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I

• ••

Page-14-The Daii\'' Sentinel

Friday, April 12,198&amp;:

B~siness . pro.,..,t~on

Multimedia officials ,.
not selling to _L orimar ~

..

·•

group meets April27
The recently f!&gt;rmed Middleport
Business Promotion AIISOC!atlon,
which operates as a branch of the
Middleport Chamber of Commerce,
has sei regular monthly meeting
times as the fl&gt;urth · _
Tue!iday
morning of each month at 8 a.m.
The group set this date at a
meeting held WedneSday· morning
at the LaSaUe Restaurant. At the
present time, au meetings wm be
held at the LaSaUe.
·
•

According,to Jason Ingels, chair-

, man of the group, the business

GREENVILLE. S.C. (AP) Multimell!a of!lclals said Thursday
their company Is not being sold\
despite Ulrtmar lnl;1's otter to buY
the communications gtarit for $100
billion, or 161 a share.
Management and the founding
tamUies of Multimedia have lndl·
cated no Intention or wUUngness to
sell. tl)e company. Since South
· Carolina law f!!QUtres that mergers
be approved ·by holders of at least
two-thirds of a company'soutstandlng shares, no one shl1uld assume •
tllat any transaction will occur with
' Lortmar, they said..
.
F'oundlng famUies and management of the company own about 40 .
percent of the outstanding shares.
· Earlier this week, Multimedia
had accepted a reylsed and sweetened otfer from a group of
lnvestors,lncludlngmembersofthe
founding IamUies and, senior man-.

club.

The group·. .WO discussed a
Mother's Day Weekend promotion·
fQrMay9,lOandll.
'llln!e new bnsfnPMr.s have
apened recently tn Mlddleport
Including Brenda's Boutique, Sanely's Boutique and Hudnall's PlumbIng. The Middleport Book Store Is
under the new ll18ll8gellellt of Nick
anc~ .Diane Thle of. Ractne and ~
LaSaUe gift shop w1U be opening Its
·doors to businesS the first of May.
· To participate In ·. the business
asSociation, which plans10 p-omote
Middleport Itself as well as the
village's businessEs, membership In
t.IJ! Mlddliport Chamber of Commerce Is necessary. Chamber dues
are $25 for associate members, $50 '&lt;
for businesses, and SlOO for banks

a:IIIOC!atlon plans to hold a celebra~ with sale$ and an open houSe at
the Middleport Boxing Club to
CCllnclde with a K-5 Run tO be held
APril '11. The run Is being ~ponsored
by Middleport Chamber and proceeds w1U be going to the boxing and utilities.

'

agernent.lbeofferwaslncre~to

Area deaths
'

.
WINNER - BID Davldloa, 1811111tant IM'RIW ftf &amp;be BJc Bend
Fogclland, pre u a 1100 check to ()pal Loullll! Roblalon ol Clifton, W.
VL Mn. . . . _ woaflle ~In the week1J bQne racing prop-am
lei! : 11 eaeb !Wurda,r an p.m. oa Chaaael S. P~tunns are
avllllllllle at &amp;belocaiFGOdlandll&amp;ore and nopurcllaee lsoec e·tJPI')'totake
.

Lee Charles Handley

a senior scli!Dtlst' with ORI
Inc. of New London since 198l.
In 1978, he retired from the navy
after a 23 year career. He !!e!Ved
aboard
numerous submarines
Including the Robert · E. Lee,
Casimir Pulaski and the Kamehameha. He was last stationed at the
Nayal Submarine School as a
navigational Instructor.
he was

Lee Charles Handley, 67,ofPUny,
W.Va., died Thursday morning In
Charleston Memorial Hospital.
BornDec.l6,19171nAkron,hewas
a son of the late WUUam and Betty
Gum Hilndley who were formerly of
Meigs County.
Mr. Hysell was a member of the
Frazier's Bottom Methodist Church
and was a U.S. Anny veteran of
World War II. He was active In the
also a member ol
Mason's and
the Lion's Club.
Survivors Include his wile, Ntna
Lee Handley, Pliny; twtn!ions,John ·
Handley of St. Albans, W.Va. and
Paul Handley oC Rochester, N.Y.;
anolher son, WU!Iam Handley,
· Huntington; a.daughter, Mary Lou
· Shlrakawa, Clnc!nnatr; seven
grandchildren; and · two sisters,
VIolet Hysell, Pomeroy and Naomi
.Wears, PlinY.
. Services wUI be held 2 p.m.
Sunday afternoon ;Jt Frazier's
I;lc&gt;ttom Methodist .Church near
Winfield with Rev. Ed Grant
officiating.
Burial wUI be In Pliny Cemetery.
.Friends may call at Chapman
Funeral Home In Wlntleld from 11-9
p.m. on Saturday.

put.

Change deadline near for direct~ry

Telephone users In the Pomeroy"If we. lmow of changes In
MlddleportareashaveuntUAprU25 advance, we .can ensure the
Mr. Lamber!wasa1!1&gt;7graduate to report changes 'for the 1985 customer:s "nanie, address and
of ChiUicothe High School and the telephone book, General Telephone _phone number are listed correctly n
the book," he said.
University oC Colorado In 1967. He · o!Ohio reported tod!IYThe deadline applies to more than.
Customers wanting to change,
a memberotSt. Luke Lutheran
Church In Gaies Ferry and a correctocaddllstlngslihouldcaUthe 4,500 customers. The exchanges In
member· of the chui'Ch-councU He company's service order center, the hook with Pomeroy and Middleaccording to Phil Ramey oC Athens, port are Letart Falls, Portland,
had been chairman of the vicarage
district service manager.
Racine and Rutland.
committee of tit!! church.
Anyone
plaMing
to
move
or
start
New 1985 directories are sche- ·
An avid sport-flshennan and
new
service
before
July
17
also
duled
for mid-July' delivery. The
canoeist, he was a member of the
should
caD
before
the
deadline
to
be
toll-free
numberoftheservlceon!er
board of directors oC Troot Unllm·
listed
In
the
new
book,
he
said.
center
Is
on page ·2 or the current
lted In New Ulndon; a member of
the AmeriCan Canoe Assn., and the
· ec_to_ry_.
TrowelLodgeofMasonslnJackson, Elriergency squads r--dtr_
Ohio. He was a licensed pUot and a
memberof!heGroton NavyFiylng answer five calls
Corps.
Meigs County Emergency MediBorn Jan. 29, 1939, In Middleport~
cal
SeMIIce reports that units
Mr. Lambert was the son oC Irene.
.
.
answ~ five calls fl&gt;r asslstanceon
Tu111: ml ~
Mllls Lam~. formerly of Middle, • IM: ~ o.nif~lly &lt;ksil'oo..J
port •nd now llvlng In Columbus, Thursday.
funer~l ;arr~l1~!f\Cnl ,
At
4:47
a.m
••
the
Rutland
fire
jLI&gt;I (~ II ur •·i ~ i l
and the late Max Lambert, Middledepartment
was
caned
to
a
strucPOMEROY
port, who served many years with
ture fire at the James Hubbard
, FLOWER SHOP
!he Ohio state Patrol.
' - Thr II' ... .....rk• .-;..,,.,, , _..,.,.··
Surviving are his wUe, Joan residence on New Lima Road.·The
Max R. Lambert
n . ltz.20Jt • MH121 ..Andei-9m Lambert; a son, Eric R. fire was !&gt;rough! under control by
Retired. Navy. Lt. Cmdr. . Max Lambert; a ''daughter; Kristen L.
io the structw'e. MiddleRlchaid Lambert, 46, 28 VIllage I..amliert, ' lxith at _horne, and a dam!lgi!
the al5'
department
with mlninial
port
:
39a.m.
transPQrled·
Hubert
Drive. Ledyward, CoM., tonnerty bi'Othl'r, JIX' .Allen Lambert.
Patterson·
!rOm
the
front
of the
of Middleport, died Marc!t 23 ·at Collimbull. .
·.
pollee
department
to
Veterans
Yale-New Haven Hospital followlng _ Services wereheldonMarch26at
longlUness. ·
.·. tiJe St.,, Lulce. Lutheraii-Chuli:li In · Memorial Hospital. Tile Syra&lt;;use
fire departme!'l! at 1: 58 p.m: was .
· ·· · '·A tes~t of l-edyard since· ~; qak!i( ferry in cO'DJieCtiCUt,
..
.
.
called to a mlilorstrucluretlreat\he
Jenna Amott residence on Ohio 124
(Continued trom 'pall! 1)
at thl,&gt; upper end of the vUiage. At
7: 14 p.m., tlte Middleport unit was
she helped prepare an estimated county budget, Including appropria- caUed to the Friendly Tavern for
1!1!4 budget for the sheriffs depart- tions for the sheriff's department. Wayne Wllllams who was treated at
ment and the need for additional He also stated that In November and thescenebutnottransported.Andat
funds to meet new contract obllga- December 1!1!4, the ~loners 9:07 p.m. Racine went to BUnd
· did tt;lnsfer funds within the Hollow Road for Marion Walson
llons was discussed.
.
Mohler also testified that In sheriff's budget and transfl'rred who was t;lken to Veterans
NOvember 1!1!4. the cornmlssloners funds from a contingency fund Into Memorial.
approved a transfer of funds within the sherlfrs budget. Koblentz said f~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
th&lt;' sheriff's budget to meet the he personally did oot participate ln1 11
\
-payments of Increased health and contract negotla'tlons with the
,welfare benefits. Mohler said she sherltrs department and that fOr-forwarded a letter of request for this mal ratification of the contract by
:actiOn to the .commissiOners upon the commissioners did not take
CHibiiAN EDUCAnON
.
·the request of Mary Hobstetter, place.
Prosecuting
Attorney
Rick
Crow,
clerk for the commissioners.
LEADERS
Then li1 December 1!1!4, accord- representlitg the sherltf, brought to
SUNDAY SCHOOL
Ing to Mohler, the commissioners light the fact that according to the
minutes
of
a
regular
meeting
held
,tWice aUocated additional funds
TUCHEIS
from outside the sheriff's budget to March l, 19113. the commissioners
did fprmally approve · a two-;r.ear
meet payroU when It fell short.
. .As president of the Meigs County union contract for the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners, David Highway Depanment. The defense
Koblentz testified on behalf of that refuted the relevancy of that tact.
hoard . . (Commissioner Richard 'll)e jiJd&amp;P overruled the defenseand
Jones did not take the stand as was ~llowed the fact to be entered In the
reported In Wednesday's DaUy court's record.
At that·pc)lnt testimony ended and
Sentinel. l
the
decisiOn to file written briefs was
CaUed by the prosecutor as a
made.
rebuttal witness, Koblentz said that
on Jan. 10, 1981, his board did make f«g hunt set Sunday
. '
appropriations for that year's
•
The annual East~r egg hunt of the
\V ashing down p~t!8 Middleport-Pomeroy Rolary Club
postpoDI!d from last Sunday due to
announced by village
•
'h-...1,- "'
Inclement weathe~ WUI be held at 1
, ....,.,.._ ,,_ California
· · The Middleport Fire Department p .m. Sunday at the General Hartin·
' will be washing down North Second ger Park.
Michall E. Moynahan, Sl
Avenue from Hudson Street sooth to
. Author of
MDI St., Sundaybeilnnlngat9a.m. VeteranB Memorial
"Getl of Infold Tales"
• Residents ate requested not to
Admlaslons-George Nesselroad,
park on. North Second Avenue Pomeroy; Kennet!J . Creme8111,
Pr~M~rt.. ~yz
Sunday untU the street -cleaning has
CoolvWe; Wanda Dickerson. Ru.Graco _Episcopal Church
been compleied.
lland; Jennie Wllllamlon, Rutland;
POMIIOY
Melissa Miller, Cftesblri; Edna

was

was

------l

.

REMEMBER

WITH FLOWERS

~

OOMPD'~

known for Its hit television series~
"DallaS," hasn't dlscuB&amp;ed llqulda-1
t1on ot Multlinedfa's ~. said
UOrlmar spokeswoman Carol
Henry.
Ulrlmar otflclaiS, who said the~
company has actively been seeking;_:
expansion opportunities, added "the;.
strateglcobjectlvesolbothcompan-~
les wUI be weD served by the;:
proposed merger."
:~
The CUlver City, Call!., television~·
production company .. made. ltsi
anhouncement late WednelldaY at-~
ter the milrlu!ts had closed In New:"

lOth

•
anmversary

Vol. 20 No. 10 .
Copjdghlocl 1986

Times-Sentinel Stall

POMEROY - A written "decision on Monday
morning from Meigs County Common Pleas Judge
Charles Knlgl!t will determine If Lindsay Taylor Is
competent to stand trtalln Meigs County on a charge
of aggravated murder, or wnether Taylor wlll be
tra~ferred to the Timothy B. Moritz Regional
Fo~nslc · Center In Columbus for further training and
rehabilitation, prior to a triaL
'
Taylor, In custody at the Meigs County jail, has
been charged with aggravated murder In theOc.tober
1983 slaying of Danny Melton. Taylor, 35, was
formerly ofthe Forest Run Road area near Racine.
A competency hearing for Taylor was held Friday
afternoon In Meigs County before Knight: Steven
Story of Pomeroy and Don Cox of Gallipolis ·a re
court-appointed attorneys tor the defendant.
• Taylor's competency hearing was continued from
The:scJay morning': On Thesday, Stilry and Cox
objected · to the court's ·entering a psychiatric
evaluation on their client without a rep.resentatlve
from Shawnee Forensic Center, Portsmouth, preparer of the report, present to attest io the report's

Q

POINT PLEASANT
Local
·.. ~
government officials, representa·
. '
lives froni of area business and the
Mason County Development Authority appear to be headed toward
~ill ~t · -qtrector to,
..
help brllig Industry and jobS to the
coUnty. . . :
.
.'
.; Last Tllf'sday, a delegation from
~ County ritet with Rep: Bob
Wise, n-w.:va.; and n'!embersof the
CI)UIIty romrritssion . and dl!'ielopment authority . from Jackson
County to discuss the possibility of
forming a regional development
•
authority.
.
·Mason and Jackson wpuld each
contribu~ half of the fundlltg for the
•director's office. On Friday, how·
ever, county· officials proceeded
with plans to hire a director for
Mason County.
.
Commission President ask~!!~
KeVIn Durst, commission business
manager, to prepare a preliminary
budl!l't for a development director's
office, along with a job description
· · · ···for the·posltlon;;A steering eommli· ......
teeofWatklns, Jim LeW.Is, pnisli!ent · · ·loi:JioooOli
,ofthecounty'sdevelopment authorIty, and other officials will meet
DEIAVS EXPECI'ED - Replacement of the
Tuesday to rev lew those
main chamber gate at the GaDipolls Loeb and Dam,
documents.
set lor July, Is eKpected to create d'llays for barge

HAMBUIGEI..:.7sc

DINE IN OR CARRY OUT

'

ATTENTION

Weather forecast

W~~h~=-~=:~

Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
around 50. Saturday, partly sunny
with a · chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Htg!t near 'lO. The
chance of rain Is 10 Pel cent tonight
aad«lpercentSatunJay..

~IIDAY, APill 19th

Sellers,

All

Ohio lottery winner

(AP) - The
wlilnln&amp; IJliDiber dl'awn 'i'bunday
Er'
nl&amp;ht In the Ohio Lc!tteey'l dally
81-'w.JIIIta .. Tt !11 r:
game, ''TheNumber,"was310.
~If
I "In the"Pick •.,, ..-·a ......., ..._.....,ft,ft8
a.- uoWII&amp;W
4'• F'-'U"'nu.._
Moe'q ..... qMz ••• wiia numberWBB&lt;mlS.
Tt 5 dq. mp. Ia lie • to lrlw 'lfa
The lottery reported a loll ot
. ~003::11! .lrml waaefnl m Ita
41 ,.,. 8lld lllllllb- Ia u. •
. . 1 ••, aad'l)tmhr. LCiwa In IIIII
dafli aame.'tllelo•uu:dtedtrom
.... • til 1111• • 8 ' J, Clllt!tl ·~' ~ ~78UII. Willie boJdt'li.
............... 11!'1 . . . . . . .. : otvri~W .i kNII ~ l!lltltled to
... - • ,.
. wref.ll»;'lll.
.
CLEVELAND

\.

- -·

w•- ,.

'FORD LTD BROUGHAM
:
0 Tin steering D Pivoting lront vent windows
D Power side windows
D Power lock group

0 .WSW steet·be~ed al~
seasooradlat•
0 Dual remote control
"'lrrors

...tlllltlltiYII, lilt

O~control

0 Rtaf wlnctow llelroster
0 Lux~ry""""' covers
0 Etectronlci diQitll

~.Yto your local

11111111 (SIIIftl ftOII

FORD DEALER NOW!

GRACE·.

CHURCH

'

. .

.......... _ _ _ ___
..;.,_ _ _ Co .. --- ~·· . . . .-tooi _ _ ..,
lllilfiiR. . M AIIIIIIIIIJI . . D, • . Diiiiii ......... ._ . . . . . . .. IJIIIIII'....... . . . . . . . . .
'

.,
\

'
•

.

1 1 Sec:tiono. 94 Papo 110 C•nu:
A Muhimed~ Inc. Newapeper ~

Two projects set
for -Gallipolis L&amp;D
·-'~

,.

'

tr-.dflc, such 118 the loJW In the abov'l photo pushing a
coal cargo lhroogh the main lock.

By KEviN KElLY
near the dam during a navigational
11mes-Sen&amp;lnel Staff
acridenl in April1984.
.
CALLlPOLIS - Two major
Thai gatE' was taken to Alabama
projects have beeli ·sched!lled for and repaired. Ripley said, and a
thls year 'attheCalllpolls Locks and spare gate that formerly sat on the
Dam by the· u.s: .Army Corps of ' dam'sEI!reka.siOO:has beenusedln .
. ~nglneers.
.
.
its plae(l. The ortg!Jial gate w:as .
· The fi rst, scheduled to begin struck anddamagi&gt;dby~ .bargeand
-Monda,y, wlll be the repair of tht' · Was · 'being removed. by a West
lowprgatPin (heailxllhu'ychainberi.· . :VIrgthla ftrmwhen tlied&lt;:rr.lck buat "
said · conrnd .. ·Ripley, · a . public · ha uling~ the · gate .C&lt;IPSI&lt;:l'd . and
lnforrnatlori oHicer for the corps ' flooti&gt;ddowrllowordthedam 's plt&gt;rs
Huntington district.
before It snagged on the rtvE'r
That prolect is expected to last l;lottom.
five days. Ripley said, whUP the
' That gate was not removed from
second project issetforthefirstpart
the river untlllater that summer·. ..,
of July and Involves replacement of
Ripley said that when that gate )s
returned from Alabama. the spare ·
the uppl'rgateinthemainchamber.
Repairs on the auxiliary lower will be llfled ·out and shipped to
gatearebelngdone becausethegate Marietta for repairs.
"At some point early In 1!111\.
was struck by a,bargeon February
.1984. Damage was not .extensive, another spare set will be taken to
Ripley said, but th&lt;' r project's Gallipolis," Ripley said.
completion could possil)ly be de·
Delays are expecred while both
la yed because part· of the corps: jobs a re being done. Ripley explained. The Julyproject,estimated
repair crew Is now in Marietla
repairing one of the' gates from. the to be complete(! in two weeks, wUl
Winfield Locks and Dam.
mean barge traffic will be routed
For the second job, hoth leaves of through tht' auxiliary lock.
the main chamber will be replaced
"That rankles IhP Industry , but
with the gate that was sw('j)l
It 's something lhat we can't avoid
doWnriV&lt;&gt;r and became moored andhavetodo," hesaid .

.

collections
.
revenue,
levies
boost
Gallia
·
tax
.
.

computer system, was completER! collections, 14 townships divided
By JOHN i'RIEDMAN
the last week In Marchand checks to $193,500 whllt" six towns and cities
'I'Irnelt&amp;lnllnel Stall
various
taXIng districts were Issued split 522,284.26.
GALLIPoLIS- The return or.the ·
Gallla County:s general fund
by
the
auctltor's
office on April 1,
Gen. James L. GavlnPowerPiant to
recr&gt;lved
$733,500.~ from the collecFolden
said.
1981's
first
half
GaUia County's taxing base and the
tion,
aOO&gt;rdlng
to figures:
'
setflement,
cilmpleted
without
the
passage of the Guiding Hand and
The
-auditor's
and
treasurer's
health dl'partment levies by voters computer, was noi finished until
offices shared $101,774.851n fees. In
last November arethemaln reasons May 4, she added.
The retu.m of the Cavin plant to addition to the county fees. advert Is·
why G~llla County's real estate tal&lt;
collections .for the first half of 1985 Gauta 'County's taxing base last lng and state auditor fees were also
are more than $1 mJUion greater year allowed the auditor's office to deducted before checkS were Issued
.Issue a check for more than $106:00l to thetaxlngdlstricts, Folden added .
than first halfcollections ln.l984.
Among the school districts, Calli a
Deputy Auditor J001n folden said to Cheshire Township, which houses
receipts from the first half collection the electric generating facility. County Local was the big winner,
In i985 totaled $6,845,185.33. That Is Addison Township, which houses receiving S3. 700,425.50. The Gallipoalm0$t $1.1 million more than the .the Kyger Creek plant, received a lis City ·School Dlst.rtct received
$904,218.89, Callla-Jackson-VInton
. $5,770,185.15coUectedln theflrsthalf check tor more than $28.600.
·
Joint Vocational School was
Overall,
.
lour
school
dlstrtcts
otl984.
'·
awarded $426,661 and Rio Grande
received
more
$5
miuton
of
the
The settlll~lng a n~

Communit y College and Commun- money wei'(' Gallipolis, $24 :a:J4.30;
Cheshire, $.158.11; Vinton, SB85.06;
Ity CoUege got $00,822.66.
·
The chief beneficiary among the and CentervUic. $20.11.
Bt&gt;nrfitting
from
tax
levies
were
:
towl)shlps was Cheshire. which
the
0
.0
.
Mcintyre
Park
District,
,
received $106,375Jl9. Addison r'l'·
·$107,868.45;
Dr.
Samuel
L.
Bossard
:
celved S28,669.87; Clay, $5,729.67;
Memorial
Library.
S97.m.67;
GuidGallipolis, $7,626.14; Green ,
$22,815.58: Cuyan. $2,245.82; Harli - ing Hand School and GaUco Sltelson, $2.791.00; Morgan, $3,447.14; teredWorkshop,$270.766.51 ; and the •
Ohio, $1,450.13; Perry, $1,398.39; Gallla County Health Dl'partment, ;
. :
Raccoon, $2,514.95; Springfield $59,579.32.
Treasurer
Bud
McGhee
'
s
atd
the
$3.189.45; and Wainul, $5,403.83.
After the auditor's and treasur· books lor the firS! hall collret.lon a're
er's fees were deducted, Greenfield sllll open fo r thoSe who haw not
Township owed the county $70.0l, paid. but a pena lty wUI be assessed.
Real estate tax bills for the second
according to the auditor's books.
In additiOn to Greenfield. Crown half collection are tcnlatlwly scheCity owed the cOI.lnty $81i8.14 and Rio duled logo oullhe fl rst week In June ·
and money will be colleett'd until :
Grande owed ~2.115.18.
Cities and vUlages receiving Ju~y 19. MeChe!' added.

,

'

ln.c ome tax _cut, w~lfare changes ineluded In GOP budget
•

.

,.,... 7 P.&amp; IS ......,

"'·3961
.__________
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BOOKS OPEN - Boob are
for nnt-haU reall!lltate
lu paymml"' aa:ordfng to
· GaDia Coonty 'J'rea8Urer 1\fyron
"Bud" McGhee, ahove, hut a
penal&amp;y wW be BB!Iellsed. .

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ror... ......... . '

EPIS(ftiU.I
•
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-open

winds/lirlld

Stllll

• .... ••·
....... NO CIAIII

ua

-·, . ..

a.c...

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~avin

ENIOWIENT IS IMIED
W • • wllfl•• ••1111

«u-c ...

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2 ...... P.M.

BettyWIIIon.

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.·_ proposed

SATURDAY ONLY

wljMI1

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Malawt:sta said that he based his· findings on
correct preparation.
Initially ill West VIrginia. Taylor was ·found
personal Interview with Taylor. on Taylor's past
The p&amp;ychiatrtc evaluation, .ordered by Knight
lncompelent to withstand extradition proceedings.
history. and on Taylor's performance on tht' Wexler 1 !Jter six months of trlllning at a specialized West
when Taylor appeared for arraignment on on Feb.ll,
Adult Intelligence Scale, a standardized test,
was to determine Taylor's competency to stand trial
VIrginia lnstllution, Taylor's mental capacity had
administered verbaUy, to determine adult lnleilland his mental condition at the time of the murder.
improved to the point that he could be extradited.
gence and learning capacity.
Calling Taylor In the report , "an Immature,
At the arraignment, Taylor's attorneys entered
Malawlsta believes that Taylor understands he has
pleas of Insanity to the aggravated murder charge
dependent person who func tions much like a child
been accused of a serious crime and that If he's found
rather than an adult, " Malawista further added that
before tl)elr client, and to a second charge, possession
guilty of the crime, he could spend many yea rs in jan:
Taylor "might we)l present a risk to community".if he
of a firearm while under a pending felony lndlctritent .
Inadequate understanding
not confined for treatment.
.
Psychologist at hearing
Malawlsta does not think Taylor has adequate
David Malawlsta , a clinical psychologist assoclaled •
Testimony liCCepted
understanding of court proceedings nor attorney
with Shawnee Forensic Center, was subpoened ·to
Counsel for the defense and Meigs County
''
.
relatiOnships.
·
· court Friday to Ji:lve his personal assessment of
?.rosecuttng Attorney Rick Crow, accepted MalawtsMalawlsta
said-he
does not believe Taylor would be
ra's e)!pert testimony and Taylor's pschlatrtc repart ,.
. Taylor's p~cqlatric report. Malawlsta prepared 'the
as evidence.
.
able. even · with the help of counsel, to make
t:f&gt;port on Taylor after 2% hours of testing at the Meigs
judgments
regarding
defense
routeS, for example,
County jail In late Marcil.
·
. ·
Taylor' s mental condition at the time oft he offense
plea bargaining.
.
could not be ascertained by Malawlsta.
Malawlsta testified that he believed Ta&gt;'lor was
·.With training In these specific areas, Matawtsta · · Knight admitted. that he had questioned the .
Incompetent to stand trial at this time, but that Taylor
believes Taylor could be restored to an adequate
necessity of continuing Taylor's hearing from
could be resiDred to competency If he were given
. C?J;I'lpetency level to withstand ,a trial , within six
Thesday toFrtday byt that Friday's p~lngs had
"stl"lll;tured -training'" ln. a "secure environment"
months to a year.
"enlightened" him.
such as the Moritz Center.
Malawlsta cited Taylor's testing In West VIrginia
ThE'· judge said he would make his decision
According to Malawlsta. Taylor falls Into the
where he was In custody from Oct . ll.l983. untU his
regarding the competency question over the weekend
"lower to middle-mildly mentally retai-ded range"
extradition to Meigs
Count y on March 8 of this year.
and enter that decision. In writing, Monday mofnlng.
but "Is not incapable of learning." • .
.

Development
director

·"DAILY LUNCHEON ·sPECIALS"

tnl~rvll

tntint

Middleport Pomeroy Gallipolis Point Pleasant Sunday, April14. 1985

By NANCY YOACHAM

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

0 SelldShllt .automatic
trJlllmillion
0 Power s111nno
0 Power brakes
0 Air COilliHioner
0 ·Light group
"'::&gt;-~ Tlntlel giU$
AMIFM stereo

--PageA-3-

Taylor competenCy .decision .due on Monday·

(RT. 7, JUST NORTH OF CHESHIRE)

0 3.8 Lv-e engine

·Ohio weather:
·Warm and wet

•

J.R.'s RESTUARAN1

...........

Along·the River ..... ...... 8+8
Busblesa................ ....... E-1

tmts··

·. a

CLOWN
WORKSHOP

.Inside:

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Settlement

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.

,William F. Blrckley Jr. considers Jeane
Kirkpatrick joining the GOP - Page·A-2

YorkandalterMultlmedla'sofflces:~

had closed.
~:
wrtmar offlclals.sald theiroffer IS\:
subject only to the completion or::
tlnanc~ arrangements. ·Drexel••
Burnham Lambert, wrtmar's lnvestment banker, hasagreedtohelp."
raise money for the transaction;
Lorim8rsald.
,
-;~
As of the six-month period that;~ ·
ended Jan. 26, I»rtmar had cash and-= ..
short Investments of $87 mUUOII- ·':
In addition to publishing 14 da!lt. :
and 29 non-daUy newspapers, Mul'
ttmedla owns and operates flv~
television stations and 12 radlct1
stations and operates moret!JI!nllXti
cable-television franchises In ~~
states.
:
Uke Lortmar, Multimedia Is a ~
syndicator of television program-..
mtng,tncludlng "The Phil Donahue~
Show." In the year ended Dec. 31.~
Multimedia had ' profits of $33.~
mUUon on revE,'IIues or $.1M.36
mUUon. The, company has a)lou~t
:
J.6.66 million ~ outstanding,, .
which trade over-the-counter In t

WEEKDAYS 6:00 A.M; TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 8 to 4
SUNDAY 10 to 6

schoolhouses

-PageD-1

$53.25 a shar,e- $890 mUllon- from
$49.50 a share.
The of{er from · I»rtmar on
Wednesdaylstheserondouis\debtd
within a week for the ;Greenv!Ue
company which owns the Ohio
VaUey Publishing Company.
Last week, Multimedia management and members of Its four
toundtng1amUiesrejectedanunsollcited SQ).per-Share proposal by
Wesray Inc., a New Jersey Investment firm headed ·by former U.S.
TreasurySecretacyWUllamSimon.
Multimedia officials said Simon's
proposal was turned down because
It was conditioned upon selling the
company's newspapers. The · offlclals Indicated they don't want the · · natlonalmarketsystem: lbeshares.~
company dismembered. · .
closed Wednesday at SM. off ~-5~
Lortmar, a fast-growing enter- cents, but cOmbed to $56.38 m;:
talnment and advertising company trading this morning.
••

HOTDOG-Soc.

One~room .

By ROBERT E. MD J .Eft
, statewide a so-caUed workfare
program, now In use In five counties
"--'•ted Pl'eiiB Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio · (APJ
on an experimental basis.
Ohioans would get a bigger Income
Asslslant Minority Le;lder Waldo
~ cut, and. able-bodied welfare
Bennett !tose, R·Lima, and others
rectptenis would .have to work for outlined a series of eight amendtheir · benefits under the terms ol
ments at a newscon(erence Friday,
amEI\qptents Republicans will offer a~rtlng that 'ule budget Is topMonday !O'Goy... tuchard Celeste's heaV¥&gt; In spending and can be cut
two-year INdl!l'l bUJ.
;
responsibly without adversely llf·
The amendments place thli tax feeling such vital services as
cut at lJ pet cent over the next three education.
~ars. Instead of 10 pet cent proBesides the Income tu cut, the .
polled by the governor, and make
Republicans w1U offer on the House

floor a second ProPosal lowering the
corporate franchise tax from 9.2
percen! 10 8 percent. The IW!&gt;
· amendments would cost a total of
$1.6 billion In revenue over the next
three ye11r8. . ·
Although majority Democrats
are expected to Insist on their own
sinaUer tax relief package (about
$700mUUon), Rosesajdsomeofthe
· COP amendmel)ls might be accepted. "You mfy bes~." he
saki, without ela berating.
Rep. .Thomas W. Johnson, RNew
.

Concord, said he will offer the
amendmenttocutthelncometaxby
lOpercent a year lor three years. His
proposal, same as a bill a~ady
passed by the Republlcanconlrolled Senate, would cost $1.5
bllllon In tax revenues.
The corporate reduction would
t.'ost $100 mUiion,
Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New
Concord, the ranking GOP member
'of the HOllie Flnallee Committee,
said the bll!lll!r reduction Is possible
because It would l!lve Ohioans more

disposable Income and "revitalize
the economy. We believe If will add
add itional jobs."
The RePublicans said they also
will oeter amendments to:
- Limit Increases In spending for
operations of the Legislature It self,
along with other state offlct&gt;s, by 4
percent a year - roughly equal t(l
Inflation. This amendment also
ellminates a budget provision giving
the Ohio SUpreme Court $1 million
for ofl'lces in Cleveland and
. Cincinnati:

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- Permanently earmark pro: :
ceeds from the state lottery loP:

schools, to be distributed equally~
a per pupil basts.
,J
-'Increase !l'OfTl about a; milll&lt;iaf
In the Celeste budget to $49 mlnl&lt;lri.;
an appropriation for research JiltO&gt;
methods of burning , Ohio) hiaiQ:,
sulfur coal In a~ environment~
safe manner.
. ·
·_ • _
· -Transfer 50 percent a1 ·flie:
budget allocation tor aid to ~;;

~~~::c:l:C:;/~ ~~~=~
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Co~mentary

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

Apri114, 1985

0

and perspective

fhe Sunday lmes-Sentlnel

....---Wea

Page-A-2.. "
'

April 14. 1986;

.
By The AI ED Wiled Pl'l!ll8
Ohio conlln!JI'S to He In the.IIOUtherly Dow rt a low pressure system
moving out of the northern Piains Into the Great Lakes.
Temperatures are forecast to remain mild thorugh the first half of
next week with llighs In the upper 60s to low 7tls most days and lows In
' the 40s or bigher until Wednesday morning. That wi~ [lOSE' litJle·threat to emerging buds.
·
The mlld weather should keep fruit as well• forage crops and
winter grains developing at a good pace.
I}ew points are . cllmblng toward 50 degrft!s this weekend.
Minimum reiatlve humidities will be arouiKI~ percent except where
'shOwers develop. That wlU provide sopteopportunlty for the aeration
of grain but conditions should Improve toward the middle of next
week as drier alr spreads over the state.
.
A preilinlnary look at the »day outlook lnillcates that both
temperatures and precipitation are expected to average near
norma.! across the Ohio Valle)' and the Great La)&lt;es.

Kh-kpatrlck factor....:..··---~--__:_:w--=u~tin~m_F.__B__uc_kl--=-er_J~ ,
A Division of

·1125 '111lrd Ave., GaDipolls, Ohio
( 614) t46-!342

I

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-ZJ56

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PubUsher

'

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'HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher·Controller

A ME MB E R of ThC' Associa ted Pu•ss, In la nd Dally Prrss Associa tion a nd the
.America n Nt&gt;wspaJX&gt;r Publi shers Association.
LETTERS OF OPI NION ar!' W('ICOmt"d. they shoUld tx- less th an 300 wOrds
· long. Al l lett e-rs are s ubjE'CI t o Ml tl ng a nd must be Slf!Z nE'd with na m t&gt;. addr ('ss a nd
lt&gt;i('phone numb&lt;&gt;rs. No u ns lgh~ lette rs will be publlshf'd . Lf ll ers should bE&gt; In
, Rood tas te. addrt&gt;S.'iiil ng issues. nor personalll iPS.

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·~u~~rings set on ·

Ohio bottle hill
• Hei'rlngs are set In the Legislature on a btu that will resurrect an old
question: Should the state- require a deposit on beer and soft drink
l:ontalners as a means of contolltng litter?
·
: Ohlo's voters said "no" back in 1979 when the question was placed on a
statewide ballot .
.
,: Their decision was rendered alter legtslattve)eaders, at the urging of
)nanu!aeturers and others opposed to the plan, pn;&gt;mised a statewide litter
,:ontrol program pegged primarily to state grants for local education and
~~ntHltter proj~ts.

1

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': Low
L

•

Rain should hold off until noon
Warm_ C p td,..

F&lt;lu&lt;S! C'MOW,

WEA111ER FOREcAST ~ The National Weather Service
forecast for Simday predict. rain changing to showers for portions of
the southeastem roast ai states. Showers are also predicted from
eastem Texas to the Great Lake!!, chanpng to J;llln mixed with snow
Ounies from the Great Lakes Into New England. (AP Laserphoto).

Extended Ohio forecast'
A chance of showers Monday ·and Tuesday. Fair Wednesday.
Highs around 70 Monday and In the mid-50s to mld·60s Tuesday l!nd
Wednesday. Lows ln the mtd·40s to mld-5(\s Monday, the40s Tuesday
ancj the mld-00$ to lower ·40s Wednesday.

· Regional forecast
a

Sunday: partly cloudy with
chance of showers · and
thunderstorms; high near 70. The chanc~ of rain 40 percent Sul\day.

~

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a

Berry's World

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What is an· editor?

Art Buchwald

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The American Society of ·News- back. The editor has his (avorttes . editor let through.
'J'Ile Editor (as seen by the
paper Editors are hOlding their and assigns them the best stories.
annual convention In town this week He wouldn't recognize real talent if it syndicated columnist who appears
and; as usual, everyone Is overjoyed was staring him ln the face. The best · In his paper ): Forthright, brave,
to see them.
waytokeepyourjoblstohaveasfEW Intelligent and hOnorable, fh('_editor
i::
What, you may ask, do these dealings with him as you pos&amp;lbly is not only a creel it to his profession. ·
high·powered newspaper editors do . can. Editors used to tear up rour and his race, but theonelndespensa·
.: ,
and thriving
:: ,
when they aren't stroking each story with a black crayon In front of ble person ln a
democratic
'. ·
other at an editor's convention?
soclrty.
your eyes -:- how they do lt on theEv('ryoneseems to havehisorher computer In their office, and there's · . His maih job is to make cl'ljclal
:· :
·:: :
own Idea.
nothing you can do but stare at the
'·
• ·
Here are some varied lmpres- monitor and bash your head against
slons, which depend on where you the screen .
'' ·
o.
are sitting.
The Editor (as seen by the
reader)
: Wears shirtsleeves In the
Tho:oEdlt1Jr(asheseeshlmself) : A .
slightly aging Robert Redford, oHice and polyester 'suits With
maybe five pounds overweight. It unmatched pants and jackets to
; ; Today Is Sunday, AprD 14, the'lOith day of1985. There are261daysleft in wasn't his chOice, but somrone has dinner partll's. Looks either like
lne ye-ar.
·
to be the "captain of theshlp." It's Jason Robards or Ed Asner.
; : Today's highlight in history:
.
lonely at the t~. God, ls tt Ionely on depending on whetlier you saw "AU
•: On Aprlll4, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln was shot and mortally the top! You don't know who your . the President's Men'' or watched
by actor John WUkes Booth whDe attending the comedy "Our
real friends are anymore. Because "Lou Grant" on television. He Is
~an Cousin'' at Ford's Theater In Washington. The .presldent died
you'retough butfair,you'realways responsible fbr all the bad news ln
~following morning.
getting a bad rap. Theedltorlal staff the paper, especla!Iy the unfair and
•; On thiS date:
thinks you're constantly knuckling libelous articles about the reader's
:' In 1775, the first Aine-rtcan society for the abolition ot"'s hlvery was under to the business side of the tAl political party, (B) rellglous
paper. And. the business ·side ls afflUatlon .or (C) favorite- sports
):¥tanlzed by Benjarrun FrankliJi and Benjamin Rush.
. •: In 1828, the first edltlori of Noah Webster's "Americ311 Dldtlonary of the always giVIng you a hard time for team. The editor ls held accountable
:Jl:Rgl!sh Language" was published.
wasting the paper's vah.table space not oniy for printing
news but
: •In l.lKJ2, J .C. Penney opened hiS firSt store In Kemmerer, Wyo. '
on editorial content. 'They can't pay also for the news Itself. He haS too·
:: Jn 1931, King Alfonso the 13th of Spain went Into exlle, and the Spanish you enough for the aggravation YO\! much power and you can't walt to
·~bile was proclaimed.
·
take. You'd go back to the pollee see him cut down to size.
: • ln 1945, AmeriCan planes firebombed Tokyo and damaged the Japanese beat tomoiTOW It you cilukl just keep
The Editor (as \ seen by the
)ft!pertal palace.
your present salary and still eat in publisher): Never Is arouod when ·
; : ~ 1956, Ainpex Corporation demonstrated Its first commercial the executive dining room.
there- IS a crisiS. Is respoi!Slble for $4
.
·
The Editor (as seen by his wtte) : million In llbei suits now pending fn
. ·'Ddeotape recorder.
' : ~en years ago: Actor Fredric March died of cancer In Los Angeles at the She ne-ver sees him, exceptat21n the courts, not to mention the,legal
:aile ot T1.
•
·
.· •
.
morning when she wakes to hand which thepaperwillhavetOP3Y. win
· '
. ; flve years ago: The Academy Awards ' and Pulitzer Pr1t.es were him the phone.
or lose. Theedltor'senttreeperatlo~
'~tedthesameday ..Oscarswenttothemovl,e"Kramervs.Kramer,"
The Editor {as seen by the Is a drain on lhepaper'sflnanees. All •
. al!tor Dustin Hoffman and actresS Sally Fleid. Pulitzer reciplents Included reporte-r): Editors have two headS, he wants to do Is spend~ that
r ~ the play "Talley's Folley" by Lanford Wilson a!ld the book "The noheartandeyeslnthebackofthelr Isn't his and print news that nobody
Exe&amp;ttoner's Song" by Norman ·MaUer.
·,
pointy heads. For some. reason, wants to read. He has no sense of
One year ago:· In his weekly radio address, President Reagan said he . · whichthereportercan'tfatholli,the how mach fiak the publisher has to
had used ern£'lli8ICY powers to provide El Salvador with an aaditlonal $32 ~ editor either Ignores the reporter all take trom his friends and business
mUIIon 1n U.S. mWtary ald.
thetin)eorlsconslanUyonhlsorher associates for SOOle stupid story the'

&lt;·

rree-

.

Doonesbury

d
.
h.
·. : 0 ay In
.
tstory '
T
if&lt;iunded

we

!ees

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decisions, For example, this article
may have been submitted to him
and he had to decide whether It
·should appear In a family '
newspaper.
If the editor said, "No way," then
you wouldn't be reading lt right now.
But since you're reading it, you have ·
to assume one of two things, Your .
paper has an editor with a sense of
humor, or yesterday was hisdayort.

BY GARRY TAUD~

~

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•White
•Grey
•Rust
•Beige
•Taupe

=-----The·

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tent~tlvely

~reacher hel~ : fO,t; :·aoubl~ ~Iaymg ·
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CA1:ffiOLLTO~. Ky,

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tAP) ~· . · entl'red. Cumi)E'rland College tn
Pl'!)ple who know Gregory Lynn
Wllllamsburgtostudytheol()gy.But
Yancey, .29, remember him as a
heleftafteroneseme5ter,ille-school
choirboy and, later, as a kind
said.
.
preacho:or in small Baptist c~urches
It was abOut the- same time that
ln Northern Kentucky.
Yancey began to preach and sing in
The Florence man sits lr. a jaU cen
rural areas of Boone. Grant and
ln WDliamstown, accused of hack·
Kenton Counties. He was affiliated
41g RDy and Ruby Bicke-rs to death at various times with Piner Baptist
ln thelrCarroUCounty hOme.
Church In Kenton County, New
Yancey once stood In the pulpit
Bethel Baptist Church In Boono:o
County and Mount :.&gt;;ion Baptist
and delivered "somo:o of the finest
preaching you PVer heard," a
Church ln Grant County. ..
former school friend said.
"That.'s not the man I knew wh.en
Acquaintances said Yancey grew
he was preaching at Baptist
up In the countryside near Verona,
churches around here," said Le-man
Stephens, a truck stopatto:ondant .
attending · W&lt;!lton·Verona High
School.
.
'After graduation In 1973, he

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Aprii1 5- May'15. 1985. See us
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Yancey. w.as the minister who
merrled Stephens In Walton In the
mld-1970s . "He was a nice guy, a
quiet guy," Stl'phens said . .
Stephens said he dld not know
Yancey weU, but t~at he saw him a
few times alter his wedding.
"He started drinking and was
taking drugs. I saw him.once at the
Walton Bowl and he told me then he
had quit preaching."
Wanda Bablne was a waitress at
the Frontier 'Ipn, Florence, when
Yancey was a cook there.
"He was friendly . He talked a lot
and joked wtth people but)le stayed
pretty much to himself," she said.

'•

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Ele1rant and classy. What else· can we say? Just traded this week.
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···* '

I

La fay"tt" '!ali
(;aiiipolis. 0

,.----,----~-----------------;

·N umber, Pick 4
CLEVELAND tAP) - - The
winning number dr~wn Friday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 201,
In the "Plck4" game, t.hewlnning
.number-was 8967.
The lottery reported earnings of
$501,776 from wagering on "The
Number."

•

:11111 St•cond .\ve.

Shoe Cafe

Three
deaths havet been
linked
•
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to the· outbreak, and
authorities said an autopsy todlThenumberofconflrmedcase~tn
cates Olat In a fourth, that of a
Illinois totaled 3,392, while 253 were 2-year-old Rlrl. salmono:oUa bacteria
reported ln Indiana and 50 In
we-re discovered in a stool sample-.
Michigan. Iowa and Wisconsin also
David Dalton, a spokesman for
had a number of cases. The-total was . Children's · Memorial Hospital
wherethegirldled Monday, said the
just over 3,Ero, officials said. · ·
. Officials believe that thOusands of autopsy indicated Ml~he-Ue Maczko
other peopie havecontracted saJmo.
of Round Lake Heights died as a
result of brain damage not directly
nellosiS, a bacterial Infection that
creates flu·llkesymptorns, but have
relate&lt;! to salmonella.
.
Margolis,said Frtday that IUlnols'
not reported it.
"The estimates are that there are salmonella Investigation had been
six to 10 unreported cases for every
conducted · pl'()perly despite the
reported case," said Mary Huck of
~udde-n flrtngofstato:oPubltcHealth
the health department. That estl- Director Thomas B. Kirkpatrick.
mate means more than 28,5!Xl other
Standing outsldo:o the suburban
CJI~mayhavegotieunreported.
Hl!lfaml dairy that p~sed the
suspeCt· mDk, MargoliS said all
ag~ctes Involved
"have been
eonductlpg a proper .. :.. .capable
• · Investigation. "
.
.
director of the Dllnols Department
of Public Health, said the number of
reports had grown to 4,742.

REMEMBER, NOBODY DEALS·BETTER

I

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.

446-3672

..

''BANJO''; :

~

CHICAGO tAP) - With the history.
The salmonella poiSonings, tenianumber of confirmed salmonella
cases mounting to more than 3,QXlln lively lll1ked to contaminated milk
. five states, local health workers are sold by Jewel COIJlpanies Inc. ln
fanning out to 1 warn suspected DlinoiS, Indiana, Mlchtgah , Wlscon·
victims against the dangers of slri and Iowa, led to the firing ofthe
secondary Infection.
state public health director, who
Authorities said late Friday they' . Gov. Jam~ R ThompSon said had
hadv!sltedthehomesof600ofthe900 bee-n on a Mexican vacation during
reported suburban Cook County
thetwo-weekprobeoftheproblem.
victims pf the bacterial infection
Il also was revo:oaled Friday that
beliPVed to be caused by contaml·
the, Chicago health .corr;uJllssloner
alsowasonvacationdurlngmuchof
hated mUk. The officials were
'cheCking to ensure · that proper
the criSis.
sanitary · procedures were being
Healthofflclals said therewasa22
followed to prevent the liUectlon's
percent ·tncrease in the number of
spread.
Illlnols food-polsoniJ!g ca~ reSimllar efforts were under way in
ported Thursday and Friday as the
second wave of the. outbreak
other areas affected by the out·
bre!\k. the secOnd-largest ln u.s"_. contlnued: J eremyMa,rgolis,actlng

hOuses In Congress.
"l think the President has put
himself In a position of fighting his
own Congress. He wants to. do
something even hls own Republl·
cans don't want ," ' Metzenbaum
said.
Metzenbaum was also crttlcal of
the President's tax cut passed In
J(ID. He said If that tax plan had not
been passed, the · country woukl
have a sur plus now Instead of a
deficit.
"Tha t pl an put the burden of the ·
taxes on the poo~ people. There are- .
about 90,!XX) corpora tlonsthatdldn' t
pay any taxes at all last year. There
are also about ffi big corporations
that made over $45 bltuon last year
and paid no taxes ;I I all ," Metzenba um said.

•

Officials iry to ·stem bacterial·infection

·
•
Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Atta'
1;011
_

By The Alllo&lt;.ia&amp;ed Pl'l!ll8
A generally pleasant weekend ls In ~tore for Ohioans.
Ohio ls sandwiched In between two weather systems this weekend
and because of the slow movement of both ofthem. Dry weather
should.be the rule. A few hit-or-miss showers,are possible. Most of the
ra in shOilld hold off ·untU a coid front gets closet on Sunday (this )
afternoon . The fro'\t was In the M!ssisslppt VaUey Saturday morning.
The other weather system l.s a large area of high pressure from
central Ontario southeast Into the Atlantic Ocean .
High temperatures Saturday afternoon were above norma l with
highs 'in the southern two-thirds lilto the 70s arid the northern third in
theup!ler 60s. Sunday's highs may be trimmed a few degrees because
of additional clouds.
·
The ~old front ~hOuld move- through Ohio late Monday. bringing
more significant showers and possibly thunderstorms .a cooling trend
wlll follow during midweek .
On Saturday's weather map, low pressure was ln southwest
WL&lt;;eonsln with a cold front traDlngsouthwest totheTexas Panhandle.
A warm front extended southeast Into Ohio. As tilt low pulls slowly
rn?rtheast this weekend , the: warn! front shOuld move north of the
state. The rotq fr'&lt;mt shOuld advanoe east to a Michigan-Texas line by
Sunday ~enlng.

O c.chJd c &lt;1..........- S t:tft&lt;HI:trv .-......

Rr.rn Flurries. Snow

1

rr 1tlR Jf.N..I£1
Dangerous miSS
• IOD
•
LITTLE

Temperatures .

'

if.
Wio!P

t::INCINNATI (AP)- U.S. Sena·
'tor Howard Metzenbaum says
several of President Reagan's
budget cu t proposals, including
· ellmlnatlon of Urban pevelopment
Action Gra nts a nd the Housing and
Urbaan Developmenl supplemental progra m , would hurt rehabilila ·
tlon projects throughout the dty.
Mentzenbaum toured several
redeve lopment projects here
Friday. .
The Democr atic sena tor crlllc·
lzed the President' s budget prop·
osal, specifica lly plans to cut out the
cost-of-living a llowance in Socia l
'Security, a nd . what Metzenba um
·called wasteful spending In the
defense budget.
Hesald he does not believe a cut in
Socla l Security would get by both

•

The annexation of Jeane Klrkpa· have gone . further, voting for and so therefore did Southerners . slvely assault.
How the proceed?
.
trtck by the Republican Party Is one Individual Republicans occasion· who continue to espouse Republlcan
The· Republlc311S have success· .
of those decisive symbolic events ally as governor (for Instance 1h policies and vote for Democratic
tuUy opportu$.ed on the enormltl:!S ..
the GOP .would be historically Texas), and as senator (lor Instance candidates.
The great paradox In Washington of Individual Democrats nominated ;
delinquent 19 Ignore. SO far as one In South Carolina) . But themasstve
can tell it Is being treated merely as · moveofwliiteSOOihern'voterstothe Is ot course that left-Democrats tend for president. The suicidal left •
the conversion of a single prominent Republican Partyhasyettohappen. to donitnate the House of Represen- policies of George McGovern, :
WalterMondale, TedKennedywere ;
woman to a party alrell!iy robust In
It might have been ~red In tatives. Begin with the raw.figures:
s!Ze. It IS more than that, and ought 1972 Whell the Democratic Party, Although the House of Represent a· we)] demonstrated by Republican ·
to be acknowledged as more than convened In Miami, selected as 'tts , tlves Is supposed tg by representa · opponents. But the posture of the :·
that.
v
·
tlveof the people's pollticallncllna· . party seemed to · be : "Dear '
'candidate George McGovern, a
·
The Republicans !lave sutfered lett-Democrat . whO spurned the tlbns, we have now in the House 75 · Democrat: We are not asking you to :
leave your party, merely to vote ·
greatly from hiStoric casualltles. spinal column of the Dempcratlc more Democrats than Republicans,
One of these It may be said to have Party, which was organized labor. nonwithstanding that the mood of against lt this one time, given the :
ldealoglcal character of your candl· : ,
wished upon Jtself, namely the The Democrats paid dearlyfor!Jielr the electorate- Is distinctly conserva ·
pre-emptive Identification of the mistake, and recoVered brlefiy only live. Reagan captured 59 percent of dates. Vote for Reagan In No- :
Democratic Party 1with the civil because Jimmy carter was In 1976 the popular vote In 1984, but the vember, and we promise not to •
nghts movement. Another u' lnher· Identified as·the conservative alter- Democratic majority In the House is pester you to cross the aisle." WeD, ·
surely the- time- has come to do ,
!ted from fate: Abraham Lincoln native to Ted Kennedy. If Gov. - 59 percent. That happened
because of gerrymandering by exactly that. The time for ·
was a Republican, and he was George Wallace, who himself had
president · with the South was entered a few primaries In 1972even Democrats ln ·power. But lt haprealignment.
•
pened also because of Inertial
defeated.
_
. There ls a problem of prtde In :
In his «;rippled condition, had taken
these matters. In England lt Is ;
We have- known since roughly the · that opportunity to · announce his afftllatlons: Southerners. for In·
election of Eisenhower in 1952 that defection as a Democrat, It IS likely · stance, voting for DemocraUc
widely accepted that Individual ·
congressmen and Republican presl·
members 'of Parliament wlU disafthe South would cross the line and that much - perhaps even rriost dents. That Is the paradox Jeane filiate with one patty and join '
vote for a Republican president. In of the South would have foUowed
Klrkpatrtck' s defecttonshOuld mas- another. Here, It tends to be viewed :
the years since the-n, Southerners him to the GOP. But he stood stiU,
as an act that borders on ritual ·
lrifldeli!Y, as though one were ;
renouncing one's heritagE'. It IS a :
problem not unlike that of the Jew·
who desires to become a Christian
but fears thattodoso!s in the nature
of tribal repudiation. even as the _
Cluistlan turning to Judaism would
face a social-cultural problem.
The tug of ancient loyalties !shard .
to overcome. But 11 can be done. One
recalls the British orator declaimIng before an audience ln the north of
England and finishing with theperoration, "I was'born an EngUsh·
man, I have lived an Englislunan,
and I hOpe to die,an Englishman." A
Scotsman from the audie-nce oomm'ented, "Mon, have you no
•
ambition?"
It ls a matte-r of pridi&gt;. And
punishment. John Connally, eight
years ago, was punished for leaving
the Democratic Party. If he had
stayed in It, he might havl' saved the
party from Us permanent left lurch.
But since then, Democ~;-ats have.
.'"",I"'~ .....,;ICI'', c.oo. v&lt;' ·.' .,.._., e 111 DvDrt~::V..- u•&lt;". ""~"'""'IJJ: vr:o 1111 ,,..,~, ~D1V-• 'l'r'S IIlWr: A. 'II..•t: gotten used to voting Republican at
VI\ lll.lrr "'" """""~
IJIII'\rt " 1\ N\ " " " " " " nrN .....,.,.,..v '"" N"rOoNio'_,. P'''" 1 ""' m ., n Ul\1
top. Thettmehascome-toincltl'a .
~lla
~.
L~S ~£1-.R
AG~~6A~! '(tAM. I the
mass movement .

·: . Now, the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation and various environmental
!:rfiups are saying that the state program has not been effective' and that a
~~ndatory deposit blllls the best solution after all.
·
-;:,!~ep . David Hartley, DSpringfleld, chairman ot the House Agriculture
:and Natural Resources Committee, has introduced legislation that would
: )'Equire a deposit of up to 10 cent~ on reusable beverage containers made of
·J:Iass, metal, plastic or other similar materials.
·
• • Hartley's bill wtu get lts,lnltlal hearing Aprll241n the House Energy and
;'Environment Committee, where he hopes to shOw that ma,n&lt;~atory deposits
· laws have W()rked well in nine other states.
;- In Michigan, which enacted Its law In 1979, there has been a 90 percent
:llecrease in ~tto:or In state parks. Iowa ha seen a 61 percent decrease and
t C:onnectlcut a drop of 90 perco:ont, Hartley says:
·
·
.•
:.; Other states with simUar success storll's inclucje Dl'lawaro:o, Maine,
:Massachusetts, Ne\v Xork, Oregon and Vermont.
.
·
:: Hartley ls·sponsoring his bill at the req\lest of the Farm Buro:oau, :.vhich
·says PJ'Oill'al'ilS oftheOhio OffleeofLltter Coturol bavo:o done little to halt the
~dumping of bqttles and cans on their property, resulting in machinery
:aarnag'f' and livestock InJuries.
·
:~ By giving youngstl'rs and others an economic incentlvl' to p)ck up Utter.
:t~artley said, the legislation "will cut down on litter thro~ghout the state
~dcut down on the dama~ caused to farm machinery."
·
---------------~---------.At thek:;lte ~lature created the Office of l,.ltto:or Contro) in 197!), lt
WASHINGTON ...: For career a!s putthelrllvesoniheltnetogather ait ache's oi!W Vol~o. They drove ail ·-canadian attache tiad a Nikl((irtnat
m lion a year for flv~ years for Jitter. control grants,
mUltaryofflcers ·a tour of duty at an the kind of Intelligence needed to day ana "bivouacked" (slepf In the . ahd. a Rlcoh · 'wl1h 500-ninl and
• l"ml!r .
~rived fr.o'!' a spec\aita&gt;; !hat was Imposed on .the manufac.ful'l'.rsofll!ter · Ain 1 •
b'
be a r:r:ake' rational respo~ . to the car.)'that night. ,
·. ..· · 200-mm te
. lep~"'to lenses.)
:.ilrea!fl
products. . .
•
.. .
. • . .· . . . .
.
er can em as.$Y can
""
(.'' The tax expires next ye' •
t·h · .Legi latu
.
. 1
d
. · pleasant lnt~rlude~ lf.theernbassy SOviet threat - and prevent a
At · 8 a.m., they · drove .to a
At.1
rw
·
h
·d •nmt' ,. t
'.L _
. .
a., so e · s
re IS a ra crossroa s as to
i In P Is 0 1 C
ha
B 1 In • · 1 :.hot ·
pre-arranged ,parking area In the .:·
, er a . o- our an ...,. nu ".
. . __,,her to ~k . new_fUnding for the state progr&lt;'m or to take another · s . ar
open gen. u
· nqc ear . oca)lst.
. -· , . ' . .
W"""" .ne'ar Orem.ov Laz
. , in .north
hike a ~ross .ntry, they
. . arriy.ed_ t ·,
approach ·to !he proble-m Hartley salO .
.
.. . .
. . Sovlet-blO.C CQUptrtes, our military ··.
Tl!e mcldl)nt t.hl!t occutl"e!! neat , """"
th sit and
tiEd t SA 8s
·
•
·
·.
· · · -·
. a ttacjles are often · .In .personal· Ptlesovce, small tow.n in CzechOII· · central ci.ocbostoyali'ta. To give-you·
e e. · spo
wo ~ • one
danger as they try to do theli' jobs. • )o\oakla, In November 1979; ts a · some Idea of the nerve of these two · under a tarpaulin, .. the other
After the shOoting .death' of a u.s. graphic example. It wl)s described attaches, theplacetheyparkedthelr exposed. The mlssles . which have,
Army major three ~eeks. ago In in a stlU-confldentlal report turned car was "approximately 1,500 not bee-n seen by attaches before ln
East. Ge-rmany, the Pe-ntagon re- in by the Canadian military attache meters (about 1,650 yards) nor- thiS. country, were in an open,
leased Information on six other whO accompanied his u.s. Em· theast of (a Czech military installa- equipment park lnsl~ a new~
violent Incidents In that Soviet bassy colleague on what they tton) and 3,!XX) l)'leters (about 3,300 constructed compound, the Canaa yards) northwest (of a Soviet dian reported.
satelllte· since 1900: They lnciuded appare-ntly . belleved would
'
beatings, broken ribs, and bullets routine mission into the Czech installatloh)."
The- two attaches coolly ~ari
' '
that missed- until March 24.
boondocks.
The Canadian attache did take
snapping pictures of the- SA-8&lt;;'
Neither the Pentagon nor the
Their as'slgnrnent was to verify particular note of the fact that they
moving around the eompound, and
''
State Department plays up SlJCh reports that new Soviet SA-8 had passed no "mUltary restricted
kept at u for15mlnutes, untU "both
Incidents or Soviet ha'tassment, antl-altcralt mtssles had bel'rr area" signs on their way. and that
vehicles wo:ore backed Into their
'
'
PVldently rtgurl!!g they're ·the depioyed near Oremov Laz- and the elevated guard ·tower at the
shed."
•
breaks of 'the espionage business, take phOtographs of them if Soviet Installation was unmanned.
I '
',• .'
They made better time- back to
e-ve-n when the Aine-ricans are possible.
At 10 a.m., the two officers set off
playing strictly by the rules. But we
The two officers, protected Only on foot , carrying attache cases their car - two .hours and 15
.__ .
think
the
Ainerican
public
should
by
their diplomatic passports, took loaded with photographic and minutes. But th(o sight that greeted'
'
know hQW our milltary profession- off on Nov: 'r/ In the Ainerlcan tape-recording ·equipment. (The them was unnerving.

Metzenbaum criticizes · .~ :
Re~gan budget cu~s

Ohio agricultural advisory

for 7 a.m. EST, Sun ., April 14·

•0

The Sunday Times-Sentlnei- Page-A-3

Four Convenient Locations
•

�•

.

.

14, 198&amp;

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Apr1114, t986

•

County court ·. concludes·40 cas~
POMEROY- Forty cases were $22 and costs: t&gt;1artln · (irtgsby,
processed .In the weekly court Massillon. m arid costs; Jim
II!Uion of Meigs County · Coun · Schrecklngast, Davlsvi\le, W.Va.,
Jud&amp;l'Patrtck O'Brien.
S21andcosts; EdwlnThomas,Polnt
Forteitlng bonds were Paul Pleasant, $24 and costs; Rodney
McNealy, GaWpoUs, $:1), stop Sign Spurlock, J\lppers Plains, $21 and
violation; Patrick Pelhtel, New · costs; Jane Harnlsll, Golumbus·, $21
Haven, W.Va ., S40; Robert AI!Ull, and costs; Richard Rlffl&gt;, Marlon,
&amp;iller, Pa., · $50; Charles Zalili, $21 and costs, all on speeding
Mantua, . $50; Earl Bowersock, charges.
P~. W.Va., $50; Pamela
Others fined were James Smith;
Speck, Celina, S50: Arle R. Brown, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failure to
Jr., MJChlgan ·Center, $50, all on . display valld registration; E.S.
~ charges; Clarmce Car· Villanueva, Addison, $10 and costs,
son,Ada, Sl93,overload, andRober1 stop sign violation; DaVId Sigman;
D. C'azart,Pomeroy,$70,dwingthe Middleport, $25 and costs, fishing
c"-lseasondldsellllvefurtleartng withpUt 'a license; James Wells,
animals, three raccoon without first Long Bottom, $10 and costs, failure
applying for and receiVIng a valid
to control vehicle; MlchaelMitcbeil,
cmunerctaJ propagators license.
New Haven, $10andcosts, improper
Filled In the coon were Sonia passing; Bruce Deeter, Long BotWise, Middleport, $23 and costs; . · tom, $00 ;md costs, dlsorderiy
WUllam Bauman, . WWiamstown, conduct, flnesuspended,slxmonths
W.Va., $22 and costs; Tony De · probation and retrain ,from com·
Gregorio Ill, Greensburg, Pa., $21 plalnant; Ricky Pridemore, Ru·
and CQSts; Ellis Booth, Ravens- Uand,slxmoillhsja.U,S350andcosts, ,
wood, W.V~ .• Q) and coxts; Terry Ucensesuspendedlndeflnitely; driv·
tng under suspension, six months
· ~ach, Glouster, $al and costs;
.Todd Kra.hel, Bridgeport, $22 and jail, $150 and costs; Michael
CIJSts; Cynthia DaVIS, Parkersburg,

GALLIPOLIS...:_AGaWpo~man
was given a six·month suspended
j~ll

term

and was placed on 18
fuonths probatiOn · In Gallipolis
&amp;funlcipal Court Friday after being
'fQUJI!I guilty of feloniOus assault.
' MarvinE.Bennett,25,444Second
Ave., was accused of assaulting
Addle Dennin With a knifeonAprU3.
- Sentenced to th!W days Jn the
' 'fallla County Jail and fined $D) for
: tlWI was Scott D. MacCUnchy, 27,
: ylpton. MacCllnchy was also placed
~ llill8 months probatlon,and had his

.' '

Carhart, 31, of Belpre, $38; Ronald
L. Scherer, 47, of Columbus, $38;
'Erl_c L. ~helton, 42, of Pratt, W.Va.,
$38, EMis J . Austin, !iS. of Flint,
Mich., $.l!; Michael R. Williams, 24,
of Greensboro, N.C .. $.l!; Steven
Harper, 19, of Reynoldsburg, $40,
Patsy A. Young, Z1, of Columbus,
$40; and Michael A. Baver, ~.of
Salem, N.C,, $42.1 ·

M:

We Have The
AaaWen Abolit

Kaylene D. Boggess, 17, Rt. 1,
Crowri a ity, ·student.
Paul A. Waugh, 19, Rt. 2, Crown
City, operator, a nd Teresa L. 0\lrst,
19, Mount Alto, W.Va., food handler.
POMEROY - A marriage ll··
cense has been Issued In Meigs
County Probate Court to Duane
Alan Andrews, ~. Nelsonville, and
Lynn Marie Kloes, ~. Middleport.

oooooo o o o &amp;oo

CLOSED SUNDAY~

.

ROUND FRESH SEVERAL

HOLLYWOOD

TIMES DAILY ·

•., •

-SPARE
RIBS

GROUND
BEEF

. •" .
-

LOIN END

99(

LB.

S1 1 ~

• LI.

LJ. PIG.

$1 · 5 ~.
~

•.,

EXTRA LEAN

GROUND.·
CHUCK ·

•. .

.•
I

$149

LB.

$1 8 ~•

FRESH

POTATO
99.~
1---.-.;.._---__;..~-----~, SALAD
LB.
..
COLE
9-9 ~••
SLAW
Ll.
MACARONI ···
99~
SALAD
Ll.
.
~

FRESH

$329

CHEESE
SPREAD

~__;......;......;.._,__-.----------1

s.pa,.te fKI from fiction! Droke
Selelllla ...,....,. lnd our
knoWIIdgllble NIH IIIII will
open your eyu to 1 new world of
I...VIIIiln IXCIIIIMIIL W.'H lhow
· you Juat how •••Y It 11 to experrd
your entllt'lelnment horlz- 11
the flick of 1 awltch. With Dreke
r~ the aky 11 never tilt
limit! Come on In end let Ul
P"'"lt today.

ROUND
.LB.

SUPERIOR
12 oz.
PKG.

STEAK

$179
.

BONELESS

..

~

'·

RUMP
ROAST ·

.

~

•

.

I

S21,
•.

·_- · HI'!DRI

PAPER

Theft reported

' p'

'

TOWElS

-2 ~,u$1
OCEAN SPRAY

32

oz.

JUICE
Cr•wry, C11110pple, Cran91 ape

HI.
I~G

$1.09
.

_Pleasant Valley
. · ..
QO~pital ..·.~pie ~~o Care
·
Cartng For
People. ·

ARGO

PEAS
:A~z.

2

GOLD MIDAL
AU PURPOSE OR SELF RISING

··"·

1807~,
IVII8CBII'TION RATES

81 Carmt or MOler-

OM Week ..... ............. .. .............. $1.10
OM Month ........................ , ....... $4.11()
SINGLE COFV
FBIC£8

SLB.
If you are like most people with hearin&amp; lo.ss you hear well
in some situations and have ~ifficulty ill others. A new ·
hearin&amp; aid has been developed that can &amp;ive you the help
you need, when you need it. The Araosy CCA Canal hearing
aid is so tiny it can be inserted in a matter of seconds. It
fits comfortably within the ear canal and is barely visible.
Help is finally here for those "part time" hearing problems.

No· subscription a by mall perr'nltted In

town• where motor carrier service Is
av•llable.
•

n. Sunday Tlmes.senunel wJII not be

te1poMible tot advance payments
mad~ by carrten .

-ayOnty

Clnf' Year .. ......... .... .~.. .. ...... ...... . 126.80

;;tx months .............................. $13.00
o.u, ... tlu~

MAIL SVJIIICIIIPTIONS
laollleOido

52 WHIC1 .......... ........................ ~ . 24
:II WMU .................................. J29.12
13 WEtlta ........... ...... .............. ,. $14.56.
·
..... 0.-eO!IIt
!1J WMU ............ , .................... SSUI
It Weeb ................................. $31.211

13 Weeki ............................ :... ,.115.60

FRESH

326 W. """"' StrHI

A.._ Ollie 45701

1"41 594-357'

,s-16
IRS.

•'

CRI$P·

LETTUCE CARROTS
ll. PIIG. ·

HEU!Nf. HOPl' HEAR
WIWAM S. DilES

$1 ·29\

,

45( 2: 69C

"
I

' '

oz.$ ·1· .49
•

·

•

You'll find that our people always
a iittle extra and likt!. doing so,
which, makes your visit 11 little more
enjoyllble.
Our St.llff at Pleasant Valley Hospital
are what we call "peopfie people".
People who ~;~~re carinu for people.
Weli-tralped medical personnel who
· belle\&lt;e in providing yo&lt;iJ with the best ci
both ~s - quallty health care
combined with personatized attention.
. At Pleasant Valley Hospital we treat
you like one of the family and no one
deserYes better care than one of the ·

give

.
I

:

I

.•

DILES
HEARING .AID
CENTER

"-'1L8UB8CBIFnONS

deserve.

R C· COLA

'

I PACK

89&lt;

care and per.10nalized a'ttention you

RITE, RC 100, RC DECAFUINATED

ORANGE CRUSH·
otA&amp;W ROOT. BR

RENTAl OFFER-For a limited time, rent tht canal aid (ar
1 anY. hearing aid) far 6 wttks far only $50.00.
TRY IEFOII YOU IUYI
Set us at Holw (link Each WedneMiay, 1:00 ·P.M.

Dally .................................. lO Con!I

BAG

25 Ll.
lAG

)

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family.

. RlD OR YELLOW

lAG

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Member: The Aaaoclated Press, In·
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Archer of Mount Sterling, Leona
and the Rev. Avon · Archer of
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P.ORK

Page- A-1i

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov. drawn-out legal appealS process ·
The series a.Ue&amp;es that the needs more money to do 'us job. •;
Richard Celeste says he's deeply following conviction," Celeste · I'lledlcal Board has systematically
"It Is In no way a witch hunt," hro
concerned about report!)() problems wrote.
'
I
overlooked or faned ·t otakedeclslve said.' "! think It will show the boar!l .
POINT PLEASANT - Marie
and allegations lnvolvling dlsclpllMeanwhile, Wllllam J ., Lee, · actions against Ohio physicians
wasdolnganexceUentjobwlthwhat
Godbey, 71, Stow, Ohio, died Friday
nary policies of the State Medical Medical Board Investlgator,denled accused of wrongdoing.
It had."
.:
. In St. Thomas Hospital, Akron.
Board and has pledged! full support reports that .the board asked him
To help board mo&gt;&lt;mt...n&lt;
In the series conoluslon today, the
Sutvlvlng are her hilsband, Clar·
of a legislative rnvestlg&lt;ttlon.
Thursday to 1step down from his newspaper reported that the Medl·
possl ble problems.
ence E. Godbey; two sons, William
" ... The peop[e of Ohlto deserve a $41,500-a-year job. A board source, cal Board appears t.O have concen- offered the
E . Godbey of Stow, and Charies
system that works bettt~r- and they however, told The •Associated trated many Investigations on
Jackson,
or
Cross Godbey of Akron; , two
deserve It now," Cele:!•te said ln. a
'
Press: "We took a vote of conn- Illegal practices by c!Uropract6rs. Oepartmenl of Health. · '
•daughters, Deloris Howard of
letter .Friday to the board's 11 dence: and he lost. We're trying to masseuses, midwives and others
Tennessee, and Barbara Hively of
members.
while Insisting It dcies not have time
move him out of the heat."
''•
Cuyahoga Falls; three .sisters;
In his letter, Celeste pledged full
One board member, Wllllam W. to examine alleged cases ol unneFredda Llevlng and Beulah Uttersupport of a special lnvestlga!lon . Jolmston said, however, that Lee cessary surgery or other similarly
Myrtie F~ Neal
back, both of Glouster, a n&lt;!. Leona
ordered .by House S:peaker Vern ·might remain with the Medical serious problems.
.t.ievlng of MlnersvUle; two brothRiff~ Jr. In the wake of a critical
· "According to The Plain Dealer.
Board In a different job.
ATHENS, 0 hio (AP) -Tuition;
GALLIPOLIS- Mynle Frances series about the l',iedlcal Board by
·~;s, Dallas Wilson ofRipley, W.Va.,
Lee said he hoped the legislative there are doctors who have been
room
and mea l costs at Ohto
Neal; 92, formerly of Patriot Star the Plain Dealer. In Clm•eland.
and Roy Llevlng · and George
Investigation would gtve the board convicted of crimes who are stUI
University
will be going up In t~e
Route, died at 12: 15 p.m. Friday at
Lievlng, both of Evans, W.Va.; and
In ·particular, Cele&gt;:te told board stronger enforcement power plus a practicing (medicine) ,"•Thompson
fall.
•.
the home of a niece, Mary Jo members they muslt address an larger staff and bUdget.
.two grandcQildren.
said. "I want to know why. "
The
school's
board
of
truslees
on
Treadway, In Kenton, Ohio.
Funeral services will be held at 1
apparent 41~k of aggn'lislvedlsclpll·
In a siatement. Issued Friday
The board source, however, said
Saturday approved the fee Ill&lt;
Born Nov. 18, 1893, In Mason nary action In dealln1g with physi- morning, Riffe said he had asked therequestforl..eetostep downwas
· p.m . Monday In Casto Funeral
creases of 4 percent for tuition and1!
County, W.Va., daughter of the late cians convicted or drtJtg cliarges.
Home Chapel, Evans. with the Rev.
state Rep. John D. Thompson Jr., ootaresullofthenewspaperserles.
percent for room and board.
'
Franklin and Eliza Sanders Sheets,
Armor Sayre officiating. Burial wW
"lt ·ls lnconsclonable lo have any D-Cleveland, to head the InvestlgaThompson said his commlttee
Undergraduate
students
from
she was a member of Alexander p~yslclan continue to practice tlon- of "·lssues raised during The planned to subpoena board records
:be In Lane -Mernorial Cemetery,
Ohio, ·who now pay $639 per quart.e.;
Methodlsl Church and attended the medicine through thE/ often long and
t:ottagevUle, W.Va . Friends may
Plain Dealer's week-long series.'
about the reported l,lOO secret
In tuition, will pay $664, a $26
First Baptist Church of Gallipolis.
ca ll at the funeral bomeafter4 p.m .
hearings the board has conducted
Increase. Out-of-state students wfll
today .
ShemarrledMortonNealonJuly
since 1975,
pay an additional $45, said 00
' 19, i913, at Gallipolis, and he
ar
.
Riffe said he hoped that the
spokeswoman Peggy Black.
preceded her In death on Sept. 16,
comml.ltee cou ld submit a report to
,·
Rat es for a standard dormitory ·
~Marlyn 0. Mooney
1967.
GALLIPOLIS- 'l'wo men were
Paul Wilson Cole D. 25, of Ansted, him by Dec. 31.
double room will Increase from tl!e
· Funeral services wlll be held at at
arrested by City p( 1uce Saturday W.Va ., and Roger L. Oldaker, 26, of
Dr. Johl) Rauch, president of the
current S440per quao1erto$453. Tie
2 p.m. Monday In the First Bapllst
morning arid charged 1n coMectlon • 1619 Chatham Ave. , were lodged In Medical Board, said he believes the
GALLIPOLIS - Ml!rlyn Otis
cost or ~meals a week will increase
Mooney,47,Rt.2,CrownCI!y(Swan
Church, with the Rev. Joseph
with an apparently breaking and the Gallla County Jail by officers Investigation will show- the board
from $455 per quarter lo $469.
treek), died at 10 a.m. Saturday ln
Godwin otflclattns. Burial wW be In
entering at Wholesale DlstriiSutors following the 4 a.m. Incident.
tiolzer Medical Center, having been
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Warehouse, 1415 Eastern Ave.
· Cole was charged with brea king
1n failing health for the past two
Friends may call at Waugh-Halley·
and enlerlng attec pollcereportedly,
years.
Wood Funeral Horne from 24 and
found him hiaing underneath a
Born .July ~. 1937, In Gallla
7·9p.m . today.
Appearin 11~
couch In theblllldlng:Coleallegedly
CHESIDRE - A cheese and
rent HEAP acceptance lett £-~.
·C'ounfy, son of the late Floyd Otis
~
had a television extension cord honey dlstrlbut.ion to Iow-!ncome
Social Secur ity leiter, Veterans
and Mary Belle Craig Mooney, he
Jessie Gaul Weber
POINT PLEASANT _ Gospel belonglngtoWholesaleotstrlbutors residents will be held Wednesday,
Admlnistl'ailon and employmeQI
checks.
,
. was a CO~ I ruetlon worker and wa S
soloist Mack Evans will appear at In his pocket when he was arrested, starting at 10 a .m., according to
'
e~ployed by Holderman · Co. and
·POMEROY _ Jessie Mae Gaul
Grace Baptist Church Monday at officers added. .
Gallla·Melgs Community Action
til·W\IY Paving c;:o., Worthington.
Weber, 84, Chester, died Friday
7:30p.m . In a !JO.mlnute concert.
Oldaker was charsea with com· · Agency.
He was a member of King's Chapel afternoon In Holzer Medical Center.
The church Is located on W.Va. 62, pliclty after officers reportedly
In' Gallla County, Ihe commodiChurch and Laborer's Union Local
foun d him Wdln g In weed s near the ties wiU be dlstrtbuled at the Guy an
Born ·Feb, 11, 1001, In· sumner,
four mlles north o.,• Point Peasant
1
83, Portsmouth.
.
Ohio, she was a daughter of Jacob
n ear the M&lt;t so n County bulldlng.
Township Volunleer Fire Depart·
He married Nancy Phillips, who and Clara Bell Castle Ga'ul.
Fairgrounds. .
Pollee were called to the scrne · ment, Mercerville; Gall Ia County
; survives, on Sept. 22, 1960.
She was a member of the Keno
Evans, whohas been slnglngslnce afterthepalrapparentlytriggereila Junior Fairgrounds; Mount Carmel
• -Also surviving are a son, Kevin
ChurcllofChrlstandaforinerowner
1960 and has ippeared on the &amp;Dent alarm .
,
Baptist Church; Bidwell; and -tilf
Mooney of Rt. 2, Crown City; a
andoperatoroftheChester Hill Golf
Old-Time Gospel Hour, will perform
A Crown City man was lodged in Guiding Hand School, ChesWre. ··
· daughter, Mrs. · John (Shirley) ' Course.
.
. gospel songs and spiritua ls; along thecountyjallFrtdayonachargeof
Dlstrtbutlon slteslnMelgsCounty
WatsonorRt.2,'Crown City; and two
Survivors Include two daughters , with favorite hynnns and original belhg absent from I he u.s. Marine arethe J\lppersPlalnsFlreSiatlon;
grandchildren.
Mrs. Raymond (lrls) Wilson of
compositions. He will present a brief Corps wlthoutleave.
Meigs County Fairgrounds; and thr
::· Funeral services will be held at 2 Rochester, N.Y,, and Mr.s. Cleo
Marv irl M . Moss J r., 28 , of Rt. 2, Am
. erlcan Legion post at Racine.
message to the aud 1ence at the .
Smith of Chestev; a son-In-law,
conclusion oft he concert.
Johns Creek, was arrested by
The following document a lion wlll
p.m. J\lesday · In King's Chapel
TWIN
Church, with the Rev. John Jeffrey _Opha Offutt of Pomeroy; two
Investigators - wltho the Athens be accepted to receive cheese and
SET
· officiating. Burial' will be In Swan
brothers·ln·law, James Weber of St.
. · branch of the Federal Bureau of · honey:
. ~rE:Vk Cemelery. Friends may call Petersburg, ,Fla .. and John B.
Investigation. He Is Scheduled to be
Current ADC Medica id card. SSI
' at Waugh·Halley-Wood Funer a l Griffon of Colurpbus; a slster·ln·
picked up by federal aut horities award letter, current unell)ploylaw , Mrs. LucyGaulofChester; and
GALLIPOLIS ·- The theft of Monday morning . Moss has report· ment book, current food. stamp
HomefromJ.5and7·9p.m.Monday .
. - seven grandchildren and and 10 articlesvaluedatmorethan$150ha s ·• edly been absent from the Marines ellglblllty card,slatementoflncome
G . WM ·
· . great-grandchildren.
been reported to the Gallla County sin{:&lt;&gt; Aug. 23, 1978.
s igned by CDHS caseworker. cur.• eorge • oore
'. In addition to her parents, Mrs.. Sheriffs Department by a Rt. 1,
POMEROY _ ·Funeral services Weber Wl)S preceded In death by her
Crown &lt;:;Ity man .
for George : w. · 1',1oore,_ 85, .or , hushand,_Thomas Lloyd Webt;t: by
Calvin Short ~did deputies tl)e
"I•.
~ daught er, Ruth Offutt, by a s00 ,
artldeswereapp3lrentlytakehfrom
£ olu blls . formerly of Melg~
ho died Tuesday al St.
Lloyd Thomas Weber; . and by a . . ·his home- betw~l€'!1.. J\lesday and "
!. :c~n~Y·.·.. ..;_
.
Fr.lday. Mlssl/lg were a camera •.'
.,
wn·!Jl·law, Lawrence Smith.
•; .
' , Ailthony:s . Hospital, were held
-Services will be held ar 2 p.m. • valued a t $75, a power..pacll wotth
• Saturday' at 1 p.m. at t11eWoodard ·
- .,..,
ed $40
,; Chapel, Columbii.!l- Burlall"aslntbe
MondaY. In Ewl!'lg Fun~ral. Home, : $ill), a n AM·&lt;·"' radio va!v at. •
,.
·;
•, Fra
. nkllh Hllls Memory Gardens .. with Rev. HerliertGniteottlciatlhg. · ~ruh ketosen&lt;' h1?a ler. ··
Burial wlll be In Chester Cerpetecy.
.
.'
Columbu&amp;.
Friends may call at the funeral
Citations
iss
ued
He was Ihe son of George· W. home from 24 and 7;9 p.m . iooay.
• Moore and Flora DOdson Moore. He
.
• was preceded In death In ·J anuary
GALLIPOLIS
-A Galllpolis tnan
. ''
1917 by his wife, Lydia King Moore;
Veterans Memorial
was cited l)y city pollee Friday for
by two children; by his parents; by
DWI
and driving left of center.
: two brothers, Joe Moore and Walter
Admissions - Willard Lowman,
Charged by off!lcers was Sylvan H.
• Dodson; and by a sister, Minnie
New Haven, W.Va .
Gan;lner, 71, of 110 Klneon Drive, ·.
. Moore, all of Pomeroy.
D
ischarges
Mabel
Hetzer,
· Raymond A. Minnis, Z1, or 917
, SurViving are three sons and
Michael
Conley,
George
Nessel·
Fourth
Ave., wus cited by officers
daugh!ers·ln-laws, George H. and
road,
Della
Roseberry.
·
•
·
for
speeding.
· Ma;lon Moore ot Columbus,
•
~roadcast
\

,:1'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Medical ·board .charges

Area deaths

Marie Godbey

9 am til10

Prices Good thru Mril 2~ •. 1985
'lie Reserve Thl! Right tg Lil'!'i!_Quantiti!!__

GO TO CH'IRCH rV(Rv SUNOI\V

8atelllte TV!·

·. ·File for marriage licenses

FRI.-SAT.

COUPONS

.

•

9 am til10 pm

STAMPS

AND WIC

Griffith, VInton. $100 and rosts,
transporting loaded firearm In
. motor vehicle, six months In jail, six
months jail suspended, six months
probation; nooperator:sllcense,six
months jail suspended, six months
probation and costS; Glen Polley,
VInton, transporting loaded firearm
In motor vehicle, $100 al)d costs, six
mall jail suspended, six - months
probation; David Russell, Millfield, '
~ and costs, left of center; IWx
Thornton, flaclne , $.1) and costs,
· failure to yield; Brenda White,
Racine. $ll and costs, failure to
control; Dennis )'iarrls, Pomeroy ,
driving while lnt!lxlcated , $250 and
costs, three days In jaU and 00 days
suspension of license; Keith Van ·
Inwagen, Racine, reckless opera·
tion,$100andcosts; JeffreyRusseU,
Belpre, $.ll and costs, failure to dim
lights; David DaVIs , Columbus, $250 ·
and costs,ll days In ]aU suspended,
six mon\hs probation, failure to
report a crime; Ollno Saltsman,
Racine, $00 and costs, disorderly
conduct, suspended fine, refrain
from complainant.

se~tence sus~ended

driver's license suspended for. 00
days following his guilty plea. He
had an additional fine · and eosts
suspendedatterpleadinggullty to a
charge of falling to control his car.
1n other traffic cases, WWiam P.
Peck, 29, of Rt. 2, . Patriot, and
Russell M. See, 70, Point Pleasant,
each forfeited $40bond for stop sign
violations.
Forfeltlngbondforspeedlngwere
Loretta L. Gilmore of 313 Upper
River Road, $36; William 0. Tedder;
43, of Louisville, Ky., $37; Linda M.

HOURS:
MON .-THURS .

&gt;.~.H'•[l

'

·, City ~esident's·

~TORE

SUI' I~

Pomeroy- Middl,eport ~ Gallipolis,

'

, KANAUGA,

0~10

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.

Page-A-6 The· Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 14. 1985.

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

Local News in Brief: Computer
'
s
oftware
-

Five caUs ar:tswered by EMS

ByJAMESF.PELTZ
AP llu8IDe8S Writer
NEW YOAA (APJ - Lotus
Development Corp'., which In just
three years emerged as'perhaps the
dominant force In . personal·
Computer sotrware, Is aggressively
moving to enhance Its lead.
But In doing so Lotus Is not relying
solely on Its own talent. II!Stead, the
company Is reaching out to rival
software makers and Independent
programmers to penetrate new ·
markets.
This past week, for example,
Lotus signed a letter of Intent to
purchase Software Arts Inc. and to
hire the companY' two top officers
and co-founders, Daniel S. Brlcklln
and Robert Frankston.
Software Arll; In 1979 invented
Vis!Calc, a financial-analysis

POMEitOY- l\1eigs County Emergency Medical Service reports
five calls lor assistance answered on Friday.
·
At 8:09a.m. Racine travele.;l to County Road 28 for Joe Gray who
wa s taken to Veterans Memorial HOflpltal. Middleport at 12: lrJ p.m.
was called to Ebenezer Street for Della Norton to Veterans
Memorial. Pomeroy at 3: 42 p.m. was called to the scene of an auto
accident at Sycamore and Main streets. Mary Pickens was treated
at the scene but not transported. At 6:36p.m. Racine took Bonnie
Jean Koenig !rom So4thern High School to Veteranp Memorial. And
· at 11: ll p.m. Mlddlep6rt transported Lisa Manley from 74.1
Sycamore St. to Holzer Medical Center.

.·. Divorce gr{!nted by court
POMEROY - A divorce has been granted In Meigs County
Commiln Pleas Court to Larry Joe Pettit, Middleport, from Diana
Pearl Pettit, Seneca, S.C.
.
Carmen Kay Brlnager and Timothy .Brtnager,-both of Racine,
have been granted a dissolution of their ma!Tiage In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Robert Shaffer, Pomeroy, has filed for a divorce from Theresa
Shaffer, Pomeroy, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
.
Harry D. Games Jr.. Pomeroy has flied divorce proceedings
against Patricia Ann Garnes, Parkersburg, W.Va., charging gross
neglect of du ry.

finn enhancing
lead
.

spreadshee) program that was
credited with helping to trigger the
boom In sales of personal cornpu·
ters, nota b)}' Apple Computer Inc.'s .
Applell.
Like any financial spreadsheet,
VlsiCalc llst:l rows and columns of
numbers, sUich as nllght be used In
flguring •a budget. If the user wants
to change just· one figure - the
expected Inflation rate, for example
- VlsiCalc I!.•WInstantly change all
the other numbers thatareaffected.·
The program remained among ·
the Industry's best sellers'untU 191!3,
when It was outpaced by Lotus's
1·2·3 "integrated" financial tiOfl·
ware, a pmgram that · added
graphics arid filing capabilities tn
the spreadsht!et functions and was
afrned largely at 1nternatlonal
Business MB1Chines Corp.'s hot·

Wright's ·reburial stirs controversy

.

selllng PersonAl Computer.
company's profit more than
Lotus also said this past week !hat doubled toS36miUio_n.
'·
a rodl!'veiQPer of 1·2-3, Jooathal)
In other busineSS and economic ; 1
Sachs, who had left .the company developments this past week:
·•
last January, agreed tn come back · -Whoiesate prices rose 0.2 per- -~
and help Lotus develop ,!li'W cent In March, and climbed at an annual rate of 0.3 percent Dep
through
products.
. . .
.
rt · f'
• And two weeks ago- Lotus and the first quarter, the LabOr
a · &gt;:
Cu!Unet Software Inc., a leading ment said.
·
:
supplier of sotrware for ffiM's
-Sales of manufactured goods i
large-scale computers, agreed to roseaslight~.2percentlnFebruary, ;'
developpl'ogr3J11SthatUnkpersOnal whUe inventories expanded 0.4
computers with~ IBM COI]Ipu· percent, the Comtnerce Deplirt· .
ters-allnkagelncreaslnglysought · mentsald.
· ··
bY businesses.
·
-R.etaU sales plunged 1.9 percent
Lotus, headQuartered In Cam· in March, their steepesi decUne In
bndge, Mass., grew up fast on Its sevenyears, the Commerce Depart·
own. Its revenue has soared from ment said. But major retailers said
:zero three years ago to $157 mUllon separately that March sales rose .
last year, employment climbed to from a year earlier, aided bY
abOut 800, . and In 11&amp; alone the lilst·mlnute Easter shopping. .
'

i

Two lawsuits filed .

..

..

POMEROY - Grange Mutual Casualty C'-0., Cleveland, has been
awarded a $3,701.49 judgment In Meigs County Cpmmon Pleas Court
from Steven C. Taylor, Pomeroy, for money due and owing on a
promissory note.
EUeen Monroe, ChUllcothe, has tued suit In Meigs County Comnnon
Pleas Coun against Roger I. Riebel, executor of the estate of Elber
L. Riebel, Long Bottom, et al. Monroe requests partitioning of
property in Chester Township.

.·:
I

...'

POMEROY - An accident Involving two vehicles occured abOut
3:40p.m. Friday afternoon at tlljllntersectlon of Sycamore and East
Main streets In Pomeroy.
James L. Fry of Pomeroy was heading west on East Main when he
stopped for traffic · at the Sycamore Intersection. Kathleen Van
Meter, Clifton, W.Va., dltver of the second vehicle, also heading
west, faUed to halt behind Fry and struck his vehicle In the rear.
Fry's vehicle sustained moderate damage; Van Meter's vehicle
s ustained heavy damage.
No Injun!'§ were listed; however, the Pomeroy EMS unit was
dispatched to the scene arid Mary Pickens, a passenger In the Van
Meter vehicle, was treated but 110t transported.
No citations were issued by Pomeroy pollee.

Funds needed .

'&gt;.:.

•

Passenger treated in accident

.

Ohio Valley Bank understands that April
c i,s typically a very wet and rainy month.
That's why, for a limited tim~e are
giving away 1 free Cepital · I.
Urn- ·
brella for each account opened.
, .

UMBRELLj~
•

· HAS YOU··

'

HWbard's Greenhouse.
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

MARIETTA, Ohio tAP) -More
than $.lXl,!XXlls needed to complete
restoration of the Becky Thatl!her
showboat,lts sponsors say.
The boat sank In the Musklngum
Complete line of vegetable &amp;bed·
River In March 1984.
dirw plants. hlrwirw. baskets.
Ohio Showboat Drama Inc., a
non-profit organization, has raiSed , potted plants ...:,. bloomirw &amp;folishrubbe~. rose l!u$!1~.
$'J!I,m. tOW!lrd restoring the boat, ..
but the lowest bid thusfar luis been · azalus &amp; RhodOdendrons. .. ·
OPEN DAILY 9 to 5 ·.
$433,822.
.
-~SUNDAY 1'to .5 ·
- The showboat grQUpwantstostart
·.
PH. 992:5776 • "
ii~ s~mmerdfama season june 22. ' .

COVERED I

.

.?

· tt

;~'

SPRING GREEN, Wis. (AP) Scottsdale, Ariz ., theschool'swlriter the rolling farmland, has become a
During his life,, architect Frank campus. Wright died In Arizona In major tourist attraction for the city.
Lloyd Wright rocked the founda· 1959at thea~eof!l9. '
TheMidwestiSdottedwithWrlght /'
Other family members and some. masterpieces. puUt lit the. organic
tlons of architecture with_. his
revolutionary .designs. Tweitty,slx ,local residents are up In arms about style he invented to marry the
years after his death, Wright stiU is · the reburial.
· '
architecture with Its suiTOUndlng
"It's
an
act
of
vandaUsm,"
said landscape.
stirring upJI1fuss as his descendents
Roben Llewellyn WJ1ght; Wright 's
fume aboul"'hs reburial.
"Ifeel that (the reburial ) was not
son
bYhisflrstwife,Catherbte,anda a~ act," said Ellptbeth Wright
Wright's remains were exhumed
from Unity Chapel, on the grounds · retired antitrust lawyer In Be· Ingraham, ·wright's oldest grand·
of Tallesln, his summer home and thesda, Md. " I have no Idea why daughter, an architect living in
archlteciure school near ·this Mrs. Wright wanted him lnA.rlwna. Colorado Springs, Colo. "The hear·
"He always wanted lobe buiied at !land is where Frank Lloyd Wright's
southwestern Wisconsin commun·
t.Y: · and the body was cremated Spring Green. -I never heard him spirit is. That's wh~:re the largest
talk about It, buteveryonewhokmiw body of his work has been done. I
March2.5.
At the request of his last wife, him understoOd that"
think he wanted to be .burled there." .
Wright grew up In Spring Green.
Olgivanna, his ashes will be burled
next to her at Tallesln West in Taliesln, which he buUI to blend Into

Two-car ai\Ccident investigated
GALLIPOLIS- A West Virginia assured clear dlstarice, troopers
woman was cited bY the Gallla· added.
A Gallla County man escaped
Meigs post of the State Highway
Patrol Friday afternoon following a . injury when the car he was driving
two-car accident on Meigs County went Into a ditch along Ohio 325
.
Road 21, near theiniE'rsectlon with ' Friday morning.
Donald
S.
Marcum,
35,
·
Vinton,
.
BRINGING IDS OWN PARKIN
Ohio, earlier last week. The Ohio?.
~as
southbound,
approxlniately
,
·
G
SPACE
"TWv.nors
said
a
plck·updriven
bY
Harley Robe~- "clears ov.;....~... "''ty ,...,.:, Tim
gar•.... w
, as being moved ......... town to. Its· new
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-~
-Harry D. Scott Jr.,-42, Oak Hill, was four-tenths of a mile nortl1 of Ohio ·
QWner's property •. (AP Laserpmto),
westbound on 21, when.he stopped 564, when troopers said he apparMadison sleerfllhe _tractor hauling Ids riew garage
ently met a nol;!hbound car In a
SPEAKER TO APPEAR curve that was driving left of center.
The Rev. WUllam E. Slater Jr.,
i)a!!tor of PoweU United Metho- ·
.,.;:
westbound, apparently was unable To avoid a collision, the patrol said
MIAMI (AP) -The Independent allows the govenunent to continue loans. in Ohio. A bank holiday was to stop 1n tUne and stru~k Scott's ¥arcumwent offtherlghtsldeo!the
"dlst Cturch In Findlay, wDl
auditor of the failed ESM Govern· to freeze Gomez's assets, He will be declared!or the S&amp;Ls toendtherun pick-up from behind at 1:20 p.m., highway and struck a ditch. The8:W
speak at 10:30 a.m. today at
ment Securities Inc. has agreed to allowed a monthly living allowance .and ' revamp their Insurance troopers said.
a.m. Incident caused moderate
Pomeroy UnltlM Meihodlst
pay damages to the.flrm's receiver to be set by tjle court. ··
. ~~system;
Both vehicles sustained light damage to Marcum's car, troopers
Church. His message wiD be "In
as settlement of a Securities and
The SEC charged Gomez with
damage and Roush was cited for added.
tbe Garden."
·Exchange Commission· fraud com· , acceptlngmoneyfromESMofflcers ,..--..,-;__,_ _ _ _ _::.::_ _ _...:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~----------'---~-~plaint agalnstptm. ·
·
while auditing the F.ort Lauderdale;
Jose Gomez, 37, signed a consent based company's fln~nclal state·
d~ree Friday with theSECbut stU!
menls. Thegovenunentsclalms the
faces a number of clviJ,sults brought · audits hid huge losses, help1ng ESM
by ESM's cl,"edltors. ·
.
· Jure new Investors.
Gomez, former man'aging
ESM owed investors .more than
partner of the Miami office of the $320 mUllon when It w~s closed last
accountlngflrmAlexanderGrant&amp; month by the SEC. Among ·those
Co., was accused of fraud for • who lost money In Its collapse were ·
accepting $125,!XXl from ESM. He ' several municipalities, including
neither admltled norden led guUt.
Beaumont, Texas; Toledo, Ohio,
A federal judge wUI be asked to · and Pompano Beach.
approve the settlement and set the
LoSsesalsoforcedtheHomeState
amount Gomez must pay.
Savings Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio, to
The decree, wlilch has no effect on • close Its doors, t11ggerlng a run on
possible crltplnal charges. also other privately Insured savings a';ld

~ra~~~~~/~;:~:~:~:

ESM..'s ·auditor .sP.t_tle_s_with SEC

DRASTICALL~

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Don't wait to give yourself the credit
you deserve. Take advantage of your
good credit qualifications with a
Capital ,_Account from $500
and above ... only from the ban~ that
makes the extra effort to serve you better (and we keep you dry)- Ohio Valley
Bank.

:.·

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the Sunday Tirn8s-Sefrtinei-Page-A·7

.Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

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.. ALL .SALES FINAL. .

. NO .EFUNDS ·
1971 CHIYT MALIIU t~l
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low mu ...

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NO LAYAWAYS·
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243 3aD AVE.

446-7886
1ti1-10YOYACILICA ~·Sfl
Extra dean, well equipped

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Gr~f1,

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S7,000 mil••· looltallke new. •
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- ..,_.,,n.rs

A2,000 mil"-

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248 Second
m Gallipolis, Ohio

WALL TO WALL

FrH Parking
On Lot

~ 614-446-0093

SPECIAL

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cultivates. sweeps, removes snow. digs post holes. There are
over 20 attachments powered by our famous all-gear direct
drive that give you year-round performance ~THE
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Stop by today for a demonstration of
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Fr" Attachment with PurchiiH
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UNTIL YOU ARE!_
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GRAVELY TRACTOR

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. 210 CONDOI ST.
I'H."2·2975
PMIOY, ON.

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•

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Same Locarion For Over 14 Years
...

•
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(Super ~1111 S1tldtet,lon18u~r ..te .. )

INCLUDES COMPLETE WALL TO WALL IN~TALLATION WITH
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Gallipolis, Oh.

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Page-A-S-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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April14; 1985

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~~--~------~~~----------~--------------------------------------------~--~----------------~--------------------------------------~~-----1·:
'
HIS'roRY PRESERVED - Many ~the one- IIIICI two-room schools
uae4 more than·&amp; half-i)flllury ago stW lltand In Melp County. At left,
this one at Laurel CUff with 1M bell lower Is a oommunlty landmark.
- 'Ibis one Is a lllorage bulldlng but- llll¥1Y have been oonverted Into
homes. At rigbt,IJChool andsiUderK ~are available to the public In
the Melp County Superlnlendeilt of sthools omce. Uncia Haley,
lleCretary, prepai'ed Illes for each of the ·l!chools•

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April14, 1986

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

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One, two-:room·· . schools retaining Meigs history

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grades. The parents dldri 't have
HOEfiLICH
around a potbeUy coaf stove,
was a "great day" when shew as
houses where she taught aU
school, the couple plan to pill the
any
moriey and food was scarce.
, 'l'hnes Sentinel Staff.
concluded It 40 years later In a ·
able to purchase a typeo,vriter
eight grades, with as many as 00
opening at the back.
POMEROY - "School days,
school where hot lunches were
and mlmeogr;~ph machine
children, who she described as · so l took my big five gallon
It was ill that school that Ray
ketlle, put it' on the potbelly
&lt;..~hool days, dear old golden rule
served and temperatures were
which she used at night to
being "wUilng to do. anything to
Whaley of Birllngham, who will
stove, and the youngsters
days. Readln' and 'writing and
controled by the tum of a
prepare , materials for her
learn." There were no teacher
observe hls ~h birthday in July,
'rlthmetlc..... "
.thermastat, contends that edubrought In whatever they could
students.
aide$ and the salary was about
taught all eight grades in the la te
·so we could make .soup.
.Fl,Jm 131 'one- af1d twO: room
catlon.tl)en was no lesS:'thal)· it!!!
As the.dl'pressiOn ended, more
$!lXJ for _the eight month school
19aJ's. .
·
ldlool houses . ln the mid- . - loday. . . -· ·~ '
,
~dtlteEpple
who
had
the
·,
money
began
to
come
·
i!tto
year.
-..'w aBta,
17 'In ~· consoll·
Reflectlng.on.llef,first year at · ·
grOcery In Pomeroy ~iways ~.
: ~'Y!&gt;U just·had to'depend on the
educat-Ion, and the con,sotldatlon
~nl preservation ,
:
'!lie rrt(dil§IJ1s,
teaclilnt. Mrs: DW said thai She
save&lt;!
til!" bones frotn the n:leat
youngsters to _help out. The
.. process began. Mrs: DUI ·spoke
Ma~ of thP early financial
and then I would take thoSe to " of tile dedlc.atloJI or the ie~cher:s
In
County have
had eight flr!ltgrlldersandevery
r£'CQrcjs of schools· in Meigs ·
eighth graders sat Relit to the
school
.to put in the Soup...We Just
a 11hanglng scene.
one of ti)QSe chlldJ:el:t ~I aU the
second graders. aM the seventh
In goi!tg out to '' !Sell" the Idea ·of , Counfli 'have been preserved.
eatly· liays reachers "' way lbrotig)l ·blgh SCIJOOI ·and
col"iiblnini(thesmall community ·. ·s'everal ~ t the M&lt;'lgs Museum; ·
· gradets l)ext to thi&gt; first graders .. got alorig with what we hlid:
~ ·1101 as ' educated, tech· · graduated ·together. ·
sehools· Into lar'ger schools, and · · o(hers 'by Individuals and former ·
If the cliHdren' In the· iowei' · That went on l&lt;ir five years.!:·
lliqUI'l .were .not as refined,
"That was quite an aecoi11P"
gradeS wanted to ask something
of their fund ~alslng for lrn·
teachers. Available records of
WIWngness lei learn
materials not as sophisticated,
iislunent in those days, since
proved facilities 'In the schools.
the Banner School Distrtct date
or have something explained,
Mrs. Dill said that as the
and bu8dings not as convenient,
many children didn't have the
And parents were supportative.
back to 1869.
they just asked the student In the
depressldn moved along, the
but education was strong.
opportunity to go ' to high
higher grade in the next row.
At the Meigs County superlngovernment .. started a lunch
I Thelma DUI of Syraruse, who
school", she commented.
Landmarks standing
Bul, of course, the reacher
t&lt;'lldent's office are records of ~
pf9gram a11d a lady came In and
Many of the one and two room
.: .began her teaching career In the
student s and teachers since the
always took time out to explain If
did the cooking, still on the
Old days
schools of a half-century ago still
• Laurel Cliff School in 1924 where
the problem touidn't be worked
early 19!l's in the 131 one and
potbelly stove. Each of the
Eleven of Mrs. Dill's years
stand In Meigs County.
students brought their lunch in a
out by a helping student."
two room schools. Long stored In
children
brought
their
own
howl
were spent in one room school
The
Laurel
Cliff
School
where
tin paD and warmed their bodies
Reciting was an ImPortant
boxes, Linda Haley a few years
and eating utensHs.
ll!frs. Dill began. her teaching
ago prepared a file for each onP
part of the teaching process,
"Students
were
sci
eager
to
career
in
1924
iS
a
landmark
ill
cif the schools.
Mrs. DIU explained, and that
learn, they were willing to . do'
that small community and iS
The Information is now availaoften m.eant- when aU eight
just about anything to get to
now used as a storage area.
ble to the public and Mrs. Haley
grades were In one room, that If
come to schooL There Were, of
Typical of the little red school
reports that nearly every day
you missed something the first
course, no buses and some of the
house of yesteryear i ~ the
someone requests Information
time around, you could listen to
children walked long distances
Hemlock · Grove school on land
from thE' o!d school records in
It the second time around .
to attend school,
now owned.by Brent and Denise · either their search for illfOima.. She said that all of the schools
She said her "library" then
Arnold. Previous owners used It
tion to satisfy the Social Security
·had recitation benches · at the
consisted of one book, thai she
for a recreation room. It iS now
system or to complete a
front of the room where the
had soome maps, and a magnl- '
being renovated by the Arnolds
genrology .
students would walt their rum to
fylng glass besides the tE'xt·
and will be used for a garage . To
recite or to work problems on the
books. She remembers tha t If
preserve the appea rance of the
slate board. "At that time
students didn't have paper to'
throw around like they do now,
They did all their work at the big
slate board at the front and on
their own slates."
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'Die Great Depression
Up untll 'the early thirties; the
• students provided their own
books and then rhey were
handed dQWn from one to
another in the family . In those
days there was apparently less
concern about germs, since Mrs.
Dill said that water was carried
, Into the classroom In a pall and
the children all drank out of the
same tlncup.
She vividly recalled In 1931
when "the depression hit and
everything folded."
"At that tlrne, I was at the
Bailey Run one-room school
with lots of chHdren In all eight

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. . . . &lt;'Aiunty ICIIooll bepn In the old t--t..aare~ Clift
~ wl!erehlh......., lhldled by the lilhl of daJ andlleptwann by a
,putbelb' CCIIII lleYe. Her rem1nc1en of tae early clayw Include lhlll
• INdler'1 cllalr, her wery ll'!lt at the Laurel Cliff IIChooL an old IJC~I
. . •llfltflclllllle liiell to cd In h children after reo 1 , aad aM~

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b)' Bren&amp; 111111 Delll8e White,

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pldufed at the front "' the
achool. Previous ownen tiled
the IChool houae for a l'llCI'I!IIilon
room. 'l1le Amoldl plan lo ~~~elt
as. a gar&amp;«e with doors at ~
IMMlk, prNervln&amp; the front exterior and !!Ides.

..

�P.omerQy-Middleport~Gallipolis, Ohio.:_Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Communi~y .corner

April14. 1986_

Brian, Har.den fund drive

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
' American Legion Past, Point Plea'J.'Imai.SentiDel Stiff
sant,w. Va., attention Miles Epling,
0\lr belated greetings to Meigs with checks to be made out to ~

attends Meigs High School.
__

ongoing::~

glean ideaS and thoughts from'";
something published, but !he article •
Kathryn and Earl Knight, such a Itself sb:Juld be put Into your own •
nice couple, just aren'tmuchtobein words. Otherwl!;e you might be''
.. :
the , limelight. So while they ob- lntrlnglng on.copyright laws.
That's why , several columns ;,:
served their golden wedding annl· .
versary this week, there was no submitted have not been printed: "- t
Opef\ reception even though their
daughter, Sue, would liked to have rp;)iiiaiiveiiaiiniilciiiwii
e ee
iikii!ii.iiiiiiiii~
done th8t tor them. Their anniversary was Thursday.

By KATHY EYRE
AMOdetM l'rel!8 Writer

...

ATTENTION

CHIImAN
LEADEIS
SUNDAY SCHOOL
TEACHEIS

Julie Flagg, Philip Vitagli.~.noJr.
:wed in New Jersey March 16 ·
i!.

. POMEROY - The Epw.orth
:Methodist Church of Elizabeth, N.J .
.was the setting fgr the March 16
· wedding of Julie Flagg and Philip
Xitagllano Jr., both of Elizabeth.
, The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
'lfld Mrs. David Flagg, ~yracuse,
and the groom Is the son of Mrs.
l'.t.uda VitagllanootWinthrop,Mass.,
and the late Philip G. Vitagliano Sr.
·

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MEDICARE PATIENT
.
f:arpenter,· Brandeberry .married_ ASSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED
•

: HARRISBURG, Pa. - Mr. and
Mrs. John T . Carpenter of Harris· ·
~rg. Pa., announcethemartiageof
· their daughter, Bonnie Carpenter,
to Tom Brandeberry, son of Dr. and
. Mrs. Keith Brandeberry. Gallipolis,
Jan . 5.
:

The bride Is a pharmaceutical
representa tivl'£1 the CarnrickDrug
Company.
The groom is the National
Insurance Marketing Manager for
AAA.
The couple will reside In ·.Falls

~ RACINE - Kindergarten regis-

·tratton for Southern Locai School
plstrlot wUJ be·held Saturday, April:
'n, from B-11 acm . and i2:~3 p.m. in
. ~e kindergarten building.
· ~.,Childrenmustbeflveby$ept . ;Dto

. !!flier · kindergarten in the fall.
· Parents or guardians at:P asked to
~ring their child's blflh certificate
~nd record of immunization.
I Each student entering school for
)he first time must have the DPT

The mimes of five seniors were
unintentionally omitted from the
fourth six weeks grading period of
the Meigs High School honor roll.
The group Includes J::arry KleJn,
Greg La they, Tim LeMaster, Mark
Landers and Elizabeth
-Lewis.
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w..... . tiCMI 0 f'IOM lot ,.,...., ll....ot11 to~&lt;• ...od oll'r'IOU!htolllt you kncM lhcf
~
Connie'• Q01 Ofl eye, IQf esetorl 'Nitti 01'4 QIOI"'&amp;. yew.rM raiCII alltle frn'1

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to..ocl'lM lt1of QIYe lt'!IMI lloll ~ llk:Oied r.oir Md - you '*-'d R ~ IIRt -

:-;,

,...,,._""""OKford tie in blatk mist leather uppers. $39

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Slip-on flat in blue, tan or pearl leather uppers. S39

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~y:

Grace Episcopal .Cl!urch
' POMEROY

FRIDAYI APRIL 19th '
2 P.M.-8 P.M. ·
All Churchn Welcome to Send

For the Workshop

VIENNA, WV 261 05

GRACE
EPISCOPAL CHURCH

(304) 295-8133

992-3968
'

2506 ·Grande Central An.

PHONE 675-1675

.

OO.N'T MISS·THIS ONE
ELLIOTT'S. GREATEST·SALE .EVER

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•Gibson
•Panasonic
•Sharp

•RCA

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•Whirlpool
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WHAT:

Color TV's, TV Carts, VCR's, Microwave Ovens, Electric &amp; Gas Ranges,
Dishwashers, Washers, Dryers, Freezers, Refrigerators.

WHY:

We at ELLIOTI'S hive talked to all·our major suppliers, and they have
agreed to bring in all new merchandise for 1 DAY and 1 DAY ONLY!
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:.CREDIT PERSONNEL WILL BE IN OUR
STORE FOR INSTANT FINANCING.
AuCtion conducted

•·10

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B11ind Duff•s
• •,.... Ohio
(614) '446-8051

MON. &amp; FRI. nL I P.M.
TUES., WED. THUR. &amp; SAT. nL 5

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APPLIANCES • TV • CAIIPEl

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

Dear Meg

Morals anger empolyer
'

Don A. Cox

snnounbel
·the opening ol hit new o_lll~e
Sf

.

23 Locugf Sf., Gsllipo/ig
fol' the . .
·Genel'sl p,.,~tice of Lsw

By Meg Whitcomb
overhaul. My husband has let me
DEAR MEG - My company know he's In the market for a new
seems to be a slf!!p-yourselHo-the· model.
top organization. Margo, my super·
I'm considering an uplift and
visor, Is having an aftalr with the enlargement, but have no idea
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
The wedding w!JJ be an event of president, a marrted man. She just where to look tor the most qualltled
Charles Goegleln, Flatwoods Road, · Saturday, April 27 at 2:30p.m. at the got a huge raise. She also flirts with surgeon In either Boston or New
announce the approaching mar· Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
all the male clerks who work with York, preferably Boston. I'm espe· riage of their daughter, Charlepe Prenuptial music will beglnat2p.m.
her.
cially worrted about stories that
')'he Rev. James Corbitt and Msgr.
~Ruth, to Der!nis Mingyar, Colum·
Just recently, the least-qualified, implants harden after a period of
+bus, son ot Mr. and Mrs. Paul Don Horak wUJ officiate.
least-productive male clerk was time. But I reaDy want to get this
Mlngyar. St. Clairsville. .
promcted over all the more produc- done beforE! I lose my nerve. Whom
tlve female clerks. When we asked can .I call? - .SAGG.ING IN
•
Margo WhY he was promoted, she SALEM, MASS.
said, "Productivity had nothing to
DEAR S.J.S. - The decision to
'do with lt."
.
have plastic surgery should not be
How can we light this dlsctimlna· made hastily. The best candidates
5th Ave., 5:20 to 5:35; K&amp;KTraller tion without losing - our jobs? Gallia County
are those who have thought it
Court, 5:45 to 6: 15.
OFFICE
POLmCS,
LANSING
,
through. Such women have a strong
• GALLIPOLIS - The Bossard .
Thursday - Cora, 3:15 to 3: 30;
MICH.
and coofldent comnutment to
: ubrary announced it's scheduled
Raccoon TraDer Court, 3:40 to 4
DEAR
POL.
Nowadays
those
changing their physical appear·
tor the Week of Apirl15 tp 50.
p.m .; Patriot,4:15to4:45; Cadmus,
with
the
office
politicS
bee
In
their
ance
to please themselves. A
~ Monday-RodneyVUiage,3: :.lto
5 p.m. to5: 20: Gallla, 5: ;Dto6p.m.;
often·.
get
stung.
Sexual
decision
shouldn't be made In
bonnet
~ 4 : 45; Gallla Metro Estates, 4: :.l to
Centerpoint, 6:15 to 6:;D; Center- shenanigans no longer spell success response to outside pressure or to
• 5: 15; Kerr, 5: :.Jto5: 55; Bidwell. 6: 10 ville, 6:'40 to 7:10.
if professiopal.performance doesn't solve personal problems. A session
, ' to 6: :.J; Harrisburg, 6:40 to 7 p.m.;
Friday - Individual stops for merit it.
with a good psychotherapist could
· : Rio Grande Estates, 7: 1Q to 8: 10.
Senior Citizens.
the
law
prohibits
discrimination
clarify
whether your motivation Is
' : Tuesday - Gallla Christian
Saturday - Northup, 10 a.m. to in the,\VOrkplace on the basis of sex, healthy.
, · School, 1:45. to 2:30; Roush Lane, 10:30; 'Green· Terrace, 10:40 to 11
race or national origin. Margo's
True, scar tissue around breast
· '" ~: 45to3: 15; Cheshire, 3: 25to4p.m.;.
a.m .; Rodney, .11: 15 to 11: 45;
an&amp;wer
aboutthe
clerk's
promotion
implants
once formed hardness In
* Addison, 4:15 to 4: 30; Addavllle
Ewington. 1 p.m. to 1: 25; Vinton, was Inadequate. You have a right to 50 percent of the cases. A new type
Elementary, 4:35 to 5: 10; Kanauga . 1: :.Jto2:05; MorgariCertter,2:20to3
have the ground rules for advance· of spongy polyurethane Implant,
p.m.
'
ment spelled out. If she won't do It, however, like those ~ In breast
~
go to another supervisor.
reconstruction after a mastectomy,
.:;! NEW YORK (AP) _There's a ,
Meigs County
Get adyive from your Equal Is now avaUable: Talk to your
i.new -type of Investment game on
.
. .
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Ell\Pioyment Opp~ntunlcy.CommfSI doctor and ask him for lnti&gt;rmatlon
. • all Street called "junk financing" . POMEROY - Bookmoblle ser- slon districlatea offi!'E', thl!re's one on .how ·to contact the American
·. by ,Its. oppon~ts and ''hlgh·Yielc! vice In Metgs .County ls,brought by • In au·major cities. they•u help you Society of Piastlc arid Reoonstruc·
,. ~ftnanclng': by us supporters. ·
· the Meigs C,ounty Pub)ic. Library · ·, confront· job ihjus~ceand discuss !lye Surgeons. ·
.
.::' 11 uses unsecured securities that · undercontPactwith theOhloVi!Uey. legal-optloll$.·. · ·. . ·.
- ·Wr1te · to Meg care of this ·
' · ·"',P3Y very high ·lnte~e5t. Th!!"securi· Area Ll~rarles.
. . . .. ' • &gt;. · DEAR MEG·-;- At -tl)!s ·stagE! of ne~spaper. She. wUl · perSonally ..
• tlesarecalied"junk"becauseofthe c .Thescfhedule. oftheklunltl!!Melg~ my life (34) I'm depressed . and . answer only leiter!~ th&lt;Jt· cont.aln
: low rating they've received from
O\ln!Y or next
s:,
.
considering breast surgery. After self-addressed, stamped· envelpes.
:Credit-rating agencies. Through this
Monday - .Burlln~h~, county two chtldren (14 and 16), and Questions of general interest will be
• . J financln~. corporate raiders, In mobtle park, 3:35 to~.~· liarrlson- countless debts, my bust needs an discussed In future columns.

Goeglein - Mingyar

MAYO MONUMENT CO.

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GUARANTEED DELIVERY FOR MEMORIAL DAY

routes set

"Quality lllgher, But Prien Lotfer''
SELECT FROM LARGE QISPLAY
REASONABLE PIICES

- nvestment game

Nklrkers - N'aausoleutns - Monuments

BRONZE MARKERS
. MONUMENT ClEANING .
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ET"RY Lm.E·RING .
1:

borrowto100percent
of thea
:"effect,
money.can
needed
use against
• company being raJded.
• ·Should the company be pur·
:.chased; then, the buyer can sell
·. pieces of the acquired company to ·
: pay oft the borrowed money.

ville
Churcl), 4, 35to5.
16, New Lima.
Road,onemlle
southofFortMelgs,
5: 15.to 6; Rutland, Depot St., 6: 4,0 to
8:10p.m.
Tuesd~y .- ~~rs PlainS,
Lodwick s •. 7. 25 t~ 8. 10, Rlggscrest
Addition, 8. 25 to 8.55.

Dinner set

~• •

nEE iNSTALLATION 'IN CE.ETEIY
· . OPEN 9:00 A.M•• $:00 p.M.
.
•
MONDAY ·THIU FRIDAY 1 ,5 Dl'YS A WEEK
OPEN SUNDAY 9iOO A.M. ~nl 5:00P.M; .. • ..
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LOCATED ON RT: 141 AT CENTENARY, OHIO
2'h MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 446· 7039

r~(N=ew=sp:ape::r:E:nterp;~rtse::;::::;~=======~=~~~::::::::::===;;~;.

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 will have ~ dinner for
members, 7 p.m., Tuesday evening,
atthe post home.

NATIONALLY 1.'\0VUHISE[)

eleflofa
presents

.
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Comer of
3nl I Pll• St.'
Gclpglll, Ohio
(614) 446..3733

We can help you reward a job well: done ·
with these .colorfUl new Teletlora Drink
- Thte and Lunch Tote Bouquets, During
secretaries' \\eek, send a floral gift of '
brigtlt spring flowers to decorate the
desk. Later, ·these pretty keepsakes
are practical for carrying lunch and ·
beverages. Call or visit our shop for
detivery anywhere in the U.S. or Canada.

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NOW IN PROGRESS AT
MASON . FURNITURE
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Giverelefloriis brinkTote

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Secretaries'~k is Aptil22-26.
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POIIIROY,OI.
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' W! ~ All •lor Credit (Gfth and Wire Flowers Everywlllrt ·

2 Locations

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Sud McGhee Auction Comp1ny. Bud McGhee, Auction"r · Steve McGhee, Apprentice Auctioneer

614 . . . . . . . .

"!Or!

Besides respect
for mentioned
the dead,
assOciation
members
another motivation.
" Really, your tombstone is your
only claim to tame,"Driggs said of
many of the ·pioneers and homesteaders who COllectively wer e the

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Full Faetory Warrantv - Dealert ·'·Weleoine
.

,',I,P

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - The
lowa-Nebri!Ska Cemetery Protection Association aims to save old,
abandoned . eemeteries from a ·
variety ot threats, Including the
farmer's plow.
As,5oclatlon members say the
dead should be respected even If
their descenllailts can't, or ·don't
care to, tight tor the f)reservatlon of
theh\ resting places.
"lt'sbaslcally sacred ground. We
, (as· a society) don't ev.en consider
cemeteries. sacred today," said
Association President Eric Driggs.
"We figure if the family's gone,
that's it."
Some families have long forgotten
the Old burial places,others recently
have been forced to sell the family
farm with its old family plot, he said.
"One hundred - perhaps only 50
- years from ' now, will your
ancestors be able to find your final

AJihough many ot the abandoned
resting place Intact? '' asks a heroes of the region's early days.
Death certificateS weren't com - cemetery plots arereiatlvelysmaU,
· brochure printed by the association .
she observed, plowing around t})em
"Or will time have erased your mon until 1904, Dtlggs said. so
genealogists and historians often · every year could be a bofhersane
name? Today there are countless
must rely on .tombstones for vital chore.
.
cemetertes and tamily burial plots
It It Is Impractical to preserve a
whose stones cry for attention, plead . Information. Although no one may
cemetery, farmers should at least
have cared yesterday about the
that someone care - In a seemingly
record aU Information available
Information on a particular tombuncaring, throw-away world."
from the cemetery before plowing It
The Omaha-based association, stone, someone may care tomorrow
formed last June, has attracted 20 and the Informa tion will have been
under, s~ said.
Association members say they
members Interested .In preserving ~ost forever.
However , more and more old can't estimate how many old
the old cemeteries scattered across
the pralrle.of Nebraska and western tombstones are being destroyed 'c emeteries have been destroyed.
each year, particularly by farmers, · But they aim to find auf how many:
Iowa.
abandoned cemeteries remain.
·
The nuclei!S ot the group Includes acpordlng to assOciation members.
''Their
motivation
·
Isn't
They
just
hope
to
attract
members,
members of the Greater Omaha
Genealogical Society and the Old strictly greed . It's just common · across Nebraska and western Iowa·
CouncU Bluffs Historical Recovery sense," Margari&gt;t Forsythe, associ· who will . help them . oomptle a
ation treasurer, saldofthefarmers. cemetery census.
Development Group.

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([ ZI rl's

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. ' Branch, Middlepon.
Yost is a graduate of Southern
, Alfred E . Rusche! Sr., are8llllOUIIC·
lng the approaching marrtage of High School and graduate of the
'their daughter, Nita, to Chuck Yost.
Ohio State ATI at Wooster. He
presently operates dairy farms In
· The open ch.u rcn wedding will
,take place on Satul'[jay, May 25 at
the Racine area with his parents,
··6: 30p.mm. at the FirstChurchofthe · ~ne and Mary K. Yost . ·
Following their wedding, the
-Nazarene, Galllpoils. ·
The bride-elect Is a graduate of couplewUiresldeat295540akGrove
Road , Racine.
Meigs 111gb School and Is employed
at the Holzer Clinic, Meigs County

SATURDAY, APRIL 20th 10:00.A.M•.:

d

Omttte

conn~e:s got ~~L-DIWL

fl

PrHented

ALL. N:EW·APPliANCES
·AND·
.
yy·
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s
:
.
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and herfamllywhowlll honor them
with a dinner party at the Columbus
AthlPtic Club inobservanceoftheir
anniversary.

·.;::===============::j

'' •

Author of
"God of Untold Tales"

.DINNEI ISEIVED FIOM
6 nL 7 P.M. IS 'INCWDED I

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.Michael E. Moynahan, SJ

PUBLIC AUCTION

series and booster, ilie ·polio serieS
ana ' tlooster, the measles, ·mumps
and tubell~ (MMR) shot, and a ..
recent skln test. OhiQ · siate law
.
. '
requires that every child enterfng
. sChool, (Or' the . fir~t time_.- musf .\J!' ·
immunized. · · . , ·.. · .; ·
. Children shouid be regiStered at
this time so that blls routes for the
next school year may be arranged
and supplies ordered.

·

From California

Ia Made Now.

Point Pleasant Medical Center

f. Knight anniversary celebrated

MIDDLE.P ORT- Mr. and Mrs.
:;;: Earl Knight, '1m Beech Street,
: : Mlddlepon;· -: observed their 50th
·;- wedding anniversary Thursday.
;,: They were married by the Rev.
~ : Bert O'Conner at Chester on April
~·· 11,1935. Mr. and Mrs. Knight have a
; : daughter Mrs. R.L. tMarllyn Sue)
· ~ : Halley, Upper Arlington, and two
; : grandchldren. Paige and Bradford
•. • Halley.
~:
Knight was a school teacher for44
; ; years, retiring in 1970. Mr. a nd Mrs.
; • Knight are spending tl)eweekend In
Upper Arllngtonwlththeirdaughter

F~turillf,

There is NO CHAIGE

DR. AAROM IOONSUE, M.D.

-

~:

CLOWN MINISTRY
WORKSHOP

leprtRntatives, lvt

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY-9 A.M.-5 P.Mf
SATURDAY-9 A.M.-2 P.M.
MONDAY &amp; THURSDAY EVENINGS~6:30,8:30 P.M •

25th &amp; JEFFERSON AYE.

Rusche! Yost

ENROLLMENT IS LIMIT£0
And 1-wotlons Should

OFFICE HOURS

Church, Va.

Kindergarten registration
planned in Soutq~rn _area .

.. .

Charlene Ruth Goegleln

NltaRuschel
ChuckYO!It

Halley's Comet .

Mr. arid Mrs. Philip

B-3

Association aims .to .locate .forgotten grounds

· '

County's dulcl·
Brian Harden Fund.
mer maker, Wll·
Brian will be undergoing a bone
llam Grueser. He
marrow transplant at the Center.
observed his lllth
His sister, Tammy Nelson, will be
birthday on
the donor, and she and his wife, the
Friday.
former Paige Carr, accompanied
Probably the
hfm to Seattle Wednesday.
While there will be no charge by
oldest dulcimer
maker In the country, Grueser the Research Center for the
contjnues productlonandsalesathis transplant, the expenses ot Tammy
Just this word io garden club
Rock Springs home. He makes aU and Paige are only being partially members who are submitting
klnds and shapes and they 've been taken care .of through another "Green Thumb Notes" for the
SQld all over the country. A lofotthat source. Contributions wUI go to tJelp · column.
Is attrlbuted to the quality of his witll their expenses since both must
The materlaal should be original.
work, and then, the price Is tight.
spend several weeks In Seattle.
That Is not to say that you can not
Grueser remains in good health .
Tammy, being the donor, must
and spends several hours a day in his remain In Seattle for a· time, while
workshop. Maklng dulcimers has Paige will be there even longer to
had ·some financial rewards, we're care for Brian ~er his discharge
sure, but the real satlsfactlonromes and whlle he undergoes outpa tlent
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
from being able to create an treatment.
~en
Halley's Comet'returns late
Instrument to please the most , Brian Is the son ,of Dorothy
this
year.
star ·g;12ers wiD have
muslc;ally gifted.
Harden, Lincoln Heights and at·
several
weeks
to view the show The family got together on Easter tended Pomeroy schools.
and
a
second
chance
In spring 1986.
Sunday to celebrate his birthday at
"Many
people
mistakenly
think
the ·home ot Harold and Helen
Due to injuries In a recent fall,
comets
streak
across
the
sky,"
says
Blackston, hlsson·ln·Jl!w anddaugl!· · Vernon Nease won't make It to
Dr.
Mark
Littman,
a
UniverSity
of
ter. There besides Grueser and his Wednesday's visit of the American
wife were Bob and Brenda Black· BM· Cross BloOdm,obile, but Ju:'s · Utah astrono~r and consultant to .
stan, Bruce Blackston and daugh· concerned about getting donors out Jason Empire lnc., a telescope
Vitagliano Jr.
maker here.
.
ter, Amber, and Francis Shaeffer.
as usual.
"Unlike meteors, which burn up ·
Shenie and Jack Kane and their
S(J'thiS"remtnder..... the bloodmodaughters, Heather and Emily, of bile will be at the Senior Citizens · as they streak .through our atmosphere, Halley's Comet Is far out In
Charlestonwi&gt;ren't abletomakethe Center, 1 to 5: :.J p.m.
space.
Although' moving rapidly, It
db)rier but cauea during the day to
Is
millions
of mlles away, imd so will
extend their congratulations.
Pageants are everywhere, but a
The bride is a graduate of .
appear
to
Inch slowly. across the
"first" tor this year Is the Miss Job's
. sky"
Southern High School and Hocklng
.
Now about the fund drive for Daughters Pagea11t to be staged In
Technical College. She is a medical BrianHardenwholsnowattheFred ·
The comet last came Into view in
Columbus on May 4. The local
as~lstant tor Neurological Asso1910.
Hutchinson Research Center, Uni- Bethel has selected Dreama Bentz,
elates P.A., Ellzabeth.
...;:=;;;;;;1
versity of Washington, Seattle, . this term's honored queen as their
The groom graduated from Wash.
·
dmd~date. Dreama is the daughter·
. READY TO FINISH
Bunker HUI Community College In
Contributions may be sent to the ·· o! Mary and Walter Bentz, and
1
FURNITURE
Boston with an associate degree In
WICKER
1984, and ls empoyed as malnteCUSTOM FINISHING
nance manager with Peoples Ex·
HAND-CRAFTED
press Airlines.
GIFT ITEMS

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page

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

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MASON FURNITURE CO •
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Mason, W. Va •

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis~

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

April14, 1986 .• ,

-

.Ostomy group meeting
tqpic· will-Pe relaxation

• • I DIDNT DO ANYIHING -Hobart Wilson, executive editor of the
GaDipolls Tribune and Sunday TiJnes..Sentlnel was aJTe8led Friday, but
hat for "real"
He was laking part In the GaDia Unit of the ;
!'\ffierlcaDCancer Soclety'sJall'n' Ball, promotion, scheduled lor May I
•1111 3. Wilson was "arrested" by Gallipolis Acllng chief Joe Owen and

re-.

~Wade

Henson.

·

GALliPOLIS - The Tn-County
Ostomy Chaptl'r will have their
regularly monthly meeting Thursday AprU 18 at 7 p.m. In the Frencl)
500 Room at Holzer Ml'dlcal Center.
Paul Dovyak, ·assistant professor
lor Social Work at Rio Grande
College and Community College,
Will ·present the~ program on.
"Relaxation Techniques."
. A 1976 graduate or West VIrginia
!Jniverslty with a Masters in Social
Work, Dovyak has been at Rio
Grande tor seven years. He has·
presentl'd numerous work:;hops 'on
Assertiveness Training and Stress
Management over the past 10
years.
According to Dovyak, a danger
signal to the brain automatically ·
programs a person Into the "fight or
flight" response. That Is stress.
Relaxation Is themostdlrectwayto
counteract this physiological
opposite.
"It's easy to tell a person to relax,
but not always easy to do. Many of
us need a structurl'd technique of
relaxa lion;" Dovyak said .
Ostomates, their famUles and
friends as. well as physicians and
nufSe$ In Gauta, Meigs, Jackson,
. Vinton and Mason counties are
lnvitl'd to attend and participate In

Former
senator
to
be
featured
'
$peaker
at Athens conference
... . .
l

.

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~

• 1\THENS - The former U.S. Senate frog~ West Virginia In 1958, alml'd at promoting an informl'd
~tor who spearheadl'd creation was one of the chief sponsors of the citizenry. Randolph and Pizzano
of the Appalachian Regional Com· legislation that creatl'd the ARC In join several other speakers at the
mission (ARC) and the current 1965 and remainl'd the SeJfate's three-day conference including
ARC co-chairman will be among most ardent supporter of the Sen. Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio;
tfte major speakers to address a program throughout his career.
Frank Manklewicz, former aide to
C!,lnference in Athens April 24-26,
A veteran of 26 years In the Lyndon B. Johnson; and Roberta
"Appalachia Ohio - 20 Years Senate and 14 years in the House,
Steinbacher, dlr~tor of the Ohio
Later: A Region Reflects and Looks Randolph scorl'd many legislative Bureau of Employment Services.
F;orward."
.
achievements and champlonl'd · The conference, to be held on the
Jennings Randolph and Winifred laws to lmprov~ coal mine safety,
Oblo University campus, ·Is deA. Pizzano wtll speak on the role of aid victims of black lung disease, stgnl'd to analyze the effect past
tile ARC In Appalachia Ohio In the build the interstate highway sysgovernment programs have had on
P!!5t tWo decades and the future of terns, clean up the nation's alr and
the Appalachian Ohio region and its
ARC programs.
water resources and construct -peopie. In addltiori'; conference
workshop partlcpants will make
:eonlerence reglstra.tlon informa· bridges, dams and public buildings.
tl!/11 may be'obtainl'd from the Ohio
I;tandolph served as chairman of . recommendations for action that Is
University of Office of Workshops,
til!' Senate Environment and Public needl'd to resolve problems lacing
Memorial Auditorium, Athens,
Works Committee for more than 14
Appalachia Ohio today.
(IJllo 45701, (614) 594-6851.
.
years.
The Conference begins Wl'dnes-Deslgnedtostrengtheneconomlc
"Public works are more than
day, April 24, with an exhibit,
development efforts in a 1,3-state structures," he said In an'lnterviEiw . · reception and concert at.the Dairy
Appalachian l'tlgion, tlte AR.C has
lor-' the Public Works iilstQJical
Bam Southeast Ohio Cultural Arts
sqpj:Jortl'd numerous highway pro:
SQ&lt;;Iety's oral history 'Series; t)ley- Center, '
. .
. ~and hea)th and job creation
are "the peQple projects that make
. Registration for the oonlerence is
proJects , In ·Southeast Ohio. How- .life livable, (the) projects thatput - · $!i0, which Jnclude!i two .luncheons.
•' eYer, theiuture'oiARCfundlnglsln . ()'len and women to work."
.
an!)_a dlnner,.o.r $40 for an optiop
qaestlon following an .o rder signed ·
Ralldolph retire/! from his Senate · ·wl\lch does nor Include luncheons·. ·
· tJY · President J:teagitn to rescind seat1Ji1984andisthenew·chalrmait · Additional ·details about the
llinding for the commission.
of the Councn for the Advancement
program areavaUable from COAD,
' Randolph, elected to the u.s. of Citizenship, a non-profit group
4 S. Plains Rd. , The Plains, Ohio

Jbb Bank helps seniors find _work
:GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizen Job Bank, 22t&gt;JackonsPike,
ts::open five days a week. Monday
through Friday, toservl.'empioyees
j(l years of age or older seeking
· f$ployment.
:The Job Ba~tk needs applic&lt;\lltsfor

14, 1986

-

WANT ADS

ARE JUMPIIIi

WITH BARGAINS

.--.
--"'

AT

. WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
COINEI OF COUNTY ID. 7(1 &amp; LAUiiL CUFF ID.
POMEIOY, OH.

· DATE: APRIL 14.; 1.9
EvanP,Iist John Futr•!k S.Peaker ..

EVERYONE WELCriME

..

~

====::::::::======::=:::·-· ·
.~

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

R&amp;M f·URNITURE
MANUFACTURING

Paul Dovyak
the monthly meetings · of the
Tri-County Ostomy Chapter.
For ad(iltlon Information, contact
Phyllis Brown. R.N .. E.T., by calo
Ung44&amp;!rol

CI;IOICE OF STYLE, SIZE &amp; FABRIC

For the birds

HAVE YOUR FAVORITE PIECES
REUPHOLSTERED TO MATCH YOUR NEW

Ornithologists searching for precise ·nomenclature to Identify birds
have devised many colorful names.
Among them are the great racket·
taUl'd drongo, yellow-bellil'd waxbill, - black·spottl'd bare-eye and
blue-face booby.

"" · NEW CUSTOM MADE
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE

PROFESSONAL WORK, FACTORY PRICES

"

CALL FOR COVERING APPOINTMENT
PHONE 266·1470- EVENINGS 446-3438
STATE RT. 7 - CROWN CITY, OHIO

~

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r

} &lt;

.•

WIN A

FREE

.

STOP ·IN THE STORE·
FOR DETAILS

.

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,

.-'
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OPEN
ALl NAME BRAND EQUIPMENT
MON.-SAT.
*Drake
*Cincinnati
Fib$rglass
9 A.M.~
_.1
0
0
*Uniaen . *90 -85 LNA .
. 5:00 P.M. .
ALUMINUM MESH OR FIBERGLASS DlSH
- ·
· $9.
9 00 · ·
.,
~

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:COMPLETE .S.YSTEM$ . .

·.·.a
· .· oos·.· AN: o··_.· :EN. os·
BUSINESS ROUTE 7HOBSON lOAD

.5 .-AND UP .
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_.C,AR...,-. -E··,.·-._·.· - sa·o-~p ·: ~ .'. :
. MIDDLEPORT
4J92·6173

~4:5:~~·~(:61~4~)n:·~;4:~~---------JL~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

baby sitting and people to stay with
the elderly on a live-In basis Will!
pay. •
The Job Counselors welcome all
employers and employees to \ISe
this free service. Teiephone446-7lXXJ
for either,service.

rt~h;at;t;he~pl~il;wo;u;Jd~pro~ve;t~o;be~th;e~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;~;~~
·

Sl69

LB.

BONELESS••• ~~...$1 89
· EXTRA LEAN

MIXED

GROUND CHUCK

FRYER PARTS

$139 LB.

49(

FMIILY PAK

SUPERIOR

PORK CHOPS

FRANKIES

of

.'

.

lily js the
.Wrtd's largest 'btooinlng flower: It
grows in the deeply shadl'd forests
of ; Borneo and other parts · of
southern Asia. Also known as the
ralflesla arnold!, it resembles the
rl'd cabbage. Its flowers weigh up to
15 pounds.

CATHY'S SCHEDULE IS
THURSDAY
9-9

MONDAY
9-9

99(

120Z.
PKG.

SUPERIOR

PORK 'CHOPS

CHUNK BOLOGNA

79(

LB.
,.

ICEBERG

HEAD LETTUCE

Cathy
J,a ckson
Cathy has been with our salon for apprpximat,ely
eight months. She has attended several hair shows.
Cathy enjoys ~11 asp~cts our ~alo~ a_ndw~n•~ to spe·
·:-cialize -iri. cutting an(t' coloring. Cathy is very con. sd~ntiQ.US an£f .~ould ·;love . fo ·give .you a gte...t : ne'\V '.
l~ok.: · -"· : . .
· · .. ·.· ·~ ·· · · · · .

LB.

CENTER CUT

PROUDLY
.
SALUTES

now

~-

ROUND STEAK

Sl79LB.

lf that doesn't help, your doctor
c~ treat dry-mouth symptoms'
eilher with a ml'diclne that propr with one of the ·
nlbtes saliva
artificial salivas avaUable lit spray
diSpensers. .

;

..

'

$l39LB.

~yourdoctorllitsposslbietoalter

'

to limit

USDA CHOICE BONE-IN

446-9510

the dose.

.

"We ReseiVe the

HAIR DESIGN

; ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)- A
dry mouth Is not just uncomlortllbie.
II It happens often, it could be a
sYn\ptom of damagl'd teeth and
gums, according to Drs. Gregory
Tetrault and Michael Weintraub of
tl)e University of Rochester Ml'dlcal
Center.
:They say that II you are troubled
bY dry mouth to check YQUr
m€dtcations since . tile condition
may be caused by many medicines .

. . cabbage . flow~r
., ...
· · ~ stinld~ COrPse

SUPER MARKET.....OPr:N DAILY &amp;:;unLJAl 9 A.M. TO 10
85 VINE ST., GALLIPOLIS
PHONE 446-9593

ACROSS THE S-TREET

A dry mouth

SATELLITE .SY·STEM

.

.
.
.
WASlUNGTON, D.C. - When are also the most rare. Evea these
perfect form of birth control. Ten . ContraCeptives. At the same time,
years ago reports of side effects you will also receive a free copy of
oral contracept.tves were tntro- · may be overstatl'd, acccirdlng to
ducl'd into the Unitl'd States 1n 1900, some experts, since most of the
brought dlsUlusionment. Today, the the Co~umer IniormattonCatalog.
they seeml'd to be the Ideal research ..was done before , the
ml'dlcal opinion Is ) hat the pill , Published quarterly !Jy the Consu· ·
combination of relll!blllty and IntrOduction of the low.estrogen pi\1
thol!gh . Imperfect, Is an option mer Information Center of the tJ.$.
convenience. But there are lew and the progestogen· only
many woinen can .use safely.
General Services Administration, .
perfect solutions, and alter several "mlnipUI."
.
· · For more Information about the Catalog lists more than 200
years side effects began showing
There Is no litrn evidence !hilt the
advantages and disadvantages of other free and moderately pricl'd
up, causing use to drop. However, pill causes cancer, lind· current
o~al contraceptives, send 50 cents · federal booklets on a wide vartety of
recent research has lndlcatl'd that research suggests that women "'hO
for a _copy of Facts About Oral subjects.
the side effects were not as serious have used the pill lor at least one r-;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
as originally thougqt, am!, 1Ji fact, year have hail the average risk of
there are some health ·benefits to developing cancer of the ovary and
of the endometrium (the lining of
using the pill:
The National Institutes of Health ·the uterus). There appears to be
has recently publlshl'd a booklet little risk that · its use leads to
that expla~ the advantages and steHlity. In fact , new·types of pUis,
disadvantages of oral contracep- which are. safer, protect many
lives. It points out that while oral women from pelvic lnflamrrt3tory
contraceptlyes are not for every disease, whichcancausetnlertQity.
The most tr'nportant outcome of
woman, recent studies show them
to be sale lor most young, healthy,
recent research Is that groups of
non-smokers. For a copy of "Facts women with -a high risk of
Aboat Oral Contraceptives," send developing pUI complications have
50 cents to the Consumer In!orma- been ldentllll'd. These. include
!lop Center, Dept. 410N, Pueblo, smokers, women over 35, and those
'batilofllla 81009.
.
with a history of such Uine:;ses as
Today, oral contraceptives are
heart or liver problems, high blOod
the most popular reversible birth
pressure, certain cancer, diabetes,
9'k J't.itcltin./
Mon.-Fri.l 0 A.M.·6 P,M.
epilepsy, obesity, or asthma.
56 STATE ST.
control method In Amertca, with
~(V'fl
Saturday
10 A.M.·3 P.M.
GAUIPOLIS-446-1303
more than seven million women
Twenty years ago there was hope

the
comblnl!(!
estogen,
progestogen
taking
them dally.
Taken
properly,
pUlls 99 percent effective, and.the
p1;0gestogen.oniy "mlntpill" Is 98
· pereent ellfectlv in prevenitng
pregnancy. They are probably the
most extensively studll'd ml'dlca- .
lion IJi history, yet they are not fully
understood.
..
.. . - . -........ . . .
The patient leaflet that comes
with all pills contains a complete list
of potential compilcatlor\s. Most
side effects of birth control pills are
minor. The most sertous side
effects - an lncreasl'd risk of blood
clots, heart. attacks, and stroke -

.• '

PICKUP .&amp; DELIVERY AVAILABLE
MON : THRU FRI. 8:30 TIL 4:30; SAT. 1-5

.

Pill side effects not as serious as thought·earlier

...•

GOSPEL MERINGS

SERVICES EACH EVENING AT 7:3CJ

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

4HEAD

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.(
· POLE BEANS .............. ~~~ •••• 69
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CELERY ...............................
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99
FRESH

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tMPEROR

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. . . . - . . ••••
.
.·.: · :.:
PE. .········-·~~······;

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SATURDAY
- 9-5

.

.

.

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COLA, DIET
MOUNTAIN DEW,
PEPSI FREE

8-160%$149
aonLES.

Plus Deposit·,.

:A Message From Th.e Bibk .. .

,,

..

THE CHURCH IS NOT A DENOMINATION
William B. Kughn ·
.
.
Christ Not Dlvldod
: "/• Christ divided1" (1 Cor. 1:13). There is one Jesus (Acts 17:7), one
'Lord Je•us Christ (I Cor. 8:6: Eph. 4:.5) who is our Savior (Jno. 4:42;
:I'itus 1:4; 2 Pet. 1:1J),II; 3:2,18; 1 Jno. 4:14) and Mediator (1 Tim. 2:5;
-He h. 12 :24) . Christ is the builder (Mt. 16:18) and the head of His ehuuh
J CoL I: 18) . Since Christ is not divided, His chuuh is not divided;
-therefore, the church cannot be a denomination since denominations
'

·SHOWCASE .

:

"Wa8 Paul cruciji€d ("" y(JII.?"" were

ve baptized in the

MORTON

by

0 · Samso~ite®

and

· 5 PC. GIOUP

Umbrella Table with 4
chairs in a choice of 3
buutiful shades. Easy
to care for Body-Glove ·
Collection - 48" table .
with 4 chairs. Choice of
two colors.

lnd Olympian (black).

REG. 1852.00

Rec. ' 450.00

SALE

Includes 41" mesh un·
brella table with 4 chlirs.
llldt of '-Y duty
wroa&amp;hl iron ll1d styled

belutilully b1lyon Shaw.
Available ln · belutiful
summor shades ol vanilla
1

$722

NOW

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HIDE·A·BEDS® by Simmons .
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~

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by La-Z-Bov

5 styiH in stock or
special . order one
riaht for you.

4 styles now in

stock.

·c hapel Hiil Church of Christ•
' (llooJnlloReod • P. O • .,x301

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n:a ....

OPEN DAilY TO 5 P.M.
MON.&amp; FRI. 10 I .P.M.

BETTY CROCKER

(

CAKE MIX •••••••••••••!!.~!;.!~!.. 79
SHURFINE
s LB $J
GRANULATED SUGAR .!t:." · 49
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F

3
9
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CORN •••••••••••••••••••••••••
17 OZ. CAN

F

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ARGO
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ARGO WHOLE KERNEL

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· WITH $10.00 ADOtnONAL PIICIIASE

DOUBLE LUCK CUT

Dllr•WifJf

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ALL GRINDS

3-LB.$599
CAN ·
·

ON SALE ARE PATIO SEATING GROUPS AND CHAISE LOUNGES FOR POOLSIDEI

SIGNATURE II®
'

FOLGER'S COFF

$366

.

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$1 59
.1°/o. MILK ••••••••••••••••••~.a~~o•"•••
69 (
MARGARINE. SPREAD~:~~~!::~.
VIVA TOW£LS~ ••••••J.u.~~.~.~~!'... 69(
Plasti'

SHEDD'S COUNTRY CROCK

name of

•all others !PhiL 2:9,10). Salvation is in His""""' (Acts 4:12). Because
'Christ was crucified for us, we are baptized into His name (Acts 2:38),
:that is by His authority, and rightfully wear it (Rm. 16:16; Acts 11:26).
"!'he church is not a denomination because it does not wear any name of
,"human origin.
The Chunh • The Fubleu Of Chrllt
; "And hath fJ'Ut all thing"'!ldff hif feet, and gave him to be tlw llcod .
""'r all thing• to the church, W.\icA. if hio bad~. til« /ulrNII o[ him tllat
'f;lkth all in all" (Eph. I :22,23). "Fv.IM11" is from the Greek 'Pfen&gt;ma. " .
denoting "that of which a thing ia full" (W. E. Vine). The ch11n:o\ ia the
:lv.\ole, entire bodl! of Christ on earth. It lacks IJi nothing spiritually, for
it isfill.ed with the.ful""" of Christ's P-9wer, wisdom, &amp;lid Jove. It being
lhe fuiMBB of Christ on earth 'is not a denomination, that ia, one of
'O.everal hundreds of units or religious sects.
There Ia Oae Cbafth
: "There u 011e bod71, and 011e Spirit, eve~~ 111 ~e are called in 011e lloH
·oj~(JII.rcalling" (Eph. 4:4). It is an established fact that the bod~ Is the
.ci&amp;urcll: "the co\urch, whicll if hil badl/" (Eph. 1/22,23), aJid "he il tile
/lead of the bodl/, the church"ICol. 1:18). Since the bod11la the 011e com.plete !perfect) body of Christ on earth, it iJ not a thnaminator Ia
.fraction ofthe whole), making it a denomination Ia religious sect).
~
To divith Christ's •pirittW.I bodl/, the cbufth, on earth today into
"'nit1, Beets, ""partU.1 is to crucify the Lord afresh. Such &amp;II one stands
-.s guilty as those who erucifil'd. His phyaical body. on the cross.
~~Mtimu definitely divit!R.! Division Is not oJ the Lord; therefore,
·"division is wrong!
For Free Bible Cerre.,....te11ee Cour•, Write ...

·

REITER

·~ ~OIL-S~

•Paul?"(! Cor. 1:13). Christ, culminating His earthly mi..ion by becomJng obedient unto death, was exalted by God and give'\ a "'""" above

•

FROZEN

PATIO AND PO.OL FURNITURE ON SALE

$fivide into units, sects, and parties.
•
•
. The Chureh Reopec:to Chrilt'a Name

89(~,
DINNERS .... ~~.?!;•. .·
~

•'

.

;
~
"

�.... ,•
Page-8-6::._The Sunday Times-Sentinel

A regular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society to help
save your life from cancer.
QUESTION: Is Hodgkin •s dis·
ease a fol'm of leukemia?
ANSWERilne: No, the diseases
are two different forms of cancer.
.but both Involve the spread of
abnormal white blood cells into the
circulatory system. Bodkin's dis, ease affects the body's lymphatic
system, the network which transports Infection-fighting white blood
cells through ~ fluid called lyniph.
As the disease spreads.•.abnormal
white blood ·cells muitiply and
crowd out normal ones. iea\liitg
patients susceptible to-a number
Infections. Leukemls Ia a cancer of
blood-forming tissues, mainly bone
marrow, lymph nodes, aild spleen.
There are several tYPes of leukemia, depending on the type of white
cells Involved and their rate of
growth.
.
'
.
The most common first situ of
Hodgkin's disease Is a swollen
lymph gland, usually tn the neck,
which lasts for three weeks or.
longer. Other symptoms lnelucte
persistent fatigue, weight loss,
fever, night sweats, nausea and ·
vomiting. Any symptom should he
checked by a physician,
QUESTION: Is cancer in children rare?
ANSWERilne: Yes, only about
6,(XX) new cases of chlld}lood cancer
are reported yearly. However,
cancer Is the chief cause of death by
disease in children between three
and 14. Cancers in children tend to
develop more quickly than adult
cancers because body tissues are
growing rapidly .and the cancer
grows right along with them.
Leukemia accounts for almost half
of all cancers in children. Cancers
of the bone, kidneys, brain and

or

PERFORMANCE SET- Musician, songwriter andcomedlcan Scott
Jones wUJ appear April 16, 8 p.m. at Rio Grande College and
Community CoUege's Fine Wid Performing Al1S Center. His music is a
comblnatloo of many inDuences- classical, contempor&amp;ry, blues, Jazz,
rag and riX:k, and James has released three albums of original music.
He has written- and perfo,rmed arrangements for LIPPS, Inc., and
toured with Michael Murphey. 1be concert is free and open to the
public.

--People in the news----.
Feminist scholasrhip 'deadening'

.

.

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY (AP)- Extreme feminist writing
and stholarship tends to "deaden reader sensibilities," author
Christopher Lasch said at a conference on lnteUectuaUsm.
Lasch, author of "The Culture of Narcissism" and "The Minimal
Self,'' said Thursday that It was a mlstaketo' 'vlew thewholeofhlstory
as the history of wori'ien'soppresston."
·'
"Victimization does not color every aspect of a woman's life," said
Lasch, who was joined &lt;;~n the panel at Skidmore University by Renata'
Adler, an author and senior editor at The New Yorker magazine, and
other writers and thlnkers.
Then• was no one on the panel to speak In favor of radical feminist
writing.
Lasch said extreme feminist writing has become "onedimensional, and, by this time, completely predictable." That ktnd of
writing "is more likely to deaden rather than quicken the reader's
sensibilities," he said.

Jedi' rerurns to screen

Hodgki~'s

.
'-April 14, 1985

April14, 1986

Disease not ·a leukemia

· ~ous system are also common.
tic mastectomy?
QUESTJON: What are monoclo,
A!I{SWERIIne: Prophylactic
nal antibodies and how are they mastectomy Is the surgical remo·
being used to fight cancer?
val or a breast In the absence of
ANSWERilne: Through a pro- known breast cancer, but tn
cess called genetic englneeiing, anticipation ·of It occulTing. This
scientists can fuse cancer cells to proCedure Is sometl~ advised for
product specific disease-fighting women at a very high risk or breast
antibodies. 1bese antibodies can be cancer. High-risk candidates Incustom-made to home in on cancer clude women who· have had cancer
cells anywhere In the bOdY- The of one breast or ba've a, strong'
targeting ability of these antibodies , family history of breast cancer In
is being used to deliver antl-caneer the ' maternal side, or women who
drugs directly to tumors, destroy- have had biopsies revealing · cell
ing cancer cells with little. or no changes in the breast that might
damage io healthy ·surrounding Indicate eventual cancer.
tissues. Monoclonal antibodies also
Medical opinion is divided on the
hold promise as an early detection 15sue of prophylactic mastectomy.
tool for cancer, pinpointing cancer Some physicians feel It Is a justified
cells before cltnlcal signs appear.
preventive measure for high-risk
QUESTION: What is prophylac- women. Most believe the actual

risk o( lleveloplng breast cancer
does not warrant ·the premature
removal of the breast. Instead, they
advise women to receive frequent
physical examinations and periodic
mammograms for the early detection of the cancer. .
QUESTION: Who Js· ~t risk for
developing colorectal cancer?
ANSWERiine: About the same
number of men as women develp
the disease and the likelihood
Increases with age, especially atter
ag'e -50. Anyone with a personal or
family history of colorec-tal cancer
or of polyps In the colon or rectum
should· be examined
carefully. Two
.
, other diseases of the digestive tract,
chronic ulcerative colitis and polyposis, are also linked to colorectal
cancer.
'

'

WE DO IT
AS WELL-.
FOR LESS
MONEY

COMPARE
OUR
PRICE

PH. 446-7 441 ·

· ..

45 State St., Gallipolis

.

1r---------~-----------~
. .COIJPOI\
1· I~---------------------COUPON
.
I

s·1995

I

I
I

.

L

PER ROOM

I' I

IIEGUlAI 129.95

Pri£1 lncludu Scotchgard

s

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I I

~Elderly's

drug actions·
posing serious threat

HAVE ANY .s ROOMS 1
AND HAll ClEANED I
llfGIIAR 1199.00
I
lnc~~~~~~!.a~d_____

12 995

__ j L.--~- ~ice

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c:::::.....--ir
The Saving Place®

Sundays 12-6

SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY

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2For'15=.·
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Hocking Valley .Chapter of Sweet Adelines

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For More Information Phone: 593-3141

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...

Fabrics suitable for &lt;urtciins, drapes, bedspreads,
~ quilts, pillows, placemats
and table cloths, · kit&lt;~en
~. auessories, lamp. shades!
wall hangings and many
crafts.
·

TAN tHROU GHOUT THE yEAR! OuR METI;ods

il
~I
I
~
aal!
~-~
I
~

1

I~

:il

~ Neces•ry notions al1o
... available to &lt;amplete
~~ your praject.

I

~.

I~
L,_.clllnlwluitl. 12·

Now· THERE's NO EXCUSE .NOr TO kEEp youR

u.l

I :li
l.

1

2 FOR 1 SALE

~~

FA.BRIC · · FAIIR.IC

BE SMART
DO IT YOURSELF
SAVE MONEY.

•

16.9

FABRIC

Decorating
.This Spring?

·.'

ldiOflfiiDW MafCOUIIL

Tony Randall

BANA-NA SPLIT

Gtt A&lt;quainted With Our Ladies Iorber Shep Group

S78

TAN YEAR 'RouNd!

TUE$DAY, APRIL 16th FROM 7 P.M. TO 10 P.M.
AT THE FIRST CHRISnAN CHURCH
CORNER OF WEST STATE It NORTH CONGRESS
.
ATHENS. OH.

.2Piqp~1

Genuine Ruby
ltld Dtemaold

TAWNEY
JEWLERS
424 SECOND GALLIPOLIS. OH .

. . "SPECIAL. GUEST NIGHT"

Earth should be proteaed

••'

end Diemond

ANNOUNCES

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Gov. George C. WaDace, who
decided to receive treatment for chronic pain on an outpatient basis
Is "in a good frame of mind," a spokesman said.
Wallace, suffering pain In his midsection and spine due to a 1972
assassination attempt that' left htm paralyzed from the waist down,
canceled an official trip to Mobile on Friday and went Instead to a
hospital !or X-rays.
The 65-year-old governor wlll !Je treated as an outpatient and has
no plans to enter University Hospitals In Birmingham for lengthy
testing, as he did two years ago, ilides said.
·

'

are for everyone

·s:a·

· Treatment for chronic pain sensible

-- . . .

·Well-versed
attorneys

Government ·stats show people living longer ·

.

Mature in America

Your

HONOLULU (AP) -AstronautEllisonOnlzukasaidheandfellow
crew members on the last space shuttle missiOn saw !fie Earth as
something fragile and to be protected,
·'
"We saw no lines out there, no divisions separating countries. We ·
had the opportunity to sec the Earth as ene," Onlzuka said at a .
banquet in bis honor here Thursday.
Onlzuka, 38, an Air Force lieutenant colonel, was a crew member
on the Jan. 24-27 mission of the shuttle Discovery.

i~jtation

SEA'I'TI..E (AP ) -Twoattrirneys
who flied suit seeklitg to have state
judges draped In the required silk
robes Instead of the rayon, cotton,
nylon {lnd even polyester thfy're
sporting w(/re told their argument
was made of whole clorh.
Pat Mcintyre and Peter McKee,
citing a slate law that au judges
should wear black silk robes, filed
their Ktng County Circuit Court
petltlonAprUl.
"No judge In rayoll merits awe,
It goes beyond aesthetics,
the very £abrie of the law
Is slandered by sYnthetics...
And, wherefore, having made
their case,
.
.
relators now petition
the.courltoend this dark disgrace
by Writ o! Prohibition," ,
Washington Supreme Court Chief
Justice James M. Dolllver replied
Aprll5:
BLIND BEAutY - Kimberly Bundy, 19, won't let her bUndness
"You claim that rayon Isn't silkInterfere with her dream of becoming Mi8!l Mlamlsburg, and possibly
So states your firm's petition.
Miss Ohio and Miss America. (AP Laserphot&lt;l)
Yau urge regowning of our ilk
By writ of prohibition.
Your erudition ma(&lt;eS you cite
From RCW · (Revised Code of
Washington) .
•,
You claim it _makes your action
·
•WASHINGTON (AP) - New . 100,(XX) Americans was down from Americans In 1981, down 3 percent . unaUjUsted death count
black populaUoncontimied to have a right
There were 1,977,981 deaths in the shorter llfeexpectahcy, it increased
government statistics show Ameti- 19130, but not as low as In 1979. That ·from a year Nrller.
By citing Title 2,
Statisticians consider the age- United States in 1981, the center nearly twice as fast as for whites
rate does not take into account the ·
c~ns are living longer than ever,
You point to Section polnt-oh-four
adj!lsted rates a better Indicator of reported, 11,860 fewer than the year between 19130 and 198L
with theaverageexpectancyhittlng overall agtng 9f the population,
Subsection point-one-ten.
74,2 years. , ,
the chances of death over a period of before. The decline affected both
however.
White women have the longest
lt'.s not enough:. You need some
1
men
and
women
,
and
all
age
groups.
time
becalllle
they
are
tiot
affected
At
the
same
time,
the
National
lives
.
to
look
!otward
to,
78-S
years
,
more.
The
age-adjusted
rate,
which
is
a
1
by changes lntheagemakeupofthe
"The average expectation of life followed by black women at 73
You'd better look again.
· Cl!nter for Health Statistics found calculation of how many deaths
at birth reached a record high o!74.2 years. White men can anticipate a
populatiOn In general.
For there's subsection One-€ightthe age-adjusted death rate hit an · -would have &lt;iecUrred if the 11m
Of the 15 leading causes o! death years in 1981, up 0,5 years from
'all-time low In 1981, the latest year
life of 7l.l years and black men 64.4 oh
population had the5ameaaemillas
studied,
_
12
alSo
declined
over
!he
191'1l,"
the
report
said.
"This
years.
And the next two in the bool&lt;.
for which figures are.avallable.
that of1940, set therecord·Jow.
year.
Oile,
blood
poisoning,
showed.
increase
reSumed
the
general
trend
lf you would know which way to .
There were 43,305 in(ant deaths in
The basic rate of 862.4 deaths per
It was 568.2.-deaths per JOO,(XX)
a sharp Increase, bl!t center officials upward In .life expectancy in the the United States In 198lforaninfant go,
aitributed tl!at to better reporting by . Unlted 'States \hat was Interrupted mortality ra il' of 11.9 deaths per
Please give them each a look.
physicians raiiMir than any actual In 191'1l."
Then you will learn that from this .
l,OOl live births , "the lowest rate
. Increase tn deaths from that cause.
Women continued to ha ve longer ever recorded for the United ' court
Smail Increases In dea 1hs from life .expectancy, at 77.9 years, States."
The rules must emanate.
suicide and lung disease were also compared with 70.4 for men. Life
No law prevails of any sort
Forwhites. the ratedroppedfrom
'recorded in the age-adjusted rate, expectancy was 74.8 years for lLO in 19130 to 10.5, while for black
When once our rules we state.
,
although. suicide declined in the whites and 68.7 for blacks. While the Infants the decline was from 21.4 to
Here is the rule lor the gowns we
· '
wear
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)
haps uMecesarUy. Her family may
20.0 deaths per l.OOJ live births.
As cases we decide:
Many older persons fac;e a higli risk feel she can no longer care for
Heart disease remained the
Silk and synthetics• The same we
or drug-related problems, says a herself."
leading cause of death in the nation
UnlvenUty of Michigan researcher.
Ms. Shimp emphasizes that
in 1981, 'followed by cancer, stroke ·declare,
I't&gt;tltion IS denied."
Elderly women Uvlng alone are drug-related problems 11re not
and accidents.
CLEVELAND (AP) - "It goes estate-planning advice:
especlally.vutnerable, according to pervasive among the elderly.
almost without saying, everyone · "It is Important for everyone to
Prof. Leslie Shimp of the U·M
"Most are doing tllje," she. says.
should have a wul, " according to a give a spouse (\r children the power
College of Pharmacy, who reported "But as' the medications prescribed
lawyer specializing In personal to transact busineSs for them Incase
•
on a recent project Involving social for an oldet person Increase, so does
they
become
lncompetentoi'
incapa•PI~. ·
,
·
·
~~r,vlce agency clients in Michigan's · the chance or a pl'oblem."
''A w\1! allows the owner to decide ble. The authorizing document is
•l\lPnroeCounty.
. In the 'study, researchers devehow his or her property will be called a 'power of. attorney' and
' · ';-ll'he study Indicated ..that the loped a comprehensive questlonpasSed to his 'heirs. St.a te Jaw should be witnessed by two people
~~lcal ' ~high risk" Individual was naire that determined such potendecides dlslrib\lilon of and notarized.
:ad elderly woman living by herself tial prob1ems as adverse drug . arbitrarily
"If someone becomes Incompeproperty In cases where someone
~Man annual tncomeof$3,00J.$8,(XX), . reactions, inapprq&gt;rillte St?lectlonof dies
wJthput a will,'' say,s Robert B. tent or Jncl,lpacltatedwlthouthavtng
: -4lktng seven prescription medica- . an aver-tlle'oounter prodpct, hoard'
N'elson,
chalmliln of the person;~_l granted a power of attoriley, ltmay
· ~ qins- mQ$tfor lopg·teflll&lt;~Umenls' Jng of unu~ preScription mediCap_lanntng section of. the- C!eveland- -becomE' necessary for a couJ1 to
and five - over-the-counter lions-In the home, ·tnapprq&gt;riatetY
bas€d law -tlrm o(.Jones, · Day, appoint a guardian. This can be an '.
nil'dlca tlon5.
·
prescribed doSage andpoormedlcaReavis &amp; Pogue. ·
·
expens ive and cumbersome
M\InY meatcatlons arepotent.and tlon seiection.by the presCriber.
'
In addition, Nelson offers thiS process.''
cause oKier person~ to . ~utter ..- With !he· results of the QtJe!!tiOnINFANTS
·. 'ai:tverse 'dl'lig'rea&lt;itions ·or ct.ruli'lo- ita(fe .-tor a partt~qtar patient at . r;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;.:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
-;- ~g tnleractton.s, according to Ms. hand, says Ms. Shlinp, a phaniuicist ·
GIN.· u·. 1-N.E c· 0· LOR AND DIAMOND ·
CHilDREN'S
: Shimp, who explains that constant can determine whether the lndlvld·
Brow a
117-1
. '1!111 taking can reinforce the sense of ual needs help.
Corner of Se&lt;ond .&amp; Court
8
1 Ct. Total Gem Wt.
~dencyeldE'rlypersonshaveon
"In some cases, the problems
your choice
mj!dlcatlon and on someone to help could be resolved by counseling the
5159.00 .
t,bern.
patient or providing written educaCompon~ 111300.00
; ~·In an extreme case," she adds, tiona! materials or-- compliance
W~EN T~E SUN doN'T s~iNE, you STill CAN!
"a patient may be placed In a aids," she explains. ".Inother cases,
ritrsing home simply because she is contacting the, physician might be
taking so many medications, per- necessary.''
~

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Qhio beauty says blindness not

MIAMISBURG, Ohio (A) - A ., clerk In her mother's fashion . year.
blind contestant In Saturday's Miss boutique In West Carrollton, . is
A horsehoe-shapedrunway will be
Miamisburg beauty pageailt says working towards an associate u!led tn the pageant to make it easier
she's entered the possible stepping- degree in mental health technology. CorMissBundytotraversethestage ,
stone to the Mls~ Ohio and Miss
Two years ago, she was fourth alone. Planters have beensetupand
Amerlc~ pageant partly because
runner-up tn tbe Miss Miamisburg men In tuxedos wlll be stationed at
"it's a big thing for me to show
pageant, sponsored by the Miamis- varklus areu at the runway so she
P'fOple we're not just going to weave burg , Spring Fling Festival will know where the runway begins
baskets or cane chairs."
and ends. SMwon'thavetowalkup .
Association.
Kimberly Bundy, one of seven
She decided to pursue her dream or down steps, but she will otherwise
contestants, 10$! all of her central of becoming Miss America despite · be judged as are other contestants,
vision last November through . a her visual tmp;~lrment.
said the show's producer, Jtm
'
hereditary disease called cone-rod
.
Miss Bundy said shedoesn'twant Outhouse.
dYstrophy, which deteriorates the to turn Into a I'CCiuse or end up
Miss Bundy will be performing
retina.
·
"making brooms. Everybody the opening dance routine with the
i'he 19-year-old Sinclair Com- thinks t!Jat'san blind p!!Oillecancto. . other cqntestants, ustng a hat and
cane.
munity College stu.dent can see only But we have riO llmltatlons."
"I bopetlley'regolngtobefalrand
blurred images in her peripheral
"A Jot of people think a beauty
~
me for betng what I am, If I
vision. She says her 22-year-old
pageant Is something that almost
sister whq Is married, has two exploltswomen,"shesald: "It'snot. •stlli'l\ble and fall, they should take
children, and ts also almost com· It develops grooming and pol!ie and points off. I don't want any
pletely blind, is her role model.
helps you bulld confidence. You are sympathy votes," she said.
"I have tM highest regard for
Miss Bundy said she hopes to sin!: judged on personality . and talent.
professionally or to work rehabili- Plus, you can wlil scholanhlps. I what she's trying to do," says
RobPrt Zettler, executive dJri!ctor of
tating the handicapped, CiSpeclally could use.the money(for school."
tJum victims, he!J)ing them "to get
The. winner of the Miss Miamis· the Miss Ohio pageant tn Mansfield.
back into theit lives.' "
burg pageant re~;eives a QXl "I think It's an amazing endeavor
• Miss Bundy, a part-time sales scholarship and the right tocom(le!e and I'm pleased to know Jt'&amp;
'
In tne Miss Ohio pageant tater this h•ppentng." ·
''

.'

NEW YORK (AP) - Actor Tony RandaU , who played the
fastidious Felix Unger in television's "The Odd Couple," says people
' have a right to smoke but "they don't have a right to force me to
breathe their smoke."
Randall, 65, was among witnesses Friday at a City Council hearing
on a bill to ban smoking In pubic places except In designated areas.
The actor, who smoked for 20 years but quit 30 years ago,
ackoowledged "prohibition doesn't work, even though It's a good
Idea. Prohibition agalrist heroin doesn't work. I suppose common
.
,
sense Is the solution."
But, he said, In a restaurant , "for the' non-smoker to have stnoke
wafted his way Is a double Indignity. It ruins the food! ."

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B·7

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

...

Open Daily 1 0 ~ 9

LOS ANGELES (AP)- When "The Return oftheJedl" made Its
return to movie screens across the na lion, one of t he fans showingup to
get another look at the third fUm in the "Star Wars'' trilogy was Its
director, Richard Marquand. ·
"No..- I've b\!en ab~ to take my son tos~lt," Marquand, 45; said Ina ·
·
recent Interview..
"I have' a photo of him at-five' montlis, sitting in Ci]ew.ba'cea's lap. ·
Now he's three.a~d-a- ha lf years old." &lt;;hewbacca was a friendly, ·
' gqrilJa,(lke creature in ihe film.
' .
. . Dlreetlngthesequeltotwoofihem.ost succesSfUl fllrrisofalltline-, .
''Star . wa·rs" . and · '-'Th~&gt; Empire -Sirikes : B&lt;l'ck'' - w~s 'an .
· ·extraordinary challenge, the Brltlsh-ooi-it Mai-quand said.
, ·.
., ·Producer George Lucas himself directed "Star Wars," released In
1971, and Irvtn Kerschner directed "The Empire Strikes Back,"
which premiered·In 19130,
'

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Pomeroy-M.jddleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant: W: Va.

Cancer Answerline:

'Common sense' the solution

...

BIG ·oNE DAY SALE

A fREE iNTROdUCTORy TANNiN&lt;; SEssiON SOON!

.. Loretta Holsinger

SUNDAY I APRIL 14th

Managing Cosm!ltologist.

"Twlee The Fun ·For
'The P.rlee of Onal"
Your .3·1h-One Restaurant in Pomeroy and Dairy Isle
Restaurant in Middii!POrt have asuper deal for .you!

Working Monday &amp; Thursday
Evenings Alter 5:00 P.M.
CALL ANYTIME FOR APPOINTMENTS

Buy one BANANA SPLIT and get ONE FREE!! And we
don't monkey ·with this product, we still make the
best!! Brin&amp; -thnntire' family, there is no limit.

OF THE

SlAIRS ·

~I ·

I~ THE. FABRIC SHOP , ~li ·McCLURE'S Mc,CLURE'S
DAIRY
ISLE
3-IN-ONE
HAITINGER I'AbWAY .
341 .E.

··-;;;;c·-

Strwlng Melts &amp; G.Uia (ollllt"'

. •

-~I

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FABRIC

FABRIC

FABRIC .

OH.

.992·5241

MAIN ST•.
POMEROY, OH.

992-6292

·

. ''full service salon

111 W. 2nd.St. .

HOURS:

992-6720

.Pomeroy, OH.

MON.-SAT. 9:00-5:00
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT

Trudy Merehell, Su11n Sleeon, M•rv Po-11

,

. . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . s~._n.d•
.
. .J.•.ne•v•••"•d•L•M•.ne
. . . H.~.•.m•a•w
.
........... •·

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B-8-:-The Sur,day Tune•Sentinel
•

t of the 'bend

prom time nearing .
By -.oa HODUCH
· call l&lt;athy Doidge, 992-i231. or
'ftnM Smlluellllafl
Mary Young at 992-7314,
:!lie may not realize It- but there
Meantime, another meeting will
a!f 80I1)e on the
beheldbyparentsatthehlgllschool
ll'te level who
at 7 Wednesday night. Joln the
- ktiOW Meigs
group - you might enjoy and
c-ounty Is around.
you're certainly needed to help
J carne to this
Insure a sate evening on prom
cObclusion after
night.
.:.
~

Help!
The
Village of Racine IS ·tn the
'ot the Meigs Couniy Emerprocess or updating Greenwood
. Medical Services - a great
Cemetery lot care records.
~up, by the way - - has been
Unfortunately, pertinent lllfor.~ned .as one of six EMS people
~Ohlotoserveonacomrillttee · mailon Is. missing resulting In the
- IQ: map plans . for emergency loss of revenue thereby forcing
cemetery care to a mlnlmum. It
i!;lidlcal se.vlces presentations at
you own a lot and have not been
~ Ohio Slate Fair this summer.
py the way, ~b wants to thank previously contacted, would you be
J4ihn Yost ot Rutland for his good enough to call 949-2600 and
report that fact so that the sltuailon
ccrntrtbutlon to a recent emergency
together and the
can
be pulled
niedJcat se.vlces training session.
.
I
cemeterymaliltenance
Improved?
Jllhn 1101 only donated a c;ar to be ·
tQ);n up In the training on extracaSlatee Rep. Jolynn Boster Is
~- but took the car to Middleport
researching
a suggestion made by
- ~the training session was held
Meigs
Couniy's
Francis H. Andrew
qd then lu!uled It away after It had
who
asks
that
township trustees
demolished by the training
.'
.• lon.
equipment be permitted for u5e on
•
· private properties In such emergen;I thought you would want to know Cies as we had with last winter's
\)leather.
tllal Mrs. Paul Werner - that's
Boster Is working · through the
f1tckey ot Lincoln HW Road-Township Trustees and Qerks
'uildelwent major surgery on Apr119
.
Assn., to help define the Issues that
In St. Louis, Mo. Youcansendcards
would
need to be addressed by any
·ICL her at the Missouri Baptist
potentlalleglslatlon.
tbpttal, 1115 North Ballas Rd., St.
[Jluls, Mo. 63131.
The Ohio Department of High. •'
ways
has awarded contracts total: ; Fantastic!
Ing
$41,111,87l.Eil
on 45 projects and
· (Some 11 parents of Meigs High
I
want
you
to
know
that again Meigs
Stllool juniors and seniorS showed
Couniy
Is
right
ln
there
.
.uP. Wednesday evening when Mrs.
Meigs Is one of tour counties.- .
~anle Taylor; faculty advisor for
,m15 year's prom, called a meeth\g the others are Athens, Hocking and
rw- parents to disCuss pre and post Vinton - which are Included In a
$67,723.55 proJect which lnvblVes
'i{'om activities.
Parents who reported were most mowing of 52.7 miles of vegetation
illq)eratlve to help In any way with on varlou~ routes and sections In the
riialdng for a safe prom night and four counties. No road ImproveljJiere were even others-who sent ments for Meigs - but a bit of
lGong notes that they
willing to mowing.
The latest contract Information Is
(Itch In even though they couldn't
dated
Aprll 8. Incidentally, I have a
make the first meeting.
folder
containing Information on
: The organization wW now send
mUllens
of dollars worth of highway
-hOme forms to be filled out by
contracts awarded over the past
~ts. Your junior or senior Is to
. ~g them home aJ!d return them few months - among all of them,
.'· :'19- the school. The group Is asking Meigs bilrely gets a glanee.
I KNOW - you love to be
·~ to volunteer time, food, money,
·'Whatever to help with the prom neglected - that's why you keep
•-ter'lng events. If you're wlittn', do smiling.

..
..

April14. 1985

Pomeroy. Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio-Polnt Pleeunt, W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS - Actlvltles and
mmusfortheweekofApr1115tol9at
the Senior- Citizen Center', 220
· Jackson Pike, are as follows: •
Monday ---- ~amlcscl&lt;lss, 9: llto
noon; Chorus, 1 to 3 p.m.; 91ood
pressure check,! p.m.
Tuesday .,.. STOP class, io: ll
a.m.; Physical Fltlless, 11: 15.
Wednesday- VlntonBibleStudy,
lp.m.; OirdGames,lto3p.m.; Art
Auction In Columbus.
. Thursday- Bible Stu(ly, 11 a.m.
to noon; BoardotTrusteesmeetlng,
1:30p.m.
Friday - Art Class, 1 to 3 _p.m.;

Physical Fltness, l1: 45 a.m.
,
The senior nutrttlon program
POMEROY.- The Senior Citizen
a'nter, Mulberry heights, Pome- menu Is:
Monday - Beet cuhes on rice.
ory, has the .folloW,lng actlvltes
Uma
beans. rote slaw, apple crisp.
scheduled for the week of Apirll5 to
·
,Thesday
- Broasted chicken,
19:
.
mashed
·potatoes,
green beans,
Monday - Physical fltn('!!S,
chocqlate
pudding
on graham
lllA5; Square dance, 1 to 3 p:m.
cracker
crust.
·
Tuesday - Physical fitness ,
WednesdayMeat
loaf,
parslled
11:45; Chorus, 1 io 2 p.m.; Council potatoes, creamed com, plums;
meeting, 1 p.m.
Thursday - Navy beans witll
Wednesday - Blood pressure
clinic, 9:ll to 11:00 a.m.; SOcial · ham, Waldorf salad, cornbread,
Security Representative, 10 a.m. to S!Jgar cookie.
noon; Black Lungrepresentatlve, 10
Friday- Sa~sage links, creamed
a.m. to noon; bingo, 11 ·a.m., peas, fried apples, gelat~ salad.
BoWUng: 1: lJ p.m.
Choice of milk, coffee or tE-a
Thusda - Ceramics, 10 to 2; available with each meal.

-

DALE ?? .:._ Cleveland
fourth Inning ol Saturday's gl!Die In Cleveland's
C~r. light, 8lldes safely lnlo . Municipal ~urn. Carter took third on Brook
third base a8 New York Yankees thlfd baseman Dale
.JIWOby's gnJUDder to shO.,t. Umpire Gres KO!IC
Berra loses both his glove and the ~hall In the ' walehes closely. (AP Laserphoto).
FORGE),'

Indians runner Joe

Don't forget - 8.8% financing on all 1985 Chevrolet
Cavaliers &amp; Olds Firenzas.

·Tigers, Braves, Red Sox post wins

"Just Arrived" - 1985 Chevrolet Cavalier Convertible
IN OUR SHOWROOM NOWIII

1985 Chevrolet Beauviile Van
8 PASSENGER

~

· .SUNDAY .
·
·=
;~ ALLlPOLIS '-!. Lafayette White
'
tne.. will meet tor tnstatlatioo
· 'ctlef1: Sunday,.4; 3o p.ril. · ' · ·_
' ·~
._.:....:..
.
.:;mOWN CITY - Michael Spina
WJn speak at Crown Cliy Methodist
C'lturch, Sunday, 7p.m.
.

·

.

.

....

'J'UFE)Al'
_ qALLIPOtiS- Lafayette White
. S!tl"lite wlllmeet Tuesday,7:.30p:rrt. ·
for Installation. BulsrieSs meeting .
will be 1 p.in. .

f

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-· .

1985 :chevrolet "Silverado'' ·
3 IN STOCK

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'

_VINTON - VInton Friendship
Garden Club wlll meet Tuesday, 1
p.m. at the home of Elva Atkins .

_,;;.
MONDAY
:;;GALLIPO!,.IS - St. Peter's · GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls Ro~lscopal Churchwomen will meet
. tary wlll meet Tuesday, 6 p.m at
~onday, noon at the Parish Hall.
Oscar's.
~l'f .wW be Wanda Parsons on
- ~lng Paris on a Shoestring,
GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls Uons
meet Tuesday, 6: llp.m. atOscar's.
:·~ VINTON- North Gallla Band
:800sterswWmeel Monday, 7p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls Area
,'~~·the High School.
Christian Women's Qub meets
Tuesday, noon at the Holiday Inn.
:;fRIO CRANDE - Southern Hills For reservations caiU 446-1252 .or
·Xfts Council annual meeting and 446--4377.
clnner wUl be held Monday, social
tiOur 6 p.m., potluck dinner at 7, In
MIDDLEPORT -Group II of the
James Rhodes Student Center Middleport Presbyterian Church
· the college campus. '·
will meet Tuesday, 7: 11 p.m., atthe
home of Martha Anderson. Asslst. GALLIPOLIS - Meet the Artist, lng.hostess wW be Helen Sauer.
·Greg Jowa!sas, folks~ger, 7 to 8
Jtm. at the French· Art Colony,
POMEORY- XI Gamma Mu
· vonday at Rlverby, Open topubllc. Chapfer, Beta Sigma Phi Sorprlty,
. :.(
will meet at 7:11 Tuesday night at
~ GALLIPOLIS - Greg Jowalsas, thehomeofEvelynKnlght.Areclpe
-~lllger, will be .at the Senior auction will be held.
tlzen Center to join the Old Tyme
rus, Monday, 1-to 3 p.m. Free
·~ open to the public. Revival Staris SUnday .
.; .
SYRACUSE - A revival will be
~ ROYALOAK-Bellesandlleaus
held at the Mission Church In
eetern Square Dance Club gra- SyraCijse, Sunday to Aprll20, 7 p.m.
. doll for square dancing class, 7 each evening with Leland Haley and
tm- Monday at Royal Qak Park . Jim Evans as evangelists. The
Jt!C"!!Itlon BuDding; everyone to public Is Invited.
• wear square danclilg attire; take a
r~overed dish and table service.
q
-- .
EMTCoune
, !'POMEROY - Nomination of
The Meigs Couniy Emergency
.• 1 ~will be held at a meetlngot
Medical Services 90-hour EMT-A
-i~ternal Order of Eagles, Aerie coune Is scheduled to begin at 1p.m. _
to bP held at.7-p.m. Monday.
on Aprll 22 at Veterans Memor1al
Hospital wtth Larry Baker, Middle• RAWNSWOOD- Calvary Sap- port, as tnstruc\or.
Church on Henry St. will have
All appllcatloru; for the course
~ tfvtval eervlces, 7 p.m. nightly,
must be In by Aprlll5. Appllcatlons
Monday and continuing are avaUable at the county EMS
S.tunlay. Rev. Don Walker office or may be obtained by
·
ewpon. Ohio, formerly ot contacting the vartowJ squad chiefs.
wbP the guest mlnlster.
'A tultlon fee r1Niwtll bPcharged
non-EMS per110111 aDd this must be
f'(Y:ROY - MetP Athletic. paid prklr to Aprt122. Thefeewill be
:
will meet Mcnday evmrefuDded Ill the lndlvldual joins a
7 p.m., af the hllh JK:hool.
Melp squad within one year and
becolilt!ll a .i1ll!ll1ber In good

.

19850
.
. Chevrolet.C~3.

~

--

.

-.
Dual air, cruise, tilt, .,,_,A,"
ter·ior ·Must aee-toaniDrA&gt;cillltA.

. •

•

.

I

1.;...Biue/Silver-two-tone
1_;_Red/Silver-two-tone
1-,.lndian Bronze/Tan-two-tone
Fully equipped with air, power windows,
power door locks, tilt, cruise, custom cloth _
seats, AM-Fm-stereo with cassette.

1985 Chevrolet Vans
Ready To Convert Yourself

1985 Chevrolet' G-20

Carg~ Van

Auto. trans. V-8 eng., long wheel base, solid
white exterior, auxiliary seat.

1985 Chevrolet Scottsdale Pkku·p
"5" TO CHOOSE FROM
All V-8 a1,1to. tra"s., tw'o ·tone paint, long
wide bed, qauges; custom interior. Just ar~ived this week.

Tilt, cruise. AM-FM with cassette. Rallye
wheels, air cond., power windows, power
· door locks and much more.

3 TO CHOOSE FROM

1985 Chevrolet Astro Vans
"2" TO CHOOSE FROM

Both cargo type. 1-burgandy, 1-two-t·one
·blue, both are V-6, auto. tn~n.s .. powersteering. See this new sized van now.

--

:. :11,

1985 Chevrolet Pickup

"2" ahort bed Scottsdale Models, equipped
with air cond .• auto. trans., stereo with casse_tte, road wheela, chrome step bumper.

Mor~

Tr,ucks Arriving
"

1985 Chevrolet Custom Deluxe

"8" to choose from - all colors. Long wide
bed.. rear step bumper. V-6 "Vorter" engine.

yl Remember, Nobody Deals· Better
, ,.........--=-==--=~~. . . . . ....._---tr

.

1:

Chevrolet·Oidsmobile, Inc.

standing.

There Is no cJwae lOMeli&amp; EMS
· penonnel oo I'OIII!8rl as r1 Aprll15,
Any questlonl about the COUI"IIe
should be directed to Robert E.
Byer aclmlnlltrator r1 the Melp
County Emergency Medical
Services. ,

,
'

''

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)- Tom
B1;00kens doubled home the tying
runandscoredtbego-aheadrunona
' bases-loaded walk In the elglltb
. Inning Sat\lrday whUe Jack Morris
fired a five-hitter and the unbeaten
Detroit Tigers posted a 3-1- victory
CJVerKansasCltylnarernatchoflast
,year's AmeriCan .League playoff
·opponents.
The world champion Tigers, who
made a shambles of Ia.st year's
·AmeriCan League East race with a
35-5 start, have won au·four games
. this sea59n after winning their first
nlDe a year ago.
1 Morris, 2-0, struck out *en and
walked four _In outdueltng Bud
. Black, H, who took a five-hitter and
a 1~ lead · Into· ille elghth.Rookle
Chrts Plttaro ~~egan the"rally wltb a
-one-ootslngle,.andwen1(o&amp;erondon

a 1 wUdpltcll_beforeBrb6~eils·.tJed 'lt .

.San Diego Padres after Bob over the Chicago White Sox.
Horner's first home run since last
Dennis "Oil Can:• Boyd, 2-0,
May 23 keyed a three-run ninth- scattered five hits as the Red Sox
Inning rally.
stretched their record to4-0forthe
Murphy's drive over the left -field first time since 1973.
fence came atter Brad Kommlnsk
Boyd, a 145-pound right-hander,
opened the lOth with a single off struck out five, walked one and
reliever Tim Stoddard; 0-1. The threw 123 pitches 1n 40-degree
homer was Murphy's. third or the weather.
season and gave him eight RBis In
Armas belted his second home
• four games. He Is batting .533.
run of the season inio the left-field
Bruce Sutter picked up his first screenafterMlkeEasleropenedthe
vlciory of the year J;ly pitching one · second Inning with a slngie off
scoreless Inning o_f relief.
Chicago starter Floyd Bannister,
Home runs by Terry Kennedy and 0-1.
. Kevin McReynolds In a three-run
Blll Bnckner hi'd three hits and
· e(ghth lnii!ng had given the Padres a Armas, Jim Riel! and Ml;lrty Barrett
5-2 lead. But Murphy cb-eW aleadoff had twq aplt'ci&gt; lo. Ie'iJd BOston·~
- walk off reliever Dave Dravecky to 12-hit attack ;
.'
· start theBraves'nlnthandHorner, .
- · .·-'
·
wh&lt;i mls$!d _mo-stoflast season with ·
--abrokfln)Vrlsl1 ho~tomakeU
. _. · _ _
·
.

Undergoes surgery

5:4. ' - ·:

Wlthhlsdouble. ·
- ·'
-. Murphy's blast beats Padres
~~A '( AP) -Red-hot Dale
Murphy hit a two-run homer In the
lOth Inning Saturday to give the
Atlanta Braves a 7-5vlcto~overthe

,.-: .-· :-_-,_ ... · ·:

-Red!?oxstlllunheaten
BOSTON (APJ - Tony Armas_,
the major leagues' 1984 home .run
and'Rffichamplon, belted a two-run
homer Saturday as t_he unbeaten
Boston Red Sox rolled to a 7-2vlctory

GALLIPOLIS

Davis backpedaled, _he appeared to
lose the ball in the sun and It clrQpped
untouched for a three-base error.
~lth Hernandez followed with a
sacrifice fly.
The Reds took a 1-0 lead In the
second Inning on on&amp;out doubles by
Nick Esasky .and Dave Concepcion
ott; Lynch, who worked -seve:n
Innings. giving up four hits.
Yankees slop Indians
Meanwhile In Qeveland, Don
Mattlngly trtpled and doubled,
driving In two ruilS and sco.;ttg
twice, and Ron Guidry pitched
seven strong Innings Saturday as
the New York Yankees snapped
their season-opening three-game
losing streak with a ~3 victory CJVer
the winless Qeveland Indians.

Guidry, 1.(), gave up two ru'ns, one
of them unearned, on six hits In his
first appearance of lll85. The
left-bander, who wu only 10--lllast

••

year, had been scheduled to pitch:
the Yankees' opener In Boston bllt;
was scratched because ot a stlfl'
neck.He struck out three and !lid nbt .
walk a batter.
•
,
Rich Bordl took wer IIi the eighth·
and allowed a run In the nlntJt on :
Mike Hari!IUve' s double and an :
error by second baseman WUUe·
Randolph. Dave Rlgllettl retired
pinch hitter Butch Benton on a:
grounder with two runners on base:
to get the save. ·
The Joss was the toui'th straight:
for the Indians, dlsappolntllig a :
home-opener crowd of 61,9'18, the:
targest opening _day crowd l!t the•
majors this season.
·
:
The Yankees, who rollected 14;
hits, scored twk:P In the first 'lnnJngi
ott Bert Blyleven. 0-1, when Mat{
tingly doubled to score Wlllle'!
Randolph, who had walked,
then came home on a biOQp doubleby Don B;tylor.

and:

CLEVELAND&lt;AP)-CI~eland

Indians' right-handed relief-pitcher
Ernie C!!macho underwent minor
surgery saturday at Lutheran
Medical Center to remCJVe a large
bone chip from his right elbow, the
American League team said.

AUGUSTA, 0a. (AP) - Veteran
Ray Floyd bounced an eagle putt
against the back of the cup, Into the
air and Into the hole on the way toll
3-under-par 69 that gave · hlm a
one-shot lead Saturday In the third
round of the Masters Tournament.
Floyd, a non-winner slncecoiiE'Ctlng tl]e 18th victory of his career In
ihe 1982 PGA championship, completed three trips over the hills and
valleys, around the streams and
ROnds of the Augusta National Golf
Club course In 212, four shots under
par.
His closest challenger going Into
Sunday's final round.of thechasefor
a $126,!ro first priZe and the famed
green jacket that goes to the Winner
of this, the first of the year's major
testso!golflnggteatness, was a man
who didn't expect to be here In the
first place ami two days ago made
plans to leave.
Curtis Strange, the season's
leading money-winner on the PGA
Tour, continued his comeback from
an embarras$ing !i) ln the openiJig
round with a 68 that· placed hlm at '
213, 3-undev-par- and one stroke
back.

-

1 Strange's second ;ion was due on
Fr.tdicy:·But thebabywasoommore.
tlian· a -~~k prein"J!ture!:;, ~abllng
tilm to eompete here. After his -opening round, however, he made ..._.......,._ _..._
plane reservations to his home In
WA'ISON AFTER THE MASTERS - Tom. Waliioa, a two-Ume
WUlamsburg,'Va. -then cancelled
winner of the Me • as cfwrlplonshlp, watches his shot !rom the namber
one tee as be started his lhlrd round of play Saturday. Walllon and two .
them after a brllllant 651n Friday's
secondr.ound.
othe_rs shared the lead going lntci the third round. (AP las tp."loto).

....

Middleweight championship on line Monday
.
~---.r-~--.----------------------~
0

-

4 spd,. 380 engine, power steering; 16 in.
· tires. Midwest bed with stake rack.•- This one
is ready to

~14, 19;86: ·

Floyd takes
Masters lead

BIG ..DISCOUNTS- HIGH TRADE
ALLOWANCES
.
Plus_8.8 °/o on an ·S-1 0 Pickups In .Stock

Van converston by Trinity Vani~---Fuliy '"
equipped. Ready ,for vacation•- Very n.-tly
appointed, inside and out.
· · ·

Reds, Indians. beaten

••

.

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'

NEW YORK &lt;APJ - Darryl
- Strawberry ledotrthebottomofthe
ninth Inning with his first home riJ!I
of the season Saturday, giving the
unbeaten New York Mets their
fourthstnilghtvlctory, a 2-1 triumph
over the Cincinnati Reds.
. The Mets' 4-0 start- all decided
by one run- tied the hest start In the
club's hiStory In 1973.
Ed Lynch and Roger McDowell
ccrnblned on a six hitter, McDowell,
2-0, giving up two of the hils In the
ninth Inning but escaping undam- ·
aged with the help of a double play.
The losing pltcbier was John
Franco, 0-1, who gave up Strawberry's homer on a 1-1 delivery.
Cincinnati starter Tom Browning
allowed three hits and an unearned
run In seven Innings before leaving
.for a pinch hitter.
·
, 1be Mets ·tied the score 1-lln the
sixtli without a hit. With one out,
Kelvin Chapman hit a catchable fly
ball to deep center field. As Eric

_, -

t•

are~ happenings _

...

.

AT JIM MINK CHEVR'OLET·OLDSMOBILE

1985 Che-vrolet Van-New

.

-,

-·

,i - ~Calendar /

~imes. ~tntiu.el

..

Chevrolet T-ruck ·Sale
"Now if the Time to Bug''

J

are

Craft Mlnl-course,-1 to 3 p.m.
-Menu consists of:
Monday- Creamed cliicken CJVer
biscuits, Ilma beans, bl!!cults,
plums.
Tuesday - Beet cubes. with
noodles, brussell $prouts, bread,
lime jello with pears.
Wednesdya - Beef llver with
onions, mashed potatoes, . green
beans, wheat bread;apple pie.
Thu_rsday - Beans with ham,
cottage cheese, peaches, COJ;11
. bread, applesauce raisin cake.
Friday - ~burgers, oven .
fried potatoes, salad, buns, pineapple s~lce with cookie.

GlGA TIC

---

.

Sports

.Senior·
Citizen
enter
sc.
e
ules
announced
_ Gaiiia County
Meigs County

,LAS VEGAS, Nev.- (AP) -Hold
the hype. It's almost hitting time for
Marvelous Marvin Hagler and
'Thomas "Hit Man;' Hearns.
..
' "Finally we're going to get It on,"
Hagler silld Friday at a news
!COnference.
"Matter of fact, I'm ready to fight
today," Hearns said. "I'm ready to
get rid ot all .ot this (news
conferences, Interviews, etc l."
The two have been hyping the
fight and snarling and snapping at
each other for several weeks.
' Monday night, In a ring at a
15,(9l.seat outdoor stadium at
Caesars Palace, Hagler and Hearns
will battle for the undisputed
,. middleweight championship held
by Hagler. '
.
.The scheduled 12-round gqut will
begin about 8 p.m. PST and be seen
on closed-circuit televlsloll at more
than aXJ locations, with more than 3
mUUon 5eats, In the United States
and Canada and on ·umited pay-jler-

\

Thomas

Hearns

Age .... .. :.Z6
Height .... 6 'l" .
Weight .... 160
R2ach . .....78"

~TV.

Promoter Bob Arum said both
fighters will make more than their
guarantees through _percentage
deals. Hagler Is guaranteed $5.6
mUllon, and Hearns Is guaranteed ·
$5.4 mUllon.
The two champions - Hearns
holds the World Boxing Council
"super welterwerlght ~tie, which Is
110t at stake - tired their final
pre-fight verbal shots at the news
.conference.
"1 fought a light heavyweight,"
Hearns said t'l!ferrlngtohis 10-round
decision over physically rugged
Murray Sutherland July 10, 19tii,
Sutherland had unsuccessfullychallenged undisputed llght beavywelght champion Michael
Spinks for the 175-pound class title In ·
'1982, but he weighed the mlddle-'
·WiiliJht Ilmlt ot 160 when he fought
Hearns.
•
.
''I've been fighting
and now
I'm aotng I!P agalnit a mJda'et," the
1&gt;-toot-1 Heanll aald.
"You Cllll scmebocly a mldeet.:'
lllllpped the !l-9% Haller. "You're

men,

(/

.

.

.
just a frea)! . When I get Into the ring, · workout was closed to the press and
I'm a giant." ·
publlc.
Following· the news conference,
"Thl$ls a big one and we OW1! It to
Hearns worJ«!(! out In the aften10011 the press and public to be avallaata ballroom at Caesars Palace, as ble," saki Emanuel Steward,
he has since arrlvtng.here 11 days Hearns' tralner:manager. "Wfl're
ago.
~
being well-paid.'~
H&amp;gler'heldanE!Yilnlngworkoutat
Hagler, who has a 60-2-2 record
Johnlly Tocco's Gym Where he IIIII _ · wltb :10 knockouts, first fought here
trained stnt:e arrlvjng here last onJune11,19'19,andlalledtowlnthe ·
Monday. For the ~nd time the mlddlewel~Nt title when hefooghtto

a 15-round draw against Vito · tentative In his fight against Duran,
and he was knocked down In the first
Antuofenno.
round by Roldan, although Hagler
He scol'l"d a 10-round decision
claims he slipped. •
.
over Marcos Geraldo here May 17,
But If Hagle!' has not sparkled In
19Eil, then In two Las Vegas
appearances as champion scored a ·Las Vegas, It was here that Reams
suffered his onty loss ag~lnst 40
15-round decision over Roberto
vlctortes, 34 of which were by
Duran on Nov. 10,1983, a'nd stopped
knockout.
,
Juan Roldan In the lOth round on
On
Sept.
16,
1981,
af Caesars
March 00,191H.
1
Palace, J:learns, then the World
HI! was crltlclz.ed for looking

Boxing' Assoclllon welterwel(lht
champion, was stopped In the ~4th
round by Sugar Ray Leonard for the
undisputed 147-pound division title.
However ,In his last showing~,
Hearns knocked out Duran In tbe
secoJid round In de!en.. of !\is ~re
of the 154-pound title and !et up
Monday's fight.
Hearns won his tour other filhts
h'ere by laloc,kout.

�·.
~~

. C~2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-&lt;Wiipolla, OJ1io-Point

)

Aprii14.11J86

Pieesant. W. Ve:·

Old m~ Sutton _helps new look Athletics
three-run homer,

By'Die"-''lh!d~

The

were teanuiultes"

' the ninth. He lett arter giving up a
one-oot single to Kent Hrbek, his
• first hi
. tor.the season 1n 13 at-bats.
by ttln
Nunez earned the save. ge g
Tom Brunansky to ground Into a
double play. .
Presley's homer snapped a 1-1 Ue
In the fourth at the Klngdome In

for several years with the Los
.,..les
· 1'\nd~.
An.,.
....,..,.~··
"It sure lrought back rtli!JTlOo
rles," Sutton said.
.
Another member or tJu;e Los
Angeles teams was
John,
Who siarted for Callfornla. He took

new-look Oakland A's are

flnally looking a Uttle ~Iter.
·Don Sutton, acquired from Mll·
waukee, started oft hiS ~ majorleague season with 61-3tlne Innings
Friday night as the A's routed the
Callfornla Angels 15-6.

TommY

the loss, although the Angels were'
traU!ng 2-0 wheii he lett the game
after pitching five strong' Innings.
In other American League
games, Seattle nipped MJnnesota
2·1, Mllwaukee beat Texas 11-6 Jlll(l

BOSTON (AP) - The BostQn
Marathon, · already · under •. fire,
appeared to have dOdged Its latest
bullet, this one lhvolv!ng a Colomblan runner , but In the end, It
backfired on the race.
. Minutes after the Boston Athletic
Association, the race organizer, had .
agreed Friday to aUo:-v Carlo$
Godoy to compete lnMonday'srace,
.following a published report that he
had submitted a phony qua lifying
time . the 33-year-old Colombian
native decided fo withdraw,
"The problem Is not · really ·
.running," Godoy said. " It 's something more than that."
The problemlnvolvedthedlstress
he said he felt about a story on the
front page of Friday's . Boston
Herald that 'accused him of lying
about his qualifying time and which
~ld he had "a history of questlonahie running Incidents."
. "My lawyer said, 'Don't attempt
tqrunBostonthlsyear,'"Godoysald ·
by telephone from his home In
Glendale, Calif., where be Is the
· track coach at the local high school.

~

SammY Stewart co . ued his
early-Season success ali Baltimore's ·
long reUever with four hitless
Innings, whlle Gary Roenlcke a·nd
Jim n.."•er took turns ~trlbutlng

Seattle.
Minnesota's Ken Schrom lost
deaplte pitching a.lhree-hltter.
Breweri111, Ranaers 6
~~ 3
BW Schroeder, who became key hits.
- ·•
MUwaukee's No. 1 catcher ~hen / Stewart, who pitched three hitless
Jlrp Sundlx&gt;rg ·was traded away, Innings on Wednesday, against
Baltimore tripped Toronto 7-2.
made a .big Impression at TeXfls' · Texas 1n his first appearallce,
Jim~~~~rOerun homeopenerbyknocklnglnslxnlns earned his second save of the year
In thre@ nights and Edwin Nunez
with a grand-slam homer· and a by shutting down visiting Toron)o.
·single.
. ThevlctorywenttoScottMcGregor,
saved his third game of the season . Schroeder had a two-run-single In whO pitched five lnnlngs and
~~=e.:._~=~ the second Inning as Mllwaukee alloWed solo home runs to George
in their nine-year history _ and a
scored thre@ Urnes to takke 3-2 Bell and WWie Upshaw.
two-ga1ne lead In the AL West.
· lead. ·
Jbe Orioles are 3-0 .this season,
Matt Young, making his ilist 1985
The next Inning,· the Brewers Ued with Detroit and ~on for the
appearance, took a four-hitter Into
loaded the bases on a double byCecU lead In the AL East.

It was host08kland'sflrstvlctory
of the season after thre@ losses In
Seattle. ·
·
"Don realized how Important this
game was," A's Manager Jackie
MQOresald.
•.
Sutton got hitting support from
Dusty Baker, acquired from san·
. Francisco, along with Dave Collins
and Alfredo Grtlfln, both acquired in
·
a trade with Toronto.
Mike Davis, In his sixth year with
08klaild, was the big hitting.star,
driving In five runs and scoring tour ·
ttmes. with a 4-for-5 etrort that
Included a home run Bnd two
doubles.
Sutton, 40, and Baker, 35, who hit a

a

.Cavs edge Knicks
NEW YORK (AP) -

The
Cleveland Cavaliers, playing their
llrst unimportant game all season.
found ·they had enough to win•
anyway.
"It WjjS a tough one to getup for," ·
said Coach George Karl after his
team defeated the NewYorkKnlcks
109-108 In overtime Friday night.
"We clinched our first playoff spot
since 1978 on Tuesday and on
Thursday we play Boston, the team
we are meeting In the playoffs. Our
emotion has been so high recently
that we decided to play some guys

::oNEVP,ONEOOWN-1'ol'oMGBiueJayssbonstopTon.vFemaadez
111:)1 the air llfterfon:lllgoutLenSalr•ta ollheBalilmoreOrlolesatsecond
~ as aecond bueman 081118110 Garcia lollows Fem!!Ddez's throw to

lint that completed a double play on Dan Ford. Action look place In
Fitday nlpt'sgamewonby the Orioles, 7·2. (AP La&amp;erphoto).

.

.

;::;,~!~S:.:la:::u~i

G-AHS splits doubleheader
·&lt;iALLIPoLIS - The GalllpoUs
Blge DevUs spllt a twlnbW with
Cbeiapeake Saturday afternoon·on
Mimorlal Field..
(jARS won theopenlnggarne,l3-4

txil,)lnd thepltchlngof~thpaw Jeff
· AtiQnson. The Blue Pevlls.slarrimed
16:6its led by Brett Bostic's three for
••010'· contrlbutlng two hits each
wft-e Todd Slone, Biian Shepler,
K$i(h Fellure, Todd Bergdoll, Kevin
•
'
E.~tman
and Gary Harrison..
~ Panthers came back to win
•'-'....... n1gbtoap, 74. John Napier had
~hits and two RBI's to pace the
wiliners. Keith Fellure led GAHS
two hiis. Brian Mccarley was
charged with the loss.
Friday's Southeastern Ohio
r .....&lt;.,;. ba ball
· ~ue .se · game, Ga ulpouS
· , edg!!d visiting Jackson, -3-2. ·.
,.
victory lett GARS 4-7 overall ·

Wlitl
Ja

Jle

iu~2-1lnsldetlleSEOAL.
Ito

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JoS.t..;o;;:~~~:~u;:c~~b!t

le;W with a·peffect 3-0 mark, Logan
dl)lilpe&lt;fill2:1111Sllli'thi!league,and ·
7-l•Overall.
·. _
qampoUs' next league game Is

~ing Justice

, caj»&gt;ures feature

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Exclusive closed with a rush In the
£nslde Friday to claim a one-lenglh
Victory over favorite Answerullah
:at Darby Downs.
Ridden· by Arturo Herrera, Mr ..
Exclusive paid $12.60, $5 and $2,00.
The · winner covered the live
furlongs In 59 2·5.
·
' Answerullah returned $3.ro and
$2.20 whUe' Ltngo,Amazar pald$2.40
to show.
. No one picked. the winning
comblnatlonofl0-7-111n the seventh
race trlfecta. As a result, the payoff
Weill to racing fans holding a ticket
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• The crowd of 3,929 wagered
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; CoLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Mr.

,•

•..

. • Althoff lx&gt;~eves the third meel
could attract nearly 25,000 specta·
tors Into Ohio Stadium. It drew

Darby Downs results

BALLGAME

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Althoff says he has team commlttments from the Bud Light Track
p ub, The Athletics Congress indoor
an&lt;l outdoor champions, the Pacific
and Atlantic Coast track clubSilhe
Tennessee Tiger Belles, Michigan,
Mlf'hlgan State, Wisconsin, Abilene
Christian, Texas and the Tennessee

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13041 11711·1380

MEN &amp; WOMEN'S

Gloves

racial separation, oc. apartheid. : ~;
Plaatjes had been assigned No.~· :
Tile beleaguered race a lso ~(;
world-&lt;:lass runner Ron Tabb Fil~,
clay. Tabb safd he decided not ~ ,
compete because oft he lack ofp~ :
money.
•!:
He joined a long list . of e~ :
runners whO arc bypassing Bost&lt;81;.
this year for·the same re~n.
·, :
The only big-name men s runner:
remaining Is defending champion •.
Geoff Smit h of Britain. Heading
women's field are Lisa Latse,!!' :·
Weidenbach a nd Karen Dunn.'
· Two nota ble women runneJ1,,:
Laura Alll!;'rs and Jennl Pe te l'll;:
withdrew Thursday.
:·
•••

LUMBER &amp; HOME CENTER

·invites you to see
their display of
monuments at

. COURT'~
rrl .. · ·, · COME IN 'AND

at:!fhistledown

. ''I can't believe II. J. would Uke to
"There's too much presS\ll'e clear this up; because I can't accept
naw," an angry Godoy said. "I last
this: ·
.
my concentration com pletely. 1
"I'm the guy on the froni pagP. I
don't feel fcouldrun a good race. I'm
don't need that."
very upset at this point.
Godpy got on the front page when
"This Is a very critical and serious · the newspaper reported that his
situation."
· qualifying time of 2 , hours, 14
'Qte newsjJaper story quot~ 1111nutes. 41 seconds on his entry
Colombian long-distance rull(ler
application was Incorrect.
· Domingo Tibadulza and the pres!·
Godoy explained the time was his
dent of the Colombian Athletic • personal best, run In the Fukuoka
Federation, E dei111 Artunduaga,
Marathon In Japan ln 1978. :The
whom Godoy said was thesecrell\ry
pubUshed report had claimed that
not the president, of-calling Godoy
Godoy submitted that time as
"a lia r." And ·It said that ·two
having .been run In the Beppu
America n race directors , Rich
Marathon In 'Japan~ where he
Castro.and Tom Sturak, who knew
allegedlyflnlshed four.th.
Godoy. had labeled him a "con
man."
''I don't need to lie," GodoYsaid.
"For what reason?
"They're trying to destroy my
name. It (the story) Is lllc&lt;irrect.
. "This Is a complete surprise to
me. Why me? ,
"How can I go to Boston. when
they (the newspaper) say I'm a
liar? " he added. "I can ~t.

LOGAN
MONUMENT

'·''

Blue· Angels down ,Jackson, ·
19-6, for sixth win of season

S~~day ..Times-Sentinei- Page- C-3 '

But there ·was no record of his
Numbers ~reassigned according
having finished fourth In the Beppu
to seeding, wlt.h the !astest runners. .
race . In l'?ltber 1$111 or l!IRI, the
receiving the lower numbers .
newspaptrsald.
'
~;W11.are not going to disqualify
•
1
Godoy said he recorded h.s him," Luchner said. "He is sending ·
qualifying time of ... 2: ro: 41 or 49"
us a copy of his truP times to Let the
this year In a marathon In Chorilo,
preSs know that he&gt;dld not Intend to
Mexico.
.
de&lt;;eive the BAA."
orr the strength or his ~ubmltted
Ironically, Godoy would- have
time of ~: 14!41, he was given No. 6 started the marathon next to South
for the Boston Marathon.
African Mark Plaatjes, whose
. Friday, aftl!l' a meeting of race . Ineligibility to compete was con·
officials, It was decided that Godoy
(lrmed Thursday by The Athletics
would he assigned another number,
Congress, the nat ional governing
to more correctly represent lilstlme
body tor track a nd field. . 1
" of hetween2: :,:land 2: 30," said Len
South African rnlU)ers are barred "
Luchller, a member of the BAA's . from Interna tional. competition be·
ijoardofGpvernors.
cause of that country's policy of

"So !cancel li. ·

Said. "This year's meet should he r~~~=ln~l!m;;a;;nd;;1;5·;ooo;;Jn;:~
the. best or the three, no doubt about
it. "
· Unlike some promoters, the Ohio
State official Is making no early
promises on this y~ar's flelil .
However, he~s fairly certain
irorld class sprinters Calvin Smith
and Mel Lattany will Join the 100
meters. Smith Is the current world
record holder with 9.93 seconds In
the event.
. Althoff alsO is talking with
. 400-meter Olympic gold medalist
Alonzo Babers and bronze medalist
Antonio McKay.
OUR POMEROY
"Once I get them (the athletes) , I
get them to come back," lie said.
VINTON
·:we do a lot of things for athletes
here that others don't do. We house
them, feed them and transport them
&amp;t. no cost. We pick the.r n up. at !he
.......rt .... :
au.,...
.
. .
· · Olympian Jud Logan, thE' Amerl·.
· can i-ecord holder ·1n· the hammer
· throw atU4feet, 71ncheS, Wlllretum
to defend hls Owens title. Logan,
. frorn - North Canton, Ohio, Is tne .
::. brother or fo~r QIUo State ' .
taUback Jeff Lo!ian.
·
Logan established his hammer
mark In the 1984 Owens meet.
Jim }J:elrlng, who set the American mark of 20:01.00 In the 5,!XXl
meter walk here last year. will bf
Our expertly crafted monuments

POINT PLEAIIANT, WV ZUllO

C A \

JACKSON · - !;iallla, Academy rungs, giving up four hit$ B!ld fou~
~ORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP ) High School's Blue Angels downed walks. Wright was. credited with the
.-:prazlng Justice, ridden by Clyde Jackson 19-6ln a Southeastern Ohio win.
JUI Muter, l&gt;aula Russell ,and
M¥!ln Jr., won the featured eighth . League sortbaU game Friday
evenllig.
Tammy
Justice led the Blue Angels
rape at Thistledown on Friday,
rU!fnlng the 5~ furlongs In 1:064-5.
. The victory lett Coach Gordon attack with four hits apiece.
~e winner returned $5.al, S3.ro Baker's girls 6-2 overall and 2·1
Collecting thre@ hits were Kim
ar(d$2.~.
Inside. the conference. Jackson ' Polcyn and Krls Ellingson. Kate
~ecky's Luck, second, paid $1.~
dropped to 3-2 overall .and 1•2 In MacKenzie had two hits. ·
· '
Jackson had eight hits, two by
ancl $3.60, while WU Bud returned leagile plliy. . ·
$1:20 to show.
..
Paulll Russell. hurled the first Pam Dowler. J~ Ross was charged
Jir the third-race trlfecta, the ' three Innings for GalllpoUs. She with the loss.
GaWpoUs next game Is 4: :ll p.m.
co!'flblnatlon of 5-2·7 pald $847.a!. · · gave up four hits and walked four..
1)le crowd of 3,752bet
$556,220.
Natalie
Wright
hurled
the
final
four
,M?~Y·
at home, against Iro~ton.
.

' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
director or the the Jesse Owens
Track and Field Classics alms to
draw a t least 17 Olympic medalists
• to the third annu.al event on May 5.
Thirty-eight Olympians comPeted In the first two J esse Owens
T rack and Field Classles a nd Ron ..
t..lthoff, themeetdlrector,elipectstb ·
mateh that total this year.
. · " And ofthose 38, X:m trylngtoget
pwhowonmedals lnLosAngeles,"
Ron Althoff, the meet's director,

orr,

.-.

. The

J\fedalists expect~d at event

Anderson took a pass near the
sideline and nailed his high, arching
shot to clinch the victory. New
whO equalled his
York's Louis
career high with 28 points, was
fouled ln\enllonally and hit two free
throws to account for the final
points. . .
Ernie Grunfekl scored 12 of his 18
points atter the third quarter for the
Injury· riddled Knlcks, who lost )lin
a
for the first time since 1960.
"You hatetokeepsaylng1hls, but
thiS was our :1001 loss by Jess than
five points, 17 on the road and three .
at home," Knlcks Coach Hubte
Brown said. "It was kind of a dismal ·
endlngathome.Nobodyllkestobe
at home at the end of the !!eBSOn."
The Knlcks, 2&lt;1-57, end the season
at Milwaukee tonight. Cleveland·
finishes ~ regular season at home
against Detroit Sunday and then can
look forward to starting the playoffs
against ,aoston next week.
•
"We're In the great position of
·being underdogs," Karl said. "Our
team Isn't fearfUl of the CelUcs. We
have a lot of respect for ~m. but
. we're not'afrald."
Karl said the player he {e811j most·
on the Celtlcs Is Larrv Bird ·
.

Monda¥. at Ironton. The Fighting our starters."
Tigers are 9-3 on the year.
Rookie Ron Anderson, usually a
Kev Easlman was credited with reserve,scored25polntsasaslarter
li)-ldliy's victory over Jackson.
to lead Cleveland, Including a
Gordon Splete came In to retire the 25-foot • off·balanoe three-point goal
fin 1J kson
h
with two seconds left In overtime
~ a ac
batter In the top oft e that broke a 106-106 tie and handed
seventh to earn the save.
Rob Young had a two run double the Knlcks their 11th straight
and Bergdoll's single plated the defeat.
National Basketball Association
third run."
F
·
In Friday's Junior varsity tilt, the
or Anderson, whO also saved the
)3lue lmps won their first game of game with
eft a 12-footer with one
·
1
the season, a 9-7 decision over host second
In regulation to tie the
Jackson. GAHS' JVs are no·w
· 1·"'
•1 score
.__ 96-\)6,
1n
1It · f was
his the first
overall.
tm .,.,.po t goa o
career and
ni 1h
nd .__
t silo
0
Joel Spencer was credited with
Y e seco t, ... ..,.poln
t.
t~ win In relief. Mike Wickline
In the overtime, three-point plays
hurled the first four and tw(}-thlrds by Roy Hinson and Johnny Davis,
Innings forGAHS. .
who scored 17 points apiece, gave
SP,encer·har:Jtwohl~. lnt"."'""
- t.rlps Clev.
elajld . a 102-~' lead, but the
Knick8 "led 1h ·
·· · ·
'
to t.he plate, Jncludlitg a double;
·
ra~
WI ~lghl str!llght ·
5cottMIUerhac;liwohllslnttvetrlps, polntsfqr.a104-1a2~. Aiiasketby
ll!cluding' a double. TOm Meadows Ariderson and two free tllTows by ·
har:l~doublefqrthewinners.
Davis with 16.$i!conds left made It
Galllpoll$ played at Rock. HW 1Q6-1Q"J_. but Trent 1U~~e.(s lJasket
S!lturday, Th\n-so;Jay; the l!Jll&gt;:5 play , . -~h four sero,nds left deadi!!Cked
.' a!WellstQn. .· - · · ·,
. fhegarm;agaln .
'

w. ya.

~stoit Marathon dodges a~other bullet prior ~ to.1985 race ,~~

Cooper, a single by Mark~rouhard
and Paul Householder s walk.
Schroeder then belted a ball juSt
over the lett-lleld wall for hill first
career slam. Both of SchJIQeder's
hits came oft loser Frank Tanana.
7 Blue J
2

Orloles •

Pomeroy- Middleport--:Giillipolis, Ohic;l- Point Pleasant,

ApriJ14, 1985

WI MURft Tttl RIGHT

TO UMlT QUANTmll

~
ISJl2j

...
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'

•'•••

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..
C-'4-The Sunday Times·S~tinel

·-

.

•

Pomeroy~Middleport-Gallipolii,

Ohio-Point Ple!lsa'nt, W. Va.

. L

.:~Wall resigns Tulane AD post
·*•

'

I

HOURS
MON. thru FRI. I to 8
SATURDAY 9 to 6
SUNDAY 9 to S ·

.

Parish grand jury April 4. They
guUty to sports brii!Pry ~barges.
Included ~ members of .the
'The other fQUr fudlcted are to bP
basketball team, ~other Tulane
arraigned Monday,
·:U.ys his decision was not a direct students.-andtwoothermen.
The Indictments claim point·
:;jesuu of alleged . basketball gam- Mark Olensky, 21, of Fair Lawn, shaving In .two home games, Feb. 2
: &gt;OIIngschemes andpayoffsthat·have N.J .. pleaded tnrocent Friday to 10 with Southern Mississippi and Feb.
•:.tu.ken the university In recent counts of sports brii!Pry and three 2tlwlthMemphlsState.
;.~ys.
.
counts of conspiracy to commit
Thescandalhasalsotrlggeredthe
·t· "The last several years have sports brii!Pry.
resignation of basketball CQBch Ned
:•ljlkm their toU," Wall said Friday:
Olensky Is a Thlane student but . Fowlerandtwoofhlsasslstants,and
::"'It's best for me to step down now. not a . rnemi!Pr of the basketball apparently will wipe. out Tulane's
has .been coming on for years.'· team.
basketball program for men.
; ·; "It has physically and mentally
Gary Kranz, 21, of New Rochelle,
Tulane President Eamon Kelly
; .a!RIImedownandlneedafresn N.Y., also "a student, has pleaded said Friday he accepted Wall's
•:;start," said Wall, 49, who has held Innocent tochargesofsportsbrii!Pry
resignation with appreciation for
:'1he poslfoi' nine years.
and possession and distribution of the athletic director's seiVlce.
::, He said he was not forced to quit cocaine. He was accused of provld"Tulane'songolnglnternai'lnqulr·
:Ancl felt no'pressure from anyone to ing cocaine to' three Tulane players ies Into pcissible NCAA Infractions
· •llo so: •.
.·
.
in the case.
have not yielded any evidence that
: • Meanwhile, a second innocent . ,Bobby T)10mpson, 21, of New Mr. Wall was Involved in ·those
·: Plea was eniered In thi&gt; alleged Orleans, a memi!Proftheteam, and matters underinvestl!iallon:~· l{elly
::~t-shavlng case In which eight David Rotheni!Prg, 22, of Wilton, said. ·
.. . .. ..
• ]leople were In&lt;Ucted by an Orleans Conn.,
student, have plead,ed
Wall denied he · ~ew of any
;
,
wrongdoing. He said his reslgna·
•
lion, effective June30,-ls llnked to the
· scandals only by time.
"It's been coming on for a while,"
hesaid.
•·

;,; • NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Hind·
.-&amp;!an Wall has resigned as athletic
:~tor at Tulane University, but

Pomeroy-Middlepori-Gallip~lis. Ohio~ Point Pleasant, W. Va.

UTO.

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

Camacho said he·has known of a
bone chip in his arm tor several

TIDS ~MY TEAM -Samrday'sgameagalmtthe
New Yon Yankees not only marked the Cleveland's
.Indlansllnthomepmeofthel8858e88Clllbuttheflrst
'opener under club pr JidMt Peter Bavasl.
Bavasl,
guided the ~ Blue Jays as the

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POMEROY,.. OH•

Offtr Goocl Until Apri~1S, 1915 •

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Savings
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•

expansion team's first president, plans to first 1 eslue::
the trlldltlon of the Indians by reminding fans o1 their: •
past championships while buDding ihe YOUDJI team•:
Into a contender. (APLaseJl}botO). ·
; ,
;

·

SATELLITE .
..-.. 8m'IIIS
.
. .

Sltl'JIOOK - ClevEland Indians pitcher Bert Blyleven practices his
1; •tiOOIIIIID reM'nlnK a bildlng practice baD to the Infield during af'rlday
, • &lt;pndlce • d ., at Municipal Sla!llum. Blyleven started S!UtmJay's
· : •• con&amp;elrt ••alnlrtthe Yanla!es. (AP Laserphoto).

.EXTRA LIFE
OIL' FILTERS .

'
·
times people try to dQ more tha*: ;
.
a\"ay.
the are capable of doing "Corrales· '
. "It hurt me a little last year, but
The manager said he was
I~ "It ld them to just'contrlbute' :
not too much," he said.
concerned with the team's morale
:th. h:r you are supposed to dO.;;
In a possiblY. related move, the af~~rtheDetroitseriles. I!Pf
thi
andw:'III!Pfine.
·:·
Indians ,aid Friday they hav!l . .
I had a meet ng
ore
s
· ·
,•
stgned former8eattlerel!everDave
and I told them that at
•'
Beard to a Class AAA contract. The
right-handed Beard, wlto was
released by the Mariners 9n March .
31, wasJ.2wltha5.flJERAin43rellef
appearances for Seattle last year.
· Beard will throw on the sidelines
In Cl!&gt;veland on Saturday before
joining the Class AAA MalneGufdes
. in Tol('do, the Indians said.
Take a tough Gravely tractor. auli ..
Camacho was the Ioslngpitcherin
a
SO"
mower.
and you'll cut hours off vucu ..
the Indians' season opener Monday
mowing time. With all:gear direct drive,
against the defending world chamthe Gravely tackles tough weeds or finepion Tigers. He also was urt;~bie to
lawns witl'l equal ease. AndTnD,.,.. .•
hold a two-run lead late in a game
Thursdily with the Tigers. .
are over 20 att;~chrnerrts 1:hati
"Weshouldhavebeatenthemtwo
will speed up your
out of three," Corraley said at a
lawn and garden chores.
workoutFridayworkoutlnprepara- .
They're all part of
tlonfortoday'shomeopeneragalnst
the
Gravely Ground~
the New York · Yankees. "We all
Maintenance
system
know that, But we maderf\istakes at
Test drive it toCiilY~'I
the el)d Of the gaine. It cost us both
ballgames we should have won."
Corrales said he would count on
~THE ,
right·hander Tom Waddell, who
GRAVELY
posted six saves last season, to fill in
:SYSTEM
as the stopper while Camacho Is

·· 81LVIRBIRD

.·

lOW-40
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CLEVELAND (AP) -Injuries years.

arm.

VALVOLINE·

•

Injuries. cast shadow·on lndians' home opener ;:
and a slow start casti-d a shadow on
the traditional opening-day festlvi·
ties for the Cleveland Indians
Saturday:
The An1erican League team
learned Friday that right-handed
, reliever Ernie Camach9, counted
upon as the ace of the bullpen, wUI
probably need surgery to remove
bone chips from his pitching arm.
The news came on the heels of the
, Indians' three straight losSes at
Detroit.
"He's got some debris In there and
It has to liP tak.en out, " Manager Pat
Corrales said.
Camacho will fly toLosAngelesto
liP examined Monday by Dr. Frank
Jobe, who wlll determine whether
surgery Is needed . · If surgery is
performed, Camacho will miSs at
least a month of action.
Camacho; who compiled a teamrecord 23 saves with a 2.43 earned
run average last season, has b(,&gt;en
compratnlpg of pain in his arm since
spring trainlllg. He was examined
by a doctor in Cleveland on Friday,
and X-rays revealed thedebrlslnhls

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terrific deals on
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·MODERN SUPPLY ·

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA -

399 W MAIN
·
•
· POMEIIOY, OHIO
.
P11.9U·2164
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Tht Store With "All lllntls of Stuff" - for Pets, Stables,
·Larp &amp; SmoH Animals, Lawns oiMI Gortltns

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"We Make It Right'_'

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PHONE 446·9335
Bill Kelly, Manager

�,,

Page-C-6-:-The

.,

Times-Sentinel

••

NY Mets' Beren

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

April 14, 1985

'

ball

II

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I

•

•

Sr.

You might expect to see a wave at
the confluence of ,the Ohfo, Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers ... but
you wouldn't expect to see 47,335
prople doing it .
At ,least the. Pittsburgh Pirates
didn 't.
"Can you believe it? Who ever
thought there would be a wave at a
baseball game in Pittsburgh?" said
Doug Frotx•l. whose two-rtln single
capped a lour-run first inning as the
Pirates won tjlejr home opener ln
Tl!ree Rivers Stadium from the St.
Louis Cardinals &amp;-4 Friday night.
'The big thing was the fans were
having fun ani:! maybe they will be 1
back. You play befol'l' nearly 50,!XXJ
and It really gets you going_"
The throng at the first night ho111e
opener In the Pirates' 109-year
history also was the largest openinggame crowd since 1976 and the.
largest home crowd since ari Aug.
17, l!llll, double-header against
Montreal drew ~9.412.
"The fans gave usa big lift, a.big,
• big lift.'' sald Manager Chuck
Tanner.
·
-

The Pirates drew only 773,500 last
year en route to a last-place finish
. and th~ team Is up for sale.
A!ter managing only .two runs and
nine hits In a palr of season-o}:ienfng
losses In Chicago, the Pirates
collected 10 hits off four St. Louis
pitchers.
.
Two other National League clubs
had their home openers end In
disappointing fashion whE&gt;n San
Francisco downed Los Angeles 4-1
and San Diego trfmmPd'Atfanta 7-3.
Elsewhere, New York blanked
Cincinnati 1-0, Montreal beat Chicago 5-l and Houstori whipped
Philadelphia 8-3.
.
Glants4, llOdgers 1·
Jeff Leonard ripped a two-run
· homer In San Francisco's four-run
third Inning as a crowd of 46,910
watched t~e SOOth meeting between
the two former NPW York rivals
since they moved to the West Coast
In 1958. Mike Krukow checked the
Dodgers on eight hits, ln!!ludlnl\( a .
Sf!i.Bream first maJor-league ho!ile
run. Rick Honeycutt : the Los
Angeles starter, allowed five lilts
andfour.runs In 32-3innfnir.i.

Lou~.

Padres 7, Braves 3

I

REMEMBER, NOBODY -OULS 'EnER

.

.'

7

446-3672

16.16 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS ·

April

.

DevoePaint .~
NOW ON SALE~ ·••~

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99

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$'
9 95 '
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NOW

$9!!LON

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. ,h.67S·1160 ·

312 6th StrHt

fit, DNwan

of Grow Group, InC.

•
Purolator

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1 1.,

,l 'll avallabte)

.I understand 1 waive aU rllfils and claims lor any damare or lnjurleo
that I, my heirs, or aulgna may have a&amp;alnot the Middleport Chamber
of Commerce, any adillllonat oponson , city of Middleport, or the!r representallvea, aMipa or acenlo. I aloo certify that I have.adequaalely
trained for tbla event, and am not sullertnc from anyln Jury or other
condition which !J1llht be .1M!rlouoly anravaled lty m, participation. In
thlo event.
SIGNATURE _ ______________________
~ARENT

IF UNDER 18

S~tf'

• • on

~tq !i R,n~•·

1.25 :~~: ~~or:.:,.

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Fits mo•tloretgn and domosuc cars.
. Sate 2.25 Rog. 3. ~g Ltml) 2
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after mfg's rebate

2~ S111e
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Purolator
Air Filters

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Fits most foreign and domestic cars.
sate 3.25 Reg. 4.49 Limit 2

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rout t o\ I
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Non-resistors · ,___ _ __,
alter mig's rebate

Champion Spark Plugs

umlt 20

Sa1e 79 ' Reg. 99'
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GALLIPOLIS- Gallla Academy
Hfgh.Scnool's .IV l!fl.se):lall (ea!fl tfe(l
, ·Athens 8Jid iost h;&gt; Me~ Iii a pair of
. basebllll gari;les last w~k . ..
· TheAthensgameendedlnal-ltle
after five-Innings. Joel SQ!'ncer, who
had two hits .In four trips, allowed
three hits, walked five and-fannedll
Bl!llpups.
,
Mike Wickline and Scott Mfller
also hit . safely for the GaUfans.
"Mmer droVe In Marvin Pullins with
Callla's lone· run. GAHS left fo
ru'nners stranded. 'At}lelts lon(' run
came In the third I;Ung:-. In llie rytel~ outing. GaUfpolls
dropped to ()-3-1 with a 148 setback.
Meigs plated five fU11S In the first
, 1 Inning off Scott Miller, the losing
· . hurler. Miller gave up nlrK' runs.
" Jlandy
Amsbary hurled three
1
Innings In relief, givingupflveruns.
Joel Spencer, Marvin Pullins,
Mike Wickline, had two hits apiece
fortheGalllans. MelgsouthftGallia,
14·10.

_.

imiurotacti and.boautlltes vinyt,' '
. rubbttr'l '!ialher.'·Sate 2.09 Reg. 3.48
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7.88·.

- Ptewf Gauv••· wnt2a, t72125, w12121 I'
- 'J7-2129 RtG. Irom 1.79 .......... .. :- .. .... : 1:25.
.
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Reg. 4.49
Ft~ dents holes &amp; scratches. Micro·
aphoros keep t~a formula h~nd workable
lor days. W267 112 gat. Silt 5.88 .
Rig. 7.95

•

sl1e 99' R~g .1.2s

Llquld-WTS0-1 Gej H51. The llrst'
ca; wu -lhlit _tluna, ahlntt a~d protect$_
- wlthoilfsirlpptng. sate
~ig, ~_.95'.' ··.
~-

f4 ~ f i•o oellollt~

', olj" ' •l' fiMP

t2·0Z. Reg. 3.49

• ·POINT PLEASANT -:- The
·National WUd Turkey Federation
wlll sponsor a turkey clinic on
,WednllS(lay, April 17, beginning at 7
p. m. at,Point Pleasant Junior High
l'ichool.
Champion call~r and Penn's
~ood Turko/ Calls representative,
Rick Sklles, ";Iii be gllllSt speaker.-A film on turkey hu'(ltlng and safety,
· ~Jbeshown.
_ .
'
., Larry Vauglm, state president of
, · thE&gt; National Wild Turkey Federa·
tjllp, wUJ discuss the possibility of
6rganlzlng a local chapter.
,
.
, · Biologists with thE&gt; department of
natural resoun:es wUJ present a
slfde program on the proposed
MonongahE&gt;Iia National Forest
plan, and discuss turkey management plan~.
ketreshlnents will be served.

29

(:Your Cholc:e ~.IPurch o12
altor ml.g 's rebota

!

POint Pleosont ·

Store Houn: Mo••t·~rlcloy 8:00 o.m. To 1:00 ,,..,,
Wwdoy 1:00 o.m. To · 12 '

-~-~---~.........-------------~
I,

ATHENS - The Kerr Dlstrtbut·
tng Little Kings Softball Team ol
Athens will sponsor a sanctlonec;l
· &amp;uble elimination softbaU tournainent~4andeatt!k!At~West
!taW St. Park. En!cy tee Is ~­

'lllere WUI

lltV.P., .•

(JP

s!JlD'I)I'I ' trollies,

M.H.R. '

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anciJiatswlll ' '

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Gas Tr~~tment Or
WS701, 15280 &amp;
Super 0 Ctitne mo Re9. lrom 89'
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Supe·r Hard Shell Wax
Liquid or Paste H123 &amp; tT223

8 88
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Your Choice

Reg. 12.95 I 14.95

Lighted License Plate
Frames or Lighted
Deck. Panel noo a not

4.88

Quality Bonded
Brake Shoes Reg. s.aa

Mag Cleane.r, Special ·
Finish Mag creaner or
Wire Wheel Cleaner

Your
Cholc:e
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Liquid Wrench,
Power Steering Sealer
Or Steering Fluid
1Mt-7t2, Uit27·12 &amp; tL2·12

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S111oke tinted cling on vinyl. Reg. 7.95
Chloltoln Musical Horn U -3000
39.95 .......... " ....... " .

6.88

Quality Rlvlted
Brake Shoes or NB1NI
Disc Brake Pads
Reg. from 8.88

'

Prices In eltact April t4. thru April 20, 1985.
'

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W• rosorvo tho right to limit quantlllao.
•'

209 .Upper River Road-·
. G~llipolis,. ~hio

17.88

Actron Timing Light or
Dwell Tachometer
tLIOO &amp; 1812 Reg. 21.95

From

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2.95

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304-675•2911

Opel .......,. Sll. 1:30 ...:.7:01 , •. ; Opia .... 12 .... to 5:80 p.m.
.Located Between Pt. 1'1a11nt &amp; M110n on St. Rt. &amp;2 Ned to M1son
FairlfOunds.

T-ohlrt size XS• _ _ s __!lf _ _.____x,..___

alter mig's rebate

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ONLY ·

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Custom colcrs slightly higher.

"NEW" OWL SLATE CAU

$

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Interior Latex Flat Wall Paint

.I

The run has befin set for Saturday,
Aprfl27, alnO\)fl withrunnerstoplck
up their race packets with numbers
and Instructions at Sears parking
Jot. The .course wfll g6 from Sears
down N . Second to the "T",left along
the river to the marina, circle

State _ _ __ tp•- - -

.· be held Aprill7

DEVoe· ~ ··woNDER·TONES'"

.

I

-~

Custom colors slightly higher

• Highly washable.
• One coat when applied ·
. a:s directed. .
• Water cle.an-up. · ~• s.patter-less formula.

Pre-registration ts · $5 and that
pnce wlll go to $6 on the day of the
· race. Age groups Include under 12,
13-18, 19-24, 25-30, 31·36, 37-42, 43-49,
50-55, 56 and over. T-shlrtS will go tci
· theflrstOOrunnersandawardstothe
first five male and the fftst five
female finishers. Awards will go to ..
the first three finishers In each age
group for hot.h men and women.

City --~--------

UQnting clinic to

'

White

GLOVE$

$3.99

•

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CAMO ·

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• Mildew and fade 'resistarit.
· • One coat covers when applied as directed.

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Exterior Acrylic_Late:X . ·
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3" MAGNUM VENT RIB

Se~---

r--·--:·.--------:-========================="=====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--;

JYs lose to
, ·~eigs~· tie Athens .

WE'VE·
GHT
AT 'COMPETITIVE PRICES
511 us II tilt lllllanlllllld TIIUy fldllll Clinic Wid.,

3"

around the loop, back up to Grant
St., right on Grant St. to Mill St., to
~he Holzer ClinJcparklng lot on )Villi.

MIDDLEPORT - The Mlddlepor1 Chamber of ComnWrce Is
taking applicants for a 5-K run
which Its hopes wlJI become an
annual event for the town of
Middleport.

.

~ GAHS.
't

.•r

REMINGTON "SPORTSMAN" 12 PUMP

Name - - - ' - - - - - - - - - -- Ase u ol t-21-86·- - Street - - -- - - -, - - - - - - - -

·=

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile I

$279 95

. .,

( Ptoaoe Print)

5-K run April27

.

; .The victory left Hannan Trace
)With a 6-l'season record.Jnslde the
oSVAC, the Wildcats llnproved their
mark to.l-1.
:- Eastern had three runs ort seven .
'Iitts and made two errors. Hannan
ifrace had 10 runs on 12 hits and the
lldme club had three miscues.
Senior righthander Terry Cline
:picked up his third mound victory In
'three days for HTHS. He gaveupsix
:hits. Deke Barnes hurled the
seventh rung, giving up one saf~ty.
'• B. Durst was charged with the
' loss. - .
Phil Balley and Dave Lockhart
· had threehltsapieceforthewlnners .
.- LOckhart had four RBis; Barnes
,and Gary Kirk had two safeties
:apiece. '
, Gr£&gt;g .Leachman's double paced
the Meigs County rilne.
Hannan Trace returns to•action
Monday with a conference game at
- home against Southern.

Steve Garvey drilled a pair of solo
homers and Kevin McReynolds and
AI Bumbry r.apped two- run doubles
to ruin the evening for a crowd of
45,·.189 In Atlanta. The Bravt"s
managed only tbree hits In sew•n
Innings off Andy Hawkins, including
a Dalt• Murphy homer.
Expos 5, Cubs 1
Dan Driessen slammed a two-run
• BLACK - BLACK - BLACK V-8, auto .• power stee ng, power
homer and Herm Winningham hit
'his first major-league horne run to
locks, power windows, cruise, tilt. lift kit and big tires. We sold it
power Montreal. Driessen's homer
new.
triggered a tour-run fourth Inning .
Only 13,400 miles.
and Winningham hit his solo homer ·
In the fifth off loser Dennis
Eckersley_· Bryn Smith, who was
winless in four UfetJme decisions
against the Cubs, limited Chicago to
three hits through eight Innings.
Astros 8, Phillfes 3
Houston's Teny Puhl drove _in
three runs wlth a triple arid single in
a seven-run slxthlnningandadded a
fourth RBI: with a sacrtflce fly. The
Pl)fflfes have lbst all three games'
thfs·yea.r·and 12 In a row elating back . ~~--:--:-....:...-.._..-:-,;....--:--.....;:-;..,-:=:-:-:---:-:-:--;:-:-....;_-._,_..,-~_;::..,_:;;._-=.-?7
to last season.
·

12 GA.

'

MERCERVll..LE - Coach Brett
· Wllpon:S Hannan Trace Wfldcats .
rupled wlth seven big runs In the
&lt;leCOnd Inning here Friday evening,
:then went on to hand visiting
~astern a 10 3 setback In a SouthErn
_\)alley Athletic Conference baseball

-game_

870 IUGNUM VENT RIB

.

E;tgles

r~----~---------~~------------------~------~

I

SEND REG. TO:

:Sill Blower, 264 S. Second Ave., Middleport; OH. 45780

Wildcats
top EHS

a grounder by }lfookle Wilson In Friday's game at
Cartersafda)ftUetlmehashelped
SheaStadlum.TheMetsheldonjpdefeattheRedsl--9 . him .dea,l with the Mets'. pltc}lfng
for their third stmighl viCtory. (Ai' Laserphoto).
· • staff_ .
·

4 7,335 see Pirate victory;.
Giants, Expos, Astros win
By The As.•;oclated Press

sb!gle
triple hitters
by Ca~laIncluded
King anda
: ptherandMeigs

•

'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-7

'

A1Uidleport channbers

slhgles each by Jodi Harrison, Jennl
Couch, Barb Hatfield, Carol Smith,
and Cindy Hawley. Templeton's
single and Suprano's pair of singles
were Warren hlts.Meigs put the game away with
seven runs In the flTht lnnlng ·and
made It 13-1 by the third frame.
Three more In fourth made 16-2._
Warren had ~ded Meigs its only
defeat In 20 games a year agb, that .
coming in first round sectional
tournathent play. ·
Coach Jon Amott's Marauderettes_travel to Federi!l-Hocklng
Wednesday for a TYC game.

Warren Local walkstoavengethelr
oply)ossofayearagowltha21-6rout
over the Lady Warriors here
F'nday:
The win was the Marauderettes'
llfih straight without a defeat and
the second tlme this year they have
lopped tiUi ~run· mark.
•Marla Musser hurled a strong
game .on.the mound as she walked
only three In the seven-Inning stint.
Musser, )\'hO fanneil three batters,
~ped her own'cause with a single
ariO doub~.

worked seven Innings, allowing just
one hit - a ffrsl-lniltng single by
Pete Rose - as the Mets edged the
Reds 1-0 Friday night; Carter,
acquired In th"' off-sellson from
Montreal, hit a solo home run In thE&gt;
fourth· Inning, giving him · two
game-winning homers ·In three
games.
The Mets have won all three of
·their games lhlsseasl!n, each by one
run, aild are the only unbeaten team
In the National League. Theflrsttwo
victories were In extra Innings over
MET TAGG£1&gt; OUT - Cincinnati Reds Catcher
. Dan11 BUardello puis the tag on Rafael SantaDa of the
New York Mets who tried to !I(!OI't!from third base on

I

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs

~reny-f got auf of the sixth and

.

-

Mllra~rettes took advantageof24

,

..

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh~-:~oint Pleassant, W. Va ,

Marauderettes in·
·21-6 league ·win

Slsk three-.h it Reds ·
NEW YORK (AP) -: New York
Mets rlght·h~r Bruee Berenyl
had retired 14Cinclnnatf batters Ina
row when he hit ·catcher Dann
DllardeUo with a pitch to leadoff the
sixth Inn~.
' · .
Mets catcher Gary Garter went to
the mound for a lltUe pep talk.
"He told me I wasn't concentrat·
lng on him. I was .Jettb:,g the hitter
bother me," Berenyl said. "He told
me I was'throwlng too good a game
to let It get tomeandtojustthroWthe

.

7mm
Wire Sets

·From

t0W600 Reg. 6.95

.7.95

From

Electronic Tune·Up
Kits Reg. trom t0.95
'

10.95

8mm Wire Sets
WOWI01 Reg. t3.95

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

Wildlife news.;. ' Fishi~g and
Majors

San Antonio 117, Kans.as Cit&gt;' 1l2
L.A.. CllpPE'f'S Wh Hoo,ll(l'l U0
~ Ull, New Vcrk Ull

By 11wo A.wki~ ~

Ponlancl 1.11, Di.Ua,c; 1l1
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Toronto

s.~.o...- .

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OMrolt a t C'l"'.'~and

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L..A. Lakt&gt;rs at Ka1158s Clly

.Qi'1 .61

Utah at So n AntoniO

2 Z .!',lk) II\,
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WN DtyWoo
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Pmland

Oerl \ '('f Ill

Golm&gt;n Sl.l'nt• at PhoPitlx J
~Il k' a t Hcustc:m
Dr."D HmVlAR SEASON

u:m -

2 2

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l''~v'N Gamtw
llalr inY)r'(' 7. Toronto 2

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SUndlt,)l11 G amt'?i
~- York at f'k'vr&gt;bnd
Toronto a t Sa l!lrnon&gt;

Montrt'al at Boston

Phil..:k'lphla qt N.V: Ran ~ ·
WaJ~ hin~on at N. Y. lslan&lt;t-1'!'
· O.Jc~ at D«roU

Chlcato at Baston
~ rdt at KAn$ils Ctn.·

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Phlladf'lphlU

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Pav.1uckt't
Roeh i"Si l&gt;f'

Monlrt'al at Chka2o
.Phlladtolphla al Hrus1oo
San f'ranc!Sl'O at Lo.&lt;; AJI,Ilf;'ll'!&lt;

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H . N.Y. VankMi
Only R~ 5('1\00uifd

Richmond

('olumbu.~

N"'M.W Barikttt.U 1\:tMOCiadoll

FA.''\'Jli'A'Iwj CONFUENCE

lc -Phlhfdl&gt;lptu 11
• ·N("A·. .J r-r~·
X·Washii1W t111

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Mlitrlf' ar Toll'OO·
Rlctlmond &lt;~ I Syrai.'U$(&gt;
Tick-woter at R.ochc-!;k&gt;r

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Pawturkl'l at Cok.rmlxls
Malrw&gt; at Thk.'tkl

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r&lt;'ll Portf'r , CillctK&gt;r", on U11 · 15-da,\ ·· db;.
ablt'd list . fU.'Calk.'!J Mike Lavallie.riP.
calctrr. from l.WIJ.Vlllt&gt; r1 the- AlTlC'I"'raR

I'OOIBAU.

SA)O

Wll:;m,

N""""" F- Le.-

OIEf'.O CHARGElUi-SIJou&gt;d Eilrl
defro.~ lvP

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, fltllhickotphla' lll . Indiana ...,
~

Ualkd SUirw FIDhall ~

Frt-.,'•G.-vo
.IIIC'k.&lt;iClii\'IIIC' 111. S:IJI Antonio 17.

'

Eastern hitters included two
singles by Amy Young, Angle
Spencer a single and two walks, and
singles each by Arlene Ritchle,Lea
Ann Gaul,Tonya savoy,and Beth
Berkhlmer.
Trimble liltters included Kulme
with a double· and triple, Sherry
Russeiltwosinglesandadouble,and
singles by fan Downs,Trainer, and
Vaughn,
Trailing 9-6 In the sixth inning,
Eastern pia ted four big runs in the
bottomhalfoftheframetoclalmthe
come-from·behlnd win.
Amy Young was . the winning
pitcher with four walks and no strike
outs. Russell suffered the loss with
rellef from Davis in thl&gt; fast round.
They combined for 16 walks and 7
strikeouts.
Eastern committed ·to. errors and
had 13 stolen bases, while Trimble

largemouth bass caught In Ken· ball, ping pong, and pOol -to·keep
Greel)bo Is a very popular and
lucky was taken from Greenbo. the young people as well as some heavily fished lake. But, good
11 weighed over 13 pounds and · adults occupied and happy.
catches are still possible. My belt
luck bas always been with live ball
stood as the Kentucky state re~me of the fish species found
' cord for several years.
such
,as minnows, crawdads, and'
In Greenbo are largemouth bass,
Greenbo has a lot to offer the crappies, catfish, and blueglll. worms. However, many fisherfisherman who might II keto take Boat and motor rentals are avail· men take to the water with artlfi·
his fainlly along. They h·ave a able at the Greenbo dock . Fish- clals.
There is a horsepower llmll on
very nice lodge with game room Ing license, bait. and lures can
outboard motors as well as s'lze
and swimming pool. Camp sites also be purchased at the dock.
are offered with water and elec·
Flshjng is done quite frequently ilmlls on certain fish ,species.
trlc hookup .or primitive camp· from the banks at Greenbo. Sev·. Tht're are also nighttime boating
ing Is available. Bath houses are era! fishermen are always pr~Sii!nt requirements. Be sure to check
also located on the campground. around the boatdock where lllave all regulations before leaving
_
They have a tennis court, a mi· seen s.o me decerit keepers taken. dock. ·
If you would like more lrifornia- .
niature golf course, . horseback Along the dam at the· lower end of
riding, and a swlmm.Ing beach.
the lake Is also a po_pular place for tlon phone the Greenbo LOdge at '
Greenbo employs a fulltimere· bank llshe~men . The poQl area be· 606-473·7324 or write to Greenbo
creation director who plans acti· hind the dam is the \leepest ·part of Lake State Park 8C60 Box 562,
vlties such as hiking, whlffl" the lake.
Greenup, KentuckY 41144.
' '
·

Kyger Creek:

had 6 stolen bases and six errors.
SVACGame
Eastern played Dawlessly for aU
but one inning, however, that one·
inning proved to be costly as five
walks and seven errorS i'l!d to au of
Kyger Creek's 12 run5 in the third

For Kyger Creek, Lllr'l Graham ·
bUt fell shOrt In the end despite a
potent eight hit attack. ArlellE' and Leanna Nibert each singled,
Ritchie was three-for-three with a and JUI Dnunmond doubled .
Eastern had u 'e rrors and 6stolen
trtple and, two slngles and Angle '
Spencer three-for-four with two bases, while KC had no errors and
triples and a single.. Lesa Rycker three stolen bases.
lCastern played Fort Frye sahir· .
and Beth !lerkblmer added two
lrin!Jig. '
.
slnglees each, while Bonnie Koenig day and at .SOuthwestern ·on ·
Eastern made a comeback bid, ·: added a single.
Monday.

County Park, whlclt Ill loca'e"
near Patriot. ParkDevelopm!!Oi
has been aceornpllshed through

phased projects, with Phase I
concentratbtg on the COIIItrilctlon olshellerhouses, play equip-

ment, picruc areas. ~ball
cotuts, softball, voDeyball, badminion and soccer llelch. Durtnr;
Phase D, three ouidoor tennis
coort.s and addltloaalsheller and

•

'!

.!

picnic! faeUities

I.
..,.
... . .

,•

PLUS THESE STANDARD FEATURES .
• Greasable front wheel and mower spindles
• Pinion and se,ctor steering
• 6.5 qt. fuel tank

~·

•

Briggs &amp; Stratton engine
.. • Heav¥·duty, one-piece steel frame
• 5-speed tilling trarisaxle
• Cast-Iron ttont axle
• Standard attachment lilt
• Sealed beam headlights

ONLY

·~;~:;;~~

• Front and rear turf tires

• Medium-back flip·up se~t w/spri n;:g~•---:::::::::;;-=
• Electric start
• .13" "Soft Feel " wheel
• Rubber foot mats
• Hourmeter

.•'

$1779°0

l·
•"
.,~

•

PRICE INCLUDES 37 INCH .
SIDE DISCHARGE MOWER

LEBANON, Ohio (AP)- Inspire
. Success briefly lost the lead lead but

.BAU

LU

BER

'

[~]
'

985-3301

CHESTER

'

·~

.

, Mcintyre Park District
marks ·lOth anniversary·
"The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District shall serve as an agent of the
people of the district to ensure the future availability of natural, scenic,
and open_space areas for t_he purposes of active and passive leisure
lime activities and education, · and to preserve .those area.s 11nd
8trurlures that are· unique in historical and cultural
significance."*
'
'

,.,,.,, ......... ••••••••
MAIN ST.

'

'. '.

-

.

' '

'

funded l!Y a five -tenths of a mill tax (fvy.
By The 'llmes-Sentinei Staff
The mlllage - an unused portion of the county's
Thl• month marks the 10-year anniversary of the
Inside io mills - was dedicated to the park by
0.0. Mcintyre Park District.
. then-JudgeR. William Jenkl~. The cuiTerit .court,
.. ·The distri~t - .· which operates year-round
• heSded by Judge .Thomas Moulton, Is ·an active
programs .at Raccbon Creek County Park ~nd
thrOugllout ,Gallla Counl)t - · was formed to m!!ft · participant In .Park a·crlvlties and ·sel"'(es in an
· recreatloriai needs established a decade ago folloWing · ' oversight capacitY over park operations' . ·, .
The early years of the district's activities were
a 'st'l"les of hearings held by .a citizens adVIsory
,
Prln:uirily
devoted to program planning. qnd ,land
cornmlllet'. .
'
·The dl•trk't
ch~rtered unde'r tlle authotlty'o! . . acqu~!tlon. '
' ·:. ' .· ..• ·.··": '. -~
: Tllclse efforts carne to .fruition In 1900 .with tn~
~!:::=~'!ivlsiGn .of Cornrnon Pleas Court: .and, ls
. opening of the 677-acre Raccoon Creek County Pyk.
which Is loca.ted near Patriot.
.; ·
For nature and and outdoor enthusiasts, t,l)e' district
'
offers a variety of actlvttl~ In the fo~st./and along
backwood trails. The park Is also th'}Sfie of seasonal
special events like the county's pnuai Easter Egg
Hunt and Kite Fly, family relihlons and Industrial
picnics.
1/
In addition, the dlsiriCt sponsors recreation and
fitness classes, cllnlcs."speciallnterest activities and
sport leagUes \hJ'OUghout the year for youth and
·
adults.
.Park officials point to annual attendance increases
as proof of the success of the' park.
'"sthce 19!ll," says Park Director Josette Baker,
"the number of people who have visited the park bas
nearlY tripled .. .In 1984, the number of visitors totaled
98,1))), t I

.\CI'lVli'IE'! - For aamre and and out41ooi.·
• t I h, tlie district ofteru variety of aetlvttles Iii
Ole laftlllt tllld along~ tralll. 'Qie parlt .....
llle lite of ae~ special evenl8 llfle the county'•
-w
En Hunt and Kite Fly, famUy
l'l!lllllon8
picnics.

Oolllf complltfl, fiMIIIf or

.... ...

, :• I

THESE·BASIC FEATURES

were lidded.

!

...

\

..

years of the dllllrlct's actlvilles
were primarily devilled lo program planning and Janil&amp;a~..W.
tlon. 'lbo!le efforts came lo
fN~ Ill 1980 wllb the ogenJnc
of the 677-aere Racroon Creek

· ~·

• t1 hp Synchro-Balanced"'(I /C)

. I

DISTRILT ANNIVERSARY
- This mouth oparb the l~year
annlvenary of the 0 .0 . McJD.
tyre Park Dllllrld. 'The early

t

Lebanon results
went on to a 2-iengtb victory in the
mile lrot in the featured ninth race
Friday night at Lebanon and paid
$13.111, $5and$3.40. · .
Shazp Knife filllshedsecond, $3.40
and ,$2.!ll, 'and 'Super
. Oab,
' · third ' ·
$260
.
.

ial Feature

fun at Green Bo I .ake

win.

LOUJ!; CAROINA.l.S-Piam:l Dar'·

'I]

.Fi1dM.Y• GIUMoi

Mllwaul«'r ll~ . ~tOn U'l. CYT
Drt rol l lfll, wa~h.lngton ~·
Allan!a• .1~ . Olkago 11"8

~'1'.

~wla t kvt

\ "-f'llnd!RI dh·lsJon lltk• ·

.

NMIIoMI Le,.. '

4 1~

.524

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S(&gt;a ttlr

Transactions

.6.111 -

:n !"il
Padn.: DM~m
.v·L.A . l..i!kt •r.;
61 'l)
x-Pol11and
~l ()
X·F'tlorn lX
:E 46
Kansa:; C\!y

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Mldwee ok· WcM~

li ·Houston

at

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.&lt;169 'lll
.M4 22

"»iTF.A~ C:O~'tT.R~CE
)' •Om \ "{'1'

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~llGamt'IJ

'

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G.1 • 111 .i7H - '
!i: 2.1 .716 !;
-10 .JI .500 22 ~

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PawtuckM a! COOmiJ.is

1\llanl.k· f)l\'t.l ilon

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2 · 1 .f£7 II
1 1 -rall
11!011.
1 2 .l'Dl¥l
1 2 ,311 JY1
02 .(00 2

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at Wallhkli!lon

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'
WLPd.OB

Cln('!rmatJ at ~"~~'-""' York
St. Lwl!'! a l PltiSbufl:h.
San D~ a t Allan!a

'

a t Phllalklphht

iL results

k&gt;s' l

NC'\Io· York 1, Cin\ lnflilll 0
HwstUII 8. Phlladl&gt;lphln .1

\"·Ba&lt;ton

l~'fl'l

..·~,
I

~'lonl rNI ~- C hJClljfO I

San F'ran('lsC'O 4, ~ A•
Pltt sburf(h 6. S r. Loois 4
Ran Ok'Jlo 7, Ailanta 3

N.!a',

CalJt:OI':\ ur W~IPf'li(
~ Angro!Nt al Edtnonton

-

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I
Jo"'rlda,y'" Gillht'!io

Roo~

Buffalo at Qul•tw
Mifli"II"'A)fa ar St. Lool,;
[}(&gt;Jroll a t Chlc'ugo

.1

."Ill

1\".V.

fb\Jon a t Mun!R'al

'.1

M.,.,. Dtdslon
Atlanta

1UPPERS PLAINS - During
two recent high school softball
games, Eastern's girls spilt tWo
decisions, clalmlng a 13-9 win over
Trimble and dropping a 12-9 tnt to
. SVAC foe Kyger Creek.
· Eastern is 6-2 overall and H
· inside the league. •· ·
Coach Pam Douthitt said she was
pleased with Eastern's effort
against Trimble as her club
collected 7 hits and made· several
key defenSive plays enroute to the

Rl. Ulu b ill Mlnnt":'iUa

0

"""Mom rt'31
' Sr.

PhlJNriph!a at N.Y. Ran~rs

.,.,. ...._w
um
,' , -

'

~astern girls top . Trim~le, lose t.o

~ tl! Bulfalo

Mltwaukt." .at 7\&gt;xas ·
CaUbmfa a r Oaklar1d
.. Minne!l()fa a t &amp;&gt;all k&gt;
SNnOS.U. 1..&amp;\GUE

2

(·Up

"'"""-"'
s....y,
""'""""

J!ifllfiS sctlmuiOO

New Yen

0

NHL resultS

Milwuuk('(' tl . T!'xa5 6 ~
Onl&lt; ltmd 1~ . California 6
Sf'aflk' 2. MlnllNJfa 1

Only

00'

Phom L'c 96, Utlih 92

AMOIJC.t."W t..EAOUE

New

By Tom BelviUe
· Special Correapondent
GALLIPOLIS ·- Greenbo Lake
Is a!IOther area lake which offers
good opportunltles for taking fish. ·
Greenbo Lake covers approxlmately 225 acres. Jt is located within '
the 3,300 acre Greenbo Lake State
Park area In eastern Kentucky.
Access is easy. Follow Interstate
64 west to the Grayson exit then
follow Route 1 north about 18 miles
to the Greenbo sign ;ind turn left:
I have fished Greenbo on sev·
era! occasions and have taken a
.few fish . During the s.u mmer the
best fishing at Greenbo Js during
the nlg,ht. That seems to be when
the most numerous catches are
made and also the biggest fish
are caught. One ·of the i'argest

family

April14, 1986

·
.
,

..

...
:

'

According to Baker, the facility lias been used for
activities as diverse as industrial picnics and
weddings.
·
In 19!ll, the park was named "Outstanding Outtloor
Recreation Area" by the Ohio Parks and Recreation
Association.
Park Development has been accomplished through
phased projects, with Phase I concentrating on the
construction of shelterhouses, play equipment, picnic
areaB, basketball courts, softball, volleyball, badmin·
ton and soccer fields.
During Phase II, three outdoor tennis courts and
(Continued on page D·S)

(X)MMtJNm' NEEDS - 'The dbJtrlct SJIOIL'OI'S recreation lllld IK11e1111

c._, cllnlai, special Interest activities and sport leagues thnlupout the
year tor youlh and adults. The district - which operates year-round
programs at Raccoon Creek County Park and 'hnlugboutGaDlaCountywas fonned to meet recreational needs established a decade ago following a
. series of hearings held by I' citizens advl&lt;lory committee.

tltla Ia lfl 5

lfJ••d, 4 cyllt~do' _,,,.., Ito• • ,ofrlt-for •IHI
OMit, potty, w•t., lfor'OfiO tonic •nd I 110tffe4 011
•'' ""dltla111111 unit. Ita oil, 111 fll....t . Oool It
-rlr? Como 011 '" a11d help.,. cltoclt If oiitl

MONTH ..Y PAYMENT '25545
{SEE DETAILS)

SAVE'3000
'ray"*)t• flgurod for IJ.4 months at 15.75 1\PR wlth down DGY""'"' ;,
1
ltOOO cath or trade, plustax &amp; title
'
'
'

GROWING ATI'ENDANCE
- "Since 1980," says Park .
Director JaseUe Baker, "the
number of people who have
vi8lted the parlt has nearly
, ...led ••• ln 11184, the number of
'Vtsllonl totaled !18,1108." Acctft.
lng 1o Balcer, thefacllky hasbeell
Wle" for actlvillell as 111\'ene •
lndwtrtal plmlcs and ............
In 1., the park Wll .......
"OuCetandln&amp; Outdqor . _ _
tlonArea" by theONo Parb_.

Recre.Mioe Aaiocllllion.
4

'&lt;

�.,
~Page-0-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

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

April

j

14, 1985

14, 1986
31

21-Busonen Opportunity
22- Moneyto loan
23-Profauoonal SeNicea

3-Announcements
4-Goveaway
5 -Happy Ads
6-lostand Found
7-Yard Sale (paod on advance)
8 · Pubic Sale
8t Auctoon
9-Wanted to Buy

'

Real

31-Homesfor Sale
32-Moblle Homaa for Sale
3~-Farms for Sale
34-Busoness Buildings
3 S-lots 8o Acreage
•
26-Real Ell ate Wanted

'
Employment

EYE THE

An nou nc em ents

3

2

1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
ofho family of Goldoe Cremeans
would sincerely like to thank
..111 our net&amp;hbors fnends and
1tlatovos for thoor kondness
.dwonc tho death of our mother
and panclmother
For the btautdul 11-rs
food cards, phone calls and ••·
sits. A special thanks to lho
steff at the Pomwoy Health
Care
theor wonderful
cart,
lusher for
and also
,lht
'four kindness was deeply ap
cJ)reeoatod God Bless all of you
,
The Choldren
Mrs Allan (Wilma) Swoshe~
~'Mrs Thomas (Ruby) Shaffer
Goorae Grover Cremeans
1

f''

Announcement&amp;

In Memoriam

Announcements

We wtsh to thank Rev and
Mrs Tdhs Mr and Mrs Du
gan, The Holzer Hospttal.
fmmds netghbors and rela
ttves for their prayers. food.
flowers and cards durtng the
lllne11 and death of Anna M
Mohler The Anna Mohler
Family

repair.

Giveaway

Juha Mane Manley on her

2 7 wook old gray female
kottona Coli 614·448·
7100

borthdoy Aprol13th We love
and mtas you Roaemary
Roger, Raymond ancl Eddoe

Puppooa B wooko old Call
614· 367·0607

3

Female Pit· Bronnol Bull dog.
Call614-448-4011

In memory of our mother

Announcements

Balloon• for Get Well Ann1
verserv• Blrthday• part1e1
Songlng Gornllo Call Sal
loons&amp; Co 814·446-4313
We need Junk Too mce to
throw away? W1U p1ck up
Call 614 992·3824 Mon·
doy thru Friday 7 to 5 30

81 -Home improvements
82-Piumblng 8o Heating
83-Excavatong
84-Eiectrocal &amp; Refrogeratlon
86-Generel Hauling
86-M H Repaor
87- Upholstery

11

.&amp; Vicinity

parts ,•nd

supphoa
Pick up 'and
delivery, DIVII V1cuum
Cleaner one helf mile up
Georges Crook Rd
Call
614-448-0294

4

SHvices

Lrvt:s lor.k

...... Gallipolis

SWEEPER and oewlng ml•

ch1ne

Supplrr.s

MIKed brHd dogo to glvo
away 1 Qorman Shepherd
and 1 Huakio Coli 992·
7764
8 week old part beagle
pupploa 3 rmole and 1
lomolo Call 982-7883
14•44 metal silo, 'I• milo
below Racine locks end
Dam, on Rt 33, above Now
Havoo 304·882-2832

Gar191 Solo Couch, choor,
clothmg. mtac rterris Clean,
rooaonable prlceo Mon 9 6,
tum right ot Clipper Milia,
follow ligna
9,

Wanted To Buy

We pay Cllh for late model
dean uted cart
Jom Mink Chev · Oida Inc
BHI Gena Johnoon
814-448·3672
Wanted 1utom1t1c tr1naml•·
Ilion for 1979 Horizon Call
614 448 1807
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Beds. Iron,
wood, cupboerdt. chtlrl,
che1t1 ba1keta. dlthtl,
ltone jart, ent1que1. gold
end 1ilver Wnte· M D
Miller, Rt 2, Pomeroy. Ohoo
411789 or call 814-992·
7760
lluyong dolly gold. •lver
colna rlnga jewelry. sterling
WIN. old cotna, 1arge currency Top price• Ed Burkett Balbor Shop, 2nd Avo,
Middleport, Oh. 614 · 992·
3478

Village pi Racine 11 on the
P.roceas of updet1ng Green·
Wood • Cemetery lot care
recorda An abtence of Caaament ,wJndowe. pho.ne
partment b•lhng mformatlon 304· 876-i3B7B
h•• reaulted m a loll of
&amp;
revenue forcing cemetefY
"GoOd" uaed truck. phone
Down Payments
caro ,to a monomum II you 6 Lost and Found
304 675·2834
~
F1xed 8, Vanable Rates
own a lot m Greenwood 1:.---....,--.,.-~~-CometerY.II\d hove not tieen
• Trailer lot with 'ell hook-ups
Purchase or Refinance
prav1oualy contl)cted for the
end tom• 1crtage 1n counFtxed Rate
•t 0 00 par yeof lot cola lee, Rong of koya loot in porkinO try On lond contract Call
Construction Loans
ploaaolet ue hoor from you
lot or ~oodland Store Ra
614·882·8967
Adoquote funding will allow ward 304·8711-3971
Terms Up to 30 Years
Greenwood Cemetery to be
:
Cell: Jeri Alhe
llliiJIIIVIIII~III
properly maenta1ned Your
(61'4) 379-2789
Yard Sale
t1me and cooperatiOn will be 7
~l~f VICI~~)
• ' N L. Stev&lt;Jns &amp;
greatly apprac1atad Call VII
,. '
Associates
logo of Racono 614-949
2809
11 Help Wanted
8
Public Sale
8
Public Sale
&amp; Auction
&amp; Auction
Houaakeepar·chtld care
1911 11 • 8 Moltfy IVIn·
Auctoon avery Friday nlghtlt lngo o~d aomo nights No
tho Hartford Community smoking Raforenqoo ••·
Contor Truckloads of now 1-q-ul_red'-_&amp;_1_4-'--44-8_·_0_30_1__
morchondlaa 8V/Iry - k
- I wrll offer for sale at the home of Wilda Hamng on Apnl
Conalgmanta of new • uHd
20, 1985 at 10 a.m, 40920 Rt. 692, Papville, Ohro,
marchandlll alw1ya wei~
, ., the fotlowm&amp; 1tems at the fotlowma pnces
comad Richard 11oynolda,
AuctlonHr Cell 304-276·
• Oil furnace free stand1ng, 4yrs old, $350; orl heatrng stove, 2
3069
yrs old, $150; bottle gas heater $75, 2- 250 gal lanks$35
each, Fngidaore electnc range $125 Fng~da1re refngerator
SEMI DIIVEIS
~ 12 3 cu ft., $100; G£ freezer $70, 3 pc blonde bedroom
Tra~n Maw Far local
' suite w/spnngs and mattress $225, Mehl1n pta no $75, ca.bi
t er
tile .....
8
Public Sala
•JOb Placement Aulst•nce
net $10,2 kerosene heaters $f5 each, table &amp;Schatrs $35
•DOT Certiflc•tktn
&amp; Auction
: table &amp; I charr $20, other mrscellaneous items Cash only
•Con.apondence/Retidltnt

HOME
MORTGAGE
5% 10%

ESTATE SALE
st

o••

Dena H. Raymond, Executrix of Estate

SPECIAL
GROCERY
AUCTION

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

ns.

:From Gallipolis, take Rt 141 Turn left onto Rt
urn rteht onto Patrtot-Cadmus Road Watch for
ians

Friday Nite, 7:00
April 19, 1985

"' Sale Eve~ Saturday Night At 7:00 P.M.
onst&amp;nments accepted from

1·5 p m

on Saturdays

ave somethrng you want to sell? Contact Marltn
edtmeyer, Auctioneer. Arrangements for pickup
ervice available

BARN AND AUCTIONEER AVAILABLE FOR
;
PUBLIC AUCTIONS ON CONTRACT
, t ,Contract rncludes hauling and transportrng all
-merchandtse.

~ MAlLIN WEDEMEYEI-AUCTIONEEI
;:_
245-5152 or 388-8249
·~

Apprentice: Finis (lkt) Isaac, 381·9370

:. Resrdent and Busrness Auctron' Serv1ce Also Avarlable

Loc~ted at Thalar Ford

Blda.

Jet Rt 16D-Rt 35
Over 400 Items to choou
from rn canned aoods,
baged IOOdS, dOJ food.
Anrthrn111 not penshabla
Dealers • Grocal')' Store
Owners • Don't m1ss th11
sale All rn date fresh
marchandlse, hi quality

Lon

Neal,

AuctionHr

614-367-7101
Reeu11r Auction Every
Sat Nite,7:00 P.M.

PUBLIC AU'CTION

"'

SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1985 at 1:00 P.M.
State Route 588 and Texas Road, watc:h for siens.

•j
•

HOUSEHOLD Poster bed, chest, ntght stuxl, low chest, AM/FM radro-record player, fan, cha1r
with ma~e trim, recliner fike new, end tables. RCA lV,Iamps, bool&lt;s, sofa makes tnlo bed,llllr·
rors, shelves, stool, utiily table, metal book shelf fokl1ng ~I table, J C Penny vacuum, books,
electlica.l allllltances, Tupperware, ~ &amp; pans, many m1sc d1shes &amp; whatnots
ANTIQUES &amp;COLlECTOR ITEMS: Wall telephone wooden haR tree, m~k can, wooden barrel,
old trunk piclllre frames, wooden stool, stone tars, caslrron kettle. boolls. ~ door knobs old
Nabisco prem1um saH1ne cracker can, cream can, kerosene lamp, cast rron kettle wlletp. salt
box, blye flowered bovil, shavtng brushes 40 year old camera, ~. push mower, mtSC Jewelry, drshes &amp; 111any more
MISC. Sunbeam electnc mower used 3 bmes, hedge trimmer, bumper taCk, wooden step lad·
der cannrng 13rs. wooden towel rack, trellis, lawn chm, woodetlladders, tools &amp; man~rsc

• items.

I
•

VEGIE AND CORBETT A ROBERTS. OWNERS
MARLIN WEDEMEYER- AUCTIONEER- 241-1112- 388-1249
Apprentice Flnle (IKE)Iuec-388·9370
Not reloponllble for 110cldent1 or lou of propertY.

Call 304-419-2027
It 14
Mi-alw.tr, W Yo

U1111'1D mKI MAml
Home Offlce.t ...

rw•t•

Fl

DEAN OF
TECHNOLOGIES

Rio Gtlnde Colltp ll1d Com·
munily eon., aun1que c:ol·
lilt tlllt cGitlpriHs I IIIII

Halp Wanted

Wanted Motor Route Onv
ora needed lor Tho Daoly
Sentinel Only honoSI, do·
pendabte penon• with relf•·
ble trenaportauon need
•pply Net a good Income
for Juot 3 or 4 hours a dey
Apply In parson or call Tho
Dally Sontonel at 614 992·
2166

Needed part· t1me babysit·
tar. Northup Centenary
area, 2 young children
Pleoao call after 1 00. 614
448-0821

==-•DIInol

Meogs County
A re a Code 614

Maso n Co WV
Area Code 304

4463673882 46 266 643 379 -

992 - Moddleport
Pomeroy
9 86- Chester /
343 - Ponland
247 - Letart Falls
949 - Racone
742 - Rutland
667 - Coolvolle

675-Pt Pleasant
458- Leon
5 76- Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
896 - Letart
937- Bulfalo

Galllpohs
Cheehoro
VInton
Rio Grande
Guyan Don
Araboa Dllt
Walnut

11

Help Wanted

Aaelttlnt to Foreman
Northern Ohio mining oper·
at1on hal 1mmadiete nHd
for 3 temporary ••••tents to
production forem1n Super
vJsory and mining tbpa·
r1ence are required, Forem1n
cortlflcetlon helpful, abihty
to communioete both verbel
and written i• easenc1al
qualified condldotoa ohould
Mild reeume to Employee
Relations Manager, P 0
Box 390. Polnoavlllo Oh
44077 E 0 E

Full-time or part hme sales
opportunity ln•urance benefit• avail•ble The Avon
Dlltrict Manager woll bo
lntervoowlng for job openIngs In Gaillo &amp; Mooga Co
Apnl 1 5. ettho Boat Western
Motel from 10 30 AM to
3 00 PM Lodooo over 18
may apply In parson
·

who would like to bo making
extra money Make from
$20 00 to 180 00 In on
ovonlng having e Friendly
Homo Party Also 11gn up
end got •1 4400 00 kit of
glfta end toy a No money
involved For more 1nforma
lion, cell Magnolia Nltz at
614-992-3681

Babysitter naadod In my
home only. own treneporta·
tlon Coli 814-446·3046

Educetor T-o create and
ma1ntaln community educe·
tlon and public apoeklng
program In private non·
profit family planning
agency Muet heva knowl·
edge end experience in
education an the are11 of
famity life, preventive
health, nutrition and putillc
policy Must demonstrate
excellence in organizatlonel
skdla, commumlcat10n,
group dynemlca, and an
ability to adapt educational
meteriala for program
needs Experience de•lred In
writing nawateleaaaa lnd
eatabllshing media contects
throughout an eight county
area Graphlca experience
helpful Bacholor"a degree
required Starting salary
$1 1, 700 00 Position Ia
baaed In Athena Muat have
own trenaponetlon, flexlbll ·
oty of limo and bo able to
travollocelly Daadhno Apnl
2.4, 1985 Send roaumoa to
Plonned Parenthood of Southout Ohio. 8 N Court St •
Athono, Ohoo 45701 An
EOEandESP

Socall Servlca poaltlon
Bachelor or IIIOCiate degree
In aoclel work required and
preferebly experten~e 1n
long term cere San~ ruuma
to Jana Dillfr, Scenrc Hilla
Core Contor Rt 2 Box 262,
Bidwell, Oh 45841 ._

Educator To i:reate and
mamtam commu01ty aduca· ~
tion and public oP.oklng
program In private non· p_pfjt
family planning agency.
Mus~t have knowledge end
••P•rtenco In oducaticJn In
the areea of family Ide.
preventive health, nutrition
and public pohcy Mull
demonltrlte excellence 1n
organiZational alulla com·
munlcatlon, group dynam
oca. and ~n ability to adapt
educat10n11 matareala for
program need• Experience
deolrld In wrhlng nowlflloaaaa end oatabltllhlne me·
die contecta throughout an
eight county orH Graphics
oxporlenco helpful Bache- 1-:::--:--:-----lor"a degree tequlred Start· Opening for legal aecrotory
lng aelary $11,700 00 Po· with typing.. dictation and
11tlon 11 boaad on Athono
filing roqulromonll RotorMust have own tran•pona~ encea required Sand ration lleKoblllty of tome and sumo to Tho Dolly Santone!.
bo able to travel locally
Box 729C. Pomeroy Ohio
Doodilno Aprol 24. 1 9B5
45769
Send resume to Pl•nned
Paronthood of Southoeat Soleo Help Wonted Sot your
Ohio. 8 N Court St , own hours, full or port tome
Atloona. Ohio 46701 An No ••-lonco nocoaury
E 0 E ond ESP
Call 614-992-7180

1-----------

AVON 6oH Avon moke
45% Call 814 448 3368

Eam more caah with MtrrlcMocl 8how our 100% guo·
rantHCI llna of gifts. toys &amp;
home decor on your hours!
No lnveatmen1 delivering or
collecting! Excellent pay &amp;
bonofltll FREE KITI Call
nowl 814· 448-71 08
Part-time child cere and
houao claanlng In my homo
1&amp; to 20 hra par week Coli
814·446-2065 after 2PM

11

110101J propns,

rten~K­

nltor buc!Pt; lllttrfact with

Industry. lt1ldent rwcntnflltlll and advlslftl. Soma
tMcllln&amp; Mil bt l'lqlillil
QulllfiCI!ions inClude I

Inn dtplt,
::Dntllo.flllr~.:,:

dodutttll

::C:

cen. -~lid .....

ilbllloa Pieltt•ed. EM c1bll

co •••Ill sldlll

ltld
Mty ID Wlllll witll dMnt

PIGPII -

llllfPICied
llll llld IIIII')' cu•llltll·

lll'ltt wttlt NUCitlon and
e.,.,ltftct. Tilt position Is
1 twtln 11ont11 contrtd.
Stlllntlt lib' of lppliCitloll

lind rwt11111 to: DireCtor of
flrMnntl, Alllntlun: Ttcll·
~Grandt ColtOlllo
liu
A,rlcltloll dlldlint: IIJ
J.

=
a•s

P.O. liZO

~~·

Help Wanted

Baby sitter needed
676 4888

21
304·

NHdod Lady houHkoopor
to Uve Jn for room and board
Phone 304 875 1840
12

Situations
Wanted

Board and room for elderly
Reeaoneblo Call 814-992·
8022 or 814·986-4416
Room and board for elderly
only Call 814-992·6022 or
814·985-4418
Expenenced painting
Barna. houaaa. all types of
roofs Melga area call 614
992 7416 In Galbo coli
814 -387 0298
In Me•o• County area Will
lnatall new rural mall box
w1th weather treated 4x4
poata "hone 61 4 992
634B
I
18 Wanted to Do

Will do lawn mowing &amp;: yard
work Coli Keith at 614·
2116 8251 after 6 OOPM
Mow lawns, 1nm rake. have
own mower~ In c1ty of
Oelhpoha. dependabl.. serVice Walter Long Cell 614·
448-0098
Bowena Construction
Complete remodeling. frre·
place apec1allata Painting
Interior • e»etenor Cement.
block brick work 25 yra
experience, reaaonable
ratn Free eatlmatea. work
guarantHd Call 614 38B
9870 or 814-388-9B08

1-----------OffiCI

Dependable yard service
Yard mowed, weeda, walk
ways cleared hedges
trimmed, ate Boll Sleek Call
614·992· 2289
Bobyalttong on my homo. full
time or while you ahop
Ruatlc Hilla Syracuae Ex·
porlonc,d Call 814 992
6021

ELECTRONICS INSTRUCRio Grandt Collep·
/Community Collep rn·
viteS applicatrons for In·
structor/Assrstanl Pro·
Elactromcs.
lessor of
Blchelor
of
Science
dtl'li or Industry experitllCI equiVIItnl requrred.

with ..ster'. pltftrnd.
Include lllchln&amp;. pro&amp;111111 dMiupment, student ldvlslfll aild IICI'IIit-

21

Business
Opportunrty

Toonlng Booth Bualnou Op
portunlty or Homo uH
1800 Write to Box 151 ,
Huntington, WVa 26708
Tavern for aale Over 110
years in bualnett One
owner lnquir~ea aent to The
Dally Sontlnal. Bp• 729B,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 Only
lntereated "raons n"d to
reply
.; ~

Busineaa 1
Opportunity

21

inc. AVIIIablt Sepltlnller

21, 1915. Sllary ~­
dent on crtdlntills and
experitnce.
Contact· Seild ltlllllll,

II'IIIJcrlpts and thrH 1111·
en of reltiiiiCI to: Rio

Grande Collep/Commun-

Colll&amp;l.

OffirM. RIO Gnnde, Olllo
45674. Appllcltlon dlld1111: April 30.1915.
lly

PO 3620

Persoiltlll

Busmess
Opportunoty

HOME OWN ERS -Rolononc•
tOiow f1xed rate Use equ1tv
for any purpose leaderMQrlgogo Co
614 -692
3061
Protess1onal
Serv1ces

P11no Tunmg and Repatr
Brunlcard1 Mus1c Co. 614448 068.7 Twontooth yoior
of quality aervlce lin~·
Daniela, 614 7A2-2961 ,

~--------------~'-'·
WINDOW TINTING Ruo.'
dantW Comrnare~al&amp;:. Auto
Free oltunetoa Coli 814:
448·9348
•
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR, Reduced ratos hmotod
time only Ward·s Keyboard.'
304 1176 6600 or 676~
3824

Real Estate

In Eatoto· 3 bdr on Rt 36, y,
mo Wool of HMC Call
814-446 0603

Mull aoll 3 bdr ranch,
\'Vollbrooko Bubd . FR.
woodburnar, carport. dock,
city utllltooa. &amp; schools.
en.ooo Coil 614 448·
7144

kanauga Upper River Rd
Houaa woth 4 Iota born Call
814·268-198Bor814 448·
7226
Government homea from t1
(U repair) Alao delinquent
tiK property Call 1 B06
6B7-8000 Ext GH-980IIIor
lnlormot(on
'"Pomeroy, 2 atoryhomeon
Plooaont Rodge 2 bod·
rooma, 1 Vz baths living
room d1mng room. k1tchen.
biaament Lorge yard plus
acreage Several out·
buildings UO,OQO Call
814-949-2846

partly
fumlahod . By owner In
Bradbury Call 614-992·
3187
lovely. colonial heme at 121
7th eva In Middleport, Ohoo
Includes oluminum oldlng,
l1rge 'CIOHd-in front porch
with wond out windows, 10
rooma. 3~4 bedroom•. 1 '12
blltha. formal dln1ng room,
u\lllty room. hordwood
fiOOrl, g11 fur.1ace With
circulating hot water 30 gal
hot water tonk Appralaed at
t37, 800. wolf aoll lor
Ull 000 Contact Rolph or
Emalono Prott at 227 S
Fifth Avo , Moddloport.
Ohio 614 992-7787

Nice older home. Vine St
Racono.Ohio Living Room,
Dining Room Kitchen, 3
bedroom and bath Some
furnishings and appliances
Priced e40,000 00 Call
814·949-21140 ovenonga af·
tor 8 OOPM, wookenda

anytime

arago
204

Call 814-992 ·

ly owner assumable 91h per
cent, 3 bedroom. 3 baths
living room. demng room
familY room, equopped kit·
chen 2 car garage. pltlo. air
cond New Haven, 304
8B2-21108

SUBLET - Reta11 space
located at 42 Court Street,
lafayette Mall Galhpohs,
Ohro Square lootage of
1,157 selling space and 2Z7
square feet of storage space
on the second floor of lhe
Ufayette Mall
Call 614-446-7653
9 30 'ttl 8.00
Monda thru Saturday

2 mobile homes for 11la Call
814·992·3847

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

8•46 trallor Good condl
tion Full bath, 1 bedroom.
largo living room Call 614
992· 2221 or 814-992·
7202

Furnished. elr cond , cable,
no city texaa. beautiful river·
view. Kanauga Folter'o Mo·
bile Homo 1'ork 814 -44811102

3 bedroom• with t1p out
Furniahad, 1ir washer,
dryer, awn1ng. underpinned
Sot up or rontod lot Coil
814 992-7470

2 bdr 2 ml from HMC at
Evergre•n. chlldr~n IC·
coptod Call 614·448 ·3!197
or 814 -248-8223

Mobile homes moved In
aured 20 years exp!llnM'Ice
304 578·2B86 or 576
2998

Nlco 2 bdr •Skyline on Rt 7
comp turn • water pe1d Call
814-245-6B18

For Mle mobile home 2 br.
70"x14' Call 304-87&amp;·
1484
1976
homo,
rooms.
n11hld.
33

In Moddloport 2 bedroom
Pertoally fumlohod Includes
washer and dryer Good
location near park One
child Depoalt required
1192- 7114 or 992- 6BOO

Cameron mobile
12x84 ft 2 bod·
ell electric. unfur·
304-5711-1777

2 bedroom troller. adults
only deposit, required Coil
304 676 21536

Farms for Sale

30 acto form
JACKSON ESTATES
bedroom tr•llar, urit&lt;inloiliocl ' l A pAR l MEN T S' {E q u of
houao low 30's weekends Houalng Opportunltvl
only 904-691 8429
monthly rent ltorto ot 1163
for 1 bedroom and 1188 fcr
2 bedroom , dopoalt 1200,
34
Busine"
located noor Spring Valley
Plan and Foodland. pool
Buildings
and Coble TV IVIIIIblo,
houra a a poaaible 1 0 am to 4
FOR BALE OR LEASE. pm ond 7 pm to 9 pm
commorcool property and Mondoy Frodoy. Coli 814·
naw buNding 70'•100' with 448 2 7 4 6 or leave
2 1cre. 200' r01d frontage, me..aga
no zolng required 2 mila• 1----=:....~----­
north of Porn! PlooO&lt;tnt, w Apt torrent et 26 I up Coil
Va on Rt 12 Phone 304· 304 875 7263 875-5104
87&amp; 187B weekdays, 304 or 876·11386
875· 7B98 ovononga and - - - , - - ' - - - - ' - weekendl
N1cely furn1ahed mob1le
hom• eff apt , central elr
and hoot In coty. adu~ll only
Call 614-448-033B
36 Lots 8o Acreage

Bachelor apt • 1st cla11
"""'ly furnished, Ref roq
Over 1 acre level lot Port..-. r.!!fl,... mo 184 ~lrot'ltva
Bx12 barn, ooptoc tank HS Galllpolio Call 614 446
or MH ready c•ah·contract 1816 or 814-448·1243
Call 814 3BB 9738
Furnished 3 rm apt upatalra
Large lot 4 milaa out hal utolltill pd • ., 95 mo .. eeo
mobile home ready to move dep011t 94 locuat Adults
lnw. alaa hookup for another only Call 448 1340 or
_,Mlt Coli 814-448·3918
448 3870
lotfor Mle located on St At
rural water. aeptic
tenk good tra1l8r alta.
te,liOO Call 814- 387·
71811

Furm•hed eff1c1ency 701
4th Avo Gallipolis ., 80
ut11itiea pa1d, share beth
adult• Call 445 4418 otter
7PM

&amp;&amp;4

Space for Rent

Pickens uaad furniture 304·
8711· 64B3 or 675-14110
RICK;S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE Uaad Slovoa
and refrlgeratora Compere 1..---------'T'---------~
ou r prices, aava today I
Phone 304· 773-6430
Pets for Sale
54 Misc. Merchandise 56

Furn11hed 4 room apt no
children or peta ple11e
Located on Oak Hill Call
•Iter 4PM, 814·882-801 0

2 ltory frame, 7
batflo, boHmont,
shop. garden
304-876 8743

Flo~ an onorgy efficient
heme builtllfl your lot From
•13.800 .00 Call for 1111·
' motoa. 304·875·3981

32 Mobile Homa•
for Sale

Rt:nlals

3 rooma w1th private beth
rot Requested Call 814
448-2216

1-..,-~,_....----,,.....-::;---·

Upstairs 3 room a. furnlahed,
bath, waahar-dryar. AC
clean. no peta. ref , dep
roq. odulta Cell 814·448·
1619

41

Houses for Rent

•

Larga cooperative eeeiCing people with a
career In mind Ability to work with others a
muat. Move ahea~ on your own perfor·
mance. Openlngot in va'nouslocatlons. As a ,"
management trainee, you have tha oppor- •
tunlty to eern up to $1 B,OOO per year. Ma· ' '
nagar• now earning $2Q-$ 36.000 per •
year. Company. benefita. Send resume to •
Management Recruiter. P 0 Box 239, ~
Oelltpolls, Ohio 45831.
'
'

1-----...;____
Remodeled 2 bdr well to
wall carpeting, odulta pro·
farred or will con11dor 1
small chMd, no pots. 1200
mo plloa utllltloa 132 4th
Ava Cai1814·448-3204

1- - - - - : - - -

:1171 letlgl8tll tzX88, 3 Mlddlapclrt aroa ho.,.. lor
'wr.. all aloctric, AC •
ocNool11nd ohop·
,underpinnlnllncluded ox I · ~~JJII•trfct, Call 304-112·
•aond Call 14·441·:1281

1 bocii'Oom furnllhld apt
Call 814-1112·114341ir 304·
882·2188

In N- Ho-. W Va , 3
bedroom. 2 bathe, Ill allot·
ric Call 11 4·948 · 2470

~."'11l'lolaMt
ond Gfllltlolia,
4-441·
1221

: 1112 Galuy 14X70,
••11100, iloocl oond Call

'114-446-ll1441.
11

Red lettered Model260, 22
rifle, loot modo on 19 62
e76 00 Auto Winchester
14 0 0 1ke e t ba r
roll 11110 00 Monuol 1y
powritor, e36 00 Call614
992-11709 from 9 00 tol
2 00

Umeatone, Sand, Oravel
P1ck up a' A1cherda &amp; Son
Cell 614 448 77B5
SPECIAL cut oloba 6 PU
loada delivered m dump
truck.,OO, or21oada•teo
You pickup f15 Coll814·
245·6804

1-----------

Built On Your Lot 8og 4 Car
Garage 18996 3 bdr homos
813 9911 SH Our Models
Colli 814 8118-7311

Merchnndrse
61 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITUftE
62 Olivo St , Gollpolla Now
&amp; uaed WOOd·COII SIOVOI, 8
pc wood Lft aulto 1399,
bunk bod a ., 89, antron
recliners etl. new • uaed
bedroom aultea, ranges,
wringer Wllh.,.. • ahoea
New llvrngroom auitea
•1 99-11118 tampa. also
buying ca.l • wood atavea
Coli 814-448·31119
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof1. ch11r, rocker. otto
man, 3 llbloa, (oxtro hoovy),
f696 Sofas and chalro
priced from 1286 to fl911
Tabloa, aeo and up to et25
Hldo·o·boda U80 and up
to 18110 , sofa beds f148,
Rechnora. 1225 to 1375..
Lompa from 121 to et 25
pc dinlttla from et 09 .. to
435 7 pc 1189 and up
Wood table with lix chaoro
12115 to 11•11 Dftl&lt; 1110
up to •2211 Hutchoo, 1550
Bunk bocl complete with
matt,.IMI, f276 and up to
•3911
Baby bods, et 10
M•nreiHI or box aprrngs,
full or twin. Ul firm. IBB
and Hfl Ouaon aata. 1225.
4 dr choato e49 ·8 dt
chasti, *59 Bod from••·
t20 and 126 . 10 gun· Gun
cabinoto, U60 Gu or
eioctrlc ranges -375. Baby
mattfllaal, 125 &amp; Uli, bod
framoa UO, 121 &amp; 130.
king frame 150 Good aaloction of bedroom awitea.
r9ck~n. matel cabineu,
hladboarda U8 &amp; up to

•a a

Uaed Furmture •• 5 pc
dinette, hood boards. and 2
bedroom au•tes 3 milaa out
Bulevlllo Rd Open 9om te&gt;
15pm. Mon thru Sat
114-446-0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahert. dryers refrt gera ~
tors, rongu Skaggs Ap
phencoa. Upper River Rd
bolide Stona Croat Motel
614-446-7398

County Appliance Inc
GoOd uaad apphancoa and
TV Hta Open BAM to II PM
Mon thru Sat 614-448
1899 827 3rd Avo Gallo·
polls OH
Valley Furniture. new &amp;:
uMd large sect1on of qualIty furniture 1216 Eoatom
Avo Gallipolis

MeyUiig wringer waaher
good cond 878 Call614 ·
258·8B92
electr~c

Tw1n bed, cheat. qu"n
aprlng • mattra11. couch.
chair. recliner. water tank
rocker. dinette aat Call
614-446-3224

Geloxio Boat 1 20 Mor·
Cruiaer. with trailer eJtc
cond, Call 814 268 6413

AI'ARTMINTI, mobllo

Bnarpatch Kennels Profea
a~onal AU-breed groommg
Indoor outdoor boarding facthtlll Engllall Cocker Spa·
nlel puppooo Ca ll 614-388·
9790
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel CFA Htmalayan. Persian
and S1amese krttena AKC
Chow puppoee Call 614·
446 3844 alter 7PM

-Registered

Naw Marlin 30·30modol30
AF f100 00 Call614-843
5218

F11h Tank and Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Avenue ,
Poont PIOIIO Ot, 304-675·
2063 F1ah b1rd1 •nd more

Tyco boxcara, tranemittera
!Ioera yard !rector 84 Model and track Aloo aollong traon
44' cut. 18 HP uaed obout accoaeorloa Call 814-992
10 hours, now cond • 7443
t1,660 Coil 814-3BB· 1---------~9738
Hay for mulching Right
front Iandor for 1977 Ca
Front troln for 74 Chevy mora Coli 742-2536 or
Blazer &amp; 360 rebuilt Chevy 742 2509
motor 200 moloa Calll14
446·0686
1974 Chevy Station wagon
1989 olda 1 old Moytag
Seera froat~ free freezer, 30 waaher, Pat No 1$ Cell
cu ft ••• cond Call 814· 61-4-992-8674
256·80811
1-------~-'

1----------

wtre h11red Fox
Terner father Nattonal
Champion Show dog 18
moo old Call 814-367·
0441

-;;::=:;;==:;===
-:
57

Muso ca l
Instruments

ElectriC gunar G1bson 84
amp ompllfoor $149 00
Coi1614-742-2961

Farm Supplrr.s
&amp; Lrvestock
61

4 Prom dreaaes 11zn 6. 7 9
Exc cond Coil 614 24&amp;
9469 after 3PM

Farm Equipment

Spnng Spec1al 24 x30'x8
With 16 x7 garage door &amp;
serv1ce door $3 888
erected Iron Horae Bldga
61 4 332 9746 collect

Gun for aolo 9MM S &amp; W
model 39-2 black llnloh
pearl handle. Coli 814·2&amp;8·
1825
1- - - - - - - -- - - -

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 35 West Jackson .
Ohoo 614 286·6451

Massey Ferguson New
Holland Bush Hog Solot &amp;
Servtce Qver 40 u.ed
tractors to choose fro(n &amp;
comple1e hne of n&amp;w 8..
uaed equ1pmant largest
selectiOn tn S E OhiQ
18x24 rad bam typo bldg 1
yr old-full of -itern llcli
Moito offar Call 11 4-296
61122.
4 formal wedding oowna
llizoo 8 to 14, like now UO
each Call 814 448·1842
boforo 41'M
Camper top for Dotaun King
Cob long bocl or oquolont,
llko now UOO Cali 814.
245 9381 after 4
Gasoline poworotd woedcut
ter w•th uw blade, heavy
duty, no Coli 814 245
9388 ott.. 4
11 HPiowntroctor4yrs old.
f600 Call 814-248 IJ39e
after 4
Stohl AV 3~ chaon aew. 20 In
bar, apara"chlln ond carrying
coaa 1300 Coli 814·246·
939B otter 4

Pole Buildings Conatructed
for commercial. garages
farm, atorea. etc Any 11ze
!roe aotomatu, cell 304
875-3981
Couch. baby bod end mat·
treae, Solmar olio ae•. 2
trailer beda Cmattresa a box
aprlngo) 304-895 3404

Waaher and dryer. copaer
m•chlne, den fum1ture and
11eroo Evening 304· 773·
64119
Panatonic rHI·to·reel tape
racorder with opeokaro and
Gerrard turntable et 60 00 ,
Call 304·676-1433 after
700PM

English Saddle, Pad and
Bridle. also English Style
ndtng coat alza 1 0. never
worn 304· 411B·1B17
Uaad outo porta at 430 1- - - - - - - - - - Fiamlngo Dr, Kanauga, OH· 21 1n Zenhh colored console
:l tontha of 1 ml N from Rt TV, 19 In RCA colored TV
36onRt 7
Phone 304-875· 1228

Honey extractor 1 h1ve &amp;
other m11e1 bee aqu•pmant
Call 814 258 1579
Sot bunk bods complete
with mauralses good cond
Call814 448 3342
Pick own cornet 90 bushel
J D corn planter 1360
Completo aproy outfit 86211
C•ll814·448· 1186 eftor 7
17 8 cu on GE rofrog gold,
equip for icamlkar no
frost, 3 yra old. UIIO
Heanh Mate wooclburner
lnaart, 1'h yr old UIIO
Blzo IJ Wedding droll • hat,
et26. Call 814·446·8247

1----------...&amp;.----------1
Do
They'll

Judy Taylor Groommg Call
614 387 7220

GE Wuhor. et50 GE
refrigerator {hko oow )
1250 Both guarantood fo r
30 daya Standard bred
horH. 1 year old Coli
614-992-2238

It Every Time

W1ld Turkey Season • buy
Army camouflage surplua
denim - rental cloth•ng Sam
Somerville'• Eaat Ravena
wood Fri. Sat Sun 1 007 00 p m Den1m Jackets
a19 00. F~rttwood Tnumph
motorcycle
2 36x6'8 " out side ateel
doors, center area, glaaa
with wood latice one
24"•6'9 " all wood panel
door 304-876 6662
Lowrey Micro Ganee organ
$860 , Spoldong XL4 golf
clubs and bog $250 call
aftor4 p m 304 773-5177
Roto tiller rotary plow for a
wolk behond Gravely troctor
llko now 304-773 11819
66 Building Supphes

JIVIDEN'S
FARM EQUIPMENT
NEW. long tractors. Ver
m•er round balers. r1kes.
tedders &amp; mowers A com
plato hno of bale handling •
feedtng ICCe11orle1 WIO·
ant, grinder mtxara rotary
t1llers rotarycuttera, blades.
culttvators desc plow• poat
dr~ven . wood•pllttera ,
gates power w•shers to·
bacco tetter, tobacco apray
ar• corn sprayers. truck
racks, aeeden ult &amp; mtn
eral feeders. bunk feeders.
sp1ke tooth harrowa. calf
creeps headgates &amp; corral
panola Wheel Horaa lown •
garden tractor• with tandem
axlaaf And see us for a
complete lme of partl &amp;
aervtcel
USED 2000 Ford. 3000
Ford, 3600 Ford 9N Ford ,
1 255 Ohvor 446 Long. 150
M ~ • 150 MF woth load or .
2·50 MF 166 MF Vermeer
round balers , plows, hayblnes. rakes bushoga. d1ac.
1p1ke tooth harrow. cultiva·
tors tobacco setter. mow·
mg mach1na. Bolens mower
woodburntng atova
We buy used eqUipment!
J1v1den a Farm Equ1pment,
114-446 1676

Baker utll1 ty tool box bed
hts t 1on truck new 6 ft
pull typo bush hog $495
New 150 lb seodor $196
Uaed Massey Ferguson baler
&amp;496 Coli 614· 286 8622

1-Now Allla Chllmora 4 • no t1ll corn ptantet W• c.n
aet up with 74 plate unlto'or
78 aor units both with
monitor• We can tinai'WIIe
new ptenterl intereat fr•~tU
Jon 1. 1988 can on prica
1-used Alha Chalm.,. • row
no•toU com plonter dry r.n,
77 air unlta monitor 13500,
1 uoed All11 Cholmora 4 • no·till with dry hirt, 79 air
units with 1nHC1 boxee,
mon1tor used 1 year.
16.500 1 uaed 8 row no-tNI
dry fort 60 aeries plato unlt1
lnaect Ia herb bo•••..
13 000 Can bo cutto 4 row
U, 500 1-uaod B row notill 70 aorooa ploto uollt;
msect •tuch. dry f.n.lllzer.
end transport U , IIOO C•n
be cut down to different row
wodtha 1 now 2 row 3 tJOird
no· till wtth 7• plate unha •
onaect boxes f1 ,900 1 ulld
2 row 3 poont no· till with 70
ae nea plata untta 1nd lneeot
boxer •1~00 Rem•,...
Alios Chalmers waa tho flr.n
company on the merketwtth
a no till planter They all
have the atrongelt &amp; meat
aucceuful voraltilo pion~.,
on the market. Can bo
ap1ced from 20" row SPIIC.·
ong to 40" Your au-lzed
Allis Chalmers • N- Hoi·
land Dealer lor -thlo area
Kaefer• Svc Canter .
St Rt B7. PI PI Ripley Rd
Wa are 13 m1 S of Ravenawood Bridge 304· 816
3874
1981 MollOY F0111uaon t 60
d18HI tractor aleo, lulh
Hog plow ond dlac 304·
675 362B
82 Wanted to Buy

Rototlllon. prefor Troybilt,
but wll buy any make, any
aozo Callt -614·693-8831
Would hko to buy 110 bolnol
good hay Call 614· 2811629
63

Livestock

1·3 yr oxc blood llnoa Call
Slate Run Farm•. Jeckaon
Oh 614•2B6·1787 or 114·
2B8 5385
Bently Pig Sole Wed April
24th 7 30PM Foyotto
County Fa1r Grounda Wa
ahongton CH Selling 160
head of Ouroca. Hamp
Ouroca t:roaa bred Barrowa
• golta Roger Bently 513
584 2398
Boat Lottie Club Lomb Solo In
Ohoo Soiling 100 Kaaetar,
Sprl!'klon, Schloclltar and
Cor,..tt Lomba Soturdloy.
Aprol 20th, 10 30 AM 11 Dan
Schlrchter Farm. 10187
Pra1r1e Road Wllhlnoton
CH Ohoo Coli 814·..28·
6726
4· H Suffolk mai1cot lambl
Taylor &amp; Taylor. Rt, 141 ,
Aroboa 614-643·2216
28 ragiSI-d polled H-·
ford cows with cal-. mora
to freohon Also 10 hell. .
brad fer faH CIIVII Yoorilng
hoofora ond buill 985-3944

At stud. cutt•a. 0 -Ton,
Dondee, reg11tered peunt.
16·1 , grode t75 00. ~II·
tl&lt;ed etOO 00 304·882·
2782
Reg1atered Charla•• bull, clill
after 7 PM 304-875 244~ •

54 Misc. Marchandlee.

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT SALE;
Rt 35 West. Galhpohs •

35

Used Tractors, Krn1 ' :
Kutter Equ1pment. Hay ;
Tools of all ktnds.
We Buy, Sell 8o
Trade Dally
•

446-9777--446-2484 .
'

.

Ford 9N tractor new tune
up p11nt. ru na good W •
heavy duty 4 ft bullh hog
et .B60 Cell 614 288 ·
8622
International 340 tractor
PS. live power 3 pt drew
bar 3 bottom plowa,
82.395 Call 814 · 286·
6622
3000 Ford dleoel tractor I
ft bush hog bre nd bu s h hog,
3 bottom plows, odJuallble

Maaaey Ferguson diac ,
$4,895 Call 614 288·
6622

•

Mitchell Rood 2 bedroom
apt . utility room. water
lumlahod Call 814-379·
2248
1' " - - - - - - - - - - 9moll opt fer ona Nlco &amp;
ctoan, In Galllpollo Coli
814-446·3111 1

NEW AND USED MOBILE
Rivaraide ,.ptl Middleport
HOMES KESSEL 8 QUAL· Houaa. 2 bdr atvvo, rwfrlg • Speclol rotH for Bonlor
•lTV MOilLE HOME SALES, garden opoco f75 depoolt, Citlzona e130 Equal Houo
'4 Ml WUT. GALLIPOLIS
.168 mo loc~ted 13 White ing OpporJunltloa 814·
:RT 38 PHONE 814 446· Av'- Coll448 ·3170
992·7721
7274
I -_;__ _ _ _ _ _ 1- - - - - - - - Four bedroom hou• In
•1172 Schultz ..,,. good Racine, no pati Call 814·
jiOnd Call 814·218·1922
949·22113

•

VANGUARD PAINTS
Quality you can trust
Ebenl:)ach Hardwa re
Pomeroy Ohio Call 614
992-2811

Knouff FirewoOd Split 96%
hardwoods You pick up or
we deliver HEAP vendor
814- 25~ 6246

range, good
cond harvest gold, 150
Call 814 245 931111 after 4

1----- - - - -

'

Calhoun modol480flrtliQI'
epraader ~ holds approa&amp;.matoly 1 ,1500 lbo Caiiii4B·
2602 ott.. 8 OOPM
•

Color TV , eea 00 4 rolrig
eratora.* 75 00 and up
Eloctlc range, f95 00 Au
tomatlc washer, 1149 00 3
dryora . f96 00 ooch
1 6.000 BTU AC, 1200 00
Gao rongo, f811 00 Call
614·992 223B

Trailer Iota for rent. aewer
and water furnllhed. will
take one •m•ll ch•ld 304876 1078

30..

Nice 4 bdr houao by owner
1 acre lot. 5 milaa from Pt
Ploaaant Call 814 448
1675
Muon •
room•. 2
garage ,
.• 35.000

1-800-992-7900

Two acroa 12x86 mobolo
home County watar Hongong Rock Rd $16.000 Call
304-8B2-3764

Burdette Addn, 2 bedroom,
family room ba.. ment, axe
cond. good neighborhood.
304 46BO or 875· 1982

Four bedroom&amp; kitchen
f1mlly room With fireplace
flnlahed baaement low
eBO' 1 Point PI Hint 304
876-3079. ovanonga
4

Own 50 outlets produo•
in&amp; hl&amp;h profits • multr!
flavored popcjlln. Your
total rnvestment onlr
$18,000. You won't belreve the profrts, part or
fulltime. CALL RIGHT
NOWI

1971 FrHdom good cond
Call 814-2118-8620

2 bedrooms, lurnlllhod. air
condotloned GoOd. ciHn
condition New Haven,
WVe BB2 2468

3 bedroom bOuMO

l

CEfHERS

1971 Oakbrook 12x60, 2
bdr . 111,200 Caii614·3BB
B259

Appracloto *29.1100, Glen
Thoma Coll814-9811·31171

Busmess
Opportunoty

'

Furniahed Rooms

Farm Equipment

Tobacco ....., • hey-··
tor Coli 1114· 2118· 1417. ,

Country Oak tableo, chairs,
cupboardo, daakl. lea boxoa
Conklu. Tup-o Plolna Rt
7
Hand crafted end
flniollod

R•ntal apace fo r trevel trail·
era. campera fold ups Wa
ter. aew'er, electric cable
hook upa Coli 304 773
6661 oftor 6 00 p m '

u•• garden apace. garage.
1 'IJ bath, ottic Must See to

15 rooma bath utlhty room
11orm wmdowa end doora.
aluminum 11d1ng, new roof

50 INSTANT
PROFIT

14•70 1982 Kirkwood on
ranted downtown lot Pre
vloualy prlcld e17,500 Wilt
conalder re•aonable offlf'
Call814 448 0208

81

Uoed rolrlgarotor, table ond
4 chairs, lovo-t, 8 pc
MCtlonal, meHrHI lnd bax
oprlnga Corbin • Snyder
Furniture Call 814 446
1171

Mobile home lot. 12' xl50' or
smaller. *715 water paid 4th
&amp; Neol. Galllpoloa Coli 448·
4418 oftor 7PM

3 bdr home 1n Vdlege of
Chollor,Ohlo, TPC water.

Three bedrooms, central air
vmyl wall paper. carpet
throughout, Well enauleted
new paint. attached garage,
gaa outdoor grell. awnenga.
mony ••traa Cell 614!446 :
26B3 tol 5 OOPM after
8 OOPM calt 614 - 246 ·"
6BI59

MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY

101

Houn for aele by owner.
Nlco 3 bdr homo, full
boaemont, goll heat. all
carpet, nice kitchen. Itt·
ached garoge. goOd location
feeing nver with garden apot.
I~ 900 Block, coty Can help
finance Call81 4-448-2573
or814 448 · 1171

22 Money to loan

21

' I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
USHING CO recommonda
th•1 you do bua1neaa with
Penon to transport ma to ~oplo you know, and NOT
Parkaburg 4 dayo, my cer or til aand money through tho
youra. 304· 8711-1348. 8·10 • mall until you have lnvoatl
gotod tho offering
or evenlnga

TOR:

3 bdr houao 2 flroplocoa.
swimming pool. garage ,
••c location Commorlcal
lot 80•12B Jackson Avo
Commorocal tract 36 ocrn
Sandhill Rd Call 304·67611104 or 876-6388

jdba, farm work Roaaanoblo 1-:=-:--:-:------,,-...,....-retea Call 814 448-8541
31 Homes for Sale

JOIN THE ARMY NA·
TIONAL GUARD GOOD
PAY GOOD BENIFITS ED ·
UCATIONAL ASSIST·
ANCE. Con 304 678-39150
or 1-800·842-3819

Help Wanted

Flatwood area-Pomeroy 4
bdr , FP, BM coiling, vonyl
11dlng alum windows. 17
ICrll IVIIIIblo Cell , 814448·23119

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-0-3

Uaad · rafrlgarltor good
worlclna oondltlon 1711 Coli
114-2(1-8388 ottar 4

For rent Sl-.ping Rooms
and light houaa kHping
rooma. Perk Central Hotel
Call 614-446 0756

46

w. Va.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

Houaehold Qoods

54 Mise Merchandise

Hera·• your opponun1ty to
become IIIOCiated With I
loader In tho Advertlain!J..
Specialty Industry Soli Co
Ianden. Pans and Gaftt to ,
local forms on a lull df
part-time beals Weakly
Commia11ona No mvest·~
menta No collections Olir
76th yeor of prompt.
fnandly tarv1ca Rated AAA1 For more 1nformat1o"writo Kevin Puka NEW
TON MFG COMPANY.
Dept C1875 Newton ~
Iowa 50208

23

46

Houaa for 1111 4 rme a.
bath. trailer hoOIIup, village
of Crown City f1 2,900
Coli 814-2&amp;6-806B

vt111 mow yards and do odd

Application• are now being
accepted lor tho pooltlon of
pool manager at tho Middleport Municipal owimmlng
pool for the summer
montho Applications are
available et the meyor'a

lilspoMiblliti• of !Itt Dtln
lit. SIIPtf'lisiolt of all liCit·

IIItllt and twtlt11110n of flculty: CUrrlCIIilll dtwtlopflltlll: ilewlopnMirt and -

11

151

Apartment
for Rant"

Efficiency apartment
downtown Pt Plea.. nt Fur·
nlohed ond utHitloo pold
Depoolt roquorod 304 11911
3480

Houaa for Solo 82 Lincoln
Bt, ., 2,600. •naoda aomo
ropolr Coli 814· 268-1 773
after 5pm

$3 00
$400
$700

Up tq 16 worda
One day onsertlon
Up to 15 words
Three day onsertoon
Up to 16 Words
Sox d.ay onsertoon
(Average 4 words per lone)

We are look1ng for women

lllltsidiad COIMUiity c:ol·
ltp llilllin a prl¥,ltt blcca-

'-tlcol'--•

Gallle County
Area Code 614

44

Furnlohod offlclan~y opt,
ono poraon, private. utilities
Included •teo 00 month
304-6711-2083 or 875·
8188

Houaa for aale In Jackson
County. Ohio II mlln 1bovo
Thurmon off Rt 35 on Co
ftd 41. Bloomfiold Twp 2
bdr , baoamont, attic,
garden apace, lorgo back
yerd1 good community,
acro11 from Bloomfield
achool Call 6l4· 258-6261
oftor 8PM

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exc han ges ...

71 -AutosfQrSal,.
72· Trucks fer Sale
73-Vane &amp; 4 WD
7 4-Motorcycles
75-Boeta &amp; Motors
76 Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77· Auto Repair
78-Compong Equipment

81-Farm Equipment
62-Wantecl to Buy
6 3-Loveatock
64-Hay &amp; Graon
86-Saad 8o Fertohzor

WANT ADS

• FOR GREAT BUYS

•3

&amp;

41-Houses for Rent
42-Mobole Homes for Rent
43-Farms for Rant
44 Apartment for Rent
45-Furnoshed Rooms
46-Spaca f~. Rent
4 7-Wantad to Rant
48-Equlpment for Rolli
49-For lease

1 1-HelpWanted
1 2-Sotuated Wanted
1 3 Insurance
14-Busoness Tralnong
1 6 Schools
1 6-Radoo. TV &amp; CB Repaor
1 7 Moscellaneous
18 Wanted To Do

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r ,I IIII

Rentals

Services

-. .

Estate

61-Houoehold Goods
62-CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment
6 3-Antlquea
64-Miac. Marchandose
56-Buoldlng Supplies
58-Peta for Sale
57-Mullcallnstrumenta
58-Fruita 8o Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

LAFF-A-DAY

Graen Township naw 2 atory
or 5 bdr formal dlnlngroom, utility room. 1 1&lt;i
bath, gar•ae. concrete drive.
nice lot, 4 Yt mlo from
Gallipolis on Rt 141 Will
conalder mobile home a1
trade In Bargain pnced.
1&amp;2,600 Coli 81 4-4411·
8038

1\'it: r cII it'! lilt :;t:

1 Card of Thanks (paod on advance)
2-ln Memory
(paod on advance)

Homes for S1l11

-4

Tribune - 446~2342
Sentinel - 992~2156
Register - 675-1333
. Announcements

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

54 M1sc Merchandise
Camont blpck, oil alzu,
building '""toriala GoiUpolia
Block Co, , 123\fa Pine St ,
GafllttoUo, Ohld 411831 Cal~
114-441 -2783

'

IAontgon•y Ward Munlh of Aprl %-'a

Peta for Sale

HILLCftEST KENNELS
loardlng all breads Haatad
Indoor-outdoor focllltloa
AKC Dollart'ilan pupploo
ltud lhnrlce CaliS t ll-448·

n11

·

ALL APPLIANCES ON SALE NOW

ll1crowne ovens $229 88. 25" console color TV SHUt.
refn1erators washars, dl')'ers, many more to choose boill
11 hp ndtnl mower $999 99 shoppona pd , push moWirs
start at $169 99

NOWI 60 ORIGINAL
CABBAGE PATCH DOLLS 1 39.99
56&lt; &gt;

..
,

:

Now offertnl (FREE) 25 1nch color IV With tile purcillsuf
TV satellite w/ deul 900·02 recttvers, IITI 2100 ICtllll·
tor 1000 L N C. also rncludts 8 ft. spuallninJI dlsll
equal to 10 It d1sh, 1nstalltd rndr fer J1111 !of $21tl•. ,
Come tn, pick up 1 salu catllOIUI- do JO!if ..INillllt ,

hoft

•
Call us now for frtt dtfllonstrthon of a pwt Ill
dtsh bro111htrnt01'0Ur hu1111- Financ~t~~alllllll~...
SPRING VALLEY PWA-441-0io7

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Page-0-4-The

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Times-Sentinel

Real Estate General
•

It takes only
a miracle

I

NORTH

71

,Aurtos for Sale

.

.WE
NEfD LISTI
Co. Listinas C1ll: Cheryl
Apartment
for Rant

•

Autos for Sale

71

J

I
I

OPEN
HOUSE
CHAIOLAIS HILL$ LAIE ESTATE

Eor of corn. •2.50 per
bushel. Cell 1114·843·5218.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER
200 Second Street
Point Pleasant , W. Va.

r&amp;n11.

Round bolea for oole. Modo

~77 .

f15.00 eoch. Coll614· 742·
2592. Gory Harper,

18711 Ford LTD. f495. Auno
ood. 8omo rulrt . .Call 814·
82-31140.

l

adjusted income under HUO Section 8 program . To quality
for the r.duced rent your in(ome must be a maximum of
$13,250 per year for one penon ond $15 , 100 per year for
o couple .

SWISS CHALET .
2.4_4 tree rimmed acres

Transpurl~ll!ln

All Ufllifles Included In Rent
beept Cable Ond Telephone
Limited number of apartments available for persons 40
yeors of age and up .

ch•lr

etectric

Truck• for Sale

74 · Motorcycles

'711 Shon Wheel bol8 Ford
pickup, 361 auto. needs
p•int

and

body

1981 Honda 750. cuotom. 1981 Honda 900. super
2,700 mi., podded alaoy bor, 1por1 6,700 mlloa. excellent
exc. cond . Coli 614·367· condition •2.000. 304-468·
0394.
1883.
73 Honda 760CC 4 cyl .. 1980 Honda CM400A oa ·
fully dres1ed •. garage kept, coHent cond. All matching
good cond., consider trede. ICCe11orle1, windthleld .
$700. Coli 448-9265.
1981 Hondo CX600 Daluxo,

wo rk,

f900.00, 304-1176-4181 .

73

Vans &amp;

4·w.o.

Factory rail dune o buggy·

ahorp. 1700. Call614-245·
9398 after 4.

th•ft drive, water cooled.

Hondo CB '660 with 2 he1 wlnd1hlold and lugggao
helmets It intercom . Must rack· backra1t. Exc. Cond.
1011. Coil 614·446·8663.
304-8811,33,3.

1 982 Ford Bronco 4x4, no
engine. tome bod'y damage.
4 tpeed tranami11ion, AM FM 8 track , cuttome

84 Honda 3 wheeler, like 1SBO CR 250 R Honda. ·
new. Coli614·388·9991 or UOO. 304-882-3389.
614-388·8823 .'

·whoell, t2,976.00. Call bo·
tween 7:30 AM and 9 PM,
304-875 -ij421 .

82 Honda CB 900 Custom.l ===a
= ====:=::
Blue. &gt;~~indehleld, shall 75
oats and

'

1979 ~eep CJ 7. 62.000
mllel; New top; new ex·

drive, oil cooler, cruise coil·
trol, custom back relt.

hautt. new tire1. Call 614·

SUNDAY, APRIL 14, 1985

1:00 - 3:30,. P.M.

'

Wiseman leal, Estate Agency - 446-3644

6_75-1&gt;679
1981 AMC $pirit.
2 dr.,
hotchbock, PS. PB, AM·FM .

Office Hours : 9 o.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Friday or call for
'"
appointment .

160

ttereo, •lr, tilt. 4 tpd .• great

gas_oovor. Priced to 1ell: Cell
614·246·6040'iifter
5PM
- ..
.
. . .,, .
~

foil ow ·Signs
.
to ' 0. J. White ·Rood
to

the. .La~i
Sign
.
...
~

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ADDISON TWP. - P~om Trot Ad. - 93
acres, m(l, all woods, old barn cin property.
$21,900.

for Sale

$1 BOO. Cell ,614-992·
7598.

'74 Chevy van. 360 motor
*800. 304·676-5889 after
6:00.

Kowuaki · KZ400 : King· cond., Call814·266 -8413.
Queen seat. padded •JsaY

'79 Chevy Van, exc cond,

r.tlro. A· 1 condition. t560. with top, 90 HP Mercury

auto, cruiae control, fully
corpotod. AM·FM , phone
304·676· 1035 or 676·
41168.

74

Gela.~eie Boat 1 20 Mer·
Cruis•r. with trailer. exc.

bar. wlndthield, new chain.

161/z' Thundercraft tri·hu\1

Ce 11 814-992-6685.

with power trim, less then
50

hr1. on motor. Dilly

I I" K

) I I

K: J

tNAUMUTt

T~eY 5A i t::'
'THE I!IACHE.L0/11::
WA~ t.JEVER 'TH 1'5 •
Now arran~Jtt'tne eire*' lefte~s to ,.

__

torm the sUrprtse answer •. as sug- •
-

goitod by the above ""'"""·

Answerh•,.,"t I
Yesterday's

I

I X.) - r XI I X)",

Jumbles: LIVEN BROIL TINGLE MARROW
Answer. How the ~r fish 2~1 hooked-

WITH HIS OWN, I.I E

1981 Virago 76P Yamaha. trailei--exc. cond. Call 614·
exc cond. mull sell , 304· 446-8096 after 5PM ,

676-2119.

--------1878 Sea Star 18 It , tri·
1981 Yamaha SECA. 760. haul, 90 HP Mercury, power
Extra good cond, 304·570· lift and trim, t3200, firm ,
2186.
Coll614·992·5380.

Motorcycles

..

1983 Kawasaki KX80 $560.
3904-773·5226.

· , Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Brick Hoene For Sale
or de

BEAUTIFUL.

PRICE
TO $54.900 -Immediate posses·
sion. Vel)' nice 3 bedroom home with full basement.
Includes: 2 fireplaces. family room, equipped
kitchen, 1l'l baths, natural gas heat, central air plus
16'x32' in-ground pool. Large lot off St. Rt. 7.
.
#769

5 BR, all brick; 1 acre more/le... Completely
remodeled, 2 full bath•. full-size basement.
carpet throughout. extra nice kitchen. 24 ft.
of cabina1a. Plenty extra large cloaeti. ·
28x42' unattached brick garage.

••le. excellent conu.•8o. Col1 ' 814·

dltlon,
448·118111 or 614·246·
61144 otter IIPM.

1 ~--------

1977 PU, t1, 700. auto. Call
814-;l46·9683,

- CUSTOM CEDAR HOME ON

3,(XXI square fee! living area, fea·
lures. 20'x26' living room with fireplace, dining room,
THREE ACRES.

custom designed kitchen, bleakfast room, 2l'x20' family
room, 4 bedrooms, 2\lz baths, full basement. central heat
and air. A fabulous home for enteltaining or just plain
IUXUI)' living. Near Pomeroy, off Route 7.

HOBSTEnER REALTY

CENTURY 21 Southern Hills R.E. Inc.

,•,

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2 BEDRII. COTTAGE situated along Rl. 5S8 in Rodney. Large
·lot w1th garden -area. Ideal for "starter" or retirement home.
• Price $20,000.
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Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

. • SEUING VOUI. R~Al £STAT£ IS llG IIISINESS..... . . . • •
CAU AN'EXPEIIENCED WOOD IEALTY SALESPEISDMI
, ..
I 1 f'

?

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Ylo "" rl ~?, nil t
1][

LJ\l

, ·\ 1

\t

r.!'li

111,
1!1!1•

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_#208

. \
· ATTRAcTIVE CAPE'COD
. PriCI Reductd to $69,900
Owner wants ID head . south and is leaving, this
corilfortable home behind. Features ~ke4 BRs. 2baths,
~ FR witlt fireplace, ·rormal living room.llld dining room.
eat-in kitd'en ·and';laili.al b;lsemeilt v.;11 bring yoo ba,ck .
· for i Sl!COnd look: Elllras like iri'ground swirin~lng-pOol; . ·
· 3 car garitge and workshop; and gorgeous nver v1ew ·
v.;11 sell yoo. Protected for a full year aher sale.
#238

rou

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DONT LET THIS ONE GET AWAY! - Th~
attractiv~ bi-level home ~ situated on .5 iiCre
m/ 1, just 10 minutes to town and features 3
BRs, 2~ baths, family room, living room and
k~chen. It also offers cari1f!1m&amp; electriC
furnace. 2 woodbur~ers. fireplace, sundeck •
BRAND NEW DUPLEX- Great INVESTMENT and garage. Call today for an appointment.
lor the buyer! Localed on Grah~m School Rd.
Each unrt offers 2 BRs, living room, bath, PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED! OWNER
kitchen witll stOI'e, rein&amp;, DW and displ., SAYS SELL THIS MONTH! - Rio-Centerpoirt
laundry, large carport, central air illld storage Road !Cherry Ridge). Approx. 75 acres
area.
woodland, fronts on 2 r~s. county water
available. $250 per acre.
CENTENARY AREA - Near Green School
24x65 modular home offers a 15x24 LR, galley
type kitchen ItAly equjpped, DR with lovely VACANT FARM lAND - Morgan Twp. 84
buik-in china cabinet, 3 BRs, 2 baths, acres m/1, level and rolling land. Approx. 33
carpeting, tellt air, elec. heat, storm windows acres tillable, remainder woods.
and doors, Bx8 utility bid&amp; Call for an
appointment
QUAliTY IN MRY DETAIL- 3or 4 BR brick
IIAI&lt;E US AN OFFER - OWNERS HAVE home offers a 20x40 family home, 3 baths,
llovtD TO FLORIDA and would like to have kitchen w1th OW, displ., microwave, and trash
their home sold this month. Uke new spl~ level compactor, dinmg room, intercom .system,
is located on Debby Drive and offers approx. centraf air, 2 car garage, deck and a 20x40
3000 sq. ft. of living area plus 2car garage and pool. Over $100,000. Call lor an appointment
ooe of the atea's niCest J)l\ols, .
today.

PRICE REDUCED TO S59.500! - 3BR ranch
on II acres more or less. Pond, full basemen~
family room w~h woodburner, living room,
equipped kitchen, dining room, I ~ baths.
attached 2 car garage.

•

COMI!IERCIAI BUILDING - _
62x80 all steel
construction with fireproof msulajion, has
overhead crane, offil:e and baths. Formerly
used lor boat sales ard repair. Located ~
from Silver Bridge Plaza with access ID the \Jlio
River Potential unlimited.

ONE OF THIS AREA'S BETTER FARMS - 10 I
acres, M/1, lots of lertile bottom land, JlOnd,
new fences, large barn, severaltther buildings,
large tobacco base, modern 3 BR home, 2
batlls. Call for mOfe information.

.

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-. · .· :REA't'f'O.R ~.

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - 102 acres, more or '
CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN UVING - leSs. mostly clean hill pasture, fronts on 3roads
MITCHEll ROAD- GiiEEN.TWP. - .5acres
lARGE ASSUMABLE LOAN - V!Ny attractive near Mudsock.
more or less, County water,
two
home offers 3 BRs, 2 baths, 16116
LR lormal dining room, kitchen, enclosed
poich, new carpet. gas heal 'Mthin walking MUST SEU TO SETTLE ESTATE! dSance of sta-es and school~ Call today.
FINANCING AVAilABLE - EXCELLENT JUST USTED!- This I year old ranch can be
TERIIS - Cape Cod home offers 3 BRs. 2 pu1chased with 5 acres or 20. 1584 sq. ft. d
batlls, kitchen willi eye-level oven, dinette, IN!ng atea, 4 BRs, 2 baths, k~chen, FR, 12x24
RACCOON CIIEEK HOMESITE - Offers living room has beam~ ceilings, ~tility room, LR. dining room, carpeting, electric BB heat
swimming, boating and fishing Lot size is double prage, storm windows, woodburning Andel2fl wooden thermopanes, county water,
100x600 and lw etedric, water tap ard septic stOI'e, city school district Additional land can SW school district
tan~ t.all for more details..
be purchased. Call lor an appointment
GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres more or less
103 ACRES, 11/L SPRINGFIELD TWP, , locatOO south of Mercerville. Approx. 20 A.
Approx. 96 A. tillable. older home has 5 BRs, lOll ACRES. 1/.L ClAY TWP. - Owner tillable. Balance woods, !Dbaceo base. Owner
b,!th, lR, kitcl)en, county water, 40x60 pole financing available. 25% down, 10% on will help finance.
jlldg., 40160 lobaWI barn, various dher balance for 20 years..Call for mOfe inlormation,
outbuildings..
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lt,;,y

446--3 644·

LOW PRICED BEGINNERS HOlE! - 3 DR
ranch style home oilers Ill, kitChen. bllh and
ujjity room. ps heat new sidine. city schools.
Call lor more inlormatior1.
·

HAV£ WE GOT A DEAL FOR YOU!
2 mobi~ homes: a 12xl6 Marlette wrth expando in
excellent shape. 3 B~ complete kitchen and DR. gas
heat AND an older 23x60 New Moon ~ A· I shape w~h
2 BRand mostly furn~hed. Also 20x40 garage.I'Jion a
42'x387' ~~ and all for only $22.500.
#212

Ike Wiseman - 446-3796
B. J . Hairston ...:.. 446-4240
Clyde B. Walker - 246-6276
David E. Wiseman - 446·9655

IIAJESJIC HOlE WITH 40 AC. Of IAIID - 7yr. old 4 OLDER HOllE WITH IIODEAII FEATURES.
BR home. Large living area overloolling Southern Ohio, Overlooking the Ohio River and West Virginia hills. Ju~
of1 Rt. 7. Kyger Creek Schools. Nice living room wnh
Wooded land, lar8J! stone fireplace COfvenienl kitchen, • lireplace.
bath, forced air lurnace, 6 rooms in all plus
21&gt; baths, Crop area, paSiure-mostiY wooded, ThiS ~
l)arlial
basement.
Good garden area with 2.6 acres in
•a quality buil home located on aquirt, peacefulrKlge
area ;Viing th~ property ,a most des~rable location to all. Possible loan assumption. Good buy at $18.000.
#Jll
; live You must see ID belieVe. Ask1~g $96,500.
.
#317
ONE OF AREA'S .GRANDEST HOMES! - This
prestigious brick is located about one mile ~om
downtown on an absolutely outstanding lot2.7acres ol
nature at its besl: beaut~ul old frees, a pond, huge
bot*lers and lovely man~ured l~wn , The house looks
ike a picture frOfO Better Homes and Gardens and
includes a ~rge family room, formal dining and large
living room, eacll of ymich has alarge picture window
of1ering a breathlaking view of the river.All4 bedrooms
are large, 3of which are .connected to abath. There are
kits of closets and two large storage rooms. Beaulljul
new carpet, central air and an in-ground pool add to
comlort and fun of spending more of your time at
home.

.

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. 'LOCATION •LOCATION 'LQCATION
.
The 3 most imiXJrtantleatures to look for wnenbuymg
a home. This location v.;11 please the most d1scnm1nate
buyer - in town on Holcomb Hill 3 01 4 bedrooms,
wife approved country krtchen with fireplace, lormal
dining. 2 baths, family room w~n fireplace, rec, room
and garage. Nice view ot the dty. Owner transferred,
Must sell.

AUractive brick and frame ranch in Northup with easy
maintenance vinyl siding, Offers 3 roomy bedrooms,
large eat-in krtchen, living room and lam1ly room Great
starter'fiome. Nicely decorated v.;th newer carpet.
Large flat yard in quiet neighi:Xirhood. Central a11.
Buyer's Proteclion Plan. $49,500,
•
#201

EXCEPTIONALLY WELl DECORATED in Earty
American charm. 3-4 bedrooms. beautiful living room
with fireplace and fantastic view of the river. Nice
shady lawn runs to the river !fish or have aboat dock in
your own front yard).In town location, very qu~ and
peaceful surroundings. $89.200. ·
#103
T~EE SHADED LAWN with large lot area. Garage, good
garden area, tra1ler space rental. I'Jso that extra space
you always wanted in a home. 3 BRand bath upsta1(S.
I BR and 'h bath, living room, knchen, dining and
family room with a very efficient and attractive
fireplace down, along wtth a full basement and
enclosed back porch, You just can't beat the price. All
for $40,000.
·
#319

.

.

YOU'LL BE IMPRESSED! - Owner has done a
beautilul job redecorating this older 2story. Nothing lor
you todo except mOI'e in. lnch.des 3 BRs. 2 batf1s, LR
and large llitchen .;th beaulilul cabmets and all the
bwtt-lns. Well insulated and easv to heat, low
mamlenance vinyl sidin&amp; 2 car garage and well
mainlamed, landscaped lot, Kyger Creek schools. Pnce
reduced to $55.000.
#210

lit AVENUE. JUST LIKE NEW
Everything- roo!, ~d ing. insulation. floors. walls.
ceiling. kitchen cabinets, appliances, bathroom,
heating. air COfdrtioning--evel)'thing is brand new.
Owner has spent $35,000.00 more on this one than he
~ askin&amp; You must see rt-rt's pertect $125,000 buys,
j(

#106
LOOKING FOR A HoiiESITEf
Here's 7 acres that include small woods, creek,
excellent road frontage and plenty of flatland for your
new hcime. Good location just off Rt. 141 past
Centenary. $10,500? Thafs cheap!
#237

CUSTOII

AR£ YOU J.OOI(ING FOR A IRICk HOllE? Then this may just be the one. Convenientiy
located on Rt 35 West. this home oilers alar!lll
living room. dinin&amp; room, 3 bedrooms, laundry
room, HI batbs. equipped kitchen, carpeting,
cen1n1 air and 1 2 car 11111(1.

1
1
I

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MAN'S DREAM.... is to own arustic cedar ranch
1ust like this one, Perched on a pine studded knoll and
surrounded by 23 rolling acres. Ideal spot for that bass
pond you've always wanted. T~e wife WOfl'l object
txnuse she'll tall in love with the home and there are a
lew. neighbors within yelling reach. Beaullful vll!w of
peaceful countrysides, This is evel)'thlng you'_ve been
looking for and more. We can get you financed,
Reduced ID $79,900.
H20l
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SB.l! 9'1!% ASSUMABLE I.IIAN! - This 3 BR home oilers kitchen
living room, dining room, nice family room with
stone fireplace and lots of v.;ndow~ gas lli'At,
cent air, carpeting. Price ~uced to $44,900!

. PRICE REDUCED' will really tall in love with .
this lamrly onented home when you step ms~e.
Owners have putthajspec1al touch on the inside which
we're sure will agree w1th anyof!e's. tastes Qua[lfY .
· ~;onstr u ctlon t~rOIJgho!ll ,hou'if: hardwgod IIQOrs. very , •.
attractive knofty pi~e eal-10 kitc~en, li(lZY fam1ly room ·
with warm briCk lireplate, ConvemeniiQCai!On to town
'or hospital in super nerghborhood. Owners anxious to
sell. Will consider liler.
#233

REAL
. : . ESTATE

~

MRY

DRIVE- 3 81
Other lo.tur., include llitchen
w!'\Ni, d~pl., range and refri&amp;. lR, FR. I ~
batlls, fuH basement 10x20 covered patio,
attached garage, fenced backyard, gas hea~
cemral air, Call for an appointment

Motors

985-4254.

ONLY 2 YEARS OlD .
• Hardly broilen in. This very altL"t;tive brick ranch hasa
• Itt tJ offer: 3 spacioos bedrooms, 2 baths, lormal
entr~nce. living room ard dining area:family room and
• an out of this WOI1d kill:hen. Heated with enerr1 saving
gas ard woodbuming furflfl:e. Home resting on I acre
• al ground which includes yoorkshop, Qlirden area and
nice yard. Th~ is one you don't want to pass up.
$76,900.
#244

MICK -

:

....·-·----

COMTEMPORAAY
3 living Levels
4 BRs &amp; 291' Lake Frontage

"TWIN RIVERS TOWER

·
Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

recliner

72

Kenworthy Seed Corn.
phone 304-876·16Q6.

Enjoy the security and comforts that are afforded with our
restricted b;uilding entry system. emergency ·calls system,
lounge and community room. Planned activities and
s9(ial events provide o relaxed and e:njoyoble en·
vlronment.

200 Second Street

many new pertt.

•1600. Coli 814-949·

of orchard gre.. end clover.

Housing for the elderly and handicapped·. Rent Is 3(W. of

· lporlocar, l~;;:=;::=~===

black. new tlrtta. brake••

Hay · Grain

Truck• for Sale

1980 Toyolo SR e with Leer
topper, fully equipped, AC,
U,IIOO. Call 1114-882 '
at•a oftor 6.
. • .

11178 Pontiac Sunblrd. Ex- ohocka, exhouot 1yotem.
oollont body. A·1 engine. 8, motor, .low mllooge. Coli
eyl. Call614·992"8722 af- l-:-11-14_·_44_11_·_92_4_0_._ __
tot 8:00P.M.
· 984 Ford Rongor PU long
whiel baoo. 11.000 miloa.
MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE cru11o, tilt, olr, 6 1pd., V·ll
13187 90% rellored. 8 cyl .. 3 engine. AM·FM cuootto.
ap_d ., onolno completely cl0tt1 interior, overhe1d map
overh•uled, looks new. light &amp; clock, has tunnel
e'4,200. Coli 81.4-448· cov•r and 1hell. Colt
~111 or 814·2'45·11544 of .. s12.000 ooking 18.700.
· tor 8PM.
· · CoR Mr, Vonco otter lOAM
•
1114·4411·7441'
1870 Chovollo. gold end
blook. 360 engine, outo FORD 1983 DUMP TRUCK
t61no., new tires, Cralgor alnglo oxlo, 292 V·B. 4 1pd..

'

.·

Detou~

~

ALFAFA·TIMOTHY HAY 32
acrea. 1tendlng. averaged
last year 3. 7 ton• per acre.
High queHty. Con 614·44.8·
8818 or -814·246·5544 af·
tor 6PM.
'

"77 Jllymouth Volorlo
t690..cJ0:' • :111 • FotrJ.....Ven
.corpotod, .good ohapo,
.2 . 000 . 00 . 304 · 878·
3878.

72

2811 Z
AC, AM·FM. oc,
Trucks for Sale
n.iloo. Cell 814 -4 4 1 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - 1978 Rongor 4 wh . dr.,
4817~

WANT ADS

64

Autoa for Sale

1973 Chryaler N-port. 1879 Grand Prix, black. flOO. brown llinyl3culhlon
U80. auto. Coli 814·248· outo tron1mlllion. AM.FM aofo t100. d!yolnk·bor *26,
81513.
lrtoroo. air, cruloa, exc cond, . 'Toihoblo TV 13' color f26,
304·882·27911.
Zenith 19' color t75. Pono·
19811 VW with newly robullt 1--------- sonic 19; BW ti!O. Coli
engine, 11100 u lo or •70o 1882 Mercury Zephyr. 4 1114·992·6149 otter 6.
with paint Job. Coli 814· door, 8 cyl, AC . Auto, PS,
246·8388 otter 4.
PB, cruloe. AM·FM. new 78 Datsun PUKing Cab. Coli
radlol, f4,280.00, 3,04· 111•·288-8278.
83 R....,t K 2 dr.• S.E.. 273-8151 oftor 15.
utrol, mulrt oell. Moko 1-:-=-------- Ford F-100 V-8, 3 1pd. std ..
·offer. Coil 814·""11·1&amp;04.
1878 Chryaler Cordoba. exc U,260. Soo to oppreclote.
cond, 4 new tires. now Call 814·448-9408 otter
1e Pontlec CotoHno nur oxhou1t aynem•. f1 ,1100.00 6:00.
.,.rfect cond .. t1 .200. Coli firm . · 304 · 676 : 1 981 - - - - - - - - · l c1114-•411·1504. ..
V-30 Ditch Witch Ditcher.
19119 ChillY 1-ton dump. 18
715 Caolero block. 84.000 1984 Cou1111r XR7, AM-FM ft. Todum hti\IYdUtytrollor.
•ctuol ~Ho1, go0d cond. Call cuoatta. power boo1ter. Coli 1114·367· 7773.
~or 1!. 151 ..·21UHI003.
loodod, low mHeogo, oxc
cond. 304·773·9134.
1984 ChoiiY ton truck . 6
1.i715 ChiiYrolot atotlon· 1--------- cylinder. 4 speed . Auno
W.gon. Coli 1114·388· 1979Dotoun2·10otondord good. Coli onytlmo .
1'21.
ahift. oomo ruat, rune good '426 .00. 992·11887...
f1&amp;00. 304-468·1883.
'84 "•nger XL, new tire•.
1183 Olda CutloN Supreme
AM·FM QIIINit, oxQIIIIont
llko new, low mlle1, 22
truck , 9,800 mil88 ,
MPG, - · 18,200, Nil
t6,600 .00. · Phone 304 '
47,800. Coli · 1114·4•11·
875·3288 . .
03112.
7,2 Plymouth Sotolllte 31 8 84 Rollont K· 300 mlle1, 1941 ChOIIY truck. exc
•~gino, runa good. body "'ko ovor poymonto. 36 1hape for , restorl.-.g, price
rough, UOO or moke offer. mpg. 5 veer warranty. 304· f600.00, Motol office deak
t100.00. 304-678-24011,
-Coli 814·4411·7215.
882e2220,
·
outo

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

,__.~-.....

71

1----------

•K

TIIU!D OF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLSP
LET US PAY THE BILLS I

Autos for Sale

Wall·•·way

Real Estate General

bucket aMtl, new · pelnt •
tlfll, new ahocka &amp; br1ka1.

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

81 Flroblrd block W•Whlto
Iotter tl'", t·top. 81 Dodge
Omnl 38,000 mi .. 4 cyl .
outo. w-olr, t2,4150 firm .
Coli 81 4·281·151122:

pow. wlndowa &amp; doorlocka.

AC. outo. trona .. tilt whool.

14.1986

.
71

-------

1982 AMC Spirit 2 tone, 4 1977 Buick Century for oale 1982 Chovotte, 211,000·
spd .. AM·FM tope. aunroof. 3ood cond, Call 1114·.388· ll'lioa. Soli or trade lor QllttleColl 111 ... 986·3881 .
now tlroa, f3,898 . John'o
331.
Auto S.lei; Bulovllle Rd.l--- - - - - - - 1114·448-4782.
11171 olda 88. 88000 mll.o1. . Would like to do hou ..
good condition. e400.00. cleonlng. Call 614·89;l·
1878 Grond PrixSJ, PS, 'P8. Coli e14·98'2·6013.
8359 oftor 4:00' pm,
• .

North let a IO·spot and a couple of
nines sway him to open a doubtful
Coli 81 4·2158·8439.
hand. When West overcalled with one
spade, North raised his part!M!r's
PLYMOUTH VOLARE 1977
heart suit because "It was his turn to
318 outomotlc, PS, PB, 4.
door. excellent condition,
bid." South now returned the lavor.
SOUTH
f1,450. Coli a 14· 441·
Liking . his fit wilh partner 's
tJ
8818
or 814-246· 5644 If·
diamonds, he went 'right to four
.K8653
tor 8PM.
hearts. Fortunately, his play justified
t A Q 10 2
tiO 13
tbe aggressive biddin'g,
Cutlaoo Supreme. Call 614·
West led king, ace, and jack ol
843·6127.
. .
Vulnerable: East-West
clubs. Declarer trumped tn dummy
Dealer: North
1881 Mercury Lynx. 4
and played a trump. East won and
Wtal
Nortb East
speed. good tlrea. rune
inexplicably returned a trump,
good, *1998.00. 1977Toy.
1+
Pass
although playing back the. spade
ole Corolla SR 15; 6 apood
~
Pass
queen need not have changed the final
AM-FM, 8 trock ,looko and
Pass Pass
result. When West disc)lrded on the
runs good. •13915.00. 1977
second heart, declarer could see that
Monte Carto VB eutometic.
Opening lead:
he needed a minor miracle to make
Alk for Sandy 11814·992·
7403.
the hand. South cjld correctly analyze
what that miracle might be. He need·
,
1979 Grond Prix. black.
ed to shorten his trump length to that
10. Then be cashed the A· Q of
AM-FM atereo. crulae, elr.
I of E.ast, and wind up in the dummy at
diamonds, played to dummy's spade
excollant condition. Coli
· the end of the hand to play a spade so
ace and trumped a spade. and led his
304-882-2796.
that East would have to trump ahead
last diamond to dummy's king. East
of him: There was only one way .that
had to follow, Now when a spade was
84 Floro; red. 4 · opeod.
would work. He had to lind East with .
played from dlimmy.' East had to
AM ·FM cooaotto, 4 vear
fQur diamonds to the jack. Though
trump in ahead ol South. and the con·
warranty, 20.000 mlloa.
unlikely, that was his chance.
'
tract was made.
;~g~o. Coli 814 • 982 •
Declarer played a diam. ~on~d~to~ht~
'$---~"'"~E~W~S~PA~P~E~R~E~NT~E~R~P~R~IS~E-=A~SS~N~.l--:-~=========
Reel Es1ate General

Bill 446 - NEW LISTING - In town location includes ·3.
BRs, livmg room, dining room, bath &amp; basement. Lots of car·
pet. Gas heal.
Priced at $29,900.-Call for details,
.

44

.

+A963
.QJ 10
•KI8"7
+Qs
WEST
EAST
+KIOU42 +Q7
••
.A972
•1
tJ6S3
+AKJ97
+su

By JamH Jacoby

Bill 444 - OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELU 3 BR ranch situated on
2.35 atre lot m/ 1. l'o$Sible 8% loan assumption to qualified
buyer. Includes lg, eat-in kitchen, separate, utility room. family
nX!m with w.b. fireplace. Call fOf an appointment today'

Foi

l

Autos for Sale

71

James .Jacoby

Broker-AuctiOnHr
can ·446·0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245·9507
Steve ilcGhH.
446· 1255

14,1985

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. va:

buill II yr. old 2000 plus
Ill 2 ICRIS of1 Rt 35. With low, low
· , minilflll maintenance. this fine home has 3
bedrooms. 2bl,ths. sunken FR. 2 ear PIIIJl! plus e.tra
24~30 prelbuildillg. CloSe ID stopp1rg area,
hospital, city school district Call for appointment to see
this one!!! Price reduced to $114,900,
.

-

OWNERS MUST SELL THIS IIONTH
to $A11,900 on this remodeled older
·home In toWn. Features: 4 BRs,.new kitchen and bath,
new carpet. walls, ceiling and wirinllo large fenced
btoltyard No rrm tlai 5411Vice-conveniently locatell
witttin llllking distance to everything. Give . us a
. clll--wners want ~ sold. We'l get you financed.
*303

Price reduced

IIEWI.Y USTED BRICK RANCH offers n~e 'rivel ~,
fi&gt;rne leatures 3 BRs, I ~ bath. DR and one car garage.
Garden space In front of house, Buyers Pr!)teclkin
Plan Kyger Creek schools. $47.00.
.
#232
PRICE REDUCED ON 2 STO~ BRICK HOME. -Ideal
corner Itt IQcation. This home lw old time flavor you'H
fall in love with. Plenty of room lor the largest lamily. It
iooludt!S lormel entra11ce. parlor, living room. dining
room, den, 2 staiiCises and 2 baths. Beautiful trim
enhance hardwood ftoots. New ps lurflfl:e and central

air. Reduced to $89,000.

#202

WE
APOLOOIZEI
We have been so busy
selling homes lately that
we have let our listing inventory dwindle .. If you
have been considering
selling your home, give
.us a call.

WE HAVE
B~YERS WAITING!

YOU CAN BUY THIS ONE RIGHT! - Alittle fixin' up
can till a king way! 2 story home 1ngood state of repair.
Perfect for small or medium s~ed family. J.4 BRs, 111
baths, living room ard family room with woodburner
hookup. Sets oo 5 acres of ground Mth mature trees,
ganden !jlM, and good river frontage with n~e ~h
area 18K18 outbuilding wrth attached carport Home
has new carpet and paneling. 2fireplaces and balcony
(overlooking river). It really has a lot of potential and it
can be bought right at $29,500.
#242
.
PACKAGE DEAL
• Just slllrting out and can't afford large house payments
plus buy fumfture ard appliances?We've got the place
lor you. Very n~e 14x70 iloiiy Park mobile home on 2
ac. of pine studded ground with aconvenient location.
Home features dining' room with parquet floors, 2 B~
and, II\ bath~ plus all appliances and furnrture you
need to gel started. Also, new 2 car gara1111 txJildin&amp;
and many more leatures you'll ' appreciate. $29,900.
We'l get you finlnced.
N247

Bea.utrf~ home
lOcated only
6 m1les lrom town 1n Green
.
love the quiet • •
country~de view.and everything else this_
home has to
ofler. Beautilul k~chen that every w1le w1ll fall m kllle
with : 2 lull baths, woodburmng stove ard large 2 car
garage. Setting on awell-maintained and landscaped 2
ac. 1o1 w~h not too close neighbors. Owner; want to
move south more than ever and ha'e reduced pr~ to
$59,500,
#342

CHARMING 8RICK RANCH - At $59,500, compare
what you get 4 B~ 2 baths, large living room. eat4n
kftchen dining room w/ hardwood floors and fireplace,
spac'llus lamily room with another brick firepla~e and
indoor BBQ. Screened·m pat1o. Excellent ne1ghbor· ,
hood-'walk to town. Don't heshtate-won'tlastatthat
pr~e

··--~-~-·········1--l··········l-1-l··-------------------------------------'
II

.

�-----

-~

____.:__

,.
Pomeroy-Middleport~Gallipolis,

Times-Sentinel

The
fOI Wf: 1om- Wracl
Catll.ut Stort,locattd $ilt·
ill&amp; van~ Plaza. Itt. 35. Goo4
po:ofitlblo busl1101s. moo · &amp;
Wifo _-oliOfl, &lt;auld moh
Pf011111111t •on~ . loro lnforMition tall 4Ai·OJ07. 9:00 to
5:00 245·9391 or 307·7101
tOJI 1• · AU lor Lon or Gtlft.

14, 19815

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

14, 1985
75

Real Estate General

Boats and
(lt1otors for Sale

Reel Eltate General

Raal Estate Geoeral

- 17 ft . Creotliner.

FOR SALE
BY OWNER

'

3 IR FARM HOUSE
To live close to town, have plenty of nei&amp;hbors but
still have a _lot of privacy. On a 2.3ac, manicured lot.
To have thatmalntenence free brick home with 2 car
aarare &amp; full basement. To have that dream kitchen ·
with double oven &amp; all the space y0u'd ever want.
Don 't pass up your chance on this wonderful honie.
It's hard to beat at $69,500.
NIOI

or

(614) 949-2568

Wiseman Real Estate .Agency

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E.r INC.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

..
'

17

REALTOR®

Onguord

;::~:~~1 ;;;;.k'f~;You.

Auto Repair
.

F'r11 Eatlmotoa. 614-985ot174.
.

.

;.z:

..

'EXQPIKINAL VAlli ON CAIFOilfiA _ . RANCH

FOR SAlE BY OWNER-f~G AYAI.AII.E
10% ltm:REST-YAIIAII£ OR AXID RATE
WITH S% DOWN PAYNENT '
Owner has moved to new home in same neilhborhood and
would like to share the lovely Sprina Valley area with some
lucky person who appreciates a well maintained, quality
home. Larce lot, California style bri&lt;k ranch with landscapina and enclosed sinale car praae witH adjacent oHice
area. 2200 sq. ft. livin&amp;area, including tarce livin&amp; room
with fireplace. dining room, family room with indoor bar·
becue, 3 large bedrooms. 2~• ceramic baths. sewina area
and roomy storage in utility room. Storaae area available
in basement and attic area with descendina stairwa1- Car·
petin&amp; throucflout. Most window lreatments.remam. Recant updates include new roof, new asphalt driveway. outdoor tarpetina and indoor painting. Home has been well
maintained and updated with extra Insulation, new
kitchen cabinets and Formica tops, stove and double wall
oven. Dishwasher. disposal and refricerator remain. Qut·
door rec1eation area includes covered patio with &amp;as grill,
b.ltdminton court with outdoor lichtinc. City school sys·
tem, city water and sewer and shopping nearby. Neichbor·
hood Watch in eHecl. Must see to appreciate fine details
ol birch paneling and trim. stone wall in family room and
roominess.
Call Owners At
For Further
·446· 2 734 or
-NK•ssory

:.
REALTORS
• Henry E. Cleland Jr.
. 992-6191 ' - . '•
Dottie turner 992-5692
Jean Trunel 949-2660

HOME - !7 ACRES - ~Ill HOllE HOOKUP :You can have all this and more when you buy this
property. 2 story frame home has 4 bedrooms, bath,
living room w~h woodburrte1 hooku~ kttchen, dtntng.
large utility room, fuel oil f..-nace,:JJ'x30' barn,prage
plus other outbuildings',_tobacco base, located on state
highway. Owner ftnanctng avatlable.
#83]

-

Real Estate

_~E~lTlj '
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(61 4)-992·3326

NEW USTING - Executive
home with 3 Bedrooms. I ~
baths. Very nice 2 story home
in town. Full basement level
lots and dbl. garage. Just
$50.!XXI.
•
NEW USTING - 8 rm. frame.
bath, lurnace, all city utilities.
view of river, Near Kroger's.
Stove and refri ~ For $23,!XXI.
NEW LISTINQ - 2 BR, new
bath, gas heat insulated,
carpeted and full basement
Only $15,000.
50 ACRES - Bath and 7 rm.
horne near Langsville.
•
EAST MAIN - 2 story dbl.
horne. Owner lives down and
rents the sea&gt;nd.
RUTI.AIID - Good remodeled
3 BR home and garage on li,
level lot.
MIDDl£PORT - Business
bldt with 5 rented units.
RMIMEW - 8 rms. fireplace, 3BR, gas furnace and lg.
lot Walk to sctoool and stores.'
BUSINESS BLDG. - 5 rm. tile.
Use as a bu~ness or hoi!M!.
Only $6.500.

NEAR POMEROY - Remo-

deled 3 BR hoi!M!. New bath,

new furnace on sttte route.

POIIEROY · - 2 Bedroom'
flame. some femodeing Near

stores.

42 ACII£5 - Orange Town~- Eltc Barn, etc.
111W IS THE TIME TO CALL US

AT 992·3325.

. .llllltl,
.""~!......
Y_"P . .
HOII\/11(/

flcadqu; 1rter s

."

,_

WORK

camper,

••If

awning,
con'talned,
~&lt;&gt;od cond .. $4.500. Call
,1~·446-2959 .

rantn. locl)l references
furni1htd . Free astimat...

~tove , 26 ft
fai~ed camper.

1603.

. in 1 ulatl n g ·r-oot Int .

g .o o d

304·773·5131.

.

·-

WHOLE WOIIILD?
Aslc Yoursolf This Question-Then Ust With_Us_
..
-

range,
co nd,

Ou1zar , end

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump

•Willis T. loadinll!am. Roa!tor. Ph. Home «6·9539

··

bedrooms.
,
living room, carport, full basement.
woodbunrer, flat one acre lawn. City school distrtcl
Approx. 3 miles from Rio Grande.
INCOME OPPORTuNITY--Owners have retired and
are very an!ious to sell rental property. The 1Jice has
been reduced on th~ business building and 3 mobile
homes. located on 2 lots wiHt all t.Cilities. Th~ property
~ in a prime location and are all presenHy i'erited. Call
today lor-all the details.

WAIIT SIIAJ.l ACREAGE? - Ideal for buiding your
new home or just as a good place for getting away from
ij all. 7.5 acres. more 01' ~ of rolling land. Oriled well,
nral water and septic lank_already installed. Call for
details.

3 LOTS
PLUS 8 ROOII HOME
Heatley Addition to Bidwell.
4 bedrooms. buill-in cabinets. dbl. s/s sink, shingle
root. wood or coal heater.
Apple trees, side porch,
rural waler system. Asteal at
$14,900. You better be the
first.
H622

NtW LISTING - MAKE HASTE - This l bed·
room rancher could ·be yours. Minutes to town.
Walk to hospital and schools. One car garage;.
Beautif~l yard. $55,000. Call. now to see'
11822

HOME IN TH( COUNTRY
7 room house with 3 or possibly 4 bedrooms, kitchen wtth
buill-in cabinets, storm wmdows and doors. Located on state ·
highway. Priced at $39,000. Will consider trade. Call lor your
appomtmenl nov•. '

REALLY AFFORDABLE - tlove right into this
remodeled I\? story home. Srtuated on over 2acres. 3
bedrooms. bath, formal dining. famiy room. Ga1age.
Cellar. City schools. Approx. 1~ miles from city.
$35,!XXI.
~ 11816

WHAT A DEAL-$24.900
Come see for yourself. Cozy
6 rooms and bath, 3 bed .rooms, range, dishwasher,
storage building and '2
cac carport. Kyger Creek
Schools. Large level lot.

N552

#364
LUXURIOUS
Country Estate with .3 Indiana slone fireplaces, including one
in a master suite. 4 BR total, 2~ baths, 112 acres more or
less. Just short distance from Gallipolis. This custom built log
home features nearly 3700 s~ . ft. of beautifully decorated
and well planned living. Stunging living and dining area wijh
beaulilul hardwood floors. The lovely kitchen is fully
equtpped and destgned for convemence. Central heating
and air: Attached garage, includes 5 room caretaker home.
#610

SOMEONE WANTS YOUI HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAlES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CALL USII
VACANT LOT- CITY Of GALLIPOLIS
40'x 130' lot H65 located on Madison Ave .. GaHpplis. All city
utilities. Only $5,900.
.

11620
OJILY $4,300
12'x60' New Moon mpbile home. 51oorils. bath with shower,
nat. gas FA furnace: Buy it and move it or buy~ and move in
by renting the lot it is presently ~fling on. Phone todar.

#626

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots. Nice size bu~dine lots with alll!lilitles there. Lot
size 101.8 by 171.2. Better get one now.
•

m6

sm

NEW USTIJIG- Georp's Creek Road- Nice 3
bedroom home located on approx. ll acre. Large
kitchen, garage, electric heat. A good buy at only
$32,5()0.
.
.

•

COUNTRY. BUT CLOSE - Th~ nice ranch home with '
.1 acre kit is only 3~ miles from Gallipolis, Includes 3
bedrooms, family 'room With fireplace, 1~ baths, nice
large back lawn for garden or recreation area. Green
SchooiiJisirict Financing ava~able to qualifted .buyer.

..

.

.

~3

POSSIBIUTY OF LOM ASSUMPTION - Attractive
home with inviting country selling. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, lar~e dining area, loitthen with d~hwasher,
spacious living room, UQfinished larnily room, 2 car
attached gar11ge, heat pump, central air. lDv(
maintenance. Over one acre of level lawn. Wfhin 8 mie
• of town. City Schools. $59.000.

. COUIITRY ATMOSPHERE - New bi-fevel home
· located north of fie Greode. Beauliful decor
throtJ&amp;ItCM. 3 bedrooms. ·2 baths, dressing room and
bath off large master bedroom, freilelt doers to back
deck off lhe dining room, nice loitthen, large lamiy
room, beautiful carpel 2 car garage.
JUST USTED - MOBILE HOME PlUS I ACR£ Located in Addison Township. 1Z!60' Freedom with 2
new rooms. Large iving room, 3-'4 bedrooms; bath,
~ity. krtchen with range and refriaeralor. Covered
patio on front Some fum~ure included in sale. ..

#839

#815

RIVER VIEW - 4 bedroom raoch with full competed
basement 3 liatlls, family room, beautiful in-ground
pool with deck plus relreshment bar and bath. Garage
in basement level. office area. Central air and heat.
Approx. 2 acres.

!1762
4 BEDROOM- 1\? story frame home. located 3.miles
from town. Eat-in ktchen, bath, living room, partial
basement with garaee in th~ basement level. Home has
new roof; new furnace. Priced tn the 30s.
M709
1984 OOUBLEWIDE 24'x41' - 3 bedrooms. 2 lull
baths, kib:hen complete with appliances. Cathedral
ceiling. prden tub and walkin closet in master bath, all
carpeted, woodburner included. Must be moved from
present location. Call lor more detai~. .

lf167
THE PRICE IS RIGHfl - lots of ''lender I.Dving Care"
really shows in this house. 3 bedroom, 1wo fuM belhs,
formal dining room•. baserneot 2 ~ prage, metal
barn, extra fenced 'lot Much more. St Rt 141.
$37,500.

Galiipolla, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
61 4-4411-4477

I~

REAL ESTATE

Real Estate. General

iiAtlOI

446-4206_ .

.~Canaday Realty

NEW 'LISTING - IIEIGS AREA - Nice remb·
deled 2 story !tome. Located in scenic wooded
area. Home has vinyl siding. 3 bedrooms, living
room, kitchen, bath. Good garden area, some
woods; 1.25acres. Priced at $32.500. Possible assumable V.A. loan.

11120
UTTI£ BUT MIGHTY describes lhis neat and clean I
bedroom home. Alum. siding, storm docrs and
Windows, nice stonae buildit&amp; Ia beckyaltf. VG!Id
be , - lor Yfllllll couple just
slaltlld tw pd
renlll ptaperty. Priced II only $13,!100.

.Z..

·We'll do itl Call 814-256·
6261 after 6:00PM .
limestone, gravel. sand. fill
dirt and coal delivered. 304 ·

675 -4412.

General Hauling , dump
trUck for ~ire. you· call, W8

haul. 304-675-3190 .

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

Mi-al Wells,

W, Ya.

Country Loft
Gift Shop.

R &amp; M Furniture Menufac ~
turing, St . Rt. 7, Crown

Open Tues., Wed., fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun 10 til S
Monday 10 til I
Closed Thursday
Owner, Sarah fillhtr

l,Jphostered.

End of Rt .7 by leics· Hill!
.school . Turn lett. 1nter Town·
ship Rd.79 and past driv-y
on ri&amp;ht.

1163 Sec.

Ave ~ .

Gellipolia.

61 4·446· 7833 or 614-4461833. -

City. Oh. Call 614-256·
1470. call Eve. 614-4463438 . Old &amp; new

I,ONIIII L mntS
.• roktr
445-4206
'

-

SOIISliiiAT
(S..,I GIINIS
.-

'

CATHY ClAD

IURDETTE

Assoc.
Assoc. ·
44i·2707 Evtninp 311-1111 Eveninas
~

JIM 'S PLUI\IIBING &amp; HEATING. At. 1 . Box 365. Gelllpolia. Coll614-367-0576.

...

.

OfAct - LOCAltD liM Clots Stilll. .lackson. Ohio.
......, by FI£D &amp; ALta HILL - &amp;14-~"·

IINfQt

Good- 1 E)(cevatlng. base·
ments. footera, driveways.
uptlc tenkl, landscaping.

Call anytime 614-446·

4637, Jamesl. Davison, Jr.
owner.
for water, gas.
drainage line1,

THIS VERY ATTRACTIVE bric~ bi-level with - 3 '
bedrooms. lamily room w~h fireplace 01' woodburner
hookup. 2 baths, 2~ car garage, tftermopane WindoWS
with marble ~lis, heat pump, central ar plus 2~ acres,
more or less. Everything needed to make you
appreciate th~ home. Pria!d in the upper so·~-

446-8508 or
2775.

L-==SU===N==
·o==A==Y==cP==U==Z==Z==L==E==R=----.JI
ACROSS
1 ThOroughfare
7 Floats
12 Harve61s
11 smantiltand

-ill Invent . - -

22'K~ '
23
by iorce
24 Frag
25 Three-loect sloth

Seize

. ~Pitch
28 Wldeilwake_
30 Emits vapor
32 Agaw plant
33 Take unlawfully
35 City In Alaska
37Con~dlng

looks
39 Horse fOOd
40 senes of games
41 Indian mulberry
43 Be borne

45 chairs

.CALL THI$- HillE - Th~ 3 bedroom r11nclt i:an tie
' yours. lYing room. loitthen with r11nge, relrigeraiDr and
bar, bath. utility room, garage, thermopane windows.
Priced at $37,000. Hyou are looking in this price range
call lor more details.

M838

HOllE &amp; ll't ACRE.S -Just listed this well kept 2
or 3 bedroom home•near town. Includes lamily
room with firepl~ce, large kitchen, dining room,
full basement plus 2 car garage and very nice I~
· acre tree studded yard. $43,500.
8800
SHOESTRING RIDGE - On top at the wolfd wrth
gracious subulban liVing at i!s best. 3 bedrooms. 1'h
baths. WB fireplace in living room, ktlchen wih
beautilul cabinets, dining room, utiity room, I\! car
attached gar•. Heat pump, ceptral air, 85'x300' let
Loan assumption, _low tntl!rest OutStanding buy. ·

.

[715

ACREAGE - 20 acres, ooore or ~ located off State
Route 218. Tobacco base, fru~ trees, well water. Owner
would consider selling on LAND CONTRACT.

#835
REliTAI. PROPERTY - You must see th~ double on
5th Ave. in town. The apartf!M!nls are in l!Ood condifun.
Upstairs sa2 bedroom mostlylurn~hed. llownstai•s is
I bedroom. Natural gas, air conditioners fenced yard.

Good

~lilies

.

.11783

NEW LISTING- 'SO MUCH FOR SO LiTT~E- At·
tractive brick and frame ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, outstandirig 'kitchen. 2 car gara(e,Siora~e
buildings. Immaculate tnstde and out. App101. I ~
miles H.M.C. Call lor -ppointment today . , · ,

Mill
'

#111
INCOME PRoouctR - Uve in one and rent the Qllter.
3 bedroom home plus 2 belioom 12'x65' mobile
home. Plus additional mobile home space to rent oort 3
~ tanks, n.ral Wllt!r. Shed, 2 run dot ltennel.
Minutes kom Holzer Medical Center. Good rental
income. Only $31,500.

Do you need . something
moved or hauled away?

87

PH. 304-295-7145

Cor. Fourth end Pine

#163

· ADORABi.E ' HOME. IlEAl AND COMPACT - 3
bedrooms, nice loitthen with dining area, living room:
balh, living room, attached garage, attic fan. new sash
wi~ fenced backyard. Good location.

~

.~ 4\1-o\\V ~c
1

"Fm O•llmr"

Plumbing

houae &lt;ella. Colt 304·57&amp;·
2398 or 1114·4411·24154.

#n3

·

\.nnox H11tina
Condi tionln~- All T1pes Insulation.
ElK~&lt;~ Wlnn~.

w•ns.

7741 night or day .

evenings 304-1176-2644.

4" Stwtr ·····-······$3.70
4" Ell .............:..... $1.00·
I'' 160#. Water :..... 19' '
1" Gas Pipe............. II'

Real Estate Ge1'18ral

A BIG BARGAIN - 3 bedroom mobile home that is
mostly lootished. Situated on a I acre lot near North
Gallia H.S. lncl~des 12'x15' addition plus a new
24'x24' dell!ched garage. $25,000.
·

COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TEU THE

Ken 's Water Service.

.•

&amp; Heating

.

.~

.J•mea Boyi Water Service.
Also pools filled. Call 614256 -1141 or 614-446 - ·
1176 .or 614·446 -791 1.

Starke Tree &amp; Lawn Service.
Undse~~ping. seeding, tertii·
lzlng. thetching, for com plete lawn service. Call us.

replacement wlndoWt,

PRODUm

service. Authorized Singer

614·367·0623 or614-367-

elumlnum soffit. vinyl sidIng, continuous gutters. free
eatimetea, all Work ouer•ntHd. Spring Diacount, call

PLASTIC PIPE

SEWING Machine repairs.

cisterns, pools filled . Phone

82

.1.400,00.. Phone 304· removal. Call 304-1715·
1331 .
896-3690.

..•

liD 1 • ALBANY OHIO

new

aelf con· RON'S Televlaio~ Sllf\lleo.
304-67.5· Specializing in Zenith end

refrigerator,

.

ref,

,4pache pop. up camper. fur"'ce.

r;N....,-1
CALLi]
98-8205

~92-406~

replacement window&amp; ·

Motorola.

{'i n k ,

$SAVE$ .

of r8frigeratora. wai:hera &amp;

conatructlon•gunere. C.111

pop-up

911

Ed '.• Appliance Serv ice.

caa. 304-896-3802.

B 8t 0 Homali'nprovementl,

r;DATI CALL;]

D 8o M Contractora. VInyl
•nd 1luminum sidingand

lincluding hot tar

oppllcttlon) 304-875-2088
or 8715· 7388.

3Q4-Ii76-2010.

ESTIMATES

remod~ling

floamper,
, St.arcr'llift
new canves,

Business Services

Solving ell mokoa &amp; b.rondo

store doora. Cell 614-992- Sales &amp; .Service Sherpen
Sciuora . Ft!!bric Shop.
2772 .
Pomeroy. 614-992·2284.
RINGLES"S SERVICE, ox·
perienced Cllrpenter. electri85 General Hauling
cian, m ..on. J)llinter. roof-

R.otary or cable tool drilling.
Moat walla completed sima
day. Pump ulee end 11111rvi·

- REPUCED. TO $36.~ ·-:-:- Owo~tmo~ing out .of
town and must sell. Spac·ious 3 bedroom home
with 2 baths, family room. eQuipped kitchen, din- ·
ong room, eler.trtc heat, central air. woodburner.
3~ acre yardd with barn. Lots of trees.
•
#791

~~MB~~
THE WHOLE .

TUPPERS PLAINS - Lg Ieven
kt near the school. W~h a6 rm.
home.

. . . ,liftnl .

THIS l-SHAPED may be just what you are looking
for! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, family room with fi replace, heat pump, central air, 2 car garage, flat
lawn. $51,900. Call for appointment Ieday!
#805

·,

Real Estate General

·

GU,t.ltANTEED

8ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING .
Unconditional lifetime guo·

-le-

Bonanza

aiding, roQfing, replecement
windows, atorm windows.

ing

.STATE ROUTE160 .'-' Reroode!ed 2 story 4~room
.home near North Gallia Aigh School.- fully 'insulated.
large loitthen, electric heat .84 acre yard. PriCed at
$29,!XXI.

-

·w

Marcum Roofin.,a. Spout·
ing. Now ina~11ling rubiMr

FARMERS ARE HAVING IT ROUGH? - Yes, we
know this, but our lower land values makes this a
good ti'me to buy.' 147 acres, solid 2 story country
home. 3 barns, shop, garage. Own water system.
Lots ol tillable land or pasture, tobacco base.
Some fa,rming tt~Dis included. Only $60,000.
#793

REAlTOI .

TEAFORD

NEW LISTING - SEIISATIOIIAL SUNRISES You won't find a more spectacular view than the
one offered from this lovely home overlooking a
large private lake. This cedar ranch offers over ·
2200 SQ. ft. of Qua lily living area including 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, famil' room with fireplace and
Buck stove, formal dming, deluxe kitcften with
breakfast nook, 2 car garage, heat pump &amp;central ·
air. Situated on over 2 acres with 640' of lake frontage. Excellent boating and lishing. Priced at
$89,900.
M824
OWNERS MUST SELL! - Stylish 2 story home
built with a family in mind. 3 large comfortable
bedrooms, living room with fireplace. family room
or 4th bedroom, I~ bath, kitchen, utility. Natural
gas furnace. Storage building. In walking distance
to schools and downtown. $29,900.•
#774
'
200 ACRES - PARADISE LA~E - Year around
relreit Located on Hannin Trace lh!d. 3 bedrooms. 2
st~ charming older home. Beautiful stocked lake.
Wooded land to hunt deer and wildlife. Tobacco base.
Owner wil sell all or part
M669
NEW USTING - Owners must sel nowt 3 bedroom
mostly remodeled home on .approx. 1 acre in Green
Twp. New kitchen, insulated, new walls, new 2IJO A
breaker, place lor woodbumer.. Needs
work.
Green ElementatY $27.000. •
#78~

some

.
A rn
.

CONTINUOUS NO-LI:AK GUTTERING
• ROOFING • RESTORATION •
*SIDING*
OVERHEAD GARAGE DOORS

FREE

'

992-2259
NEW LISTING ·- Middle·
port - Cozy, small, two
bedroom home in a good
neighborhood. All on one
floor and immediate posses-•
sioQ . Carport, level yard.
Asking $20,000.00.

21 ACRE FARM - with a 4
bedroom home, fencing,
barn. eQuiment shed &amp; good
garden area. Owners will liance with a small down payment. $35,900.00.

' Home
Improvements

· 161ft. Scotty camper trll.iler.
CaQ 614-2116·1467.

POMEROY,O.

POMEROY - Convenience
to shopping - this I \? story
home has newllinyl stding,
new roof. front-sitting porch,
3 bedrooms, dining room.
·and a full basement. Asking
$31.900.00.
•

81

Basement W•terproofint.

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
.

zi"' ft .

SYRACUSE - Large corner
at, I ~ story home with 3-5
bedrooms. Recently remodeled, nice front porch , Just
$16,900.00.

steam carpet· cleaning .
Scotch gu•rd, free elati·

Coli tolloct 1-1114·2370488. day or night. Rogers

•,

79'

• Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Spring apeoiol: Ge"''a·deep

roofa. 30 yoera oxperlenc..
specializing in built up roof.
Coli 614-388-9857.

P-ersons Body Shop. Locust
Rd . Pt.Pieasont. Post K&amp;K.

Real _Estate Gene.r al

IIEW LISTING - RacineTwo 2 bedroom apartments.
partly furnished, aluminum
siding, double tal. Rents for
$150 each. $25,900.00.

1973 Fronklln 28 tf, tlr,

84

Home
Improvements

mato,. Call 814-992 -8309 dr_l'IFI , ltOVI I &amp; d il ·
or 814·742·221 1.
hwaahora. Call 114·367·
7187 or 61 4•446-4466.
J • l lnsufatio~. Vinyl

.Cjhevy Chevelle SS. Call
614-388-8522.

446-3644

NEW LISTING -BradburyOne floor home with a garden
space, front &amp; rear porches, 3
bedrooms, large storage building, and approx. '.4 acre.
$23,000.00.

81

81

3448.

.
Parting out or nil whole- 72

'

Wy ...__...,......, _0451
Jim tact..., ...1;; 446 7111
'frgila Snilh · ftMIIN -311-1126
......, Loctg lllaiiOI-675-3961

II

HERE'S YOUR CHANCE

' (614) 464-356.3

16~

.

Judy DeWitt-IIQitor-3N-11SS .
J. Mtnl
- Cartw ,,.·101-379-2114
.

Call:

&amp; Campers

tri·haul. 304·875·1281.

76

With barn, 58.5
acres $70,000.

79 Motors Homes

ihb'o1rd·outbo1rd , power awning, needs work ,
trim prop, power trim tabs,; &amp;2.200. Cell 814-441 ..

Real Estate General

7

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W : Va.

flEW USTING- $48,900 FARII-GSacres, more or
le;is.. lOcated appro~~unalely 12 miles from GaiHpoi~­
Ftame house with natural gas heat. drilled well bern
oom crib, starlit buildin~ tobacco bese. ~0; 20~
25 IC\!5 tih~Ml, approx. 30 acres mixed ~mblir.
,111'

LOCATtOI -"' Walloini dislln&lt;o to cily schools. Modern 4
bedr'*" hOmo. 2 family rooms, 2 both!, built-in litthen, living room. ulllity
...., hllttbt room. ;oorllshop, fruit c:olar, scrMMXI·in perch, central air. 9
aaes 1111 will! prderl.lnit troeslntl e'IPf
has been well cared

Mill CREEK RD. - QUALITY BRICK HOME, WEll MAINTAINED
IMMACULATE INSIDE AND OIJT. HARWOOD FlOORS. EQUIPPED,
KITCHEN, BREEZEWAY, ATTACHED GARAGE JUST LISTED!CAllEU·
KIC£ NIEHM.

IODfH iUCM comptetely remodeltol. 3 bedrooms. lg. modern
kilchen and break last rotrn, LR, new bath, sittln1 on .8of an acre on
St Rt. S54: On top ol crou.,.t swimnoina pool. Storage building.

CHIISI Century 21 Rill Elllle Cor.,oncton u '"*"""'the NAP...... N -ll'ldeltarllaal Cenlury21 Real'~ Colpenllcon. PMIId In C.S.A. IIqual ill.u.illlt llppurtun11 1Gl
.
·IACIIGtnc:l
I
•

.-

....,_Home
·

•

'

Prteed. ~· 40't

UCELLUT MIIGIIIOIIIIOOD - Owners hm tompletely remothis homo inside elld out ta. lormallivina room w/ w.b. lire·
ptac:e, formal dinina room modern klichtll, 3 bedroom1 full basemtnl, lamlly r11om w/w .b. fireplaci and book shelves. Li-scr.,.ned
Florida porch. lots ol room to build I soimminc pool on lhislg. lol.
Garden ern. Garage. City schools. Prittd. low 60's.

d~ed

A BEAUTY! LOCATED I.N TARA SUIDIVSIIIII - 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS. FORMAl DINING. EQUIPPED KITCHEN: SCREENED OUTDOOR DECK PERFECT' FOR fAMilY BARBECUES OR ENTERTAIN·
lNG. SPLIT FOYER DESIGNED BRICK AND FRAME EXTERIOR, IMMA~ULAT[, BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED! JUST LISTED!
_

U ACHS- More orless. 3 ~it"EO~Ie home. also 2 addi-

S21 000 UNBEATABLE PRIC£- 2 STORY FRAME, 3BEDROOMS, 2

lfllllmttG- 15 mes of voc"'t land more or less. Some good

.

IIIAT ADEA1.1 ~ Three bedfooti, ilome. lvin&amp; room. eat&lt;n kilchen, bath
With , liundr-, roomo..._ nic:o 1M. &lt;ily schools, ..OOburner.
celina fiJI, ·IIIII Yin~ sidinJ LOW 30't OON'T LET THIS ()jE PASS YOO BY\

8ATHS, EAT-IN KITCHEN PLUS DINETTE. NICE LEVEL CORNE~ LOT.
IN CITY.
·
\ .

'

'

OlD RT. 1&amp;0 -INVESTMENT PROPERTY OR fAMILY HOME. THIS
PROPERTy IS AGREAT BUY FOR EITHER US . NICE 3 8EDROOM
FRAME HOME HAS VINYL SIOING. WOOD BURNER; PLUS 3 BlDjroOM MOBilE \lOME. ON APPROX. 3 ACRES. $32,00Q.
..
Ftl UP AND SAVEl $25.000 - FOUR BEDROOM, 1~ STORY
' fRAME, FUll BASEMENT, VERY NICE LOT AND LOCATION ON BUlA'VIlLE RD'.
RT. 141- A~PROK . )5 ACRES: 4 BEDROQMS. I ll BATH MOBilE
IIOME WITH '2 ADDITIONS. 21'0RCHES.. S(VERAt. OUTBUilDINGS.

J-12.500.
biiOCEIIT - URYICE sTATION - CAIRTOUT - PLUS NICE 3 •
BEpROOr,t APARTMENT. PRICE NEGOTIABLf!

1

L~ ~rS~I~IUs ~~~~~ RT. 3S LOCATION. BUSV, BUSY,
Ol
BUYING AGREAT INVESTMENT

TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE -lliCELy REIIODELED Z starr. 3 bedroom home with appro! 1~ •
acre lawn. 45 ~45' barn, garaae. Plus I~ story re·
modeled 3 bedroom home. Both priced togethtf
al $4MOO.
178&amp;

11123 .

tor. e..., elciont.

LOW PRICE PLUS LOW INTfREST IORTGAGE ASSUM~TION: COLONIAL DESIGN. SPLIT FOYER, 3 BEDROOM , SPAAC&lt; FOR 4TH
DECK, A90VE GROUND POOl. $49,900.
•

'.

MOBILE_HOME PL!JS4~acllt- 10.50 t9s3mo~
home with 10'x_
26 addition. 3 bedrooms bath, living
room, IUtchen With range •11!1 refrigerator. Worxlburner
lnctudad IOCIIId VInton area.
•
.

~

YOUR FAMILY DESERVES THE BEST! AND THIS HOME QUALIFI~S.
LUAN WOOD SIDING, GIGANTIC DECK SO YOU CAN ENJOY THE
FANTASTIC VIEW, 4 BEDROOMS, 22X20 LIVING ROOM, FIREPLACE.
FULl BASEMENT 2 CAR GARAGE, 6'h BEAUTIFUL ACRES LIKEDRIVE, RIO GRANDE. CAll FOO AN APPIJINTM~NT.

tioul mobile home
riants included.

47 Symbol lor cerium
48 Escape
49 Showy flower
52 Weary
54 Grasp abruptly
56 Slghtiess
.57 Retreat •
59Tip
.
61 Masl
62 Chk:kiln house
63 Poems
114 Compass point
56 Tltla of respect

67 Work·at one's
trade
56 $uccor
69 Place of the seat:
abbr.
71 Weight of India
72 Matured
74 Eagle's nest
76 Rage .

77 Meadow
78 Teutonic dally
79 Facial expressions
81 Sailor: colloq.
8:i Baptismal basin
8J Gr!&gt;8f1
.84 Twirled · ·: ·
_85Watch pocket
87 'f'itnctuatlon maik ·
89'Web-footed bird
90 Husband or Wife
92 (3ocfof love
94 bifsprlng: pl .
9SDecbrous
96 .Chlcago airport
97 Empower
99 Household pet
100 Frees of
101 Mend With cotton
-i02 Advantage
103 Sudsy brew
105 Citrus fruits
107 Sforzando: abbr.
109 Beast 'ol burden
110 Health reso-rts
111 Breaks suddenly
113 Knocks
114 Brown kiWi
1 15 Compass ~nt
118 Pronoun
117 Mire
118 Sltk
120 Pronoun
121 Warning device
122 Point ol harTYTler
123 Doom .
124 Jacket
128 South American
animals

·128 In front of ·
130 Planet
. 132 Metal strand
134 By oneself
135 ClayeY earth
136 Myselt
137 Handle·

19 Kind or Sail
20 Prepared lor print
27 Send forth
29 Becomes known
31'Manuscrlpt: abbr.
34.Cake ml• .

95 Urge onward
97 Kind of a 98 Guido's high note
currency
102 Unlocl&lt;
143 Bundle
104 HerOic ewi11
1451roquoian 'lndll\ilS·
106 Stofnach
141-Engllsh baby ,
36 R&lt;!dliol · 107 ~enus ol geese
38 -Wirenail
-_ . CB(riage .
108 lmllatlon 40 \Jndergarment
149 NeW!
110 Lean-to
42· Hawaiian wreaths
i 52 .Either
1 1 1 Surgical stit!l!t
44 (&gt;oddess of
153 Rise
112 SluggiSh
discord
155 Killed _
t l4 Distant
157 Stalk• -- 46 Raiiialn -·
· 116 Athletic gr~p
48 Miserable failure:
159 Babylonian delty
117 Actor Dillon
slang
160 Folmer Russian
119 Den
49Gotup
ruler
121 Bundle
50 Hebrew festival
162 Go In
122
Fuel
51 Raiiroad: abbr.
164 Bar legally
53
Lamb's
pen
name
123
Note
of scale
166 Rubber on pencil
55
Credit:
abbr.
125
Pitfall
168 Juncture
56 Dart off
127 Note ol scale
169 Unkempt
58 Motor
128 Apportions
170 Acts
60 Allqwance for
129 OiSCOrdanl
171 Irritate
waste
130 Goddess ol
62 Coin
the moon
DOWN
65 Lamprey
131 Trapped
68 Workman
133 Transgresses
1 Cicatrix
2 Group of three
69 Rent
136 Clubs
70 More rational
138 Plague
3 Concerning
4 Dine
72 Entertain
140 Consumed
·s Short jacket
73 Guards
143 College dagree:
6 Singing vOice
75 Knock
abbr.
7 Rupees: abbr.
76 Mate fowl
144 Heraldry: grafted
77 Nooses
B Exclamation
146 Location
79 Reject
9 Tumble
146 Simple
80 North American
10 Woody plants
rails
I 50 Perceive by tOUCh
11 Frolics
Last
151
Biblical weed
82
12 Symbol lor
153
83 Frames ol mind
Limb
ruthen ium
84 Floats In air
154 Spread lor drying
13 Worm
86 Cut short
156 Bow
14 Vehicle• colloq.
88
Fabulous
bird
158 Srnall rug
15 Give a sar.mon
89 Facial expressions 161 COOled lava
16 Freshet
90 Soft drinks
163 Railway: abbr.
17 Possessive
91 Aspect
- 165 Postscript abbr.
pronoun
93 Those who·defame 167 Saint: abbr.
18 Therefore
139 Unusual
141 Latin conjunction
142 Unit ol Latvian

hooo R£0v"!! ..o• Sthool District. Mineral
-

timber.'
rights
. ell mineral
.
. w/ lht property. Only

17 .~ .

. DOl IIIICI IAIICM - 1\l acm. ,.. cr leSS. 3or 4 OOdraoms. 2
both$, IJ llllt:htn w/ltls of Clllintts, blnlllvin&amp; room o/wb flr&lt;!lllace. lull
c...,.·w/- llil&lt;llen. THE lJ'SIAIRS ~ NE'IER BEEN lMD IN.
l!llc*toP drive. _..., buildilip. Sllelitt dill\ Illy shoots. «&lt;s

.

.

SITtlflt. t• ZO ACifS Of WOODLAND- Contemorory home lea·
turinaa solarium w/hot tub wrapped bran open lormat.livlng and ·

dlninl room w/atrium doors, mnsiv1 stone fireplace .. A modern

complllle krtchen and a breakfast nook. 211 baths. 3 bedrooms·
w/master suite, slidina doors to • polio area. laundr! and mud
room. Unfinished basement. 2 ••r praje. Vecellble tarden and
dnrt fruit trees. Slwwn by appontment.
lMMIIIIT..cT - 111!1 DtMn ,yma( 1011 Interest Rat. - 39.50
acrei of vacant land. kk llllnut. LJlb of rroodllncl. Awatellal. SeciUdBd
lntlllffllll.
l'liced ~.(Dl.
.
IUSTIC L8fl CMIM - It tou'reloollln&amp;ler llol cabin yat111ove th~
~ styli doafrllld 3 bodrooon. i'alurll I rJ1lY ]' ' 10(]1111iith field
llblf ....,_. w/Miadbuntlr. ~ country
nly roon,
dirinlllld litcNrl c:ambination. QniJ 1'00 , _ '*!. ·nt on • l)lrlialy
"""""' tal Illy sdtllals. Pric:ld in lite 50s.

llldtlll"""-

.a
... - Nl'lllrtt~, '~-Inti dining
- . . . wlh tiladol,~~-~-!.~!'.!e',~.Y.ndrt rocrn. linJIICir
..... ~ ldtiiiL Ills ... Air cstll ••

DAllY FAll - 121 A~RES. BEAUTIFUL 3 IIEOIIOOM

HOME HAS 21!ATHS FULL BASEMENT, BARN, SILO, OTHER
GOOD FENCES EXCEUENT BUY!

AUDREY f. CANADAY •.REALTOR
MARY I'LOVD, !tEALTOR. 441-3313
EUNICE NII!HM, fti!ALTOR, 441·1117
LOcUI'I' ITftiiT. GAWPOLII. OHIO

•. ae

l .

.

poD !_Mil • 111 COIIIITI'f 111.-T TOll? - Son ~ """'

~ 11111'- ~In .......... Vall hlwroomtorlillltlen
c:hidlhs.llldl tr &amp;6 acrtS to iUII ruttlltlllltlf en. Wthis~~ type 01
lvinllltllllll to,., lhln 11rrry, ..,, .-t
iiow
up oiad - - In lite r-efill SUIIIIIIIIIiniS allhl atUntry. •
10U111 'ftlll uDllllfM IIIIIIIEID _ _,- To reht, Ill,. as a

""...-,Cal

.ncr"*

;

••

Ill~" 10,. we ltlit ]1111 tlllllullttr IIIII· L.-1 at 72llni1Wt.

Nee $1f,JJO.CIO.Il'tn -

•

and buy torrtenaw.

Unl~ Fe11ure Syncl'"'•

"

�...

.

l
.
:Pea•
l

.

Pomeroy-Middiepon-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleaunt. ·w. Va.

D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•
r·

--Local Briefs:·- ----.. Petition drive organized for
Respite care program begins

•

. I

POMEROY - The Pomeroy Health Care Center Is announcing
the starting o! a respite care program.
,
Through this program, a member of a famlly who will not be able _
to go on vacation with the reit of the famUy due to poOr health, can
stay at the center and receive around the clock professional care.
For more lnfonnatlon, Meigs Countlans may call Sonya Wolfe,
992-EOO&amp;, MOnday thi'ougn Friday.

•

·VUlage pays contractor
POME;ROY -Bob Campbell~ president of Hemlock Pipeline Inc.,
Racine, lll!s.liEen pafd by Pbmeroy VIUage for his -rork In Installing
· · the.. West Main Street sewer line extension to the Pizza Hut.
Campbell's low bid of $56,919 for the project came In under the
$62,250 Economlc Development Grant secured by the vlllage for the
project.
A total drawdown ofthe$56,919from the state was received by the
vtllage. The money has been Issued to Campbell with the village
retaining just a portion of that total which would be necessary to
cover repaving of West Main where the sewer line was laid. .
Cam~ll will be paid In full as soon as rejlavlng Is completed,

..

..

1'

..
'

.

Local gov~rnment funds distributed
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County received $33,002.17 In the April
distribution of local government funds.
·
The couhty auditor received most of the money, $32,395.:ll, whUe
Gallipolis got $611.59, and Rio Grande ~lved $45.28.
The money is distributed to counties and communities levying
local Income taxes.

"

•

ByNICKGEllANIOS

The DOtson home In suburban
AllsociiUedPrellllWrlter
Country Qub Hilts was humming
CHICAGO (AP) -Gary Dotson's Frlilay night .as friends and family
faml.ly and friends , (ightlng bitter ' scrambled to dlstrij)ute petitions
disappointment at his return to caUlng on Thompson to release
prtson for a rape hls accuser now Dotson, said hls sister, Laura. ·
saysneVeroccurred, areorga'nlzlng
Thompson said earlier 'Friday
a petition drive to win clemency that he had gotten calls from
from Gov. James R. Thompson.
Dotson's farnlly and others seeking
And Cathleen Crowell Webb, 23, hls release but had filled out. any·
whocontendssheliedwhenshesaid immediate action.
Dotson raped her In 1!)17, said
A petition for executive clemency
Friday, "I'm' not going to hang my would have to be IUed with the state
head. This ~n' t finished."
Prisoner Revi!lW Board, wliich .'
Mrs. Webb challengro prosecu- would then make ·a recorrimenda·
tors to try her on perjury charges if · lion to the governor- In this case,
theybelieVesheislylngahdsaldshe probablynotbeforeDecember.
Is wUllng to take a lie detector test.As he beaded back Into prison ·
·

Restauran.t ·exp}osi•o'n
71
kl•Jts 15, J•nJ•u~es
a •

.
MADRID, Spain (AP) . - An
explosion ripped through a suburban Madrid restaurant near a U.S.
Air Force base Friday night, kiUing
at least 15 people and injuring 71,
lncludingsomeAmericans,officiais
said.
·
'
·
Police speculated the blast, which
occu~ around 10:45 ·p.m., (3: 45
p.m. EST) at the crowded El
Descanso barbecue restaurant,
might have been caused by a bomb.

.
tiWuented by Americ;,u1s, particu·
iarly thosewhoworkat the air base.
TherewasnolmmedlateldentWcation of the victims.
TenAmerlcansfromthebasehad
reported to the base hospital with
minor Injuries, accordingtotheU.S.
Air Fdrce public ,affairs office at
Torrejon,Jt said In a statement that
other Americans could have been
taken t.o hospitals In Madrid.
Police said the three-story build·
lngwas nearly fla ttE&gt;ned by the blast.
The restaurant was on the ground
floor, and its owner and employees
lived ln the upper tWo floors.
· Fireman used bulldozers to
remove debris In a search for other
vlctlnis.

April 14, 1985

Dot~on's

Frlday,Dotson,29, told reporters he
was ·"very upset" but would
·continue to seek release.
His mother, Barbara. 48, said
after visiting her son ·Friday .night
that she believed he tried to assure
her, '"It'll all work out , Mom."' ·
Dotson, who was imprisoned ln
1979 after h1s conviction on charges
of rape and aggravated kidnapping,
was returned Friday to Joliet
Correctional Center after a week of
fi-eedom. Corrections'officlals sald
he wll§ distraught.
"He's It) the hospital sickroom,"
Laura Dotson said.
.
Mrs. Dotson took her son's
television to him Friday night, his
sister said. It had been ainong the
possessions he took home Apru 4,
when he was · released on $10,001
bond \ after Mrs. Webb formally
(ecantedher1979testlmony.
Cook County Circuit Judge Ri·
chard Samuels upheld Dotson's
conviction Thursday, saying he

Soil Stewardship Week slated

Park district..• __.__ _ _ __

believed that Mrs. Webb hadtoldthe
tfUthathlstrlai.
Samuels. who presided at Dc;lt ·
son'strlalandsentencedhlm.to25to
50 'years In prison; said llllnois court
rulings made lt difficult to accept
recanted testimony. Dotson will be
eligible for' parole in 1~.
He had spent six years behind
bars when Mrs: Webb came
foiWard last month to say she had
lied when She sald she was raped In
1977.
"I was never raped. I was a go&lt;id
liar and a good actress," Mrs. Webb
said Friday. "I'm praying fervently
and almost constantly ·tor him,
especially now that I know what
kind o(agony he's ln."
·
Mrs.Webb,whowas 16andllvtng
In suburban Homewood at the time
oftheaUegedassault, nowUveswith ·
her husband, David, and two
children in Jaffrey, N.H.
Dolson and his mother say they
harbornoillwllltowardMrs. Webb.

have earned thestateandArnerlcan
Farmer Degrees, have been final·
ists in state and national publlc
speaking contests and have served
as state officers. Sayre was named
Outstanding Teacher of the Ohio
Vocational Agriculture Teachers
Association In 1979·80.
This honor will be conferred
during the banquet_ program of the
1985 Ohio FFA convention on
Friday, April26, for approximately
3,001 attendees.
Sayre is the son of Juanita Sayre
and thelateThomas D. Sayre of the
Portland-Great Bend area of Meigs
County.

qf

GAHS

participates in concert

trnn

I

Sharon

carter.

.

•

SIR

freedom

I

HONORED -

•Fonner Meigs

resldlllJt, T. DWaln Sayre, has
been named to receive honorary
Ohio FFA Degree this spring.

POMEROY - Loretta Holsinger
·iias accepted employment at Top of
the Stairs, Pomeroy, on Mondays
and ThufS!(ays after 5 p.m.
A 1978 graduate of Southern High
School, she completed hercosmetolcey training at Meigs High School
and has since received her manager's license.
Holsinger has been employed at
Dorothy's Beauty Salon, both In
Syracuse and CooMile, and the
Chateau Beauty Salon, Pomeroy.
She specializes In .cuts and
permanents.

.

Business Briefs: ___..,

CIC meeting set for April 22
.

· GALLIPOLIS - The ann\lal meeting of the Gallia County
Community Improvement Corporation has been set for Ap~ll 22 at
noon at the Down Under Restaurant.
·
The meeting'~ purpose, according to CIC President Dan Davies, is
to elect trustees and officers for 1985. To be eiiglble to liote In the
election. dues must be received by AprU 15. Checks for the dues,
which cost $5, can be sent to thli Galllpolls Area Chamber of
Commerce, P.O. Box 465, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
A member may, through a . written proxy, authorize another to
vote at the meeting, but the person so authorlzed must alsQ be a
member and 'the proxy must be filed with the seci;etary before the
person 'authorlzed can vote.
·
.
Reservations for the meeting must 'be In by April 19.

_________.

''Tandy's quarterly sal~s up

By TOM BALDWIN

,,
' t-:...

.
A .,.... 1'.- Writer
.
i, urrENHAGE,SouthAfrlca (~)
More than ~.001 people, singing
.!IJ Mlom songs and raising clenched
:,Jilts, .IIWI1led 29 black victims of
·'f'ilcial Vlolellce Saturday In what
:; ,-ttneaeil said was the biggest
· .~In South African history.
~-, Hours before, three more blacks
ldlled In new rioting and 17
~ IJ'mted for various activities

:;.,re

•
Ei
t•,;:=..
· ~lng

the

: •••n auaat.

~

,'

white-minority

··

EmotJcnl swelled ln !he dancing,
lni crowd as 29 cofii)\S were
lhoulder·hlgh Into a sta-

. •
•"

~

In Kwanobullle township and
Cll tablel In ' front of the

Ill a

~~ 19 blacks

•lnlle vOuey

by polk.oe
till)' wl!t'e niarchlilg
)rlthhundredlofothersfromLanp
JIIWIIIIIIP to Kwanobuhle for the
llaa'ellol tuck riOt victims. Pollee
,, 4..,...
tilt! procession as It neared
,

':.)Ierch 21 u

I •
'l

)

.

.gather to
:! mourn .rioting victims
•

t. . . lll'lldel, looal reslden&amp;a w11 become more lnfonned
~t the IUbjed ol - " " ' - .

.subject which lmpolell a maJor
~on aU rifourlndlvldl!al and

COIIIIIIUIIMy declsloas).

By CRAJG COWPY

helps
.steel mill propOsal

·~:ffhousands
,

has been promoted to operations
metallurgist at Timken Co.'s Falrc·
rest steel plant.
Ward graduated from Gallla
Ac;ademy High School ln 1!181 and
received h1s bachelor's degree In
metallurgical engineering from
Ohio Slate University In 198!1.
Following gr.aduatlon, he started
with Timken and was associate
manufacturing engineer with the
steel project team prlor to hls
prqmotion.

threup

Mitst~:bishi

POMEROY - Several cases have been dismissed In Melgs
County Common Pleas Court Including Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Co., Pomeroy, against Paul E. Smith, Middleport, et al; a divorce
action by Marjorie M. Reeves against Robert L. Reeves; and
cllsSolutton proceedings IUed by Johnnie Gale Johnson and Pamela
Sue Johnson.

·r

Paul R. Wan! ·

and every Individual school. From
that figure, they are to distribute a
fair and correctly needed amount of
food to each school.
The state of Ohio ~ives $18-$19
mUllen of food commodities each
year. Californla1 New York, Te1!As. ·
F1orkla, Pennsylvania and Ohlo are
the top six recipients In the nation to
receive food commodities from the
federal governrtll!llt.
OVMA s~ - M)'l'lam Ruthchlld, psychological 001m ~I'll' at
In Ohio, there areapproldmately
IUo Grande Collqe and C&lt;lmmunlty College, lldol..-l tilt! recmt
2 million. students and approxi·
meeting of the Ohio Valley Management Asllocladoll. Her preMII!adoa
mately 1 rn!Uion of those students
was on ''Tranlll&amp;lon Management."
are receiving a reimbursable lunch.

Theotherhalfreceiveanalacarte.
vALERIE McEIJWY
open lunch, food carried from home
SAFE Pl111J8111
or food received ·from a vending
IUoGrandec.llep
machine. If a Ia carte were to be
RIO GRANDE - The average' . included Into all school lunches
parents and - citizens In your served, Ohio would he l'l'Sponsibie
communitythlnko!theschoollunch for serving a high percentage of
GALLIPOLIS - Paul R. Ward
and breakfast program as a small their dally lunches to school
part of the daUy routine iii thi&gt;ir · students
,
. Inc.lu'ded in the Oh•'o Child
hool
This
f
h
W
tr
he
Also
sc
. · is ar omt trut . e
.
wnrstart at the lilceptlon of the NutrltiqnProgramsisthebreakfast
program and bring you up to the program, whose purpose Is to
present. ·
provide a complete breakfast to
Back In thernlddle19als there was chlidren.lf In any oneschoolthefree
a deep depression, many families lunches reach 33.3 percent or more,
were without food and many or free and reduced lunches equals
chlldral would ~ to achool ~percent or more, that school must
MAssiU.ON, Ohio (AP) - A
Part of the proposal was detailed hungry. It was very.ditficult lor the offer breakfast for these students.
proposed steel minl·mlll that would ln an application made by Malerfor children to do their work properly.
There are rules and regulations
create4~permanentjobsmaygeta a $7.5 million, low-Interest tJrban So In 1937 the United States that must be followed In order to
financial boost from Mltsublshi Development Action G rant.
government Instructed the U.S. have a successful program. Ohio's ·
International Corp. of Japan, offi.
Aane Aaby, assistant planning Agr~ulture Department to pur- School Food Service Program is
cia.ls say.
·
director, saki Maler's application chase food from farmers, dairies required to review each school
. ·h e hopes to secure $5 milllon ...
"'""
P"""'am
evecy ,.
•our' years. The
ThenJansaretentativea nd partof s bows
~ .,.,atpa cklngcompan les .
•v.,.
,.
bonds
, ..ongoing negotiations, said Otto In industrial development
The food was thf.&gt;n shipped to all review Is.bandied I?Y 12consuitants
Maier, .who wants to build the mUl through the city and $8.4 million · communlttesfortheneedypeopleas worklngfortheStateDepartmento!
through h1s Maler'&amp;,Associates and
from the state and j:rlvate sources.
well as for the children ln the Education, each havlngapart\cular
Maler Enterprises. He refused
The Department of Housing and schools, so t~ chU~ would he area In which they are I'esponslble.
,., __ Ioprnent In W hln"'""
h da
1u h 1me. are·.
Included In these .....nnn•ibllitles
further comment.
· U r ban ut"Vl'
as .. ~. served food·eac
Y at nc t
··....-City o!ficlals confirmed Mltsubi· ~hould make a decision on the loan In 19Ci the achOol lunrll program
1.Tocheckthemenusto•~ifthey
• shl's involvement, but city records
application somet lme In M ay, he wasofferedtoallp.Ibllc,privateand·
~~
id
.
1
intheU
itedSt
t
meet
the
nation~!
lunch
program
C
holi
boo
did not reveal the extent of sa . .
at
esc
s
n .. a es
L..
·
.,..._"""""It
reported Mitsubl
· become
·of bel
t'
requirements.'
.JIPI~t by thi&gt;. A.merican
""'·,~r- ory
· and has .
one ~ . t _ rmos
•
•sublildlacy O'f Japan's la'rge8t trad· shl j&lt;oOUid sell the mill $.'l8.9,rnllllon linportant programs. · · ; .
2. TocheckhoWihebaokke'eplngls
·
,
.
. " ,. ,
.tng'rotnpany.
,.
•
wort hof stati!'Of·the- arteq ul pment ' ·. Ohiohasaverygoodsehoollunch done'.
.
However, The Repository of _thei! finance the equipment pur· program, 115 you wllLsee by the
3. Tolnquirehowstudentspayfor
· Canton on. Wednesday · put the
chase at 8 perel'ftt Interest wlth balance of this rejlon on how Ohio
thl'lr lunches.
' amount~~ $38.9 m!liiQn. more than ilefenlod palm~E!P(S._for up t\i four operat&lt;'S itsschoollunch,ptogtam. ·, 4. Veiify' the applications on !U~.
)~:~it of theJJ\IIl's$61.3mlllion !)rlCe .•.. yeatS. ·..
', . ; .. '·' ' . :
. .7he,.u:s. ceri~s aR)roprlat~ for free and reduced iunclies.
. .
'l'aklsha Nawa: an official with
"The structure is not yet firmed far 1!111 $3187 001 dXJ rirr the
5 To also inquire a~ to how tne
up, but this shOuld be done ln quite a
national ~llu~hprogram. Ohio m~ is handled and deposited.
. MitsUblshi ih New York: conflrn1ed
the c6mpany Is Interested in the
short t~e,'' a source close . to the
receives 3 to 4 percent of this each
6. To inspect andcheckthekitcheli
, arrangemmt, but sald the firm has
deal told The Associated Press. '!be year, depending on thC amount of -to make sure lt Is In lts proper
reimbursable lunches served. A condition
noothercomment.
official, who asked to remain
The Repository sald ina copyright
anonymous, said the type or . large amount of money that is given
7. To check the food storage.
story that the miUwould provide600
financing arrangement described
to the states by the Congress goes
8. Their last responsibility ls to
construction jobs In addition to the
by The Repository sounded
toward reimbursements for the check and take Inventory of all the
4~permanent johs.
possible.
number ot lunches served. A food Including ail thi&gt; food donated
by the government.
reimbursable lunch consists of: one
Alter the review has been
h•lfplntoffiuidmllk·
twoouncesof
"" ·
'
completed, .it is then possible for the
cooked lean meat, poultry or fish. or consultant to make recorn!Tl('nda·
r---"0.....

Court cases dismissed

~
.--·

(EDri'OR'S N&lt;YI'E - Sluden&amp;
"""-ion for Fr. Enlerprlae
(SAFE J 11t IUo Gnat1e CGIIep wOJ
be MlbmiiUIIg a eerta of lll1icles,
CGIIVIII!IItllll Cll ~ lllsues
and conditions tha&amp; ailed IIOUthe. .
ern Ohio. It Is SAFE's hope that

Loretta Holsinger

.

RIO GRANDE- A special meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Vinfon
Joint Vocational Board of Education ha~ been set for Monday at 7
p.m. at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
An executive session wUi be held to discuss personnel and
negotiations, and action may be taken afterward, said ClerkTreasurer Naoml Beman.

______________

IOhiO's s~hool
lunch, breakfast

.

Vocational board to meet

}..,.

Area personnel &lt;file

program opera,es
. ·hn·
upon . eIIgi
. tty,
.·r eimbursements

Fonner .Meigs · man
getting FFA honor

POMEROY - A former Meigs
County resident, T. Dwaln Sayre,
who been elected to receive the
The restaurant on the main
honorary Ohio Future Farmers of
Madrid-Barcelona highway Is nine
America Degr('t', according to Dr.
miles northeast of Madrid and near
James E. Cummins, state advisor.
·POMEROY - R. Craig Matthews, Middleport, an!l Barbara
the O.S. Air Force base at Torrejon
Each year the Ohio FFA Assocla ·
. Becker Matthews, Pomeroy, h;IVe petitioned Meigs . County
deArdoz.
·
lion honors Individuals who have
Common Pleas Court for a dissolution of their marriage.
The restaurant was known. to be
made outstanding contributions to
agriculture, and specifically to
agricultliral education and FFA
'.
· programs in Ohio.
•
Sayre Is vocational agriculture
(Continued from page D-1) ·
available- but we do not have our Instructor at Mohawk High School,
GALLIPOLIS- Gallla 's Soli and Water Conservation District wlll
Sycamore, In Wyandot County.
additional shelter and plcnlc facill · match."
join the nationwide observance of Soil Stewardship Week May 12·19.
were added.
"We
have
been
operating
on
the
Teachers of vocational agricul·
ties
This was announced Saturday by Frank "Buzz" MIUs m, ·
The
park's
future
plans
as
.
same
budget
...
approximately
lure
are selected on criteria of their
chairman, and CoMie Massie, president of the ladles auxiliary unit.
outlined
In
thedlstrlct'sMaster
Plan
$18J,(XX)
a
year
..
.for
the
past
several
chap,ter's
ratings In state and
Theme this year Is, ".Tomorrow Together."
ExpansionIncludes
developyears,"
Dr.
Thomas
said.
"There.
'
national
competitions;
their service
for
The sou conservation move~t In 'America is marking Its 50th
ment
of
an
outdoor
swlmmlng
pool
has
never
been
a
new
tax
to
support
·
and
conductlng
effective
vocational
anniver~ this year. During the "dust bowl" era of the 1930s,
day
and
evening
recreation,
as
the
park
...
we
have
used
·
our
agriculture
programs
for
youth,
for
conservation districts, local units of government, were founded to
well
as
lnstallatlon
of
an
amphlthea·
avaUable
fUnds
as
a
base
to
get
young
farmer
and
adult
programs;
take soU conservation Information and techniques out to farmers and
ire, camping facilities and bridle grants."
committee leadership, pius 'speciaL
ranchers.
and cross-country ski trails.
OVer the Hjstory the park, !li'e leadership roles at events of the
SQ!ce 1955, the National Association of Conservation Dlstncts has
Pool
'development
is
currently,
district
has garqered a total of · national and American Agriculture
i , sponsored SoU Stewardship Week, In cooperation With appi'OXI·
according
to
park
officials,
the
·$629,298
in
state and federal match· Teachers Associations ..
• ., mately 3,(XX) conservation dlstrtcts throughout the United States, to
district's
"number
one
priority."
·lnggrants.
.
Sayre's love for agriculture and
emphasize Its Importance.
Plans
tor
the
project
were
"With
thetaxbaseprovldedbythe
desire
of wanting to help others
Information and materials for this year's observance is avaUable
outlined
Thursday
night
during
a
county's
power
plants,''
Thomas
,
succeed
In agriculture Is quite
at the Gallla distrtct office, 529 Jackson Pike, phone 446-8687.
joint meetlng of the original Gallia said, "it may be possible to build a . evident ·upon revlewlng his leaderCounty Study Committee and the pool for less than five-tenths of a
ship records of student Involvement
district's 12-member Citizens Advl· .mUI... maybe for as lilt~ as three- · and awards and Mohawk FFA
sory CQmmlttee.
. tenths o! a rnlll."
' ·.
Chapter's accomplishment&amp; in· hls
bar~.d
.
.
"
Last month, the conuhl&amp;o!lon · 24 years of teaching, Dr. Cummins
While the issue nas .not been ·
.
'.
.
finalized. Park Commission Pres!- employed bon~lngcounsei. to advise · ,said.
..
· · 'GALLIPOLJS - · 1Wenty·four Gama Academy · High School ·
dentDr. WlliiamB.Thomastol~the the district on the particulars of
Consistently, the Mohawk Chap· .
students performl!d with the Ohio Music -Education Asscielatjon's
joint meeting, .. ".a swlmtniJ)g pool ~drafting approprlate,dOcutnents for ' ter has been In the high upper 10
District. F All·D~trict Ball!l at Ohio University Sarurday night.
Is ~olngtonecessitate a tax levy." .. ,subin)sslon of a . levy to &lt;;;ama· percent In chapter raUngs· out of
The Initial concert, held ·ln OU's·-Memonaj Auditorium; ·lncluded
· · · · .. . over 3!l&gt; state . chapters .. 'Nineteen
. tne folioWlng_
GAHS:
Seyfarth; Rhonda
Michele: '; · ' After : outllnlilg tile fesults of · County :VOters,. ·. ·. ·
and
surveys,
that
support
~
According
to
Baker,
the
proposed
jUdgingteamshaveplacedinthetop
·
studieS
· Holley, Crls8y Riehle, Amianda l;lrunicardl, Carole Cannlchael, jo
such
construction,
Dr.
Thomas
said,
~would
be
a
3&amp;-meter,
L-shaped
ten
In the 'last 15 years with two
Anne Stewart, Tanja Sattler, Mandy 'North, Karen Craigo, Rita
"The
only
way
to
get
it,
that
we
see,
{acillt)
Cjlpable'
of
accommodating
teams
placing · first in natioll;ll
Randolph, Lyynn Conley, Laura Brunlcardl, Jessica Montgomery,
is
a
levy
..
,!here
are
matching
funds
.
up
to
600\Wlmrners.
·
contests.
Many. oi Sayre's students
David Brown, T.J. Leohard, David Brown, 'Jenny Merry, Gene
O'Rourke, David Edelmann, Eric Jones, Jeff l'Jorthup, Jack MIUer
and Mark Oliver.
District 171nciuctes schools from seven southeastern Ohio counties.
Area schools represented this spring were Gallipolis, Jackson,
Athens, Southern, Oak HIU, Meigs, VInton County, Kyger Creek,
NelsonvUie-York, Wheelersburg and Eastern.
David PhUiips; GAHS, was coordinator for the 1lll5 conCE-rt.

FUe for dissolution

•

FORT WORTH, Texas - Consotidatep sales In M'arch for Tandy
Corp. Increased 3percent to$227.~.001overthe$227,233,001earned .
In March 1lll4.
Radio Shack division recorded a 3 percent galn to $174.382,1Dl
during March, compared to $1691023,001 in March of last year. Sales
of Radio Shack stores In existence niore than a year rose 3percent In
March .
Consolldated sales · for the quarter ended March 31 WI!TI'
approxlmat~ly $670,628,IDI, a 2 pelt ent gain over the )'l'ar earlier
sales o! $656,1li.OOJ. Third quarter earnings wUI be released later In

thf: edge of the white town ot
Ultenhage. ·
Theother10rofflnlheldvictirnSof
other Incidents of unrest In recent
weeks.
Pollee said three ·black men and
three wamen were arrested Satur·
day near Uitenhage after they
stoned pollee vehicles and youths
stopped JX&gt;Uce vehicles three times
before they
dispersed by tear
gas.
A spokegnan at national PIJIIce
headquart~!f!J ln Pretoria said• the
Incidents were not related to the
funeral, which be described as

AprO.

·

·

Startlng In March, Tandy opened an additional • 50 te~llllle
· centm, located within existing computer centers. A majority of the ·
new tl'lephone centers will be located in Pennsylvania, New Jerwy,
California and Florida. New centers WUI aiJo be placed ln the
southwest, mldw.e st and southeastern states.

were

Station head ,chairs
. committee
.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Leo M. MacCourtlley, vice lftSidenl
and aeneral manager of WOWK·TV, hal been named chalrrnali of
VIE till! VIewer IQfonnatlon·Educatloll aDunlttN. of tbe ABC
. Te~lon-Network's A11111ate Aliloclatlon Board Of Gclm'larl.
~rtney was 101111e!'ly secretary·tre.ln!r of the Cl'plllza11011. The comnilttee, formed In 1911&gt;, cl r: mllnates lnfonnatlon.
prtmar11y on the educational value Of televl.ston programinlna:,
among ABC·afflllated stations all!l their viewers.
·
MacCourtney has held his CIUTI'Ilt position at WOWK since It wu
' purChased by Gateway Communlcatlul!a, Cherry Hill, N.J., In '

••very peaceft.it.''
Hours o! speeches and prayers
were acheduled, ending In a masa
burial In a nearby graveyard. There ·
was no violence.
·
Hundrecla of pollee and IOidlers
guarded roada on the outiklrtB 01
black ixxnmunltles around the
white cities of Ultenhage and Port
Elizabeth, the countty's auto- ·
manufacturing centers. ·

October 197f.

'I

..

twoouncesofcheese,oron~egg.or

tionson~nvlmprovementswhichhe

keddrybeansor
of
half
-.,
one
-cup coo
·
orshefeelsnecessaryandbeneflclal
peanut
tablespoons
o!
f
peas, or our
.
to the program The consultant
butter, or an equivalent quantity of works ve closely with thesuperln·
any combination Gf these; three- tendent rybusln
· ess mana=r 1.__,
fourths cup 0I two or more dlrectn~ and-or dietician in
...order
• """
to
vegetables or fruit oc IJ&gt;th; one slice keep r the school lunch program
of whole grain or enriched bread or • ruMlng smoothly. Monthly reports
acceptable bread alternate.
are required by' all schools on the
Local schools are reimbllrsed.for National School Lunch Program.
the number of reimbursable The reports are kept on !lie ready to
lunches served each month.
be checked by the consultant when
lmbursments by the
School
re
he'or she rE'VIews that school.
There are t~ kinds o! relmbur·
government is: 12 cents per each
tutly paid reii'nbursable lunch, .able luliches prepared in the state
$1.25~. cents (or each free meal, and
f Ohio
85~ cents per each reduced meal. 0 1 F~ Prepared on Site ...;. each
·Schools which served 00 percent of tndivldualschoolpreparestbelrown
aii their lunches free or at a reduced food In the school kitchen where 11 Is
prlcet~lsyear (198'-li5),quailfy to ·
•ed
'
~Ive 2 cents more each fret' and serv ·
·~~
2. Bulk . Satellite - food is
reduced
price lunch se~Ved.

f::a?,!;'x:~"'\":':.:c~t~~'::

k
Counselor spea

at OVMA
.
· me.e t•mg·.

At the meeting were Charles
Adkins, Holzer Medical Center:
Edith Adkins , Pomeroy offiCe of
OhioBu'reauofEmpioymentServl·
ces; GaryAi'go: cAMSCOProduce
c o.: Ron Ash. Ohio Power Co. and
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce;
with an attendance of !14.
Richard Batyko. RGC·CC; Steve
Speaker for the .,eettng was
Biankenbeker, Cedar Hl'lghts Clay
Myrlam Ruthchiid, psychological
co.; Bill Blower. Rawllngs-Coats~~or ~~~C-C~n;;'c~ Blower Fu~ral Home and Middle'pUbli~hlngrompany and mail-order port Chamber of Commerce; Dr.
Ray Boggs, RGC-CC; Marvin
marketlngfirm. ·
Boxdorter. Imperial EleCtric Co.;
The company's lis t of customers
range from professional magicians
But L. Brady, Stauffer Chemlcal
to amateurs atld from small
co.; Steven Chapman, Certified
io
public accountant; Beverly Crabretailers to large internal na 1 tree, RGC·CC: Donald L. Crance,
companies. Her presentation was
titled "Transition Management."
Commerciai&amp;SavlngsBanlt, Mark
Ruthchlidautilned thefiliestageso!
Curry, the Wiseman Agency; Carl
a transition or change period In an
Dahlberg, RGC-CC; Lesa Evans,
, RGC-CC ; Chuck Fenwick: LQuis R.
organization and what manage·
ment should do at each stage to
Ford Jr., Ohio Valley Electrtc
h
Corp.; Blll Gray, WJEH-WYPC ;
make the transition as smoot as
Carl Jerzyk, Goodyear Tire. &amp;
possible.'hil
.
ded he H
Ru. bber Co.; Caryl l{tser.-RGC.CC
. .. ;
RuthC · d atten
t
o09rs
,.,
·Tu· 1......~ 1 c0"...;e Ohio University .DhHerrnan.Koby;RuC·CC:,;. · -: ·
"'"'
uq; '
. · • '
John M . .,"Jakt&gt;'.' Koebel, Colum- .
received
bachelor's
,
. ch 1 gya magna
cum.degree
laude •!'
ln
blaGasofOhio; DennlsKomaroml,
P8)' 00 • .
,
.
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rttbber; JOhn .
· 1983· She received a. mastE'r s in
Lambert, Jackson Aluminum Co.; .
education from OU s ·&amp;hoot. of
Dwigbt ~. ~GC·CC;·; George
Applied BehaviOral, SCiences and
Lukac,' RGC-CC; Joseph Mllt_lh!.ws,
Education Leader!lhlp in l98'.
RGC-CC; Ronald ·G. McDade,
· She )las beendeveioplngentrepre- Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
neural pro~tssincetheearlyl960s, ' Co.; Dr. Milton McRoberts, RGCranging from the development of CC; Gary Roach, the Wiseman
the James B. May Management
Agency; Ralph Roner, Federal
Agency • which dealt with talent
Mogul Corp.; Jl'nnifl'r L. Sheets,
development and marketing, to
attorney·ai-law; A.G. Shoemaker.
Astromkl Corp .. a mail-order firm
c &amp; s Bank; Dr. Clodus R. Smith,
for jewelry.
RGC-CC; Paula Smith; Ron Snider.
Ruthchild has been writing professiofially formorethan.18yt&gt;_a rs in
Jackson Corp.:
fro
d
rtis
t
Walter S. Stowers, Gallipolis
areas ranging . m a ve J!lg o
personality analysis. She l~ c;ur- office,' OBES; A.J. Trawick Jr.,
rently wrltlng "Tra•. nsltlon: Coping Appalachian Power Co.; Dr. E:
Wade Underwood. RGC-CC; Hac
with Lift'Chan2es.
rold Walker, RGC-CC: Chu~k :
I
t
In
R uthchud sp:&gt;a ks and ec ures
. both the United States and Canada Woods, Federal Mo¢\11; Betty.
and has an international following Zavada. RGC-CC .
OVMAm('('tsonthPfirstTuesday'
for her books and, art icles · She h as
dooc extensive research 1n lndivid· of ~ach,. m&lt;)nth , October through
uat response to chtangeln a nddi tranthsi
~~; -~~~~iintyR~';'n~~~of~~~
t1on managemen , c 1u ng
e
devPlopment of the Transition breakfast and a s hort program. Tht'
Schema for cognitive process of next !Tl('('ting is o;;e! for May 7. and
changE' in adult growth and speakrr will be Raymond Lorello,
assistant dil'I'Ctor. Ohio DepartdeVl'Iopmen t ·
RuthchUd conducts workshops in ment of Development. Lorello will
various areas. lnciudlng transition discuss ·economic development In
management, handling the divorce Ohio.
process and professional. develop- , For more information on OVMA~
ment, and 1s a pen;onai counselor contact Dwigllt Leedy , Ohio Trchworking with individuals with a noiogy Transfpr Organization coo_r-.
myriad of life· · tran•ition dinator at RGC·CC, at 245-53.1.1 or·
considerations
··
· l·IID-:182-?Wl. extt'nsion 367.
·

Allofthedecisionsonhowaachool
student becomes l'iiglble to receivE' the district (ln bulk). where it is then
a reduced or even a free lunch is
basedonthelncomeofthefamUy.lf served.
the family Income l'xceeds the .
3. Pre-packagE' Satellite- food ls
mirllmum dollars amount, the · prepared In the central kitchen ,
student is n!QUired to pay the full placedlnstyrofoamplates,andthen
transported to 'the schools in that
price for a lunch. '1'IMt Pllglblilty
dlstrlci
to he hetlted and served.
figure shown are the same tor all sOme schools prepare t~ meals
the United State~~ but will vary In 'advanCe (as long as a week ),
accordlllg to the numbel' of children freezing them and using at a later
In a hoUiellold.
.
da
·
1. 11 !Ill! lnCilme per family
te.
· ~ $18,0D, tilt! studrftt is
required to pay the full Pflce for li . ·
retmbuned lunch.
2.11 the IIICOI'I'II' level falls between
BOWLING GlttEN, OhiO (AP)
thearnountof$18,00)and$13,(D), the
ThepresldelltoftheMid·Anierlca
llludfnt Ia IUbject to pay !Ill! reduced
Council
on Economlc ~lopllll!llt,
price !Or. relmllur!Ed lunch.
Cllrlstlne
Dletlch, has rt!SicJled.to
3. H the lnCilme Is below $13,001,
tEt\AJie
«UUtdc dewlopiueat ·
till! I!Ud!nt Is allotted . a free
director
for
WWJama C&lt;uty.
reimbl.ned luilcll. '
Dletch.
of~
will remalll
In addition to !Ill! relrnbUI'Ierllei ·
oa
tilt
MAC-ED
board
of
dhectora,
·~ by CGieM, tllfllldlool
l)'ltllll do~ PJiiMIIIMit IIIII tbe c:ouncll's dlalnnan. Alhel
foods "blcll are dolllltecf by the Bryu. Her ltiC.'O!IIOI' IIJcely Will be
'federal aovernment. In order to be dloeen next Wft!k, he said.
'lbe m•nd\, a private, non·pr'Oftt
fair about the dlltrlbution of the
food, which Is dcmted by the USDA, IIIWP. helpl CIIUNiel IIJtl mlanii::Ithe JOYft'llll'l'lll calculatee tllt JIIIlda With drYeloprnent lltltll!l. It
IIUIIIber of daBy relmbllrled ... .,..... In Jl7lj by 'l'olldD-efte
lun!:hell which are !rM!d In eecll

Executive l'e8igns

8

RIO GRANDE _ The April
meetillgoftheOhioVaiieyManagement Association was held recent 1Y
In James .A. Rhodes Student·
CommunitY Center at Rio Grande
C
College and Community 011Pge

Murphy· net _income increase8
·

McKEESPORT, Pa. - G.C.
Murphy Co. reported net income
from the 1!184 fiscal year ended Jan.
31 or m,J16,&lt;XXI, or $4.90 per share,
compared wlth $18.~001 or St.56
per share for the 1!113 fllcal year
ended Jan . 26, 1!184.
Sales for the 53-M!t!k period of
1984 were $913,252,(XX) compared
with $872,151,001 for the 52·week
period of 1983.
The net Income amounts for both
years Include pri!vlously fe!¥&gt;ned
extraordinary gains o! $9i4,001 or 16
cents , per share ln 19fW and
$1,381,001 or 34 cents per share ln
1983. resulting from non-taxable
. exchanges of long-term debt for
equity.
.
In addition, during the fourth
quarter ct. 1!184 the company
repurchaM!d outAandlng lolll·lerm
debl resuiJing .In an ~aordlnary
gain, Ill!\ of applicable Income'
taxes, o! SHJ.OOI or 11 ct!llts per
share. Income before tbe ~aordl­
.n ary gains was $1!1,001,001 or $4.63
per share In 198f and $17,027,1Dl or
' SU2 pn"lllllre In 11183.
Net inCilme tor the fOUrth quarter

was $8.827.IDI or $2.14 per share ill
198' against $7.343 ,001 or $1.78 per
share for 1983. Income before the
extraordinary gain realized In the
fourth quarter ofl98' was$8.384,001
or $2.03 per share. Sales for the
14·week fourth quarter of 198f were
$288,597,000 compared wlth
S279,251,&lt;XXI for the 13-week fourth
quarter of 1983.
As previously announced, the
company is actlvely exploring the
feasibility of proposing a transac·
Hon. structured as ~ leveraged
buyout, which would result In an
employee stock . ownenship plan
purcllasing the company.
11 the employee stock ownership
plan lelleraged buyout were propollf!d and approved cerlaln slgnlll·
cant adjustments would be required to the llnanclal stat!ml!nts to ·
reflect the related purchase
transactions.
'
·
· At the end of the ti8Cal )'Hr, tbe
company wu operating 31131100!1, ·
of which 119 were Murphy's Marts.
At the same ·ti~ last year, Q
lltm!l, lncludlllr ll8 M\lrphy'l
MartB, were ln CJIII!I'8tlon.
·
•'

•I

�'
Pomeroy~Mid(Ueport-GaUipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va.

Page-l;-~- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 14, 1985

China ~ cutting into U. S•.soy_
b ean exports

Meigs County ·agent's corner

Linked deposit loans available

fJrreg;:;lo~n,;";th;e;;~~sa~l~d~.Chln~~a:d;oes~~~~c~o;n~tln~u~ed~on;E;-;311i~iiii,,

ON THE .JOB? .

Agriculture and our community

.·A·re.a·· farm
· '· e·rs
· Ia
. . ki•ng·
.·
.
.adv·a
·n.taf71e of'· ·p·""ogram
· ·.
. .· . . e
•·
.

mllk

.

If you have been iniured on the job and
si,re legal representation for your Workeu'
Compensation claim, call for further infor•
.mation without obligation.
.
CALLCOLLECT:(614)488-6945
(614) 486)8401

.

.

r------------i
NOW OPEN

may

. Paotec;t vour.hOine .
against fire and bUrglary,
·and save on your
.homeowners
too.

. WINDSOR
FURNITURE

Upholstered Furniture

· SWIMMING POOL KITS

SPAS

WINDSOR
FURNITURE

.

-~

-~

~

n............ ss· "'

.
~

. •·

The

.

Comrnon.Pleas

·

. ·

Fr.!lnklui

"·

.

l ... : .

OHIO BUILDING AUTHORITY, PLAINTIFF, vs. THOMAS E. FERGUsON, AUDITOR,
STATE OF OHIO, et al., DEFENDANTS.
.

NOTICE OF GENERAL BOND VALIDATION HEARiNG

"·

TO THE ·STATE OF OHIO AND TO ALL PROPERTY OWNERS, TAXPAYERS AND
CITIZENS OF THE STATE OF OHIO, INCLUDING NONRESIDENT OWNERS OF
PROPERTY SUBJECT TO TAXATION OR SPECIAL ASSESSMENT BY THE STATE OF
OHIO, AND ALL OTHER PERSONS AFFECTED BY OR INTERESTED IN THE ISSUANCE
OF SECURITIES BY THE OHIO BUILDING AUTHORITY:
'
The securities referred to above are the State of Ohio Local Jail Grant Bonds 1985 Series A &lt;the
"Bonds"). On February 11, 111115, the Ohio Building Authority &lt;the "Authority") approved in
preliminary form the bond documents governing the issuaooe of the Bonds and determined the
necessity of commencing this action to obtain an adjudication of its authority to issue the
Bonds as weU as of the validity of the proceedings taken and proposed to be taken in connection
therewith.
·

"'.-;

,,

.

With amazing savinp on the most spc;U·
binding collect~ of luxurious Evans..

Black carpets by Arm!lcons. In today'•

mosr papular colon and 5tyles.
So pick a style-any style-and save bia;!

•

.......
...,

Amazing Savings On

Savings On

Scslsls:adPIIII•
Reg. '16.50 SQ.
~d .

$]250 sq. yd.

HAFFElT BROS. CUSTOM CARPmNG
397 JACKSON PIKE

IT. 35 WEST

GAWPO...$, OHIO

. aforesaid master Ieaiie and supplemental leases will be provided by the payment of rents by
·~ the Department and the' Department will be a party to the aforesaid leases solely for the
· · · pUrpose ol agreeing to pay the rents on' behalf of·the Counties. Such payment of rents will be
funded by such biennial appropriationa as may be made in the discretion of the Ohio General
Assembly from the general revenue fund ol the State ol Ohio.
·
TIM! State ·of Ohio, througb ill Attorney General, and aU other 'persons named herein are
required to appear 11t8::J&gt;a.m. on May7,1• • in Cou.rtroom 7-A of the Court of Common Pleas
·· of Franklin County, Ohio, :tal South High Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, and be heard before the
CGurt; and abow ~use why the prayer ol the PetitiOil and Complaint seeking validation ol tl\e
Bonds lhould not be IJ:'Ilnted and the proceedinp taken and proposed to be taken by the
Authority in connection with the issuanCe ol tlie Bonds should not be validated and CQnflnned.
The Petition and Complalnrtor validation of .the 8onda was filed as Case No. 85CV-o3-1500 in
the COUrt crl Common Plti!is crl Franklin County, Ohio on March ta, 111115 by the Authority.
Thomas E. Ferguaon, Auditor ol the State ol Ohio; Palmer ·M cNeal, County Auditor of the.
· C~ty ol Franklin, Ohio; Richard P. Seiter, Director ol the Department; and all property
owners, taxpayet'l and citizens of the State ol Ohio, including nonresident owners of property
subject to taxation or speclal•aessment by the State ol Ohio, and all other persons affected by
or inlerelted In the taauanc:e ol securities by the AuthoritY were named as defendants.
Fallowing pub~tion of thla notice onee a week for three consecutive weeks in a newspaper of
general cirtulation in each county·ill the State cl Ohio, tlervice }halt be complete on all 1UCJ1
peno~~~~ulf served per1G118Uy. Anthony J. Celebrezze, Attorney General qf the State ol Ohio
and the pi"CCMCCItiJJg attomeya in each county in the State ol Ohio are charged by law with the'
duty ol maklag a def- to IUCb Petltioa and Complaint for vaUdation'crf the 80nda If, after
their eumlnatioa ol tbe petition, ·it appears or there is reason to believe that the petition is
defective, inluflieieat or untrue, or if in the opinion of such attorney 011 attorneys, the ialuance
ol the Bonds is not lawful or has not~ duly authorized.
.•
· .·
Cauaed to be published by 'l'hoqJu J. EnriJht, Clerk ol,Court, pursuantto Order of the Court of
Common PI~ ol Franklin County, Ohio, dated March 18, 1885.
·
/S/Fais for Britt
. Jllllae. Court ol Common Pleu ol Frlnklin County, Ohio .

ooMt on1y If the pi'QCt'edlngs or tile h;ippened In 1900 inHarrlsonTwp., Frenclunan.
(Special~)
''No. I don't suppose It Is,"
conference regarding him were . in 1910, at Yellowtown. In 1915, at
TifURMA,N - The church we · printed · and distribUted · to the · Morgan Center.
rem arked !he preacher. · .
feature · today is
All the trials .of these pen;ons, ·
The Frenchman then shuffled his
quarterly conference.
not quite In Gauta
The printing was done 'artd testing out hOw far tree speech .right foot and as~ed :
county. ijow.'
" Is that a sin?''
Edwal'ds promply flied a libel suit extended within the confines or the
ever, thlBJackson
played out before .. ' The preacher _stated \h!it jt
against Carmel and Centeryille church,
Coun~ · church.
chui:clles as.weii as the ministers ot overflowlngcol.lrtroom crowds.lbE' seemed all right with him, whereu , .
Cam'l€1 by name, ·
Nebo, Tyn . Rhos, and the other . .arguments usually centered a round pan the FrenChman stated that all
through most o(
Welsh Congregatloital churches. ln somE' ihe9loglcal question dealing . he did was shuffle both fft&gt;t at the
Its hlstocy was
. court Edwards was awarded $.DI with baptism, thesecondcomlng,or sa me tlme.
associated with the Centerville for libel darna~ . The circuit court the meaning of holiness.
A trustee or- one chijrch was
. Welsh Congregational' Church then overturned this decision aitd
Churches themselves also con- brought befon. the church board tor
· (which Is no longer s~dlng) . ·
sent It back to the Court of Common due~ trla}s of their members gambling. He confessed he had In
· Carmel and Centerville Welsh . Pleas where tlle churches won:
according to church law. Orieofthe fact fallen to tempta.tlon:
Congregational Churches were of
"But preacher," he said. "'fix'
This was not theonlytlmethat the FrettchsOObeCameamemberofthe
theS81TledenOmlnatlonas'l'ynR.hos · courts have been called upon to Methodist Church and was put on Lord dealt ine a royal flush and I
and Nebo Churclwis, both located · settle church squabbles In GaUia trial for dancing. The Frenchman , · cleaned those sinners out!"
liNl' Rio 'Grande. Centervwe and . County. 1n 1894, one VInton church . . standing before the pastor, shuffled
(You may write a Je«ertoJIUJleS
1
CARMEL CHlJRCH; located olt U. S. Route 3&amp;, .near,lhe H1c11an1s
Carmel Churches were probably took their preacher to court·to have his left foot.
..
sands, author oUhls article, Box 92,
lirothers fnrlt farm In J~~Ckson · Cootncy, w• 1111pa11y a · Welsll
organiZed in the 1850s and tunc!!· him ruled insane. It seems thai the
"Is that a sln?" asked the Clarksburg, ObJo, 4311~ ). ·
Congregational ~burch and was on a circuit wWt Cenlervlle Welllh
oned as Welsh . CongregatiOnal RE'v. P: S. Butts had opened the
Congregational Church. Thlsdenoollnatloadledoutimt'*cllarp!about · · · Cl)urcllestoaboutWorldWarl. The funeral service of a prominent
W~rkl War I. ln 1889, the pastor of Centen&lt;!Jle 81!11 Cannel •
his
. church In CentervillE' ceased opera- Vlntonlan with the remark:
ch~rches for Utiel, asking $211,000 1n OOJ:nages.
. ,
· · lions ·as a church In 1914 with the
"If this Bible Is true, today this
, churcb.buUdlng taken over by the rnan Is In ffades."
CentervUie · School, which was
On another occasion Butts had
..,....~-~-"""'-......!::C::::on:::t.:::ln:::lled:;:;:.:;fro:.::.:.:m.!.:E:=:-~2~-.;....~-..- located . next to the chureh. the leaderS of the church join him In the
church at Carmei has continued to
"
. nature and scope of the probiem,
ly to ,reach about 52 mllllon•t9ns In .be used as a house or worship since pulpit io raise up their hands .~nd
. 2) .analyze the financial condition
the ctirrent July through June World War .I off and ·On, but not . shciut, "Praise the Lord! "
One witness ln the trial or Butts
. of th~ farm firm, 3). analyze factrade year. This will be slgnUI· always as a Welsh Congregational
claimed that Butts Imitated birds.
tors contributing to stress 4) ldencantly above the previous record Church.
··
animals and' residents of Vinton In
.tffy avajlable resources In the
amount or 46 million tons In 1981-82.
lnl888,theRev. WIIUamEdwards the pulpit. Butts also mentiOned by
AT THE ·
community, and 5) consult with
For comparl.son, Imports averaged accet&gt;ted call to the pastorate or.
name
three
dellquent
members
who·
the family and agree on the 'best
just 27.6 million ton annually bet· CentervUie and Carmel. The follow,
MAIN CLINIC ON ROUtE 35 NEAR GALliPOLIS
ought to be branded with a red hot
course of action In· Implementing ween 1975 and 1~. This year's
' lng year a.rlft .broke out'hetween
a plan .. ·
wheat Imports alone are put at 26 preacher and congregation. At the iron. On, anotller occasion Butts
. called some peopleofthe church old
The home economics aent Is
rtlllllon tons, which Is 25%;~bove the
quarterly conference of Welsh fogies, deserters, and backsll&lt;lets. , .
also avaHablE' to work with the
preVious record 11mount Imported
Congregational churches held In
Appearing bfore Doctors John·
,
..
.
·
family on famtly living and any last year.
September,
1889
at
.
Nebo,
the
ston.
Howl'
II;
and
Hanson
as
well
as
Other
clinical
specialists
available
for
consultatiol)s.
En•
siress problems a family · may ·
Coarse grain imports are ex·
congregations
of
Centerville
and
Judge
Hanna.
Butts
was
found
to
be
have. ·
pected to be nearly equal to the
.t~r. the Clinic at hospital Emergency Room entrance. ·
'/(]1 fatnllles Who have farm
previous record of 25.5 mUlkin tons Carmel11'Quested that the RE'v. Mr. "only E'Cet?ntrlc and riot Insane."
·
Pediatric patients should phone :
At anolhE'r tlrrie, the courts had to
problems are urged to contact
reached In 1981-82. The U.S. Is be- Edwards be reljeved of his duties at
446-5287
; . .
· the toll·free hotllne number - 1· nefitting slgniilcantly from these .the end or ·the conference year~ ~tep In an\1 ~sue restraining orders
which
was
about
October.
for
a
time
to
be
seen.
against certain persons whollked to .
8Q0-253-3276 - or call us at 446· . lhcreased Soviet purchases, with
7007. There will be free educa- shipments likely to reach neerly 21 · When the quarterly conference travel around to other d'en9mina·
URGENT CARE 'CENTER HOURS
tional counSeling for the family . million tons. This would be about convened In Decf.mber of -1889, lions and break up services by
'
'
again
at
Nebo,
It
was
reported
the
MONDAY-FRIDAY
......:..........." ................................. $ P.M.-9 P.M.
arguing with the' preacher even as
50% greater than the previous reRE'v.
Mr.
Edwards
had
Insisted
on
Mtlk produ ction appears likely cord for u.S.·U.S.S.R. gral!t shiphe spoke. This sort of thing
SATURDAY SUNDAY .••,.......................;..................... 1 P.Rl·9 P.M.
to turn upward this spring. This ments which was reached In fiscal retaining the pulpit after his year
HOtiDA YS o . . uuoooooo'oooOhooo~ouoo~oouuoouooooooooooooooouoooooouo 1 P.M.•9 , .M.
will result In an increase In go, year 1979. The record level or· So- ·was up, The conference passed a
vernment purchases or surplus viet Imports reflect expansion In 11, . resolutloni:all\llgEdwards'conduct ·.-----------_j~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;::::::::::::::::=::::::=.
dairy products and the llkell.hood . vestock produ.ctlon In the U.S.S.R. to he "sfl!bborn, unworthy, and such .
of a further reduction In the level Continuing Increases in animal as to bring reproach on the cause of
.
of federal milk price supports.
numbers albeit at a somewhat Christ."
The
problem
came
In
how
to
Compared to a year earlier, · slower rate of growth tha11 In r~
output in ' early 1965 was down . Gent yeats and a significant 13% remove Edwards from the pulpit.
just 2.2 percent even though the decreaSe In the size ot last fall's So- After some days of discussion
Edwards agreed he would step
milk diversion progr.am was still viet grain harvest."
In effect. Cow numbers totaled
10.8. million, 2 percent fewer
thana year earlier. ·
AJOURNEY TO THE
. Ho,wever, with the end or the
HOLY LAND
diversion p'rogram ,on Aprll1 and
PER PER$0N
a large .crop of freshening heife~s
DOUBLE OCCUPANCY
.
this .s pring, cow numbers appear
·
· · JUN~ 10-19 . ' .
likely to lncrea:se somewhat, 'In .
Fix fiom· Columbus to Tel Aviv vi4 TWA to
the month&amp;· ·ahead., Comblillng
spind· lO-.day·s.tourin&amp; lsra~l. AU meals iff· ,... ~ ,
this with highe~ feedj~g·rates, to, ·
cJuded. ·A vacatton of wur .lffetmM,. For 6 pf
·.
tal output should be boosted In
your. tour n i1Hh:.s_ y~u Jsta~ at: the d,eluxe lnte.r
,,,.0 , "'" ~"""'
the· .last half ot tl!e current
, C.ontmelila ·
1n erusa1em. ,. .
" . , . . . . · . . •.,;.totM!r. through Septembet' mar• 7
.
.•
· ~~7_1,
,; GA~P~LI~ :':·· .. ·, .
.· .keiijlg year b}'. enough, to bring
the aitnuartotal to' atound 137 bll·
lion: pounds, slightly above a
,
360 Second Ave.
year earlier.
Gallipoli$. Ohio 45631
Ph. 446-0699
This . will put government
• 11 H.P. Industrial
purchases at above 9 bUllon pounds
~ 5 Speed Transml11lon.
of milk equivalent, which Is mQre hjjiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii";·· iiiiii,iiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiii
• Professional 20" Turf Tires
than enough to trigger a reducdon ·
• Electric Clutch
In the prloe support to ,$1Ui0 .i&gt;er
• Huge 5 ~allon Gaa Tank
hundredweight on July 1. .,

were

··
A. 'rea ...

.· HOLZER

LTD.

~LINIC

URGENT CARE CENTER
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

a

·.

Staffed by Family Practitioners and
Pediatricians for treatment of· urgent
. illnesses and injuries.
.

~

.

1 u..1

oc·,

· .@) :·..

..

orA~;a4 ~
?:11Travel Agency ···• · · ···

Model ST110

..

SoVIet grain Imports appear Uke.

•

China ...

' Let H&amp;R Blotk.evaluate your situation and then
. accurately comp!ete the prQper fo~ms. Come
on in to our convenient office at:
.·
.. .

Continued from E·2

.

U approved, the Bonds will be issued 1!8 bonds of the State:of Ohio by the Authority and will be
secured by pledges of the revenues and receipts derived by the Authority from a master lease
it will enter into with the Ohio Department ol Rehabilitation and COI'fl!Clion (the "Depart·
ment") and the supPlemental leases it will enter into with the Department and the Counties of
Franklin, Hamilton a lid Mahoning, Ohio respectively, with respect to the Projects located
· within such Counties. The revenues and reeeipta that the Authority will derive from the

...

· ·· ByJAM1!8SANI18

• W/38" Mower

nte Authority claims authority, pursuant to Article VIII, Section 2i or the Ohio COIIIltitUtion;

Chapter 152 of the Ohio Revised Code; Section307.021 of the Ohio Revised Code; arid SectionS
of AmenQed Sublltitute House Bill No. 530 of the 114th Ohio General Assembly, as amended, to
issue boildli to provide ~oneys for the purpcises of paying a portion of the costs of acquiring;
constructing, rehabilitating, renovating and otherwise improving capital facilities for use as
county, multi-county and city-county jail facilities and/or workbouses and/or single county or
· district community-based correctional faciliti~ and/or county family cburt centers. The
proceeds from the Bonds, if approved, will be used to pay or reimburse a portion of the costs of
constructing the Franklin County Correctional Facility, the portion of the Hamil to!' County
Justice Complex constituting a county correctional facility and the Mahoning County Coil)·
munity Correctional Facility (the "Projects").
·

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-. Page - E~3

1 .C annel in Jackson County · associated with Centerville

ByOONKENi&gt;ALL
· iiecomeantnlportantsaurce ofboth U.S.S.R." for the sale of 400.!XXJ tQ not rely heavUy on jllgh·proteln ·
. AP Fann Writer
soybeans and soybean meal In 500,00! tons or soybeans annually, soybean meal tor Uvestock, "leavWASHJNGTON
(AP)
Amerl·
selected
Asian countries" aswellas · the report said.
lngsubstantlalquantltlesavaUable
By JOHN C. RICE,
Is In short supply the price goes up
c~nsoybeanfarmerstoryearshave • In the SOviet Un!Qn.
,
In
1983-84~ OUnese shipments to
for
export."
.
Melp Extarslon Agent
· very sharp)y. The dairY Industry Is . kept a wary eye on 'BrazU and
The
department's
Foreign
Agrl· . the Soviet union Included 300,00&gt; ·· Other factors that are hurting the
POMEROY - State Agriculture no exc;eptlon·to this rule. To provide
. u.s. soybean meal potential In that
Bill Passes - effective AprU 2, 1985 a more stable price, the government Aqrentina as thelrchief competitors cultural Service said In a monthly Ions of soybeans.
In
world
markets.
Now.
they'd
revlel!( C&gt;f the lnterna tiona I ol).seed
.
·
Japan,
tile
Nb.l
rorelgn
customer
part or the world Include "a·modest
and running till ,June ~. 1987, you
has" provided a support price for
better
glance
occaslonaUy
across
situation
that
China's
exports
IIi
ofAltierlciiJifarmers,lsanotherblg
.
lncre~ In protein me~ output
may be able to borrow operating
milk. In 'other· words, the govern· · !hePaclficatChina.
~85 are expected to cUmb tO soybeanbuyer.Forsoybeanmeal,
fromlocallyproducedo!lseeds,and
rnoey for less than the current
merit purchases so much milk IQ
In the market Iii&amp; year that ended about 850,000 tons ot soybeans and Malaysia and Thailand are the · plans to l;lUUd or·expal!!l" say bean
Interest rate. Check with your local
.
'
mall)taln a cyrtaln market price.
last
Sept. ~. China - the ancestral
600,00) tons or soybean meal.
largest markets for Chinese .soy· crushing facUlties In the PhlllpleMing InStitution regarding the
Now the government has said It has
home
or
the
soybean
exported
Only
two
years
ago,
In
1!182-83,
bean
meal .- Other Important mel!l pines, Malaysia and Indonesia.
linKed deposit loans.
cost too much and they have said 684,814 metric tons. That's not much China exported 241,239 tons or beans buyers Include Hong Kong, lndone"(&lt;.s these..l1lduslrles grow, U.S. •
"Linked deposlr' means a certlfi· they will cut back on the price
lJ)
comparison
with
the
~.2
million
and
342,508
tons
ot
meal.
A
metric
·
sla,
Japan
and
South
Korea.
exports
or soybean meal to the
cate.of deposit placed by the state
support . This means dairymen wUI
tons
shipped
In
1983-84
by
the
United
ton
Is about 2,205poundsand IS equal
"This
growth has occulTed at the region can l!e expected to decline,"
. ·\reasurer with an eligible lending
,be selling tllelr milk for less. The
States. Or even the 2.97 millkin tons to~ 7 bushels of soylieans.
expense of u .S. Jmpor:ts to ·the the report saki.. "However, tJUs
· Institution at up IQ three percent
government has ;tlso paid dairymen
below current market rates.
· Chinese representatives
who signed up money not to produce · exported by Argentina and the 1.59 aggressively
marketed their"have
pn&gt;'
Lelldlnjj Institutions shall give a certain ainOunt of milk. 1bls was mUI!on tons by BrazU.
·But the Agriculture.Department . ·ducts In Asia, aitd have reportedly
priority !Otheeconomlc needs of the
paid for from a turtd which' was . said Thursday that China "has concluded an agreement with the
area and state treasurer may reject deducted
' ..
from all dalry~en's mUk.
tile ~lculture Unk deposit package
Now the diversion program . is
de~
If It does not meet designated
coming to an end and It looks Uke
speclflcailons.
production will Increase again.
An example of how the .linked" Thl$ will put government purchases
deposit Pl'O!ll'am will tunctlon:
up which will C,iUSf the prslce
fA) farmer m$e5 Joan appllca· support to be lowered to $1UO per
tlon. with the lending Institution ..:. hundredweight on July~ .
the lender . approves the loan
r application and submits the pack·
Use chemicals wisely ..:. Cheml·
by a nearl)y county agent who .Is a
By Bryson R. Carter
·age to the state treasurer.
C&lt;\1 fertilizers and pesticides are
member
of the "Immediate res· County Extension Agent;
(B) State treasurer approves the
lndespensable to modem agricUJ.
William R. Hamelberg
ponse"
team.
Once the contact
Agriculture
&amp;.
CNRD
package and agrees to reduce the
ture. But th,ey must be used with
Janice M. Kennedy
GALLIPO.LIS - More than 300 has been made, the farmer and .
• Interest rate by three percent on
care and the approplate protec_tlve .
his
family
have
a
chance
to
work
farm families from throug~out
Attorneys"At·Law
• funds deposited with the lending
gear.
the state have taken part In the on a onE'·Io·one basis with the exinstitution or, pn bonds purchased
21 09 Stella Court
Always read the label and follow Ohio Cooperative Extension Ser- tension agent Inventorying farm
from the Farm .Credit system. In
Its directions explicitly.
Columbus, Ohio 43215
resources and &lt;;onslderlng avalla·
·vtce program called CES·FARM
turn. the lending Institution Is
ble options . .The agent will counsince
It
began
March
1.
·
expected to reduce the Interest rate
Ample skin cover and eye
sel the ·famlly on assembling flan-.
About 60 pecent of those who
by three percent to the farmer
protection are critical. Even with have called the toll· free hotlln'e
cial records, available credit, J--:""--~--'"---.....,-...--'-~------.,.-'-----c
borrower&gt;.
production and marketing opchelt)l
..
~
·
Is
not
consi.dered
p
.
artjcu.
number1-Soo-253-3276have
(C) Risk for repayment oft he loan
!Qp(y' · h
. ous, wear trousers, used the resoutces of the Ohio
tions · and related farm managere$15 with tbe )ending fns!ltutlon
sl.,..ved s t and hat, preferably a Cooperative Extension Service.
rr.ent concerns.
which means the lending Jnstltutlon hard hat at can't absorb dusts or
In addition, severai hundred .. While working with the farmer.
. '
will not make loans unless ·repay· liquids. ear gloves and boots. With other 'farmers have called their
an agent Is able to 1) Identify the
ment abUlty Is evident.
some chemicals you mlght need local county extension office for
Continued on E,J
(D) Maturity of loans shall not liquid-proof garments.
assistance. I have been wdrklng
exceed two years, but man be
with five farmers here In Gallla
renewed for up to an additional two
Safely dispose of empty contain· County and one In Athens County
Insurance~
years at the option of the treasurer.
ers.. Triple rinsing each emptied since I am an "Immediate res·
No Joan
excefd $100.00J.
pesticide container, using the rinse · ponse team •; member.
Ask me about State Farm 's Home
No one can produce Uke the
In thetankmlxwheneverposslbleor
The program was designed to
Alert Protection Plan . .
Amer)can farrr)er. While Industry dlsposlngoftheresidueon the farm provide individual assistance to
,p
output per Worker has pretty much
Is requ!fed. Tripi~ rinsed contain· · families facing financial man;lgeCAROLL SNOWDEN
peaked. the American farmer
417 Second Ave .
ers may be disposed of at a san1ta1'J'...., men! problems. To get asslsGallipoti•, Oh.
.pnituces more and more with less
landli!L.
·
lance, a persori has only to call the
Phone 446-4290
map hours of labor Involved. Not
local County Extension Agent or
BY
NORWALK
.
itome 446-4$11 · .
Store leftover chemicals in their the toiHree number. At th~ callonly that but he as a tendency to
Lifetime frame Guarantee
prOduce more than people can · original containers in a cabinet , er's preference, contact wll] be
Li~e a good neighbor. iStare
coliSume. Agricultural products, for room or buUdlng that can be locked. made by the local county agent or
2 Years Fabric. Warranty
· "the&gt;: most part, have ·a n inelastic
'.
~nd.· An Inelastic demand
'·•'
· means people can only eat so much.
&amp;
fteiardlessortbeprlce, you wUlonly
2404 Grand Central Ave.
Fall
SOLAa
COVEa
WITH
ANY
IN-GaOUND
consume so much. True, you may
·Vienna, W.Va.
POOl. KIT Oa SPA INVOICED .IN APall
change your eating habits and eat
.
304-295-8133 .
State Fa~rf! Fire and Casually Company
'1 00 DOWN MOLDS YOUI PURCNASI
mo~ vegeiables or purchase more ·
Beside
Wood
World
_. AT TH~SI LOW DISCO!II\IT. PRICIS
~ _ Off~ : "Bioomipg1~. llllnoiiS
.
. ..
poqliry and eat~ beef but In total, ·
1 23S'oo.. (o111plefl! K.lts ln. Jtock · · · .
•
• J
·
·
·l6a32
'
your cOOsiimptlon ·wrn·Jie. thesaine. · ·
. 1 8&amp;36 - 1;16$0•• . . . ••
. .
.
. .
' "
.. 20,::40 ".....:.: 1281SH . .
AJIO Ot'"'r Sino
.
1bl.S Inelasticity ·Iii'· demand...can
· • cau,se.laigi&gt; fluctuations in prtces ..
Abowe
Grouiu:i
Pools
-•t;;OGIII · - - - " " - - " '~" " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . .,r
· .in
24'Stock
Round,
·. Deep
•·••; .·.........
, . .., ...................
.WJ,en "'~haw too much pl"Qductlon,.
priCes drop: .v~ry sha.rply. 'fhe
·
In
Cou.rt of
of
County: Ohio ·-:: ,..
•.
' .
. ·.. . . .:&gt; CAsE NO. ii5cv~~liloo . . •. . ..···. . . . .
opriQslte!S ·als6tnie. Whena,pl'Qd"cr.

Presentift1 the ule that's pure magic.

Poinerov._:_ Middleport-Gallipoli~, Ohio-: Point Pleasant, W. Va.

· April 14, 1985

"

~·

.

j

)

,,,,
,(

'

.-

.....••·•
....".....
..."

decllne may be offset by increa~ed
U.S. soybean exports."
· , Last month the USDA said China
has 'I)Jrned Into ari exporter or feed
grams this year with shipments
. estimated at 3.6 million tons,
compafed with 400,!XXJ tons last
~ason and 100,!XXJ tons before that.
The United States. as wit])
soybeans, Is the largest exporter of
feed grains, with shipments ex·
peeled to total 58.8 million tons In
.1984'85. But. also as with soybeans,
China's gain In grain exports )las
l)elped dampen the U.S. trade .
outiook and further put doMtward
pressure on prices paid toAmE'rican
farmers.

.

27 .Sycamore St. ,

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy,· OH.

. Gallipolis, OH.

PH. 992-3795

PH. 446-0303

WE INVITE·.
·TRADES.!

· OPEN 9 'A.M.-6 P.M. WEEKDAYS; 9·5 SAT.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

OI.ANTIC CARfEl SAtE
,Jery Large .Selection Of
Carpet Drastically Reduced
. 7,~= $395 sq. yd•

·

~

..

MOdel1400
•
•
•
•
•

LAIGI SIUC:nOII '

CARPEt REMNANTS

14 H.P. .
I
Fuli·Size Garden Tractor
Caat Iron Engine
HelyY. Duty COI1SII'UCttlon'~
W/42' Mower

o SIVI

S1 ,000

PIICID TO SELL

L:f.

...
...
.
.;.
. =l

I )

,, ,.t

.
•..

%

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

I

, .OPEN MONDAY
'IIIIU SA'IUtDAY •
. 9-5

ODDS &amp; .ENDS C.ARPET ·SHOP

RT. 1; HOrSON RD.
•

~

.

'

!

.

·

~· •

MIDDLEPORT

11M£lb,ifJ !J:r--SEE YOUR IOLENS DEALER TODAY FOR FULL

CHUCK COLLIER SERVICE. STORE

262 THIRD AVE.

·

. . .

GALUPOUS, OHIO

�.••-

•

..-...--'

r .

"'

•

Pomeroy~ Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Plaesant, W.Va.

Page · E-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.. . .

We're Celebrating

'

.

I

~ur ·

•

11th· Anni~ersa·ry

April14.19ff

-.

ITH
THESE :
..

•,

•.

11~

· STOR£ HOURS .
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM ~ 10 PM "
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

POMEROY, OH.

'

'

.
PRICES EFFECTIV£ THRU SAT., APRIL 20, 1985
.

;

r--.
.
I ANNIVERSARY COUPON
I
.
IGood Sunday, April 14, Only

• ·

CHICKEN-Of·THE-SEA •

.

TUNA

'

11 (

oz.

6.5

LIMIT I PlEASE
GOOD ONlY AT POWELL'S

--·-·--·-··-·J.-1

~----

,j

Pork Lo1n
··· •••••••• S1 29

1'4

...

LB.

. ~·
II~------------ANNIVERSARY COUPON • :
,
IGood Monday, April 15, Only

I

GERiER'S STRAINED

BABY FOOD

BUCKET

or JUICE

Cube SteCJk ••••••••••
LB.

.

~

.

..

Hams ••••••••••••••••••••

,.,. .
~

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

• •

.

-------------..;1.:1
GOOD ONLY AT POWELL'S

WHOLE

1

'

LIMIT 3 PU~SE

SUPERIOR E-Z-CARVE

~=

LB.

Tutsday, April 16, Onhr '!~

$]49
Chunk Roast •••• ::·.•

..

..

MIXED '
.

. ._ · . .

.

. ..

'··

.

,

1.1.( I'

. l.s-o.. .

.

.

: &lt;.

~

'.
'

.

.,

,.

"

r·-----~

I
,Good

I

.

••I,

. PORK

3
9
(
.
Yellow On1ons......
·
•'

GALLON

.

..
·--·---..-:•

~Marga nne··~~··~'='··.2/

$

______ ...,

.

I

$]1
9
Ice Cream. ••••••••••••

:

l2PK.

oz.

'

• • ••

"

GOLD MEDAL

FAIIIC SOnENER
960Z.

$J79

lilllif 0.. Ptt C.l

I

GOilll Ololy AI rowtl't
ott.&amp;..... Set• .,.. 20, lfU

• •••••

e

•

• •I • • •

: .

.

lAG

69C

.COFFEE

, ... _
GOilll Ololy At fawolt's .
ott. ..... Set. April 20. !tiS

~A~·

li::oil 0.. ,

o

•

• • • • • • • •••••••

•••••

MAiWill HOUSE

FLOUR
HI.

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We.App"~''''

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II

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-•

.•

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0

•

•

AWARD GIVEN TO 1st. 2nd an.d 3rd PLACE FINISHERS IN ~ACH AGE GROUP DIVISION .

.

y,,, p,,,,,l•·

COME DRESSED TO RUN .

.

REGISTRATION BEGINS AT 8:00A .M. IN THE CITY
PARK ARES. DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
'

.

RACES START. AT 9:00A.M.

'

I

~

5K and 10K RACE COURS£ IS FLAT .AND RUN
THROUGH SCENIC GALLIPQLIS .
, ·

•

PRE·!:tEGISTRATION IS ONLY '6.00 (Before April
28th I.
,

.

REGISTRATION TH~ DAY OF THE RACE WILL BE
'
I
'7.00.
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. '
'

'i

11 (

• ,PART OF l .
NAnONAl NITWOII · ,
Of PIOfESSION~lf TRAINED
VIDEOTAP.ING SPECIAUSTS

ISORI;D BY

.HOLZD -ICAl CEtnU
OHIO YAWY PUKISHING CO •.

.i'

.'

...,.,IM i.

•

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tranderred to ·
vida~

.•' .
•

0

'TOMATO SOUP'

*COMMEI(I~L

·.

Training

1·1:( '

•

PreHIItatlonl
,Semlnera
•

0

*SPECIAL lYENTS

LMT HUlK
GOOD ONLy AT POWELL'S

..

L-- __,;.._,_··-·•-·-~

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0

a. Buline11

.Inventor!••
Accident Cl•lma

'
• .PrOvide vltuel proof
, for clelme ·
1
Anti11ue1 • Co.llllf~blel
'

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F"i;;i,iiii;t.-1

· · · I Edlttn{l..-•w--..
It Music Jl·
.__.~

•
•

Reunion• · '

tlonie

Wlltil t

.

~All OCCASION
*INSURANCE

,Oontr•ct•

,

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

Partie• .

Depoaltlon 1

0

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AnniverAtiea

t1pe. •
'

*LEGAL

.• .'

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SLIDE RANSFERS

YO\!.f' home movjel

•'

CAMPIIELL'S ~ . '

.......•

.

AWARDS GIVEN I TO ,1st AND 2nd MALE
AND FE.
MALE FINISHERS IN BOTH THE 5K AND 10K

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s.t,fde!, ,April 20,, ,Oftly
.

4~ .1985

. FICIAL RACE SHIRT .

'

··Phone ·992-6641..

Llf!liT .3 PUASl

l•o~. oz.

$5'9

-

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ciu.- or Sft»P BY

0

r;N~~~;~-;;;~;UPQr,i

I

I

limit ~ p., Cuslamor
Goad Only At Pawoll' s
ott. &amp;plru Sat. Ap-il 20, 1913

oz.

.

PRE-REGISTRA~·TS WILL BE GUARANTEED AN OF-

. ·WUI Relftaln Ote~ .For·
- . 811111811 A• 01111., I' ..,

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GOOD ONLY AT POWIU'S

I

• •••••

DO. .Y

16

JELLO

.... ··cooRii···...... •.._....··coull(W·· ......• ······cmAW····· t
••••

GAL. .

&lt;

'

. .INSURANCE
AGENCY
11,5 (.2nd
.
,_.,,OIL
I

I CHILl HOT BEANS

•

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•.

(
-1.1

SATURDAY, MAY

lUSH'S

·1
$]59.
- Dermtissag~ •••••••••• 89&lt; Ge·latio. Pops·.....
f-'
' "

I,

Onlt;~

'·

·v.,-o. .:·EDWARDS

..

,-----1 ANNIVERSARY COUPON
I
.
II Geod Friday, April 19,-. Only .

FLAVORITE

112

to

(AP Lliserphoio). .

UMIT 3 PlEASE .
GOOD ONLY AT POWELl'S

.

~

FRENCH CITY RUN .

XAVIER FINANC~ - .Jolm P. Minahan, viCe president lor
·aca:lerntc affairs at Xavier University, relaxes Ill his olfloe In Cincinnati
thls·week. Xavter has lncrelllled Its efforts recn:Jt college lreahmen.

~ ..

(AT FOOD
oz.

...

,.· ... ·

&gt;
L

GOOD ONLY AT POWELL'S

6.5

KRAFT PAR~A\

22

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BRIGHi EYES

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••

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lOK

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liMIT 2 PlEASE

3-LB. BAG

,.

.-

•~.. ~~tain
D's.
a
littler nfull,a.e.,

. ··.·

1"1(

7 Oz.

I
.
.
jGood
Thursday,
April
18,
'
.

BROUGHTON .

LIQUID DETERGENT

STUFFED CRAB &amp;
SHRIMP DINNER $3.
STUFFED CRAB &amp;
·FISH DINNER .

I.

1ANNIVERSARY cotiPoN

Hot .Dog Sauce •. ~.: ..·/

$3.59

I

~--------· ....

$

'

pupptes.

5K

..
.r:.
..
'.

CUFF HOUSE

·-~-------

10 0~

Delicious crab meat
and stuffing inside
nab.lral crqb shells,
nab.l.ral-cut french
fries, fresh cole slaw,
Southern-style
hush
.,

....

tI ' LUNCH~ON MEAT
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w......,. April 17,

I
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1

.· .

STUFFED.
CRAB DINNER·
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I ANNIVERSARY COliPON

1

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The

1...-·-·--·-·~-·
-~~-~~.J .
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SUPERIOR .

VIEnl

Times-Sentinei- Page- E-5

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I.MO PLEASE
'·· GOOD ONLY· AT POWELL'S

,

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...

RN MUFFIN

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JIFFY

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.·Fryer:-:. Parts~···:·· ·~~~B~......4
:· .......9,. .
29
Lunch Meats ....~••. S1

..

11 (

oz.

4.5

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

CJNCJNNATJ (AP ) - Xavier cl~ss," he said. "We'rP a tuition·
University has stepped up Jts efforts dependent ·Institution, as most
to re&lt;;rult freslunen in a dual effort to
private Institutions are, so anrthing
we candoto lncreaseourenrollment
meet the competition for ·new
stu~ts and to Improve its financial will obviously help our revenue
picture. 'l'!lerecruiilnghasassumed
base." ·
·
more urgency in light of a projected
Current enrollment of gniduate
shortfa ll that could rmch $850 em
and undergra~uate students Is
this year.
·
·
· about 7,(XX), down about 3 percent
Co~ttrlbutions to the Jesuit unlver- from recent years, Mlilahan said.
slty, lounded In 1831, have eased the · Xavier officials say an unex ·
. expected deficit . Bu1 the co.m pett·
pectt!j! · decline In part·tlme and
graduate students, along with
tlon for new students Is no less a
problem, says John Minah&lt;)n, vice
tncreasing costs of fringe benefits
for employees, are worsening the
president lor acad~&gt;nilc affairs and
· second In command.
deficit.
,
He said the number oi teen-agers .
The university's aMual budget of
about$30milllondependsontultlon
who want to attend college has
declined In recent yea~. and he· lot _more than 70 percent ol Its
foresees the trend continuing Into
Income. Average room, board and
the early 1990s.
·
tuition Is $8,100.
·
"So every1J9dy's Increasing their • University officials said the
recruitment effort s;" Minahan 8aid.
decllrte In enrollmenfamonggradu·
"We'retryingtostay in there tphold
a te and pa11-tlme students rost 1he
our. fair share of the market. We're . school nearly 6 (lercent of the
Increasing our efforts to' mt!Elt the
anticipated number . of student
competition."
'
' credit-hours.
·
Rene Durand ;Jr., Xavier's direc·
Undergraduate enrollment In
tor ol admissions, said the univerarts and sciences and business
administration . Is up slightly. ~ut
slty has Increased its re.;rulting on
the East Coast and In Sunbelt states
down by 56 students In the CoUpgeof
such as ~rgla and Florida. · ·Continuing Educatlop. Graduate
University officials have enliSted
enrollment declined by 12l stu~ts
a himnl to help 'in the campaign .
from the fall ofl983. l· .
.
Appllca~ions to Xavier are .runXavier has considered· la,a·v tng
nlng nearly 9 perceni above- last
some staff positions vacant and
year's level, Durand said; As of
temporartly suspending ~stoOf·
March 22, Xavier had received 1.558
living or merit pay Increases. -But
applications for undergraduate
Minahan says that was a "worst·
study, 124 more than last year .
case situation" anc;l that gift·givlng
Xavier officials want to enroll 600
to Xavier alone will !'educe th!i'
freshinen, :ll more than last year.
projecteil deficit below $850,cm.
Xavier traditionally has had good
"What we're facing Is not unlike
luck . recruiting freshmen, but this
what other colleges are facing a ll
year's effort has ad&lt;le&lt;J significance
across the country," he addo;'d .
~ause of ~avier's financial
"These are very difficult times wlfh
decreasing college populations ...
crunch, Minahan said.
It 's the tail-end or the baby boom ."
"They're related . In that , yes,
The . Rev. Charles L. Currie,
Wf''ve been working very hard to
Xavier president, says his school is
m aximize the size of our freslunan
equal to the challenge. '

COUPONS

298 SECOND ST.

'

Xavier steps. up ·
r~~ruiti·ng efforts to
stay c9mpetitive

..

SA~E

We Reserve The Riehl To·
Limit Quantities

0

April 14, 1985

614·446·7555

0

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-· fRENCH CITY RUN

NAMl

S/ 4/15
""

M'ALE (

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ADDRESS·------ - - - ' - - - - = " - . . : . . . C . - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - , . - - RACE. ( ) 5 It (3. llllllS)
A&amp;e IS of IIQ 4". . - - - -

( ) IOK (6.2 MILES)
(

)

1 MILE DINOSAUR DASH (FUN RUN)

Shirt Size (Adult) S
,

114-l'l

11 '' L

'KL

t h• 1114!
tCIICIO OoiJ

t-l

I

In submiltin&amp; this entry to partiti=e in the HMC/OYP FRENCH CITY RUII. I waive and rtlelll any allllall
rlchts .ud claiwts for da1111p1, de llllsand actions I may hmapinst the HOLZER HOSPITAL FOUIDATIOI
dbti/HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER and the 0~10 VAllEY PUBLISHING COMPANY. lllttst that I tit pllpiciiiJ
lit. thai I hut sufficiently trained for my participation in this e.vent. and that my physical condition flli bttn

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verified by) Physician.

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Sianature

·
' Parental·Sicnaturt if £ntrant Un~ Alt of

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Pomeroy~ Middleport-GamPolia;-Ghie-Point Pleasant, W. Va·.

April 14, 1985
-·

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Page· E-6-The Sunday TimeS-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleellnt, W. Va. 1

'

Vietnam 10 years later: living .haDd to mouth

April14, 1986

Resch -ooks .for credibility from ~nexplaiited . phenomenori.

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Tina
Resch, .whose year In the glare of
publicity has been marked by taunts
tromschoolmatesandmadeberthe
subject of endless tests, hopes lhat
the latest. round of rese~b gives
her some credibility: .
,.
The research, conducted by the
Psychical Research Foundation In
Chapel Hill, N.C., Is to be presented
during a national conference on
parapsychlcal research May 3-4 at
West Georgia College In Carrollton,
Ga., near Atlanta, saldWUllamRoll,
lllrector ot the frundatlon.
Thus tar, the research Indicates
that Tina, 15, may be able to gain
control over the "ablllty" that Roll
says Is responsible for reports of
unexplained flashing llgbts, shatterlng glass and flying furfilture at the
Resch home barely a year ago. Roll
Insists lhat the events at Tina's
home tit the definition of recurrent
spontaneous psychokinesis - an
unoonsclous ability to.move objects
Wltbout touching them. · . •.
.
It.etiearchers trom the · Buffalo,
N. Y.-based Committee !or the
Scle~,~tlflclnvestigatlonofQalmso!
the. Paranormal last year labeled
tlmi' s claims as trickery. The
Resches refused to meet with the
group.
Reports of bizarre events at the
Resch homemade beadllnes ilround
the \'IOTid tor weeks last year and
fueled public fasctnatlon wltll Tina.
nnals mother, Joan Resch, said

there have been no unusual tprur· heallng.Parapsychicalresearchers
~atthehomeslncelastsprtng. consider healing to be an effect of
·
'The general leYel Of activity~ psychokinesis, said Jeannie Lagle
subsided considerably. 'lbereha\le Stewart,whohasbeenworklngwitll
been few, If any, dlsruptlv~ ~· Roll as part of her doctoral work 1n
rences.Andfortherest,wed~er cUnlcalpsychology.
walt forthereporttocomeout. Roll · ·Tina's efforts to explain the
!illld.
"powers", how er, often fall on .
The ~ents n&gt;portedly began unbelieving e .
d h - forced
last March 3, and five days later her t9 repress her
to talk
Tlrui shed her anonynllty during a about them, she said.
news conference at her home. The
"I don't tell people my own age
publicity began wben tha farillly, about It too much anymore. People
having already summoned doctors my own age are~ out by It,"
and ministers to the h&lt;lme, called sbesalddui'lng a recent Interview at
Co}umbusDispatchcol\lmDIStMike herhoniehere. •
· Hai'den to see ll he knew any experts
Tina said she was continually
that might be able to stop the harilssed la.St fall, when she began
dlsturb!utces.
.
her freshman year at Northland
Hardel) then wrote about what he ~School In Columbus.
saw at the Resch home, and the ' "I' was pushed down stairs and
story was accompanied by a, they told me to fly. I was spit on,
photograph that showed a telephone pushed around .. ;. They'd sing the
apparently flying across Tina's lap. theme to the 'Twilight Zone' when 1
"I tiJlnk the more and more testS came Into the room," she said.
~ do- t1B1 people can read about l
Her two best friends turned away
them and see It (RSPKJ Is not as : from her at the time because they ·
· dangerous and weird as they think," 1 oouldn'ttake the pressure, she said . .
said Tina, who has made several /
"I could have handled queStions.
trips to North5~arollna and.sta~ ' J couldn't handle what I did, " she
. there throUgh January and Febru· said.
ary to take part In the continuing
She changed her hairstyle, asked
experiments~ Tlrui and her parents to be called Christina and keptqulet
have not yet decided where she will about her ~rate&lt;j past when sbe
resume her schooling In Columbus. began attending school In January
Tina saki RDII and his staff have Iii Carrington, N.C., she said.
taught ~ to UndeJ.'IIland that - If
"They said you look farnlllar and
she has unusual powers - she can Your name's familiar. Then someuse them for · such purposes 'liS body remembered and went back

c laim the red-carpeted Presidential night .Is just giving way to dawn,
world's thltd largest land army, war with North .VIetnam ma[Ch consider restoring relations until
women from the outskll1s of Hanoi
Palace.
slllgleflie tntormatkln, a23-year-old VIetnam withdraws lis 100,&lt;Xll to
with mol\\ than 1 mllllon tl'O()pS.
But thousands of South Vletna· walk briskly Ina rhythm aJmostllke
ThelnternaUonaiMonetaryFund ' Army drill sergeant at their slde. 170,1XXl troops from Carnhod,la and ·
mese soldiers and dvll servants,left lhat of a road runner acrOss the Long
and the Asian Development Bank Young women practice harldllng gives a substantial accounting of the
behind In the chaos of the evacua- Bien bridge, the rniJe.longstructure
have cut off Its credit for defaulting Soviet-made AK47 rilles.
nearly 2,500 Americans listed as
tion, were sent to S~Kalled re- that was heavily bombed by the.
on loans and for mismanagement.
Hanoi's Bach Th;~o Patk Is fllled missing In action In Indochina.
Americans during the war and
with small groups of men and
eu Dlnh Ba. the top VIetnamese education camps.
Today, there's little to cheer repaired.several tln)es.
4: 10 a.m., April 29, 1975, tile day women being given military and
official dealing with the missing In
The women are on their way Into ·
about. So many VIetnamese work so
befoR&gt; 'the South VIetnamese sur- weapons training not far from the
action, says there ;Ire no Americans
Hanoi's
market, balancing two , .
· By GEORGE ESPER ·
. render. Several North VIetnamese wreckage of a U.S. B-52 bomber on
hru;d
for
so
little.
being held prisoner of war In
of fruit and vegetables
large
baskets
AP Special Correspondent
Women
In
bllie
and
green
ponchos
divisions surrounding Saigon rained display In the park.
VIetnam. He adds:.
'
dangllngfromeachsldeo!abamboo
HANOI, VIetnam (AP) -Every.
and
~nlcal
bats
are
hunohedoverln
rockets and artillery shells onto Tan
VIetnam has· come full circle
' "ln ·the search for the MIAs, we
1
where, the young and old are cutting
Son Nhut Alr Force Base. The again, warring ·with the Chinese,
have done our best. Whenever we the rain-drenched fields 9f the pole slung across one shoulder.
In the early evening of 'Hanoi _,
wood for cooking an"ii heating, attacks would not let up until three ' who gave It~ billion In aid to Tight get any Information we Inform the central coastal plain planting the
winters,
on the darkened street
·
spring
rice
crop
that
Is
Vl~tnam's
ca,rrylng gt'8$S on bamboo poles to
hours later. Washington ordered the the United States, and courting the
slde 'lmmedlately: We have no
corners,
women
hud~le In 4(1-degree
buUd roofs for ihelr homes and ~ evacuation of the remaining l,ml Americans. Hanoi ts worried about
lifeline.
Interest . In keeping ( American
temperatures
over
their small food
Old men and young boys squat on
pedallngblcycles loaded wltbpleces
Americans and as many Vletna· the growing ties between China and
remains ."
and
cigarette
stands
'by the llght of
street
corners
ln
Hanoi
with
air
of scrap )ron scavenged _!rpm
mese as possible who were thought the United States,
'
small
gas
lamps
to
earn
a few cents.
former American military bases.
Ten years ago, Saigon, the seat of pumps and boxes of tools to service
to be marked for death by the
Shunned by the western world and
PoUtlcal
prisoners
tell
of bard
thousands of bicycles that are key
VIetnam today Is women pulling communists.
the South VIetnamese government,
its non-communist Asian neighbors
la
hor
and
hunger.
·
Hanoi
bad
means ·of transportation, even for
carts because there aren't enough
The U.S. Embassy, with a landing beCause of Its slx·year occupation of
prudently cheered as North Vletna·
It
would
free
the
lO,trolt
announced
many govenunent o!ftclals.
pad on Its roof, would be
draft animals (not to mention
of the Cambodia, badly In need ·of U.S.
mese fank columns and troops
(Continued on E-81
Even before 6 a .m., while the
tiucks); people 'working on high·
main pickup points for hellcopters dollars and technology, Hanoi says
drove down Unity Boulevanl to
ways by hand; a country where the
Oytng from American cllrriers In It wants to negotiate without
awrage sl;lte employee earns less
the South China Sea. The chaotic pre-conditions now about bringing
In a month than an American
!'lcenes would long be remembered. . baCk. the Affierlcan embassy.
All . over Saigon, . VIetnamese
Hanoi has alro proPosed that the
teen-ager niakes In an hour at a
hastened
to
escape
the
country,
United States be a peacemaker In
fast-food restaurant, where marpanicked by rumors of an IJ:.I)pend- Southeast Asia but does not make It
' rled couples work at two jobs lust to
lng commun ist blo0dbath. clear just what role·it should take.
have enough to eat.
Hundreds trted to claw their way Goverilment officials Indicate they
This Is Vietnam, broke and
over a 14-foot embassy wall In would llke the United States to
sbunnedb}'muchoftheworld,llvlng
desperate atiempts to ~ach the Intervene With China, which threatlargely hand-to-mouth . 10 years
American helicopters.
ens VIetnam from the north and
after the ~rnmunlst north forced
U.S. Marines In baJtle garb beat which Is supplying war materials to
the . evacuation of the American
emb!!Ssy In Saigon and the sur- them back with their ptstols, rifle the cambodlan forces resisting the
butts, fists andf\'ft.Somegotcaught VIetnamese occupation.
render of the U.S.·hacked South
In the barbed Wire strung across the
"Vietnam and the United States
VIetnamese government .
top of the wall. Others trled.to himd fought a war," says Vo Dong Giang,
As the VIetnamese government
the.i r small chlidren over the wall to . first deputy foreign minister. "And
observes the )Oth anniversary of Its
It Is VIetnam and the United States
the Americans who were leaving.
takeover of SalgoJ1 on April :11, 1975,
"Take
It,
I've
got
to
fight!"
one
who ended the war. So lt means
there Is little to cheer about.
VIetnam's problems are stagger- U.S. Marine yelled over the mob as Vietnam and the United States are
Beautiful beige with saddle landau
and
custorri
he thrust a 6-month-old Vleinamese In a posli1on to determine · tlie
Ing, wttiJ,few sollitlons In sight.
boy Into the anns of a German outcome of the war here."
Thecountryhasdriftedbackward
ham interior, only 3,150 low miles. T1lt. cru1se, AM-FM stereo w•th
clergymari In the embassy com·
Twe!ve years agp, on January 'l7,
In tlme. lt'ls stnl ruled by the original
cassette, locking wire wheel covers. .
1973, tlle 'United States and North
pot~nd. Minutes later, the clergy·
Communist Party leadership that
'
EXPECT THE FINEST
man was airborne In an American VIetnam signed the Paris Peace
took power In the 19:Jis and was
helicopter wlth the chlld. He knew . Agreement. The last 23,(0) Amerl·
Isolated by two Indochina wars, first
nothing about the boy or what had can troops In Vietnam went home In
against the French and then the
become of his parents. '
February and March o! 1973.
Amerlcans, over a span of 30 years.
But 50 mUitary attaches, 150
7:
52
a.l'l)
..
April
30.
U.S.
Marines
Today, with an Interval of less
.:. ·
fired
a
red
smoke
grenadeto
guld.
e
a
Marines
and more than 1,200
than four yeats of peace between
1975 and 1978, Vietnam Is locked Into CH-46 helicopter In for a landing on civtllans remained ·at the U.S.
'·
the embassy hellpad. A rear guafd Embassy '¥Jd Defense Attache
its third Indochlnll war. fighting a
coalition of Cambodian resistance of 11 Marines Jumped aboard, the Office, which continued to admlnls·
last Americans to be flown out of ter American military and ecoforces ·on Its western flank and
Saigon from ;~mong ~ Marin~ nomic aid until the fall of Saigon.
clashing on-and-off with Its onetime
The U.S. position Is that It won't
ally, China, on Its northern'border . . who bad 'provided security for the
The CO\illtty Is short of Just about
Two hours later, the
··:
everything. It can bl!rely produce
evacuation.
' . Saigon
gov~rnrtlent surrendered, ending
enough crops to feed a pOpula tlon of
the United States' longest, most
more than ro million that Is gro\VIng
PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING
and most divisive war, with
costly
DbNrT MISS IT! 8.8%
at the rate of 2.5 percent a year.
58,020
American
dead
and
more
As much as 50 percent of lts
lhan $150 bUllon spent In mllltary aid
budj:et, financed l;JJgely from the
to .k eep the South VIetnamese
estimated .$1 bllllon ·~ year In aid It
.
In power.
.
government
receives - fni\'n .. lis. unly major
Today, Hanoi schoolgirls who
benefactor, ·the. Soviet Union, ls
spent fqr ·defenSe. It'maintains the · were toddlers when America was a t
EDll'OR'S NorE - When Sal·
goo fell 14 the COillf!IUnl818 10 years
ago, G!!orge Eloper lioas there as the
AP's chief of bureau and
there five weeks. after Hanoi's
takeover. &amp;cently he revisited
VIetnam and IDed this account of
w~ Ufe IS like t~ today.

throUgh the newspapers In the
As tor her claims to do healing, ments are being used to learn If
school library," she said.
Tina said she hopes 'to learn \0 Tlrui'sabWty to bend spoons results
"At first they thought 1was pretty further develop the skill.
from physical strength or PK, Roll
welrd1·but they treated me like a . Tina sald she has healed such said.
human being. If they think I'm minor aUments as . headachfs,
. AJt)lough Tina and her family
stupldtheydldn'tteUme,"shesald, scratches,cutsandcramps,hujthat : rejected offers of book and film
adding that she felt fairly well It requt.res heavy concentration.
rights to her story last year, Tina
accepted at the school. .
RollsaldTlna' s ·c asejsrarelnlhat saldshemightconslderthemnowto
, Tina said shecontlnuestoposs~:Ss few people have been willing to
help people understand .l hat what
an abtuty to sense knowledge about explore possible wapsychlcal oc· even she considered · Impossible
a person's past and p~t, and to a
ctUTerices using ~ scientific me- , untU last March can and does
much lesser degree, their future.
!bodS ·such as those used at happen to normal people.
.
"I · don't belleve you can read· Psychical Research Fo6ndation.
"I beUeve you can:~ do anything
people's minds. 1 belle've 1 can just · For example electronic tnsl.ru·
without God anyway, she said.
be around them and then pic)&lt; up on r-.;.....-_:c.......'- - - - - ·
ll)elrfeellngs," shesald,
·
Roll said the Psychical Research
Foundation now Is focusing Its
research on the psychokinesis hut
might study her claims about ~lng
"readings" If funding were
obtained. ·

remained

---....,.--------==::-

u.s.

one

i

~alnpaign solicit~tions
·qUestioned
.

to~

.
.
A!PtON,Ohlo (AP)- Ano!flclal
giving the mopey.
· 1975 toadJudlcatectalmsagatnsttbe
of the Ohio Court of Qalms denies
The Code of JudiCial Conduct state.
an9ttons lhat he solicited cash
contitblltlons from his employees
commlttees from soliciting or
accepting donations from emfor -the campaign of former Ohio
ployees, appointees or those ~olng
Supreme Court Justice James
Celebrezze.
.
business with the court. The code
1'l1e Akron Beacon Journal, citing warns others to refrain from doing
so on a judge's behalf.
canipaign reconls with the Ohio
Secretary of State, said Thursday · Celebrezze told the newspaper he
never received cash contributions
lhat4pouses and f~!latlves of court
emplOyees contributed to CeJe. by way pt Gllllvan. Records with the
bre22le' s campaign. The report OhioSecret.aryofStateshownocash
quoted two employees. as saying contributions In au of 1984 for the
tbef gave ca:;b contributions for Celebrezze campaign.
Celebrezie, a Democrat, lost his
Celej)rezze to Court of Claims
seatonthehlghcourtla.stNovember
Admtnlstratar John G. GIUivan.
Tlie alleged actions last year to Franklin.County Common Pleas
could violate state election law and Judge Craig Wright, a Republlcan.
Chief Justice Frank Celebrezze,
the Code of Judicial Conduct, the
James' brother, told the newspaper
Beacon Journal said.
Election · law requires that all that Court of Claims employees are
cOntributions be reported and be employees of the Supreme Court.
· The Court of Qalms Wt15 ci'tllited In
In the pame of tlle.

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�Apri114, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport-c;.llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleassnt, W. Va .

.

Page- E-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

·Res:toring monuments labor of l~ve for Greek Unmigr~nt
,

CINCINNATI (AP)- ToEleltherlosKarkadouUas,lt's.alaborotlove
10 overhaul some of the nation's
hiStoric monuments, repairing the
breaks and restoring the "5park!e
stolen by time, weather and
pollution.
"You shouldn't get Into It for the
money," says Karkadoullas, a
Greek who learned his cra1t In his
homeland. "You have to have
· knOwledge, Jove and ability to do
this.,
He has repaired and restored the
luster of twisted, .broken and
tarnished statues and monuments

·from as far away as Wisconsin,
Massachusetis, North Carolina arid
Georgia In his Clnclnnatl foundry.
He Is equaUy adept at working with

Vietnam
(Continued from E-7)
. stW holds, soldiers and ctvn servants who worked and foughtforthe
Americans. The United States
agreed to accept them. But negotla·
tions have been stalled because
Hanoi wants the United States to
· guarantee they would not take part
In anti-VIetnam acti~ltles.
MostofVletnam'sproblemsstem ·

from Its ~rdeveloped economy
and flunlts six,year occupation of
cambodia, which It says Is neces·
sary to meet the threat of the

cmununlst Khmer Rouge forces of
Pol Pot, whom It ousted tn Its
Invasion In late 19'18.
......
This Is an economy where i:&gt;'IMn
Van Tlulng, a laborer. his wife aJI!l
three children live In a shack
c;rowded withrabblts they raise for a
few extra doU.ars tor food In the
government's new economic wnes
near Ho Chi Minh City.
lt Is an eeonomy where In these
same new economic wries, once ·
American battlefields, both a man
and his wife have to work tn the hot
sun on harsh land that grudglngly
yields a harvest for $3 a month plus
food subsidies from the govern·
ment. These Include two pounds of
meat per month.
. This IS an economy where the
government-owned Hong Gam t.eX·
~companylnHoChlMlnhCltyhas

enough work to run three eight-hour
shifts a day but operates only one or
tiWo because of . a shortage of
materials and electricity.
Today, reviSiting the old l;la«le-· ·
fields stirs memories. The datelines
are historlc.
Ben Tre. The town In the Mekong
Delta that became a symbol of war's
deV.astation When an American
: -a4Y)sei'.saJd,.''We had to.destroy the
towniosavelt."
· .
·· BenCatandBenSuc. The heart of
the "Iron Triangle," a Viet Cong
stronghold of
tunnel

netwlirkli

l .

;. that
·years, the taunch\lig grounds of the ·
big controversial U.S. search-anddestroy pperations of the mld-1.900s·
In which entire vlliages like Ben Sue
.were relocated.
Da Nang, where U.S. Marines
landed on the beaches 20 years ago
.on March 8,1965. the first Amerlcan
COil'lbat troops sent to Vietnam.
· Khe Sanh, where U.S. Marines
. withstood a 77-day North Vletna·
rnese siege.
:. The towns and vlUages have been
.~tied. The markets have been
,reopened. Many of the survivors
·have returned and a new generation
of· Vietnamese who knOw nothing
. but commu~t rule Is growing up.
During thewaryears, Saigon was
·flllf\d lvlth gaiety and camaraderie,
despite the surrounding death and
destruction.
· LovelY Vietnamese women sere-naded the Amertcans. The Joe
• McCoy band, fronted by a Vletnac
mese man named Nguyen Ngoc
Bao, entertained Gls In slng·alongs
. with "LetMeCaiiYouSWeetheart,"
and "Give My Regards to Saigon,"
at the Rex 8JI!l Five ();:eans oilleers
· quarters.
.. OneofVletnam:stronleswastllat
you could dine at the finest French
re~taurants whUe watching and
bParlni the war. just across the
Saigon River - red flares Ughtlng
up the sky, the tumble of bombs and
'the thud of artlllery.
• Today, many of tfo Chi Minh
•City's 311 million people live.In fear
ot tbP security pollee and a
well-organized governrnent netWO!ic of Informers.
Each Thursday, hundreds of
VIetnamese jam the Ofderly depar·tures lounge at Tan Son Nhut
·Airport, where they walt for the
flight that will take them. to
America.
Stncel9'79, when the United States
lind the cornmul!lst government·
agreed on an orderly departureS
pnllll'am, more than 75,10l Vletna·
n1e1e have left the country legally,
Including aboUt :ll,lnl who Wl!flt 10
the United States.
Since 1975, more than half a
mll1loil Vtetnai'J'lell! have fled the
collnlrY lllegally, meet of them by
bollt. often bribing their way out
wtthaokt.
" Another half a mJWon Vlelna·
. - have asked to leave the

. COIIJ1IrY.

bronze, copper and stone.

He has renovated statues, monummts and fOUntains from national
mUltary parks, state capitol bulld·
lngs and municipal parks and

squares.
"l have a monument hospital,"
said KarkadouU.as, a naUve of
MarkopOlo, Greece, who came to
the United States In 1967.
StatUes of Andrew J!lckson,
Abraham Lincoln; WWlam Henry
Harrtson and Romulus and Remus
- thefounderslnlegendofthecltyof
Rome - · have beneltfed from his
touch.
Inaddltion,1Uscreations Include a
Vietnam veterans' memorial In
Cincinnati and a statue of Clnclnna·

tus being prepared for tnstaU.ation
this year on the city's riverfront
alollg the Ohio River'. Clnclnnatus, a
5th-century Rom.ari general and
dlctator.lnsplred Clndnnatl'sname
and thatoftheSocletyofClnclnnati,
a grcilp of Revolutionary War
officers.
The l'e$1orer, aided tiy his wife,
Mercene, and a sta1f of workers he
deploys on some· jobs, remoVes
tarnish aDd corrosion from the
works. and recasts metal parts
Where necessary. He removes
corroded plris and bolts, repairs
bases and coats the renovated
works with hot wax to preserve the
restoration.
·
Thewaxreslstsheatandmolsture
and protects against- corrosive,
airborne poilutants at bay .. Karka·
doullas said he recommends periodic upkeep on the restored works by

National Military Park.
North Carolina Is paying approxl·
mately $10,10l toward the resiora·
tlon. under a program In which the
National Park Service encourages
private contrlbutions to renovate
Gettysburg's monuments and facnt·
ties. The National Park Service wUI
pay the balance.
•·Karkadoullas has renovated·
smaller monuments at Gettysburg
during the past six years, since he
Introduced himself to Park Service
officials and began bidding on jobs.
Karkadoullas' renovations dur·
lng the past 15 years have Included
monuments at the Chickamauga
and Chatlanapga National Military
Park at Chickamauga, Ga.; works
at the state capitols of North
Carolina, South Carolina and Ten·
nessee; the Lincoln Statue and

Tyler-Davidson Fountain In Clitcln·
. naU; the Daniel Chester French
sculpture In Plttsburg!l; and a
World War l doughbqy statue In •
Liberty, Ky.
Repairs take from one week to ~
four months, Karkadoullas said,
depending on what needs to be.done.
Mrs. Karkadoullas,' who handles
theJ13perworkandove~someof

the repair work, has complied ,a
scrapbook of .letters from state aild
city goveJ1Illlellt o(flclals praising
her husband's restorations. But,
KarkadouUas hasn't landed every ·.
job he sought.
He was among seven to bid on
renovationoftheStatueofLlberty,a ,
job that meant overhauling Lady
Liberty's torch and name and the
spikes jutting from the hand around
•
thehead.

••

at y
Vol.34, No.257
Copyrighted 1986

•

•

enttne
1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 15, 1985

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. New1paper

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- It was a mad dallh at GenenlllaninJier Park bt
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There II a saying IUTI(il1&amp;10111eOid
Allan hands that everything Viet·
llam troched. It tooched for the
wont.

retouching with solvent, then reapplylngthewaxcoatlng.
"It'sbaslc,.tax, but lt'ssomethlng
I've cultured through the years "
.
'
Karkadoullas said. "We can't redo .
what the sculptors do, because
they're gone. But we can preserve
what they did."
One current restoration project IS
North Carollna's'- ·u,IOl-pound
bronze monument at theGettysburl;
National Mllitary Park, established
In memoryofNorthCllrollnlanS who
fought In thli July 1863 Civil War
battle at Gettysburg, Pa.'
· KarkadouU.as had the monummt.
which depicts five so)dlel'$ heading
Into batlle, trucked to his fOUndry
Feb. 28. The $12,10l restoration Is to
be completed In time for a ·June :II
rededication of the monument ~t
Gettysburg, said Supertntendent
John R. Earns! of the Gettysburg

•

'

NowS3QQOO
'

I

'

•

Oub egg hunt wah club members, Uilsled by Middleport firemen,
slagtng the event. Hundreds Or plastic ecgs (lOII(alnlng gilt certificates at
local buslneslle!i were found by the young people.

Miners

BASKET ~ - Mlchtlel Dont, 11 Middleport, held by hill
modler, Tammy Doni&amp;, found an en whlch-enl_.ed IUn 10 wiD the blc
Easter bMket 'In the picture at the Middleport-Pomeroy &amp;wy Club
aiiJII!al Eaater egg lnd at Hartinger Park Sunday. 11Je Ealter lkmi\Y
pretll!llled the b1111ket which Willi provided by .the 1\oliddlepqrt Fire

.........-.-

~~···~·~·

.

·laid off

.
.

Tayl()r ruled
· incompetent
· -to ·~t3nd~;tri~l·:·. . · ,

More than 160salarled and United
Mine Workers affiliated employes
of the Southern Ohio Coal Co .. are
being Ia!&lt;! off- for either long terms
or perllaps, pefll1anently.
.
This Is the rl!P9rt of Steve HUes of
the A,rnerlean Elec)rtc Power Co.
fletd services offi~ ln Lancaster.
this morniqg.

.l
.

....

·~

... Hiles ... salg ·- that , 24 . S;jlarled .
~mployeS and.13.8wo.i'.kersafflllatcd. ,'
With ttie union are ,be.Ininatd citf at
the Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Mlnel,located lnMl'.lgsCounty,and
Raccoon Mine 3, located in Vinton
County. Meigs Mine 21s not affected
by the layoffs, Hiles said.

•.

.

Lindsay Taylor, 35, formerly of Pleas Court.
Judge Knlght'.s deciSion Is based
the Racine area, has been found
Incompetent to stand trial at this UP.!Jn expert testimony given Friday
time In Meigs County for the In court by David Malawlsta, a
October,1983 aggravated murder of clinical psychologist assoclatled
· with the Shawnee Forenslce Center
Danny Melton.
Meigs County Common Pleas ' tn Portsmouth. Malawlsta was the
Judge Charles Knight, !Ulng an preparer of a detaUed psychlatrlc
entry this morning In the case, has evaluation on Taylor as previously
ordered Taylor be transfered from ordered bythecourtdurtngarratgnthe M~lgs County jail to the Timothy ment proceedings.
The judge's order Is fouildro upon
B. Moritz Regional Forensic Unit In
Columbus. Taylor Is to undergo the serious nature oftheoffeilsewlth
treatment at .the ¥orltz unit which whiCh Taylor Is charged and the
should render him compete~! to purported danger of the defendant
stahd trlalln a year's time.
to himself aild others.
·
Taylor was represented by~attorA hearing to determ(Jle Taylor's neys Don Cox and Steven Story.
competency was held Friday after- Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney
noon l.n Meigs· County Common Rick, Crow represented the state.

BIG WINNERS - Ollldren ftndlqg the bl8' cBIIh · en worth $10, and Danny M&lt;.-cioud, Mlddleport, the
goldenenworthS25.JohnWemerservedlll!mlllllerol
Easter en hunt, held Sunday at Hartinger Park In ~eremonles at the public adtii'C!III system and Amy
Middleport, are pictured with the Easter Bunny. They LuckeydOO portrayed the Easter Btmny. The hunt
are, I tor, Je~~Sica Cale, Middleport, the bronze egg, t'OIIId nul be held on Easter Sunday due to Inclement
worth a S5 prize; PatrlckGryszka, POmeroy, thesUver weather so was postponed untO yesterday.

Jll'be egp at the Mlddlepqrt-Pomeroy Riltary Club

Budget
goes
to
HOuse;
.
S&amp;L crisis continues

Meigs motorists
charged with. D WI
. A Meigs County man was cited by School Road.
the GaUla·Metgs post of the State
Highway Patrol Saturday following
Jlll D. Golden, 17, of Patriot Star
· a two-vehicle accident In Athens
Route, wastreatedformultlplecuts,
while a -passenger In her pick-up,
County.
Donald R. Mays, :11, or Rt. 1, Brian K. McDade, 22, of Rt. 1,
R.eedsvUle, was westbound on 124, -Cheshire. was treated for facial
Just Inside the county nne, and a cuts, according to hospital officials.
pick-up driven bY WUllam C.
Chevalier, 46, wase1151bound, "':hen
TheGalU.a·Melgs t 0fth State
troopers said M11ys apparently ·
pos
e
struck
left rear of Cheva~r·s · Hlghwf~Y Patrol said Golden had
just turned onto Brick School Road ·
pick-up as the vehicles ~sed In a frmlJohnlon~Road,whenshe
curve. Mayf car sustat¥ moder· apparet~tlytostcontrolofl!ervehlcle
atedamagelmdChevaller'splck-up whlcih ran Ott the right side of the
ilght damage·th i~Sp.m:accldent, road; striking a building owned by
t.roopets said. Mays was clte!1 bY EariV.$haverofRt.4,Galllpollsat
troopers for DWJ and, no &lt;!_pver:s 5:25 p.m. Golden' a pick-up suslicense.
t.alned light damaae In the accident.
A Rt. 1, Shade youth was cited by Golclelt }Vas &lt;:lted bY \l)e patrol for
troopers for DWJ following a !allure to control her vehicle.
•
single-car accldent,on SR 7.

the

~rs said 1&amp;-year-old Tho-.
mas E. White was northbo4ild on.1,
when he appjlrently went off the
rtght side of iheroad and Into a ditch.
'J'rOOpers said White told them he
swerved to avoid a deer, which he
said ran Into the pllth of his car. The
10: 55 p.m. accident caused light
da111age to White's car, the patrol
~(d .

Meanwhile, two Gallla County
residents were treated and released
at Hotze\- M:edlcal Center Sunday
afternoon for Injuries suffered In a
single-vehicle accident on Brick
J

· St~len jeep found
inMe~spond
!'&gt; Jeep. stolen frml Vlrgtna has
been fouild In a, farm pond In
Salllbury ~hlp. •
The Meigs County Sheriff's De-.
partmeoi was called 'nlursday
afternoon When the Jeep parts were
found. The pond was being drained
at the time.
IiiVestlgatlon led to the dl!leovecy,
that the Jeep was stolen. The case Is
stW under Investigation.

•

1

$5.7 billion In 1985-87, rompared with $4.8 billion this
COLUMBUS. Ohio !AP) - Governor Richard
biennium, while higher education would Pe boosted to
Celeste's record $3l.8 bUllon budget bill was expected
$2.6
billion, up · about $500 mWlon. Celeste's
to be approved by the House today, paving the way for
Department
of Human Se!'\ttces would speod $4.5
a tough battle In the Senate.
billion,
an
Increase
from about $4.2 billion. The budget
Much of the legiSlative attention In the last month
contains an Increase In welfare benefits of 7 percent .
has focused on Ohio's savings and loan crisis. But the
Assistant House Minority Leader Waldo Bennett
two-year tax-and-spending plan was up for a vote this
alrern0on, with minority Republicans ready to offer a . Rose, RLima, disputed the governor's claim that 70
cl'nt s of E-ach new. tax dollar would go to !lie schools,
series or amendments which probably won't go
clatmJng the use of "gimmicks" by the govl'mor's
anywhere.
,
budget drafters. He said. tor Instance, that the
Democrats control the House 59-40, and Speaker
percentage of !Ill- general fund golng_toeducatlon this
Vern Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said he expects
year Is onl~ 27.6percent, an actua(decreasefrom 29.4
Celeste's proposal to go to the Senate pretty much
1
percent last year.
Intact.
Tilt&gt; budget Includes a 10 percent cut In the state
Rose said Ohio's buUt·ln revenue growth over the
Income tax- although Republicans wUl try tor~lse It
next
three years would more than accorniTlodate a 30
to 30 percent - combined with record spending !or
percent
tax cut. with a prtce tag of $1.5 bllllon, while
education, mental heAIIhl ·wetra!'ll and other social
not
a1fectlng·
funding for education. and other vital
services.
He
estimated
general revenue growth from
services.
Much of the new money wlll come from a 90percent
about
$8,8
billion
this
year
to nearly $10.5 bUllon In
Income tax Increase which majoHty Democrats
1!1l7.
.
enacted In 1983 over GOP clatms that It was
The budget battle wUI heat up considerably later In
excessive.
the
when the bill reaches the Senate, controlled
JX the $:11.8 bllllon total, raJ.~ bUllon Is general fund 18-15week
by
Republicans. · Senate Finance Chairman
spending 1lnanced with tax , doUars. The rest
J
.
Aronoff, R-Cinclnnatl, has said hearlrtgs •
Stanley
represents federal fundS and monies de.rlved from
will start Tuesday.
fees charged for services. There will be a separate
$2.5 billion budget for transportation and related
Meanwhile, legislators are expected to get back
programs In the new biennium which begins July 1.
Into
the-savings and (pans controversy early In the
Celeste,ln defense ql his 10 percent tax cut, said the
when&lt;:eleste asks for legislation peni'llttlng the
week
1983 hike provided stabUity In education funding for
sale
of
the closed Home State Savings Bank o(
the flrst.tlme In several years ilnd that 7()cents of each
Clnclnna
tl to Chemical Bank of New York. · ·
new dollar wUl go to the schools.
.
Many
Republicans and some Democrats are
The governor sald thilt ot the $1.8 bllllon lncreaile In
concerned
about the governor's proposal to sweeten
gen~al fund spending over the next two years, EB.6
the
Chemical
Bank deal ·with aboUt Sill mllUon or
percent wut go for education, U.3percent for welfare
more In taxpayer f\lnds . They claim Ohio would be
and other human services, while tax relief and ald to
giving
the out-of-state bank a bargaln·ba5e]Tlffil deal
local gOVerninents would be Increased to 18.2 percent.
to
the
exclusion
of potential Ohio buyers.
Prtmary and' secondary education would get about

"

•

ThP layoff Is part of a plan to
Improve eff.lclency and reduce COsts
through the better ut Ul:za lion of both
manpower and equtpmerit at thf'
two mines, Hiles reported. The two
mines will employ greater use of a
super·section technique which will
use two cont lnuous mining machines In each work.Jng section
rather than one machine per
sec lion. Thl' use of the super section
technique has been quite successful
In application at the Meigs mines to
date, HUes said.
The changes art- necessary to
keep costs of producing coa t in line
and the company Is strlvlng for
greater efficiency whilerecogn lzlng
that It Is very unfortunate for people
who are losing their jobs. according
to HUes.
The layoffs wlll be long term and
possibly permanent . It ls antlcl·
pat&lt;'d that the three rillnc.comple.x
wUI be able t_p produce coal for the
Gavin Plant at the same rate after
the layoffs as before due to the
doubling on the use of the
equipment .
Last year, th&lt;' complex produced
5,!l'i1.:J70 clean tons of coal.
A series of mf'('tlngs are bf&gt;lng
hl'ld among the laid off employes
and company officials at the
Rutlarid Civic Center to discuss tht&lt;
layoffs and plans oft he company for
more efficient OIJ('ratlons.

C~sp

critical
following fire
Meigs Countlan Jack Crisp cHtl·
cally burned while checking a gas
well that lgilited near hls home was
taken from Veterans M&lt;'morlal
Hospital by Llfent!(ht Just before
midnight Saturday to Ohio StatP
University Hbspltals In Columbus.
Crlsp was listed In cr itical
condition In the hospital's burn unit
Monday morning.
According to a spokesman · at
Veterans MC'morlal, Crisp had
bums which appeared to lnvolv&lt;' the
upper part of hls qooy.
Cr:tsp was taken to Vi?tcrans
Memorial at 7:51 p.m. Saturday by
the Rutland unit oftheMelgsCoonty .
Emergency M&lt;'dlc"l Service.
J

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