-O-ca:-:IL-c:E-H"o"'M-cE:::S:c:-:M::O:::V::E:::D~:· in a
.to~M, 3 atoragt bulkl- sured. riNontblt rttN. Ctll

..

2 or 3 bedroom tg · tcltchen •
llvlnaroom, gu hMt
wood

1\o\ ttorill, 4-5 bdn, 2 bstha,
firtP~. full bllt't,141t20 bldg.
.. wtttl fll'lgt on 8 .1 acres.
Locttld in Rio Grenclt. Call
New.""" occupied 3 bf, 2 full
btthl, famityroo"', 2 ctrg.,..ge.
No lntlnttn•et. Bricks A vinyl
u:te(ior.CA. G• h•t. itrgt
lhtded tot w·pfanty of privtcy.
Cire141 Drive near Holltr Hospittl. All for t59,000 . 114·4415·

21157.

lric* rMdl
, 3 nice,
bdr., 12 ~bllth.
2 car
htfl
mi. from

g~ngt .

7398.

Now diiPity6ng our new spring

ESTATE SALE, ROUSH LANE.

models in lingle 1nd doubiWII'idt
homes 11 reduced pricn. Wtsl·
wood Hom~~ . 6898 At. eo e..
Btrbournillt, W. Ve . 304-73&amp;·
38.,8 open every d•V·

2 matching d1y bech. good
cond., liking UO pr. C1ll

EVANS FARM.

"Mom, how come the bride

1979. 1•xeo mobile home. 2
btdroofNI , tottl electric, underpenning , te.ooo.oo. Phone
304· 273-15719 .
14'•70' mobile home. 3 bedroom~, undwpenning. applitn·
ces induded , NICE, 304-6715 ·

114-241-11171ft0f 5.

buys her wedding gown and
the groom rents his tux?"

1---------,..Shtrto Holly

43 Farms for Rent

51 Household Goods

l;pl;oo~a='=";k,~3=0;4·;6=7;5-;1=12;1;.;:=

34 acre cropl•nd, 50 •cr..
pasture &amp; tobec !:o alotment .
C1ll 304·675 -5104.

Multi colored .tripped couch,
SSO.OO. very good cond, phone

1418.

- .

198~

P~rk,

1411170.
3 bedrooms, t14,600.00. Peo-

HMC. CoH 114-441 -3413.

33

Farms for Sale

on old Rt .33 . C•ll 614 -9492103 . 4 to 6pm.

hom dem, 032.000. Coli 114· 142 tc,.. with

hou•. btrnl. 2
fge . pondt. lime1tone. Calll14-

. .11·22015.

245-924a.

Settle Est.tt 3 bdr. ,.nch. 2
blth. ft~ .....-v•.dllinlblt
Gallpolla arM, walk to .chool Of
town. Hilttop view. Call 114-

It,., j)lrtitltv .fenctd Nrn .
large workahop, 1 ~ rtorv 3 or 4
bdf. houae, othtt out bulldlngt.
Htnnlfl Tr~ct School District.
Cen b1 purchiMd with or with
out ftrm mtchintfY. Call 114·

luutiful bride qnch 3 bclr, , 2~
bllhl, ftmltyroom wlttt firtP'Iet. 2 Clf .,_,..,, 5 mil• from
town. Cllll 814-448-0318 th11
I PM.
~eled 1h

By owner, 110 acr1 ftrm at
Dtldtr. An high ground, bttuli·
ful horM with dutl hut, .wim·
mlng pool. Mu11 .... P.O .I. By

own•.
Dtldtr.

from city. r..t bergtlin. owner
..... c...... 119,900. Call81··

114 •ere ftrm near
2 Hma. modem 3
btdroom houll. VIIIIY Htting.

4Hunting
bedroom
1111. .Good
andhome
goodforfishing
Ctn
bl net~otletod with owner. Coli

!;;==;;;:::::;:====
34

114-111-4312.

Oov.mn.1 Hornet from

t1

Business
Buildings

(U

-bt: Otf·9101
· C.N 1-801-117-1000
lot lnforJNtion.

3500 1q . ft. brick building .
ldHitv auhtd for office aptce .
Located In cttv lmlll on mtin
hlghwl\'. paved parking for 17
Cln . C•ll 114 ·441-0070.

5 roomt, Nth, utiHty v.-.a•.
tkunlnum skUng, 1torm windows. doora, ctntn~l hilt. 1ir
canclition. 114-912·15204.

Llrge 2 ltory harM. Full b•t·
riwnt wtth \NOodfum.ceancl full
oil tumece. clf"P(H't. P'cnlc thll ter, traiW hook-up. Approx . 1-2
. -. In Duttr. ue,soo. Ctll

For rent or ••It

2 bdr .. n11r Silver Bridge Pltza.
Nlct carpeting, water 8&amp; Qlftb·
tge paid. Ctllll14·4·8-7025.

nice

Aptrtmtnt for rent. Quality 2
BA. 2 bath aptrtment in prime
downtown locttlon With off·
ltrHt p~rking . Kitchenfumithad
with rtfrig ., telf·clean oven.
OW. gtr. diap ., hookup for
w11her/ dryer , For non-amoklng
singla or couple. 'NO 'clflldrtn or
pets. All et.c:tric. lncludn Wl1tr·
/ stw.ltrash . AontyllriNiell
rllqulr«&lt; . Ctll SU-441· 1894
9AM to &amp;PM .

tot on

Rtccoon Cr.... Wtttr. stwtr,
eteetric. phone. tll6 mo .. trtvtl
tr~iltn only . Cell 11 4 -258·

114-742-2132.

1211.

In Mklctl~ 7 room~, 2 bM:ht,
fuU baun••t. 1111 hilt. ttr
oondltfoned. -..1 lntuiMed, 2
c.- gM". .t. nice comlf lot .
Pllont 814·192·3581 or IU·

2 Large loti with 12al0 M H ~
milt off Rt. 218. 10 mil• from
Chltipolla. Rur1l Wlllf, Meurttv

192-2110.

light, ...,lkllng. Colt 514-245IO~t wllngo.

Thtlt.lwtrt-Vtolet: Smith Est1tt
- l d n g ... Oltlo. 4 ......
roonw. INit potentlll for tnttr·
tllnlng. Otrltlkert COIIIQI,

Fot 1111 by own" 4.1 teres.
3bl8 bldg .. property .n t.nced.
good home building lite ,

hou•.

••e.ooo. coa
Mollo NultOf, 114-171-2471 or

114-423-1010.

- ·· Coil 114-915 -3594.

I room hou• wfth bath. 1 1h
ecrM at lnttl"'tCtion 143 1nd 7.
Tum '-". flr.t grttn hou•. C1lt

- 114-192-74113.

::: •v Clvt~w: Mlddl_., comO&lt;
.. ·_tot. 3 b!Nroom home. 11AI bltht,
.. ... , . fumeoe. modem kitcken,
· ; .. ltvlng room, dining room, 1 car

11 ec:r•. klcat:ld In Rutland on
IHChgrovt Rd. N.w g11 and oil
well, All mineral rights , 11tcelltnt
hunting . ucludtd ar•• ·

2 bdt. utilhiM parti.tly fum .,
t175 mo. Cell 304-6715 -6288
or 304-875-5104 .

afttr 1 :00pm.

514-441-0390 '

ISO terM, 1m11ll bam, tob•cco
tlkrtmtnt. mintrel right•. rural
watM". 30•·1715-3128 .

Fum. tfflclencv 1146 mo .,
utlliti• Pllid, ,,.,, bath. 607
2nd . A'llt . Gtllipotis . Ctll 4484418 tfter 7pm.

U4.000. Coil 114-992-3901

....,..,, ctt port, pa11o, cloH to

.·-1

ond o11opping. Mony
- "'Mtr1 ' 1. hctlltnt eondidon.
.. '" Good nllighbcwttood. Priced to
.. Mil. No )und.y clll• pltMt.

REDUCED EXTR4 NICE HOME

- 3 Mdroonw, rMdy tD mow
mto. Ctntrtl air. pool·dtdl,
chllin Ink ftnce, g1rdtn plot.
Lou of extrN. C.ll .tter 15 p.m.

e

ond _..,..._ 304-171-7211 .

1 bedroom tptrtmant tt 4021111
Twenty Founh 51., Point Plet-

lli:nl dls

... ,V. ttary houM. Fr.trock •••·

Nnt.

:30·o. 304-171-4001.

: 3 bedroom. 2 btthl, firllthtd
.. •u•rr..m. ttllcfted 2 car a•·
-111. Mit pu~ 1nd ottt• atn•.

41

'992-3487 or 304-171-1815
:- 1:00PM.

Rtnt,IIIN, IMd contr~et, 3br'•
RodneyVIII1CiJell; 2 bt't ·Eureka;
3br Evtnl Htl;h11: Dtpoait •
rttertnCM r.qufrtd. lleckburn

·Moyo Drlvl Now HIWft, 304-

~3 btdroorN, lt¥tng room, kit ·
dltn. b1th,

f~mHy

or dining

room. Point Pl ...tnt. 304-871·

1 bedroom furnished 1p1nmtnt.
ld11l tor workin11 couple. No
pets . Deposit requiftd . C1ll

Houeee for Rent

114-992-2937.

Smell •Atrtment for 1 perton.
On Second St . in Middleport.
C1ll tl14 -992 -!5262. K1y Cecil.

Aooltv-114-441-0008.

For rent 1 bedroom fumishtd
IPtrtment. Cell 61 4 ·992 -5434

3 bdr home in country, VInton
Wtttr."tr•h furnlthed ,
t200 mo . 1110 depoalt. Call

er••·

or 303·812·2688.

Qulllty buift 1 1h 1tory TudOf
ltylt home Of'! I wooded .ern,
10 tninutt1 from Point Ple . . nt,

114-381-9111.

One bedrool"n apt . Totti tlaetric .
free w1ter . and tr11h pldcup.

Hou11 for rent r.., Men::ervillt,
lond Hll Rood. ua.ooo.oo. nice
locttion. nice yerd. good
304-ne-3313.
nttghborhood. Reference • dtp·

114·992-2094 .
Unfurnished

Gllllpollo
1-•·
71-2931.

Fill\'. 304-

3 bc:h. 1YI bath, geragt. very
nice. nur Spring Vtllev Pier.~ .

t400 mo. ptus He. d.,. Ctll

On Mulberry Ave. 2 bedroomt.

MOBILE Cute cott~~tt for tin~le person.
KESSEL'S QUALITY fumlhttd, utllhl11 Pl•d. 15! .00
HOME &amp;ALES. 4 MI. R., wetk, 304-175-31 DO or
04WPOLII, RT 35. 178-5509.
114-449-7274.
~hoot pump.
- 14-Colli
......... ..,ct..plnnlng.

.,

42 Mobile !fames
for Rent

i"IIJIIIIj

lived In 7

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Ptrk,
Route 33 , Norltl of Pomtfoy.
Large lots. Ctll 114-992· 74 79 .

2

Home Pork. Coli 114-317-

• ·nlng. Pootllly tumllilod. •uoo
' "or bNt oHtf. Cll 114-211·

Dlltrlct, 1171, ptu 1 1100 dep·
oti1. CIH 11 4·441·3152.

2 bdi. mobllt home, rtf. • dtp .
....,.... Cell814·211ill· 1122 .

1177 HoNv

SWAIN

·

Plrl&amp;

12•10 CA.

2 bdf. on O.J . Whitt Rd .' Oulet

e2
Olive St.. Gallipolis. New&amp; uNd
WOOd·COIIItOVII, e pc WOOd LR
.,ita 1399. bunk btdl 1199.
antron recliner• t99, naw 6
Ultd bedroom tuhn , rengtt ,
Wf'inger Wnhtrs. • •ho•. New
IIYingroom tuhu 1199 -tall,
tempt, •~o buying cotl&amp; wood

country Nttlng. Cll 114-441·
_ ,_•o_._c_.,_,&amp;_1_4_·_
44_1 ~·3_1_
59_._
_...
H.IOO. Call f14- 71571ftor1PM.

..,ctorp~nnlng,

110. -

61 Household Goods

occoptoblo, Kvgor C_,. School AUCTION • FURNITURE

'O'i biO mobile homt, new
; ·c:lf1)~ gaa. tum.... und.-pln·

·-·

bclr. 12111•5 MH 1 child

,.rtiV lvmilllodm

241-1120.
1111 Monlrcll 12•10 2
Col 114·H7-nl1 .

1

2 bedroom moblla home. Nell'
bdr.

Aoclno. Coiii14-892-IIU.

Fumtlhld 3 blclroom mobile
home. Wtahtr end dryer. No

In , _ Gorda. Flo. f1 1.100.
Two bdlr.. wtlh •"*enoe enc1 ..... Col 114-141-2213.
rtlv lvmllllllf, now ltiiiiiUmp

r....... • 1001 oltllf. con 114tlr oondidoftlf. Ftorkle room,

441·1118 - 8:00PM.

•

2 bedroom fumlehtd lralltr.
•110. per month pi"' d-olt.

Colll14-t4t-2133.

1125 . pc. din.ttn from t109 .,

·'Now open from 1 :00 W~tiiiS:OO
• .Mondty lhru Ssturday et Ml·
nenvltlt on At. 124. HouM of
Btrgtlnt tnd Ohio Vtlley S.,tl·
lltt Syl'ltmt. Uted clothk'lg
. 'lmtn.
chlldfM); btby
clotl'tts t. 10 up; flowtn; ntw'
tennis aho• •&amp; .00, colored;
boy'• dru• thou f7 .9ei; different ttllng• pul out .vtrydl'f.

no.oo. Coli 814-446-0123
efter6:11P.M.

women.

TONY'SGUN REPAIRS. hot dip

rebluelnt. tfl typtt of guntmith
work, ftd service, 304-&amp;75-

41131 .

Trl County Spon Shop, Spring
Vtllty Pitre, GtiUpoh, Ohio.
Guns, Ar.:htry, Tecklt. 114-

441-2335.

Beautiful pink long formal with
whitt lac1 rnttchlng mltta, size
7 ·8 . Mutt 111 to lpprtcitte,

Model Selection

304-882-2904.

614-441 -0322

54 Misc. Merchandise

Y.u m'"

Snapptf, tltc nert. btgger. coat
t1.1SOO .OO now tl .00() .00,
ultd I hourt. Homtllft XL2

"'"'d' kn"' Ihal ll.anh-

§t nn~: llnm~s i~ tht: ill:knuwl ed)!l'd
indu~trr lt•lldt' r wht"n ~ ftl mt"s IH hUi ld·
inll qu&lt;ilit~· l un!l- l &lt;.,.tin,K ~~~ homt"s .
What \ 'UU ma\· nuf k rm~ ~ ~that
llt•.1nhstOnt' i1fft·ro; Oll•r h ill dun·n dif·
ft·n.·nl homl' modt" ls Ill f hnu ~t: fmm .
l'lu~ an t' ~pt"rt arr hitt:rturnl ~ t a ll thut
~· ill ht·lp ~uu dt"si)!n a l'Uslom l uj.~
humt" . St"nd for ~our llll·pa,i.! t' m lur
t·atllln.l!ut• (11da.1. \nd ~t't: wh~ lfw

6808

can blckhot witt! e•tendable boom and clb . ••cellent
condidon $12 ,600. Call 61•·

643-0115.

S'Eert 16 cu .ft . freezer. Call
814·26&amp;-1691 .

llt•anhstnnt' .-\d\·anta)!t'

Tumtebl•ctlletll player i90.
Aiding ltwn mower 1126 , 3x18
rabbitt home t126 . Ctll 614 ·

~~

""""' -

1553.

fnr rr11l .

Gunny Stt: gown tin 11 , dotted
swill sb:t9· 10, 304-182-3820.

•*

8 hp Roto-Hoe, rear tint gtlf
g~tden tllltr, Kohler engine, teoo.oo. 304·876·1815 .

Patriot, Ohio 4565R
(!/4).179-2297

Aluminum aiding brtke, 2 1et1
laddtr i•ckt , tool boa for JA 10n
truck, 2 in . pipe utlllty rack.
tluminum cut tlble, lit utill1y
galvanized work horsts . C1ll

s ..,.

ehut 22 ct ft hMztr
t276.00. Wtrm Mornhing wood
end coal hetter '22&amp; .00 . Cow
tnd calf 1450.00 . 304· 895·

3886.

614-317 .7781
New breekf11t Mt with 6 cttairs.

good rtd swivel rodler, on etable
limp, one 1tand teble. C.ll

50 g1l. steel barrellt, 5 miles
wen of Rio Grtnda. On Co. Ad.
77. Call &amp;14-682 -1492.

16 il . girls bike, high chair &amp;
pl•ypen. C.ll 814-448-7881 .

County Applienct, Inc. Good
uted epplltnces tnd TV set1.
Op.-. BAM to IPM . Mon thru

Sot. 114-448·1599, 127 3rd.

Ave, Gatupolls, OH.

.Vallev Fumlturt, nlfW &amp; used .
L.artt section of CJitlltv fuml·
turel 1211 Eutsrn ' Avt .•
GaiiiPolll.

· 304-175-11147.

KE100 motorcycle. S11n GoCef1. Huffy 7 hp riding mower.
Setradryer. 1979 Ctmero. New
EOIO tlrt end rim. Porch relling.
Will do ltwn mower rtPtW end
pktw amall gtrdtnl. 304-871-

Riclrt1rd £. lnniJ
R. il. U , Box 116, Wi.wmfln Road

317-77e1 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES 614-448-4871 .
W11htrs. dry1r1, refrlgerttora,
r1ng11 . Sktggs Applitncu;
Upper River Rd . bnidt Stone
Crest Motel. 614·448·7388.

8 hp riding lawn mower .

64 Misc. Merchandise

514-44'1-9141. Opon 4:00

THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
b~

Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscrambte these lour Jumbles,
one letter lo each square, to form
lour ordinary words.

til

Phone
1-[8141-992-3326

WANT ADS bring

~ -

PEAC~FUL

Vacation Money

61

Farm Equipment
CROSS. SONS

U.S. 31 W"t, Jtckton, Ohio.

114-281-1451 .

Massey FtJguiOn, N.w Hotland,
Bush Hog S.l11. SlfVIct. Ovtr
40 •ad trtCtor1 to dlooM frOm
S. (I(UIJIIIItt I ina Of n~ 6 uMd
equiprMnt. Lerg"1 Mltctton in
S.E. Ohio .

New lnt of ltwn mowen end
tiiiM"t. Troybilt tilltrt, Melnllne
tilltrt. MTD mowert, Sntpptf
mowera, Steintr lrtctora tnd
lmpltmll'ltt. Swithtr lmplt·
mant, Upptr At . 7, Gallipolil.

Wt will do sll types of cuttom
f~tm rnechintry work. Call for
rstu, 1114·251·15636 .
JIM'S FARM , EQUIPMENT
CENTER . IR 36 W. G1Uipolis,
Ohio. c.u &amp;14·4411-97n.
814-441-3892 . Up front trtctorl with Wlrrtnty OYif 7&amp; ustd
trlctofl, 1000 too Ia.

•v•.

1871 lnttmetlontl cub tr~ctor,
cultivators, tide dr1111r, tnd
woods bltly mower, tfl In A· 1
oondldon. 5000 lobecc:o stic:ks.

Coli 814-251-1259.

2010 John Dtefe wide front li\11
powlf, poWit' deering, 13,660.
14-T JoM Deere baler t89&amp;.
John D11r1 rake tl595 . MF dina
bound mowtr with 7 ft . bar like
new. Ctlt 1114·281 -15622.
1970 15000 FOt'd di. .l3 bo1tom
Mttlie Ferouton pkJwt. 8 pt.
trMapon diac, e ft . Woods
bulhhog , 15,995 . Ctll 114-

3334.

--=-=--=-

::._

~

FREE DELIVERY, 304-875-

1

J

66 Building Supplies

1980 Merctdtt Benr: SE 460.
PW. PSR. exc. cond .. average
mileage. emtreld green, AM -FM
ctlltne ttereo. c~th interior.
wll tell for Ina than whole11!1.
Ctll 10AM to &amp;PM, 8U-44&amp;·
Mlkt't Auto Stln , Op1n Mon·
d1y thru fridty, 9 ·6. Sttutdl'{
9 · 12 . Ctll 81•· ... 8 -2900. S•·
lnmtn Mtrk s.._rl81 . 1983
Plymouth Horizon 4 cyl. , 4
t3.C86. 1980

,~RGEANT

t
J I I J

K'NEIV

WHEN iO C'OiHI5.

tELDAHN

Now arra n~e lh e c ircled letters lo
forrn the surprise answ,-. as s ug·
gested by the above cartoon .

I l X) A r I I I J

Print answer here: (

7441 .

(Answers Monday)
Jumble" EXCEL SPURN CLOUOY NOVICE
Yesterday 's

I An swet:

What th e de livery bOY from the pizza parlor

rode- A " PIE" CYCLE

J1.wn111t 11oo11 No. :11 11 ~~~...,._a U-25 plulllooni• ~ .nclllanillnQ ttom
Nn01t "0 IIIII - · , ,O, Ioll UN, Otllt!Oo, fL :J:ao%..QIII. Irlet..di)'OUI'
tllflll, ide,,..., lip eOOt Mid INti
I cNtt.
lo ...

I.

Oh 114-441-0475.

Utility bldg . spl.: ' 30 ' ~~:40 ' ~t9 ' ,
1&amp;'•8' sliding door &amp; 3' 111\1.
door. tlli , 2&amp;6 "tcttd . Iron
HorM Bldgs. 814 -332-9745 .

- Comtortable

3 bedtoom home in Miners-

far111 Sii pplii•s
I&gt; Ll v t:s lu ek

I

cktttllng, tmlll tQulpm~nt, wUd
turfttV aeuon ltlr1t Mondty
April 28th, Stm SorNrville·,
Ea1t of Rtvtnswood. (Fri even·
ingt}, S.t. Sun 1:00-7:00 PM,

Autos for Sale

71
80 Cturvette 2 door, lltd., good

Real Estate General

work car. Ctll 614·446-3073.
1977 Ford Thundllfbird AC. PS ,

PB, good cond. Call B14 ·448·
M24 .
'

1984 Ford Ttmpo auto, tir,
M . 199. 1983 Chevy lmptll
auto. tlr. crulaa. U ,499 . 1983
Plymouth RtUtnt auto, sir:
cruise, t3,1599. 1983 Mercury
Zephyr ...,to, elr t3,499 . 1981
Ford Ftlrrmnt tuto, air t1 ,199.
John' a Auto Stl•. Bul1ville Rd.,
G1llipolis .

1978

Fle~tt

1973 D1tsun 8210 body rough
t76 . 1974 Ford Mutttng II bad
engine 875. 1973 Hond• •so
Scrtmbler 20 ,000 miles t295 .
Cell 114·387·0108.
1986 Pontitc Fl~ro . Loaded.
excellent condition. 18600. Cell
114 ·992 · 5628 tn'(11me.

1878 Ford Thunderbird. Good
c:oncli1ion. New Redial tires, tilt
wheel, AC, tuH power. 614 -98&amp; -

4418.

exc. work Clf',

1980. CoiiiU-441-2106

2 stall horse trl. 1750. 1979
Camero 11 ,796. 1986 ChiV'.
4a4 zo .ooo mi . 110.000. sll vt~do lkt niW lotded. 1984
Moped Tomosmtde by Kal . Call

114-246-5223.

1981 Mudt RX-7, 5 spd. Call

514-441-3231 '

1978 Malibu Cl111ic. 306 V8,
PS . PB, air, Cruillt, AM radto,
715 , 900 original mil• . 119&amp;0.
080. Coil 814-992-2386.

HOUSE FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE
Reduced price,
three-bedroom house
on 4.4 acres. private
and shady, central
air, woodburning
stove, low fuel bills,
double car garage.
il mile !tom Chester on
Route 24B .

CALL 985-4294

ville. Carpeting. gal(len &amp; lg.
lot.
NEW USTING- 3 bedtoomhome near business section
in Pomeroy with garage tor
only $8.000. 1 •
NEW LISTING- 1981 Kirkwood 14x70 trailer. 3 bedrooms, II! baths, range, refngertor, sundeck &amp; aJ
acres. Lebanon Township.
POMEROY- 2 BRs, full basement, front deck &amp; lg. klt
above all floods. Asking
$12.900.
NEAR STORES- Nice older
home. 2 baths,lg. basement,
storm windows, hot water
heat &amp; 2 porches.
COUNTRY - 2 .:1es..,J
houses in need of ~k.
Southern Schools. Special
linancing available.
12 ACRES- Woods, 2 trallm in Chesler Township. T.P.
waler.
·
PORTlAND - 2 lg. level
lots, ~d house, barn. etc. For
the handyman. But just
$11 ,000
BUSINESS BLDG. - In·
come will pay for 1!. Lots ol
space, more to rent. Heart of
Pomeroy.
We Save You Time .,d
Ttouble in Sellin&amp;.
CALL 992-3325 · '

1985 Camero, c1H btfore

PM. 304-675 -titltO.

OWN YOUR OWN

Hous ing
Headqu art ers

General

WE HAVE A NICE FRAME BUILDING FOR SALE ON CLAY
CHAPEL ROAD. PANELED, CARPETED INTERIOR. GAS FURNACE. PRESENTLY B£1NG USED AS A CHURCH. OWNERS
HAVE PRICED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE $12 ,500.

2 ~ 00

SUPER SITE! 1.56 ACRES- NICELY lANDSCAPED WITH LIMESTONE DRIVE. HAS 2 SEPTIC TANKS, WATER TAP, 24X20
BLDG. W/ GARPORT. GREAT PLACE TO BUILD A HOt.l OR
FOR A MOBILE HOME. $14.000. JUST LISTED'

Real Estate General

lor Gravely tr~t:tor,
1200. Coli 114-286-1035

Mt•MV Ftrgu.on 150 trtctor,

g11, 8 tpttd , live PTO. PS,
diH-Iock. Ctll 814-4415-7322.

Fergu10n 30 tt'tctor cracked
blodl ,'
or M1 re..antblt

ua.n ...

J . Pthung Interior 5
doof' 1

111

ftl.ltl ...

CAMPSITE •••

sizn

,_.,et pine

(8) grtd11.

fiJI•••

8. Thermtl lntulated
pen·
tit 71" hgt . 32 " wktt t39 .95

...

10. Wood door penala w-full

'gtast 78 " hgt . .14" wide 1%
.thick t39 .96 .
11 . Octegontl window w abined letded (11111 159 .96 ••·
12. CIN; ICr;'liC lhtetl 080 and
121
ttveral li1n btg
HYingl.

•BOATING
•FISHING
•HUNTING
•SWIMMING

vao•

13. Plywood handy penelt
~ th lch t .71 11 .00 N .
14. Mttonht primed horizontal
Uttrlor sicUnu 11 '•18 " 1l7· 16

SMALL FARM WITH RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE - RE·
MODELED 2 BEDROOM HOM£, BARN AND OTHER OUTBLDG.
~EARLY 20 ACRES, TOBACCO BASE. GALLIPOLIS SCHOOL
SiSTEM. $45,000. JUST LISTED!
DON1 SffiLE FOR JUST AWOODED LOT! FOR ABOUT THE
SAME PRICE YOU CAN GET APPROX . 40 N:RES OF WOODS.
UNBELIEVABLE $10.fiJO.

•eoo

otter. CtM IU-387-0132 .
3020 John DHft Trtctot. Eactl·
lent condition. 2 111111 tow boy

LAND- APPROX. 160 ACRES , GUYAN TWP. SOME nLLA·

trlllor. C.ll114-192-7401 .

BLE. ROAD FRONTAGE. $50,000. OWNER WILL SPLIT LAND
AND SELL 77 N:RES FOR $20,000 OR 83 ACRE TRACT FOR
$30,000.

Otutz wector, pent end ttrYict
1t th*t btrt prtce, lidn Equipment Co. 304-178-7421 .
Alit. Chal~r 2 " row 3 point
no ·lill plll'lter,' dry ftrtilb:tr and
inttet 1ttach~~ment. dtmonltra·
tor U ,IM)O.OO. Alia Chalmert 4
row pull no -till, dry ftrtiliztr,
ln11ct antehamnt. t1 ,900.00.
Allis Chtlmara 4 row pul no· tJII.
78 .., .., , lir lllhl, dry fertilitlll'
15 ,fi00.00 . Alll ChtlmM'I I
row dry fertilizer. hydrtulle
mtrklfl. lnttet tnd hll'biclde

mtehment 11.900.00. CaM
Moo.! 1580 011 btckhotand end
lotcttr.

cab.

very

good,

•I.ISOO.OO . Intemetionel aoo D
dlitll dozer hydraulic bltde end
wtntfl ti ,IOO.OO. KHftr Str·
vice Cent", PointPINIInt Riply

Rood. 304-895-31174 .
John

Real Estate General

GORRELL REALTY
Racine,
24 741 Hill Road,
Ohio
Vlrginlne D. Carroll, Broker
Tal: 247-6844

THE FINEST NAME IN lEAL ESrATE
OUI 2Ql

DHrt A llmt· flrtililel'

sprtldlf. John OHrt hey conditioner. ctll 1no;1imt, 340 ·191-

3471 .

62 Wanted tD Buy

12"1ong 1B" wide

no.oo.,

15. B·grtdt merblt vtnlty top1
choictslntln 11ock. •20 .D0et.
16 . 4 ' ~t8' treatld pint ltttlee
t1C .9&amp; N .
17. K-lux brick andatonued end
tan . reg . ...99 ctn now t1 .50

ACRES &amp; ACRES OF
NATURE'S UN-SPOILED LAND

and 11.99 ctn.
18 . Erterior llty doortodl eluminum ftnlah 12.99u.
. 1,. Good uood 1-2 bulb light
complete w·bulba t11S .0011 .

20. Wood·Mttonltt·btthroom
paneling 4 'd ' pc t4 .99 to
t8 .95 ••.

Own vour own camtsite ...
cbea er than Rent...

21 . Praiinlshtd 1nd unfinished
door and window andelltyp11 of
trim attrting at t1 .00 for 8 ' pe
22 . Aluminum mobile hon.tnd
bam roof col11ng w·fib• &amp;egal.

U3 .tltl 100 gil 1nd upUO .tltl
tlgol poll.

23. W1llboerd tdhaaiweqt . tubea

or 29oz. 11 .39 ••· or by c11e
11 .26 ...
24 . Pentl6ng ntill t .79 box .

Now buying shell com or tlf
corn . Call forlatHtQUOtel. Aivlf
City Ftrm Supply, 814-448-

2985.

63

livestock

Pure bred Duroc botrl. Roger
Bentl~. Stbina. Oh. C•ll 11 3 ·

!i114-239e.

4 Regilttrad Angu• bulta. , 5
rro . okl. &amp; tw;te,., Call 814-2515·
1210 .

Double reg. Tenn . walking

llock , brlcll , mortar 1nd m• ·
sonry suppll•. Mounttin Stat•

8 week old plg1. 130 .00 . Cal
lfttr &amp;:00 PM. 304-8915· 3619 .

66

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Pets for Sale

PARK YOUR CAMPER ALL YEAR LONG

Wtnt to rent hl'f fieldt n11r Eno
or Porter. Calll14·388-9832 .
Oragonwynd Canary KKenntl.
CFA HlmeriYan, Plftlan .,d
SitmMt ldtttnl. AKC Chow
pupplu. New puppl• II kitttnl.
Ctll448-3844 tftlf 7PM.

WA TER-ELECTRIC·BATHHOUSE

...CABLE TV•••

ytentld 10 buy Foa Hound
puppy. Call 714· &amp;37 -1143 Of
Wrltt 10812 Till Dr., Gtrdtn

AU CAMPSITES SHADED &amp; LEVEL

Grovo. CA 92143.

Chow-chow puppltl Silver blue.
AKC Rtg . champion blood Un•.
~e.. . ptdiaNII. Stud 11rvlee.

DIRECnONS
6 MILES BELOW GALLIPOLIS
CROSS RAC:COON CRI. BRIDGE
TURN RIGHT &amp; FOLLOW SIGNS
OFFICE OPEN nLL DAII

Milled hay l•rgt .qutre beltt.

11 .25. 304-57tl-tl579.

66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Saad com Otkalb tnd Ktn·

wo"lrf: Pllono 304-171-1101
ott• e:OO PM.

lr dnsllllr l.t 11 un

1-114-2511-1271 '

'

AKC Bl•ck Labedora puppill,
htvt hid ell shot•. • 100.00
cell 304-871·4301 .

•ch.
67

Musical
I netru manta

PIANO FOR SALE. Wtnted:
Attponalble petty to attu""
1m1ll monthly paym.,tt on
aplntl·con•l• pleno. Clift be
~ ioetlty. Writt: llnduda
phctnt numbtrl Cr.ctit Menaa•,
P.
Box 120. leckem-ver. Ill

o.

12219.
.•

LOOKATTHIS GREAT BUY NEAR RIO GRAN DE. NICE3 BEDROOM RANCH HAS EAT-IN KITCHEN . ATTACHED GARAGE
.ABOVE GROUND POOL. PRIVACY FE~CE . AN ABSOlUTE
STEAL AT $30,000.
OORGEOUS SETTING! RANCH WIT HOVER 3 ACRES WIT HACCESS TO RACCOON CREEK FOR FIS HNG OR BOATING. 3
BRS. 2 BATHS. LR AND FP. DR . FRWITH WET BAR AND BIG
GARAGE WITH ~ BATH. WELCO ME SU MMER IN STYLE.
PRICED TO SELL AT $59 ,000

Real Estate General

Coli 814 -441-2615.

Wellton.OhkJ 114· 384-3845 .

Hevtn, W.

2. APPROXIMATELY 140 ACRES lOCATED AT PORTlAND.
OHIO- No buildings, excellent hunting area. 100%m~neral
rights go wilh p1operty. About 'h of acreage ISpasture. balance is wooded'

3 yr . old PoRed Hereford bulf.

horlt . Mtrn 1nd Colt~: . Alto
Ooubler111 . Tenn. wtlldng hor•
SNd tervlce . 814-742· 2060 .

Block, At. 33 , New

LOCATION- LOCATION- lOCATION! CLOSE TO TO\VIl'
GROCERY, SCHOOL &amp; HlSPtTAL ON RT. 588. VERY Nlcr
LARGE l£VEL LOT WITH FRAME RANCH . 3 BR 'S .I ~ BATHS.
BIG FR WITH FP.POSStBLE OWNER ANANCING. DON'TWAtT
- CALL NOW1 ASKING $42,000.
·

Wtnted 10 t1111 1000 lb. or
more toblceo pound111•· Will
PlY no mort than 40 ctnts lb.
Ctll tftlf IPM, 81•· 388-B614.

PENN ' S WAREHOUSE -

v•. 304-112-2222 .

BIG
FOOT
PA

THIS HOME COULD BE THE BUY OF THE YEAR! 3 BEOROOf,iS, 1'h BATHS, FAMILY ROOM. UTILITY ROOM, NICE
COUNTRY SETTING NEAR CITY. $28,fiJO.

Mowltf

BuHdlne meterlalt. cement.
bloella til ab:H, ytrd or dtlivewy.
Gttllpoltt Bkldl Co., 123V. Pint
St., Otllpolil, Ohkt Ctll t1•·

luildtrs Supplln Surplut.
Cloaeout1. Setwge.
1. Prlhung ttHIInsultttd 8 or II
~~~door. . 89 .1&amp; .
2 . Prehu"9 ttNI Insulated door
end g.l••• 91itl or 111te 1125 .96.
3. Ooublttidl I itt entrance door
Mts Y, glut 91itt t399 .
tl. Bingle sklelltt entrance door
Mta Y.. thermal giMt t299.96 .
15, Commercitl doubtetntrencet
"'brown tlllku1'inum t699.
1 . Double aidelittl entrance set
Wood \It pent!' \-', glut w dtoorttlvl trtm t288.H .
7. Prlhung iuerlor doors til
lizll and flnl1h11 I grad•

HOliES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET. GAlliPOLIS, OHIO 45621

....

9117.

51'11

Canaday Realty
446..3636Jl~.
AN AFFORDABLE HOME WITH A POOL! TI-IS RANCH Hlt.l
HAS VINYL SIDING AND BI!ICJ&lt; lRIM. 3 IIDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
EQUIPPED KITCHEN , NICEDINING AREA, 16X321NGROUND
f'()DL HEATED FOR COOL DAYS. ATIACHED GARAGE. SOLAR
HEATING UNIT. A LOT OF HOME FOR $55,000. JUST MINUTES FROM HOLZER HOSITAL JUST LISTED'

1982 Dttton 310 Hatchbtck. 6
IQHd, dtlu111e interior, ••ctllent
condition. •2800. ORO . Cell

814-742 -25e1 .

Real Estate General

Endlo.t• for 3&amp; Ftrguton and 3·
pt. hitdt disc . Ctll 1!114-44&amp;·

245-5121 .

441-2713.

Reel Estate General

R1111l Eatate General

•218 E. 2nd St.

~-P~e-;-nd;e~r6o-paj.!e color ~lu.l!ut. f.nr~tdi:' S7. \\ hirh ;~ -I
inrludes handlin~ and posta~t· l'h:lrJ.!t~.
I
II \ 1omr
I
1'1 "'"' . -----~
j
' -(Ill

Jl

Dtrk.

CAMFI-"UGE ARMY SURPLUS 211-61522 .

'llnl

Autos for Sale

The

131 MF trtc:tor. T- ~4 J .D. baler,
Building Mttlfitll
81odt. brick. ltwtr pip•. wtn· 418 nw~ Holand. hayblnd 9ft ..
dow1. lnttll, ttc . Cl...,de Win · HoW Hollond hoy roloo. ~~~
ttra, Rio Or1ndt. 0 . C1ll 114- 614 -388-9770 or fH -388-

Merchar11l1 se

2 bedroom, new ctrpet, AC , ln

0122.

White met1l storm door. croll·
buck atyle. 79 -"'J'' x 36W'.

514-317-0232 or 814 -4,8 4281.

t••••·

Golllpotlo. Cotll14-441-1408.

Plnlt Prom Oreu sizt 7 , full
ltflgth. CeM 814-388-9336 .

.Control hunQif end 1011 weight
Vilth Ntw Gnptfru11-PPH .
Combo. Fruth Ph~tmtcy .

·Advantage

Antiqua1

71

Dllcount price~ . A&amp;fle tre•
U1 :50, Ytwt 1,2 . . , Mapl~
•a.IO, ~wood 18.10. Aull11
•1.11-:--·2 mt. North of ·erktgt

teo. cou 114-251,114175.

3674.

2 mobllehomelott. 1 onRt. 7. 1

114-441-1102.
vlc18ri .. \4•70 n .l9a, 12
M - 14d0 U ,500. Nlcl fOf' Mle CM' rent. Ua70. 3 bdr .•
111 l'rinoon 12•10 n.100. 1\-\ btth. clote to town . Cell
P - O 10 tM your ........... 114·44· -7545 '
ElaN Home Centtra. Chillicothe
114-772-1220, Clrclovllloi14- Mobllt Hon. Call 114-4460101 aft• 1:00 PM.
773-Jt27.
14•70 Mtnlktn

Mo1orlzed trtlldmlll, e•ctlltnt
condition, UOO. C•ll 814·448·

The Hearthstone

304-175-1483 or 175-1480.

e

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Small tr~lltr for t&amp;DD. liwingroom 2,pc . vtkKtrt250, stereo

on Bulavlllt· Addit'on Rd . Ctll

Furnished , cHie. beautiful rfvlf·
Yltw, tn lteneuga. no thy
Fodtrt Mobile H6mt Ptrlt. C.ll

.not .• eet up H1 Chtehir~ Mobile

Pickena Uud Furniture. Good
QUIIIty usltd furniture. Op.-. 9 to
6 Of Clll for appointm.nt .

11t. tutu,..

octlvhoo. Col 114-379-2139 .

46 Space for Rent

, .,241-1111.

::~ell hoiMII WthM'I'tm,
We Fln8nct'tm! Dtlivtrtd end
Hl•up at No btnl Chatolt 74

Furnished Roome

For rent Sleeping Rooms 1nd
light hou11 k•p lng ro om1 . Ptrlt
Central Hotel. Call 614-446·
0761 .

Colll14-9t2-35S1 .

"1871 14•10 lchuft with til·
~pand:o. 3 btdroomt. 1 V.. b1th1,

' ..U . .winr

2 bedroom. No

APARTMENTS . mobile hom11,
housn . Pt. Pltlllnt•ndGIII ipolla. 814-448 -e221 .

114-441-9210 or 304-17546
5101.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sele

0373.

isc.

61'4-246-6040 .

53

Oak flmrood tor Mil. lptcill
Spring pricte. Ctll 114-448-

POll. C.lll14-949-2253.

ollh fllqUirtd . CeH d1y1 114·
441-3158 Of 114-2156-18152 .

tlr, llrgt dtck, 2 loti, IHichtd

•'

Ctll 1-304·675·4024 .

lt31.

3 btldroorri, 1M 11-=trlc, ctntrll

Centrtl air conditioner br mo ·
bile home, 1300. Ctll after
!5:00PM , 6;14·388·9800 .

High btclc couch and oh lir •t.
llk.t n.,.,f 1881 C.mero In v:»od

Colt 114-2..·8311.

Ntw 1 bedroom aptrtmtnl. Ctll

BY OWNER - 11.15 acr• . Mt .
Alto on St. At. 2. tJCCtllent 1 bedroom ep1 . for rent . Bille
building lite with all utilltin. r111t st1rt1 t216 . e month thtt
drlvewey , uptlc ayuem, lncludh all utilities. Dtposh
gwden, utility bem, fruit trill requirtd of t200 . Contact VIIan'd aomt ltndw:tping . lege Mtnor Apt. Middleport.
t19,000. 304-898·3422 tfttr 814 -992-n87. Equtl Hauling
Opportunity.
p.m .

114-192-1072.

Refrigerttlon I! Applitnce Str·
'llict. All brtnds used tpplltnetl·
part•. UHie'a Refrig. a. Awl~ .
Cheal'llrt. Oh 614·317-0440.

58

LINn mower 20 ~. cut~ tlao
Flymo llwn mower. llkt naw .
SIIIPif eofe In good cond"lon .

Futnlshtd Apt. 2 bdr., t195
mo .. w11er pd . 1136 2nd. A'llt .,
Gallipolis. Ctll 61 4-448·.41 8
lfttr 7PM.

••ch

Century 21. C11Ndy1 A11hy,

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock·

ton. Oh . 111 • ·288·5830.

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

oandition. Ctll 11 4·"1·0019.·

6 Court St. 3 bdr. 1YJ bath. U50
mo ., plus utllldea, refnnc111 &amp;
no Pllll. Cell 114·4•8-4928.

1 ·I K,..,pertitlly woodtd lots
neer tpprovtd tub-divllkln . T.P .
tnd C. wetIf tnd tpproved rold
to
101. Rt•ontbly priced.
will flntnc. whh 10 ptn:tnt

. -.. • rtYot.

Color TV's ell shape tnd 1iz11.
Cell 614-448-1149.

742 -2788.

Furnished tpt . , 1 bdr., 701 4th
Av1 .. G111ipolis . t235 mo. utHitill plid·. Ctll 448·4418 1fter
7pm.

U2.100. Colt 114 · 281 · 1~22 .

tvm·perty
much mort.
40 teree m-1 . mottty woodtd,

~

e ,.,.,

36 late &amp;. Acreage

0145 . Aocllnoro. &amp;226 . to
8375., ltmps from t28 . to

Uted Furniture·· Drts..r. &amp; bed,
Trundle bed. m8t.l office dub .
3 milft out Bultvilll Ad . Op.,
9tm 10 6pm, Mon . thru Sal.

0338.

,.,.,.., , Alto dtlnqutnt tla

I

Furn. tpt . 919 2nd. Ave . Gtllipolis , ah~re btth. lingle male.
t13&amp; mo ., utilities Ptid . Call
441-441
7pm.

m•••u•.

Colll14-742-2877.

Pleltlc clattm ltltt epproved.
plllllt septic 11nk1, piUtlc
cul'lltftt, mtttl cutver11. RON

pul"'1) 1-3 • 1·2 horsspowe; holding mnk . Cell 814-

Well

a

Nicely furnished mobile home,
eff. tpt .. ctntrtl 1ir 1nd hett In
city, adult• only. Call614·4•8-

MENTS IEqU11 Ho111ing Oppor·
tunltyJ monthtv rent 1t1r1s at
t17e for 1 bedroomtncl U12
for 2 IMdroom, depoth UOO,
loctt.ci nNr Spring Valley Plaza
and Foodlend, pool tndCabltTV
IYtlllblt, office houfl H polll·
bit 10 am to • pm 111d 7 pm to 8
pm Mondty-Frldty. Cell 114·
448·2745 or leeve

ert:.,5PM.

Old roof sletea 12K24 , old ltnd
1110neavg. lile12x1211138 . Over
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
1,000 tq .ft . betded ceiling, ustd
Sofal and chtira priced trom aluminum siding. lots of old
'285 . 10 1895. hbla. •so and· lumber beams. C•ll614-448up to 1125. Hlde-t -bedl,t390. 0841 .
and up to t510., toft bed•

toO&amp; . 7pc. 1189 tndup . Wood
table with lilt ch lin t 286 to
1746 . Desk 8126 up to 1376 .
Hutch11. 1550 . Bunk bed complete with mettreuet, t276 .
and up to 1395. Baby beds,
t11 0 . Mtttrtllll or bo•
1pring1, full or twtn. 183 .. firm.
t73. tnd U3 . Ouatn 1et1.
t225 . Bed frtmet. t20 .tnd
t25 ., 10 gun - Gun ctbintls.
UlliO. G11 or electric rtngu
U76. Baby mattrfun, t36 •
&amp;46, bed fr~mts UO, t25 , •
130. king f11mt 850 . Good
selection of bedroom IU itts.
rocbrt , metal ctbinets. h..d bolfds i38 &amp; up to 165 .

JACKSON ESTATES APART-

251-1111.

mi.

...1 ·2034 after I!IPM .

for Rent .

53

441-0381mw IPM.

3 bdr. newly

~;::==;~::;~::;;===
-:;
44 Apartment

1981 EtcOn ttetlonwegon , one
owner, 31 ,000 tit', 12,1915. Callihan 's Ulld Tire Shop. Over
1971· BuJck LtSabre 4 door,- 1.00Dtirn, aiatt 12. 13. 14, 11,
to.:led, on• owntr, 11 ,8:)0. 1$, 11.5. 8 mil.- out At. 218 .
Cotchman· 19'- pGp•UP"Cimpll', CoHI14 •211-6261 .-sleeps 8, 11 , 600 , C•ll814 .. .a..
7019.
Ttr'dv 1000 home eol"'1)uter,
equipptd wi1h coktrtd monitor.
Electrolux vtccuum lliNn••· printtr, IBM toqJtttblt, ulld
A-1 condl11on ·•1tachmentl . tpproa: . 12 kours•.over t2,500
Availebt. et t72 .00. Cllh or lnvetted. will ucriflce for
ttnnt •n•n;ed . Call 614 -246 - t1.600. C1ll 814 -...1-4171

9115 or 30~ · 175 - 1799 .

April27,1986

64 Misc. Merchandise

64.,Miec. Marchandlee 64 Miec. Merchandise

304·676-6221 .

38 1cru farming land for lease

'

3 bdr .. 32 10r11, oil h11t, county
MINt. Rt. 7. EureKa, tcron

Apri127, 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

71

Autoa for Sale

74 Otr1 lwtnger. CJ -&amp; Jeep
Ntw mp, n.w 1irft, lharp. Cell

114-441-2708.

1971 Ptymouth Dutter 311
tulo, PS , runt good, loob good
13715. 1870 Ford Mlverlck 8
cyl., auto. run• good, looks
decant t1715 or Offtr. 81e It
1710 Chtthlm Ave .• OeiHpollt. ,
1874 Chtvy Nove II cyl. , runt
t&amp;IIO. Ctll
&amp;14-448· 1801 Mytlma.
.

IIICttllnt tookl

_,od

1),,9''1/a £

8mitlt
REA L ESTATE

R(SIOENTIAL . INIIE 'H M ENlS . CO r.1114 ERCI AL

388-8826
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

TOWN AND COUNTRY
4 a:tes on the Oh1o
River . 7 rooms on Garfield Ave .. lull basement
living rm .. sitting rm .. 3
bedrooms, mbaths, lull
bs nt ., 2 outbu ildings,
fruit trees, 2 car garage
with basement.
PRICE
SR 160 north
bedrm.homeon2acres
Mi l. Full
and bath. Rural water.
new electoic service
garage.
SECLUDED
$9,500.00
10 actes wooded , stream , approved aeration seplic syslem.
dtiwe, rural water and electric availab~. Wil l trade.

96.5 ACRES 11/L

SR t60 &amp; 124, Wilkesville, pond, barn and ~der outbldgs.
Owner will subdivide.
4 LAROE BEDROOMS &amp; 4ACRES
SR 554 remodeled 8 tm. home. Just charnlng lor all your
ant~ues. Family size kitchen with bar and loads ol cabinets . Ba·sement, rural water, beautiful !lees in yard. Mid $50's.
BRICK AIID FRAME
5 miles from town. Beaulilul home and I .:re MIL. You will lovt
the decorthrouJilout. 3 bedrooms, country kitchen,lamily room
w~h WBFP. AHotdable ptice.
. VACANT ·UP THE RIVER
3 bedrooms and balh, latge kitchen , lullllosemenl,rriake an of·
fer. Priced in lhe mid Sal's. Good schools. •

••

••
••
•••
••
••
••
••
••
••

e

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING WITHIN THE CITY but with a
country atmosphere?? Approx. I ocre, located inside cily
limits. 2 nice outbuildings, garage and carport. Excellent •
condition. Buy now lot $55,00.00.
_•

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ~ Loa~led at corner d Seaind. •
Ave. and Sycamore St. Call for mll(e information.
·•
PRICE REDUCED!!!! ~ 29 ACRES, IIORE . OR LESS • •
!Nerlooking Ire beautiful Ohll River. lncklli.&gt;s rover lronlage •
and small 2 l:Edrm. cottage. Prime deve~pment ~nd. Call for
more intormallln.
•

OM DOWNTOWN.•
WITH ALUM. SIDING. 3 IIDROOMS. NICE:
B£AUTIFUL CAPETING. OCCK, GARilN
ATTACHED GARAGE. NICE PRICE $37,fiJO. ·

a~ng

COMIIIERCIAL BUILDING located
Court St. in Gallipolis. •
3,fll0 sq. ft. plus 1,200 sq. ft. apartnvmt. Call tJr more •
~lormalion. PRICE REDUCED!
•
RED BRICK HOME-I.ocaled 10 Ga~prjis. Fullllom101l Cent •
g~s lurnace. fireplace House IS ~ excellent condilion, •
so lUSt "move 1n" Pnce $49.\JJO
•

IC, nat

PRICE REDUCED rro this beaubful Cokln~l OLtch hon'~ •
. klcaled across lrom Ihe new courthouse. Central AC, wbfp,!lltl •
linished basement. $73.000.

•
•

FOR R£NT - Two 2 bedtm. apls. 2nd fbol reao g&gt;H COUISe. •
$175 and $200 pils depos!. ADULTS ONLY'
•
FARM - 150 acres. Gteen Twp. $79,000. Teribs.
SELLING YOUR R£AL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS.....
CALL AN EXPERIENCED W!)OD REALTY SALESPERSON

•

GET READY FOR SOllER! THS HOME HAS A B£AUTIFUl
16X321N-GROUND POOL NICE FENCED BACK YARD. 3 BEDROOMS, FAMILY ROOM. 21\ CAR GARAGE. 10' DISH SATEr:
UTE SYSTEM. GRfAT LOCATION. KYGER CREEK AREA.
$58,00D .

lB

··.

.

~

AUDREY F. CANADAY. REALTOR
\a~
MARY FLOYD, IEALTOR, 446-3383
~ 25 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS. OHIO "'' ..,.

•.=..

.
'

'

�;

Times-Sentinel
71

Autos for Sala • 71

1973 Toyota Celica. 4 lf!Md,
Allld with good body, runt good.
Swutya Auto SaiM 1560. 814-

882-7403; -

-

1978 Toyota Celica OJ liftback.
Sunroof, •lloy wheels. 11600.
Call 814 · 9!1f2 · 3264 afler 6:00

p.m.

1974 Olds Cutlan and 1976
lTD . Call 614 -992 · 6134.
1917 Plymouth Volarl!l station

wioon. auto .•-31 8 eng .. PS, PB.

Autos for Sale

. 72

198! Monte Ctrlo, 5,000 plus
miln. loaded, "Ill mill loan.
:JJ4-875 -7852

1978 Malibu Cla11ic, PS, PB,
AM -FM cuseu , air cond, new

73

72

Trucks for Sale

6 whHI all terrUl vehicle, good
condhlon . 304-882· 2887.

p•c•uo.--1 1985 VT 11QO_ Shll;low, low

1984 KIWIIIk'l Kb)( -200 011'1
Bike. II.. new. - ,.., than 1150
mil81. Anawer $llen01r, t1400
Of belt offer. Call 304-87fi'J889 . Tony Keathley,

:tJ4-876-1655
1978' helf· ton· Chevy

304-676-6766 .

mileage, 1111c . cond. Clal after
6PM. 61&lt;6-367-0818

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1980 Kawasaki KDX goodcond.
MOO. C1ll 814 -446 -31!52.

--------1980 Ford Van 3speed. cerpet.
aponv. low mileage, $3 ,399 .
John ' s Auto Sales, Bulaville Rd ..
Gallipolis.

1983 Honda VF 1100 V-65
M1gna 6 ,600 mi., new tiraa,
windshield, exc. cond. 12 , 160.
Call 814 -388 -9744 .
1976 Honda 360 for sale. Low
mileage. t400 or best offer. Call

lit- cond . ." t796 . Phone 30411'6-1149 .
1t:Chevy Citation, 2 doors. 4
1
. 4 cyl.. 55 . 000 miles.
A -FM cetsene. 13,000. 304-

QI-7436.
11-78 Subaru OF. 111utomatic. 4
cyt:, AM -FM cassetta. 81.000 .
:11'4 -675 -7436 .

Motorcycles

1983 Honda XA 200 dirt bllta,
eJIIc. cond . Call614·446 -7015 .

'70 Toyota tor ...... t&amp;OO .OO,

-=:-:~-~----c-::-:---::-~--~' 68 Camtto, 11,000.00 or belt
offer, 304-nl -6088 .

paint, 111lly wh eel•. $1 .500 .00.
3)4 -675 -4210 .

74

Trucks for Sale

you want it ...
you've gotit...

76

1978 Chevy Blarer, 411.4 , 350
auto .. 1\Jna good. body rough .
New tires and two extra rims .
388-8510

•

1981 Harley Oavidaon kJw rider.
Call 614 -367-7110 aftar 4PM.

1979 CB 750 K Honda Motorcy cia . low mileage. 4 N1 Header.
t900 or bast offer. Call 614 -

992-67!!-7·
, 982 Honda CB· 750, 2920
miles. with ·extras. $1450 Call
614 -446 -0122 •her 4 .

,980 Kawasaki LTC 1000. Exc
cond, 30-4-675-6433

17ft. ski boat will trade tor 1 ~ ft .
to 17 ft . ball boat. Ph(lne

LESTA

304·676 -6336 .
19 foot inboard boat and trailer .
6 cyl ., engine, runa good.
13000.00 . Phone 304 -676 ·
1849 and after 7, 304 -675 ·

BONNIE STVTES- BROKER
JIM STVTES - REA tTOR

Motors for Sale

1976 Starcraft sld boat with'
many extraa . Walk" through
windows. 56 E\liiiNda. vary
good oond ., *3,000. Call 614-

'

12·11 bOat, Sear• Hmrv bot tom
with 6 hp motor, 304 -675 -

6602.

Boats and

18 ft . boat, motor &amp; trailer,
8700. Call 814 - 218 - 8&amp;63 .~ ~ ·

Sea Ktng 12 ft. Semi -V with
pedestal nats. Wards Tilt
Trailer, trolling motor and more.
M75. Call 814 -742 -2877.

Reall'state Generel ~ -~ - -

446-4206

614-985 -3907.
198J"'ford Ranger $4 ,000. Call
614 -367-7781 .

and
Motors for Sale

NTHE CUSS16ID

360 Hond1 , goodcond. Uldefor
smaller bike or 1811, 304-5712198 .

3!186 .

JACKSON COUNTY BRANCH
286-4496, 64 CHURCH STREET
FRED &amp; ALICE HILL - OFFICE MANAGERS

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

PU roppers, 8ft. and 6 1J2 tt .. S85
each . Call614-446 -7322

446 -2164.

Camping
Equipment

1985 Fan Travel Trail11r. 1JV1 ft .,
batl'l with shower. gas -electric
refrigerator, 3 bumer g11s stove
with ov&amp;n , etc . Sleeps 4 . 304-

WISEMAN

n3-5170.

Stake Your Claim
On One of These
Fine Homes

446-3644

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER
Clyde B. Walker, 245-5276
David Wiseman. 446-9565
B. J. Heirston, 446-4240

81

Home
Improvements

Roofing. painting, room addi tion•. 11tc. Free estimate• . 17
Yurs experlenc11. 8 &amp; W Con ·
atructlon . Call61 4--446 -8668 or
61 4 - 246 - 9~48 eve'a..

#134

1972 Tag -A-Long 18 ft . trailer.
Very good conditton. $1495.
Ca ll 614 -992 -6173 or 614·
1985 SunfiV Travel Trailer (28
h .). fully equipped . U~ed 1

1980 !28 11 .1ca mper by Skyline.
Co mpletely self -contained
85500 . Call 614 -742 -218-4
1973 Titan Motor Home. 28 ft .
440 Oodgeengin a. GoodCondi·
tion . e&amp;ooo. Catl 614 -74 2 ·
2050 .

4004

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

,
.-

.··

Services
81

__.

,.

Home
Improvements
~ BA SE MENT

WATERPROOFIN G
Uneonditionel lifetime guaran·
tee. local references furnished.
Free estimates. Call collect
1 -814 · 237 ·0488, day or night.
ROger s B aseme nt
Waterproofing .

~cry

83

Excavating

Good -1 Excavating, basements,
tooters. driveways. septic tanka,
landsCIIping . Cali anytime 614446 -4537. J ames l. Oavi1on.
Jr . owner.

--;;;;--=~=..-:-;~­

85

General Haulr"ng

Bulld orer work and dump truck
work , phone 304-675 -3338 .

Hll i'i i JW!'\S
-it•ni('t'S

f----------i

THE FAMILY HOME THATS AFFORMBLEn - For
$55,900 jOU will 1-.ve th 5 3 ll!droom b&gt;level with I
full and 2 haff ooths. lar&amp;e eat-in kitchen, hu&amp;e family
room, I car lllrage, and wood deck. Nice fot.locatoo
on Debby Drive. Green schoo~ -

GREAT LOCATGION - RroUCED PRICE.
NICE NEIGHBORHOOD - fiJI these things
descnbe th5 all brck,ranchstyle home rust o~
Rt 35. This home offers 3 BRs, I '.1 bat I!;. LR,
m.equipped knchen. full basement, covered
pat1o, n(e lot fenced backyard . Call today.
WANT TO DO A UTILE FARIIING THI S
SPRING? - We have a new isbng .,th 11.4
acres m/1,small tobacco oose, mceranchstyle
home offers 3 bedroorre, 2 baths. lar&amp;e LR,
krtchen. full basement. hardwood lbors. fron t
'llrch and rear pat1o Just off Rt . 35, near
Rodney

24 ACRES M/ l, HARRISON WP . CLAY UCK
ROAD - Rolling land. well on JI'Operty. barn
and tobacco base. t;alllor more deta1o.
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL-HAS REDUCtO
THE PRICE BY $1.000 - 132.9 acres m/ l,1n
Walnut Twp., 1 ~ ~orj home has 3 lfl _bath.
42x94 barn, ~rge tobacco base. Call ~r an
appointment.

DO YOU WANT LOTS OF ROOM PLUS THE
CONVENIENCE OF LIVING IN TOWN 1- This
homeoffers both .Locatoo on Second Ave.. 1h~
rome has 3 or 4 ll!drooms. LR, dnngroom.
large kitchen w1th pantry off kitchen. small
back porch. large front !Xlrch. full lot wrth
pkmty of room lor garden and k1ds, gas heat.
unattached one car garage Ca lll oday for an
app01ntrrent
VACANT FARM lAND - Morgan Twp_84
acres more or ~s. l evel and rolling land.
App1ox. 33 acres tilla b~ . rema ~der woods
VINTON AREA - 1 ACR~ M/ l - Anrac!Ne
ranch home features 1104 9:1 - tt., 14x261R.
eat-1n knchen_bath.attached garage.add!onal
ld can be purchased.
EDGE OF TOWN, RIVER FRONTAGE - Th ~
home leatures LR. eat-1n ~! chen , nice tam1~
room w1!h hearth for woodburner. bath. gas
heat, large unattached garage. city schools.Call
tor an appointment

1972 (22 hi Yellowstone
camp•. self cont•lned w ith
awning and air cond . Cell
304 -176· 41 13 .

#103

rehirbilitlted. '-"''!~us inter~r. Home
offers bnght IMng room, formal
family room
excep!Onal kitchen. J bedrooms. 2 baths. utllrty
room and oorement. 2~ car carport.Fantastic VIew rJ
the Ohil River. $1!4.000. Don't rest 111til you see th~
Illme.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pinl!l
Galiipolis, 'Ohlo
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or 614446-4477

1975 Southwind motor home.
co ,.,lately self-contained. low
milts. Call 614 ·992 -5906.

DEFINITELY WORTH YOOR IMMEDIATE INSPECTION
- Yoo will fall in love with this 4 OOdroom Cape Cod
locatoo on a L3 aere lit with ••er frontage. Beautiful
formal dililg country ~!chen. 2 Jl'etlj balhs and full
basement $75,800. Call to see today You won't be
sorry!

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 183 Sec. Ave.. GellipoNs.
814· 448 -7833 Of 814 ·446 ·
1833 . .

87

87

Upholstery

R &amp;: M Furniture Manufacturing ,
St. Rt. 7 . Crown City, Oh. Call
&amp;14 -256 -1470, call Eve. 814·
1648 · 3438 . Old &amp; new
Uphoatered

Upholstery

M owrey's Uph olatlring HrVing ~
tri countya i'e~ 1 year~. Thebtlt :
in furniture upholatering. Alt
wortc guaranteed vilh our mod·
em ahop at Maaon CountY~..
F.sirgrounds. Pllo.ne 304.- 876·
4154.

Richard and Sons, interior and
eKtarior pain ling and wallpapering. phone 304-675 -7147, RiChllrd D. Purchas&amp;.

rronth . Call 614 -992-6192 or 1:========~
304 -882 -2230 weekands .
~

home to competing 111d recently sold
properties in your neighborhood. Cat! us
today. We're Setting Houseell

Upholstery

Rotary Or cable too l drilling .
Mo1t wells completed same day
Pump ule1 and 1ervica. 304 895 -3802

992 -6206

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Establishing a fair price is a~ical in
marbling your home. We'A bo happy to
give you a marlcetanalysis comparing your

Ken ' • Water Service. Wells,
Coel. llmntone, gravel, etc.
Delivered 1 ton and up. Jim
ciatflrns. pools and watarbeds
f illed . Call 81.t -387·0623 or I"LI•nllf 304-876-1247 or 676614 -367-7741 0, 304 -876 ·
1247 ,

87

Starks Tree and lawn Service,
lands ca ping. 304 ·576 -2010.

82

1971 Rover camper, self con ·
t~tined . with awning, sleep• 6 ,
$1 ,600. 459 lariat Or., Gallipo·
lis. Call614 -446 -1511 .

#101

General Hauling

RINGlES ' S SERVICE, expe·
rienced ca rpenrer, electrician ,
maaon, painter. roofing (Includ ing hot tar application! 304 675-2088 or 675·7368.

1973 motor tuma Dodge Chas·
sis 318 motor, selt co ntained
with central11ir. 21 tt . long. Cell

1981 19 ft Wildem~t•s travel
trai ler, loaded with options . Call
614 -446 -3934 after 5.

.:Ill

86

Fetw Tre11 Trimming. stump
remova l. Call304 ·675 ·1331 .

Remodeling, electrical, panel ing, painting, inte rior and exte rior . Fred Pa11rson , 304-675 -

1

A SURE WINNER - ()! I acre lit.
ranch OCfers 3 bedrooms. 2 ball!;, foing room wrth
fireplace, dilingroom, eat·in kitchen and 2rnr_l!lrage_
Energj eff~!mt heat pump. Quiet kx:ation. SfB.9JO.

James Boya Water Service. Also
pools filled . Call 6, 4 -266·1 141
or 614-446-1175 or 614·446 7911 .

86 . General Hauling

RON ' S Televi1ion Service .
House calls on RCA . Quazar.
GE. Specialing in Zenith. Call
304 -676- 2398 or 614 -446 -

1974 Starcraft fold out eamper,
&amp;leaps 8 , co fll)lete with stove ,
ictt box, lights &amp; 1inlc, eKe. cond .,
like new . Call 614 · 388 -9755
aflar 6PM.

1977 VW motor home, 53,000
miles , 11•tr11 n ice, like
new l2 ,696. B &amp; 0 Motors.

SHUT YOUR EYES and imagile joor famil1 in this
prest1gous br~k on an atmute~ ootstanding lot 2.7
acres of nature at its best. Home offers 4 redroorT!i 2
baths. formal dilingand larll! fami~ room. 2fireplaces .
In-ground pool. It's not just adream . __rt's a new 1111y d
lie. $129 fXXl _

General Hauling

446 -0916 .

614 -446 -0558 . .

A REFL£CTION OF GOOD TASTE
•Ow,... t-.s romp~te~ rem ode~ and rooecoratoo th~
;well located horre. Offers 3 dlarning ll!droorT!i, nice
.knchen. formal d~ng and fulloosement.ln oodn~n . a
·lar&amp;e double lot and garage buildingw1th lots of room.A
.f!OCd buj at $54,fXXJ

85

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-=-0-7 ·

Conc_rete &amp; block work , ·also
carpentry &amp; painting, garegas ,
pattos. sidewalb, basements.
Free estimatea. By job or hour.
We're on the level. Call 61 4 ·

Carpenter work, roofintJ, siding,
electri c:el, reasonable rates, gua ranteed work. call 304 -676 6016 .

26 pt . Trotwood exc. cond ..
e2 .000. Call6t4-258-1583 .

:JUST PERFECT FOR 1 FAMIUES! - Very nice 3
bedroom brd ranch .,th 2 red room 11Jartment bUlb
in. You11 have lo~ of room and privacj. Has full
basement, garage, new hea!1ng Sjslem, new roof and 2
nice knchens.ln :rldnon. you11&amp;et atwo s!orj 5 room
lrame resKience to re11t and he~ make roortgage
payments_~~ th~ llcated on 10 acres and priced well
II!!IW market at $69,000.
#Ill

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

614 -448 -7322 .

_

• •· •.

2454.

=:=----r

78

REAL ESTATE

•. •

27, 1986

April 27, 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

v

CHRISTIAN'S
CONST_RUCTION
gp,ing gpsele/
SCHIOULING NOW FOR ,

• Roofing 'Siding
• Continuous
Guttering
'Fencing
'Remodeling

PRICE REDUCED TO $85.000! 20 ACRES
MI L. FRONTS ON RACCOON CREEK Approx. 65 acres til~b~ and 135 acres v.oods.
Comfortab~ two story home offe~ ·4BRs, bath.
krtchen. l1v1ng room. fam1l1 room. two
firepoces. bam. 2 ~rge screene:t fX)rches
love~ quret setting.

EDGEMONT DRIVE - CLASSY CAPE COD IN
PERF£CT CONDITION - Th5 home offers 3
ERs, krtchen with DW. d ~pt., range and refrig.,
d~ing room . livllg room )'lith woodburmng
firep~ce, fam 1
ly room. woodburllef. two batl!;.
toyer. gas heat. almost new ~of. immediate
posses~on .
'
DANVILLE AREA - Close to Meigs Mines 67 acres m/1, mce home offers 3 BRs. 2 ootl!;.
k~ch en w/IJW, dispt., doub~ ovm, etec.
fumac ~ carpeting. Bam on property 24ill
with joH. Call today for more rnformaton.
MOBILE HOfll FOR SALE - 14x70 Fleetwood
Broadmore, 2 IJl, 2 ball!;. klhen \\llh range
and refri~ . carpeting IOxll metal ~orage
b~~ Call tor more deta1~.
CLOSE TO TOWN - Nice one story horre
teaturing krtchen. LR. fam1~ room, dningroom.
tun oorement. carpetin&amp; gas teat ctv water.2
car unattached bock garage.
GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 35 acres mil, mostly
lll~b~ . 3 mi~ north ol Rodney . Sprn&amp; wei
and county water, fenced and cross fenced.i
tooocro base_Very ~ce 3or 4 red room ranch
style home wlh _krtchen. LR, barn. breezeway,
woodburning fireplace. Call for an
appointment

$8,0110 - 11 ACRES - CHESHIRETWP.Vacant land. Sepbc tank on property. CaU fur
roore mformation_
NEW USTING! WALNUTIWP.- 28.8ACRES
MI L- N~ home offers 4 BRs. bath, kichen.
living room. dining room, !replaceandcoveroo
rear !XJrch. Tobacro base, oose, st-ed; and
garage. Owner may cons~er finan cing. Call for
roore detai~.
IDOl( AT THIS ONE1!! 10 ICRIS MI L ONE
YEAR OLD RANCH- $39.'Jl0 - This IDme
offers 1584 sq_It 4 BRs, 2 batt.;, klchen,
tami~ room. 12x24lR, dlling room.carpeting.
efet_118 hea~ Andersen therroopanes. county
water, SW school d~tr~t. Call today and make
an appointment to see Ills me.

THE KIND YOU HAVE IN MIND! - Bnck
ranch within walking distance ~ schools and
downtown shoppin&amp; 3 Bs, bath, LR. krtchen.
d1nllg room w/ bu~-in chila cabnet. fami~
room in"baement. gas teat, !replace, attachoo
garage.

BRICK RANCH - ROUSH lANE - Th~ ~ve~
rome offers 1378 sq. fi. pki sa full basement
Three bedrooms, LR 6 L-shaped .,;th treplace
and dining area. woodwrn ing stove in
OOsemEilt I ~ baths. garage. Call br ITCre
Information .

THIS HOME HAS All THE TltNGS YOO
WANTI! - 4 BRs, equ1pped knchen, 2 ball!;
(master bath has a wh ~rl poolf. LR. carpe!ln &amp;
heat pump. cent. arr. attached garage. above
ground 1)00 Just m1nutes from tlliln at
Centenary

QUALITY IN EVERY DETAIL - 3 or 4BR fl&lt;&lt;k
home o~ers a 20x40 lam1ly room. 3 batl!;.
knchen \11th IJW. displ. micrCNiave and trash
compactor, dining room. mtercom system,
central arr, 2 car garage, deck and a20x40
POOl Over $100.000. Call for ap!XJintrrent.

COMMERCIAl BUILDING - PERRY IWP.NEAR CORA - 0000 fll ft.steel bldg__,deal ~r
anjone mtrucking. drillingor m1mng bu~ness.
Owner may consder leasing or fmanc1ng. Call
tor more 1nformat~n.

PERRY TWP. - 218 acres, mil. older IDme
offers 3 BRs, LRF, krtchen , bath, fulloosement,
storm windows, well, rura lll"ler avai~ b~. Call
for more detai~.

STARTER HOME OR RENTAL HOfll $19.900 - 3 BR lxlme offers LR, krtchen.
bath, 2 car unattached garage, fenced yard.
Call for rnformation.

~100 SQ. FT. BUILDING - Solid concrete
wal~. 200 H. frontage on SR 7 1n Crown Cllj
Former~ used as furnrture factory. Ideal br

retail sales or manutactunng business.

PRIOE OF OWNERSHIP - Love~ home offers
3 8Rs.'3 bths. eourpped kit. 14•44 famrly
room, drnette, firep~ ce. 2 car attached garage,
alx&lt;IO POOl and satellrte d~h. Call tor an
appo1ntrrent

THE FAMILY Will lOVE IT HERE' - lh ~
oome offers 1728 9:l-H.. 3 BRs. I ~ batl!i. plus
shower m basement, gal~j krtchen ~
CDI!'(l~te~ eqUipped, LR. family room. d~m g
room. carpenng. central arr/heat pump, rear
deck overlooks Raccoon Creek. CaUbr an
appomtment today

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOlJI - Lovety
bnck ranch offers a 14x24 LR. k1tchen w/ rNI.
d!Spl_, eye-level oven, counter top range and
breakta~ bar. d1nette. famrly room, 3 Ills. 2
baths, full oosement. pat~ . 2 frreplaces.
attached 2 car g;uagewrth e ~ctnco peners , gas
heat, central air, pato. intercom system. Just
minutes ~om !l!iln on Debbj Dnve. Call tor an
appOintment

ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
acres m/1, all woods. Old barn on iJOperty .
$21 ,000.

l«lRTH GAlliA ESTATES - Morgan Twp_
100x300 ~t Alktng S3.!m O.ner ,;11
ronsider financrng

103 ACRES MI L. SPRINGFIELD 1\W. Approx. 96 A. til~b~. older home has5 IllS.
bath. lR. krtchen. county water. 40xlil ;:&lt;Je
bid~ . 40x60 tobacco oorn, vamus dt-er
outbuikl~ g&gt; .

AITENTION INVESTORS!! RENTAL INCOME
OF $485 PER MONTH - ASKING PRICE
$29,'Jl0! - 1.5 acres m/1. 5 rooms and ooth
home. 12x65 mobile home and roo~~ oome
pill_Call for more detar~ today

YOU CAN OWN AUTILE BIT OF COUNTRY 5 acres m/1on StRt 141. Nice one story home
has a family room Mlh woodburner, lull
basement. heat pump. cent ar. cistern. well
a~~d county water. Qeen school. Call for an
appointment

COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAl - fhs nne
room twostory home leatures two ootl!;.dnrng
room. krtchen w~ h new cab•e~. carpe!Kig,
firep~ce. full basement. gas heat. b~ck, J car
garage, vmyl ~d1n ~ Level ~~ w1lh highwaj
frontage on Upper Rt 7.

THIS HOME DEMANDS ATTENTION! - 1.86
acrs, m/ 1, 2,024 SQ . H. of livilg space Other
ou~tandilg leatures include fR wl fl&lt;ick
fireplace, lR w/ treplace. 3 IJls, 2 ball!;,
formal dinng. newty remodeled krtchen .carpet
throu~M electriCfurnace. central ~r. 2 car ·
attached garae with openers, satellte d~h.
fenced back yard, nrce
Sjlace_Let 1.6
show you this home

DUPLEX 4 SAlE - Great nveslment ~r the
buyer. Locatoo on Graham School Rd . Each
unrt offers2BRS.Iivingroom.bat h.klchen il'ld
stove. refri&amp;. OW and d6pl., laundry, larJ!
car~XJrt central air. a~~d storage area_

Call today ....

446-4514
or 446-4841

.-

#l16

.·

.

#123

+-

AT $57.500 - You cannot afford to pas s up th6
gorgeous bnck ranch. Home OC!ers 3 bedrooms. 2
baths. formal h~ng room and dining area. beautiful
family room with trepoce. Coveroo oock IX&gt;'ch and 2
car garage. Ibn'! m~s lookingbefore it re i~'
#107

NEIGHBORS QO COUNTI - Attractive brick ranch
with double lot in an mellen! neighborhood _Well
arranged home elfers 3 bedrooms, I ~ baths. l•ing
room wlh 4irepoce. handsome kitchen, d•1ng area.
Large storage room and 2 rnr garage. $63,al0_

#117

.'
FAMILY DEUGHTI - Home bui~ with the whole
family in mild. Features very useab~ family room.
knchen and breakfast nook tJus formal dlling room
and living room. Over 1400 9:1-ft. d l~llg space a~o ­
mludes 3~;tJod s~ed bedrooms and 2sparkling ooths.
Resting on .66 acre lot with oodrt~nal 1.6 acres
a.ai ~b~- Priced to ;lease at $64.000.

..

#114

,,''

SICK AND TIRW of renting' Lucky you! Make a
gt)rous ·beginning in this 3 bed room brick randl.
Home offers comfortabf fami~ room wlh
woodburner, eat-in knchen. liv1n1 room and I car
garage_ Q~et ne1ghborl'ood, 5 ni les from citj
$41,9011 We can help &amp;el you financed.
#219

-'

HERE IS WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN
LOOKING FOR - Ohio River fron tage
in S1 racuse. 3 lots and an rnder rou se.
cleared lan d to the nver. REOUC ED
PRI CE $15,000.00

SYRACUSE- Here 1! is areal~ ~c. horre
- 3 oodroorT!i, 2 ooths, roodular Lll~ on a
doub~ fenced lot ~us a rea l~ rire llxll
two rnr g;Jrage. Woodburner. sunporch. all
1n good condrt~n . Wants $39.al0.00_

NEW USTING - MIDDLEPORT - Aneat
12x65 Schu~ mobile hon-e. on a ~x 120'
lot Chain link fencing. Equip ~ klchen , 2
redrooms, all electric. Stocage bu ild1n~
$16,!:00.00.

NEW LISTING - N;ce~ remO&lt;Eied 111?
story home on aQUiet sir ee l ~ M1dd~port.
Many features must be seen $29,000 00.

YOUR SPIRITS WILL BUBBLE over th~ super sharp 3
bedroom, 2 bath home. Freplace with heatolater in
l•~g room. eat-in knchen. wiD~ house fan_Above
-ground pool. $59,500

PSSS:rn -

Annrou ..... an ""~ us "&lt;Yo'll'e to Ill"? Come
see
home jOU
you couldn1 afford. 15
Oakwood Drive. 4 redroorTli. 2 ootl!; , lar~~Jioing room,
eat-in knchen. din01g room. family room and 2
firep~ces. large screenoo-in patio. Priced at SfB.~O.

#000

BROI&lt;ER 'S NOTE:
lt't Time To Sst Exelfsd/1
the It~well.;, 7 gun. Qon 't wslt '"
tomo.mw - es/1 '"' of DIU fllsllflsd p~t~fml~~nsl• '" s
psnonsl eoun11/lng 1111lon snd we 'II thow go11 how sffD'dshls
• home o•• 11sllg 61.

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

NEW LISIINGbaths modern
back lot wl2

PROPERTY - ONLY $35.000 - Nice modern 4 bedroom ran ch .
room. new back patio built out of pre-treated timbers.

ACRES MORE DR LESS -

~1----.~....;------t

-...-

.~

.• •

•

•

...
.

SYRACUSE - Nice ranch type holre oo
Rustic H~~- 3 bedroorT!i, garage, eH:. Ill
heat. Patio and nrce lot. in lllod condniln.
Wan~ $38,!:00.00.

I

Vacant land. located in city

'

~

- 1.53 acres, more or less, in Kyger Creek School Di slrict with 2-19
lives in me and rmtsthe other ftir $250.00 per month. Excellent
-

•
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_,_
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DOUBLEWIDE -Owner needs to sell_LfBO acres, more or less _3 bedroom ranch, 2
formallr vmg room, formal dm 1ng room, fam ily room, 1.920 sq. ft. of hving space. 21arge
ered pat1os. Crty schools_ Pnced at $38,000.

#248

ClAIM A PlACE IN HISTORY.... with tlis spacious 2
stcry brick home located in t&lt;Yo'ln . Ustoo in the Oho
li&gt;torical Soc!!ty Record, thii ID~re has been recently
relilished insKie. Offers 8 rooms, 2illtlund 65•125
lit. lmmed~te ~n. $49,900:

HYSEll RUN ROAD - N1ce 10 jear ~d
brick ranch home 1nagoodloca t ~n . Over I
·acre and 3 oodrooms, 2 !Btl!;, full
basemen t, large pat~. equ1pped krtchen ,
many features. $49.500.00.

LONG lllTTOM - Aneat 311!droom ranch
wlh spac~us family room, kitchen wrth
bui~·in range and oven unrts. separate
dining area. Gas f~- heat ~us ooodlurner.
2 car garage. approx. I acre with g;Jrden
space and outbuildil&amp; Many features_
$32.fXXJ.OO.
-

••
•
••

.•

FARM - Rio Grande. Mostly tillable land. 2 storj
use to have.lg. shade trees in yard.Home has been ter
blrn _Clv schools. Priced in SO's.

' ;~

MINI FARM - Approx li acres. 3
bedroom home, 2 car garage, pond and
pasture. O.ner .,;11 negotiate. $45,000.00.

- ··-

.. ..

STATE ROUTE 7 - Recently rederorated
3 bedroom home. Approx. 2 acre ~t.
Beautiful firep~ce, fami~ room, full
ba sement and equipped kitchen .

·~

1'Ji.\ , . ""· ~ ""'*·

HERE IS A GREAT DEAl home on 6 acres rl ground cklsetot!M'n.
10x20 bui~~g pkls aft turnnure and
appl~nces. Owner will sacrifice &amp; wants
clfer. $24.!:00.00

REiiUciro - Here ~ a nice rnder
lxlme, priced to sell, l;llod street 1n
Midd~port and leatures a garage.
basemEilt, 3 bedroom. l'o ball!;_ Nrce
k~chen a~~d m good condloo. Now
:D,500.DO.

......"••

�- .,

..
27. 1986

Ohio-'Point Pleasant, W. Va.

·BRIDGE
James.dacoby- ··

Knowing when
to strip
By Jamu Jacoby

12'160', 2 bedroom home. Larae

· room. with

tx·

Plldo. mod. kitctlen with dishwasher, cent. ait, It. back
porch, conred. ltke new Ill side and out. Buy this ooeend
movt lt, or buy~ and-move in by rentin1the lot it is preslltly sittin&amp; oo. SH it today.
#636

,.

· ~--------~--~
MAKE CA::JFE£ L LIKE A KING
$HC° FOR H. I~ Jl-o; TH£ CLASSIF/£DS

REAL
Consolidating domestic and·lorelgn subsidiaries ol

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO, N.A.
of Martella In the state of Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1986 published
. In response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Utle 12, United
States Code, Section 161.
Charter Number 4f64
Comptroller of the Currency Fourth District
Sta tement of Resources and Lia bilit ies

.

Cash and ba la nces du e fr om depository institutions:
Nonlnteres t-bea ring ba lan ces and currency and coln ...................... 6,468,000.00
Interest-bearing bal an ces .. ............ .... ........ .... .............. ................. 25,000,000.00
Securities .. ..... .. .. ...... ............... .. ....... ..... ......... ...... .......... .............. ... 24,467.000.00
Fede r al funds sold and securities purchased under agreements
to resell In domestic offices of t he bank and of its
Edge and Agr eement S)lbsldi ar les, and in IBFs .................. ............ 2,850,000.00
Loans and lease fin ancing receiva bles:
Loans and leases, net of unea rned income ...... 104,139,000.00
LESS: Allowan ce for loan and lease losses .. ...... 1,182,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unea rned income.
allowance, and reserve ......... ....... .......... .. ...... .......... .. ... .. ....... ..... 102,957,000.00
Premises and fixed assets !including capita lized leases) ...................... 798,000.00
Other assets .. ............................ .. ...... .... .. .. ........ .... .. .. ..... ................... 2,400,000.00
Total assets ... ... ........... .... ................ .... ...... ...... .... .. ..... .. ................ 164,940,000.00

"'
t;

""c"'

=
E

i

:I

Suppose you were an undercover
agent sneakmg mto a nudtst colony.
Naturally you'd strip. When you're de·
clarer with plenty of trumps and en·
tnes to both hands, try to re,member to
do the same thing. It cant bur! and
may help.
Declarer trumped the opening lead
and played ace and a diamond. West
continued clubs. Declarer ruffed and

Treasure house of
. the Kre~lin opens

We , the unde rsigned direc tors, attes t to the correct ness of this statement of r e·
sources and liabilities. We declare that it, has been exa mined by us , and to the best
of our knowledge and be li ef has been prepared In conform ance with the lns truc·
lions and is ttue a nd corroc t.
Don F. D~v is
William A. F ields - Directors
Russell L. Reid
-

--- -

-

WE ARE BRINGING THEM
BY THE TRUCKLOAD WITH
MORE TO ·COME

f)

TREES • SHRUBS
ORNAMENTALS
Jackson &amp; Perkins
ROSE BUSH
500 of '1111

MAKE YOUR SELECnON
EARLY

Ohio pOlitic$ on Page

Story, photo on Page 5

TVC track results

Prom royalty
Photos on P age 6

+
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at y

e
Vol.35, No.262
Copyrighted 1986

I

scene

87 Hide
89 Employ
92 Macaw
95 Immerse
98 Dlllseed
99 Smirk
tOt Refund

1 Capital ol Guam
6 Worker who

refuses to strike

tO Again
14 Hidden supply
t9 Military signal
2 t Legume plant
22 Informal letter
23 Condiment
24 Empowers

103 To give artilicial
value t o

t04 Neither
t05 Portico
106 Teutonic deity
t0 7 Member of

26 Intention

28 Spire
29 Succor
30 Ivy League
university

Parliament : abbr.

..

32 Barter
·
33 Close completely
34 Fall behind
35 Pet itioned ~
37 Evergreen trees

39 Anger
40 Lane
41 Poses lor portrai t
42 Pintail duck
44 Having a dull
llnish
46 Does wrong
47 Toward shelter
48 Period of li me
50 Condiment
52 Skidded
53 Behold!
55 Belabor
57 Alternoon: abbr.
58 Not one
59 Flap vigorously
60 Therefore
62 River In Germany
64 Tidy
66 Before noon
68 King of Bashan
69 Endure
70 Circuli
71 Location
73 Takes unlawfully
75 Drowsy
77 Float
78 Cubic meter
80 Stories
8t Lamprey
82 lmpregnales soli
with air

t08 Miss Horne
t tO Lion
t t t Tin symbol
112 Point of hammer

t 13 Paradise
t 15 Babylonian deity
117 Hindu deity
119 Hall an em
t20 Elevate
121 Part of sentenca
124 Exllncllllghtless
bird
. 126 Lease
127 Servant
128 Supplies,
prepares and

serves food
130 Grandmother
132 Medieval armor
support
133 Reveal
134 Unit of Bulgarian
currency

135 Kind of Iabrie
137 Ashes of seaweed
139 Suite: abbr .
140 Sheet of glass
14.1 Sutlers defeat
143 Daughters'
counterpart
145 Prefix for new
146 Divisions ofthe
:;ear

148 Restrai n
150 Seesaws
152 Stroked
153 Chinese faction
154 To expose (a lie)
156 Browns, as bread

1 Regions
2 Extraordinary
talent
3 Educational
lnstl1ullon
4 Catch: colloq.
5 Partner
6 Scandium symbol
7 Drinking vessel
8 Border (on) .
9 Fleshy fruits
10 Positive pole
11 Facial feature
12 Parisian season
13 The two of us
14 Part ottoot
15 Unlock: poetic
16 Devoted
assiduously
17 Tell
18 Sediment
20 Page of book
23 Chiel god ol
Memphis
25 Meager
27 Forgave
28 Deposits
31 Baseball slats.
33 Warbled
36 Act
38 Walk
40 Evergreen tree
41 Sever
43 Merit
45 Mexican dish
. 46 Unmarried
47 Winglike
49 Regrets
51 Loop
52 Killer
53 Smaller amount
54 Leave out
56 Military tactical
unit
59 Parts
60 Secure
61 Chooses
63 Stricter
65 River duck
67 Editors' concern:

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newapaper

Cooler temps, rain head toward ,O hio

_.,.m.,...,.

157 Rain and hail
158 Is In debt
159 Barracuda
160 Out ot ilate
DOWN

1 Sectto n, 10 Page•

Pomeroy....:. Middleport. Ohio, Monday, April 28 , 1986

",

By United Press lntemallonal
Ohio could he In for its second straight day of record
high temperatures, bul cooler wealherr and rain are
headed toward I he Buckeye Sta te.
Blue skies and warm sunshine covered the Buckeye
Slate Su nday, enabling several records to be set.
In Columoos, the 88 broke the 1957 ma rk of 87. hu t
some 3,700 people t urned out for a walka thon to raise
money for the March of Dimes. J im and Fran
Blamble dropped out after walking about nine of the
. 18.6 mile route.
Walkathon officials said there were a few cases of
heat exhaustion and leg cramps, oo t oo serious
Injuries.
Other records Sunday included the 88 in Zan esville,

Ohio from Illinois and should be in wes tern Ohio by
afternoon. Some of the thunderstorms may become
severe over the western two-thirds of the state by
evening.
Clouds building up ahead of the cold front
approaching Ohio should keep readings in the western
part of the stae below the records.
The passage of the cold front and the ra in it
generates should leave behind drier and cooler air
Tuessday, partly cloudy skies and more seasonal
temperatures between 65 and 70.
Wednesday is expected to be dry with highs in I he
70s .
At daybrea k with mostly clea r skies, temperatures

breaking the 1957 mark of &amp;'i; Dayton' s 86 exceeded
the 1962 mark of 84; Toledo's long· standing 1915
•·ecord of &amp;1 was exceeded by one degree' Findlay's
1962 record of 84 fell when an 86 was rocord ; and
Youngstown 's 1957 record of 83 fell when the
thermometer hit &amp;1.
·
Cincinnati lle!l a 1914 record of 86 degrees and
Akron's 85 tiE'd the record set in 1938.
Aq·oss lhe Ohio River In Kentucky and West
Virginia, temperatures reached the low 90s.
Readings lll is afternoon wUl once again climb ito
the lllsand approch record highs for many locations ,
mainly in the east.
Showers and thunderstorms are moving toward

ranged from the mid :xls to mid 60s.
This morning's weather map soowed high pressure
along the East Coast, a low·pressurc center over
Minnesota and a co ld front from Iowa to Louisiana.
The high will move eas t today and by evening, the low
center should be over centra l Canada with the cold
front loca ted across western Ohio to the Gulf Coast
states. The cold front will be east of Ohio by Tuesday
morning and high pressure wUl begin to rrove across
the state.
Fa ir weather is expected Wednesday and Friday,
but there is a chance of soowers Thursday. Highs wUl
be in the 70s Wednesd ay and In the 60s Thu rsday and
Friday. Lows will be in the upper 40s to mld 50s
Wednesday and Thursday and in the 10s Friday.

Southern board hires staff
Cont racts were approved when
the Southern Local School District
Board of Edu cation met Friday
evening.
Given onceyear teacher contrac ts
were June Bucha nan , Kathryn Hill.
Debra Lightfritz. and Roberta
Malllt&gt;ns; two year contracts,
Donald Dudding, Koste E l Da baja.
Deborah Harris. Debra Hill, and
Diane Rice. Three-year contracts
went to Jennifer Hill , John Van·
Reeth; five yea r contracts were
awarded lo Michael Elbelield. Jan
Norris, Donald Salmons. and De·
horah Syare. Catherine Johnson
received a cont inuing contract.
Given non·leaching contracts
were Cintra Winebrenner. Donna
Wolle, aides; Bobby Dudding.
Evelyn Foreman. William Hoback,
continuing contracts. The contracts
of Brenda McGuire and William
Lake were not renewed but are
expected to be renewed as soon as
additional specialized certificates
are obtained .
The 1986-87 school ca lendar was
adopted which will ru n from Aug. 25
to May 29.

.

84 Disclose
86 Come on the

.
enttne

•

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

I, Judy A. Hoff, Assistant VIce President of the above- named ba nk do hereby
declare that this Report of Condit io n is tr ue a nd correct to the best of my knowledge
and belief.
Judy A. Hoff
Apr il 25, 1986

vs
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Rtiodes
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.Bitter Senate battle

Photos, story on Page 3

MOSCOW (UPI l - The reopened F-~~:r,::;r:;:iiiii;;;;;:::;:;=:=:;:::;;:~;;;r;:::r.;r,;;::;;iiiiii;;r:;'i':i;:;::;;:;::;~
1Kremlin armory, home ofcenturtes I f.;~:+;~~;&lt;
1 of treasures collected by the czars,
~ ~~:;+;:;+-:;:+:;+;:.
i Is already hooked solid for the rest
' of this year after being closed ·for I ~B:~
(our years of renovation.
The Communist P arty newspaper Pravda said Friday that
when the renovations began in 1982,
workers dlscovered a decreesigned ~~~
by Peter the Great In 1718 ordering H-=~+,..:,
that the chambers he repaired and
glass cases be constructed for
displaying ail the Czar's clothes,
crowns and other belongings. ·
The 19th centu ry museum, which
reopened Friday, displays ancient
arms and armory , court rega lia ,
Including an ivory throne and a13th
century crown, carriages, cos·
tumes and the whimsical collection
of prroious eggs Tsar Nicholas 11,
presented to his wife, Alexandria.
Pravda said new items on display'
included an unusual snu ff box and a
17th century religious shrtne.

Deposit s:
In domestic offices .. ..... .... .......................................................... 152,328,000.00
Nonlnteres t·bea rin g .. .... ............ ...... ...... ...... .. .. .18,7'2 1,000.00
Interest-bea ring ............. ...... ...... .. ..... ... .... ..... . 133,607,000.00
Fede ral funds pu rchased and securities sold under agreements
to repurchase in domes tic off ices of the ba nk and of its
subsidirles, and in IBFs .................................. .. ............................... 603,000.00
Demand notes is sued to the U.S. Treas ury ........ .. ................. ........... .. 1.059,000.00
Other liabilities ............... ...... ....... .. ....... .. ........... ................... ........... 1.401 ,000.00
Total llabilities ................ ... ............................. ............. ................. l55,391 ,000.00
Common stock ................. ..... .... .... ... ....... ... ........... ...... .. .. .................... 441 ,000.00
Surplus ............ ...... ......... ..................... .. ........ ........................ ... .... ... 4, 559.000.00
Undivided profits and cap ital reserves .. ...... ...... .......... .. ...... .. .. ....... ... 4,549,000.00
Total equity capital ....... ... ...... .. .............. ... ....... .... .. .. ......... .......... ..... 9,549,000.00
Total liabilities, limit ed -life preferred stock, and equity capital.. .... l64,940,000.00

Celest~

played another diamond. When that
suit failed to split, declarer eventually
1·11-11
NORTH
+A183
had to pial the heart suit lor himself.
fQ 10 6
Because o the unfavorable locatioo of
+8 6 4 2
the heart ia¢~, he had to Ji)se two heart ··
+JS2
tricks and ·his coniract. Stripping the
dummy of the club suit-before·playing. WEST
EAST
diamon~ would have' solved declar·
t2
t7S
er's problem.
• Ji3
fASS 2
Here is the correct sequence of • Q 10
+K J 7 3
tH86 3
lays. At trick two, declarer plays a tKQ 1071
Cow spade to dummy's eight. He then
SOUTH
trump5 a secOnd club. A spade.to dum·
tKQJI0 9 64
my's ace is followed by a ruff of dum·
fK74
my's last club. Only then does South
play ace and a diamond on which
. ", ..
95
West plays the queen. T~ defenders
Vulnerable: Both
are now helpless. East cannot over·
Dealer:
South
take with the king and pJay the jack
because that will make dummy's
Norlb Eaoo
fourth diamond a winner. If West is West
left on lead, he must either play aw'ay Pass
1 NT Pass
from the ace of hearts or must play Pass
Pass Pass
another club, allowing declarer to ruff
in dummy while discarding a loser
Opening lead: K
from his hand.
Notice that this strategy is correct
beca~ you welcome the defenders' your best hope would be that the diaattacking the h~art suit. If your hearts monel suit was splitting and that the
were weaker, hke A·X· X opposite J-x· defenders would not switch to hearts.
x, you would play differently, si~ce · .,.. NIWIPAPCR

abbr.
70 To the side
72 Build
74 Baseball leag.
76 Spanish
article
77 Rants
79 Adam's male
83 Edge
85 Christian festival
86 Sea In Asia
87 Containers
88 River In Siberia
89 Sign In elevator
90 Sowed
91 Transgressed
92 Limb
93 Iterate
94 Hebrew month
96 Merriment ·
97 Short Jackel
100 Mother
102 Wife ot Geratnt
105 Membership
109 River In England
112 Shut up
113 Great Lake
114 Keenest
116 The sweetsop
118 Aleutian Island
120 Declare again
121 Peel
122 TO hOllow (OUI)
123 Goddess of
dilroord
J 25 Unity
126 Amend
127 Provides crew
129 Narrow opening
131 Warns
132 Grates
133 Machine belt
134 Yearns
136 Difficulty
138 Armed band
140 Bard
141 Solitary
142 Cleaning
substance
144 Halt
147 Sainte: abbr.
148 Farm animal
149 Falsahood
151 Chinese pagoda
153 As compared with
155 Army off.

Given supplemental co ntracts
were Donald Dudding, yearbook ;
Barbara Ba iley, school newspaper;
Roberta Ma ide ns, va riety sho" '
Donald Salmo ns, senior play:
Howard Ca ld well , athi et ic director;
Botby Ord , transportat ion supervi·
sor; Sandra Baer, cheerleader
advisor; Kimbe rly Phillips, head
softball coach; Michael Wine·
brenner, head baseball coac h;
William He nsler, assistant base·
ball; Suzanne Wolfe, voUeyball;
Kimberly Phillips. Junior high
volleball; Wi lliam Hensler, head
football; Howard Caldwell, head
basketball; J ames Lawrence and
Michael Winebren ner, junior high
basketball; Kimberly Phillips,
head gi~:l s basketball ; Deborah
Lightfrltz, assistant basketbaU;
John V anReeth, pep ba nd; June
Buchana n, assi la nt marching
bank; Carla Shuler, computer
coordinator; Joyce Thoren , lunch·
room supervisor; Sa ndra Boothe,
Title IX compliant officer; CathP·
rine Johnson, chapter I coordina·
lor; Dennlf' HIU , chapter I treas·
urer; Grace G•·iffin, chapter I

secretary; Dennie Hill , DPPT
·treasurer; Ca rla Shuler, DPPF
coordinator; Joycf' Thorne, handi·
capped coordinator; now through
fu nd coordinator, Joyce 'Thoren;
black II grant coordinator, J oyce
Thoren.
The board approved the district's
participation in the educational
tecyhnology service educational
television for Southeastern Ohio at
55 cents per student. Joyce Black
was added to the substitute teacher
list and Patty Lavf'ndar was named
a substitute bus driver. The hoard
named Marr-Knap!&gt;Crawlis Associates, Inc., for helping the board
work on an Improvement pi an for
educational fac ilities.
Approval was given to Supt. Bob
Ord to check into the pos.•ibllitles r1
seeming a talented and gifted
student teacher and the title II
progra m for Sll'l6.38 was approved.
The board approved $600 to the high
school cheerleaders to help with
new uni forms and s:m for' the
junior high basketball uniforms.
The next special meeting wlll be
May 9 at 8 p.m. and the rext regular
meet ing wiU he May 23 at 9 p.m.

Seven die on Ohio highways
M-G-M Area

By United Press lntemallonal
Seven people, Including a farm
tractor operator and a motorcy·
clist, were killed in accidf' nts on
Ohio roadways du ring the weekend,
the sta te Highway Pa1rol report.ed
today .
There were fivP deat hs Saturday
and two Friday nigh!. The victims
died in five separa1e accidents.
Only one of the auto crash victims
was wearing a seat belt, a patrol
spokesman said.
The patrol counts fata lities result ·
log from accidents on thr state's
public roadway s each weekend
between 6 p.m. Friday and mid·
night Sunday.
Killed were:
Sunday
None.
Saturday
New Philadelphia: David A.
Manella, 27, Minerai City, when his
motorcyclf' collided wllu ~ car on
Ohio !OJ in Tuscarawas tounty.

Scout
COOKING DEMONSTRA·
TION - Several Meigs County
Scouts participated In Salur·
day's Tri-State Area Scout.().
Barna at the Gallla County
Junior FairgrounWi. Above,

members ol Troop 249 ol
Pomeroy are all set lo demon·
strate their cooking and lire
building ~11\Vli· More than
1,1*) scoW; lrom the Meigs,
Gallla, Mason area participated
In the day· long event, held In the
Activities Building. On left
(bottom) Is exhibit of Chester
Cub Scout Pack ~. SupervisIng lith! project was Jon Karsch·

Ca mbridge: Raymond · T. Ray .
17. and Brian E. McKinney, 18. both
of Cambr idge, in a one-car accident
on U.S. 22 in Guernsey County.
Kenton : Melissa J . F lowers, 18,
Forest. in one-car crash on a
township road in Hardin County .
Woos ter: D. Craig Rohrer, 24,
Onvilie. when th!' farm trac tor on

which he was riding was st ruck by
an automobile on a Wayne County
road.
Friday

Findlay: Warren R. Sheperd, 34,
F indlay, and Ba manamma Vish·
nubhotla. 71, Rochester , Mich., in a
two-car accident on U.S. a! in
Hancock County .

Expenditures total $470,000
Everything from lumber tow~ld ·
ing services- that's what Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Div·
ision bought from Meigs County so
far this year in the amou nt l'i
$470,000.·
Expenditures for mining SUP!&gt;
lies, services and other related
payments went to more th aJi 2(1
vendors in the county, according to
Jim Tompkins. general manager.
Southern Ohio Coal Co. is a

subsidiary of Ohio Power Com·
pany, one ofelghtelectricoperating
companies within the American
E lectric Power System.
The Meigs Divisio n opera tes two
underground mines In Meigs
County and one in VInton County,
all of which. depend on Meigs
County vendors and supplies.
Wit h a combined work fo!'l'e of
about 1.650, the division produced
5.1 million tons of coa l in 19&amp;'i.

nlk:

Her carriage ·was a 'copter
as young patient attends ball

Wdlng Pl11nts
Petunias
Marigolds
Snaps
And Many Others

GERANIUMS • BEGONIAS
IMPATIENS • FOLIAGE
AND OTHERS

SMELTZERS
GARDEN
CENTER
and
FLOWER
SHOP
453 JACKSON PIKE
GAWPOUS, OHIO
4 Miles West of Gallipolis on U.S. 36 Near Holzer Hospital.
@) 1988 United I Feature Syndicate

.
l

By NANCY VOACHAM
Sentblel staff writer
Janelle Wolfe of Jackson may
have arrived al Saturday night 's
.Jackson High Prom in a helicopter.
but as far as many of her friends
and famUy are concerned, she
looked iIke Cinderlla s tepplng out of
her golden carriage.
Sixteen·year-old Ja nelle. the
daughter of Cecil Eddy and Sharon
WoHe, and the granddaughter of
Victor Brown of Minersv ille and
Ma rtha Wolfe of Racine, was flown
10 the prom via Columbus Grant
Hospital' s corporate helicopter.
The Jackson High School junior
has been hospital !zed In Children's
Hospital, Columbus, where she
underwent surgery recently for a
brain tumor. Although stlli weak
~m the surgery, the teenager's
only thought was to attend the
prom.

,,

After being told no by her doctor
time and again, a nurse intervened
on her behalf. This nu~e. who has
cared for Janelle since her admit·
tance to Children's, cornered the
doctor and fa nagled him Into giving
his permission -11 appropriate
arrangments could be worked out
-by the nurse.
The nu~e the n got on the phone to
Grant Hospital and nurse Myrna
Maag Graves, a Syracuse native.
The two women first thought of
requesting use of Grant Hospital' s ,
Ufeflight helicopter , the n reconsl·
dered since U fe fiight is strtctly for
emergency situations.
Undaunted, the women finally
came up with the Idea of using
Grant Hospital's own helicopter.
Wit h necessary details worked
out between Columoosand Jackson
High Principal Tom Slater, the
nurse at Children's lllen worked a

double shift so she could be free
Sa tu rday night to make the trip to
Jackson with J anelle. A Grant
Hospital nun&gt;e also accompanied
J anelle on the fl ight.
And when the helicopter arrived ,
friends and relatives and mem bers
of the news media were on hand for
the landing on the Jackson High
footballlleld.
The excited teenager, dressed in
a blue formal and matching hat,
was then escorted by her date from
the ball field into t~ dance . And
all.hough her stay was short - just
JJ minutes long - that' s all the
doctor would allow - it was a
dream come true for Janelle.
With spir its lltted, and knowing
that for at least one night. she was
the helle o! the ball. Janelle was
1lown back to Children's Hospital
where she wtll soon begin cancer
treatn1ents.

•

-·..,
CIVIC PHOJECf - Pomeroy's Daisy Girl Scout
Troop are partlclpallng In the spring cleanup
progTam of the v!Dage. 'lbey spent an afternoon
picking up debm al the Pomeroy Mini Park. In the
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group whose leaden are Susie Smith and Tammy
Daniels are Cindy Lewis, Trlcia Smith, J eselca
Wright, Jerlca Clark, Sue Ellen Barnluut, Wendy
Daniels, Erin Haggerty, GlnK!'r Darsl, and Wendy

Sizemore.

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