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.

•

Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel

'

•·

Friday. Oecamber 9, 1988 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

•

Local news briefs...__, Highway travel said ·treacherous itt southwest

Sunday

)

Continued from page 1
meeting will be rept&gt;ated again at 7: 30 p.m. the same day and
loCation to permit farmers ol Meigs County an option ol
attending.
The FBPA program is designed to provide farmers with
Instruction ln record keeping and then make proper
management chOices from a computer analysis of the farm
records at the end of the year.

"
Financial
report released
Racine Village Council approved Clerk Jane Beegle's
financial report for November when Council met Monday
evening in regular session.
·
The cash balance of all funds amounted to $152,561.31.
Balances In each of the funds comprising the total were
$23,768.24 in general fund; $17,275.231n street; $41,689.77ln fire;
$3,611.65 in state highway; S51,971.961n water revenue; $4,188.42
ln cemetery; $3,556 .. 05 In water deposits, $6,500 in cemetery
endowments.
Super Now lnteres t received in October was $643.81. Thls
amount was pro-rated to the various funds.

EMS has five calls Thursday
Five calls were answered by local units Thursday, the Me igs
County Emergency Medical Services reports .
At 11:03 a.m., Racine w,ent to Bowman's Run Road for Carol
Dalley , Injured in an auto accident. She was treated but not
transported. Racine at 1: 46 p.m., went to a car accident on State
Route 338 and)reated Mike Talbott; Tuppers Plains at 2:37p.m.
treated but '!lid not transport William Grueser, Route 7;
Middleport at 4:44 p.m. treated Jimmy Casto on Art Lewis St.,
and at 9: 48p.m. Syracuse treated Todd Hubbard on Second St.

Horse thieves may be in area
Horse thieves could be operating in the Gallla·Meigs County
area. according to a report from .one area manager.
Fred Vollborn, manager of Bob Evans Hidden Valley Ranch,
Green Valley Road, told the Gallipolis Daily Tribune today that
. a horse was missing from the farm Tuesday night . Vollborn said
the animal had apparently been stolen because when it was
found the next.day it still had a piece of rope around its neck.
Vollborn said the incident had not been reported to authorities
because he had just completed his investigation Wednesday ,
but that it would be reported. Area farmers or stockmen are
encouraged to keep an eye on their livestock and report ai)Y
thefts or unusual incidents
According to Vollborn, the horse was the one that was hit by a
car late Tuesday night on State Route 160. The animal had
bruises on its side.
Vollborn said there were other bits of evidence which led him
to believe there had been attempts to steal hOrses in the area,
including cut fences and wire cut from the top of a gate.

:Christmas party scheduled Sunday
There will be a Christmas fire department booth at the
'· parfy Sunday at 9:30 p.m. at the · Meigs County Fair is invited.
; Chester Fire House sponsor)!d by Those attending are to take a
; the Chester Fire Department. covered dish .
; Everyone who' helped with the

~-Area

deaths--

;Raymond VanMeter

'

Johnny of Florida and a daughter, Hope·, of Atlanta , Ga.
William A. McKelvey of Ra·
venswood, W. Va., is a brother of
the deceased.
Mr. McKelvey was an em·
ployee of the U. S. Corps of
Engineers and had worked at the
locks in Portlanp lor many years.

"' VanMeter,
• Raymond Jedson
:71, Youngstown, former Meigs
;county resident, dled Thursday
; in Youngtown after suffering a
•massive heart attack.
: He was bern in Meigs County. a
; son of the la_te Jedson and Mabel
•VanMeter.
• Surviving are two sisters,
•Laura Mae Nice, Route 3, Pome·
:roy, and Opal Eichinger, Ches·
;ter; a brother, Richard VanMe·
•ter, Valpralso, Ind., an uncle,
:Eldon Kraeu ter, Racine; his
·wife, Edna; a son, Raymond
Earl, Canton. and a grandson ,
; Raymond VanMeter, Jr.
•. Services will be held Monday
:at the Szabo Funeral Home. 1360
;Fifth Ave., Youngs town.

Larry R . Jenkins, 51, Middleport, who died Wednesday at the
Holzer Medical Center following ·
a brief illness, had been an
employee of Pomeroy Village
and Foote Mineral, New Haven,
W. Va., and was employed at
American Alloys, also New
Haven, at the time of his death.

.Charles McKelvey

Hospital news

: Relatives here have received
:word of the death of a former
'Portland resident, Charles D.
:McKelvey whO died at a hospital
:near his home in Augusta, Ga.
: Mr. McKelvey was born In
1912, a son of the late William G.
and Ida Fankhauser McKelvey.
; Survivors Include his wife,
:Evelyn of Augusta; a son,

LuTy Jenkins

Veterans Memorial
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Leland Saxton,
Pomeroy; Josephine Parsons,
.Pomeroy; John McKenzie,
Pomeroy; Charles Blake, Ra·
cine; Franklin Lemley ,
Portland.
Discharged- Virgil Saunders,
Cecil Carman, James Lyons.

•

men! received 3 to 4 inches of
snow Thursday, and areas south
of Fort Huachuca had 2 to 3
inches, with strong winds caus·
lng dr l!ts. Snow and Icy roads
also were reported In Texas.
Scattered snow also was re·
ported Friday from northern
Arkansas across parts of Ken·
tucky and Tennessee to the
sou thern Appalachians. Blu·
efleld, W.Va., reported an Inch of
snowfall betWeen 1 a.m. and 2
a.m. Snow also was expected for
the mountains of North Carolina.
In alldltipn, snow was forecast
for the Great Lakes, thanks to.
very cold air passing over the
lakes, said Lyle Alexander, a
NWS forecaster .

By United Press International
Wind·whipped snow made
highway travel treacherous In
New Mexico and west Texas
Friday as a major winter storm
mixed moisture from the Gulf of
Mexico with !rigid Canadian air.
The heaviest snows hit New
Mexico, where t~e National
Weather Service reported 13
inches on the ground at Ruidoso
and a foot at Cloudcroft. A s now
advisory was in effect Fridav for
most 0f soutnern New Me~ico
and roads were reported icy.
A snow advisory also was in
e ffect •arly Friday for areas of
sou theast Anzona above 4,000
feet. Chlrlcahua National Manu·

Lieutenant Dan Henderson of
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol announced
today that the " Seventh Annual
Drunk and Drugged Awareness
Week" 'rill be observed !rom
December 11 through December
17.
Lt. Henderson said a few years
ago, the pub! ic demanded and got
tougher ~runk ·drugged driving
laws and stricter punishment for
drivers convicted of driving
under the influence of alcohol
and other drugs. This grassroots
support for DUI enforcement
action has been very helpful to
the law enforcement officers who
work to rid our highways of these
dangerous drivers.
Drunk and Drugged Driver
Awareness Week is promoted by
the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administrat!onn to fopcus
attention on the drunk·drugged
driver problem and maintain
that much needed public support
for effective enforcement of out
drunk·drugged driving laws.
Drunk and Drugged Driver
Awareness Week wlll once again

Daily slack prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Am Electric Power .............. 27%
AT&amp;T .......... ................. ...... 29'/.,
Ashland Oil ......................... 33
Bob Evans .. ..- ..................... 15'!.
Charming Shoppes .............. 12'!.
City Holding Co .................. 30')4
Federal Mogul. ....... ...... ...... 47%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. ,.47%
Heck's ................................. y.
Key Centurion-.................... 15\4
Lands' End ......................... 27%
Limited Inc ........................ 27\4
Multimedia Inc .................... 71
Rax Restaurants .. ....... ......... 3'!.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 13 . ·
Shoney's Inc ........ ............ .... 7%
Wendy's Inti ........ ................ 5%
Worthington lnd ................. 21)'8

Page 83

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

I

ex-

pected 10 have major economic impact on Point Pleasant and Mason
Coooty.
Outgoing State Highway Commissioner William "Bill" Ritchie
said Friday that the agency has
begun sile location studies for a
new Shadle Bridge and inhouse
route investigations for a four-lane
highway through Mason County.
Ritchie said that while he will
leave the highway departmenl at
the close of the month, the current
studies would continue for the
bridge site as well as a feasibilily
study for !he four-lane highway.
"I would say the site location
work will take six months before
the department will be ready to
hold the first public heanng,"
Ritchie said "Actual replacement
of the bridge wiD take four years or
The four-lane highway feasibility
study wiU be done with $200,000
in federal funds obtained by U.S.
Rep. Bob Wise, D-W.Va., for that
purpose.
.
"We have asked our people to
locate any past studies for routes
through Mason Coun1y," Ritchie
said. "I personally feel that Highway 35 should be a high priori!)'
project, but u!lder tenns of the
funding, all ocfuutes or possible

routes need to be checked."
Committee To Replace the Shadle
Ritchie said that while he has no Bridge, said Ritclhe's actions were
idea who Governor-elect Gaston "great news."
Fruth said he felt Mason Counly
Caperton plans to select as his
replacement next month, he , is and Point Pleasant communily
hopeful !hat Caperton will continue leadeiS should move along with
to support both the highway plans for a meeting wilh Ohio
feasibilily swdy and bridge officials 10 coordinate the two
replacement project.
projects with · West V'uginia
The bridge site study was or-' officials.
dered by Gov. Arch A. Moore Jr. . Frulh said he had met personally
prior to the Nov. 8 election - · with Gallipolis leaders and discuswhich Moore lost to Caperton. sed the four-lane higllway issue and
very upbeat about
During a Democmtic party rally in .found "they
Point Pleasant. Caperton said he the project on both stdes of the
would consider replacing the river."
Tom Kelly. state field office
Shadle Bridge on an emergency
basis if it was found to be unsafe, director for !he FHA, said 'l)lursday
but he did not close the door to that the feasibility study was on
replacing the bridge as an on-going hold pending Caperton becoming
highway department projecL
governor in January and naming a
A Mason Counly Area Chamber new. highway commissioner.
of Commerce committee is direct·
Kelly said the study mighl be .
ing a drive to bring about replace- "pursued further sometime during
ment of the bridge, which is 57 1989" but did not SfY when that
years old and spans the Kanawha might be. Kelly said much depends
River.
on how high a priorily the state
Ritchie has mainlined for months places on the study for a road
that the bridge is safe, but because through Mason County.
·
of its age and the amount of traffic
''Then the cost of construction of
that uses it, i1 should be replaced.
that road may well be out of line
Ritchie also u(ldated the four- for the state highway depanment."
lane highway proJect after he was Kelly said.
told that a Federal Higway Ad- · RiiChie said the four-lane route
ministration official said no action was very imponatlt to Mason
was being taken on the study until County and West V'trginia because
after. Caperton becomes governor.
it would open this part of the state
Ritchie said he had directed the and provide better transportation
first phases of the feasibility swdy from Ohio into the state. through
to begin ·in order 10 shorten the time the county and onto Charleston.
'T d say it is a high priorily
frame for the actual study.
Jack Fruth, co-chairman of the item," Ritchie said,

.are

There's still time to 11Ulil packages

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS
$1500

behind the scenes in W.Va.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. State highway officials have taken
the first steps on two mai9r
transportation projects that are

POMEROY -; There Is still
plenty ol time to get Christmas
packages delivered anywhere
around the country, says Pome·
roy Postmaster Tom Reuter.
"As the holiday grows nearer,
customers should not overlook
the use ol Priority Mall," said
Reuter. "It's last and' consistent
and will meet most everyone's
needs down to the last few days."
Priority Mall allords llrst·
class hilndllng for packages
weighing more than 11 ounces, up
to 70 pounds. It offers one- to
three-day delivery, depending
upon the destination, anywhere
In the United States.
Reuter said there are several

advantages ol using Priority
Mall.
"You can send a package
weighing up to two pounds by
Priority Mall to any place In the
United States for $2.40. Packages
weighing live pounds can be sent
lor a cost of $3.61 to $6.37,
depending upon the destination,''
said Reuter. Rates for heavier
packages are also economical.
"Priority Mail can be sent
from any post office, station,
branch or even collection box to
any address In the U.S. Including
APO and FPO addresses,"
Reuter added. "Rural carriers
can also accept packages Jllalled
this way. It's the ideal servlcetor

a

1-----.:...______ ______-..r"
.._.:__ ---·----""-

people who want prompt pack·
age delivery."
. Reuter adds that service options such as Insurance, return
receipts, COD (collect on dellv·
ery), certificates of mailing and
special delivery are available
with Priority Mall.
Reuter o!fered another Up to
those who shop at the last·
minute.
"Remember that If you do get
pressed lor time, we can save the
day with Express Mall, our
reliable Next Day service which
we deliver even on Chrismas
Day," he said. "And there's no
extra charge lor holiday deliver
either. "•

•

~

'

$500,000 to purchase medicine
and other medical supplies for
the earthquake viCtims.
Larry C. Moody, a ·vlce pres!dent ol the Cincinnati lirm, will
coordinate the effort on behalf of
the Industry.
"The Ohio Insurance industry,
which helps those In need here
when disaster strikes, !eels a
moral obligation to provide help
to victims .~f these terrible
earthquakes, Moody ald.
"This is a generous gesture on
the part of the Ohio insurance
Industry," Fabe said. "The role
of the insurance industry Is to

step..in when tragedy strikes." .
Members of St. Gregory of
Narek near Cleveland ali Armenlan Orthodox chur~h. began :
raislilg money which It wtH ·
forward to its diocese In Ne•i
York City to be sent to the Sovlel
Union.
.•.
St. Greiory of Narek has about :
100 _members and many of the :
church members have relatives ,·
In the area where the earthquake ·
struck, kllllng as many as 100,000 ·
people, church officials said.
About 1 OilO'Armenlanians live
ln the Cl~veland area, olliclals
said.

, ·H igh col.lrt denies . PyroChem writ

lhe
or.a
you,'' said Assistant Manager Stephanie Sullivan.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Margaret Caldwell)

Road, bridge studies _proceed

-

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

r-rey, Ohio

By United Press International
Ohioans have rallied to come to
the aid of the victims of the
earthquake In the Soviet Union.
George Fa be, director of the
Ohio Department of Insurance,
said the Ohio Insurance Industry
would provide humanitarian aid
to the victims. And the only
Armenian· Orthodox church in
Ohio, began raising money to
help the victims.
Fa be asked John J. Schiff,
chief execu tlve officer of the
Cincinnati Financial Corp.. to
spearhead the ellort by the
Insurance Industry to provide

Twenty locaJ uaderprlvoe,ed children shopped
wltb San Ia Saturday mornln1 at K mart as part of
tile .0,1!4 New• Prop'am, a national K mart
pl'op'am for more lhan 4%,000 uaderprtvlleptl
cldldren. The children were 'treated with
brealdaat, a vl&amp;lt and presents from Sanla Claus
and a S20 llhopplnlapree for l!acb child. Thhrts die

more."

s. ...FrL-t.r.
-n.n.

readings would be the first of the Inches ol snow reported in the
season.
snowbelt while areas to the west
.
of Cleveland received anywhere
TheWeatherServicesaidsnow from a blanket of snow to about
was likely to continue In northern two inches.
Ohio throughout the weekend,
with a chance of llurrles In other
The Akron , Canton and Youngareas of the state.
slown areas to the south were
Ohio's snowbelt area, runnlng · ·only expected to receive about
from the east side of Cleveland to one inch of snow. There was also
.the Ohio-Pennsylvania border, some snow In the in the vicinity of
lived up to Its reputation again the Lake Erie Islands near ·
Friday, with as much as six Sandusky.

Ohioans aiding quake victbDs, ·

OVPStalf

OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER

H2·2~64

;. I

By GLENN McCASLAND

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(

-

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614-992-6600
OPEN: MON.-FRI. 7 A.M.-5(30 P.M.
SAT. 7 A.M.-6 P.M.

PLUS 4 · 16 oz. Soltdrinks

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AS LOW AS

By United Press International
Northeast Ohio got anotner
dose of heavy snow Friday and
earlySaturday,buttherestofthe
state alsoapwared to be heading
toward winter-like weather in the
form of single-digit temperature
readings.
The National Weather Service
predicted low temperatures In
the 5· to 15-degree range across
tlie state Saturday night and
early Sunday. The single-digit

71!4-ln. Circular Saw
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11 1111-2 •

Snow returns to Ohio;
bitter cold on the way

•• &lt;

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111 Soctlono, 92 Pogoo
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Middleport-Pomeroy· Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, Oecamber 11 • 1988

Shopping with Santa ... ~,-------,

7V4·1n. Circular Saw has

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worlal at
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Mostly sunny. Cold, high In
mid 258.

•

29.99
Super

Reversing Drill

Along the River ......... 81·8
Business ....................... EJ
Comics- ................... Insert
ClassUieds ................. D2- 7
Editorial .... : ...... , .....-..... A2
Deaths ...................... ... A3
Sporis ............ ........... Cl-8

In Our Town: Christmas a time for giving...

Vol. 23 No. 44
Copyrightod 1988

74.19
3/8-ln. Variable-Speed

lnsidf'

Page B6

•

own base. WHh bit

Cl

Beat of the Bend; Gung ho for fair ...

SAU ENDS DEC. 24

kick-off a concentrated anti·
drunk driver enforcPment effort
called "D·Day of Traffic Ways."
D-Day will begin at 6 p.m. Friday
Dec. 9 and end at 7A.M. Saturday
Dec. 10. During these 13 hours,.
thousands of state, county and
municuipal law enforcement officers across the United States ' ..
will be on tlte highways looking
for alcohol and drug related
drivers.
This D-Day, officers of the
Gallla and Meigs County She·
riffs' Departments, Gallipolis, ·
Middleport, Pomeroyy and Rio
Grande Police Departments and
troopers of the Gallia-Melgs Post
of the State Highway Patrol will
join together In this special
13-hour drunk-dru~ged driver
enforcement effort. They will
patrol those streets · and hjlgh·
ways that have a history of
alcohol· related crashes or drunk
driving violations.
Lt. Henderson concluded by
"asking area motorists to report
drunk or other dangerous drivers
before they involve some inno·
cent motorists in a serious traffic
accident. You can call the
Highway Patrol at 446-2433 in
Gallla County or 992·2397 In
Meigs County. We will send the
nearest available trooper and
notifY. the appropriate pollee
agency if the violation occurs
within a city. The Highway
Patrol also monitorts CB channel
9, 24 hours a day. Our call letters
are KNN 3083. " ·

ANY 12" 2 ITIM PIZZA
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STOlE OJILY

DOG ·CHOW

14 more
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Christmas

•-""""'~~'•-------------------,8

Stocks

POiliOY

P.URINA

Jets defeat Colts·

Drunk, Drugged Awareness
Week will be observed

FOR TWO

"'W. llaln

The Santa Ana winds , blowing in
from California's desert interior,
also knocked out electrical power
to more than 500,000 people
throughOut Southern California
a nd portions of Centra l
California .

O'DELL'S

Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
A chance of snow in the
northeast Sunday and statewide
Tuesday. Otherwfse lair with
highs Sunday between 15 and 25, ,
between 25 and 35 Monday, and
between 30 and ~0 Tuesday.
Early morning lows will be
between five and 15 Sunday,
between 10 and 20 Monday, and
between.l5 and 25 Tuesday.

Soudl Central Ohio
Tonight : Partly c loudy , with a
slight chance of snow flurries.
Lows will be bet ween 15 and 20.
Winds mostly ' west less than 10
mph. Chance of snow 30 percent.
Saturday: Variable cloud!·
ness, with a slight chance of snow
. flurries. High temperatutes will
be near 30. Chance of \$ ROW 30
percent.

Wolf Main St.
992-2124

50 Ll. BAG

Angeles area Thursday. trigger· ·
1ng fires that destroyed 41 homes. ·

------Weather------

OH.

$3°

In upstate New York, weathermen were on the lookout for snow
squa lls that collld bring a half·
foot of the white powder. Light
snow was fa!Ung Friday in
wes tern Montana and portions of
Idaho, Alexander said.
Elsewhere, e mbers carried by
hot desert winds gusting to 80
mph spread across the Lo:;

50 cen t s

POINT PLEASANT, W.VL Counly Commission, and· Counly
The West Virginia Supreme Coil\ Cler1t Josephine T. ''Tommy"
of Appeals has denied a petition for Hanes over the sitin~ apeman.
a writ of prohibition from LouisThe agreement gtVCS the county
ville, Ky., company seeking to one IWf of one percent of the gross
legally solidify a siting agreement revenue of the incinaator venture
in ·connection with a commercial through the establishment of a
hii;W'dous wilSie incinerator project county benefit fund.
·
plarined for Mason County.
PyroChem wanted to block Watt
Rudolph L. di Trapano, and as- from ruling further in the case, and
sociates . P. Rodney Jackson and to have his most recent Older deny·
Lonnie C. Simmons, all of a Char- ing intervention bf PyroChem m
lesion law firm, filed the writ with the Jawsuil to be VOided.
the state high court on belialf of
The petitlonets argued that the
PyroChem, Inc. The case was ar- judge doesn't have the jurisdiction
gued before the high ; court this to previously issue a temporary
•'
week.
writ of mandamus - an order
They were asking the court to blocking the siting agreement from
have Mason Counly Circuit Court taking effect -and also thai by not
Judge Clarence L. Watt prohibited allowing PyroChem to intervene in
from taking any further action on the lawsuit, the project could he
the lawsuit belween Point jeop;udy.
Pleasant's Jan Haddox, the Mason
The JUdge has yet 10 rule on the
crucial question of the matter,

whether the Mason County Commission had lhe legal right to enter
into the siting agreement. He has
said that ruling is still being
reseatthed. •
The petitioners told the high
court that should Watt rule that the
siting ~ent was not valid,
they bebeve !hal ruling could influence the current pending permiiS
being sought by PyroChern for the
project from the West Virginia
Department of Niltural· Resources
and West V'uJil!ia Air Pollution
Conlrol Comnussion.
In essence, the petitioners told
the court that the judge's ruling
~ the regulatory process and
eliminates participation of the
general public in concerns over
construi:Uon of the commercial
hazardous waste incinerator facility
planned for northern Mason
County.

Local clergyman honored
GALLIPOLlS - A Gallla
County man who began deliverIng the word ol God In the
Gallipolis City Park and lndl·
vidual homes In 1939 has
received recognition for SO
years of ministry.
The Rev. Everett C. Delaney,
79, of 1915 Chatham Ave.,
Galllpolis, received a plaque in
appreciation !or 50 years of
falthtul ministry by the 1988
convention ol the Church of
Christ In Christian Union at
Circleville, Ohio.
In 1940, the Rev . Delaney
became association paslllr of
the Gallipolis Mission, · at 13
Mill Creek Road. He founded
his first Church of Christ in
Christian Union at Hobson
before leaving for the armed
forces.
·
Delaney joined the Army
May 4, 1942 and took his basic
training at Fort Warden, Wash.
He was In the 14th Coast
Artillery with the Harbor Defenses of Puget Soulld, and was
discharged as a private first
class August 27, 1943.
Alter the war, Delal).ey returned to· his llrst church at
Hobson, where he remained
untll1945. Alter that he served
a church In lheCinclnnatlarea,
and at Elkwood and Evans·
vOle, Ind., before returninl to
Galllpolla In 1958.
Alter five years as pastor at
the Church of Christ In Chris·
tlan UniOn on Eastern Avenue
In Galli polls, Delaney founded •
the Bell Chapel Community

....

-~~

.... \L~

Church on Bell Ave.. and
served the church for 21 years
untO 1985. Then for two years,
he was active In the Church ol

.·

Christ In Christian Union at
Hartford, W.Va. He Is now at
the Church ol Christ In Chris· ·
tian at Lecta, Ohio.

FDTY YEAR CER'ID'ICATE - Tbe Rev. Everett C. Deluey,
'fountler or the Bell Chapel Community Church, GaiUpolll,
reeelved a plll!ae or .,preelatloa for II Jelln of f.W.Iulmllllltry
by the IlllleoiiV•tll• ul tile Cburoll of ~18&amp; Ia Chrlldau Vnlo• a1
Clrelevllle. Delaaey tiii'Ved Bell Chapel ror 21 ;re11n. (Tim.,.
Selitbtel photo)

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December 11, 1988

:Commentary and perspective

--Area deaths
, Judson H. Gainer

EPA inspectors wirik at water pollution
A Division of

•

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Oblo
(614) 44&amp;-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT MIITEHEAD
Asslstunt Publisher-Controller

,JJOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press Associ a·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Asscdatlon.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. ThE!'J should be leSs than 300 words
long. Alllet.tersaresubjl.'Ct to editing and must be signed wUh name, address and
telephone number. No unslgns:J letters wDI be publ1shed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing issues, not persmallt\es.

Backstairs at
the White House
•

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - Washington Is In the throes of the Christmas
season and preparations for the-inauguration of George Bush as
president on Jan. 20.
,. The homeless who languish in L;~fayette Square, directly across the
: street from the White House, have been moved from the
'•.• Pennsylvania Avenue side to make way for the building of the
; ; .bleachers and prime seats for the Inaugural parade.
; ·. Some of Washington's hotels In the $200-plus a night qracket have
• been booked for a year, particularly the Willard with its prime rooms
; overlooking Pennsylvania Avenue.
·
;
The Bush clan will be staying at the Jefferson Hotel, Instead of the
' White House or Blair House, the president's house, which recently
: .underwent a multimillion-dollar renovation.
·
: ' The Bushes will have to wear their dancing shoes the night of the
• inaugural, making the mandatory eight Inaugural balls. Tickets for
• the balls cost $175. The tic~et cost is $200 for the inaugural gala,
' scheduled the night before the swearing In of the 41st president.
•
After the Inauguration, President and Mrs. Reagan will head for
~ the airport to fly to California and a new life in the past presidency.
Reporters are gearing for night and day, seven days a week
coverage of George Bush once he moves Into the White House·. Bush Is
known for his "spontaneity, " his desire to be ou! amongst them early
and often.
He Is not the contemplative type and after eight years of President
Reagan's gener.al predictability, reporters are going to have to wear
their running shoes.
·
Bush does not sit still fo r long. He Is impromptu and does not.always
want to be trailed by the press.
. There will be other differences. Reporters will have to learn the
·names of
Bush children and 10 grandchildren who will be around
• five
a lot. Tlie
Reagan children, who were grown by the time their parents
.moved into the White ·House, were infrequent guests.
There were never any major Reagan family get-togethers at the
· White House. The only full gathering of the Reagan clan was during
,'. the two inaugurals.
,._ The Reagan children shunned the White House spotUghtanddld not
; :.:Show up for birthdays, anniversar ies and special holidays,

•
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Marlin Fitzwater Is being very scrupulous a bout not having his feet
in two camps. He makes It clear that he Is the spokesman for
President Reagan until Jan. 20. But from the swearing In at noon that
day, he will become the White' House press secretary, taklng the title
from James Brady, who was severely wounded In the atteinpton the
: , president's life on March 30, 1981. ·
·
• Fitzwater Is priming himself for a new ball game. It's not a question
of no more nice guy. But he is gofug to have to be ready to jump at a
moment's notice, and he Is going to be speaking for a president, who
after eight years of sUence, Is enjoying the freedom of speaking for
himself.
Still, Fitzwater may have to brief Bush on the question of
goverrunenl secrecy. One of the most notable Impressions of Bush Is
his penchant for secrets, even though they may fall into the domain of
legitimate public Information. He reportedly hits the ceiling when a
story appears that he has not authorized. Shade of Lyndon Johnson.
There are other similarities. Johnson always said he wanted to be
president of all the people . And now his fellow sometime Texan,
George Bush.. is saying the same thing.

Today in history
By United Press lnlernatlonal
Today is Sunday, Dec. 11, the 346th day of 1988 with 20 to fo llow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first qual'ter.
The morning star Is Venus.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include Scottlsll physlcls t and kaleidoscope Inventor David Brewster
In 1781, French composer Hector Berlioz In 1803, German pioneer
.• bacteriologist Robert Koch In 1843, New York Mayor Fiorello
LaGuardia In 1882, Russian novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn In 1918
.• (age 70). actress Rita Moreno In 1931 (age 57). and singer Brenda Lee
.: In 1944 (age 44).
· A thought for the day: Novelist Alexander Solzhenltsyn wrote
: "Talent Is always conscious of its own abundance, and does notcj,lJject
: to sharing."
'Y
.

Jack Anderson

WASHINGTON -Lakes, riv- against water pollution. The next 'ust of facilities that aren't
ers and oceans where Americans time George Bush decides to meeting the EPA standards. In
swim, fish and get their drinking excoriate a political nemesis on a some cases, the EPA has even
water are more polluted than the water pollution Issue, he would modified sewer plant permits to
make them comply on paper,
Environmental Protection do well to make sure his federal
agency Is doing Its job, because It even If they can't comply In
Agency Is letting on.
·
reality.
EPA watchdogs are supposed Isn't.
Any facility that discharges
The report came from the
to make sure that Industrial and
city sewage plants don't pour too treated sewage Into a waterway Inspector General's Office at the
many dangerous byproducts of must have a federal permit. That · EPA, but EPA officials outside of
treated sewage Into waterways . . permit puts limits on the quantity that office disagreed with the
But some sewage plant operators and quality of the sewage. Many report's tone. Theysaldltwastoo
aren't staying within their dump- sewage plant operators have negative and that It Implied the
Ing limits. Federal Inspectors been ordered by the EPA to water .monitoring program was
have found that EPA Inspectors · upgrade their operations and are using false Information to make
the EPA look good. EPA officials
on the state and regional level under deadlines to comply.
are
trusted
to
said
they were working to lm·
The
operators
are letting the operators get
monitor their own discharges prove the system.
away with dangerous dumping.
SHORT CHANGING THE EN·
Our associate Scott Sleek has and to submit periodic reports on
their
output
to
the
EPA.
The
VffiONMENT
- The Reagan
obtained a report by EPA Investifederal
government
puts
Its
faith
.
administration
hasn't won any
gators who checked up on agency
In
EPA
state
and
regional
friends
among
environmentalunderlings. Their report shows
overseers
to
keep
an
accurate
IsiS
with
Its
program
to escalate
that chronic violators of federal
tully
of
any
operators
falling
the
leasing
of
the
outer
contlnenpollution laws are escaping the
behlnd on scheduled Improve- tal shelf .for oil exploration. In
proper monitoring.
That means top EPA manag- ments or overstepping their 1982, the Interior Department
· . Increased the number and fre.
ers, not to mention the public, are pollution quotas.
In many cases, the names of quency of those leases. Environbeing mlsl~ about the nation's
accomplishments In the battle violators are lll!ver added to the mentalists warned that In Its

haste to make money off the
ocean, the federal government
would gloss over the environmental Impact stutements requl~
for each lease.
Since 1973, the Interior Department has spentabout$450milllon
tracli:Tng the environmental lm·
pact of offshore oil and gas
drilling. But the budget for those
studies has declined s"e verely
under Reagan - from $55 million
In 1976 to about $29 million this
year. Part of that decline Is due to
the slump In the oil business. But
part Is due to underfundlng of the
environmental program.
The General Accounting Office
recently clocked the timing on
Interior Department environ·
mental studies for offshor~
leases. In the past two years, the
majority of those studies have
come In late - some of them long
after the oU or gas 'ease was
already awarded.

Qne man's guilt Or innocence _ __:__.:::.::Ch-==u=ck:.. . :.S:..:. to:..:. n:.. :. . e
The devastation of drugs on our
society has so enraged me that I
sometimes speculate about the
mass execution of drug dealers
as an appropriate solution.
Yes, I believe In the death
penalty. But the cases of Edward
Martin Ryder and Randall Dale
Adams cause me to have second
thoughts about Its Irrevocability.
Ryder Is one of four Inmates
convicted of stabbing.a Pennsylvania prison Inmate to death In
1973. He was sentenced to life in
prison In 1974. Adams was
convicted of a murder In Texas
and was also sentenced to life.
Recently, The New York
Times ran a 40-lnch story ·about
Adams that Included detailed
.Information about another prison
Inmate's confession that he (not
Adams) had committed the
murder.
In the last nine years, I've
come up with five witnesses who
have recanted their stories and
confirmed Ryder's Innocence.
But a succession of Philadelphia
district attorneys and courts
refuse to give any weight to the
new evidence exculpating
Ryder. In Texas, .the prosectutor
and local judicial system just as
adamantly oppose a new trail for
Adams.
Adams, 40, Is white. Ryder, 38,
Is black. Injustice In America
can be an equal . opportunity
plague.
But you decide whether Ryd·
er's case has any merit:
Jan . 22, 1975: Jeffrey Hunter,
the DA's chief witness against
Ry~er, told a Philadelphia Dally
News reporter that he (Hunter,
who had a long criminal record)
had made a deal with the DA's
office to testify against Ryder In
exchange for the dropping of
robbery charges against him.
July 10, 1975: Hunter con- .
firmed the deal with the DA on a
television Interview show with
me. "I did It to get out of prison.
I'm sorry I did It to the brother."
April 3, 1978: During a postconviction hearing In court,
Kenneth Covil, one of the other
Inmates convicted of the pr1so11
murder, testified that Ryder had
not been Involved. "I dldn' t know
Mr. Ryder until they brought us
out that night !or questioning
after the body was discovered."
June 11, 1984: A deathbed
confession signed by a terml·
nally Ill Michael Grant (another
of tbe four convicted Inmates)
declared: "I, along with Theodore Brown and Kenneth CovU,
did In !act kill Samuel Molten by
stabbing him (54 times) . Edward
Ryder had no knowledge of this

Incident."
March 1985: Philadelphia In·
quirer prison expert John Woestendlek wrote a story on the
Ryder case, quoting yet a fourth
witness, Robert Waddy, who said
he saw five Inmates come out of
the murdered man's cell at about
the same time of the murder, but ,
none of them was Ryder.
October 1985: CBS News ran a
story after a reporter had discussed the case with me and dug
up a filth witness, Edward
Shelton, who told CBS: '.'I remember discussed the case with
me and dug up a fifth witness,
Edward Shelton, who told CBS:
"I remember distinctly that
Jeffrey Hunter was In the yard
also that day .... He was In my

cell at the time Molten was In Pennsylvania, the criminal
murdered." (Which means Hun- · justice system Is a sharpedged
ter couldn't have seen anybody, sword that has murdered the
come out of the murdered man's truth which could set them free.
cell.)
But the Philadelphia DA's
Be_rry's Worlg
office, which Is one ofthe worstln
the nation, was so anxious to
convict Ryder that It made a deal
with one of the scummiest
characters It could excavate
from under a rock.
No system of justice Is perfect.
An occaslonallnjustlc will occur.
But during the last 11 years, I've
kept a record of the hundreds of
wrongfuJly convicted men
throughout the United States.
. ~&amp;.
For wrongfully convicted men
.
like Randall Dale Adams In
Texas and Edward Martin Ryder

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MIDDLEPORT - Lanny R.
·: Jenkins, 51, of Middleport, who
·· died Wednesday at the Holzer
· Medical Center following a brief
Illness, had been an employee of
Pomeory Village and Foote Min·
· era!, New Ha'ven, W.Va., and was
: employed at j\merlcan Alloys,
· also New Haven, at the time of
his death.

Mem ber : United Press Interna11onal,
. Inland Da lly Press Association and the

•••'

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· . Lanny R. Jenkins

Published each Sunday, 825 Third Ave. ,
Gallipolis, Ohio, by iheOhlo Valley Pub·
llshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc. Se·
cond class postage paid at Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. Entered as second class
m ailing mat ter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
Ofllre.

EMERALD
and
DIAMOND

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'2995

•
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RAVENSWOOD- Earl Julius
Henderson, 87, Ravenswood ,
died Thursday at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis, fol lowing a short illness,
Son of the late Julius and
Mat tie Clelr Daugherty Henderson, he was.born In Portland, and
was a member of the United
Methodist Churc~.
He graduated !rom West Lib·
erty State College In 1934 and
later received his master's degree from the University of
Pittsburgh. He was a school
principal for 34 years in Ohio
County, retiring In 1963. He was a
member of the Ohio County
· Principals Association and the
West Virginia State Educational
Association.
" He, Is survived by his wife,
; Virginia Leach Henderson, Ra·
venswood, and one brother,
Ralph Henderson, Portland.
Funeral services will be held
. · Monday at 10 a.m at the Straight: Tucker Funeral Home In Ravens . wood. The Rev. Andrew Pence
·: will officiate. Graveside services
·: will be held at the Mount Rose
·· Cemetery at MoundsvUle, W.Va .
·· Friends may call at the funeral
·· home from 2 to 4 -and 7 to 9 on
Sunday.

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POMEROY Well-known
Pomeroy businessman, . Karl
Krautter , 70, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
died unexpectedly on Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born May 22, 1918 In Mason,
: W.Va. , Krautter was a son of the

95

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GALLIPOLIS- Ruth L. Hartley, 60, of Gallipolis, died
Saturday at Holzer Medical
: ' Center following an extended
Illness.
She is survived by her mother,
·. Muriel Lawrence of Fredericktown, Ohio.
There will be no calling hours.
Services will be at the conven·
lence of the family.

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LAYAWAYS
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CHRISTMAS

COOLVILLE - Judson Harold
Gainer, 93, of 241!00 Mountain
Belle Roild, Coolville, died Saturday at his residence. He was a
farmer.
He was born In White Pine.
W.Va.; the son of the late Jacob
' N. and Helen Car~er Gainer.
Surviving are his wife, Thelma
Clevenger Gainer; three sons,
Lyle and Marlin Gainer • of
Coolville and Marion Gainer of
Columbu s; one daughter, Shirley
· Fry of Parkersburg, W.Va.; one
brother, CarlGalnerofCoolvllle;
one sister, Chloe Rinehart of
L o n g B o I t o m ;· o n e
granddaughter.
He was preceded in death by
two brothers and two sisters.
Services will be conducted
Tuesday, 2 p.m ., at White Fun·
era! Home In Coolville, the Rev.
· Hershel Thompson officiating.
Burial follows In Fairview
· Cemetery.
Frelnds may call at the funeral
· home 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.,
Monday.

Sunday Only
One Year ......... : .................. ..... $37.44

Phone (614)992-2054
Gallipolis, Ohio

Six months .. ...... ................. ...... $19.50

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13 Weeks ...... "........................... $19.24
26 Weeks ...... "........................... $37.96
52 Weeks .................................. $74.30
Kales Outside County
13 Weeks ................................. $20.80
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52 Weeks ...... ,..............., .......... $15.40

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

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

Page-A-2
December 11, 1988

..

•

late' Richard and Clara Hall
Krautter .
He was a jeweler for 30yearsat
K&amp;C Jewelry In Pomeroy, and
was an Army veteran of World
War II. He was a member of the
United Methodist Church: the
Meigs 40 &amp; B. Locale No. 776; the
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie
No. 2171; Drew Webster Post 39
of the American Legion; the
Loyal Order of Moose, Lodge No.
731, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; the
150th West Virginia National
Guard Association: and the
Buckeye Sheriff's Association.
Survivors Include his wife,
Clarice Gibbs Krautter of Pomeroy; a daughter, Kimberly
Krautter of Pomeroy; acson, Karl
Keith Krautter of Columbus; a
brother, Henry Krau tter of J ollet, Ill.; three sisters, Lucille
Brown of Jenkintown, Pa., Mary
Ebersbach of Orlando, Fla., and
Flornel Allen of Columbus; and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by a
brother, Christy Krautter.
Services will be Tuesday. 1
p.m. , at Ewing Funeral Home,
with the Rev. William Mlddleswarth officiating. Burial will be
in the Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 1 to 4 p.m. on Sunday
and 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on
Monday.
In lieu of flowers, the family
asks that donations be made to
the Heart Fund or another
favorite charity.

Elsie May Kuhn
GALLIPOLIS - Elsie May
(Beck) Kuhn , 79, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, died Saturday at Holzer
Medical Center.
Born Feb. 20, 1909 in Green
Township, Gallia County, she
was the daughter of the late
Edward and Etta (Rothgeb)
Beck. .She was a homemaker and
a member of the Centenary
·united Methodist Church.
She Is survived by two sons,
Donald Kuhn and Francis Kuhn,
both of Gallipolis: two daugh·
ters, Mrs. Charles (Helen) Plymale of Sabina, Ohio, and Mrs .
William (Nellie) Milstead of The
Plains, Ohio; one step-son, Wil·
!lam Kuhn of Gallipolis; nine
grandchildren; two great·
grandchildren; five step·
grandchildren; six step-great·
grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs.
Marie Hlv.ely of Bidwell and Mrs.
Vernon (Ruby) Holley ofGalllpo·
lis: one brother , Francis Beck of
El Dorado, Mo.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, Charles Kuhn on
Dec. 3~ l979. Also preceding her
In death was one brother. one
sister, and one step-son.
Services will be Tuesday , 1
p.m . at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis. Burial will be at the
Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call Monday, 3 to
5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
funeral honie in Gallipc:!!is.

r
She Is survived by one son. Ron

Services will be 10 a.m. Monday
at Waugh-Halley-Wood FunMiller of Fremont, Calif.; two
eral
Home, ·the Rev. A.C. Conn
daughters, ConnJe Day of Pine
and
the Rev. Alvis· Pollard
Grove, Calif., and Nancy Niday
o!flcatlng.
Burial follows in Swan
of Lodl; three brothers, Col. AI
Creek
Cemetery
.
Burke of Charlottesville, Va.,
Flag
presentation
will be given
Frank Burke and Lloyd Burke,
PY
VFW
4464
and
Lafayette
Post
both of Gallipolis; and nine
American
Legion
27.
grandchildren.
Friends maycallat the funeral
She was preceded In death by
home
Sunday, 6 to 9 p.m. Masonic
her husband, W.R. Miller tn•1985, '
serVIces
will be by Gallla Mawhom she married In 1932. Also
sonic.
Lodge
469 at 8:30 p.m"
preceding her In death were two
Sunday.
brothers, J .C. Burke andWllllam
Pallbearers will be Dean
Burke, and one sister, Sadie
Evans,
Chuck Gillam, Verlln
Irwin.
Swain,
Bill
Gooderham, Nelson
Services will be Monday, iO
Swain,
Frank
Cremeans, Mike
a.m., at the Fremont Memorial
Neal
and
Bill
Gray. Honorary
Chapel, 3723 Peralta Blvd .. Frepallbearers
will
be Jim Crance,
mont, Calif. Interment will folDr.
John
Strauss,
Dr. Keith
low at Cedar Lawn Memorial
Sheets,
Tom
Tope,
Earl
Tope,
Park In Fremont.
Emerson
Corbin,
Max
Tawne.y
.
Calling hours will begin 9 a .m.
Carl
Daniels.
Monday at the funeral chapel.

WOODSTOCK, Ill. - John
Allan Roach, 37, of Woodstock.
Ill., died Thursday at Woodstock
Memorial Hospital.
Born Feb 25, 1951 in Newark,
Ohio, he was a son of Dorothy
• Nibert Roach and the late Okey
Roach.
He Is survived by his wife,
Janet Roach; two brothers,
james Roach of Gallipolis and
Glen Strickland o! Bayou LaBatre, Ala.; two sisters, Kathy
Armstrong of Gallipolis, and
Helen McKee of Columbus.
Services will be conducted
Monday. 1 p.m.. at WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home,
with burial following In Pine
Street Cemetery. The Rev. Jack
Finnicum will officiate.
Friends may call at the funeral
home 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
Sunday.
Pallbearers will be Joey,
Bruce and Shawn Swift, Gene
and Ron Plants and Bill
Armstrong.

Hazel Marie Miller
LODI, Calif. - Hazel Marie
(Burke) Miller, 75, of Lodl,
Calif. , formerly of Gallipolis,
died Friday morning at Vista
Ray Convalescent Home, Lodl.
Born Dec. 26,19131nFrankfort,
Ky., she was the daughter of the
late Alfred and Lena Burke,
She was a ·member of the
Eastern Star and a member of
the First Baptist Church In
GallipoUs.

MIDDLEPORT - Sarah ,Lu·
cllle Schwarz Theobald, 75. 137
South Second Ave.. Middleport,
died Friday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital In Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
Born Dec. 16, 1912 In the
Pomeroy area, she was the
daughter of the late Slg and
Bertha Allensworth Johnson.
She was a retired receptionist
for Dr. Thomas McGowan, Ma·
son, W.Va., and a member of the
Mason United Methodlst.Church,
Mason, W.Va. Previously, .she
had been a member of the Mason
United Brethren Church, where
she was an organist for 25 years.
Surviving are her husband,
Wilbur Ji:. Theobald; a daughter,
Marilyn J. Strother, Louisville,
Ky.; a grandson; and a sister,
Carrie Kennedy, Pomeroy.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded In death by her
first husband, Harold Schwarz.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday at Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home with AI Hartson
and Bennie Stevens both o!flclat·
lng. Burial will be In the Kirkland

Paul H. Roush

)ohn Alian Roach

.

Sarah Lucille Theobald

ATHENS - Paul Herbert
(Skeet) Roush, 67, of Palmetto,
Fla., died Thursday at home
after a brief Illness.
Born June 14,1921 in Athens, he
was a son of the late Clarence and
Ellen Hayes Roush. A former
resident of Gahanna, . he was
employed by Ohio Bellin Columbus for 33 years before his
retirement. He llved In Racine
for 10 years where he operated
Roush's Landing, before moving
to Florida four years ago. Hewas
a member of the Racine Masonic
Lodge, and he served with the
Merchant Marines In World War

GALLIPOLIS - The Retail
Merchants Association will spon·
sor the Fourth Annual Home
Decorating Contest for noncommercial residences, Bob Hood,
president of the association,
announced.
The theme for this year's event
Is "A Christmas For All." Prizes
will be given In categories of
traditional and contemporary
decorations. Each category will
have a $50 first prize, $25 second

Survivors Include his wife,
Helen Spencer Roush ; two
daughters. Carolyn Roush, of
Palmetto, Fla., and Patricia
Hoffman, of Bradenton, Fla.;
seven grandchildren.; three
great grandchildren; a sister,
Mrs. John (Ann) Algeo, Athens;
and a brother, Charles Roush, of
Beaumont, Calif.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by three
Marvjn H. Robinson
brothers, Rex, Dow and Douglas
Roush; and a son-In-law, Wayne
Chappelear.
GALLIPOLIS - Marvin Ha· ·. Services will be Wednesday,
rold Robinson, 75, ·Rt. 1, Upper 10:30 a.m .. at Jagers Funeral
River Road, Gallipolis, died Home, 24 Morris Ave., Athens,
Saturday at l;lolzer Medical with Rev. Thomas Fisher off!.
Center. He retired after 22 years elating. Burial will be In Sutton
from Gallipolis Developmental Methodist t:;hurch Cemetery,
Center In 1972.
near Racine. Friends may call at
Born JljlY 6, 1913 In Stanford, the funeral home from 2 to4 and 7
Kan., he was the son of the late to 9 on Tuesday. Paramuthla
James Benjamin and Selemma Lodge will conduct masonic
Pollock Robinson.
services-at 6:30p.m. on Tuesday.
After his mothers's death In
1917, he made his home with an
uncle and aunt, Alfonso and
Elizabeth Pollock Blake.
He Is survived by his wife,
Erma Jewell Dillon Robinson,
whom he married March 21, 1931,
In Gallipolis.
Also survl\llng are a son.
James Stephen Robinson of Gallipolis; two daughters, Loraine
Lyman of Columbus, and Mrs.
John (Anita) Strauss of Gallipolis; six grandchildren. seven
great grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by a •·:
brother and two sisters.
He attended Flrs.t Baptist 1
Church. He was a member of
Post 4464 of the Veterans of
ForeignWarsandLafayettePost
27 of the American Legion; the
Ga!Ua Masonic Lodge 469; Galllpolls Chapter 79; Rose Commandery 43; Moriah Council 32;
Valley of Columbus Scottish
Rite; Aladdin · Temple of the
Shrine Columbus; Galllpolis
Shrine Club;~ Galllpolls Hillbilly ..
Clan. He was a World · War II .•
veteran.
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Donald Wilson
COOLVILLE- Donald Casey
Cllde Wilson, Infant son of Kevin
and Nancy Day Wilson, dlf&lt;(l
Friday at Cincinnati Children's
Medical Center .
Also surviving are a sister,
Jlna Wilson; grandparents Maxine Wilson of HarrisVille, W.Va.,
Donald and Betty Day of Guys- .
ville, Ohio; and great grandmother Virginia Meeker of
Tuppers Plains.
He was preceded In death by a
grandfather, Clide Wilson.
Graveside services will be
conducted Sunday, 2 p.m., at
Coolville Cemetery, the {(ev.
Charles Buck officiating.
Friends may call at White
Funeral Home Sunday, 1 p.m.,
until time of ~ervlce.
Memorial contributions may
be made to the Heart Association
and the Ronald McDonald House.

Home Decorating Contest announced

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Memorial Cemetery. Point Pleasant, w.Va. Friends may call at
the funeral holl).e after noon on
Sunday .

prize, and $15 third prize.
Judging will take place Mon·
day, Dec. l9, 7 to 10p.m. Winners
will be announced Tuesday, Dec.
20.

Vinton woman
claims injury

$3895 .·

GALLIPOLIS · The driver was
Injured In a one-car accident at
4:24p.m. Friday on SR 554, 0.5
mUes eastofMilePost7, near the
junction of Bulaville Pike, according to the State Highway
Patrol.
·Troopers said Mitzi L. Ball. 22,
Rt. 1, Vinton, lost control. Her
1987 Jeep pickup truck went off
the road and overturned. Damage was heavy.
Ball suffered a minor visible
InjUry. She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center by the Gallla
County Emergency Service.
The patrol cited Ball for
driving under the lp.fluence and
failure to maintain control.

Spruce up
for the holidays with a
sophisticated Seiko.
Seiko has something sp~eial for ••·
eryone on your gift Hst. Sn our
great selection of both men's and
ladl•s' watch11 tochlyl
OPEN THIS SUIIIA Y
1:00-5:00 , ...

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Christmas Flower
If RIVERFRONT HONDA CHRISTMAS SALE ·
~ A rrnngements From~''" II
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WEAR WHAT THE PROS WEAR

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FLORIST

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28CEDAR ST .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
44&amp;-9721
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IICIY JOHNSON WEAlS HONDAUNE Tl10 APPAREL IN 1989

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1110 IOOTS ........................................................................ S119.00

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Coupe Bouquet

The Cake

Plate Bouquet

The Candlestick
Bouquet

NOW UIING ORDERS FOR CHRISTMAS FROM
FOX, AIO, SINSALO, O'NEAL, MALCOMB SMITH

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Show(hrome

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Accessories

GOLDWING &amp; HIC SWEAT SURS

Dall)' and 8uHay

,

' Markland, Drag,
Kuryaykn,

Honda Youth Jerseys ... 515.95
1 1 "'.....•' ......... 529•95·
1 lng a·b
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Gift Ideas for !
Goldwingers I

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RICKY JOHNSON BELL MOTO 4 HELMn .............................. $159.00

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Don't Forget the Stocking StuH•s

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1 • 1' 1' Glew•, Grips, Vilen,
Sticker
llt1, c ......., Pach, ltlt
hdd11, Hats, Car.. 11m.

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MAIL SUIISCBIPTIONS

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Sale In Progress thru Dec. 24 or While Quantities Last
446·1240

CLOSING NOON ClllstMAS EYE

SAT. 9·5
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Page-A-4-Sunc:lay Times-Sentinel

December 11. 1988

December 11, 1988

P()f1'181'0y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Gallia's first rubber-tire wagon built50years ago

----Municipal court_- - - tensen, 32, Alexandria; Va., $47;
Barbara L. Rexroad, 44, Temperance, Mich .. $46; Otis W. Tilley,
37, Hiddenite, N.C. and Walter
Pugh, 25, Rt.1 , Bidwell, both $44.
Charles A. Toney, 28, Oak Hill,
W.Va. and Anna E . Bowman, 35,
Orient, Ohio, both $42; Jerry
McMinnls, 45, Raleigh, N.C., and
Donna D.,Corvtn, 26. Warrenton,
Va., both$41; JohnM . Aqulno,48,
Holt, Mich., Scott A. Cline, 24,
Columbus, Roscoe Bentley, 34,
Shelblanna, Ky., and Nicholas R.
Hager, 25, Charlotte, N.C., all
$40.
Others forfeiting bonds were;

GALLIPOLIS - David Tltchnell, 33, of Vinton, pleaded not
guilty Friday lnGalllpollsMunlcipal Court to charges of ·shopUft·
ing, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. A pre-trial was set
for Dec. 19 at 2 p.m. Bond was set
at $1,000 each on the disorderly
and resisting arrest; and $2,500
on the theft charge.
Fifteen persons forfeited bonds
and charges were dismissed
against four others Friday In
Municipal Court.
Forfeiting bonds on charges of
speeding were Gregory K. Chris-

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GE'M'ING A HUG - Children gather around
Santa as they Christmas shop at K mart Saturday
momiDg. Twenty local underprivileged children
visited and shopped with Saata as part of K mart's
Good News Program. As Santa met the children ID
the aisles, he heard their Christmas lists and

CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT

POMEROY - The following
Individuals were fined this week
in Meigs County Court by Judge
Patrick O'Brien.
Jeffrey D. Root, Cleveland,
$300 and costs, 90 day license
suspension, 10 days In jall, DWT;
costs for failure to control; $75
and costs, three days In jail to be
served ·concurrently, no opera·
tor's license; Keith Musser,
address unknown, six months in
jail suspended to 10 days, -six
months probation, costs, two
charges of assault: Wllliam E .
Morris, Pomeroy. $250 and costs,
three days In jail, 60 day license
suspension, jall time and $150. of
fine to be suspended upon completion of residential driving
school, OWl; Cletls Dalton, $250
and costs, three days In jail, 60
day license suspension, jail time
and $150 of fine to be suspended
upon completion of residential
driving school, OWl; Gary N.
Curtis, Pomeroy, $75 suspended
to $40, costs, no valid operator's
license: Patty Landaker. Poemroy, $75 and costs, three days In
jail suspended, six months probation, no operator's license.
Wildlife related fines were
ordered from Alfred Whittington, Morrow, $125 and costs, not
having special managment antlerless deer permit, and $50 for
failing to deliver deer to an
official deer checking station;
Nicholas Muetzel, Reynoldsburg, $50 and costs, spotlighting;
Allen Olley, Pataskala, $50 and
costs, spotlighting; Clarence
Moore, Alger, $125 and cosl5,
failed to tag deer witH temporary
tag; Jim Metheney, Langsville,
$35 and costs, hun ling ,.'ilboul
valid 1988 license; Caner D.
Henson, Chesapeake , S25 and
costs, hunting without written
permission; Melvi n Biederman,
New Bremen , $125 and costs,
failed to tag deer where It fell;
Richard Stivlhland Jr., Bowling
Green, $100 and costs, spotlightIng; Kevin Clar, Racine, $25 and
costs. possessing a deer not '

tagged as required; Lawrence
'McQuaid IV, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, possessing a deer not
tagged as required ; Franklin
Giles, Cheshire, $25 and costs,
taking and possessing deer not
properly tagged; Michael R.
Johnson, Chesapeake, $25 and
costs, hunting on another's land
without written permission;
Jerry L. Uribe, Albany , $50 and
costs, untagged deer; Jeffrey L.
Dilcher, Racine, $300 and costs,
30 days In jail suspended, one
year probation, taking deer with
gun during closed season with
previous deer offense; Steven
Mapes, Plain City, $100 and
costs, possessing a special management anterless deer permit
and taking more than one deer in
one day; Donald R. Chapman,
Celina, $25 and costs, hunting
deer after temporary tag had
been detached from sepclal deer
permit.
Other fines were ts·sued to
Kimberly K. Ryan, Racine, $10
and costs, left of center; Megan
L. An&amp;ews, Long Bottom, $20
and. costs, no seat belt; Paul D.
Milliron, Racine, $138 and costs,
overload; Ronald S. Haggy,
Pom.,roy, $15 and costs, Insecure
load; Perry A. Smith, Racine, $20
and costs, operating a vehicle
with two flat tires; Stanley D.
Trout, Albany, $95 and costs,
overweight; Anna J. Slater,
Albany. $30 and costs. left of
center: Randall Russell, Middleport, $20 and costs, expired tags;
David Coppick, Portland, costs,
overlOad; Richard Darst, Cheshire, $127.50 and costs, overload ; Stanley D. Trout, ALbany,
S95 and costs, overweight.
Fined for speeding were Carl
F . Edwards, Lakewood, $22 and
costs; Larry R. Mees, Portland,
$21 and costs; Vincent Reusser,
Columbus, $13 and costs; Kenneth Green, Rutland, $24 and
costs; James Hart, Corning, $16
and costs; Dale W. Hill II,
Racine, $22 and costs; Diana
Karr, Pomeroy, $21 and costs;

a

Hospital news
Friday Admissions - Dorothy
Higgins, Pomeroy; George Cummins, Racine; Darrell D!lgan,
Racine.
Friday •D ischarges - Iva Upton, Josephine Parsons , Wanda
Johnson, Sarah Neigter.

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·Rutland Furniture Co.'s

ST-OREWIDE
CHRIST S SALE
.CONTINUES'
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$89 S

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SAVE UP TO

10 Different Styles!

60°/o

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ALl GOLD COINS IN STOCK

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Janna Joy Burton, David Bur- brenner, parcel, Orange.
ton to Randy Lee Sycks, 16.736
Lawrence 0. Cunningham, Ltlacres, Bedford.
llan D. Cunningham to Buckeye
Janna Joy Burton, David Bur- Rural Electric Corp., Inc., Right
ton, Randy Lee Sycks to Edward of way, Columbia.
Sycks, June Sycks, 1.5271 acre,
Buford Wayne Smallwood to
Bedford.
Southern Ohio Coal Co., 1.6 acre,
Judith Ellen Codner to Robert · Salem.
W. Codner, Betty Jane Codner,
Carl Eugene Look to Wanda ·
parcels, Lebanon,
Jean Look, 3.03 acres, Rutland.
Gale Roland Heiney to Arnold
Tennis Edmiston, Genleva J.
Spencer to Arnold Spencer, Fran- Edmiston to Southern Ohio Coal
ces H. Spencer, 26.24 acres, Co., 2.55 acres, Salem.
Olive.
Oris A. Roush, Dorothy Roush,
Lucllle C. Story, dec. to Leo R· Orion W. Roush, Kate Roush to
Story, cert. of trans., Bedford.
Southern Ohio Coal Co., 45 acres,
Wllllam Mason Fisher I, Do- Salem.
rothy Anita Fisher to James
Raymond Hoffman, Ora HotMason Fisher. VIrginia Ann fman to Brenda Sue VIckers,
Fisher, parcel, Minersville.
parcels, Salem.
Imogene Dean, dec. to William
Elza Birch, Cora Birch to
R. Dean, affidavit, Rutland.
Roger V. Birch, 2.32 acres,
Josephine Parsons, Pauline Sutton.
Wolfe to John A. Broerman, · Bertha F . Smtih, Fred B.
parcel, Letart.Burl Drake (o Smith to Fred B. Smith, Kathryn
Southern Ohio Coal Co., parcels, Smith Windon, Barbara Smith
Salem.
Tripp, parcels, Chester.
Harry E. Johnson, Delores M.
Floyd Barringer, dec., Lucy
Barringer, dec. and Dorsel R. Johnson to Michael W. West,
Barringer, affidavit, Olive.
Sandra K. West, parcels, Olive.
Anna E : Hllldore to Robert E.
Helen E. BUrkhart to Mary V.
Byer, Donna J . Byer; lots, Stewart, Parcels , Middleport
Syracuse.
.
vlllage.
Gregory A. Light, Cheryl Light
Terry D. Moore, Linda M.
toAlanG.Brown,JoiinL: Brown, Moore to Jeff Davis, Brenda
parcel, Orange.
Davis, 4.39 acres, Sutton.
Gregory J. Light, Cheryl Light
Ronald Barber, Beryl Barber
toAianG :·Brown,JoanL.Brown, to Walter K". Dtllon, Karen S.
lot, Orange.
Dillon, tracts, Olive.
Richard B. Payne, Sherry L.
Hazel M. Weslen, dec. to
Payne to James R. Cundiff, Sr., Charlotte Marriner, Delilah
Thelma M. Cundiff, · parcels, Wright, Augusta Welch, Sarah
Sutton.
Roush, Wllllam Westen, cert. of
James F . Sears, dec. toOcelJ. trans., Meigs.
Arnold P. Johnson to Secretary
Sears, affidavit, Middleport vi
llage.
of Housing and Urban Develop-· Marty E. Dugan, Ruth Ann ment, 5.75 acres, Salisbury.
Dugan to Burl Drake, .48 acre,
Dorts E. Snowden to Jimmy
Rutland village.
Joe Hemsley, Marlene J. HemsMichael J. H!ll, Mindy K. Hlll ley, parcel, Chester.
to Douglas C. Sands, Cindy
Robert E. Vance to Frank
Sands, parcel, Sutton.
Herald Jr., parcels, Rutland.
Hazel Carnahan, dec. to Nancy
Leona B. Wise, dec. to Cecil J.
Bobb, JoAnn Gilmore Parsons, Wise, affldavlt, Rutland. · ·
certificate of Transfer, Sutton. .
Cecil J. Wise to Cecil J. Wise,
Orville H. Hogue, dec. to Rosalee V. Wise, lots, Rutland.
Margaret Capehart, certificate
Lois Jane Jeffers, Richard L.
of transfer, Rutland vlllage.
Jeffers, John Dunham, Janet
• James R. Stewart, to Greg Dunham, Lee S. Jeffers, Mary
Winebrenner, Paige Wine- Jeffers, Gene Lowell Jeffers,
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Martha Jeffers to Herald 011 and
Gas Co. 99.45 acre, right of way,
Columbia.
Tony Woodyard to John A. .
Rankin, Gladys Rankin, parcels.
Columbia . •
Mabel Grate, dec., Warren
Emory Grate, dec. , and Raymond Hoffman, affidavit, Salem.
Regina G. Swift to Regina G.
Swift, Carol Wolfe, .38 acre,
Middleport village.
Maudie Ethel Wood, dec. to
Ernest Wood , cert. of trans.,
Bedford.
Ernest Wood to Earl Luther
Wood, cert. of trans., Bedford.
Ernest Wood, dec. to Edith
Wood Hubbard, cert, of trans.,
Bedford.
Ernest Wood, dec. to Earl
Luther Wood, Edith Wood Hubbard, Earle Lee Wood, cert. of
trans ., Bedford.
Earl Luther Wood, Earle Lee
Wood, Frances L. Wood to Edith
Wood Hubbard, 11.295 acres,
Bedford.
Edith Wood Hubbard, Ronnie
K. Hubbard, Earle Lee Wood,
Frances L. Wood to Earl Luther
Wood, 10 acres, Bedford.
Earl Luther Wood, Edith Wood
Hubbard, Ronnie K. Hubbard to
Earle Lee Wood, 19 acres,
Bedford.
Gladys Heiney to Elleen Frlss,
2.11 acres, Olive.
Gladys Heiney to Gale Roland
Heiney, 30.19 acres , Olive.
Gladys Heiney to Gale Roland
Heiney, 40 acres, Olive.
. Beulah M. Coll!er, Sherwood
Collier to Meigs County Engineer, Easement, Salem.
Wetzel Bailey, Linda G. Bailey
to Meigs County Engineer, easement, Salem.
Dennis E. Sergent!, Sandra K.
Sergent to Meigs County EngiEmma L. Hoffner, dec. td
Albert V. Hoffner, certificate,
Pomeroy village.
Enda M. Swick and C. A.
Swick, Daisy Swick, affidavit,
Rutland.
Edna M. Swick to Robert
Michael Swick, Cathy L. Swick,
80 acres, Rutland.

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. Larry E : Hoffman to La verna
M. Kauff, .29040 acre, Syracuse.
Daniel J. Buchanan to Benjamin M. Buchanan, Jr., Barbara Buckanan, parcel, Olive.
Kenneth F . Molz, Marilyn Molz
to Lester P . Shoemaker, Viola B.
Shoemaker, parcels, Salisbury.
Donald W. Stauch, Nellie M.
Stauch, Dorothy Ellen Arnold,
RObert Arnold, Patricia Ann
Thurn, Paul Thurn to DOnald W.
Stauch, Nellie M. Stauch, parcels, Salem.

Far m Bureau youth group was
enough to haul large, heavy
taken tor a hay rid e· on the wagon.
loads . The rubber tires made It a
The or ig inal lum ber Is still In
snap for the horses to pull.
In contras t, a ne ighboring
the wa gon fr ame and bed. It
Iarmer , who purchased a new . never had to be replaced even
after setting out In all types of
steel-wheeled fa i'm wagon with
weather and co ntlnu O\IS use [or
roller bearings In the wheels In
50 years. That's - because the
1938, paid $128 for it.
·
origina l wood was coated several
One day the Thompsons hauled
16 loads of ha y from the fie ld to
t lmes with cr ude oil.
the barn. Each load weighed
abou t two tons per load. This
year, the same wagon hauled
Sou Ill Central Ohio
Sunday, mos tly sunny aiid co ld
four or five r ound bal es of hay.
each weighing about 800 or 900 with th e high 25 to 30.
Extended Forecast
pounds.
While the wagon was under
Monday· through Wednesday
construction, everybody In the
Fair Monda y with a chance of
neghborhood had to stop. The snow Tuesday and a c hance of
busiest place on the Thompson s howers Wednesday. Hi ghs will
farm was the shop where the be between 25 and 35 Monda y,
wagon was being built.
between 30 and 40 Tu esday a nd
Hay wa sn' t the only thing they between 40 and 50 We_dnesda y .
hauled on the wagon. One time, The lowwUlbebetweenl0and20
shortly after th e wagon was Monday, bet ween 15 and 25
completed, a Gallla County Tuesday and between 20 and 30
Wednesday . .

Weather

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ENTRY BLANK
4th Annual Home Decorating· Contest
NAME

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ADDRESS .. ...................... .... ................................................ .. :................. .
TELEPHONE NO......... ....................... .... ... .. .............. .... .... ................. ....... .

Please return your entry form prior to December 14. 1988 to :
Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association

•

P.O. Box 465
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

Every Child Has The-Right
To A Musical Education. • • •
ONLY PARENTS MAKE -IT POSSIBLE ·
.

·We hope you will give your child the·
precious gift of music this Christmas.
STOP IN AN lET ONE OF OUR PROFESSIONAl

CONSULTANTS ASSIST YOU WITH THIS VERY
•
IMPORTANT DECISION.

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.

neer, easement, Salem.

''LIGHT UP THE HOLIDAYS''

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Comer of Second &amp; G"'P• St.
Gallipolis, OH.

GALLIPOLIS- A rubber-tire
farm wagon built 50 years ago by
a Gallla County farmer and his
sons, Is none the worse for the
wear and still In use today.
The late George C. Thompson,
a resident of Little Kyger Road,
and sons, Fred, Joe and Bob,
buut the wagon, the first rubbertire farm wagon In Gallla
COUI\Iy, out of neccesslty.
The 1937 flood destroyed telephone lines along SR 7, lh
Addison and Cheshire Town·
ships, so the lines were relocated
on newly acquired right-of-Way
back of the hltls to the west of the
stl!te route. The move put them
out of danger from the flood. But,
of timber had to be
a lot
removed.
Fred and Joe Thompson
hauled huge poplar . logs out of

Ll me Kiln Hollow on the Ella
Rothgeb place on a 1935 F ord
truc k, with a team of horses
hitc hed to the front of the vehicle
to pull It through tlie mud, The
Thompsons decided they needed
a wagon. Their other wagon fell part.
Some of the Jogs were sawed
In fo two-by-tens over 16 feet long
to build the g\lnnels or frame of
the wagon. George Thompson
bought two truck axles, one from
a 1931 Dodge, the other from a
1932 Chevrolet, which he and his
sons reforged for running gears.
The finished rubber-tire wagon
cost ~ total of $27 to build . Not
o.nly was it the first wagon In
Gallia County to have rubber-tire
wheels, it also had four wheel
brakes, Ingeniously rigged with
ropes and block and tackle under
the bed. ~he finished wagon was
light eno h In wel.ght for a team ·
of horses to pull and sturdy

Meigs property trl:'nsfers· ---------

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lo!e"'llf' Neoo """Slot'- 6on""'l"

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11-: S0A,Y,0E

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inrormation on CO's.

STOCKING STUFFERS

1 oz. 999 Pun Silv•

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10

FARM WAGON- This 50-year-old farm wagon, builtin 1938 by
the late George C. Thompson, Rl.1, Cheshire, and his sons, Is still
In use today. This 1888 photo shows the llrst rubber-tire wagon In
GaiDa County with five huge bales of hay. The wagon cost $27 to
build In 1938.

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conditio n ~.

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monlh matu rfly and aubj ed toavallabUlty.
.,. The Ohio Company maint ain s ~ sC~­
om.htry market. The selling price

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33°/o
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of your choice.

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•Rate u of 12/f/88, hued on a 12

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The Ohio Company
444 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631

By DICK THOMAS
Times-Sentinel news stall

..•.....

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~:.~r~o:~t~~d:
::.
!~~
pendant or studs
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Minimum Investment $10.£KXl
Liquidity,...
Variety Of Rates &amp; Maturities

bdore ma1urity is subject to mllrkel

.

Select one of our diamond
SOlitaires in the carat size

Mail coupon or call:

Joseph W. Davis, Middleport, $20
and costs; VIrginia Snyder,
Langsville, $21 and costs; Charles J . Mayersky, Poca, W.Va. ,
$25 and costs; Jeffrey A. Bissell,
Reedsville, $25 and costs.
Bonds for speeding were forfeited by Kimmberly Tyree, Gallipolis, $49; Trafford Dick, Zanesville , $75; Dorothy Steier,
Toledo, $55; Oliver Sayre Jr.,
Speedway, lnd. , $47; Christopher
Hutton, Rutland, $75; Dennis
Butcher, Middleport, $47; and by
Thomas Myers, Langsville, $139,
overload.

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FSLIC/FDIC Insured up lo $100.000

Meigs County Court·news

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I so many ways
,1_.·. :.~~~=~...
•- ·.

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&lt;IN~--~~-W!)O----

.f can be gift wrapped

t

received a hug from many. "The kids get
enthusiastic and enjoy seeing Santa. Seeing Santa
let's them know he hasn't forgotten them," said
Stephanie SuUivan, assl!!tant manager. (Times·
Sentinel photo by Margaret Caldwell)

"

Matthew Cornet Jr .. Bradner,
Ohio, $129, possession of . an
untagged ·deer; Richard Price,
34, Gallipolis, $41, Improper
backing; and Keltb S. Gilmore,
26, Gallipolis, $25 for no seat belt.
Charges of not wearing a seat
belt were dlsmtssed against
Sabrina V. Craig, 18, Robertsburg, W.Va., Charles Delong, 33,
Lancaster, Ohio, Amy Doehiman, 19, Hamilton, Ohio, and
Janice I. Link, 60, HamUton,
Ohio. All four viewed the requlred film on seat belt safety, a
prerequisite for dismissal of the
charges.
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1Our D~OND sourAIIW;

Lottwy numbers
. CLEVELAND (UPI) - Friday's winnirg Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
473.
PICK-4
7480.

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Sunday Times-Sentinei - Page- A-5

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Poi!tt Pleasant. W. Va.

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Gold &amp; Diamond
Sale
MONDAY THRUSATURDAY

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8:30 TIL 8 P.M.
SUNDAY 1 P.M . .TIL 5 P.M.

...

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NOW THROUGH CHRISTMAS ...

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r~-~~~~~~~M~~~~m~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~MMM-,

1

REPLACEMENT CONTACT LENS SERVICE

I Contact Lens
I Replacements
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Ranu your

CONTACT
LENS

Save 35% to 65%
The Only Difference Is

The Price

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Prescription
thru Our Pharmacy

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FROM

.
LARGE .BEAN BAGS ON SALE $2988

''

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r..--tactl&lt;nl

NOW

CJO DAYS
SAME AS
CASH

FOR

FBE

IMUrana:

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• All brwiCII and

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len~a . .ura

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and

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UP TO 65%

CHRISTMAS

'PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

2 71 NOITH SECOND

MIDDLEPORTI OHIO

Cake Plate Bouquet

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SAY••. MERRY CHRISTMAS WITH

106 lunEINUT AYE.

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Necklaces
DIAMOND EARRINGS

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DIAMOND
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ALL 14K GOLD CHAINS
WEDDING SETS,
FROM$110 '·~

50°/o

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Brass 'N' Blooms
Bouquet
Holiday Cheer Bouquet

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IN THE HOLIDAY SPIRIT.

IUTLAND

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OFF

31eleflonf

Candlestick Bouquet

DELIVERY .~~

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$9950

Florentine Basket

. TWO WAYS TO RING

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742·2211

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HOME OF TilE GIAIE GUYS, WHDE YOU GET GliAl BUYS

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Birthstone

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25°/o

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MANY OTHER WATCHES

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SEIKO, PULSAR
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Ring

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POMEIOY I OHIO

OFF

t---------tl
Large Selection of II

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TAWNEY .JEWELERS, INC •

422 SE(OND AVE.

PH. 446-1615

I

Gift Items from
Around the World i

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GALliPOLIS, OHIO

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December 11, 1988 .

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

Page-A-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Mailing tips for holiday deliveries _
'

PATRIOT - There is still
plenty o( time .to get Christmas
packages delivered anywhere
around the co\lntry, said Patriot
·Postmaster Dannie Greene.
"As,the holiday grows nearer.
customers should not overlook
the use of Priority Mail," said
Greene. "It's fa st and consistent
and wlll meet most everyone's ,
needs down to the last few days."
Priority Mail affords First
Class handling for packages
weighing more thlm 11 ounces up
. to 70 pounds. It offers one- to
three-day delivery, depending
upon the destination.
Greene said there are several

Goodyear supports MGM District

advantages of using Priority ages mailed this way. It's Jhe
Ideal service lor people who want
Mall.
"You 'can send a package prompt package delivery ."
Service options such as insuweighing up to two pounds . by
.
ranee,
returned receipts, collecPriority Mail to any place In the
tion
on
delivery (COD) , certlli·
United States for $2.40. Packages
cates
of
mailing and special
· weighing five pounds can be sent
delivery
are available with
for a cost ·Of $3.61 to $6.37
depending upon the destination," Priority Mail.
"Remember that If you do get
Greene said. '.'Rates for heavier
pressed for time, we can save the
packages are also economical.
day
with Express Mall, our
"Priority Mall can be sent
from any post office, station, reliable next day service which
branch or even a coUectionbox to we deliver even on Christmas .
any address In the United States Day," he said. " And there's no including APO and FPO ad· extra charge for holiday
dresses," Greene said. ~~Rural delivery.
carriers also ~a~n~~~q~

GALLIPOLIS - J.O . Carver,
plant manager of the Goodyear
Point Pleasant Polyester plant,
announced a contrlbu lion of
$2,5!10 to the Tri-State Area
Council Boy Scouts of America. .
Scout Executive Robert H.
McGinnis and District Executive
John Pinkerman met with
Carver and Goodyear Indu strial

College/Community College Monday, Dec. 12,
from LO a .m. to 4 p.m.. Above, Charlton
Armstrong, a student at GaiHa Academy Hish
School Is pictured giving blood during the
bloodmobile's October visit to GalllpoUs.

POMEROY - A sizable dona·
lion was made to the Women's
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital at the Nov.l5 meettng of
the auxiliary. Two guests, Bar·
bara Hatfield Scarberry and
Nancy Hatfield Jeffers, presented the auxiliary with a check
for $1,000 in honor of their
mother, Ethel Hatfield, a former
auxiliary member. The money is
to be used for the Nurses '
Scholarship Fund.
The nexl meeting of the auxiliary will be Tuesday, Dec. 13,
with a family potluck dlruier at
6:30 p.m . in the hosp,ital cafete·
ria. A gift exchange will take
place along with caroling around

GALLIPOLIS- Tli'e Gallia County Chapter, American Red
Cross issued an appeal Saturday for household and clothing
items for a Gallia County couple who lost their home during a
recent fire on MI. Carmel Rd.
Jeanette Springer needs blue jeans (size 7-9) arid shirts or
tops (large) while Stephen White needs pants, 34 by 32.

KANAUGA- The Kanauga Neighborhood Watch Group will
meet Tuesday, Dec. 13, at7: 30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn. Gag gifts
wUI be exchanged. All area residents are encouraged to attend.

GALLIPOLIS - No accidents were reported Friday in
Galllpolis. Officers cited four persons in a 24-hour period ending
at 9 a.m. Saturday.
Barbara Siders, 22, Gallipolis. was cited for shoplifting;
Amanda Russell, 24, Rt. I , Gallipolis; Johnny White, 31,
Gallipolis; and Lisa R. Tbomas, 18, Rt . I, Glenwood, W.Va., all
for speeding.

GALLIPOLIS - The State Highway Patrol Investigated a
car-deer accident at 11 : 15 a.m. Friday onSR 7, 0.5 miles north of
Mile Post 27.
Troopers said a deer was killed when it ran into the path of a
car driven by Lyvonia C. Bunce, 77, Rt. I, Gallipolis. Damage
was minor. No one was injured.

..

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports one call
on Friday; Middleport Fire Department at 6:45p.m. to a brush
fire on Van Zandt Road.

Divorres, dissolutions sought
·,

POMEROY - Pamela J. Buchanan, Reedsville, has filed in
Meigs County Common l&gt;Ieas Court for a divorce from Gregory
E. Buchanan, Reedsville .
Dl$solu lions of marriage are being requested by Patricia Ann
Miller, Syracuse, and Robert Miller, Racine; Cathy E. Nutter,
P rtland, and Alan W. Nutter, Ravenswood, W.Va.
Divorces have been granted Dewayne RilJ'gS from Edith
auline Riggs, an.d Terry Timmons from Loretta Timmons.

., :=====:==:=:::::;;;;:::=====~
)Ctt flotl\90"'.'"
KANSAS CITY
ROYAL PITCHER
~\iCHf.R

JEFF

MONTGOMERY

ONlY

177

Now til Cllrilflllas

Mortgage•

12 Monthly Payments
(usually
mailed or made in
person)

Payments deducted
from your
checking account
every 2 weeks.

TUESDAy I DEC. 13
4 PM TO 7 PM

Rate

A Bi-Weekly

'll1f'IJ1l r( li1l1l'll_'ll'll1l'll tJ '11'1181l1l1l~
·

WOMEN'S
WARM
LEATHER

SJaoo

SUPPERS
S2800

=
alf
It
It
It
~

It
It
$2800

=
=

Total Payments per
year: $5,400
After 5 years:
$2971 equity

Total Payments per
year: $5,849
After 5 years:
$5,997 equity

25 years
of payments

Ill•
565 JACKSON PIKE

PHONE 614-U6-2206

AJ

Jantzen.
Christmas
•

SET YOUR SIGHTS ON JANTZEN'S
VARILOne ACRYLIC SWEATERS
FOR CHRISTMAS: INTRICATE
. PATIERNS DEVELOPED BY COM• PUTER AIDED DESIGN. CREATIVE FASHION AT 139.

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Loan Amount· $50,000
roln lsiO rlgmallon f.ee 0

•

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or Pa)lmen!s ' :;co Monthly Pa.yments

f'aymem Amouri1· $4119.CJ6

,..·~

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rotat or Payme nl s· $134 .988
Pay~"J"~enl

20%

Expr:tnses $50 applicnllon lee. plus oul ot

-~

,•'•.

~X&gt;Cke t costs

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• • 25-Year Bi-Weekly Payment
Adjustable Rate Mortgage

Use your equity for
financial leverage

Total interest
paid: $84,988

Burn your mortgage
approximately 6 Y4
years sooner

Total interest
paid: $60,297

You save 24,691
in interest payments

Loan Type. Bi.WPekly

.•
.

•,

Pt~yrnent

Adlust~ble

Rate Mo1tgage

PolntsfO Jigtnat ton FPe 0
Number ot Payment s .t91 BIWeek ty

Paym'"''.

Payment Amount· S2~4 98
fotat ot Payments· $110,297
Minimum Down Paymenl: 20%
E~penses . SSO apoflcalion lee. plus out or

The sweater shown is .
only one of dozens of
great Jantzen sweaters
we have for you. Make
your •election from cot·
tons, acrylics, or wools in
great patterns or solid
styles. Sea them 100n for
his Jantzen ChriltmBI.

pocket

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e11penses.

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HALL OF FAME- Dr. Martin W. Essex, Columbus, fonner
superintendent of Middleport Vllla1e Exempted Schools, was
Inducted Into the Ohio State University Colle1e of Education' a Hall
of Fame recently. Dr. Essex, who left Middleport In 1841, 18 the
first person ldenlllled prbnarUy with the state department of
education superintendency to achieve this distinction at O.S.U. Dr.
Essex Ia Ohio Department of Education Superintendent-Emeritus
of Public Instruction and Executive Director-Emeritus of the Ohio
Council on Vopational Education.

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STAR BANK
Reachfrthe Star.

c

• Court Slreel Office
((il4) 44G-ll(jG~

We
Are
Your
Sales
•
and
Service
"'
.
••
Representative For
•
ZENITH
&amp; APPLIANCE
...:. "RIDENOUR TVGAS
SERVICE
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:-it;1r Bank, N.i\., Tri-Siillt• l:allipulis Ofncc l.ucatium

•

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IID•1111•GALLIPOUS,
lfDID.
OHIO

':

lll&lt;Jn R.11e . 9 875t 1~ A P A . 10 8225

Approximately
18% years
of payments

..

Many Othlr
Stylts ift
Men's &amp;
Chillhn's

CHLORIS GAUL

Lc.an Amount · $50.000

i

SJ900

•m

•

Loa n rvPP. A A M !Adjustable Ant£' Mor lgaQ~ )

M1nimum Down

Featured Special: Roast Prime Rib of Beef Au Jus

KOHl SIIEPSIIN PADS
MIEl/lliOW PROTECTORS
WIIEICHAIR CUSIIIONS
LAP TRAYS
lACK CIIIHIONS
aRYICAl PillOWS
OIUS tACK FOMIS
SPEC CADDIES
SLANT PIUOWS
ANTI-EMIOUSM HOSE
WIIEICMAIR SAFETY
HERMAN &amp; DEE DR.LON, OWNERS

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The entire $449
difference is applied
to the principal

ot

. Limited Menu Selected Especially For The
Occasion

For your convalescent
ones···
some Christmas suggestions:
PAnENT GOWNS
EGGCRATE •o PADS AND TOPPEIIS

Ohio during January -and Febru·
ary for ·Schools of Instruction to
; Jo~~~~·~~Ithrs G~~~~~:~o~t the 28 districts and attending
• Southern Ohio Coal Co. as ·secre- receptions, visitation and inspec·
; · tary to the Vice President· lions during the remainder of
This marks the tOOth year
tj General · Manager. She Is a 1989.
celebration
of Eastern Star In the
· , member ofthe company's speakState
of
Ohio
and a Centennial
:' ers' bureau, Is coordinator for
will'
be
held in July at
Ball
;: the fairs and festivals and Is the ·
Columbus.
1• company's representative to the
Mrs. Gau I and t~er husband,
:: Pomeroy Chllmber of ComRoger,
reside on Sumner Road at
: • merce. She serves on the Board
Chester.
They are the parents of
· • of Trustees of Woodland Center,
:: Inc., Gallipolis, and Is a member two children, Roger, a graduate
:• of Ohio's Chapter of Women in student In the Sports Administration and Facility Management
•: Mining.
Program
at Ohio University, and
:
Duties connected with the
Lea
Ann,
a senior In the College
. :: Grand Appointment wlll be traat Ohio University.
of
Ecucation
~; vellng throughout the State of

'25·Yeat Convenliooal A.R.M.

/\lumber

in the elegant atmosphere

MAKE RESERVATIONS TODAY TO ASSURE
PROPER SEATING

••,,t,

Automatic
Convenience

Celebrate
New Year's Eve

THREE SEATING TIMES AVAILABLE:
1st Seating: 5: 00 p.m. to 6:45 p.m .
2nd Seating: 7:00 p.m. to 9:15 p.m.
3rd Searing (Ca~dlelighr): 9:3Q-11:45 p.m.

.

The Bi-Weekly
Payment ·Adjustable Payment Adjustable
Rate Mortgage* *
Rate Advantage

~djustable

WILL BE AT HORNER
HILL CARRY OUT

RD DEUVEIY-IIC. 2ollll

Compare
·Star Bank's
Bi-Weekly·Payment
Adjustable Rate Mortgage ·
With A Conventional 25-Year ·
Mortgage Loan.
A 25-Year

MEMBER OF THE 1988
BASEBALL DIGEST
ROOKIE ALL-STAR TEAM

:POMEROY - On Oct. 26, 1904,
• Pomeroy Chapter, OrdertOfEast·
.e rn Star, was given its charter
)rom the Grand Chapter of Ohio.
'• On Oct. 26, 1988, 84 years later
:.to the exact date, Pomeroy
~apter received its first Grand
Officer when Chloris L. Gaul was
Installed as Grand Adah at the
99th Grand Chapter Session at
the Convention Center in
Cleveland.
Past Grand Matron and the
1985 Worthy Grand Matron,
Marjorie Karth, was installiong
officer in Cleveland and also was
Installing Officer lor Pomeroy
• Chapter in 1985.
· Mrs. Gaul became of a
member or Pomeroy Chapter in
1973, served as Worthy Matron in
1985 and was elected to a three
'· year term as Trustee in 1986. She
: was appointed 1988 District
·: Heart Representative by Arlene

leg.l299

H...:Op~~~9:3G-I

~ill!llil

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Lighted pecan
curio with mirror
back. 25"x71''

Second &amp; Grape
Galllpolls, Oh.

gave the sme amount to the
council.
''This excellent corporate support has enabled the employment
of a full-time district scout
executive lor the M·G·M District
for the' first time in nine years,"
said McGinnis.
''The contribution makes sure
the boy scout has quality expe·
riences which is an Important
part of growing up. It enables us
to put new clubs in areas where
there are none and help existing
clubs," McGinnis said. "That
would not be possible without
financial support."
Pinkerman wUI assist some 275
adult scouting volunteers who
bring the scouting program to .
nearly 700 boys in the three
county area.

The Down Under
Restaurant

its
charter
....:~receives
,

S799

s-..y •·•

EMS answers emergency call

:oES Pomery chapter

CURIO

And reciprocal actions for
child support have been [lled by
Kathy D. Bryon against Kerry D.
Bryon; by Belinda Carole Ram·
sey against James' Allen Knight;
and by Sharon Hubbard against
Kermit Buzzard.

Patrol investigates car-deer accident

,.

SALE

the Christmas tree.
This Christmas season, the
auxiliary is sponsoring a hospital
hallway decorating contest. A
prize will be given and hallways
will be judged on Thursday, Dec.
22.
On Dec. 16, a Christmas bake
sale of candies and cookies wil!
be held In the hospital lobby .

•

REG. IJ099

Herald Oil and Gas Co., et al, is ·
to pay $5,000 for violations
alleged in a complaint filed April
30, 1984, by the' State of Ohio, ex
rei, Anthony J. Celebreeze Jr. ,
·
Attorney General of Ohio.

Police reports no accidents

laduslrlal Bela~ ~ lions Manager B.ob Rober Is and Plant Mana1er of
•: !he Goodyear Point Pleasant Polyester plant,
;~ contribute $2,1100 to the Tri-State Area Council,
•

2 drawer, 3 pullout shelves, electr~l·s:;~~~i"
cal outlet.
.Also available In cherry.

POMEROY - An entry ordering disbu rsement of sale pro·
ceedS has been filed in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
case of Blennerhassett F ederal
Credit Union, Vienna, W.Va. ,
against James R. Vance, et al.
Proceeds were insufficient .to pay
the claim ,of the plaintiff so the
plaintiff was awarded a defl·
ciency judgment of $13,104.85.

Neighborhood watch group to meet

I

ENTERTAINMENT
UNIT

Common pleas
court news

Gallia couple in need after fire

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,
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-4:00
•SEASONAL CANDLE~ ...••..••••..•..•.•••.•..•..••••.. ~ .••....•.••....• ~ HALF OFF!
•ALL FLOOR LAMPS ••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••• , HA.LF OFF!
•WOODTOP ·CEDAR CHESTS ..I~!!!,:~ ...... !R!IF!!!.'!!.~~)........ 1 199!

AU OAI

·--Area news briefs---.

Relations Manager Bob Roberts
to receive the conirlbutlon which
Is part of a three-year commit·
tment by Goodyear to ass it the
council in providing scouting
support services in Meigs, Gallla
and Mason counties.
Earlier !hi~ year, Appalachian
Power, Columbus Southern
Power and Ohio companies each

Guests donate to auxiliary

y
BLOODMOBILE TO VISIT GALLIPOLIS . · The Tri-State Regional Bloodmobile, Huntington,
will be at Grace Un lted Methodist Church In·
GaiUpolls on Thul'!lday, Dec. 15, from noon until&amp;
p.m. The bloodmobile will also be at Rio Grande

7

Sunday Times·

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FREE .GIFT WRAPPING
MASTER CHARGE-VISA
SHOPOUMA REGISTRAnON

••

•Si Iver Uridge Plaza

Spring Valley Office

(H14) 446-!:J:JOO

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Time &amp; 'I'Pmpernltlrc: ·Hf;.STAII
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NO 'til I P.M.

01'81 SUNDAY . . . •
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Page A-S-Sunday Tunes-Sentinel

Decambar 11. 1988

Pomeroy-'Middlaport-Gallipolia. Ohio-Point Plmem. W.Va.

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CblllfMII

ong the river

P1odu''

s,,,,,,,

We lleserve The Ri&amp;ht To
Limit Quantities

Monday thru Sunday.
8 AM-10 PM

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298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., DEC. 11, THRU SAT., DEC. 17, 1988

B~ MARGARET CALDWELL

working In other jobs, Including
at a Marietta shipyard and state
hospital.
'
GALLIPOLIS- One of Soh!o's
After World WarJI in 1947,
qldest dealers, and one of Galli- Earl opened the station and
polis' last general store/ service store. In 1950, US 35 expanded
station Is closing.
right through Earl's one-room
~ Winters' Service Station, 470
buUding. He said he then built the
Jackson Pike, has shut down Its
building now standing and had
g,as pumps, locked Its service
the construction workers dozer
garage doors, and, as soon as the
away the original buUd!ng.
$lock has been sold, will close the
When the station first opened in
general store.
1947, gas was 17 cents a gallon,
: Earl and Marguerite Winters,
Marguerite remembers. Their
both In their 70s, are retiring
first customer was Carl Winters,
~rom the business after 42 years
. who bOught a gallon of anti- ·
9wning and managing the ser·
freeze.
y1ce station.
"I remember how pleased we
·' Earl began In the business
were when we finally sold 100
~orklng for a man In Rio Grande.
gallons of gas in one day ,"
lfe bought an acre of land while Marguerite sal d. In their cellar,
Times-Sentinel news staff

FRUIT
.BASKETS

Chuck Roast •••~••••

S1 49

$399 &amp; UP
RED OR WHITE.
'

CAROLINA

Sliced Bacon ••••••••• 69&lt;
LB.

GRAPES

CHICKEN

GRADE A FLAVORITE-12 LB.

Leg Quarters ••~••••• 49C
SU.PERIOR
.
.
$ 19
Lunch Meat •••••~.... 1

UP

Turkeys··~······~~ ••••••

CAUFORNIA

NAVEL
ORANGES.

Turkeys •••••••••• ~~·····
GRADE A
Whole Fryers ••:•••••
'',4 por k· L
. oan
• .•:•••• $·139

Marguerite sald she h~s kept the
first order of Dromedary fruit.
· When they first started the
store, they Intended to sell it alter
it got on Its feet, Marguerite said.
"But we raised our three kids
in the store," Earl said. "And It ·
put them a·ll through coltege."
Earl and Marguerite, who call
each other "Mother" and "Dad,"
have three cnidlren, Ear!' of
Pennsylvania.. Margaret, a
school teacher in Maryland, and
Donald, a chemist.
Earl talked about how proud he
was of his children, all the
activities they were in in high
school and the good grades each
made.
"We're proud of our family ,"
Earl said. "It's the main thing
you have ~n this life."
The store
With years come changes, Earl
said. But the one thing that didn't
, change was the Sohio and Win'
ters' names.
"I've always liked Sohlo products," Earl said. "Our busiest
time was during the (gas)
shortage. When we'd run out ·of
gas, I'd call up another station'
and buy whatever they had.''
Marguerite kept the books,
which included marking down
how much gas was sold, how
much the store brought in and
wh~ the weather was like that
day.
Earl's collection of Sohio and
store equipment and novelties
have remained at the station,
Including an old Coca-Cola cooler
with cold water cooling sevenounce Coke glass bottles. Customers who want a seven-ounce

Ha.$119

BUTTERBALL-12 LB. &amp; UP

December 11 • 1988

,-

ASSORTED

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

B

Winters' station closes
•
after 42 servtce years

·At
·Powell'•
Sups1 Vslu

STORE HOURS

~imts-~~tdinel Section

FLORIDA
ORANGES
S1 29 .

'· COLLECTORS' ITEMS - Sohlo collectors' Items Include a
bubble top gas pumb and a Soblo pen. In the comer,, Earl Winters
)las collected all the Soblo calendars since he began the station.

'

Coca-Cola must drink the pop at
the station and leave the antique
bottles with Ear I.
Above the counier Is an old
paper bag rack bearing the name
of Red Rock Cola. In the corner of
the store are ail the Sohlo
calendars from the past40 years.
"This store has a llttle bit of
everthlng," Earl said. '-'Peo ple
would say. 'It you can't find It, go
to Winters'."'
The store Is supplied with pipe
fittings to night crawlers, hunt·
ing and fishing license to meats

•

THE WINTERS - Earl and Marguerite
Winters are proud of their years as Sohlo dealers
but most of their pride lies with their three
and cheeses.
Earl talked about his days of
checkers and horseshoes at the
store. He pulled out an old cigar
box with his checkers all covered ·
In dust.
He and John Gal nes would
battle each other In checkers for
years. They each tried to outsmart the other by buying . the
same book on checkers.
Earl said one day John made
an unusual checker move. After
questioning John and doing some
Investigating, Earl said he discovered John had ordered a book
from the library, so he ordered
the same book.
Horseshoes was the big game
with the ki(ls. Earl said they
would have contests behind the
store.
,
Wl)ile telling the story, a car
drove through, ringing the bell.
Earl jumped up out of habit,
des p!te the fact that the gas
pumps are shut down.
Sohlo
'
. . :'Earl beats the 15 seconds,"
said Berry E. Johnson, Sohlo
district manager at the
Columbus-East district. The 15
seconds Is the length of time a

children, all raised In the station.
store put each one through college and gave them
· learning experiences they have used since leaving
home. ·

Sohio customer should be
recognized.
Johnson and Kent J. Heln,
Sohlo retail sales representative,
had a retirement dinner for the
Winters Thurs·day night at the
Down Under Restaurant.
· "Earl has been a tremendous
example for other dealers," said
Heln. "He has been an excellent
ambassador for Sohio. He and his
wife have been someone we could
count. on.''

''TheW Inters have been one of
our best dealers.'' Johnson said.
"We hope Earl enjoys his retire·
ment but we are not happy to see
him go." ·
"We are glad to see Earl
devote his time to his other
interests and to himself. But he
will ai ways be part of the Sohlo
fam lly," He in said.
Earl and Marguerite said all
the service Items will be returned
to Sohio, and as soon as the stock
Is sold, the doors will close.
Earl said he was quitting
because of his health but he has
plenty to keep him busy . He has a
garden and some cattle.
"The best rest is work," Earl
said.

While talking to the Winters. a
regular customer came In to pick
up one of Winter's last Sohlo
calendars.
"You've been a good and
faithful distributor." Marian
Harrison told the Winters. "I
hate to see you go."
"The worst part about quitting •
is the people, "Earl said. "A·loto!
people are coming in and it just
tears you up.
"I've seen three generations
come through and I've enjoyed
seeing them come. But (the
people and the store) have been
good to us. We gave it all we had
and it's been good."
"I though t we'd be happy to get
out but It's a little sad, " MarguerIte said. ,
"It's done good, but there's an
empty feeling," Earl said as he
walked through the service area.
"I really loved the people."

Times -Sentinel
photos by
Margaret Caldwell

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SLB.

TANGELOES
5 LB~ BAG

u.s. N~. 1-1 0 LB. BAG

Wh1te Potatoes •••

S1 39
,

$ 49
2°/o M1lk •••••••••:A!.... 1

·FLAVORITE •

ROYAL SCOTT •

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Margar1ne ••••.••~•• 3I

$

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DAILY
DRAWINGS FOR
GROCERIES
THRU DEC. 24

---WEEKLY

•

DRAWING

•

1 .ssooo
$ 49
Dog Food •••••••• !~~.. 3 , Banquet Pies •••••••• 89&lt; ---$
$ 39
Crackers ••••.•:-:':••• 2I l - Family Entrees •••• . 1
APPLE, CHERRY, PUMPKIN, PEACH

SUNSHINE

1

FLAVORITE SALTINE

FOLGER'S COFFEE
• 390Z.

S4 99

Ulllit I P• Clllt-

s.,_

Goool Only At Powell' •
Valu
Goool Sun.. Doc. II lloru Sol,. DoL 17, 1918

20

.

BANQUE~-28-32 OZ.

.

CHARMIN

PURE SWEET

TOILET TISSUE

GRAN, SUGAR

4 ROLl

PI(G.

99C

Unolt I P• CuotGoool Only At h•oll'o
Yolo
Doc. II thro Sol., Doc. 17, " "

s.,_

4LL

$119
Unlil I P• (1111-

.Goool O.lf Alhwol'olo,_ Yolo
,
'GoM loa, Doc. II tlwu s.t., Doc: IJ, 1911 1

oz.

oz.

$4 99

limit I P• CuotGoM Golf AI Powtll'1
Yolu
: 'Goool Sun.. DoL II tlwu Sol,. DoL 17, 1911

0

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SOHIO - Earl and Marguerite Winters were
treated with a retirement dinner hy Soblo Retail
Sales Representative Kent J. Heln (L) and
District Manager Columbus-East Dlsll'lct Berry

E. Johnson (R). Johnson said the Wlnrers are one
of Sohlo' s best dealers. "We're sad to see them go
but they will always be part of the Sohlo family ,:
&amp;In~&amp;

•

l:njoy

RE»RO(I(

• •

'•

CO LA

GlAND PIIZE
DUWING
3 MINUTE
SHOPPING
SPREE

CHEER DETERGENT

l'

'The hardest thlfiA' to contend with Is the people.
They've been good to us," Earl said.

IN Gin
CERTIFICATES

.

147

': THE CUSTOMERS- Marian Harrison stopped
·in the station to pick up one of Earl's calendars
:..Od expressed his best wishes to the Winters.

s.,_

DIAWING 4 P.M,
DEC. 24th Gild

AND
FISHEI·PIIQ
DELUXE

CAMCORDER

-

and M&amp;fiUerlte Winters opened lhe Sohlo Standard 011 gaa elation.
A service station and reneral s&amp;ore allowed the Wlnlys to sell

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ANTIQUES - Earl Winters demoMira&amp;es the handiness of one
of hla antiques, the Red Rock Cola paper bag holder. Among the
antiques Earl has collected over the years Includes a Coka-Cola
cooler. In lhe cold water circulating cooler are antique
seven-ounce Coka-Cola bottles.
•

�Page-8-2

Sunday Times-Sentinel

.,
SUNDAY
LECTA- Rev. Everett Delaney will be In services at the
Church of Christ in Christian
Union, Sunday, 7 p.m.
LECTA Keith Adkins
preaches at Walnut Ridge
Church, Sunctay, 7 p.m.
·

BIDWELL- Wayne Sweeney
will preach at Poplar Ridge
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m .
GALLIPOLIS- Prospect Baptist Church has the Heaven
Bound Four singing Sunday, 7:30
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Lighthouse
Assembly of God presents the
Littlest Angel by its children's
choir, Sunday, 10:30 a.m. , the

December 11, 1988

Community calendar
church choir will also sing. A · Rese rvations must be made in
party will be held at 6 p.m
Christmas dinner will be held at 6 advance. Tickets may be pur- Monday at Craw's Steak House.
p.m .
chased from Nancy Hlll, Sandy - From there the group will go to
Iannarelli or .Bob Freed.
the home of Mrs. Vernon Weber, ,
Liberty
CROWN CITY Rutland, for a reJ!Ular meeting.
Chapel has Frank Connors
CHESTER - Ken Amsbary
preaching, Sunday, 7 p.m.
Chapter of the Jzaak Walton
TUESDAY
League will hold muzzle loading
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis RoPOMEROY -The Royal Oak shoots at the clubhouse near tary meets Tuesday, 6 p .m .,
Da nce Club will hold their annual Chester on Sundays, Dec. 11, Down Under.
· Christmas Dance at Royal Oak Dec.18 and Jan.l. The shoots will
Resort this Sunday-, from 7 to 10 consist of free hand and bench
ENO - Eno Grange meets
p.m . Music will be by Orlando rest events with various prizes. Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m ., potluck
Columbo.
such as meat and money, to be dinner.
awarded. All shoots will begin at
POMEROY - The annual 1 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
JayMar Go lf awards banquet
district library board of trustees
and dance will be held Sunday,
MONDAY
meet Tuesday, 5 p.m.
Dec. JJ, at the Eagles Club.
GALLIPOL IS • Gallipolis
Soclai hour will start at 6 p.m.,
City Schools OAPSE chapter
KYGER- Cheshire Township
followed by dinner at 6:30 a nd a
Christmas party is Monday, trustees meet lfuesday, 5:30
dance at 8. Tickets are on sale Washington School cafeteria .
p.m., township building .
now for $25 a couple or $13 single."
GALLIPOLIS- Bethel Ladies
POMERO)' - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladies Aid meets Tuesday, 1 p.m., home
Auxiliary will hold their regular . of Helena FeusteL Christmas
meeting Monday, 7 p.m., at the meeting and gift exhchange.
!fall, at 124 Butternut Ave ..
OAK HILL ..,- Cardiff Club
Pomeroy. A Christmas dinner
will be served. Men are to bring a meets Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.,
$3 gift for men and the ladies a $3 Welsh-American Heritage Museum; gift exchange for women.
gift for ladles.
DARWIN- Bedford Township
Trustees will meet in regular
monthly session Monday , 7 p.m.,
at the town haiL
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club's annual Christmas

GALLIPOLIS - Gailia County
Extension Homemakers meet
Tuesday, 10:30 a.m., First Presbyterian Churcl\. Bazaar 10:30I : 30 p,m.; open to public. Auction
l)egins 1: 30 p.m .. slide sho\\1 on
Roots Go Down, Plants Go Up;

1

potluck dinner at noon.

Ban&lt;! Boosters will meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m., In the high school
band room .

GALLIPOLIS Riverside
Study Club meels Tuesday, 1
p.m., at the Holiday Inn for
luncheon, business meeting; gift
exchange; hostesses Lorena
Webb and Joan WoOd . Program
by Jonnie Lou Gabrielli on The
Wilderness Plot.

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ALL FLANNEL!
ALL "SPORTSWEAR" FRABIC INCLUDING KHAKI!
ALL SPANDEX ('bikers pants' fabric)
DOUBLE KNIT NOW ONLY '1 .99 YD.

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BRIR ''

ISnd

FORMERLY VILLAGE PHARMACY

'
CHERYL (LETTIE) STEWART, DONALD W. SWYERS

•

41111••
I

What is a Family

II)

Independent Phannacy ?
We are 1 group of independllnt bu1inesa owners
of family phtrmocloo )olnod together In o

voluntary group to bettef' serve you our valued
cuatomar. ·Wa are the original Family Independent
Phermacve group - over nineteen yeara old end

over 1000 atores atrong.
We serve you belt beceuae of our:
•conv.,lant location and hours
•one ,stop shopping
...rvica with .- smile

our coupon
savings add·up
to big savings
for you

•quality name bnind merchandise

•old fuhion person .. service
.,euonabla price&amp;
•profllaional/carlng attitude

I

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Baceuse our buainMe ia family owned and
operated we can beet serve your f•mily. Unlike

supermarkets or chain drug stores. we want to:
•get to know you
•lumlah bettor Information
•furnish better •rvlcee
•understand your individual needa
••ervice you as a nlighbor

41111~--

iail
I
4ft-···· ••.•
I COUPON ANY DEODORANT
: OR ANTI-PERSPIRANT

',;,·;~ 40~

nfF ;.;:_::

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STORE HOURS:
Monday thru Friday
9:00 am - 6:00 pm
Saturday: 9:00 am-3:00 pm

Through our affillotlon wHh the Family
Independent Pharmacylli Group we:
•buy at better prices as a group- saving
you money
•advertise more economically u a group
- aaving you money
•provide aarvice'you can depend on store
to 11ore
•provide convenience which will NV&amp;
you time
•buy new merchandi•elin• to meet your

-do

FREE DELIVERY TO THESE AREAS:

MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERVILLE, RUTLAND,
SYRACUSE, MASON, W. VA.
OIDDS .UST H PIIOIIID IN IIFOII 3100 P.a

FREE DELIVERY ON All PRESCRIPTIONS - IF YOU DON'T NEED A
PRESCRIPTION WE Will DELIVERY ANYTHING IN THE STORE FREE ON A
$5.00 MINIMUM ORDER

PRESC I992-66,9
ON SHO

271 NORTH SECOND

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In our town...

446-0435

~ $100 PER YARD SALE

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417 2nd be.

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

5884 Trayr~~ore
Dayton, OH.
To The Staff:
'
We wish to thank you for the Thanksgiving Dinner
and the gracious hostess thot was given by you for our
Dad and Family.
We appreciate the effort and work that was put into
it, that we could be together for the holiday.
Sincerely,
·
Howard and Rebecca
IMeek I Richter
Daughter of Wesley C. Meeks
Room 211

'·

·Ladies Choice Fabrics &amp; Fashions

PRESCRIPTION SHOP••••••

at your
Family
Independent
Pharmacy®

~

HARRISONVILLE - A free
blood pressure clinic will be held
Tuesday, from lOa.m. to 12 noon,
at the Harrisonville Town Hall. A
business meeting for the Harrisonvllie Senior Citizens will be
lield f~Uowing lunch.

CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees meeting, 7:30p.m.

..

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mad&lt;• ha rdtack ca nd; for &gt;ale.
q9:l-.1tl!5, or
eve ning;, a1 992-oG37.
Ca ll Y91·20l~ or

LETTER OF THANKS TO PINECREST CARE CENTER

PRESENTED PLAQUE A large plaque In memory of
Kermit Walton, long-time
member of the Pomeroy_
Emergency Squad, was pres·
ented to his wife, Jane, re•
cently by squad members. An
identical plaque hands In the
fir~ slation. Making the presentation to Mrs. Walton area
Capt. Jay Evans, Squad Chief
Rick Blaettnar, member Joe
Struble and lsi. Lt. Chris
Shank.

I

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POMEROY Riverview
Garden Club will meet at the
home or Mrs . Denver Weber on
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Mrs. Paul
Thomas will ·be co-hostess.
Members are asked to bring fruit
to make baskets.

POMEROY - Monthly meet·
ing of Pomeroy Area Chamber of
. Commerce, 12 noon Tuesday at
Trinity Church with Chrlstm(ls
luncheon to be served.

.

SYRACUSE
Syra r u&lt;e
Presbyterian Church has hom e-

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EAST MEIGS - The Eastern

GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County
Right to LlfemeetsTQesday , 7:30
p.m., Buckeye Rural Electric.

Sunday Times-Senti,nei- Page- B-3

Candy for sale

Tuesday at town hail.

•

StewartSv.ryers

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

I

-Engagement--

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Phyllis
Stewart announces the engagement of her daughter, Cheryl
Lowiette (Lettie) Stewart to
Donald Warren Swyers, son or
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Swyers,
Murray City ..
Miss Stewart Is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High SchooL
She also graduated from Rio
Grande College with a degree in
Medical Laboratory Technology.
She Is employed by the Athens
Medical Lab as a medical laboratory technician.
Swyers Is a graduate of
Nelsonville-York High School.
He Is employed by E.C. Babbert
Concrete Inc., Canal Winchester.
Wedding plans are Incomplete.

•

December 11, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport · Gallipolis, Ohio POint Pleasant, W. Va.

,,

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By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS- Christmas is a
time for giving and receiving and
there's an event
. coming up this
' week that wUI
·,give you an op' l&gt;ortunlty to help
a worthy cause.
. The Tri-State
; ·Regional Blood.
: mobile will be in Gallipolis
• Thursday !from noon to 6 p.m.
• It's your c hance, if you're a blood
; -donor, to give a gift that will be
• appreciated for the rest of
·: someone's life, by most people
· that Is. Blood is the gift of life.
And , by the way, if you've
never given blood you can be a
first-lime donor. It takes only a
while to process you, to give the
unit of blood and to recuperate
afterwards, some faster than
others. And, like the acorn and
the oak; first timers become
regular s, the backbone of the
blood program for' any chapter .
. or course, you have to be in
good health, between the ages or
17 and 70 and weigh at least 110
pounds. Think about giving. You
could make a difference. And, It
would make a nice Christmas
gift, especially If you pledge the
" donation to someone who has
used blood, or will need It in ,the
future.
•.' Talked to Mrs. THelma Shaver,
· Gailla Countts Red Cross Blood
.~ Chairperson, the other night to
.:·verify the time and place or the
.·•· visit. The bloodmobile will be in
;. the ususal place at Grace United
·~ Meihodlst Church. I was worried
;· that some prior commitment
: · night force the operation to the
~ :, basement or another location.
: ·: And, speaking of Christmas
:· gifts, have you bought your dog a
;. :present , yet? Was talking to
:" Sam, the loveable mutt from the
;;•Gallia County Animal Welfare
·=· League, the other day. Sam said,
' • "Buy your dog a license before
Jan 20th, or It'll cost you more."
, I bought a dog tag the other day
· for Cricket, Nate and Terri
·,·Thomas' black cocker spanlel;: border collie mix who spent
,several months of her early life
this past spring and summer In
·, the Thomas backyard on Fourth
, Avenue. It came about In a
. strange way . I received an
' envelope from the county audi ' tor's office with what I thought
was a bill but It turned out to be
~· an application for a 1989 Gailia
County dog license. Not thinking,
'• r had registered the dog In my
. · name.
· ;. · When I went to the auditor's to
-:.check it out, Auditor Ron Cana;. day told me it was a. computer-: !zed application for a dog license
: sent out to all persons who
;. purchased dog tags last year.
·' Canaday said it 's the first time
, • it's been done . Not only will it
: remind dog owners that It's
.
,'.. renewal time, it will make 1t
·· easter for a renewaL The already
, -prepared application provides an
: opportunity for the dog owryer to
· make any corrections in the
·: name and address or the owner or
·: in the classification of the dog.
;· Canaday says If you have any
;:questions call the auditor's of.: nee. Of course, if' you still don 't
' have your dog, disregard the
· application.
· Come the first of the new year,
' there'll be a 'Jot changes made in
local political offices . For @xample, In the sheriff's office Jim
Montgomery Is leaving after 12
years, and Dennis Salisbury
takes -o ver. But , Jim Is not the
only one leaving. I know or four
others who are retiring with a
total service In law enforcement
of more than 135 years.

:Muzzle shoots set
: CHESTER' - Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the Izaak Walton
·League will hold muzzle load ing
'shoots at the clubhouse near
:chester on Sundays, Dec. 11,
·Dec.18 andJan.l. The shoots will
:consist of' free hand and bench
"rest events with various prizes,
• such as meat ano money, to be
awarded. All shoots will begin at
1p.m.

Bob and Viola Hartenbach are
leaving with 75 years of service,
both with the Gallia Sheriff's
Department for the last 12 years.
Bob was Meigs County sheriff for
20 years before that. He has a
total' of 40 years. Viola has 35.
Silas J . Hamilton has 35'h years,
including time with Montgomery. Ana, there's Bob Meade,
who has a total or 19 years,
Including the last 12 with MQntgomery. That comes to 139'h years
for the four of them.
.
Dec. 15 Is not only the date for
l
the bloodmobile visit. The 15th of
~-~......~
December was my mother's
••
birthday and my son, Jim, was
APPRECIATION GESTURE- Mrs. Nonna Gooowin for many
also born on the 15th. It's also the
years was dispatcher for the Pomeroy Emergency Squad. As a
gesture of appreciation several squad members visited Mrs.
day in 1967 that the Silver Bridge
fell and If I probably thought long
Goodwin on her 97th birthday to present her wilh gilts. Pictured
enough, I could think of some
with Mrs. Goodwin Is Joe Struble, long-time squad member.
other things that happened to me
on that day.
I well remember the night the
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
bridge fell. I was supposed to be
inscription "Kermit's warmth,
in Mayor's Court at Proctorville Emergency Squad recently hohumor and true concern for other
on a speeding charge from the nored Norma Goodwin and the
people serves as a hallmark for
previous Friday night, when, •late Kermit Walton ·for their
each sq uad member to follow in
while returning from a Gallipolis long-time service and personal
serving the citizen s of our
at Ironton basketball game that contributions to the unit.
commun·ity. ''
.Several members of the squad
night, I was picked for doing 48 in
An identical plaque was placed
what I thought was a 50 mlle an visited Mrs. Goodwin on her 97th
in the firehouse. It was noted that
hour zone. This cop was on my birthday with glfis of appreciathe family also received a
tail with siren and red lights tion. In the early years of
resolution of appreciation for
local e mergency
before I knew what happened. I Pomeroy's
community work from the Ohio
said "What have I done.?" You ·squad work, Mr s. Goodwin
Senate.
see the 35 mlle an hour speed served -as dispatcher taking calls
limit sign was obscured by a big on her home phone and dispatchparked truck. I went down a week Ing the unit.
Walton was a long -time active
later and paid my $10 fine and
member
of the squad, one of
costs.
many
civic
organizations in
Got a phone call last Sunday
he
was
involved.
A memorwhich
when the story on Pat Southard
ial plaque was presented to tits
ran In Our Town.
the
Delbert Sigler wanted -to know wife, Jane Walton, bearing .what happened to Pat's brotber,
Mike Southard.! told him I'd find
out. So when I returned the
Springfield newspaper article
about Pat to his sister, Mrs.
• OPEN nL 8
Sheila Saunders, I ask her. She
EVERY NIGH!
said Mike lives in Columbus.
FIEf GIFT
He's 45; ' Mike 's 43 .
WRAPPING
Ron Trimble also called about
Pat and wanted me to do a story
on the streetcar line that ran
from l the old ferry landing at
Kanauga, down through the
middle or GalUpolis to Vine
Street. So I guess, !'11 see what .I
THE GIFT THAT KEEPS ON
dld with the old copy and notes on
GIVING .... 24 HOURS A
thai one.
DAY, 365 DAYS A YEAR!
And, my good friend, Jack
Griffin called to tell me about a
,. 1 ,.... acco,...,..,
drama group they had back in
.......... ,...... s.- .... . - . , _
1949 or '50. They presented a play
.,.__Ac_._
called "East Lynne," directed by
..........................
Marge White, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Merrili White , whose
~1FT
name the last time I heard, was
•
.
011
Mrs. James Gigante. Hope I got
that right. Carolvn Wetherhoit
was In it, too. The play ran for
HUHR\'1 OFFER ENOS DECEMBER ll•
three nights at Washington
..rD1
AUTOMOBILE CUJB OF
School. I told Jack I would check
qs)'
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
it out and tell our current
generation about it.
360 SICOND AVI.
OT&amp;013•
446-0669
I must finish my Christmas
OVER 20 SLEEP
shopping. It's only 13 days 'til
SOFAS IN STOCK!
Christmas.

Celebrating
a 10 Years o

Plaques presented by squad

"MEOWIE CHRISTMAS"
109fl()()
e •~

Er-:ESC:O IMPOill5 CO!P

lllustrllicn .m..., t H98B S..,.,....

J ~ Uc

&amp;am

·JOYOUS
GREETINGS
With all the rush and excitement of the '.
holiday, sometimes the true meaning of
Christmas is overlookect. The ENESCO
PRECIOUS MOMENTS® Collection captures the inspirational messages of the
season. The joyous symbols of this holiday are sensitively depicted in finely
crafted porcelain bisque collectibles,
which make heartwarming gifts to celebrate holiday joy for generations to come.

.

We invite you to come in and see our
complete holiday selection from The
ENESCO PRECIOUS MOMENTS
Collection.

FRUTH PHARMACY

Jet . of Rt. 35 &amp; 160 across from
Holzer Medical Center
Authorized Dealer
ALSO MIDDLEPORT &amp; PT .
PLEASANT STORES
@1 968 ENESro IMPOR'JS calP.
IIIUS.nlllions ~ €:11 978 through 1988 St1rrM.oe1 J Butcher. l'lc ~

-~~~-

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liS liS-liS liS""""""'"""'
lOS

liS !IS IOfli JOill"'ii l;:o;{IOfli JOill JOill JOill J:a

TODAY ONLY
.1 til 5

M

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M

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FOSTER

80" OuNn SIMper with
NOW
Beautyrut rnallreu.
REG. 1879.00

s

~

WOMEN'S BOAT SHOES

&amp;

REG. S33.99 TO S47,00

l

TODAY ONLY

LAMPS, BUY ONE
GET ONE FREE!

~

l

~

'

M

I
~
I!
•FREE Gin WRAPPING
I
•SHOP DOWNTOWN GALUPOUS
I
- AND PARK FREE
I
I! DAN
THOMAS
&amp;
SONS
~·
.
DOWNTOWN GAUPOUS
NOW $27 19 TO $\
3 7 60

$4 9 9 00

Coffee and cookies will be served to THANK all our valued customers
for a great year!

a
a

M

!

~

!
~
~
~
~

M

. •

DELUXE
INNERSPRING ·
MAnRESSESI

M

M

•LA-Z-BOY
•STEARNS &amp;

ALL WnH

= ~i

a CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

•SI-ONS

1A

ill

L"""~~-..a~,;:g••••·-~··JOilll$Mllf.liJOilll'lil~

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Large Group of Lamps ALL ~ALE PRICED
Buy One At Sale Price, Get the Second of
Equai or Lesser. Value, . FREE!

IIH out terma, ~

VIN ot MHterCard

CORNER OF THIRD AND OLIVE • GLALIPOLIS

frH Parking
FrH Dalivery
Open Daily
til I P.M.
Sunday
1 to 5
446-3045

�• ·0

•

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•
'

Page- 8 -4- Sunday Times-Sentinel

]am es Sands

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

The merchantile history of Gallipolis
BY JAMES SANDS

..

"Yep I live in the country,

. ~.

Where mud Is s u~ t o be.
But when I come 10 Gallipo.lis
The likes l never see.
Our mud Is clmn red clay ,
Doesn't squash and spla s h and

splatter,

But .that Gillllpolls mud , Sam Hill!
'Taln',t nothing but a batter.

·ns nasty, black and "thln,
Dirty, sUcky and mucky,
. And If we get out of tCMtn
We think 1t mighty lucky.
We'll have to wrap our horses
With lots of cork so light,
That It'll keep 'em fran slnkin'

In mud clean out ofslgl'lt.

Or else we'll h.ave to Stay away
An' do no more our tradln'

In that air muddy, 'slushy town,
When all the folks air wadJn',
By and by we'll have our pikes
An' then we'll stay away

From them air muddy streets.
That kin swaller a load of hay.
But what's the use to have our pikes
To get Into that town,
To put our beasts In danger,
An' maybe us' ens to drown?

.

If they don't do their level best
And give thE!Ir streets a pavln'
They'll make a mighty big mistake
In which there' ll be no savln'. "

'

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w. Va.

WHEN G\\1 COX had a store In the right half of the present
Thomas Clothiers building, it was not always easy to drive lo town
or to get around lor that matter, Cox sold carpets and yard goods
here in the early 1900's.

The above poem was written
by W.P. Vicars lor the Gallipolis
Daliy Tribune In 1895. In that
same edition of the Tribune we
read that "the streets of Gallipolis were said to be from a loot and
a half to two "foot" deep In mud
and the neighboring papers had

lots of fun over our being made a
city of the second class due to the
mud. " In ·the early 1890's the
Gallia County Commissioners
sold turnpike bonds to build
gravel roads through much of the
county. Paved brick streets did
not reach Gallipolis untU 1899.
Much like today's Inadequate
highway system in and ou i of
Gallipolis, In the 1890's the Jack of
good land transportation was a
major drawback in locating
b,uslness and Industry here.
In 1912 Captain G.W. Cox
looked back on merchantlle
history In Gallipolis lor ihe
Gallipolis Dally Tribune. It was
Cox's opin!Dn that while Improved highways would bring
industrial jobs that It might also
encourage people to do their
shopping elsewhere.
"The Captain says not half the
business is done here now that
there was then (18SO's and
1890's). His dally sales often ran
away up Into the hundreds. He
remembers fitting out one custo·mer on the Kanawha with $1700
worth of carpets and house
furnishing goods In one day.
Country stores have taken away
much of the business. The mail
order houses have taken stili
more and much of th.e old
Gallipolis trade has been dl·
verted to other points, Huntington and Charleston
particularly."
It is interesting to note that In
the 1890's and early 1900' s Galli-

December 11. 198!!

polls merchants sponsored
steamboat excursions from Huntington and Charleston In an
attempt to draw trade from those
two major cities. The charm of
the shops that surrounded the
city park was a focus of this
1
attempt.
All of tlie above seems to prove
that there are no easy answers to
economic competition because
economic factors are always
changing. When turnpikes were
talked o! no one could anticipated
mall order houses or the birth of
the automqblle. The latter devel·
opment of course changed the
economic playing fleld
drastically.
.
Captain Cox, by the way,
operated his department store in
several buildings In town IncludIng the old Fenner building which
we have pictured today. Cox
began his working career In 1856
on a boat store at Gillette

Dear Ann Landers: A while back
• you suggested that students who
' need financial help to get through
college should investigate all possibilities. You said there are many
: scholarships just waiting for takers
· and that guiqance counselors
should be aware of them.
A story in the Wall Street journal
by Carrie Dolan mentioned some
· interesting possibilities. I'll bet if
you printed them, some of your
readers would profit from the
information.
The University of California has
not been able to find a recipient for
a scholarship fund worth nearly
$400,o00. They are looking for a
. needy jewish orphan who wants to
· ~an aeronautical engineer.
· Ryan Gatling of Pocomoke. Md.,
rc&lt;-eives $7,000 a year from North
Carolina State becaus&lt;: of his name.
john Gatling, a Raleigh business·
man, set up the $1.2 million fund
several years ago to give an educa·

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS•
"'1988, Lo~~o Angele.
Timl'll Syndi~•h• 1nd
CreJ!I(WII Syndif'MII'

tiona! edge to students named
Gatling.
Harvard offers scholarships to
students named Pennoyer, Downer
and Ellis, regardless of need. Chris·
lina Schreiber received a $14,000
scholarship because she is a descendant of William Floyd, a Long
Island farmer.
Amherst College has a scholar·
ship for a "worthy student of
moderate ability who rails to win a
prize or get help from any other
source." Yale University's class of

who isn't a Big Man on Campus.
Ann, please continue to urge
students who want financial help to
be aggressive about inquiring. They
just might hit the jackpot - D.R.
(CONNECTICUT)
DEAR D.R.: You can be sure that
a reader of this column will follow
through and pick up a scholarship.
. Please, let me know when it happens.

.,·. :. l' '

,.k,!ft
V
.~;;:;, ' ,'::;; .

Feeling pressured to go "all the
wayn because everyone else is doing
it? Youh· not alone. For answers ro
your questions about sex, and to learn
how your peers really feel about it,
write for Ann Landers' newly revised
booklet, usex and the Teenager. IJ
Send $3 plus a self·addresseq,
stamped buiiness-size envelope (45
cents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. fLkJI UJ562.

~

'

'.'

'

'.-,

Hb·

""~·t··

The Perfect Olft

•

"lsotoner Gloves"

'L.+.'

'

200fo

. Vinza

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ·
OPEN DAILY 10-8. SUNDAY 1-5

Stone
Mountain
BAGS'

r~~---------------------,

·

THIS IS THE SEASON
FOR TAKING
PICTURES!
BRING· YOUR FILM IN TO
US FOR PROCESSING.

THE SHOE CAFE
LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

ANN lANDERS o

12 EXP•••••••••••••••• ~••••••••••••••• S3.29~

15 DISC ••••••••••••••••••••;•••••••••• S4.4 9
·24 EXP•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S5.99
36 EXP•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 58.49

Sto'p in to register for weekly drawing at our store.
Also. register for Downtown Jackson drawing of
•soo cash. Drawing: Dec. 24.

WHEN YOU
BRING YOUR FILM IN
nP
TO US
t-.1"'~

Th2~o ~~~~~~!!rn !?a~~h:rd
New Holiday Hra.: Nov. 27·Dec. 17 open til7; Mon. &amp;
Fri. Iii 6, TWTh &amp; Sat. Oac. 19-23 open tl17 every night.
Dec . 24 open til 3. Closed Mon .. Dec. 26 Ba Chriatmaal

YOU'Ll

J.

GET ONE
OF THESE

. '

_-

i

· · L •.

FI P
EXCLUSIVE
PHOTO

DE6EF~~~NG

i

Sheets-Siedel
WHEELERSBURC, Ohio Dawson of Vero Beach. Fla.,
Sharon Kay Seide! aJ!Ii Anthony cousin of groom and Chris Seidel
Ira "Toby'' Sheets were united In of Huntington, WV , brother of the
marriage on Sept. 3. Rev. James bride.
·
Pickett performed the nuptial · Andrew Malone, nephew of the
mass, at St. Petet' s Catholic br ide and Tyler Dawson, cousin
Church In Wheelersburg, Ohio.
of the groom , were r!ngbearers.
The bride Is the daughter of
Shannon Kelley was present at
Mr. and Mrs. David (Phyllis) the guest book. Steven Seidel,
Seidel of Rt. 2 Sciotovllle. Th e nephew of the bride presented
groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. programs and bundles of bird
Kenneth (Betsy ) Sheets of 4 Main seed to the guests.
St. Crown City . '
The bride Is a graduate of
• Joyce Rlepehoff presented the Minford High School and Rio
organ music for the ceremony. Grande ·college, where she reSandy Strickland and Darren celved a Bachelor of Science
Love were the vocal!sts.
degree In Elementary EducaDeborah Seidel, sister of the tlon , She Is employed by
bridewasma!dofhonor. Attend·· Fayettev!lle - Perry Local
lng the bride were Stephanie Schools as the Developmental
Sheets, of Crown City, sister of Handicap teacher at the high
the groom, CarofFiglestahler of schooL
Minford; cousin of the bride,
The groom Is a graduate of
Paula Russell of Rio Grande;
Hannan Trace High School and
Beth Potts of Wellston, Nikki Rio Grande College where he
Thaxton of Fayetteville, N.C.
received a Bachelor of Science
Ashley Seidel, niece of the degree In Physical Education
. bride, was l!owerglrL
and Health. He Is also employed
Best man was Tom Belville, of by Fayettev!lle-Perry Local
Crown City. Groomsmen were Schools where he teaches physl·
James Murray of BeallsvUie;
cal education at the elementary
and middle schools.
Kevin Waddell of Rio Grande ;
Dean Rees of Rio Grande; Scott
They are residing in Batavia,
.
Ohio.

"'?

POMEROY - On Aug, 6,
Rasche I lace' over satin featuring
Joelle Eileen McLaughlin and
a basque waist line and ElizabeGary Lee George exchanged
than sleeves. Both carried bou·
vows of marriage In a double ring
quets of pale blue forget·me-nots
ceremony at the Trinity church,
with simulated pearls, white lace
Pomeroy.
and tulle.
Music for the ceremony was
The flower girls, Lourie
provided by Ralph Werry. CanTincher, the groom's sister. and
delabrums adorned with bows of
Donyale Koharic, the bride's
white lace and tulle l!t and
cousin, wore white tea-length
church sancutary. Large baskets
lace dresses with white satin
of roses and baby's breath were
ribbons tied at the waist.
placed on the steps leading to the
The bride was escorted to the
alter with complimentary arranalter by her brother, David
McLaughlin.
gements placed on the alter, The
The ring bears, were L.J.
flowers were a gift from the
gardens of Mrs. Pat Holter, the
McGraw, the bride's brother and
bride's cousin, and Mrs. Ada
Shannon McGraw, the bride's
Holter, the bride's great-aunt.
cousin. Each ring was tied in
Mrs. Pat
., Holter created each place with white satin ribbons
arrangement.
and rested on antique venlse lace
The bride wore a gown of
appliques, a gift from the bride's
detailed taffeta. Venlse lace,
great-grandmother's bridal
pearls, and sequins accented the
trouseau,
neckline and close-f!tting bodice.
J.D. Colley was best man .
The sheer !lluslon net yoke,
Ushers were Scott Starcher and
accented with Schlffi! embro!d·
Mike Koharlc, the bride's couery, fell to Elizabethan sleeves.
sins. All men In the bridal party
The gown's full skirt, featuring a
wore grey tuxedoes with match·
basque. waistline was gathered
!ng grey cummerbunds and
and trimmed with venise lace
boutonnieres of miniature white
appl!ques above the flounced
carnations and baby's breath.
hem and extended to form a
A reception was held following
sweeping chapel-length train,
the ceremony In the church
The bride's headpiece, featurfellowship room. The bride and
ing a three-iler walking length
groom's three-tier cake, a gift to
veil with pouf and blusher, was
the couple from Mr. and Mrs.
fashioned In sprays of simulated
Roger Starcher, the bride's aunt
pearls, white silk flowers and
and uncle, was topped with a
trimmed with satin ribbons .
keepsake porcelln bride and
The bride carried a bouquet of groom.
white miniature carnations and
Guests were registered by
baby's breath. White lace and . Mrs. Shirley Park, the bride's
tul!e were wove!) throughout the aunt. John Park, the bride's
bouquet with white satin ribbons
uncle, provided the couple with a
tied In Jove knots cascading.
video ~assette of the marriage
'The groom wore a white tuxedo ceremony and reception. '
with a boutonnler on miniature
Tr!na Debblsh created the
white carnations and baby's boutonnlers and coursages using
breath.
the bride's choice of an old·
Mrs. Laura Smith, maid of fashion design mixing miniature
honor, and Terri Starcher, bri- white ·carnations and baby's
desmaid and cousin of the bride, breath with accentsofwhite lace,
wore tea-length lee blue-gowns of iulle and satin ribbons.
I

FREE!

..]'- -~

1t~~UP·GRAOE

J.. ,., to 4" PRO·SIZEI
PRINTS

1 DAY
SERVICE
GUARANTEED

GET II. COUPON for

fi~~8x10
.....
~

POMEROY - . Bookmobile
Schedule - Dec. 12-16. 1988.
Bookmobile Service Is provided
In Meigs Cou_nty by the Meigs
County Public Library under
·contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Monday - Dexter, 3; 15·3: 45
p.m.; Danv!lle (Church), 4: 15·

12·15·24-36
EXPOSURE

•

I

110, 126,35MM
OR DISC

50•~ OFF

Couoon muatB&lt;COmpany oraer

One roll per coupon

- ::--,.._

C-41 Flt'M

ONLY

BORDERLESS
PRINTS

• EYE

ONE
-- - DAY
. .. SERVICE

~t~":!

SilVER BRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
STATE IT. 7 - GALliPOLIS, OH.

.
.

--

~

'

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

992-6669
271 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPOII, OHIO
'·

EXAMI·~ATJONS

ALL MERCHANDISE NOW REDUCED 50-75% INCLUDES EVERGREENS, SHRUBS, SHADE TREES,
FLOWER SHOP EQUIPMENT, HOM£ SUPPLIES,
CHEMICALS, FERTILIZERS, DECORATIONS, SUCH
AS SILK AND DRIED ARRANGEMENTS, WRE.ATHS
FOR CHRISTMAS OR EVERY DAY, CASH REGISTER, TABLES, SHELVES AND SO FORTH.

SMELTZERS ·

FLOWER SHOP &amp; GARDEN CENTER
453 JACKSON PIKE, GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
446-4848 OR 446·6681

--------------------------,

.OH WHAT·A FEEUNG l
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446-7076

.I

Revlon's

I

GREAT FEEUNG
Perm

·

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SAVE35%
on one of our most

:

popular perms. M

1

SJ250

Reg. so Sale
i
long hair highe[
1
~~--~~~--~ -------~-------:
Offer valid only with a 1
copy of ad 1hiough
1
December 24. waa: 1

fUaXIOI§TM

I
I
I

HAIR HAA=lENING
1

446-3353

I

1

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA - GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

:

L-------------------------------------~

Has

- - ·---

Bowman's

•

Homecare Medical Supply
I

I

'

I

Robes
Gowns
Paiomas
led Jackets
by

Sha_dowlin e
"~oar

Sm.-3X

e••,,••• MoMI Heelth Cere Stere"

ADULT DIAPERS
o liFT CHAIRS
• URDERPADS (CHUXSI • WAU£RS
• WHEELCHAIRS
• HOSPITAl lEOS • BEOSIDE COIIIODlS • DIAIETIC SUPPLIES
o lAilY OTHER ITEIS
· o SHOWER STOOlS o PAnENl urn
• HOlE OXYGEN

o

Wt bill Weare/Medicaid anti othtr IMUriiiCII For You.
THIRD&amp;PINEST.

-&amp;MIIyAm....,

446•7283

~--GA-L_u_P_ou_s~-----~~~·--------------~:~·
r

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outslanding wave for :
·soft body and shine. :

PHONE 448-1141U
-

I

I

Located At HOLZER Cl.ll'VIC M'llin Facility
On Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

~-

I
I
I

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A private psychological agency
offering Individual, Couple and
Family Counseling for a sliding
fee - Medicaid cards accepted.

•

OUR GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE
ENDS DEC. 24

HOLZER CLINIC
EYE CARE CENTER

William Whitney, Ph.D., Director

252 Jackson Pike

SALE ENDS

~

• CATARA CT &amp; LENS IMPLMT S URGERY
• IN-OFFICE LAZER S URGERY _
• CHILDREN'S EYE EXAMINATIONS
AND SURGERY
• GLAUCOMA S URGERY

Gallipolis, Ohio

HOU15

MoiL &amp; Fri. 9-8 " Qualit y Men 's W e ar Sin ce 1866"
Tun.·Wtd.-ThurL
&amp; Sat. 9-!

OPHTHAlMOLOGISTS

A BETTER CHOICE

I

----------·------------~--Vi~~ BLACK ANlf WHITE FILM
Colorwatch

Announcing ....

S2995
HASKINS·
TANNER
·
332 Second Ave .

JEAN A. DISSELER, M.D .
MAUREEN A. MAY, M.D.

4:45p.m.; Rutland (Civic Center), 5:15-5:45 p.m.
Tuesday -New Lima Road (1
M! S. Ft. Meigs), 3-3:30 p.m.;
Portland (Post Office), 4: 15-4:45
p.m .; Letart Falls (Effie's Restaurant) , 5:15-6:00 p.m.; Racine
(Bank), 6:45-7:45 p.m.; Syracuse
(Ball Field). 8:00-8:45 p.m.

POMEROY -,Rianned Par- r esidents may call 992-5912.
enthood of Soutneas1 Ohio has
scheduled a lam!ly planning
clinic for Friday from 10 a .m. to
noon at the Pomeroy oll!ce, 236
POMEROY- On Wednesday,
East Main Street.
Dec. 14, a representative of U ,S .
Birth control services, preg- Rep. Clarence Miller's (R, · nancy tests, Venera! Disease
Lancaster) office will conduct an
tests , cancer screening, and open door session from 11 a.m . to
supply pickups are among the
1 p.m. a1 the courthouse in
· services available by appoint - :. Pomeroy . Anyone who has any
ment. All services are confiden- questions concerning the Fed·
tial and charges are based on a
era! Government, is Invited to
, • sliding fee scale, For more
stop by to discuss them with the
information or an appointment
representative.

WITH COUPON

We offer dbmpleta tuxedo rental
service to help you look your best
on that special day. Priced from

HOLZER CLINIC
EYE CARE
CENTER

Planned Parenthood clinic set

EACH ROLL

For That·
·Special Occasion

RUSSELL SWEATS

Miller rep ro visit

•

ANTHONY (TOBY) and SHARON (SIEDEL) SHEETS

POMEROY ~ "Christmas McGhee, Sheila Nease, Christina
Elementary Style" will be presNeece, Linzie Nottingham, Ml·
ented at the Pomeroy Elemen- chelle Ramsbttrg, Rusty Robin·
tarySchooiTuesdayeveninga 17 son, Georgia · Shively, Adam
p.m.
Thomas, Ryann Trelawny, Rai ·
The program will open with
ney Walker , Daniel Whittekind,
recitations, We Welcome You by Jennifer Yeauger, and Brian
Wesley Tnoene, and Santa ·by Young.
Ryan WelL Giving A Rid~ for
Narrators are Anna ThompSanta will be. Patrick Erwin,
son. Steven McCullough, Jen Melody Ho!llday, Amber Black·
nlfer Yeauger. Jason Roush ,
ston, Gran! Abbott, Ryan Pratt. Wendy Shrimplln , Charles Ty and Jennifer Shrimplin.
ree, Wendi Daniels, Chris Sto·
Soloists for My Two Front
bart, Jerlca Clark, Jeremy Mi·
Teeth will be Jackie Buck and chael. Amy Smith, Clay Crow,
John HilL There will be group Candace Miller, David Anderslnglng of Santa Claus is Coming son, Amy See, Brian Nutter,
to Town, a poem, Five Little Jessica Wright , Sco1t Sellers,
Reindeer and then Micahel Willi· Misty Hart. and Roy Powell.
amson, Ashley Hoover, Jul!e
Spaun, Missy Lehew, Sara !hie,
Mlstle Musser, Michelle
Kennedy and Christoph e r
Snouffer will presen1 Pack Up
NOW AVAILABLE
the'Sleigh.
·
The kindergarten will sing
"School Colors"
Christmas Greeting, San1a •s
Helpers and Santa's Sleigh.
The third grade w!ll have a
play The Little Los1 Christmas
Melody.
The disability and hand!·
capped classes will be singing ·
several songs including Jingle
Bells, Rudolph, and Up on the
housetop along with giving a
poem, I'm Tired of Being so Good
for Christmas, Second graders
will be singing One Little Candle,
Beneath the Chr.istmas Star , : .
White Christmas and St. Nick
RUSSELL SWEATS
Rap,
-·BUILT
TO LAST
For the program planned by
the teachers, the choir Is made up
of Lauren Anderson, Wayne
Barnhart, James Congrove, Sara
Craig, Brandy Gangwer, Danielle Grueser, Erin Haggerty,
Amber Heldreth, Stacey Hubbard, Michael Klein, Li s

OVAL announces book route
.,-" ._-.SECONDS
~:;..-"" of 3%x5"
PRINTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page- B-5

Christmas program set
by Pomeroy.Elementary .

.,

George-MclAughlin

Colors: Brown, Taupe, IICKk, Grey, Camel or Camel/Mink.

OFF ALL

J·. '
.l.'

•
GARY LEE and JOELLE (McLAUGHLIN) GEORGE
Comfort"le,
high-quality fashion
wtar available in
the original unlined
or the warm fully
knit lined. Ont-sizt
with genuine .
ltather detailing
and fully washable.

I;

New Dress for the Holiday Season
Pretty Sweater to Dress Up Winter Wardrobe
Warm gown or PJ Set to Cuddle In at Night
Something New to Make Her Feel Special

Q

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SUNDAY ONL Yl ;
1:00-5:00 P.M.

A Mother-To-Be Wish List

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A.'il'. ·.·.· ...
¥'*
•%

C198B, los Angeles in]lf, Syndicate end
Crooto!l Syn~cate
U
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Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Weddings--

Landing · near Proctorv!lle. He
closed out his last store In the
Fenner bu!lding In 1912. In
between he ran stores tn Winfield
and Cox's Landing, West Vlr.glnla; Joplln, Missouri and Steubenville, Ohio. He was also
captain of two steamboats: Kanawha Belle and V!ctress,
Accoiding to a Cox ad In 1893
his Ga!llpol!s store dealt In
carpets, musllns, sheetlngs, domestics, dress goods, woolens,
silks, embrolde~les, oil cloths,
mattings and alt kinds of housekeeper's goods.
As to the Fenner buUding It was
rebuUt In 1895 after a fire
destroyed most of it. Through the
years the structure has held
stores l!ke: Blake's Hardware,
King Clothing, Werhle-Naegle
Millinery, Kroger's, Moore's
Auto and Thomas Clothiers.
From about 1906 to 1908 a bowling
alley was located here.

Scholarships available in unusual places
1988 has a scholarship for someo.ne

December 11 , 1988

FREE
GIFT WRAP
412 Second

,__ _..Downtown Gallipolis
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Senior

Beat of the bend

Gung ho ·for fair ...
By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Fair Board has elected
officers for
next year and
now lt's gung
in preparing
the annual
Meigs
Fair-. ac~~:~~~
of a big job.
The ofllcers are Bill Radford,
president; Benny Slawter, vicepresident, and Wallace Bradford, treasurer. The board ·bas
appclnted Mary Radford Gilmore as secretary for one year
and Mary repla~es Muriel Brad. ford, long- time secretary, who
retired from the positlon last
summer working her last fair in
August.
By the way, at the Dec. 19
meeting of the fair board,
representative will be on hand
from Variety Attractions to discuss the booking of entertainment lor next summer's fair .

a

There's food for thought In the
report of the Ohio Department of
Health In regard to the dangers of
toys and let's face it, this Is the
time when parents are really into
buying toys.
The department reports that
an estimated 131,000 patients
with toy related inj uries were
treated In hospital emergency
rooms in 1987. Approximately 80
percent Involved children under
15 and near half of all the injuries
involved children under 5.
Thirty-seven fatalities resulted
from ingestion, aspiration . or
choking on sma ll toy parts,
balloons, balls or small marbles.
Riding toys including bicycles
were associated with more injuries than any other type of toy.
So - there Is a message there
for parents to use discrimination
in selecting toys for their youngsters. The health department
urges you to read the labels on

Program set GALLIPOLIS - Lighthouse
Assembly of God presents the
Littlest Angel by lts children's
choir, Sunday, 10:30 a.m., the
church choir w!ll also sing. A
Christmas dinner will be held at6
p.m.

DAV, auxiliary
meeting planned

Game warden Keith Wood
reports that Meigs County was
fifth in the state in the numer of
deer checked in during 'the gun
season this year.
•.
Muskingum County was first
with 4,464 ta ken this year compared to 2,956 last year; Athens
was second with 3,819 taken this
year compared to 2,439last year.
In Washington County, third
place, 3,475 deer were taken this
year with 2,373 taken last year. In
Meigs Cou nty, hunters checked
in 3,374 deer this year compared
to 2,257las t year. Jackson County
was fifth with 3,351 taken this
year and 1,610 last year.
By the w~y. there were no
accidents in Meigs County during
the season and that is the really
good news.
Sometimes, du ring the season,
it seems like a jungle out there.
Do keep smiling.

~~t;"£.-:J;f~.t},":t;- ~

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•Shoes
•School Jackets
•Referee Jerseys
•Football Jerseys
•Sweatshirts
•Custom Transfers

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TENNis aRAcELn·s"l
w
i
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11 CT. T.W. S750 I
I2CT.T.W.

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ACROSS FROM POST OFFICE, .J.lfi iiOi\ 1

GALLIPOLIS- Activities and
menus !or the week of Dec. 12-16,
at the Senior Citizens Center, 220
Jackson Pike, w!ll be as follows:
Monday - Chorus, 1 p.m.
Tuesday - STOP/ Physical
Fitness, 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday - Health Consul·tant 12:45 p.m.; Garden Club, 1
p.m.; Card Gam es 1-3 p.m.
Thursday - Bible Study, 11noon; Herbalists 12:30; Advent
Service (Rev. Rick Vilardo and
Rev. Joanne Kern!tz) 11:15 a.m.
Friday - Art Class, 10-noon;
Mini Crafts, 1-3 p.m.

DISCOUNTS on furniture,
appliances, jewelry &amp; carpet.
(Amana, Magic Chef, Zenith, Fisher, Philco, RCA,
(atnaper, Schweiger, Eureku 8. othe&gt; '!

•FULL SERVICE DEPT.
•PAR~ING IN REAR
•WE SHIP UPS Nol ,\n ~q•·nt
•LOCAll Y OWNED &amp; OPERATED
Hours' 10-b PM; M""· &amp; Fri. to 7 PM; Tliuo. ?-12 PM; lot.? 5 PM

fl:. very special Christmas offer from Hallmark!

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Office Hours
Monday through Friday
8:30a.m. to _s p.m.

U Years
Davts and Eugene Elllott:

lt Years

Janet Browning

•

l&amp;Yean

Hope Burnett

1'l Yean
Evelyn Elllott, Hank Forgey, Barbara

Kemper, Junior Kemper, and Barbara
Ours.

18 Yea.J:"I
Jane Ann MOler
15 Yeara
Jacque Glassburn
14 Yeara

David Graham and Bea White.

· 13 Yeal'l
Lewis Miller, Ronnie Slone, and Sandy

Slone.

12 Yeara

Gary Lewls, Terrt Long, Bonnie Mit-

chell, Mary Pope, Katie Shoemaker, and
Paul Shoemaker.
..11 Yeart
.
Judy Clark, Naomi Durst, Jlalph'Durst,

Cindy Graham, and Joyce Shong.
. ~~ Yearfll
Carl Clark, Ann Elliott, Carole Roush,
Lynda Smith, and Karen Tucker.

lYe••

Susan Breech,

~rtha

Carter, Gene

Elliott, AnKle Harden, Don Harden, Nick

Johnsen, Pearl Leifheit, Carla Mlller,
Larry Shong, and Jimmy Thomas.
BYeart
Rick · Altizer, Dianna Ehman, Lyda
Hudsoo, Russell Lelfhelt, Ralph MU1er,
Brenda SanderS, Penny Simpson, Randall
SJmpsm, Stephanie St over, Linda Waugh,
and Charlene Wood.
'7 Yean
Rosemary Angel, . Kathy A1derman,
Judy Billl, Jim Blevins, Nancy Blevins,
Kenny Deckud, Kim De&lt;:katd, George
Ehman, Jerry Evans, Rulh Evan s, Dan
HamUtoo, Gall Hamutoo, Richard Long,
Helen McGuire, Ernestine Smith, J.D,
Smith, and Joyce You~.
6Yean
Barbw-a Donnally, Jeff Donnally, Joe
Foster, Bill Greene, Jackie Greene, Bob
Howard, Cindy Howard, Lin&amp; Lewbl.,
JuUe Pace, Allee Sanders. Dale Sanders,

··

!YearA

Tamml Barcus, Dennis Blakeman,
Diana Callihan, Mike Carter, Greg Clark.
Mary Deel, Teresa Eastman. Terry
Elliott, Sharon Fisher, Steve Forgey, J udy
Hall, Catby Heinke. ConnleJaa:ers,Drema
Jtvlden, Mark Jividen, Jodi Hall JohnsM,
Karen Marr, Lea:ea. McAvena. Kandy.
Miller, Karen Polcyn, Carole Pope,
Sharoo Sanders, Jeannie Saunders, Mar·
tha Shaffer, and Vera Snedaker-. .
1 Yean

Ro.nnle Angel, Darlene. Beaver, Lisa
Beck, Connie Brannen, Randall Breech,
Marsha Butcher, Keith Callihan, Jodie
Chen ey, Laura Chtlders, Virginia Daniels,
Sandi Darnfu"ough, Judy Gee, JamB'
Greene, Sandy Greene, Mart~ Harrl$(1!.,
Clara Jacksm, Jim Kemper, Joiln Kimmel, Becky Meaige, Karol Paulsen, Mike
Polcyn, Leon Queen, . Kelly Roush, Rick
saunders, Stanley Taylor, Kelly Waugh,
Ronnie WaUgh, and Patricia Whitt.

Literary dub to meet
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Literary Club will meet at 2
p.m on Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Mrs, 'Charles Gaskill will review Seven
Stories of Christmas Love by Leo
Buscaglia. The Rev. Sonny ZunIga w!l present vocal selections of
Christmas _music. Members are
asked to share a favorite ornament for roll call.

LONG TIME ADVISORS Pictured are Gallla Co11aty
4-H advisors who've served
between 15 and Sl years. They
are, front from left, Dorothy
.Toler, Jackie Graham, Glen
Graham, Recta&amp; Grubb; back
row, Jaae Ann Miller, Evelyn
Elliott, Hope Burnett and
Eugene Elliott.

From the bottom of my
heart (which, incidentally is
better after surgery) my
family and I thank you for .
your cards and concern
during my recent illness and
Merry Christmas.
Lionel Boggs
'

Garden Club
party slated .
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club's annual Christmas
party w111 be held at 6 p.m
Monday at Craw's Steak House.
From there the group will go to
the homeo!Mrs. Vj!rnon Weber,
·RutlAnd, for a regulllr meeting.

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Pre-Christmas

In the service...

New Patients Welcome

DANE E. MH.LER
M_arine Staff Sgt. Dane E :
M1ller, whose wife, Shirley, is the
daughter of Wanda Morris of
Bidwell, OH, recently received a
Certificate of Commendation.
He received the citation for his
noteworthy performance of duties while serving as Platoon
Sgt., with Marine Aircraft Wing,
Marine Corps , Air Statton,
Cherry Point, N.C.
He joined the Marine Corps. in
July 1975.
LUCIAN C. Kll\ILER
Marine Cpl. Lucian C. Kimler,
whose wife, Lea, is the daughter
of Walter b. Lambert of 47 Vinton
St., Gall!pclls, OH ., has 'been
promoted to his present rank
while serving with 2nd Marine
Division, Camp Lejeune, N.C. ,
A 1982 graduate of Huntington
High School, Huntington, W.Va.,
he joined the Marine Corps. in
January 1985.

(304) 675-6015

VALLEY
HOSPITAL

All for only

Valley Dttvt, Point Pleaant, W.VL 2S5SO

95

with any $10
Hpllmark purchase

Hallmark presents the classic "The Night Before Christmas"
in an originally designed pop-up book. This delightful children 's
·Christmas story is brought to life on audio cassette by the
narration of Wilford Brimley.
Also included is a coloring book to give your child hours of
holiday entertainment. Available at participating Hallmark
retailers, but hurry, because supplies are limited.

IT

Prices In Effect Now Thru Saturday, December 24th

GALLIPOLIS- Gall!a County
Right to Life meets Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m ., Buckeye Rural Electric.

CURIO ·

ON LA·Z·BOY
.RECLINA'·ROCKER

CABINETS

Milly Styles t. Slzts
SALE PRICES I

SElfCTION Of STYLES AND
"""'',... BUY NOW FOR CHRISTM4S!

Comtln Soon!

ALL MEN'$,. WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

HOUSE SLIPPERS

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© 1988 HaHmark Cards. Inc.

MASON FURNITURE CO.

Right io Life meets

12 NOON TIL 5 P.M.

..

Gallipolis
Full House of Cards
Silver Bridge Plaza
446-7330

AT

Happy Holida11 Savings

SUNDAY ONLY

•

·IOIILEIS

SHAWN T. HOLLIDAY
Marine Pfc. Shawn T. Holliday, a 1988 graduate of Gal!ia
Academy High School of Gallipolis, OH, has been meritoriously '
promoted to his present rank
upon graduation from recruit
training at Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
Holliday received the early
promotion for his superior performance dul'!ng all phases of the
11-week training cycle, which
emphasized physical conditionIng, self-d!sctpllne and
teamwork.

AMWIUI DEPOSIT WILL

,r

U!S

Bar~:»ara

FIRST YEAR ADVISORS - Pictured are first year GaiDa
County 4-H advisors. They are, front from left, Sandy Greene, Joan
Kimmel, Becky Mealge; back row, James Greene, Fred Dee! ,
(Extension Agent), and Ronnie Angel.

\

(A $t2 retail value)

'

%3 Yeart
Jane Jlvtrten

Suite 12
Pleasant Valley Hospital
'\V!edical Office Building
Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550

· and Coloring Book

FOOESTS F&lt;XI

Regina Grubb

,

ln~ludes Audio Cassette

The National Forests are
such great places to unwind .
The air is crisp and clear.
The sky is a deep blue and
everythi ng you see fills your
eye with pleasure . If. you listen closely you might hear
an old hoot owl down in the
valley. And if you look up .
you could see an eagle soar:
ing high above the timberline.
These wonderfu I getaway
places are open to everyone.
and they are easy to reach
... a day's drive or less away
from ius! about anvwhere in
America . To learn more
about the miracle of our
Forever Forests. write FORESTS FOR US , Box 2000.
Washington. DC 20013. Then
get ready to enjoy.

%~Years

Clerm Graham
%8 Yeara

Internal Medicine

•l&lt;&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;Bo&lt;Bo&lt;IIOIBo&lt;IIOIBo&lt;IIOII!!::!idt

CharJ100 Heston lor Amencu Na1100al Fores~ ~

3t YNrl

Jack.Je Graham

5 Years

Tom Brown, Tnva Caldwell, Janet.
Cardwell, Irene Cla&amp;IL Melvin Clagg,
Diana Drummond, MarUyn. Martin, Jean
Notter, John Pierotti, Shirley P.terottL
Lakshmi Prlyanath, Beverly Queen, and
Fred Queen.
f Yean.
Becky Bennett, Vlckl Blakeman, Lora·
lee Carmichael, Terry Danner, Mary Ann
Durst, Patty Graham, Carolyn Halslop,
Margarent Hall, Lols Mlller, Rod Morgan,
Kelly Ours, Larry Queen, Sandy Queen.
Steve Sanders, Roberta Shrtver, and
Shella Slone.
3 Yeata
Terry Barr, J eannette Beck, Tom Beck.
SAndy Byer, Peggy Callihan, Donna
Crlssenbery, Jay· Crtssenbery, Roberta
Duncan. Denver Garber. Danella Jenkins,
Teresa Hall, Patty Hays, Bobble Hudsm,
Jenny Huaman, Lynntta Crawford, Nancy
Nickols, Angela Prestm, Angela Queen,
Debbie Saunders, Alima Sprague, Herman Sprague, Susan Stanley, Sally Sta·
pleton, Joyce Twyman, and Rhonda
Warren.

Pediatrics &amp;

•urEASANl
Tawney Jewelers I
Gallipolis If

Sl Yeara

Mike Shoemaker, Ray Slone, Virginia
VanSldtle, and Donna Waugh.

Dr.Ayers

I

! 422 Second Ave.

DonJthy Toler

, -H'

$1595~

Stop in and sign up for tht frtt trip m
Ill to tho Bahamas - to Las Vtgos- 111
or frtt trip on tht W. Ya. B.Uo.
Ill
Open horyday
1
8:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
W
W Sunday 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. 1

ft

MIDDLEPORT 992-5627

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INGELS Furniture &amp; Jewelry

educational programs and activities which are available in the
4-H program. according to Fred
J. Dee!. The 1988 Gallla County
4-H Advisors and the number of
years they have served as
volunteer 4-H leaders are:

' Edward .

W

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salad, bread, brownie.
.
Thursday - Beef BBQ,
creamed . potatoes. seasoned.
green beans, bun, pear halves . •
Friday - Tuna pattVcheese·
sauce, hash brown potatoes, .
buttered kale/ vinegar, bread,
chocolate cake with glaze Icing.
Remembel'theAdventServlce
each Thursday at 11:15 a.m.
Make ,reservat!ons In advance·
for meals .
-·-

GALLIPOLIS- Gall !a County
Extension Homemakers meet
Tuesrtay, 10:30 a.m., First Presbyterian Church. Bazaar 10:301:30 p.m.;· open to public. Auction
begins 1:30 p.m., slide show on
Roots Go Down, Plants Go Up;
potluck dinner at noon.

~~·~~~

~JTjt--

GALLIPOLIS- Gall!a County
4-H Advisors were honored for
their service to youth during a
Recognition Banquet h.eld recently at the Canter's Cave 4-H
Camp and Elizabeth L. Evans
Outdoor Education Center. During the evening, those In attendance had the oppcrtun!ty to take
part in a program entitled "4-H
Advisors - You Make it
Happen" by AI Ulrich, State 4-H
Specialist for Advisor Training."
Also, Paul Shoemaker, President of the 4-H Advisors Associa~
t!on, gave a report of the actions
and accomplishments of the
Executive Committee during the
year 1987 and Introduced special
guests, which Included Gall!a
County Commissioner, Mr. and
Mrs. Kall Burleson; Donna
Waugh, Star Bank; Jim Dailey,
Ohio Valley Bank; Madge Boggs,
4-H Advfl;or Association's Treasure; State Rep. Jolynn Boster,
(D-Gall!pol!s); Janet Pettus,
former 35 year 4-H Advisor;
Betty Reese, South District ActIng Supervisor; and Bob &amp; Jewell
..
Evans.
The 1989 4-H Executive Committee was also announced.
Members for 1989 will Include
Joyce Young, Bob Howard,
Karen Tucker, Ray Slonf?, San.dy
Slone, Herman Sprague, Paul·
;$hoemaker, Dorothy Toler, Ro. berta Shriver, Bobbie Hudson,
Sherry Fisher, Gary, Fisher,
John Pier!ott!, Joyce Sheng,
Drema · Jividen , and Donna
·waugh.
During 1988, 200 adu Its were
volunteer leaders, working with ·
over 1,000 Gall!a County youth.
Without the dedication of these
volunteer leaders the 4-H program would not be possible, and
many youth would not have the
oppcrtun!ty to participate in the

Home council to meet

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· Menus consist ot:
Monday - cubed steak,
whipped potatoes, buttered broccoli, sliced pineapple, bread.
Tuesday - ham loaf, green
Iimas , whole kernal corn, toss
salad/ cabbage and carrots with
oil and vinegar, corn bread,
refrigerator dessert/vanilla
pudding:
· _pot roast, potacarrot raisin

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-B-7

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

4-H advisors' service honored

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~1:11~! J:-t~~

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plan. weekly schec{ules ·

Thursday, Dec. 15, by
ng the
center at 992-2161.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu tor the week Is:
Monday .- Chicken pattie,
mashed potatoes, mixed vegetatbles,_fruit cocktail
·' Tuesday - Corn dogs, sauerkraut, mashed potatoes, brownie
Wednesday - Clam chowder,
diced tomatoes, pudding
Thursday - Baked porkette,
dressing, carrots, peaches
Frtday . - Vegetable soup,
_gelatin with fruit, cake
Choice of beverage available
with meals.

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladies
Auxiliary will hold their regular
meeting Monday, 7 p.m., a t the
hall, at 124 Butternut · Ave .,
Pomeroy. A Christmas dinner
wi !I be served. J\rlen are to bring a
$3 gift for men and the ladies a $3
gift for ladies.
·

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"YQUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

Center~

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center
has the following activities sch~
duled
tor the week of Dec. 12·16:
toys, look for sate toy construcMonday
- Round and square
tion, check safety of electrical
dance
1-3,
ex~rcise
class 3: 30;
toys. avoid toys with small
Tuesday
Athens
Mall trip, ·
removal parts and parents are
9:
30,
Senior
Chorus
ID
leave
urged also to select toys which
extended
care
11,
chorus
1-2,
are suited to the individual
bowling at Pomeroy Lanes 1-3,
child's age and abilities.
Senior League 3 games for $2.
Wednesday - Social Security
The Winding Trail Garden .
representative
10-noon, knitting
Club and the Pomeroy Chamber
circle
10-noon,
bridge 1-3, tole
of Commerce will join forces to
instructor w!ll
painting
class
1-3,
conduct a Christmas decorating
be
Joan
Fetty,
the
class will be
contest in,Pomeroy.
tole
painting
in
oils,
cost $8 with
Categories of judging w.m
materials
furnished
for a fininclude religious, non-religious
and entrance ways with prizes to Ished project, bloodmobile visit
be awarded. The prizes list and 1-5:30, Exerdse.class 3:30
Thursday ~ Quilting, craft more details on judging will be
available later. For the time making, games, trip to La&lt;;omebeing, you may not even have to dia Dinner Theatre, leave Center
register for participation. How- at 7:30 a.m., AD/ RD Training
ever. If you liveona street that is session 1-3, subject "Coping with
a little bit out of t he way, you Behaviors and Feelings", James
should register. If registration is Althof, PhD.
The Senior Nutrition Christrequired I'll advise you later.
Judging has tenat!ve1y been mas dinner and program wUI be
set for 7 p.m. on Dec. 22. If you do Tuesday, Dec. 20, reservations
want to make sure that you're in for this m:al should be made by
·,
just give the chamber office a
ring at 992-5005.

w-

December 11 . 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasa:;n~t~.W~-~V~a~.===========;;;;D=ec;ce~m~bet=:::-;:::;1:::1:::.: : :1: :9: :=88

Page-B-6-Sunday Times- Sentinel

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that will keep on giving
years to come,

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$199.
From 6-8-10· Gun Sizes
At OdrStore

CHAPMAN
SHOES
NEXT TO BIIIFELDS POMEIOY
IN

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Page-B-8-Sunday limes-Sentinel

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December 11, 1988

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

. 4-H Hall of Famers inducted
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County 4-H Program recently ·
announced the charter lnductlees Into a 4-H Hall of Fame
which has been established to
help recognize outstanding contributions and service from Individuals to the 4-H program In
according to Fred J . Dee!. ,
Each year, hundreds of Individuals contribute time, resourcetl, and service to the youth of
Gallla County he said. These
contributions are Immeasurable
because without them, ~e program could nQt be the success
that It has become, Dee! added.
Tbls year's Hall of Fame
honorees were Virginia Cremeens, a former 35 year 4-H
Advisor; Ja11et Pettus, a former
35 year 4-H advisor; William P .
Smith, County Extension Agent
In Gallta County for almost 20
years; and Bob and Jewell
Evans, long time supporters of

the Gallla County 4-H program. Trust Company, who has also
These Individuals were excel- been supportive of the Fair
lent examples of Individuals who Uvestock sales and awards
have helped make the 4-H pro- programs, Canter's Cave 4-H
gram what It Is today and It was Camp, and the Innovative Ceovery appropriate to honor them tral Trust Award program which
In the !lrstgroupofHallofFame provides flnanclallncentlve for
4-H members to enroll In nonllhonorarles, Deel said.
The Gallla County 4-H AdVl- vestock projects at the Gallla
sor's Association has also County Junior Fair.
created a Clover Club to honor
The third honoree was Star
businesses and groups which Bank, Gallipolis, ·which has also
. have contributed to the success been a long time supporter of the
of the 4-H programs throughout ,~ 4-H Camp, Gallla County Junior
the years.
Fair, and others. They have also
These businesses through their been a long time sponsorer of the
efforts and contributions have 4-H calendar which Is given to all
made many programs available club members and advisors In
for many years, Included the 4-H Gallia CouniY each year to help
livestock sales at the Gallla them better ptan their program.
County · Junior Fair, the 4-H
Camp Improvement programs at
Canters Cave 4-H Camp, and the
very successful Ohio Valley
Bank 4-H Scholarship program.
Second honoree was Central

HONORED - Pictured 18 Vl&amp;lnla Cremeen1 wUII her plaque
npw111Dtln1 ber Induction Into the Gallla County 4--H Hall of

ports
.

HALL OF FAMERS- Pictured are Bob and
Jewell Evan belnc recopized at the '-B Advlaors
Banquet held recentb' 1111 they receive tbelr 4-H

·youth exhibit slated at FAC :
d'A:LLIPOLIS - Paper cutting and a watercolor by Brian Reed.
and pencil drawings are featured
The French Art Colony welIn the Children's Gallery at the comes suggestions for Youth
French Ar Colony through Jan. Gallery display. The public Is
31.
encouraged to visit the current
Junior High -students at Gallla . exhibit and become better ·ac· Academy have been selected for quainted with the young talent In
exhibit by Instructor Mike Vigue. the area.
The artists are se\enth graders
French Art Colony pr~ams
Travis Samons and Beth Brown, are offered with the support of
and eighth graders Kenneth the Ohio Arts Council. All activiFellure, Bobby White, , Robert ties are offered on a nonNewsome, Jet! Knotts, Heather discriminatory basis. Phone 446Wakefield, Tonya Timms and 3834 for more Information on
Matt Phillips.
events at the Regional Multi-Arts
Included In the exhibit also IS Center.
an oU painting by Jason gue~.

GIFT A
GIFT OF
BEAUTY... · •
The Cake
Plate Bouquet
All'le!1ilef ol

HOLIDAY SALE.
25o/o OFF
The Christmas
Coupe Bouquet

The lloi!Uyitleer
that puts everyone
In the spirit.

The Store!
·Bugle Boy •Jordache
•Camp Beverly Hills

Christmas In
full bloom.

·12118)

110 SIUCTJOII OF I'OIIIIITTAS, -All$,
1 - . , FIUH AIID Sill WIIAIMI,
K&amp;IIGIIIG AIIIAIIIIUIDm.

Special Holiday Hours

OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

9 A.M. nL I P.M.

Mon.-Sat., 10:00 to 7:00
Sunday, 1:00 to 5:00
321 VIand St.

Job Bank helps
seniors find work
GALLIPOLIS- The Job Bank,
located In the Sfnlor Citizen
Center, 220 Jackson Pike Is stU!
serving clients In Gallla County.
Interested employers or applicants over 50 years old should
contact the Job Counselors from
7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through
Friday.
This Is the time of year to
winterize your home, and will
need someone around to help
with those jobs.
The Job Bank can take those
orders and put a Senior Citizen to
work. The number of the Job
Bank IS 446-7000.

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CORNER COLLECTIONS

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10°/o Off
Buy 2 Items ••••••••••••••••••• Get 20°/o Off
Buy 3 or more items..... Get 30°/o Off .
j

Corner
Collections
011 TIE "T" Ill MIDDLEPOR
SUNDAY 1 P.M.-4 P.M.
HOUIS: MON. THRU Fll. 10 A.M.-I P.M•.
SAT. 10 A.M.-5•30 P.M.

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DECEMBER 11th to 17th

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Buy 1 Item ..................... Get

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during fll'llt half action In Eut Rutherford
Saturday. The Jets raiDed from R 13-10 halftime
deficit to win, 34-16. ( UPI).

Bengals will •try to wrap up
AFC _Central title at Houston
By RICHARD LUNA
The Oilers, upset by Pittsburgh
UPlSporls Writer
· last week, are In a must:wln
HOUSTON- Cincinnati Coach situation If they are to have any
Sam Wyche was fighting to keep shot at winning the division, and
his job at this time a year ago as possibly even making the
his team struggled through a 4-11 playoffs.
season. This Sunday, Wyche and
"Our objective of making the
the Bengals try to wrap up their playoffs hasn't changed," said
first AFC Central Division chamHouston Coach Jerry Glanville.
pionship since 1981.
" We've jl&amp;t got to find another
way to get It done. We never do
Clnclnnatl,ll-3, ventures to the
anything the easy way. We
Astrodome, a.k.a. Houston's
"House of Pain," to battle the always seem to do things the
hard way."
Oilers, who are tied with Cleveland at 9-5, two games behind the
The two twns played Oct. 23tn
Bengals.
Cincinnati can win the division
title and remain In position to
secure the home-field adv~ntage
throughout the playoffs .
"We haven'tcllnched anything
By BOB KEIM
that we were shooting lor,"
UPI Sports Writer
Wyche said. "I don't think I've
MIAMI. (UPI) - Th is Is the
ever qUite seen them (his team)
kind of challenge Mark Clayton
the way they are this week. The
thrives on. :
The Miami wide receiver, on
guys are going to be ready to play
... there's no chance of a letdown .
course to have the most produc''This Is a game we have towln
tive season of his career, wlllsee
In order to, first, clinch a division
a lot of man-to-man coverage
win, then we go on from there
Monday night when- the Clevehopefully to maintain a home
land Browns play the Miami
field advantage, which we think
Dolphins In Joe ~obble Stadium.
Is a tremendous advantage In the
Cleveland, 9-5, will make the
playoffs with victories In the final
playoffs. We're going to be In the
playoffs ... we've got the wild
two. games of the season, while
Miami, 5-9, is looking to break a
card done, thatone'sln'ihebank.
Now thiS game Is the biggest
five -game losing skid.
Cleveland cornerbacks Frank
game of the year for us . The
Mlnnlfleld and Hanford Dixon
players are approaching It as a
are generally regarded as the
one-game shot ... to play against
a good team with a good record
best tandem In the league, and
and 'a lot of good players and find
the Browns pass defense Is
out If we belong where we are.'' . ranked No. 1 In the AFC.

Cincinnati, with the Bengals
winning 44-21 after converting
three ·Houston turnovers Into
touclldowns en route to a clubrecord 28 first-quarter points.
Yet Houston pulled to within
35-21 and had a chance early In
the fourth quarter to cuI the
deficit to 35-28, but Drew Hill
dropped a pass In the end zone. ·
Cincinnati's top-rated offense,
averaging 394 yards per game, Is
directed by Boomer Eslason (203
of 347 for 3,254 yards, 26 TDs and
13 Interceptions), the leagtie•s
top-rated passer.

Browns meet Miami •

Christmas .Specials

~

JETS ROMP - Eric Dickerson, runnlnc back
for the lndl4napolls Colts eludes Jets Kyle Clifton
of the New York Jets for first down yardage

i'

10°10
OFF
All Jeans In
(Price Good 12111

3.

ll:ldiORI

The Candlestick
Bouquet

ALL BLOW-OUT

GalllpOlis area famllles Interested In International exchange
should call Lisa or Paul Koch at
(614) 446-2319 or EF Foundation
toll free 1-800-44-SHARE . Call
soon, so that next year, greeting
or "Joyeux Noel" br "Buona
Natale" will be exchanged In
your home.

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December 11, 1988

'

on a · fourth-and-one with 10:04
left In the period.
"
After IndianapoliS' Dean Blasucci had kicked a 45-yard field
goal at 11:37 to cut the deflclt to
24-16, the Jets followed with a
70-yard, seven-play drive for a
31-16 lead. Toon's club-record
86111 catch of the season was a
33-yard scoring strike from .
O'Brien on third down.
Leahy added a 46-yard field
goal 5: 11 Into the flnB,l period to
make It 34-16. O'Brien completed
10 of 19 for 115 yards. Toon, the
leading receiver In the NFL,
cauglit seven passes for 103
yards. McNeil ran 23 times for
100 yards.
New York held Eric Dickerson
to 42 yards on 17 carries.
Dickerson, who ran for 169 yards
last week against Miami, had a
50-yard TD reception from Hogeboom In the first half.
Hogeboom completed 16 of 30
passes for 217 and three
Interceptions.
The first half featured five
Interceptions and five quarterbacks. Hogeboom replaced Chris
Chandler after the rookie suffered a bruised right shoulder In
the first quarter. Hogeboom
threw two Interceptions. Rickey
Turner, the Colts' wishbone

quarterback, ran two plays from
that formation In the llrst half.
O'Brien replaced Ryan In the
second quarter after the Interceptlons on three straight possesslons, two by cornerback Willie
Tullis.
Dickerson's 50-yard TD receplion, the longest of his· career.
came with 13: 14 left In the firs t
half and gave the Colts their first
lead at 13-10. With the Jets
blitzing on third-and-nine Dickerson dropped out of the backfield,
caught a short pass, deked out
James Hasty and raced Into the
end zone.
The Colts marched 80 yards In
nine plays to trall10-6on a 9-yard
Dickerson run on the final play of
the first quarter. The Colts had
appeared to lose possession on
the previous play when Mark
Boyer appeared to fumble after a
tackle by Rich Miano at the 9.
Replay official, AI Sabato, ruled
Boyer was down before the ball
came loose.
The Jets buUt a 10-0 lead In the
first quarter on a 35-yard field
goal by Pat Leahy at 6:19 and a
59-yard punt return by JoJo
Townsell at 8: 41. Townsell raced
untouched up the middle for his
'nrst return. touchdown of the
season.

!Vo. 11 Al~ouri tops
Memphis State, 86-74

\

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8 P.M.

GALLIPOLIS - Clirlstnias
greetings such as these will be
beard all over the country this
hOliday season, as host families
and .their exchange students
share one of the most special
family holidays together.
"Learning about another culture and sharing your language
and customs with an enthusiastic
young student Is what student
• exchange Is all about," says Lisa
Koch, a Galllpolis volunteer Area
Representative for E4ucatlonal
Foundation for Foreign Study.
"Tbi81S the time of the year when
we pay extra attention to the
Importance of peace and world
understanding. By accepting a
young ambassador from abroad
Into your home, a family can
make that holiday feeling last all
year long, " Koch added.
According to Koch, families
whO wish to host a student need
only provide a bed, meals, and a
" loving environment". Students
bring their own spending money,
have their own Insurance and
have studied English In their
home country.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(UPI) - Ken O'Brien came orr
the bench ana led New York to
three third-quarter touchdowns,
Including a 33-yard strike to AI
Toon, lifting the Jets Saturday to
a 34-16 victory that eliminated
the Indianapolis Colts from
·
playoff contention.
O' Brien replaced starter Pat
Ryan In the first half after the
starter had thrown three straight
Interce ptions. New York Improved to 7-7-1 and won for tile
Urst · time In nine Decembt!r
games.
Tbe Colts, who moved Into
contention for an AFC wUd-card
spot by winning seven of their
previous eight, fell to 8-7. Indianapolis. the defending AFC East
champion, needed to win Its last
two games to remain In playoff
contention.
The Jets erased a 13-10 halftime deficit with touc)ldowns on
all three of their third-quarter
possessions. Freeman McNeil
ran In from 1-yard out at 6: 35 to
make It 17-13. .
On. the Colts' next play from
scrimmage James Hasty Intercepted his second Gary Hogeboom pass and returned It 16
• yards to the IndlanapoUs 21.
Johnny Hector ran In from the 2

Hall of Fame plaque from Paul Shoemaker •
President of the '-H Advlaol'll Auocletlon, and
Fred Deel, County Extenaloa A1ent, 1-H.

L~.91.. C£ori:J{JfJ{.{j

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Section
r,l

Fame.

Host families sought in program

'iim:es ~ i'.enfinel

Jets eliminate Colts
from post-season play

RECIPIENT - Pictureli 18 Janet Pettus, who rooelved her Hall
of Fame plaque the recent Advl&amp;o'r Recopltlon from Paul
Shoemaker, President of tbe 4--H Advisors A.uoclatloa, left and
Fred Deel, rl&amp;ht, County Extension Agent.

GIVEN PLAQUE -Pictured 18 Ball ol Fame hoaoree, WIUiam
P. Sml&amp;b, bela&amp; presented R plaque on behalf of the Gallla County
loB Advlaor'a A.uoclatlon by Paul Shoemaker, left, president of
tile auoetatlon, and Fred Deel, County Exteaalon A1eat. He was
eaducted Into tbe 1-H Hall of Fame.

..

Clevelahd bas surrendered just
eight passing touchdowns all
season.
But mention the single coverage he Is likely to see Monday
night and Clayton's face breaks
out In a wide smile. '
"They play aggressive defense
and they take chances," said
Clayton, who has caught 72
passes for 967 yards and 11
touchdowns. "There wlll be a lot
of opportunities out there."
Smiles have been In short
supplyaroundtheDolphlnstralnlog facility these days. This wlll
be only the second Don Shulacoached team to finish with a
losing record, and the problems
s temming from receiver Mark
Duper's suspension for violating
the league's sub.tance abuse
policy have mushroomed.

Flyers edge Blackhawks, 64
By JOE CIALINI
UPI Sporta Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Derrick Smith scored three goals
Saturday to lift the Phltadelphla
.FJyers to a 6-4 vlctdry over
Chicago, handing ' the Blackhawks' their ninth straight
defeat.
.
Smith's first goal gave the
Flyers a 2-0 lead at 4: 02 of the
second period and his second
gave them a 4-1 advantage at
7:02. Smith, who has eight goals
thla season, completed his hat
trick with 1:34 left Jn the game.
The game was the first In
Philadelphia for Chicago Coach
Mike Keenan since he was fired
as coach by the Flyers after the
1987-88 season,

Brian Propp gave the Flyers a
1-0 lead with his 13th goal of the
season at 3: 32 of the second
period. Smith scored 30 seconds
later, outmuscllng Everett Sanlpass for the puck and beating
Chicago rookie goaltender Jim
Waite, who has lost seven.
straight games since an openingnight tie.
Rick Valve scored his lOth goal
of the season to bring Chicago
within 2-1 at 6: 21 before Smith
scored again, tipping a slap shot
by Gord Murphy past Waite. ·
Dirk Graham scored his lOth
goal of the season to cuI the
Philadelphia lead to 3-2 at 9: 19
but . Mike Bullard notched his
ninth at 12:06and ScottMellanby
his 14th at,. 14:17 ·for a 5-2
Philadelphia lead.
'

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The goal for Bullard was his
fifth In seven games since the
Flyers acquired him from the St.
Louis Blues on Nov. 29. The five
goals In one period were a
season-high for the Flyers.
Troy Murray scored a powerplay goal, his sixth goal of the
seasop, to cut the Flyers' lead to
5-3 at 6: 11 of the third period,
shooting the rebound of a Doug
Wilson shot past Philadelphia
goaltender Ron HextailMurray added another powerplay goal at 14:41 before Smith
scored to put the Flyers ahead by
two.
Chicago's Steve Larmer
played In his 509th consecutive
game, tying the club record set
by John Marks.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (UP!)
over seven minutes of the first the boards, outreboundlng West· Senior guard Byron Irvin, Mishalf that opened a 40·22 lead for ern Carolina 30-21.
·
souri's leading scorer, hit 17 of the Hoyas. Georgetown, using Its
Miami (Ohio) 68
hiS 21 points In the second half as famed pressure defense and
Xavier 81
No. 11 Missouri pulled away to conslderablesizeadVantage,outCINCINNATI (UPI) :._Miami
beat Memphis State 86-74 Satur-· scored the Hornets 58-8 In the led by Jim Paul with 17 point~
day In a non-conference game.
second half.
and Jamie Mercurio with 15
Sop)l.omnre forward Doug
Georgetown, 4-0, l!as. y~t to •...Jl.UIJ!!d away In the final thr~
Smith scored 18 points, forward face an NCAA Division I oppo- minutes for a 68-61 victory over
Greg Church had 12 and senior nent, defeating NAIA Hawaii- Xavier Saturday afternoon.
center Gary Leqnard added 111n Loa, NAIA Hawaii-Pacific and
The Redskins, now 2-3, broke a
the second half.
NCAA DiviSion II St. Leo before 58-58 tie with 10 unanswered
Missouri Improved to 7-2 while Saturday. Shenandoah dropped points, six of those by Mercurio.
Memphis State fell lo 3-3. II was to 7-2, with Its two losses against
A free throw by Paul with 3:02
the first time Missouri defeated Division I teams.
remaining put Miami ahead
Memphis State, which had a 4-0
59-58. Mercurto and Jeff Scott
Noire Dame 77
record against the Tigers.
then each added two free trows
Creighton M
Missouri received a spark
and Mercurio a basket. MercuSOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!) when Leonard entered the game
rio's two free throws with 14
with 17:04 remaining. The 7-foot- LaPhonso Ellis scored 17 points
seconds to ptay ended the 101, 264-pound senior scored Mis- and Jamere Jackson and Tim
polnt run.
souri's next seven points to give . Singleton added 13 apiece Satu!t
Karlton Clayborne added 13
day,llfting Notre Dame to a 77-04
the Tigers a 51-48 lead.
points for Miami and Jeff Scott
But with forward Rodney Dou- victory over Creighton.
had 10. Hlll, With 15 rebounds,
The Fighting Irish, 4-0, took the helped Xavier, now4-2, to a 40-35
glas and center Bret Mundt on
the bench with four foulS, Mem- lead for good with an 8-0 run In edge on the boards.
phis State managed to keep the- the final 2: 24 of the first half that
W&amp;.J 75, Kenyon 70
game close behind the shndtlng of made the score 38-30. Jackson
GAMBIER,
Ohlo(UPI) -Tim
sophomore guards John and Kevin Ellery hit 3-polnt shots
Stephenson
scored
22 points
McLaughlin and Leon Perry. In the run, and ElliS added a
Saturday afternoon to lead Wa.
Memphis State tied the game at dU'nk.
shington and Jefferson to a 75-70
Bob Harstad hit a career-high
55-55 with about 12 minutes left,
win over Kenyon.
and trailed only 59-58 with about 28 points for the Bluejays, 2-4,
Stephenson got double-figure
and Chad Gallagher added 11
10 mlnu tes left.
support from Dave 113ranchen
However, Missouri openedupa points and 8 rebounds.
Creighton's only lead, 13-12, with 17 and Danny Jones with 13.
nine-point lead on two free
W&amp;J led most of the way,
throws and a layup by forward came wltb 11: 50 remaining In the
Greg Church, a slam dunk by first half on a Gallagher basket. Including 34-31 at the half.
forward Nathan Buntin and a The Irish regained the lead and Kenyon had pulled to a 56-56 tie
layup by Irvin. Missouri later maintained It until two James with about seven minutes to go,
stretched Its lead to 74-62 with six Farr free throws with 2: 24 left In but couldn't keep up with their
visitors.
minutes left when Irvin scored the half tied the game 30-30.
W&amp;J Is now 3-3, while Kenyon
The
Blue
jays
cut
the
IriSh
lead
seven consecutive points.
won any of Its six games.
hasn't
to
49-47
with
12:50
remaining
In
Perry finished the game as
Tim
Keller paced the Lords
Memphis State's high scorer the game on a Gallagher basket.
·
with
17
points, Andy Kutz added
with 19 points. McLaughlin However, the Irish maintained
14
and
Eric
Nueremberger 12.
the edge by keeping the ball after
added 15.
Memphis State took a 41-40 grabbing offensive rebounds off
lead when Perry hit a driving of missed free throws.
Notre Dame 77
The Irish outrebounded
layup with three sewnds left In
Creighton 84
the first halt. It complete~ a Creighton 49-311 Including 15
SOUTH BEND, Ind. !UPI) sloppy halt that featured , 23 offensive boards.
LaPhonso Ellis scored 17 points.
Kentucky 78
turnovers -12 by MemphiS State
and Jamere Jackson and Tim
Western Caronna 60
and 11 by Missouri.
Singleton added 13 apiece SaturLEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI)
day ,lifting Notre Dame to a 77-64
LeRon ElliS scored 19 points and
Georgetown 114
vlctoty over Creighton.
freshman Riehle Farmer added
Shenandoah 44
The Fighting Irish, 4-0, took the
15 Saturday to lead Kentucky to a
LANDOVER, Md. (UP!)
lead for good with an 8-0 run In
Charles stnlth scored 22 of hiS 25 78-60 victory over Western the final 2: 24 of the first half that
points In the first half and No. 4 Carolina.
made the score 38-30. Jackson
ElliS, who scored 37 points In and Kevin Ellery hit three-point
Georgetown· surrendered just
two field goals In the second half Kentucky's 85-82 loss to Northw- shots ln 'the run, and ElliS added a
Saturday to roll to a 114-40 estern Louisiana Wednesday, hit dunk.
victory over Division Ill Shenan- 8 of 15 from the field and 3 of 4
Bob Harstad hit a career-high
from the free-throw line.
doah College.
28 points for the Bluejays, 2-4,
Unlike In Kentucky's loss Wed- and Chad Gallagher added 11
Smith, a senior guard, contributed 10 points during a 20-5 run . nesday, the Wildcats dominated points and 8 rebounds.

Central State
WILBERFORCE, Ohio (UPI)
- Vernon Turner scored on a
short run and Robert Thomas on
a 63-yard run Saturday af\ernoon
to give Carson-Newman a 13-0
win over Cental State In the
semifinals of the NAIA Division I
playoffs.
,
Carson-Newman takes an 11-2
record Into the national championship next Saturday on Its
home field In Jefferson City,
Tenn., against Adams, a 13-10
winner over Pittsburg State In

ou~ted

from playoffs

the ,day's other semWnal game. Central State· missed a 42-yard
Central ·State, which fumbled field goal attempt, Carsonaway two scoring opportunities, Newman took over and scored
ended It season at 11·2.
three plays later. Thomas broke
Central State was stopped on loose for a 63-yard run.
Its first possession and punter
Central State lost three fumTony Copeland, kicking into the bles and had one pass
wind, got off a 12-yard punt, with Intercepted.
Carson-Newman starting on the
Late In the third quarter, CSU
Marauders 43-yard line.
fumbled on the Carson-Newman
After a Central State penalty . 20, and In the fourth period, CSU, '
and a 15-yard penalty, Vernon starting on t}le Carson-Newman
went over the from two.
30, tumbled two plays later on the
In the fourth ql!,lltter, after 12.

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December 11. 1988

Pomaioy-Middleport-Gallipolia. Ohio-Point Pleaaant. W.Va.

Page

December 11

'

Eastem undisputed SVAC
leader after 74-70 triumph
By SCOTT WOLFE
TlmeH!eatlael staff
EAST MEIGS - Billed as the
prtzeflght between the two undefeated teams In the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference, Frl•
day night's cage clash proved to
be a " fifteen round" bout between the two heavyweights, but
In 0the end Eastern won a
hard-fought 74·70 battle over
the Oak Hill Oaks.
This boys hardwood classic
will long be remembered for ·Its
fierce competition and down to
the wire finish.
Eastern remained undefeated
In league play at J.O and 3·1
overall while Oak Hill dropped to
2-1 In the league and 4·1 overall.
Picked to finish In the bottom
half of tbe SVAC, Eastern has
certainly been the surprise ot the
league. The Eagles now find
themselves In command of first
place In this Infant season.
Playing the role of giant slayer,
EHS has knocked off league
"Goliath" Southern, this year's
favorite North Gallla, and now
has cut down the timbers (Oaks).
Although not overwhelming In
stature, the dynamic duo of
junior guard tandem Scott Fitch
and Shaun Savoy are big at heart,
displaying glant-kiUing tactics
·with Identical 21 point efforts.
Going Into the game Eastern
knew It would have Its hands full
In the paint and would have to
look forward to a conservative
Inside game as the Oaks' 6-foot·8

.•

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SHADOWS WILDCAT - Kyger Creek guard
Chad Leach, left, shadows Hannan Trace guard
Brad Cremeens In the first quarter ol Friday
night's game In Cheshire. Leach Jed all scorers

: .. .'

with 20 (l!lintl, and Cremeens tied teammate Tim
Brmnlleld lor team honors wlth ·l4 (l!lints, as the
WUdcats held oil a late KCHS rally to win 18-57.
(Tim..,..sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

.r- Hannan

Trace Wildcats top
~ Kyger Creek Bobcats, 58-57
.

•

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Stafl
CHESHIRE - Turnovers·
. , .. .good defense .. Joss of concen·
•· tratlon . .. not playing smart·
.. . these were some of the
observatloqs made by the eoach• lng staffs In Friday night's
, Hannan Trace·Kyger Creek
:: game, a contest the Wildcats won
•. 58·57.
.
The win puts theWIIdcatsat3-3
:.
overall and 2-11n the league . KC
Is 0·4 on the year and continued
·. Its losing streak to five games.
The Wildcats started the game
, with the upper hand, but with the
• game' s first three-pointer, cour·
· tesy of Bobcat point guard Chad
,:-: Leach, the hosts went 9 for 12
.: from the field In- an offensive
assault that didn't stop until they
'. had 16-polnt leads In the first
• quarter and early In the second
quarter. "They got away early
· ; because of our turnovers, and we
-·· panicked when we got behind."
::; said Hannan Trace skipper Mike
• . Jenkins.
Bobcat forward Alan Denney
was Instrumental In distancing
KC from the Wildcats with a pair
of three-pointers almost two
,. minutes apart In the first quar·
ter. After Denney's second long
• bomb, the Wildcats called time;
~ at which time Jenkins called his
•' players to the bench and told
.. them not to " stand around and
: watch," citing Trace's ear)y lack
• of aggressiveness on the boards.
But when Kyger posted Its last
,, 16-polnt lead, a 2~·10 score with
.• 6:02 left before halftime, that,
·: according to Kyger Creek coach
: Larry Markham, was when the
: • problems began for the Bobcats.
. " We lost our concentration and
• • Intensity. We dldn' t do the things
that got us there," Markham
,. ·• said.
The Wildcats continued the
aggressive man -to-man defense
;t with which they started the
.:
game, and the results began to
~·
pay off as they cuI Into the
~
Bobcats' lead. In the first four
~
minutes of the second quarter,
.. Hannan Trace outscored their
;
hosts 11-4, and e ven though the
•
Bobcats ended the first half with
•
~
a 34·30 lead, Trace's aggressiveness on defense had successfully
.;
~
spilled over Into their offense.
"
The fact that the Wildcats went
~
11·13 from the foul line In the
• second quarter was a vital partln
::: the comeback.
:
, Leach started off the third
:: quarter with a long jumper that
was short of three-point range by
·• Inches, putting , the Bobcats
• ahead 36-30. Then Trace hit two
:
straight uncontested buckets to
cut the lead to 36·34.
•• · Denney, who had three fouls In
:
the flrsl half, picked up his fourth
'
with '5: 33 left, sending Wildcat
• forward Shad Johllson tq - the
charity stripe for two foul shots.
:
• He missed both free throws, and
~
the Bobcats were out of the
• woods, or so It seemed.
••
In the bat tie on the boards that
:
followed, KC center Mike Reese
•
was hit In the mouth with an
•
• elbow , sllghtly loosening one of
; , ·his front teeth.
•
Wildcat Rich Cornell tied the
:;•;game at 31 after sinking a pair of
• •• •free throws. at the 4: 51 mark.
•,•,.
• , •• 'l'wenty-slx seconds I ater KC
: •;• torward John Sipple hit a jumper
;:;:1n the paint after getting the
•:·:rebound on his own miss and
:•:•spinning off a defender, giving
: -:! ;!Jbe Bobcats a 38-26 lead.
·-~·!•:· The Guyan squad tied the
~ • : ·,kame at 38 when sophomore
•:;-tenter Craig Rankin connected
·!· ~n a short jumper with 4: llleft.

. _... ,

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r. ',
ti

1

"

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..

.·... •

•

I

•

. ATHENS - A field of 12 teams
which combined tor an average
of more ,than 18 victories last
season at the varsity level will be
participating In the McDonald's
Day Inn Basketball Classic
which Is set for Ohio University's

'

Though Leach revived the Bob- line to shoot a one-and-one. He
cat lead with a layup that sank both shots to lie the game at
produced a 40·38 KCHS advan· 44.
tage, HT guard Brad Cremeens
With 36 seconds left In the third
decided to end the trading of period, Bobcat forward Ted
buckets when he sank a three- Perry committed his third foul,
point shot .from the left side to sending Brumfield to the line. He
give Hannan Trace Its first lead,
connected on both foul shots,
a 4140 count with 3:011e!t.
putting the visitors ahead 4644.
Foul-ups. bleeps and blunders With three seconds left, Vlllanu·
became the order of things after eva visited the line again, hitting
Cremeens' first three-pointer. the first shot but missing the
Tl)e Bobcats' Chad Johnson second. Hannan Trace ended ihe
found the Wildcats' baseline third frame ahead 46·45.
defense too much and lost the ball
Cremeens started off the last
out of bounds. Trace got the ball, quarter by hitting the nylon from
only to have senior guard/for·
three-point range, which gave
ward Tim Brumfield miss the HT a 4945 lead. From that point
basket. When KC got the ball the Wildcats managed to keep
back, everything seemed to point four points between themselves
to a Bobcat lead, but something and the Bobcats untU Perry,
happened on the way to the after missing the first free throw,
bucket. Leach was called for sank the second to cut Trace's
charging.
lead to 53·50 with 3:14 left. After
Cremeens dropped In another consecu live missed one-and-one
long bomb, this time from the left chances by both sides, Denney
baseline with 2: 261eft, to give the . scored on a layup to bring the
Wildcats a 4440 lead. Chad Bobcats to within one, at 53·52.
Johnson hit a layup 21 seconds
Brumfield scored on a long
later to cut Trace's lead to 44·42. jumper to put Trace ahead 55-52, .
After Leach missed a one-and· but Kyger Creek stayed on their
one chance at the 1:23 mark, heels with an Inside jumper by
Wildcat forward Bill Bailey was Leach with 1:42 left. However,
called for charging. The Bobcats Kyger committed a foul, sending
held on to the ball until Hannan Brumfield to the line to shoot a
Trace committed a foul, sending one-and·one. He made both
KC's Ernest VIllanueva to the
ContinuedJ on C-3

• SVAC STANDINGS
(All lame&amp;)
TEAM
W L
P OP
North Gallla ...... ..4 1 379 320
Eastern .. ..... .. .... .. 3 1 322 322
Hannan Trace ..... 3 3 385 360
Southern .... .......... 2 2 280 270
Sou1jlwestern ....... 2 2 273 303
Oak Hill .............. 2 2 261 267
Kyger Creek ....... ,o 4 243 293
Symmes Valley .. .0 5 269 370
(SVAC games)
TEAM
WL POP
Eastern·.. , ....... .. ... 3 0 249 232
North Gall Ia .. .. .. .. 2 1 240 189
Southern. ....... ...... 2 1 228 203
. Oak Hill .. ...... .. : ... 2 1 206 182
Hannan Trace .. .. . 2 1 197 184
Southwestern . ..... : 1 2 185 228
Kyger Creek .. .. .... 0 3 169 208
Symmes Valley . .. 0 3 155 203
TOTALS ......... ... 12 12 1629'1629
L
(Reserves)
W L P OP
'TEAM
North Gallla .. .... .. , 3 0 176 99
Southern .............. 3 0 166 107
Hannan Trace .. .... 3 0 144 · 94
Eastern ......... ...... 1 2 144 175
Oak Hill ......... ..... 1 2 119 135
Symmes Valley ... 1 2 113 126
Southwestern ........ 0 3 96 134
Kyger Creek.. ....... 0 3 82 170
TOTALS .. .... .. ... ~ l2 12 1040 1040
Friday's resulta
Hannan Trace 58, Kyger Creek 57
North Gallla 93, Southwestern 58
Eastern 74, Oak Hill 70 ·
Southern 63, Symmes Valley 47
Tuesday's schedule
Eastern at Kyger Creek
North Gallla
at Southern
.
Symmes Valley at Southwestern
Hannan Tr,ace at Oak Hill

-2 I

L

in Pom..,. Wiltl ATTORNEY D .
MICHAEL MUUEN8

=""

Opposite the Post Office

rmm
LIFE

IUIINI!!IS

i

•'
•.

''.

1951

HULTH '

.
•. .

\
•

GIIOIJ.'

took game scoring honors with 25
points and nailed four of the
Tigers' 22 rebounds.
Both teams connected on 52
percent of their shots with
Marietta getting 22 of 42 while
•Logan was 24 ~f 46, but the Chiefs
swished 16 of27 free throws while
MHS was four of seven at the line.
White led Logan In rebounding
with eight with Tim Moore
collecting six.
The Cblefs entertained the ZanesvUie Blue Devils In a
Saturday night contest with ·
Marietta Idle.
The box score:
MARJETI'A (U) - Justin
Herb 2·1·5; Brent McKenna 12·1·
25; Mike Roach 1·2·0-8; Keith
Tornes 2-0-4; Frank Steratore
1·1-0.5; Mike Wharff 1·0-2; Chris
!!chmedes (1.2-2. TOTALS 1t-3+
51 .
LOGAN (8~) - Shawn AI·
lender 1·0.2; Tim Moore 2·1·4-11;
Shane Champ 0-2-2; Chad Stiver·
son 0-2-2; Doug Stiverson 4·2·10;
Chad Dennis 1·0-2; Jim White

Logan-cage coach acquitted
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)- Log"!' Hlp School boys basketball
coach Kirk Hardman was acquitted Friday on charges of
haying sexual contact with members ol hll learn.
Hardman, 3'l, Indicted by a Hocklnll County IJ'and jury on 7
counts ol sexual contact, was found Innocent by a Mont11omery
County Common Pleas jury on all counts.
, Tbe trial, which started Monday, was moved to Dayton from
Logan on a change of venue.
·
Hardman was suspended from his job without pay by the
Logan School board after the coach was ·accused of placing a
video camera In a boys locker room and fUmlnl the players
wbUe they sbowered.
Hardman, who 18 single, has been a coach at teacher at the
blgb school lor seven years.

Friday's scores
Hell~

·n, MaryavUir M

Blanchater '211, MMoa4f
Bloom Cari'GIIIII. FalrftMd Ualo• 88

Boardman ... Younp Cb•ey M
Bol:ldll 71, Sl•f!J Fairlawn&amp;!
Bawlal Greea •· Manaee 5f
Bradford 51. Ml111111nawa VaiiJ2 ~
Brecknllle H, lltrf!a Ml-k 43
BrookvUie 81, Mild•ttown Mactgon U
Bra•wtck 5'7, Loll Clowerle&amp;l41
IIIICkeJt Ce•&amp; H, Colonel Crawford 63
Buckf!1e Nordl il, Brldl;epurt It
Buckt!Je VaJif'!)' In, LoltdtD IS (lot)
Cambrldp ij, Steube•...tlle 11 {Of;)
C&amp;mi!IMIIIB, Str•lhe{l U

"To live in faearu
we Leave beh.i nd
is not to die"

8-3-19; Dan Starner 3-0.6; Jim
Redd 4-3-11. TOTALS 2!*-1-1&amp;-85.
Score by quarters:
. Marletta .. ........ ...... s 12 10 21·51
Logan .. ... .. ............. ll 7 22 25·65
Reserve score: Logan 50, Ma·
rletta 41.

Sports briefs
Skiing
Peter Mueller of Switzerland
won the first World Cup downhill
race of the season at Val
Gardena. Italy, with a time of
two m inutes and 51 hundredths of
a second. Armin Assslnger of
Austria was second In 2: 00.69,
fo llowed by Rob Boyd of Cana da
In 2: 00.79. Defending World Cup
champion Plrmln Zu rbrlggen of
Switzer land was fourth.

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shots, and the Wildcats were
ahead 57-54.
With 14 seconds left, Perry
fouled Cremeens, which resulted
In Perry's exit and Cremeens'
opportunity to shoot one-and-one.
He hit the first shot but missed
the· second one, giving the Wild·
cats a 58·54 lead.
The Bobcats Immediately got
the ball in Leach's hands, and on
his flrst r shot attempt from
three-polni range , he missed. He
rushed In to get his own rebound,
stepped behind the three-point
line and fired. The long bucket
wentln with four seconds left, but
the Bobcats fell one point short.
Leach led all scorers with 20
points, while Brumfield and
Cremeens were the main engines
for the Wildcats with 14 each.
In the reserve game, the
Wildcats won 51·29 . Jason Black
led Trace with 14 points, while
'Phil Bradbury and Shane
Swisher led the Bobcats with
eight each.
On Tuesday night, Hannan
Trace will host Oak Hill, while
Kyger Creek will entertain
Eastern.

HANNAN TRACE (58)- Tim
Brumfield 2·1·7-14; Brad Cremeens 2·3-n4; Blll Bailey 4-0.3·
11; Rich Cornell 0·0·6·6; Cratg
Rankin 3-0·0·6; J .J . Bevan 0-0·4·
4; Shad Johnson 1-0·0-2; Caldwell
1·0·0·2. TOTALS- 12--4-22-58
· Field-goal shooting - 16-38
(42.1 percent)
Foul shooting - 22·30 (73.3
percent)
Rebounds- 19
Turnovers - 14
KYGER CREEK (57) -Chad
Leach 7·2·0·20; Mike Reese 5·0·2· ·
12; Alan Denney 1·2·0-8; John
Sipple 1·0·3-5; Ernest VIllanueva
1·0·3·5; Chad Johnson 2·0·0·4;
Ted Perry 1·0·1·3. TOTALS 184·9·57
·Field-goal shooting - 22-42
(52.4 percent)
Foul shooting - 9-16 (56.3
percent)
Rebounds - 22 (Reese 7)
Assists- 10 (Leach 3)
Steals- 6 (Reese 3)
Turnovers - 19
Score by quarters
HTHS ....... ..... 8 22 16 12-58
KC ..... ... .. ... ... 22 1~ 11 12-57

~,.,.~

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eight of 11 free throws, and netted
31 rebounds.
Saturday night both teams
played non-league opponents
with Jackson host•g Wellston
and Warren visiting the Belpre
Golden Eagles.
The box score:
WARREN (73) -Brad Holbert
3·0.6; Curt Plummer 6-2-14; Scott
Mitchem 7-1·15; Tyler Barnes
2·1·5; Larry Ryan 1·1·0.5; Jeff
Ontko 8-4·20; Brian Neville J.0-6;
Kevin Fausnaugh 1·0-2. TOTALS
31-1·8-73.
JACKSON (40) - Mike
Abrams 0.2·2; Greg Harris 10·5·
25; Steve Walburn 1·0·2; Mike
Moore 1·1·3; Doug Kldd 3·0·6;
George Smalley 1·0-2. TOTALS
·1&amp;-&amp;40.
Score by Quarters:
Warren ..... ......... 14 15 23 21-73
Jackson ...... .. ........ 9 10 6 15-40
Reserve Score: Warren 48,
Jackson 44.
Continued from C-2
... _..::::=::.::==~C--.--

JACKSON - Jackson's Greg
Harris poured In 25 points Friday
night but his performance could
·not offset a balanced Warren
Local offense that carried the
Warriors to a 73-40 SEOAL
victory.
The Warriors, now 3·2 and H ,
, jumped to a 14·9 first period lead
and were never headed as they
led by quarter scores of 29·19 and
52· 25 against the winless
Ironmen .
Jell Ontko led the assault on
the nets with 20 points, Scott
Mitchem tallied 15, and Curt
Plummer added 14 for the,
winner~.
,
Warren connected on 32 of 61
fielders, eight of 12 charity
tosses, and· pu lied down 38
rebounds, Brad Holbert getting
10.
The Ironmen hit just 25 percent
from the floor (16 of 62), made

lersburg (20·0), Wehrle (15·1) ,
had highly-successful junior var·
Indian Valley North (19·1),
: : slty squads last season.
l)prlngfleld
Catholic Central (18which wUI partlelpa te
I In Teams
2),
Wellston
(18·2), Bewv'er East·
the event Include Columbus
ern
(17·3)
and
Russell, Ky. (22·3) .
Wehrle, the defending Division
The
lineup
of games for this .
IV state c)lamplon In Ohio (26-2
event
Is: Oak Hill N"S.
year's
last year); Wheelersburg (24-1)
Columbus
Hartley
at noon; Gran·
Indian Valley (a consolidation of
view Heights vs. Indian Valley at
Indian Valley South, which was
1:45 p.m .; Athens vs. Wh~lers·
.24-1 lbst ·season, and Indian
' Valley North); Springfield Ca· , burg at 3:30 p.m.; Trimble vs.
' thollc Central (24·2); Beaver Russell, Ky. at 5:15p.m.: Well·
ston vs. Wehrle at 7 p.m.; and
Eastern of Pike County (23-1)
Beaver Eastern at vs. Spring·
and Russell, Ky. (28-5) .
. Catholic Central at 8:45
field
Among those with top reserve
p.m.
records last year were: Whee-

446-0404
COMMERCIAL &amp; PERSONAL

.-

LOGAN - Member s ot the
Logan Chieftain basketball team '
shook off the effects of testifying
at the trial of their former coach :
.t his· ·week, to overcome the
Marietta Tigers with a second
half rally that carried them to a
65-51 SEOAL triumph Friday
night.
·
DOug Stiverson, Jim White,
Jim Redd, and other members ot
the team traveled to Dayton this
week to testify In the sex-related
trtal of former coach, Kirk
Hardman, who was found not
guUty of all charges by a
Montgomery County jury Frl·
day. (See trail story In today' s
Times-Sen tineI) .
After falling behind 20-18 at
halftime Friday night, the Chiefs
. oulscored the Tigers 47·311n the
second half to remain undefeated
in four outings.
.
White finished at the top scorer
with 19 points while Redd and
Tim Moore chipped In 11 each tor
.the Chleftalds.
Marietta's Brent McKenna

Warren Local drops Jackson
·73-40 for fmt league win

336 S. High St. Columbus, Otl.
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Convocation Center Saturday,
Dec. 17. Many of the teams also
Continued on C-3

NewI
The Fastest
Show In Town"

..

ROCKER HONORED - Auburn defensive tackle Tracy Rocker
llashes a smlle .after receiving the 1988 Lombardi Award wianer
tor being the driving Ioree In the Tigers' defense, whlcb pushed .
Auburn to a winning record and a trip to a post season bowl...
Boeker, a senior, llnlshed ahead of three other finalists In winning ·
the 19th annual award, named In honor of Green Bay Packer coach
Vince Lombardi. (UPI)

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BANKRUPTCY

SVA(:standings

SIPPLE DRIVES JoliD Sipple, with ball,
past Hannan Trace's Scolt Caldwell,
drives Inside after
behind Sipple, to score two of his live points In the oecond quarter of
Friday nllhl's SVAC battle on the Bobcals' home court; The
WUdcats came from behind to post a ~8-57 win. (Times-Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

I.Dgan remains unbeaten Wi~h
65-51 win over Marietta five

Inch Jedd Rawlins stakes his , Eastern held on (or the dramatic
claim to this territory.
·
win. ·
· Eastern mixed It up well, · In the reserve contest Eastern
tantalizing the Oaks with torrled won 62-47 led by Tim Bissell with
outsdle shooting from Fitch and 14 and Jeff Durst with 12. Matt
Savoy, then pulling the defense Flnlaw and Mike Wheeler each
out to pick up'some quick buckets added 10 for Eastern. Tony
Inside.
Simpson ahd 6, Jones 12, and
Savoy and Fitch not only ShaneMaynard20forthevlsltlng
received shooting honors, bl.lt Oaks.
were just as lrilportant with their
In the varsity contest EHS hit
careful ballhandling. Equally 27 of 62 percent; 3.5, 1 of 7 three
Important to the EHS success point land, and was 17·24 percent
wasKennyCaldwell(fivepolnts) 68 from the line. OH was 30·57
and senior Chris Lance (8 points) percent, 53.6, and 10-12 percent
who did a' good job holding the 83.3 at the line. EijS was
handle.
.
outrebounded 2042 by OH, who
Insiders Mike Martin and Mike was led by C. Smith with 13 and
Frosst found the going tough Jedd Rawlins with 15, and 7
Inside, but excelled with respec· blocked shots. Mike Martin had 9
table 12 point and 7 point efforts. rebounds for Eastern. · ·
Eastern combined a patient
Box score:
offensive pattern and adhesive
EASTERN (74) -Mike Martin
defense In the first frame to lead 4·4·12. Shaun Savoy 5·1·8·21, Scott
19-13 'at the buzzer.
Fitch 10·1·21, Chris Lance 4·0·8,
Oak .Hill. fought back In the Kenny Caldwell 1·3·5, Mike
second round as sparks ·flew In Wheeler 0-0·0, Mike Frost 3·1·7.
the frlctlon·fllled battle to stay on TOTALS 27·1-17·74.
the number one pillar In the ... OAKHILL(70)-ChuckMIIIer
SVACrace. EHSheldontoa33-29 1·0-2, Bobby Coon 0.0.0, Chad
Smith 7·3·17, Bobby Ward H ·18,
lead at the half.
Oak Hill fought back with Jedd Rawlins 14-1-29, Josh Ruff
poise but couldn't get over the 1·2·4. TOTALS 30-10-'711.
hump as Eastern coUed like an
Score by quarters:
Anaconda to smother areas of Oak Hill ..... .. .... . 13 16 16 25-70
success mustered by the Oaks.
Eastern ...... ....... 19 14 18 23-74
EHS bull tits advantage to 51-45
after three rounds of staving off I
violent attacks from Its foe. OH
oulscored the winners In the
_614-221-01.8
hectic last round, but .dld not get
over the victory hump and

OU to host 12 teams
in holiday cage classic

Sunday Time•Sentinei- Page- C-3

Pleasant. W. Va.

(

$999

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or Chichi

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32 Tllet/Cartoo .
Full Cartona ONLn

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\

PagB

Pomeroy~Middleport

C-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs freshmen win 2 games

OVC:S WINS TOURNAMENT TITLE - Ohio
Valley Christian's basketball team displays its
. trophies alter winning tbe OVCS Invitational
Tournament championship, sponsored by lhe
Willis Funeral Home of GaiUpolls, on Saturday,
Dec. 3. In the front row (L-R) are Matt Willis,

ROCK SPRINGS- Coach Ron
Logan's freshmen continued
their Winning ways as tlley
posted two victories in last
week's actton.

scoring.
The second victory came at the
expense of the Southern fresh ·
men. With James Howerton
leading the way with 20, the
Logan crew! racked up a 57-45

Against Hannan Trace, the
young Marauders ~ all)e out on
top by a 48-31 score. With all10
players seeing action, the Meigs
team commltled only 11 turnov·
ers and, according to Logan,
improved great!~ on their ball
handling.

win.

Jim Brace led the Hanhan
Trace ·crew ~tth ten points.
Shawn Hawley was credited with
14 to lead all scorers. James
Howerton canned ·12 for Meigs
and Jeremy Phalln posted 7.
Darin Logan add 1. Kevin Musser
4, Chuck Mash 6, Robby Wyatt 2
and Bill Harless 2 to close out the

Wlllls Funeral Home; Benton Hall, Tony Jamora,
Tom Rawlings and Jamey Black. Behind them
are Eric Burgess, Brady Johnson, John Keenan,
E .T. VanMatre, Barry Call, Shannon Gilliam and
Coach WilHam Asbury.

By Un~M&gt;• PreKs .. ler-.tlelllll
Frlda,y, OPe. t

Akr Buchtl'lll, Akr North 51
.'\kr Cf'ni-Hower 5'7, 'Akr Kenmore liS
Akr t'lre~~hNif' '7.&amp;,.;\kr Ell«t S8
..U.rGarleld87, AkrEM1841otl
A.kr B•hiU\ 13, Canton l'enl Cath 35

Alar Man-.oht~~•r ·11, Wt"~Jt Holnws 41
Allen lEast 7$, r ........ ,,l (lit)
Alllancr 7... N Cant01t Hoowr 5I
Amaada 13, Ucklnc Htl'l 45
Amherst •· Roeky lttver 5!
An-U,Ru•au ·
W huny "'"' .. fl. Syl Soucb\' 1t&gt;w 58
Aailwt"rp.,.l, Fort Jeulnp !tB
Arllnaf:oa Si, IJIM'tr-Benlea S:l
AMI•dCren~ew 4II,S.ull Cf'llttlllll
AMI Sf: John 511, 'PalnH ftl;\-erslde liS
Alltubu .. 151, .\.Ill hi Edll'Wood -tO '
Allleu
Galllpallll n
AYOII Lake It, Olm1k!d lfalla U
Barbertoa 7H, Kent 77
8&amp;r11NYIIIP15. "St Clltin.'oille 54
By Vllla,eo 17, Wflllblkl! .&amp;1
Beadlwoed ltl, Blcllmnd HUM
Be•er Local 54, IAUsoo Nort• til

a.

..

h•er&lt;.Teek 85, W C•ruUtoa $3
a.c~ronl !4, L)'lldlturst Br•lll 41

Mario• EIPn 14, RldJedalf' il
Mario• Plea.nt 58, Carey !5
Marlins Fl'r1")' 8!, Terolllo 8:1
M•IAIIonPerryil, Can Glt-nOak til
Mlllll!IIIIOII Jackson &lt;Ill, Can Tlm~n -11
M111avllle 83, Wf'!il Mualdnpm 71
Ml.'Comb St. Hanlin Northern$)
Mcll...... tiS'l', MIHRJ Bld&amp;:f' 6a
Me•• 71. Nerth ft.o)'alt a. 10
Me•• e.ckeyt&gt; It, BrooWyn 4fl
Mentor 8'7, Euttall.e North 11!1
Ml•l Valli!)' 53, Uberf)' Orr .&amp;1
Mlalll..,l'l fl. benton Ed«ewood 51
Ml ddlefldd Canll•l 17, Pl'rl')' n
Mlddfl!(own Chr 76, Cln Sf Rita -10
Mldlletown 72, W Chf'JI1Cr Lakoca 85
Mldllelown Fenwklt '73, DaJCarroll61
Mllloo Unkln 7'1, Sl*'ey Ltobman 7$
Mlni!I"W. 17, Tuslcy \'alley 5I
Mlnp 10, Stt"Ubvenvllle ('at hN

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Locally
ll

51

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Ownf~d
~. ! f i l .; ll) ' ' ,, '-,

7 Wlm, 2 Lossn
, 1 SaYe, 3.•s EU
WILL BE AT

/ '

GLOECKNER'S

ifJ}Jli'l iuil'(i,'

II 0 EAST MAIN, POIIIIOY

BURLILE OIL COMPANY

.WED., DEC. 1•,
•PMto7PMFOI

JCT. RT. 7 &amp; RT. 35

Nel1onvUie 11, Hwnloclt MIIIH" "7

AUTOGRAPHS AND
PlaDIES

KANAUGA, OHIO
446-4119

New Albany H, l.uc• 53
NN Boalen t7, Pore.no•IEast 41

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MONTGOMERY

BUR ILE OIL CO.

Morran 83. Dretdl!ll Tr ..YaJiey 61

Mount Qllead 5!1, Crelllllnf 50
M.um \'rr.mn 6$., FriUIII.IIn HI!! 18

Natkual Trail 58, .Vcanlfil

Nt•w London j9, MapiP,ton U
Nt'w Mlam161, ClnSelo'to;n Hlilll U
Nrw Rl chmond fi:l, Wllllamsburr '2

Nt•'-· Brf'Men S:f, Mendon Ualon 117
Nf'W CODL'Ord 71, CroOI«s\1111' 87
New Knox\tlle 4S, Marion l.oc al Ul

M•to•Caih18, Fre*tcktownil

-----

Bedford 01Mel1i, P•tM Holy Nanu•

Bellaire "'t, Bdl•• Soutll U

Bell.ilialne-&amp;.1, Sprt. 1 NE &amp;I
Beii~IR SJ, 11fftn CclllmbiM !I (et)
Belpw M, Well•o•lll
llftljaml• Lo1• •. Rhlpnumt 5I

•

Beru U. SlrupYIIIf' D'! 1
Berni! U•lon 72, Mllhnper1 88
lll!thl!:l Tile i-1. Fl!lll'il.V 51
Canal Full• NW U, .\kr Co¥Pnlry U

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.· Va.

Southern Tornadoes tightened
the draw strings on its defensive
bootstra"ps to outlast the Symmes
Valley Vikings, 63-47. here Frl·
day evening in boys' SVAC
basketball actlon at Symmes

Valley High Sc hool.
Southern is now 2·2 a nd 2-1 in
the SVAC , while Symmes Is 0·5
and 0-3 in th e le ague.
Accrediting his team's victory
to super foul shootlng and great

Meigs drops 88-59 TVC tilt
ROCK SPRINGS - McCiel·
land sank a long range shot for .
the Trimble Tomcats just se·
col\ds Into the opening stanza of
the TVC contest against the
Meigs Marauders to give his
team a 3-0 lead and the Cats were
off and running for an 88·59 win
against the hOsis .
The lo~s dropped Meigs to 0·3
,
·on the season.
Meigs could not manage to
contain the Cat offense with Jeff
Tolbert, who Coach Paul Pettit
deems the best in the TVC,
leading the way with a game high
28 points. Working the ball
downcourt, the Cats would very
patiently keep the ball on the
perimeter until the Inside
opened.
If not, they took advantage of
their accuracy from long range
to drUl the three point goal.
During the course of the game,
the visitors were 10 of 13 !rom
outside the circle with McClel·
land accounting for five of those.
Defensively the Trimble squad
kept pressure on the Marauders
throughout the evening. The ·
Marauders did not score a field
goal until midway through period
bne. At that time the Cats
enjoyed a 13·3 edge and never
relented In their attack.
Statistically, the visitors pre·
valled In every aspect of the
game except at the free throw
line where they hit on 10 of 21,
much to the chagrin of Coach

Pettit, for a 47.2 average while
the Marauders canned S of 13 to
hit 61.5.
Trimble shot a 62.9 from the
field (34 of 54), outre bounded the
Marauders 27 to 17, committed 11
turnovers; had 8 steals and were
whistled for 12 personal fouls.
Meigs hit on 24 of 63 attempts
from the field (38.1) , came up
with 10 steals and committed 9
turnovers. They were called for
13 infract iOns.
Box score
MEIGS (58) - .Burdette 5·0·!h
10. Betzlng 3·1·0·9, Baker 3·0·1'''1,
Powell 2·0-1-5, Barton 1-0·1-3,
Neigler 3-1-0-9, Oller 1·0·0-2,
Greene 0-0·0·0, Humphreys 0·0·0·
0, Crooks 2-1-4-11, Stewarll-0-1·3·.
TRIMBLE (88) Holbert
20-6-2-28, McClelland 4-15-3-22,
Auflick 10·0·2-12, Blngrman 4-0-15, Downs 6·6·0·12, Fouts 2-0-0-2,
Sayre 0-3-2-5, Jenkins 2·0·0-2,
Mecum 0·0·0·0.
Score by quarters
Meigs. ..... ........ ........ 7. 25 39 59 ,
Trimble ... ........ ........ 24 46 61 88

lively. Leading the way for Meigs
was Ke vin Taylor who posted)4.
Close behind were Terry
lv)cGuire with 12 and Robert
Fields with 10. Rounding out the
scoring for the Marauders wer
Wright with 2, VanMeter who tiad
7, Troy Gibea ut with 4 and Frank
Blake who added a field goal.

Friday's soores
:'I t.:oll t•Ki' IIIII 7;i, \\'t'Mttrn Brown ~6
N (j.illl la !1:1, P..r.rlol Soulhw~!~&lt;ill'r n$11
N Lo-wlo&lt; lou rg Triad H. fo'alrha.nlls tit
Norlh OhnSU'd 67 , •·alnit"W Park :n
North Union 62, Granvill e 50
J'II'Qrv.'lllki5. Ru cyruii;~!l
No r\'lul kSt PIW 175, Bl~k Rlvt&gt;r GO
Nor~o~;t)'llf' 75, !&lt;imlthvUit• 62

Nurwoud 63. Amell~t M
OWt Harllor 87 , M11r,;1U'PIIa 41
Ohrrlln ; ;t, K ..y!ltont' ill
()~erlln Fln•IMd!i 66, Brooluildt&gt; ~ :l
Ontarlu ~.Spar Ia Hl~hllind :iti
Orrrlllt•llla, Na;..arrf' Falrle~s ~

seco nd hal f d efen se, Coac tt
Howie Caldwe ll stated, ' T wo
things we need ed to improve on
all sea son helped us win tonight.
We played nice de fen se the
se cond half and we did a nice job
on the llne. Da ve (McMillan ) wa s
in foul troubl e a ll night and the
bench came in and did a nice job
f illing ."
Southern turned the tables in
the s econd half when it broke
open a tight game and close 30-28 ·
)1alltime score behind a super
defense . Symmes Valley did no t
score until the 5:15 mark In the
third frame, when It scored just
four overall points, then did not
score unltll the end of the fram e .
Southern push ed Its advantage to
45-32 during the span.
Sophomore guard Andy Bae r
led Southern offensively with 15
markers, while guard Chad Tay lor tallied 13, Including 7-9 from
the line. Junior pivot man Brad
Maynard diced it up inside in the
absence of Dave McMillan to
notch 11 points, incl)ldlng 9·10
from the line.
Senior Chris Stout, who was
injured in the KC game, watched
from the sideline as x-ra y s

The reserve contest was much
closer with the Marauders enjoy Ing the lead through much of the
.opener but seeing the . bubble
burst as Moore sank both ends of
a one and one with two seconds
left to break a 51·51 tie and give
the Tomcat JV a 53-51 win .
Moore, Shamhart and Jenkins
were In double figures for the
Cats with 16, 10 and 12 respec·

.

1988-89

Ch lrtlon 7&amp;, Kf'nllt~• Sll
Cln CAPE H. Marlemoli t2
Cln Couliry ~ Ml , Cln Summit IH
Cln Elder 1.~, Ctn Pu n"ell -18
Cln Gr~enNIIs 1:1, N Btond T~lor tt
Cln itu~~;hn 70, HarrbH.1• SB
Cln LaSalle II. Cia &amp;lcoo S7

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Cit" Soudl t7, Oe IEaat TeciiiD
( :te St.IQt~ePh K. Oe SliiMl.. a-15
Cle WNt Tech ts, Oe CoiH.wood 88
Cl~eiMd Hrlpt1&amp;0, Par ... lA
Cllll1,.4ocademy Ill, Ulentang 57
Clfaroolthaven lit, C.l Undl!n •
Col East 83, Col Beechcrefl H
Col E.stmiJOI' 'l'D, Col BriiP 64
Coll•llf'ptndence 511, ColMar-Frank 52
tol Norttulld KZ. Mllnln 44
Col8t ChiU"h!tt ea,.Cel Hartley -10
Col Wallu8on '78, CGI Ready 48
Col Wehrle i l, Col DeSall!ll 5I
Col Wnl S7, Col Sodt 81
Col WhehiOflf' 66, Col Cen&amp;ennlaJ 18
Colerain •• Mouni Hultt'Q' l8
Columbia 50, Ol)'ahop HeiJhl8 :li
Columbu8 Grove '73, Upper Scioto Val

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On Our Lot Saturday, Dec. 17,1988
From Noon To ?? To Help Us Reduce
Our Inventory • us Vehicles To
Choose From.
HEBE'S HOW IT.WILL WORK...
II' BID ON THE VEHICLE YOU WANT
II' TRADE-INS WILL BE ACCEPTED
II' LOCAL BANK REPRESENTATIVE
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ON PREMISES
TO FINANCE
VEHICLES PURCHASED .
Owner Has The Right

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22.95

•

Reg.
348.85

,.-=:--..

Covld&amp;ton 59, Tlppl\ly 37
CuyahOII Fall!! 7.t, Akr Sprtn1 1)8
Dan¥tll• u, Ge•lf&gt;rbur,; n
Day Chr 7.f., HamUtoa Badin D
Day Colonel Whl&amp;e tl. 1M)' •lmomlfl
Day .Iefier.. U, Da.y Pai&amp;.P:raoa 58
n.y Mudow•ale Ill, Day Dunbar II
O.y Oakwood 811, llhl:lf !2
Delawart&gt; ... Chlllk:othe 57

Garrellsvlllr 86, ft.oot!lll-n fit {ot)
Genna 51, A.lbtat.la Harbor 12
Genoau. Glsbo..,ur«80 (oil
Georptownli&amp;, Mowrylllilown WhiteOak

Box score :
SOUTHERN (6:1)
Brad
May nard 1-9-11; Mike Am os
J &lt;~;4 : Todd Grinstaff 1·2·4, Chad
Tay lor 3-7-13, Hank Cleland 0-0·0,
Dave McMillan 2·0·6, Andy Baer '·
5·1·2·15, Brent Shu ler 0·2·2, and •
Kevin Burgess 1·0·2. TOTALS
I7.J. 26-63.
SYMMES VALLEY (47 ) - :·
Ken Nichols 1-0-2, Jr. Sm ith 0-0-0,
Scott Miller 1·2..4, Chr is Cri swell
5·1·0·13. Sha wn Mootz 4-0·8, P aul
Hayes 3·0·6, Carl Robinson 5-2-12,
Bob Lang 0-0·0. Danny Jus tis
0·2·2. TOTALs 19·1-6-47.

.,

Color
Computer
:1

WATCH THURSDAY'S PAPER
FOR MORE DETAILS .

...

"!

Roy J ohnson with 13. Todd
Cas teel had 11 for SV.
Score by quarters:
.
., •
Southern . ....... .... 15 15 15 18- 63 ·-Symm es Va lley .12 16 4n15-47 ·

'.

tn, Madl!lon 12
Connuu14Pa) 418, Pymatumn,\'al 12
Convoy Creshtew II, W~nl" Trace 80

"

Scott F rcdC'rick tema ined u nbeaten with a 42·35 win. l ~d b.v

1\. l y ~ I OII Ouill
!) · r~ O III SI!I.Io nl
Lo n g·la! l• n t; cnn rc,e -uP ro I

fe ar Recl'laoQ ~ ~ ~~~ a rlYC. .. IIer

128K Color Computer 3®

.

boards 35·24 led by Chad Taylor·s
8. fo llowe d by the ins ide tand em
o f Brad Ma ynard with 7 and
teammate Brent Shuler with 7.
Robinson had 8 for SV.
SHS had 6 stea ls, 8 t urnover s.
a nd 17 louis. SV had 7 stea ls. 9
turnovers . and 24 fouls.
The lit tle Tornadoes of Coac h

19.99

DFTHI MDNTH

~ l ASHl i TEA ' "

1611 5

(~onnnul

OelpE•d~fll1,

revea led a broken elbow .
Leadi ng Sy mm es Valley wqas
Chris Criswell wi th 13 poin ts,
Car l Robinson with 12, and
Shawn Mootz with S.
In the first per iod South ern
pushed ahead to a 15·12 lead
behind a good team eflort . but an
ever deter mined Vikin g crew
maint a ined. its striking dista nce
wllh a consis tent second can to.
The Norseme n actua lly out·
scored SHS 16-15 In the dr ive as
the troops adjusted the ir strate·
gies at the half.
The third period was a Ci nder·
ella tale for the Southe rne rs, who
have oft ctreamt ol such pcrfec·
tlon , while nightmares haunled
the Symmes Valley offe nse. This
frame yield ed just four SV
points , while Southern ra ced off
to 15 of its own to lead 45·32.
Southern held on for the final
63-47.
SHS hit 17-40 for 42.5 percent.
hitting 1· 7 from 3pt. range, and
26-.13 from the line for 76.8
percent. SV was 19 of 49lrom the
floor and 1·3 !rom 3 point range,
hitting 6-12 for 50 perce nt from
the line.
Southern won the battle of the

"""''.""'"

CAnal Wlnclle81er Ill, Tu)'ff Vill 7:1
Canton McKin~y Ill, l ' ounp SOvth ~~
carUsle n Valli!)' Vltw 41 iol)
Carrolllen ,.8, Uhrlch!ivl Claymolll n

Cln Ludnark53, Batavia -II
Cln McNicltoiM M,,~· Nvr1hW1!5f "9
Cln Oall HIIM 8i, Cia Wn Hllllt 87
Cln PrlariHI3, IJ'nta Sr
Cln Rf . . n,o, Madrlrail
Cln Sl Xavier 71, Un Mofllt'r iMj
Cln Sycamon! 58, Glen E.te :W
ctn Turpin n. Andmion !9
Cl11 " 'oodward 18, Cln AI lien Sl
Clr Cent CaUl 71. Mentor Lake Cllihlll
Cle EMl M1 C:IP Lincoln West 51
Cle Jol8 tiQ' •· Oe Glf!llvUh.&gt; 12
Cle Kennecb' •· OeJoi.-IWMM II
Cle Rhodt-to 13, Cle ,JoM Marlhall 4'C

.

Sunday Times-Seminei- Page- C-5

rolls over Vikings 63-47 for second win of ye~

By SCOTT WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Staff
WILLOW WOOD-\Jioldlng Its
opponent to just 19 second hall
points, Coach Howle Caldwell's

Southern's J . Roush with 15
and S. Lisle with 14 were the only
Tornadoes In double figures . For
Meigs, Shawn Hawley contributed 16 points, Darin Logan
added 2, Kevin Musser, Jeremy
Rupe . and Chuck Mash had 4
each, Jeremy Pha11n and Bill
Harless posted 3 apiece and Matt
Haynes had 2.
In field goal percentage, Meigs
shot 57 percent and hit 45 percent
at the foul line. The Marauders
grabbed 34 rebounds wit~ Hawley being credited with 15 of that
total.

KANSAS CITY ROYAl
ROOKIE ALL-STAR

,___,

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gal~polis.

Sout~em

7M, ZanH..UW II!

NI'Whuryt.f, . . ,... &amp;rll:l;tllr.lll
Nl'wceQ'II'NiiOW•tl, Stnuhv"K 61
Nrwleu 11, AII•M• H
Nordonla Sf. Tallm. . Kt' .&amp;i
North llaltlirrnGr. U, BftbwiiiP S~

•

Friday's scores------------__;_Boy10 Ohlu Hia:h.kltool las iRe ball

N1 • ~· 1U' II

____________

December 11 , 1988

December 11 , 1988

Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W.Va.

---

..

�-I
Page C-6-Sunday Times-Sentin81

•

1
·

t

.

'

•
REED MOVES UP COURT- Athens' Jon Reed ( 11) dribbles·up
court In Friday night's SEOAL hardwood game a,alnst GalllpoUs.
GARS defender Is Todd Casey (10). Athens won, 63·37.
Athens will play at Warren
Matt Joliiek led the Bullpups
Local Friday and take on Whee- with eight points.
lersburg in the OU Convocatlon
Varslly Box:
ATHENS (63) - Reed, 0-2·2:
Center, Dec. 17.
In Friday's preliminary con- Corrigan, 7-6·20: Walsh, 3·3-9;
test, Coach Roger Brandeberry 's Decaminade. 3-2-8; Creer, 6-2-14;
Blue Imps won thelrfirstgameof Lee, 0-0-0; Spurlock, 2-0-4; Patthe campaign , 39-35 over the terson, 1-0-2; DeWeese, 0-2-2;
·•Bullpups.
Goldsberry, 0-2-2. TOTALS 22-19·
After trailing 10-7 and 19-18 at 63.
the first two breaks, the Blue
GALLIPOLIS (87) '- McNeal,
Imps tied at 29-all going Into the 3-0-6; Skidmore, 2-0-4; Owen,
4-2-10; Casey, 2-0-4; Strait, 2-0-4;
final period.
Matt Bond's goal (5:50) follow - Anderson, 0-0-0; Rathburn, 1-1-3;
ing a steal put the Galllans on top · Murphy, 1·0-2; Elllott, 0-0-0;
for the first lime, 33-31. The Williams, 1-0-2; Sheets, 1-0·2;
visitors were never headed.
Fallon, 0-0-0. TOTALS 17·3-37.
Donnie Haynes' two charity
By quarters:
tosses with five seconds left Iced Athens ............... IO 17 18 18-63
the victory for the Imps. Haynes Gal llpolis ..... ..... . 14 6 8 9-37
led the Imps In scoring with 16
Reserves Gallipolis . 39
points. Ryan Smith added eight, Athens 35.
Bond six and Scott Morgan five .

Pirates thump Highlanders

Friday~s

SEO standings
(SEO,Opponents)
(All-Games)
w L p
TEAM
0 276
Wheelersburg .. . 4
0 292
Waverly .. .... ..... 4
Logan ..... ......... .4 ·O 271
0 181
Chesapeake ...... 3
0 93
South Polnt.. .... .l
Athens ... ....... .... 4
1 306
1 355
Portsmouth ...... 4
1 201
Greenfield ....... .3
Warren ............ .3
2 332
2 280
Southern .......... .2
3 275
Vinton County .. .2.
2 153
Marletta ...... .. ...l
Gallipolis ......... .1
3 177
Jackson ........ ....O. 5 341
0
0
Pt. Pleasant ... ..0

93~58

Ehman 1·0·0·2. TOTALS - 12·616-58
Field-goal shooting- 18-58 (31
percent)
Foul shooting - 16-24 (66.7
percent)
Rebounds - 21 (Colley 71
Assists - 7 (Walker 3)
Turnovers - 18

Burnette promoted
to Pioneer varsity

Paine~~

--

December 11 • 1988

OP
230
190
208
116

71
254
285
197
289
270
295
156
223
446
0

sucarCIIIMlc

Scoreboard ...

scores

Brl ...... Yo ... n. Taa•Arllactoa'Jt

n.r• r..a ...k

BRONCOSI SEAIIAWKS·:
8 P M l I VE

w.. t

Deawr

1' 0 .1180
LA.Raldel'l
1' 0 .NO
Sei&amp;Ue
7 e .1M
&amp;aft. . CltJ
t I .311
Ibn Dlep
4 II I .ZIJI
N.tklaal Conference;

TONIGHT

1'
1'
7
4

Eut
W L T

NfL GAMEDAY .

NY GIM&amp;t
Pblladdptlla

Picks and. previews.
11 :30AM

PHeD~x.

W•JUaalon

7 7 0 .101 111 HS

.......

I ll 0 .US D4
CeDiral
ll I D .1'81 n2
lfl • 0 .114 sn
4 10 0 .181 118
4 18 Q .181 ts3
I 1% D .141 Ill

Cllleap

\

PA
.M3 Ill Ml
.n 1 us ltl
.111 na Jfl

Ddrall

Tam .. Bay

""''" ....

WMt

New Orleans

s.a Fraa.
u a....

1

1

t

5

s •

e
o

All the day's highlights.'
'
7PM

:as tt4
sts tst
.n1 sn r1t
.MS

LA Barras 2S CltiC:qo 3
hhtrd "'' De c. 10
ln••apelltatNY lett, U: stp.m.
PblladelpW.a at Phoenix., 4 ~. m.
Suldq, Dec. 11 .
Kaa-Citr at NV Glsnts. 1 p.m .
CIDCI••U at Ho•li•n, 1 p.m.
o.llu at W•Mnpoa, I p.m.
Deerall at O.le.,., 1 p.m.
lA Raiders at Jl•ftlllo, I p.m.
Mla_.eta at GrMD Jla, , I p.m .
Tam .. BQ at New Ell&amp;laad,l p.m.
Adula a1 LA R..na, t
New Orleuta&amp; Saa Fraacltco, 4 p.m.
Pllltbu.rrb at 8u Dtep, 4 p.m.
Deawr .t Sullie, I p.m.
Moad11; Dec. It
Clftebnd at MI..U, t p.m.

,.m.

Pro scores

1.o•

nracBou.r

Transactions
1 •

lAa1 Buctl sa. n. Drexel It
Lo .....rll0Mak

Jluebtll
CIDd•..tl - Traded c.acher-llllelder
Uo)'d llcCif!Ddon to a.leaao tNL) lor
o•ifll!lller Bol•dD BoomN.
,.._.elphla - Tr•ded outn f!lder Pllll
Bradle:r .. Baltlm•re lor plkllf.l' Ken

rlrlfl Bo)lnd

-Teku 11. Lehlati'JS
T~&amp;·OI.t~CiUoia"a 1'7,
(O'r )
'

an•
.

•

\JWI.- Coach FrUIIIA)IIIea n~~lped

to betJDme team pn:tldea&amp;; aamedJ~rry

Sl_. tw.ela.
Colle1e

Mll•rt Saldllern- Named do• Lantz

......

'J'raded deleateman

left wtn&amp;Larl"J' •r...-~ and a Dftb-rou•
draft cllolc• In lbe 1,. entl')' draft.
NewJeuey -TradedrfahtD&amp;r~Dor•n
lo Jloaton far rip&amp; wlar Je ...Marc

" •-liE
.s.

Wilier.
Nl' blander• - BeharWld paliudel'
ltlf Hacbti to Sprlalfleld of lbe
Amtrklll Jhckey Lupe.
NY Ru.prl- Seat palteader Mike

Ia
Ill ....

.

CoUege scores

ae..at.

lit. Saenn~enfo 105

Toum&amp;metltt
Champion Holt~ Cluatc
FlratBqulll
Montana 73, Valpal!'al•o Bl
(;O(ltColaCiu•lc

STH.....,

Cheyaey Sl. •· Lowell lit
Lemoyne 84, DewiDI 10

I

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Alarm Clocks •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-:5.95
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40 pc. Ratchet Sat ................... S6.95
7 pc. Punch &amp; Chisel Set •••••••••• 54JJ5

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MI-t
Ander110a 711, MariM it
Bethel It, or. Rapkll; Bapt. 14
Braschi '73, Mancheater 70
CelliNI Metbo•at 91, Peru st. 13
Fort 81Q'a8&amp;. 17, Pu.....Ue St. 15
Praaldl.n 8f, J•dsoal1
H•••bal LaGr&amp;lljle lSI, Harrts-Stowe

:jl=~----------------------·
CHRIST~AS SALE

Reserves:
Gallipolis 39 Athens 35
Warren 48 Jackson 44
Lol!an 50 Marietta 41

M&amp;allfaCCiftrl Cl•lk

Ham'Pden-Sydn~ '71, Olrllll. Newport 115

Martllardf 1o the New Yorlr:Baaprtftr

•

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W
W POP
Logan .. .. ... .. ...... 2
0 95 78
Warren .. .. ... ...... 2
0 86 . 78
Athens ....... .- ...... 1
1 87 81
Galllpolls ....... .. .l
1 73 13
Marjetta ...........0
2 · 86 102
Jackson .... ....... .O 2 81 93
TOTALS
6
6 508 508
Friday's results:
A!hens 63 Galllpolls37
Warren Local 73 Jackson 40
Logan 65 Marietta 51

'·.

Statenlalaad It, Barllllh II
Utica Tecla &amp;I, O.eonta 81. IW

..... -

71

Hofatra~nl8

lootb .. lcoacb.
Morelles.dl (Ky.) 8ta&amp;e - Re•llped
lootb.U eoacb BUI Bal*ldce fol' HaMil
reuoM; namedVIcLlarklllkrllnc:oach.
Football
•
w.~
Claimed del 81th·~ blltlll
'l't'&amp;\'lt CulilleD ..,.t\'era from Phoenix.
Hockey
Mlaae~ota

.JacUOn~lle

F1rstR.ulld
IOIIL 84, Rl .... 'l'l
St. Frud1 (Pa.l 15, C.Oiumbt a II
M•doa Pb.-. CIMalc
·F1raiRou.al
SW Mllaouri 8&amp;. 7S, MWL Valle,&gt; St. 45
N. Artzoa&amp; It, SE Loulllua t8
PaloUIIII!!aMak
F1ntRound
ldalta 75, S. Utah St. U
Eat
FredoalaS&amp;. i8, Peaa St.·Behftod 7'3
Harlford 14, f)lrletah Dlcldnton It

Bowellud miDOI"-Ieap~e pMcb« Gordon
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H.lNGING BASKETS •HOU.Y TREES
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PlANTS • BASKETS •MONUMENT
SPRAYS
•CEMETERY VASES
•WREATHS ond GRAVE BLANKETS
oUVE. CUT CHRISTMAS TREES

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PlriiBoUd
8(, MM'J'• (CaiU. ) 11, Pe••SI . II

PlrnRoulll

Parkwll.l' tl, Fart ReCilWI")' It

Non-league scores:
Vinton 72 Federal Hocking 54
Greenfield 49 Wilmington 40
Southern 63 Symmes Valley 47
Portsmouth 76 Russell 66
·
Waverly 58 Portsmouth West 52
Wheelersburg 63 Minford 62 (ot)
Tuesday's games:
Belpre at Vinton County
South ·Polnt at Boyd County
North Gallla at Souther
Pt. Pleasant at Parkersburg
South
Wednesday's lame:
Zanesvllle at Marietta
Friday's ~~:ames:
Logan at Galllpolls
Athens at Warren Local
Jackson at Marietta ·
Vinton County at Miller
HS Joe at Chesapeake ·
Miami Trace at Greenfield
Southern at.Oak Hlll
Huntington high at Pt. Pleasant
Northwest at Waverly
Porismou th at Ironton
West at Wheelersburg
· SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W
L P
Logan ........ ....... 2
0 142
Athens .............. 2
0 111
Galllpolls .... .. ... .l
1 97
Warren ............ .1
1 132
Marletta . ..... .....o 2 97
Jackson ............ 0
2 92
TOTALS
6
6 871

·--

December 11 • 1988

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

Athens remains tied for top .
spot after 63-37 SEO victory
THE PLAINS- Cory Corrigan
popped in 20 points and Matt
Creer added 14 and picked off
seven rebounds to pace Athens
past Gallipolis 63-37 In a Southeastern Ohio League hardwood
outing Friday night
The victory Improved Coach
• Fred Gibson's Bulldogs t&lt;~ 4-1
overall and 2-0 Inside the SEOAL.
· leaving them tied for first place
with defending champion Logan.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue Devlls
dropped to 1-3 overall and 1·1 In
• conference play .
Gallipolis built up an early 10·4
lead and stlll Jed 14-10 after one
. -period of play. But the Gibson- ·
men came storming back to knot
. the count at 16-all on a pair of
• charity shot'S by Corrigan with
: 7:03 left In the half.
After Josh Williams put the
. Galllans ahead 18-16 &lt;6: 41) the
Bulldogs defense stiffened ,
blanking GAHS 10-0 over the next
•. five minutes and three s~onds.­
: The visitors never recovered.
: AHS Jed 27-20 at halftime. ·
•. Two early ·goals by Gallia 's
: Rob Skidmore cut the Bulldog
; advntage to 27-24 with 6: 28
remaining in the third period
,· before Athens again blanked the
,- Devils, this time 12-0 over a
: four-minute, 10 second spread.
: That made it 39-24. Athens led
• 45-28 going into the final stanza.
;. Both coaches began substltut: lng freely after Athens build up a
commanding 57-30 advantage.
Joe Owen was the only Blue
Devil In double figures with 10
: points. Shawn McNeal led thiJl
: Gaillans on the boards with 11.
• Gallipolis hit 17 of 52 field goal
; attempts for 32 percent. The
visitors were three of five at the
line, had 24 rebounds and rom- mltted 21 turnovers.
•
Athens , playing without its
' leading playmaker, Scott Strick·
• lin, 5-11 junior guard , out with a
stress fracture of the foot,
• connected on 22 of 36 from the
field tor 57 percent. AHSwas 19of
28 at the line. The Bulldogs had 21
rebounds and 14 turnovers.
Friday, Gallipolis will host
: defending SEOAL champion Lo·
' gan. Saturday, the Devils travel
to South Point for a non-league
contes t.

-

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.
Page-C-8-Sunday Timet~- Sentinel
.

)

Sooners up mark
to 4-1 aft"er win

...

December 11. 1988

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

National/International

.Rjck Bay accepts AD position at. Minnesota
.

MINNEAPOLIS (UP I) -Rick leadership was needed when he
Bay, who quit as athletic director fired Glel, who held the job lor 16
at Ohio State last year over the ~years.
flrlng of football coach Earle
Bay was Introduced to the
· By United Press lnternatknial
Bruce, was hired Friday as regents Friday by President·
.
Schelfler
scored
21
points
to
lead
While defending national
men's athletic director at elect Nils Hasselmo, who met
champion Kansas was declared five Purdue players lnt double
Minnesota.
figures
as
the
Boilermakers
'took
with Bay several times.
.
eligible to participate In the 1989
The . hiring of Bay was apan
88
·
73
victory
over
"I
believe
we
have
hired
the
Brg Eight postseason ·tourna·
proved· unanimously by the unl· best person available In the
Connectlcu
t.
ment, Oklahoma continued to
verslty's board .of regents. He Is country to · head our men's
Trailing 14·11 with 13:11 re·
establish Itself as an early malnlng In the first half, the
to assume;the post at the Big Ten athletics program," Hasselmo
favorite for the league title .
school
Immediately, replacing said. "He has a strong commit·
Boilermakers took command
Big Eight o!flcials announ,ced with
Paul
Glel,
who was fired last ment to the academic perfora 17·1 spurt that gavetl!em a
Thursday that Kansas, which Is 28·15 lead with 6:40 remaining In
summer.
mance of ·athletes, to abiding by
prohibited from NCAA postsea·
"I think this Is a great tile rules and to fielding competl· ·
the
half.
.~
son play as a result of rules
opportunity beCause the tradl· live teams.''
Tony Jones, ·Jimmy Oliver and
violations. will be allowed to Loren Clyburn each scored 11 · lion Is here, and that Is something
Bay, a University of Michigan
partlcipat,e In , the conference · points for Purdue, 4·2, and Ryan
you can't buy," said Bay, who graduate,• had been athletic dl·.
tournament.
negotiated a five-year contract rector at Oregon for three years
Berning added 10. ChriS Smith
The decision by conference led Connecticut, 3·1, with 16
worth $100,000 per year plus a
faculty representatives and at· points, foUowed by Cliff Robin·
supplemental retirement pack·
hletic directors came during son wlth ·l4.
age that will become available to
their quarterly meeting.
him at age 55.
At Bowling Green, Ky., Pervis
Missouri faculty representa· Ellison scored 11 points and
"I'm here, really, to do what I
tlye Car 1 Set tergren said Big blocked 8 shots to lift Louisville to
can to push It forward. Paul Giel
Eight rules stipulate that If rules an 81-69 triumph over Western
and his people did an outstanding
violations are alleged, an lnstltu· Kentucky.
job. I'm here to do what I can as
lion may elect either an NCAA or
athletic director and as someone
Louisville, 3-2, shot 57 percent
conference Investigation. If the from the floor and held Western
who Is very, very much Inter·
NCAA lnves tlgates, and ultl· Kentucky to 39 percent shooting.
ested In how we (lo In the
mately levies penalties, the con· The.Cardinals were led In scoring
cJassroom. •·
terence Is prohibited from taking by Kenny Payne with 19 points
Bay, 46, had been the candidate
additional actions of penalty.
recommended by a search com·
and Labradford Smith with 18.
"It was a question of the
mlttee and interim president
Brett McNeal led the Hil·
conference not wanting to be In a !toppers, 4·2, with 20 points.
Richard Sauer, who said new
position where two organization~
In other gawes Thursday
(the NCAA and Big Eight) take night,
Sports briefs
Alabama·Birmingham
action against an Institution, " edged Alabama
Soccer
State 87-85, Ala·
Settergren said. "That would bama nipped Virginia
West German soccer league
Tech
79·76,
have been double jeopardy.
lead~r Bayern Munich will play a
Arkansas·Little Rock trounced
" We simply followed the Big Colorado
charity match Sunday In Rem·
91·66,
Louisiana
State
Eight rule and regulations. The clipped McNeese State 91-89.
9.25% . . .
sclieid stadium to benefit victims
bottom line is the University of Arizona State slipped past Texas
of the fiery U.S. Air Force plane
8.75% . . .
Kansas will continue to be a Tech 81-75, Air Force defeated
crash that killed five people and
welcome participant in the Big Idaho State 71·57, Fullerton State
Injured 50, the (earn said. Bayern
8.50%
Eight Tournament.''
will play amateur clUb BVL
stopped
San
Diego
68-66
and
Utah
'Meanwhile, No. 7 Oklahoma beat Web(&gt;r State 66-63.
Remscheid.
8.00%
ran Its record to 4·1 Thursday
night with a 100-96 victory over
New Mexico.
Stacey King scored 24 points
and Tyrone Jones added 19 to
· lead the Sooners. Mookle Blay·
lock contributed 13 points. Ter·
renee Mullins 12 and Andre Wiley
THIS LIMITED
' 10.
The Sooners trailed 94-91 with
1:30 left before a jumper by King
Confidential Services:
and a tree·polnter by Jones put
Birth Control
Oklahoma ahead to stay. After a
V. D. Screening
free throw by Mullins gave the
Cancer Screening
Sooners a 97·94 lead witj! 31
Pregnancy. Testing
seconds left, Darrell McGee hit a
pair of foul shots to pull the Lobos
within 1.
Sliding f• Kille. No - ref...d •vices because of ildlility to pay. ·
· The Sooners spread their of·
' tense and ran the clock to nine
seconds He fore Jones was fouled
and hit both ends of a 1·and·1 for a
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO
99·96 lead. After a timeout,
Blaylock stole a pass In the
POMEROY:
GAWPOI.IS
backcourt, was fouled, and made
236 E. Main St., 2nd floor
414 Second Ave. 2nd Floor
. one free throw to close the
992-5912
446-0166
, scoring.
8:30
'to
5:00
Monday-Friday
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Rob Robbins led New Mexico,
2·4, with 25 points, Willie Banks
Closed Wednesday
·
8:30 to 12 Saturday
LENDER
added 21 and McGee 10!
Closed Thursday
At West Lafayette, Ind., Steve

prtor taking the Ohio State job In
198&lt;1.
He left the school In November
1987 to. PJ:!lles t over the firing of
Bruce, who had a winning record
with the Buckeyes but had taken .
them to the Rose Bowl just twice
In nine years.
After leaving Columbus, Bay
served briefly as executive vice
president of the New York
Yankees. He currently Is chief
operating officer of StarBrlgbt
Group Inc., a communications
management firm hi Westport,
Conn.
Bay Is the second fanner
Oregon administrator tabbed for
a job at Minnesota. Chris Voelz

was hired away from Oregon In
Sepiember to head up the Minnesota women's athletic program.
On Thursday, Hasselmo ac·
knowledged being lobbied by
supporters of Lou Holtz, the
fonner Minnesota coach who
now Is at Notre Dame.
"I have spoken to a number of
people who have been Interested
In advancing (Holtz's) candl·
daey and listened carefully to
what they had to say," Hasselmo
·said. "Under different circum·
stances, I may have wanted to
pursue that OQIIon, but Mr. Bay
has the quatmes we're looking
for, and that's where I want to go
at this point."

By JOHN lAMS
·~

..

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. . . . .... '. . . . $ 50,000 - $99,999
$ 10,000 $49,999
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--

--

.

By WARD ROSS SMITH
HONOLULU (UPI) - Former
J:'hlllpplne President Ferdinand
Marcos was taken by ambulance
, Friday to a hospital for treat·
ment of congestive heart failure,
a spokesman said.
.
Marcos arrived at St. Francis
Hospital by private ambulance
at 12:10 p.m. HST (5: 10 p.m.
EST) and moved by stretcher, a
breathing tube In his nose, Into
the facility. His eyes were open
and he appeared to be conscious.
There was no Immediate report of M&amp;T,l:os' s C91)ditlon.
· Imelda Marcos, looking wor·
rled and with puf(y eyes, rnde In
the front seat of the ambulance.
She hurried lntQ the emergency
room without talklngtorepor.ters
outSide.
Marcos spokesman Gemma
Trinidad said upon the recom·
mendation of St. Francis cardiologist Or. Calvin Wong, Marcos
"will be hospitalized due to an
acute onset of congestive heart
failure early this morning."
Wong could not Immediately be
reached for comment.
"For the past three weeks,
President Marcos has been
under close monltlorlng and
treatment by Or. Wong for
arrythmia due to cardlomy ·
opathy," Trinidad said in a brief
statement. ~'No details have been
released due to the fact that
Marcos Is still scheduled to
undergo a series of tests.
"He will be kept under com·
plete bed rest and will not be
. allowed.to walk," Trinidad said.
Cardiomyopathy, or conges·
tive heart failure, Is a chronic

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for the U.S. Agency for lnterna·
tiona! Development In Washing·
ton, said a ·plane left for the
Soviet republic early Saturday
carrying a trauma medical
team, .search·and. · rescue
workers accompanied by victimfinding dogs, and three State
Department representatives.
The Communist Party Central
Committee and the Presidium of
ihe Natlonal Parliament said a
territory south of the Caucasus
with a population of· 700,000 had
been.devastated.
''Thousands were killed, tens
of thousands Injured and
hundreds of thousands left homeless," the official communique
said. "It was the strongest quake
In Transcaucasia on record."
The communique said the
severest blow was dealt to the
cities of Lenlnakan, Spltak, Kl·
rovakan and Stepan a van, where
houses crumbled, Industries
were demolished and service
facilities destroyed.
Rudolf Khochanov, an Armen·
Ian Foreign Ministry representa·
live In Moscow told United Press
International In a telephone
Interview that the death toll
"could be 50,000, 70,000 or even a
(Continued on D2)

·

25°/oo,,

·

•

...

•

.,
HOMELESS - FamWes use the center
reservation of a boulevard to set up a bed for their

children following the massive earthquake which
hit Armenta last Wednesday. UPI

Couple charged
with molesting
grandchildren

degenerative heart problem. It
leads to Irregular heart rhythms
and labored blood flow to and
from the heart. The condition can
be brought on by an lnvas Ion of
fatty tissue Into the heart muscle,
among other causes.
· The hospital visit came as
Marcos awaited a decision by a
judge on whether he Is !It to
travel to New York to face
racketeering charges. A govern·
ment doctor recently concluded
Marcos Is healthy . enough to
make the trip.
Doctors were summoned to tpe
Marcos house at 4 a.m. and Dr.
Wong was called iater, Trinidad
said. Asked why almost 10 hours
had elapsed before Marcos was
brought to the hospital, the
spokesman ,said, "I believe the
doctors were running tests and
were trying to keep from bring·
lng him to the hospital because
some people might think we' re
playing games."
Asked about the sudden onset
of medical problems so soon
after a meillcal examination
Indicated he was not seriously Ill,
Trinidad said, "When a man Is
sitf he Is sick."
Marcos went to the hospital for
several days In May alter report·
lng chest pains, but a heart
attack was ruled out. Since his
Indictment he has appeared · in
public In a wheelchair and
wearing a neck brace.
A court·ordered medical eva·
luatlon of Marcos by Dr. Francis
Weld of New York concluded that
!he former Philippine leader
faked pain and other ailments
durlng a three·hour examination
In October.

•

at the First Congregational
Church In Cambridge, is charged
with rape of a child under 16 by
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) A Harvard University professor force and indecent assault and
acussed of · sexually .assaulting · battery on a child under 14.
his gr&amp; 0dchildren told a toddler William Moran Is charged with
the alleged abuse was "their rape and abuse of a child under16
secr'et," while his church admln· and Indecent assault ana battery
Is trator wife warned the little girl of child under 14.
Parr told the court that at the
her parents would abandon her If
time of the incidents the,chlldren
she tattled, prosecutors said.
William .Moran, 64, a Harvard lived with their parents, both
professor of Assyriology, al· doctors, in nearby Watertown.
Jegedly cajoled the children Into The parents and children have
cooperation, while his wife, Su· · since moved out of state.
The prosecution said the
zanne D. Moran, told her grand·
daughter that If she told anyone grandmother used to babysit the
about the alleged assaults "her children at her home, at the
parents would never come back children's home and at the First
I~
for her and she would have to Congregational Church in
stay with Granny forever," As· Cambridge.
"Evidence shows that Suzanne
slstant Middlesex District Attor·
Moran
sexually assaulted her
ney Audrey Parr charged.
two
grandchildren
on several
The couple pleaded Innocent at
their arraignment Friday and occasions while she was babysit·
were released on their own ling them," Parr said.
The grandmother fondled the
recognizance.
As conditions for release, the children's genitals and made
Morans were ordered to sur· them do the same to her, Parr
render their passports, obtain said.
r ' ,
''On one occasion she allegedly
' permission from the court before
I •
\ ..
traveling out of state and cut off stuck a sharp object In the boy's
contact with !he grandchildren. rectum which made him bleed,"
HOSPITALIZED - Forni~ Philippine President Ferdinand .
Judge H!)ler Zobel set a pret· the prosecutor said. "She also ·
Marcos (file photo) was tal(en by ambuance Friday loSt. Francis
rial conf,erence lor Dec. 20 In told him that If he ever told
Hospital In Honolulu for treatment of congestive heart failure, a
anyone what she was doing to
Mlddte,ex Superior Court.
spokeman said. UPI
·
him, she would kill his mother
Th~ couple, who live In Bel·
monf, wei-e·tndlcted earlier this and father," Parr said.
"Suzanne Moran told the fe"cried
out
and
grimaced
In
pain
weekforallegedlncldentslnvolv·
Weld said Marcosbad " slgnlfl·
male
that If she told anyone about
cant departures from normal'' In on multiple occasions" during . tngaglrl,now4,andaboy,now7,
some vital organs, mostly due to the exam, his reactions to pall\ -' between June 1985 and June 1987. the assaults that her parents
kidney problems, but the prob- were not consistent. His heart Authorities said Mrs. Moran Is would never come back for hev;
lems would no't be worsened by rate uncharacteristically !~ied the children' s grandmother and and that slie would have to stay
air travel or appearances In to Increase during the tiples he the professor Is their step· with Granny forever;" the prosecutor said. "She also told the
said he was experlen~ng pain, grandfather.
court.
(Continued on D2)
the
doctor
said.
/l
Suzanne
Moran,
administrator
Weld said although Marcos
By DAVID KELLY

..._

/

LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Howling Santa Ana winds
churned a brush fire Into a
3,IXJO.acre Inferno Friday In the

San Fernando Valley, destroying
or damaging 36 . homes .and
forcing thousands of residents to
flee. .
Damages were estimated at
more than $3.89 million, city Fire

Th-partment spokesman Jim WI!~
11amson said. The cause of the
fire had not been determined, but
arson Investigators were looking
for two men for questioning.
Gov. George Deukmejlan de·

2 FOR$12

SOCKS
OR

and Klrovakan.
Some 6,000
people had been hospitalized , the
official said.
The loss ol life made made It
the worst earthquak~..(llsaster In
the history of the Soviet Union.
Saturday was declared a na·
tiona! day of mourning and nags
around the countr-y were raised
to half·stafl.
Gorbachev, who cut short his
visit to New York to rush home to
take charge 9f rescue and re·
building efforts, left for Armenia
about 11:00 ·a.m. Saturday, the
official Tass news agency said. It
did not say how long Gorbachev
would be In the area.
Soviet authorities - with the
help of specialist teams from
France, Switzerland and Britain
looking and listening for cries or
.signs of life under the rubble of
crumbled buildings- stepped up
rescue efforts and prepared for
the mass evacuation of survivors
by rail.
·
In Washington, deputy Soviet
Ambassador Evgenl Kutovol
Issued an unprecedented appeal
for American aid, and the American Red Cross prepared to ship
antibiotics and blocxl transfusion
sets to Moscow .
Cindy Steuart, a spokeswoman

OR

MEN'S
GROUP OF MIN'S

By ALICE CRANE

S6''

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D

LA County decl~ed ~tate of em~rgency; 36 homes bumt

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Section

December 11 . 1988

Marcos treated
for congestive
heart failure

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OFFER MAY BE WITHDRAWN AT ANY TIME

.r·

MOSCOW (UPI)
Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev arrived In Yerevan Saturday to
observe !lrst·hand the relief
operations for victims of the
earthquake that killed up to
45,000 people, left half a million
homeless and 12,000 people In
dire need of medical help.
Foreign Ministry spokesman
Gennady Geraslmov said Gorba·
.chev arrived safely In theArmen·
ian capital of Yerevan Saturday
morning despite bad weather
that has virtually closed the
airport to other traffic, Including
planes carrying emergency
supplies to the quake vlctlms and
Western reporters.
Tremors wen;! stU! being felt In
the area Saturday as selsmologists warned that a Jess powerful
quake could strike at anytime.
Deputy Foreign Minister Va·
lentln Nlkiforov told a news
conference that the death and
Injury figures from Wednesday's
earthquake constituted prelim!·
nary data on the Impact of the
temblor that obliterated several
townsalonganarcofdevastatlon
about 50 miles north of Yerevan,
between the cities of Lenlnakan

...:....____ 27 MONTHS WITH MONTHLY INTEREST-

It Makes Sense,••

'iill!e5- -Jentinel

Death count' rises; another tremor possible

..

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a fire wbl,ped IIIIa aa t.ferno II)' Saala Au wlada

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•

In Granada BUll, CalU. Tbe fire burned over s,•
acres and dealroyed or damared 38 bomea. UPI

clared ' a state of emergency In
Los ' Angeles County as the
.metropolitan area was hit by
devastating fires lor the second
day In a row. The declaration Is
the first step toward making
low·lnterest state and federal
loans available to residents who
suffered losses In the fires.
On Thursday, major fires
driven by hurricane-force winds
In the suburbs , of Baldwin Park
and La Verne destroyed at least
21 homes and damaged more
than 20 others. Losses were
estimated at at least $10.5
million.
•
Seventeen people, including 16
firefighters, suffered minor Injuries In Friday's fire, ,which
brokeoutabout4: 30a.m. above a
waste dump In suburban Gran·
ada Hills.
Pushed by the dry desert winds
that gusted to 60 mph. the fire
snaked west Into the Porter
Ranch area, an upscale neigh·
borhood along the foothills of the
Santa Susana Mountains about22
mUes northwest of downtown Los
Angeles.
Authorities said 1,450 fireflgh·
ters from the city and the
counties of Los Angeles and
Ventura, Including 10 water·
dropping helicopters, were
called In to fight the blaze. Many
were weary from battling l'hurs·
day's fires.
Thirteen homes were des·
troyed and 23 damaged In the fire
that erupted a.JioY~ the Sunshine

Canyon Landfill, WIIUamson
said. The fire caused lll least
$3,240,700 In structual damage
and another $650,200 damage to
the homes' contents.
Rene Nunoz, one of those
whose homes was lost, said the
lire had alL but engulfed her
residence when she and her
husband fled.
''I was opening the garage door
and sparks (flew Into) my hair. I
had to put cold water on my
hair," said Nunoz, who appeared
to be In shock as tears drew
tracks on her soot·coveri!d lace.
Many of the houses threatened
by the fire were valued at $1
million and up.
Domestic horses escaping the
flames were seen running across
the Simi Valley Freeway, a
California lllghway Patrol dis·
patcher said. Workers rounded
up more than 72 horses and too\
them to Granada Hills High
School, Department of Animal
Regulation spokesman Dyer
Huston said.
Winds knocked down fences
throughout the San Fernando
Valley, and several pet dogs who
ran Into the streets were struck
by cars and Injured, Huston said.
As • the fire spread out of
control, pollee ordered as many
as 8,000 residents In Its path to
leave their homes.
One of those who fled, Jona·
than Klein, 19, said glowing
embers Uttered his front yard as
he and his parents were awa·

kened by the acr ld smell .of
smoke.
" We started hosing down the
place and removed all of our
valuables," said Klein, a UCLA
student and one of about 15
people directed to a temporary·
shelter at Temple Ahavat Sha·
lorn. "I also woke up some people
by banging on their doors down
the s tree!. "
Along with the temple, evacua·
tlon centers, ihciudlng ones for
pets and horses, were es ta lJ.
llshed at '\}ranada Hilts High
School and the Chlmlneas Jewish
Center. Several schools In the
area were closed for the day .
Arson Investigators were
searching for two men seen In a
white pickup truck In Bee Canyon
just before the II re broke aut,
Williamson said, but he emphasIzed they were not suspected
arsonists but possibly witnesses.
In Riverside County, a wind·
whipped fire consumed 1,000
acres of dry brush In the
GoOd hope Mine area 8 miles west
of Perris, Department of Fore·
stry spokesman Joanne Evans'
said.
·.
About 260 firefighters bat tied
the blaze In the remote foothllls ,
Evans said.
.
The undercarriage of ·a singleengine Cessna snapped as the
plane was trying to take off from
the Burbank airport, knocking
the craft onto Its nose. No Injuries
were reported.

�·.
Page-D-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Snow in north; winds diminish in California
By United Press International
A blast of ley air whisking over
the Great Lakes produced snow
squalls from the lower Great
Lakes to northwestern New Eng
land, the National Weather Service said, while winds were
dimmishlng in fire -ravaged
Southern California.

The heaviest snow fell near
lakes Erie and Ontario with up to
6 inches of snow at Oswego, NY
and m the northeast corner of
Ohio
Heavy snow was expected
Saturday in the northeast corner
of Ohio A snow squall warning
was in effect over portions of

DOE withdraws
exemption claim
from lawsuits
CINCINNATI (UPI) - In a
surprise move. the federal government has apparently rescinded its argument that a
u)'anlum processing plant in
southwest Ohio and its formet
operator are protected from
lawsuits because the plant was
run under government orders
In papers filed late Fnday in
US. Distrtct Court in Cincmnati,
lawyers for the Department of
Energy said a legal doct rlne
called the ''government~ntractor defense" does not
shteld the government from
personal and envlronmenta I
damage claims at the Fernald
uranium plant, The Cincinnati
Enquirer reported.
The department has admttted
that the plant spewed thousands
of pounds of radioactive dust mto
the environment when tl was
being run by NLO Inc.
' The department's earlier assertion that the contractor defense protected NLO from a

Houseplants
get cabin fever
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohto State University horticulturist Jim Utzinger has prepared a
list of tips on what to do when
Winter's dark days gtve housepjants cabm fever
-Wipe plants wtth a mois t
sponge once a month if they have
collected dust Dust removal
ensures they take in all avatlable
light.
-Run a humtdtfter near the
plants, or group plants together
to raise humidity around them.
Plants naturally give off water
through tiny leaf openings, PlacIng them together on a tray of
pebbles that holds a constant
~upply of water combats dry
indoor air even betl(r Mtsting,
even If done regularlY, is lneffecfive because its Influence is
short term
-Place plants where they
won't dry out rapidly. Avoid
spots with low humidity , intense
light , high temperatures and last
movement of cold air.
-Give plants water as !heir
soil dries. Most houseplants grow
slowest In winter and need water
less often Also, different plants
use water differently But one
oout of severe water loss can kill
a ptant.
_-Water plants when the top
half-inch of soli feels dry Do it
sll&gt;wly so water soaks into the son
and doesn 't run down the side of
tlie pot or over the rim. Space
~tween soli and pot wail mdicates poor-quality soiL

December 11, 1988

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

clttz.ens' lawsuit unleashed
strong opposition The $300 million suit was brought on behalf of
14,000 people who live or work
near Fernald
The energy department acknowledged In earher court
documents that It knew NLO was
breaking pollution laws, but said
the company could not be sued
because it was following the
department's otders In effect,
no one would then be liable
because ordinary citizens cannot
sue the gover nment.
Although the Fr iday ftltng
appears to retreat from the
immumty claim, the department
IS still asking lor dismissal of the
Citizens' suit on the grounds that
the depar tmen t and NLO would
be liable only If the Citizens COUld
prove that environmental laws
had been vto Ia ted
The energy department's lawyers argued that no laws had
been violated because they had
not been enacted when major
environmental pollution
occurred
The lawyers also said the
majority of the contamination
lnctdents were releases of radioactive materials which are
not covered by the state's pollution laws.
The filing was challenged by
Stanley Chesley : lead attorney
for the citizens' group.
"There have been pollution
laws s ince \he Clean Water Act of
1890," Chesley told the Enquirer.
"And the strongest environmental laws were passed In the 1980s
and NLO contmued to pollute."
But Chesley said he was
"astounded" by the .government's apparent admission It
was not exempt from prosecu tidn
for Fernald pollution. "This Is
exactly what we have always
stated," he satd

New York state to the east of
lakes Ontario and Erie. Snow
also was expected for the northwest mterlor of Pennsylvania.
Three inches of snow fell
Friday night over northern Vermont between Burlington and the
Canadian border, said Lyle Alexa nder of the NWS.
Howling Santa Ana winds,
which earner gusted to80 mph In
canyons and mountain passes in
Southern California, were dlmln·
ishing Saturday and the NWS
said, "It appears that the worst of
the windstorm of the past two
daysis over. "
The wltlds contributed to fires
that left dozens of homes destroyed or damaged, thousands of
scorched acres and more than
$14 million in damage in the Los
Angeles area
Light rain, meanwhile, spread
from southeast Arizona across
southern New Mexico to central
Texas early Saturday, the NWS
said. Rain and snow were expected to become more wtdespread as a slow-moving storm
system over northwestern Mexico moved eastward. More than 4

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 A.M. EST 12·11..S

30

Inches of snow was forecast In the
mountains of southern New
Mexico.
Light rain also fell In the
Pacific Northwest. Scattered
light snow reached across the
northern Plains and Into the
upper Mississippi Valley.
Dense fog was reported In
some of the valleys of far western
Montana , northern Idaho and
eastern Washington. Freezing
driZzle made roads slick late
Friday In southeast Idaho
Clear skies prevailed early
Saturday from the middle and
south Atlantic states across the
Tennessee Valley to the central
Plains. Early morning temperatures were below freezing over
·
~SNOW
RAIN
~SHOWERS
most of the nation.
Southern Florida and Southern FRONTS:
Warm "
Cold
Sialic . . Occluded
California were the only warm
Map showS mirimum temperatures At least SO% of any shaded area Is loreaiSI
spots in the nation with tempera- to receive Pf'Cipltatlon tndlcatlld
UPI
tures early Saturday in the 60s,
WEATHER MAP ~ During early Sunday morning, snow Is
Alexander said
forecast for portions of the northern and central Intermountain,
Temperatures around the
central Plains, middle Mississippi Valley, upper and lower Great
nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged
Lakes, Ohio Valley, and north Atlantic Coast regions. Rain Is
from 14 degrees below zero at
forecast for portions of the west and east GuU Coast, middle
Warroad, Minn , to 70 degrees
Mississippi Valley and south Atlantic Coast reglorut. Scattered rain
at Key West Naval Air Station,
Is expected for portlorut of the southern Plains region. UPI
Fla.

11

w'

Couple ...

ABUSE- Suzaane Morea (L) and her husband,
Harvard University professor WilHam Moran (C )
appear at their arraignment Friday In Middlesex

.

Superior Court charged with sexually assaulting
two chUdren between June 19811 and June 1987.
Their attorney Brackett Denniston Is seen at
right. UPJ

Stocks post gain past week; Dow up 51.21
By BRIAN J. EGLI
the week.
UPI Business Writer
Broader market Indicators
NEW YORK (UP!) -Stocks
also rose on the week. The New
rallied on Monday and Tuesday
York Stock Exchange compo_site
but showed signs of fatigue by
Index rose 2.57 to 155.59 and
Wednesday, when excitement
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock
about a new stock unbundling
Index rose 5.90 to close the week
package and cutbacks in Soviet
at 319.06.
troop levels eased enough to
Advances led declines 1,087-763
cause profit taking though the
among the 2,163 Issues traded.
rest of the week.
Big Board volume totaled
The Dow Jones industrial aver709,151,450 shares, compared
age. which rose 1.78 Friday,
wtth 662,727,960 last week and
closed the week at 2143 49
946,057,890 a year ago.
Although Friday's advance was
On Monday, American Exmodest, the blue-chip index got a . press Co., Dow Chemical Co ,
big enough boost Monday and Pfizer Inc. and Sara Lee Corp.
Tuesday to raise It51.21 points on announced plans for a new
package of securities they intend
to use as an invesiment vehicle to
buy back stock by exchanging
common shares for new securities known as ''unbundled units."
The stock units, developed by
Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc ,
essentially are reinventing a
· share of common stock by
spinning It Into three components
- one part debt and two parts
equity
By exchanging stock units for
common shares, the companies
intend to lower their cosls of
capital by minimiZing Interest
costs, increasing earnings per
share and maintaining high
credit ratings.
The introduction of the units,
which could help thwart unwanted takeovers, helped pull

the stock market out of a slump $2 billion In damages
that occurred late in the previous
RJR Nabisco followed, off 1\i,
week.
to 89% Occidental Petroleum
Stocks rose sharply on Monday
and Tuesday and moved higher was third, off ~ to 25~.
· Il!M rose '1Iii to 120% on the
again Wednesday amld rumors
week. AT&amp;T rose "-' to 29~ .
that Soviet leader Mikhail GorbaAT&amp;T and US Sprint were
chev would announce cutbacks In awarded multibillion-dollar conthe Soviet military In a speech at tracts to build a new digital
the United Nation Wednesday.
phone system for the U.S
Analysts said the consensus on
government.
Wall Street was that a reduction
Trading surrounding takeover
in Soviet troops would ease U.S.
Issues
- real or rumored -was
defense spending, thereby lowerrelatively active this week, trading the budget deficit.
ers said.
Gorbachev delivered the exAmong such Issues, Texaco
pected news at midday Wednesrose 3)1, to 50\j, amld rumors that
day, but by then the market had
TWA Chairman Carl
Icahn
digested It and was looking ahead
might wage another proxy battle
to next week's expected release
control of the company
of several economic reports and · for
following his defeat this spring.
a meeting of the Federal ReFGIC rose 3% to 22 on news
serve's Open Market Committee,
that
General Electric offered
its policy-making arm.
$22.50 a share for the company.
Prls:es tumbled Thursday and
On the American Stock Expos~ only modest gains Friday
change, the Amex Market Value
amid profit taking ahead of next
index rose 2.34 to close the week
week's economic events.
at 297.61, while the National
Analysts said Investors were
hoping the reports and meeting Association of Securities Dealers
would not lead the Fed to take index rose 1.29 to end at 375.21.
Declines edged advances, hQW·
steps to raise Interest rates
ever
, 429-409 among 1,053 issues
higher. ·
_
traded on the Amex. Volume
On the NYSE trading floor this totaled 51,212,440 shares, com·
week, Long Island Lighting was
pared with 59,722,735 traded a
the most active Issue, off 3 to week earlier and 61,607,695
12~. A jury found the utility
guilty of violating a racketeering traded In the same week a year
earlier.
statute, opening the door to a
Wang Labs Class B led the
class action suit involving almost Amex weekly actives, off % to
8%.

0

.(

(Continued from D2)
xemale that wherever she was,
that (Suzanne Moran) could find
her and steal her away from her
parents."
Parr said William Moran al·
tegedly assaulted the female,
touching her genitals with his
fingers. "He told her not to tell
anyone about It because It was
'their secret,"' Parr said.
Defense lawyer Brackett De·
nlston said the Morans have no
prior criminal record. "This case
Is based principally on testimony
of two children who are age 2 and
4 This poses a serious question of
credibility, not a case where the
evidence is overwhelming."
The Rev. Frank Dorman, a
member or the First Congregational Church, said he has
worked dally with Mrs. Moran
and described her as a "patient,
kind and loving person."
"I think It is Incredible that
these charges have been brought
and I think that I can speak for
the church in saying that we wUJ
support her all the way. I firmly
believe she is not guilty," Dorman said outside the courtroom.
Harvard officials confirmed
Moran's position at the university but declined to comment on
the matter while It Is pending in
court.
Laura Johnson, staff administrator at Harvard's History De·
partment, said, "I don't think
people should jump to conclusions. With all the media hype, I
think people are beginning to get
a little hysterical about child
abuse cases. Thank God there's
still the 'trial process so we can
determine a person's guilt or
innocence.' '

Fannland value
increases 3 percent
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The value of farmland increased
almost 3 percent In the third
quarter or 1988, say Mlldwestern
bankers, and Ohio State University agricultural economist
Warren Lee says that Indicates
continued strength In the land
market brought on by better
commodity prices.
Nationally, land values are
expected to be up 2 percent to 4
percent for all of 1988. Most of the
increase came on top-quality
land in response to higher com·
modlty prices and the fact that
fewer acres wl!l be enrolled in
goverrunent set·aslde programs
next year.
· Increases came despite the
dro\lght and higher Interest
rates. "Good" row a farmland led
the way wlth a 5 percent jump
between July and October 1988,
which completed a 21 percent
climb from October 1987.

De£lt h••• ------~(C~o~n~tln~u~e~d~fr~om~D~1)~----------~--------------------------------------

RESCUED - Marlneh Nuroyan holds onto her three daughters
after they were rescued from under debris following the massive
earthquake last Wednesday. The family spent 40 hours trapped
waiting for reiiCuers to reach them. Children names are Anna, 7,
Shushanlk, 18 months, and Christine, 5. UP[

r

100,000 ••
tragedy"
Survivors told grim tales of the
The youth daily, Komsomols temblor and of efforts to cope kaya Pravda, again criticized
with Its aftermath.
the slow pace or the rescue
"We were at work, within operation. ''Help Is coming, butit
seconds the walls came crashing Is not always well organized
down, " Vazgen Tumanyan, an Some roads are blocked by
engineer, told Pravda . "I could traffic and they are having to use
hardly crawl from under the helicopters," It said. "MachinruJns."
ery to clear rubble Is not being
"I thank everybody helping brought In quickly enough."
us," Tumanyan said. "They
Asked about the potential
bring food water and canvas
death toll of 100,000, Kochanov
tents. I say thanks to the army said, "It Is possible. Spltak Is
guys who haven't stopped look- wiped out. Lenlnakan and Kirov·
ing for survivors for a minute."
akan are 50cent destroyed." In
Pravda's front page carried Spltak, he said, seven out or eight
pictures of women with veils schools were leveled while stu·
walking In a state of shock dents were In class.
around the ruins of PI tak, a town
"I fell from the fourthfioorand
demolished where at least 5,000 landed waist-deep In the ground
died. Another photograph
completely trapped," Kamll Yushowed nurses In white uniforms
maev, a student at a mutUa
running from a big transport · training college, told Izvestia. "I
plane to render emergency help.
was one out of a thousand lucky
The Soviet newspaper',s head- enough to get rescued. I will
nne said simply: " Our pain and
never forget those people."

For the first 24 hours after the
tee said, "It was stressed once
disaster- while Gorbachev was
again that the main task remains
In New York- the Soviet media
to clear debris as soon as
and government gave few If any
possible. There may still be
clues of the scale of the disaster
survivors trapped underneath."
But as it dawned on the world,
When the Earth moved under
and Gorbachev rushed home,
the Soviet· Tu rktsh border area at
they started releasing a fiood or
midmorning Wednesday, the
Information with unusually open
U.S. Geological Survey mea·
reporting on television and in
sured the quake at 6.9 on the
newspapers.
open-ended Richter Scale.
Rescue efforts by the thouThe Komsomolskaya Pravda
sands of troops sent into the area
newspaper cr lticized seismolowere hampered by the danger of
gists for falling to provide
falling debris, severed roads,
adequate advance warning of the
broken bridges and a lack of
temblor and architects for not
communlcat Ions . Survivors
lncorporat~g earthquake safety
camped around !Ires overnight measures Into the design of
too scared to enter the few buildings In the stricken area.
buildings left star di ng. .
Vladimir Dubinyak, the lnteA special Pol!tbuw committee, ..,rior Ministry chief of staff, said
headed by Prime Minister Niko- 7,000 troops were in quake·hlt
lai Ryzhkov, visited Leninakan.
areas with the "sole mission to
In a report released just before save people and give them
midnight on Friday,_the commit· essential ald."

Computer comments
By ALLAN S. PAPKIN
United Press International
1
Heavy duty computer users
have some special problems that
cas ual users do not. One problem
Is what to do when your hard disk
starts to get crowded with
;seldom-used files.
You have a few choices. You
can start the tedious process of
examining each and every flle,
deletmg those you know you will
never need again, or you can set
aside thes~ Illes in archives
withm the hard disk or copy them
to floppies for storage
The latter Is a better choice.
There are several ways of
doing this. IItke a new commercial package called DS
SQUEEZE by Design Software.
This program accordmg to the
publisher will increase disk
space by as much as 75 percent .
I believe tt comes close to that
claim.
I have been testing it now for
a bout a month in dl !ferent ways
and it always gave me at least a
38 percent Increase in space tn
whatever files it squeezes, or
compresses Sometimes it gave
the claimed 75 percent mcrease.
Installation is simple For this
review, assume It is being used
with a hard disk although it is

Squeezing files for storage

possible to run It on a floppy based system
After making a back-up by
using the pos Diskcopy command, store the master
program
Insfrt the back•up in the A
drive and log to it. At the A:
prompt, type Install C: and press
Enter. If a directory does not
exist the program will create one
to install itself.
To run it, just type DSS and tt
loads.
As I have mentioned in earlier
reviews I like to go as far as
possible Into a program without'
the manual. DS SQUEEZE lets
yov go a long way, and even then
the manual is a s hort 46 pages
and easy to understand.
The program is menu driven.
The me nu bar across the bottom
of the screen is self explanatory
and simple to follow. If you need
help, It ts available on the screen
via the Fl key for each command
in the menu bar.
You can also select defaults to
set the destination of the compressed files.
A feature of DS SQUEEZE I
have not found elsewhere ts the
a bl!ity to run an application
program · from within DS

-

SQUEEZE . An Important warnIng however: Do not run a
memory resident program from
within a compressed !lie. This
will lock the computer
You can squeeze entire directories at once or select individual
files . The same is true lor
restoring the material
You are also able to add
comments m the directory of the
stored files so that when you vtew
that directory within DS
SQUEEZE , you can see what
each file is without restoring the
file to Its original form and
vlewmg it Thts ts ex tremely
handy si nce it is something you
cannot do within DOS
There also is a password
capability that will prevent una utltortzed access to the files.
And DS SQUEEZE has a
reporti ng system that shows the
file name, the onglnal and
compressed stze of the fil e, and
by what percent each file was
compressed Thts information
can be sent to a printer or saved
tn a file
Beyond gaining extra disk
space, one of the benefits of this
squeezmg is tltat tf you send large
amounts of data via phone lines,
sending a compressed file saves

time and thereby money.
There is a tradeoff to using this
program over one of the more
standardized utilities. It Is that
the file compression used by DS
SQUEEZE Is proprietary This
means that any flle squeezed by
this program cannot be restored
to Its original format by anyone
who does no~ have DS
SQUEEZE
The squeezed files are given an
" ark" extension rather than the
more usual " .arc" extension,
which means that other archives
utilities either will not "see" that
"arked" files or will not act on
them.
This Is an excellent program,
simple to learn, simple to run and
most importa nt, very good in Its
dollar value.
If you need to get more dts k
space - and who doesn't without losing any of your data,
thts program might be for you.
Software. DS SQUEEZE, by
Design Software. distributed by
Electronic Arts. Minimum system requirement MSPC-DOS
2.1 or later; IBM compatible with
256K. List price : $59.95. Copy
protection . No. Reviewer' s evaluation Recommended.

Unless changes are made,
•
t
ne
programs may become exli
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State University agricultural economist Leroy Hushak says
colleges of agriculture will become extinct unless land-grant
umverstties shift their focus
away from production
agriculture
Land-grant universities have
focused on production agriculture for nearly 130 years, but
Hushak said that focus Is
obsolete.
"We'd better think through
whether there's a need to continue what we call the land-grant
university system," said Hu shak. "Limits placed on the way
the system works were legislated
about 100 year~ ago. I'm not
saying do away with ali our old
missiOns, but we need to decide
what still works and .get rid of
what doesn't."
When the Morrill Act gave land
to each state to start coll~ges of
agriculture and mechamcal arts
In 1862, 75 percent of the American people farmed But times
changed. With less than 2 percent
of the U.S population working on
farms today, there isn't nearly
the demand for education in
production agriculture.
Changing demographics have
1 alsed questions about the land·
grant system but have done little
to encourage change, Hushak
said.
"USDA and colleges of agriculture have conducted research
and educational programs that
are primarily farm-dominated,"
he said "Even though we claim
all of agriculture - from production to processing - as our
domain, we're not very comfortable with firms or groups that

are not 'farm." '
That just doesn' t make sense,

Hushak said. With the rural
economy In such dire straits
during the past decade, the
land-grant system had plenty of
opportunities to change its ways
Colleges of agriculture, with
their research and Cooperative
Extension Service programs, are
in a perfect position to help solve
the problems of rural communi·
ties, Hushak said. lnstead, the
land-grant system seems mtred
In programs of the past, he said
Programs to help small rural
communities develop or attract
non-agricultural businesses have
worked when trll!d. Similar s\lc·
cess came with programs that
helped farmers diversify their
operations and others that taught
management skills to non-farm
rural businessmen, Hushak satd.
But It's always been a case of
too little emphasiS and too few
resources, he said.
Yet, It wouldn't take radical
change to start serving new
groups, he said. For example,
land-grant untversttles already
teach business management to
specialty groups within
agriculture.
But Insurance principles, sales
methods, advertising and customer relations are skills used by
rural grocery stores as well as
farmer cooperatives And IncludIng new audiences In existing
programs would justify their
continuation, he said
Hushak said the reason
changes don't happen as fast as
they could is because university
administrators remain haunted
by the problem of how to change
the "cows and plows" image
without offending the people and
organizations who have supported such programs for years.
" ! think we have to make an

effort to convince those who have
tradtllonally supported the landgrant system that some of the
new things we could do ate
critical to them, too," he said.
"The future of rural commumttes has a critical effect &lt;&gt;n the
daily lives of those m traditional

agriculture.''

SoJbe~

supplies
down 23 percent

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Soybean supphes for 1988-89 are
23 percent smaller than last year
and 243 million bushels below last
year's use.
Dennis Henderson, agricultural economist at Ohio State
University, said this means this
year's use must drop about 17
percent. High pnces are needed
to bring such cuts.
In 1987-88. Ohio prices averaged about $6.65 per bushel, but
about 70 cents of this was due to
sharp gains in June and July In
anticipation of short1988-89 supplies, with a peak near $10 In late
June.
Since then, prices have fallen
to the mld-$7 range. It now
appears the high mid-summer
prices cut this fall's use to a level
that supplies can handle. Domestic crush is down about 10
percent, and exports a Fe running
about
50 percent,lower.
.

A big argument for diversify ing the training and outreach
missions of land-grant unlversit tes is what has happened In some
Midwestern commumtles during
the 1970s and 1980s
As farmers were pinched by
dechnlng land and cr.op values,
communities that had no businesses outside of agriculture also
felt the squeeze.
"I really worry that we've gone
beyond the point of no ret_urn tn
some of the communities to the
west of us, in terms of not
developing employment bases, "
Hushak said "They're definitely
worse off than they were 10 or 20
yeats ago, before they decided to
put all their eggs tn the production agriculture basket. "
Hushak doesn't think many of
these communities could recover
and build new economies even If
they got technical help from their
land-grant universities. Unless
colleges of agriculture pay atten
tlon to what has happened to
these communlttes and diversify
educational programs, more people will be questioning the
mission and existence of the
colleges, Hushak said.
''The Idea of the land-grant
system was to servi' the people,"
he said. "The people have
changed Colleges of agriculture '
haven't They must if the landgrant system is going to have any
future at ali"

Fanners get 4 %
return on assets
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Farmers get about a 4 percent
return on their assets, but Ohio
State University agricultural
economist Luther Tweeten says
the difference between the largest and smallest farms Is
dramatic ,
In 1986, farms with more than
$500,000 In sales earned 20
percent on their Investment
while farms with less than $5,000
In sales lost enough money to
have an asset returnofnegatlve3
percent.
Returns on assets turn positive
when sales exceed $100,000.

inspect the products before bld- Amencan floral lndustrycan buy
_ding, Rhodus said. This allows into the Idea of cooperative
quick sales of large volumes.
marketing and more specialized
Westland is more like Wall production "
Street than a traditional auction,
In !act, Increased volume and
Rhodus said. Bidding on flowers increased buyer Interest has
takes place simultaneously in forced Westland to expand, Rhoseveral large rooms. Each room dus said Now , in a small part of
has one or two clock-like gauges the auction room, buyers use
that show auction prices. Wes- monitors and high-resolution vitland has a total of nine gauges.
deo screens to see a gauge and a
sample
of the product being
A transaction _ occurs every
auctioned.
A push of a button
three seconds at the auction.
allows
buyers
to make rapid
About 75 percent of the buyers
are exporters. The auction retransactiOns.
"This Is a test period that may
wards the best growers because
a gauge stops quickly for highlead to buyers having monitors
and computer screens in their
quality products, Rhodus said.
Conversely,low-quallty products offices," Rhodus said "Buyers
result in lower bids.
will be able to see the action in
"Holland's system allows the - each au~ion room. I'll be studyauction to handle marketing, the Ing the economic Implications of
buyers to purchase large vothis, especially how the new
lumes and the grower to concen- system affects prices In Europe
trate on quality. A similar
and the United States."
Currently, several US. llvessystem In the United States
would allow our floriculture
tock auctions use videotapes and
satellite technology to beam
·industry to better compete in the
world market.··
pictures of their animals to
Dutch growers meet regularly buyers nationwide. Buyers
to discuss their knowledge and phone In their bids
' 'Tradition prevents American
experience, Rhodus said. Their
greenhouses contain the latest . flower growers from forming
automation and computer tech- cooperatives and auctions," Rhonology to help them regulate dus said "Tradition tendS to 1
growth factors such as tempera- keep them from finding ways to
ture, humidity and light Inten- be more efficient, keeping up '
with the competition and ultisity, he said.
mately making more money.
"Efficient production of highSeveral
major U.S. products.
quality products sold at a coopersuch
as
oranges
and butter, come
ative auction allows buyers to
from
cooperatives,
but!t doesn't
purchase large volumes rapidly
seem to be catching on In the
and at low cost," Rhodus said.
"Reduced costs are passed on to floral ind~stry ."
the consumer. Hopefully, the

•

BRIDGE

ASTRO-GRAPH

JAMES
JACOBY

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'l
A
'Your
~'Birthday

NORTH
+Q J 3 2

•• P
73

.,

+AQJ8 5

WEST

Dec:. 11, 1988
LOng·term tmprovements In your baste
lifestyle can be achieved m the year
ahead This cap be a time when ambition s can be fUIItlled and material desires gratlfted
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) If you
have an Important ftnanclal arrangement to transact you're apt to fare better today than you Wttl taler Treat the
other party involved as tatrly as you
want to be treated yourself Mater
changes are ahead for Sagtttarlus tn the
com1ng year Send for your AstraGraph predictions today Mall $1 tQ Astra-Graph . c/o this newspaper, P 0
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428
Be sure to state your zodiac s1gn
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 19) You
should have excellenl foresight today,
and If you act upon 11 properly, changes
for the belter can be brought about to
help advance your personal tnferests
AQUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.Feb. 19) The results should be good tod ay for calling m
markers tor favors thai are owed to you
by fnends However, frame your requests as gentle reminders.
PISCES (Fob. :ZO.Morch 20) This could
be a very successful day tor you It you
apply yourself Remember hopes and
wtshes can only become reaht•es when
they are acted upon In a positive
manner
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) If you 're In·
valved tn an arrangement today where
you are dealing for high stakes you
should do rather well lady luck may
be Instrumental In giving you the edge
TAURUS (Aprol :ZO.Mor 20) Before
mak1ng an 1mportant decision today, 11
mtght be w1se to seek adVlce from
friends or associates whose opinions
you respect They could prov1de you

w11h cons1ruct1ve slants
GEMINI (Mer 21-Juno 20) Your grea1est benell1s 1oday are likely Io be de·
nved from Situations where you share a
vested 1nterest wnh another. Jo•nt ven·
tures look more promtsmg than solo

flights
CANCER (June 21-Jutr 22) You are
presen11y '" a favorable cycle tor en·
hanclng your popularitY and making
new friends Several pleasant experl·
ences 'l:ould be possoble lor you loday
LEO (Jutr 23·'Aug. 22) Your chart ondo·
cates opportunity lor gain from two dlf·.
ferent sources today One may be
through personal efforts, the other
might come from a second party
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) Lady Luck
tends to favor yout endeavors today,
espec1alty tn situations with lntermedl·
anes The spirit of coopereJIIOn Is the
catalyst for success
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) The eventual
income of a matter that has been con·
cemlng you appears favorable now
Don't let any grass grow under your feet
II you see a way to conclude 1t today
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II could
prove worthwhile today to get In touch
with two different friends wllh whom
you 've lost contact lately One you know
from business, the other Socially
@) 1-. NIWIPAPER EN1'ERPIIII£ AlaN.

n-oo-u

EAST

•a+
+8

.QJ109
+J9642
+ 10 7 2

.--

602
K Q8 5

+K 94

SOUTH
+AK10 9765

•A s

l-

+AlO
+63

,.,.

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer North
Nortb

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

East

Pass
Pass

s+

Db!

6+
Pass

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead

South

2+

!NT

5NT
6+

+4

It's right
for five or seven
By James Ja&lt;Gby
Even though South held only 15
high-card points. the seven-card spade
smt catapulted hts cards mto the
range for a strong Jump shtft Ftgure
extra pomts for the ftfth , stxth and
seventh spades, and you eas1ly bnng

the values up to whatever you like to
have to make a jump shift as
responder.
When the response to Blackwood
was ftve dtamonds, East took the obvi·
ous opportumty to make a lead-dtrect."
mg double South sttll asked for kmgs,
but then stopped m SIX spades when
North showed only one kmg. In fact
thts ts one of those deals tn whtch declarer may JUSt as well be in a grand
slam after the defenders lead a dta·
mond. Apparently be will need the
club fmesse anyway, II West has the
club king. he can make all the tncks II
East holds the club kong, the small
slam wlll be set But there was one

ktcker Perhaps East held K·Q-J of dt·
amonds, perhaps also East mtght err
tf he held only K·Q of diamonds.
Declarer won the diamond ace;
cashed the ace of spades, and played
ace and kmg of hearts Now he led a·
low dtamond from the dummy East
was up agatnst t\ If he won the queen
of dtamonds, the play of a red card
would allow declarer to dtscard a club
from hts hand whtle rufhng m dummy,
and a club play would be tnto the A·Q·
J on dummy. He finally took his only
chance. He played low When West
turned up wtth the jack of diamonds
and played a club through the dummy,
the contract was set
James Jacoby's books "Jacoby on
Bndge• and "Jacoby on Card Games ·
(wnlten w1th his father, the late Oswald Jacoby) are now ava1lable at_
bookstores. Both are published by
Pharos Books.

Classifie

Dutch auctions offer lesson
to nation's floral industry
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State University economist
Timothy Rhodus says America's
floral industry could grow significantly by using the same techniques that have made Holland
the world's leading flower and
plant producer.
Rhodus, who studies world
trends in floral prices, said
Holland uses a mix of cooperation and technology to raise and
· sell its products.
In 1985, Holland exported $744
million worth of cut flowers, or65
percent of the world's trade. The
United States exported abou,t $6
million worth of cut flowers , or .5
percent of the world's trade that
year. A majority of the U.S
flower exports went to Canada.
Most Hoiland growers belong
to cooperatives, which sell their
products at auctions, Rhodus
said. This arrangement has
existed for about 100 years . Most
U.S. flower and plant producers
grow and market independently
One of Holland's largest auctions Is in Westland. It has about
3,000 growers as members.
Another 1,000 growers also
supply products.
"The Dutch have descending
auctions," Rhodus said. "An.
initial price is set for a product
based on Inspection from the
auction staff and market trends
It then goes down untU someone
makes a bid. That bid ends the
auction for the product."
Because the reputation of most
growers Is well-established and
the products are graded by the
auction st!'ff, buyers seldom

Sunday Times- Sentinei-Page-0-3

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

December 11, 1988

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
Public N otic&amp;

Public Notice
PUIILIC NOTICE
Tho Greonlleld
Twp
Board of Trustee~ are plecng
two (2) keroMne huter and
a fuet can up tor Malad bidl .
Board will accept bldl Dec.
16 ot 7.00 p.m ot Town
Holt Higheot bod will hove

SITUATED IN HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP , GALLI A
COUNTY. OHIO.
And being mora fulty d•
scribed as followa:
Begmnlng at a potnttn the
centerline of ax11t1ng State
Route No. 326. 181d point
being 0 .2 of a mila, more or
len. u mepured along axootlng Stote Route No 326
aouthwettarty from its JUAC·
tlon with Gallla County
Rood No. 16 tWoodo Mill):
thenc.. nonh along existing
State Route No. 326 on 1
tlngent and curve to the left
'tor a distance of 0 .17 of a
mile. mora or less. crossing

choice of heater , and fuel
can. Second high•t bidder
will get other heetor Bldo
will be final and heater• wll
be placed Dec. 16 et Town

Hall

Brand name of both

heater~

It Keroaun Both

heater• oro 22.700 BTU
Greenfield Twp
Board of Trua. .
OEC 6. 7 , 8. 9:11

Deer Creek and ltttle Rae·
coon Creek: thence. continulng in • northerly directton along 1 curve to thelefl
end 1 tangent to 1 potnt in
the cent•line of exilting
Stote Route No. 32&amp; ond
there terminate Sold point
belngO 20 ofomlto, more or
leu, u mOMured olong
State Route No 325 In o
northerly dlroctlon from ita
junction with Gollio County
Rood No. 1&amp; (Woodl Milt!
Sold deocrlbod Relocation
hovingototlllengthofO 30
of 1 mHo. mor. or leu
PROPOSED. THE ABAN·
OONMENT OF A PORTION
OF
EXISTING
STATE
ROUTE NO. 325. SITU·
ATEO IN HUNTINGTON
TOWNSHIP, GALUA COUNTV. OHIO. SAME TO REVERT
TO THE GALUA COUNTY
HIGHWAY SYSTEM
AT
SUCHTtMETHATTHECOR·
RESPONDING RELOCATED
PORTION OF STATE ROUTE
NO. 3211 18 OPENED TO
'I'RAI'FIC ANO AFTER THE
FINAL ABANDONMENT EN·
T11Y HAS BEEN ENTERED
ON THE JOURNAL OF THE
DIRECTOR OF TRANSPOR·
TATION.
And being moro fully de- .

Public Notice
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING
CONTRACT SALES
LEGAL COPY •88·48
In accordance whh the
proviliona of Choptor 11111
ol the Ohio reviled Code end
purouant to Section 128.
Title 23 oltho United Stateo
Code, ttoe Director of Tho
Ohio DoPenmont ol Trill·
oportation wll hold o public
hoerlng at 1 :DO p.m., Wodn•dey.Jonuory 11, 18881n
the Buckwe HPta Cor.or
Contor, County Rood No.
678. In Rio Gr.ndo, Ohio,
for ttoo purpo• ol hearing
otot. .onto on tho propoood
Relocotion, Abondonmont
ond Vocotlon ol portion• ol
Stile Routo No. 3211, ••·
tlon 12.08 tocetad In Gollio
County.
PROPOSED. THE RELOCA·
TION OF A PORTION OF
1ST ATE ROUTE NO •• 32&amp;.

•

ICflbod as follows:
Beglnnong at a point in the
existing centerline of axial·
ing State Route No 326.
uid point be1ng 0 10 of a
m•le. mora or leu. as mea-

sured along "uating SUite

Route No 326 in a south•
westartv direction from it.
junction with Gallla County
Road No 16 (Wood Mill) :
thence. in a northeeatarty di·

raction along existing State
Route No 326 to ita June·
tion with Gallla County
Rood No. 15 tWoodo Mill)

and there tarminate S11d
Abandonment to fncluda all
that portion of the existing
route not neceuary for the
construction or maintenence of the propoaed carr•·
pondmg
relocation
or
needed for any other State
highway
PROPOSED . THE VACA,TION OF A PORTION OF
EXISTING STATE ROUTE
NO 32&amp;, SITUATED IN
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHP.
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO,
SAME TO REVERT TO THE
OWNERS OF THE UNDER·
LYING FEE j\NO THE ABUT·
1
TING PROPERTY OWNERS
ATSUCHTtMETHATTHEOIRECTOR OF TRANSPORTA·
1
TION HAS COMPUEO WITH
' THE PROVISIONS OF SECTlON &amp;611 .07 OF THE RE·
VIS EO CODE OF OHIO.
And being more fully de·
ocrlbod u fottowo:
~ Beginning It tho jUnction
of &amp;toto Routa No. 3211 ond
Gotllo County Rood No. 1&amp;
IWoodl Milt!: thonce. In o
northerly direction olong oxieting ototo route No 326
for o dlltance of D. 10 of 1
, milo. mo.. or Ina. ond thor.
t"'"'inale. Sold Vocotlon to
Include ell ttoe obovo del ocribod portiona of ulotlng
Stote Route No. 326 not
1noodld for ttoe conotructlon

or memtenance of the corraspondiAg propol&amp;d relocation or needed for any
other public highway
At thts hearing, mapa
showing the
propoaed
changes and alternate locations and design• to the
highway ayaem Will be dll·
,pioyed Ten1otive schadutn
for rtght·of-wey ecqui1it1on
lind conatructlon, will be
diiCUSeed .

A copy of the environmental document 1n the form of a
Categorical Ex.clus1on. aa

wall as maps, drawtngs.
environmental 1nformat1on
and other pertinent data developed by the Ohio Depanment of Trantponetlon, and
any written commenta received as 1 r11utt of coord1n.t10n with ttllte. federal
and local oHicial• agendea, .
and public advitlory groupa
wdl be available for view1ng
at the O'hio Department of
Transport.tkm D1atrict Offlee, In Marietta. Ohio . Co·
plea of the environmental
document may also be
viewad at d•ignated locations. a list of which mav be
obtamed from the above
mentiOned ODOT District
Office
Anyone wilh1ng to submit
a wrttten statement or ex·
hibit concerning the Categorical Ex.clualon or othr
item• of the propo•l may do
10 by prnentlng it ot tho
hoorlnv or melllnv to the
Ohio Dapenment of Tran oportotion Dlotrlct Deputy
Dlroctol, Box 866, Mullkin·
gum Drive. 1n Manetta,
Ohio, 467&amp;0. Tho fino! dote
for aubmluktn of ltltl·
menu wMt be Jenuery 23,
1888.
Barnard B. Hurtt, P E.
Olroctor of Tronoportotion
DEC . 11. JAN. 1, 8

�Page-D 4-Sunday Times Sent1nel
[ IIIIJI!lVI'II'Iil

PubliC NotiCe

The Tupper a Pia ns
Cheste r Water 0 strict is
requeat ng bldt to pa nt the r

Success Tank. a 200 000
gallons

elevated

:)l~fVIL!'S

11

PUBLIC NOTICE

storage

tank located 2 m les IOU
thea1t of S R 7 on Co Ad
46 n Me gs County
Specif cat ons can be
p eked up at 1ha D str C1
Otfle$ 39661 Bar 30 Road
Reedsv Ue Oh o 3 miles
south of Tuppers Pia ns on
S R 7

Sealed b ds bill be opened
onJanuary9 19B9at11 00
A M at the D str ct Off ca
Ma I ng Addre.. 39561 Bar

30 Road Reedsvllte Oh o

45772
There w II only be one
inspect on tour of the tank

That tour wiU leave the
DstrC1 Otfce at 1000
A M On January 3 1989
The tank s located 4 m•les

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

36 lots &amp; Acreage

'
R en t ~ls

U gentfv need depMdlble PM
son to work w;thout IUpet'V$IIOn
for Tu;as .011 Co In Gall pols
••• We trt1 n W ite H J
D ckeraon Pr.. SWEPCO Bo:-.
9151006 Ft Wonh Tx 76161

L cenHd Phy•c.l Thnplst 1rt
Vete ens Memo II Hosphal
Cal &amp;14 992 2104 1111 for
Dente

from the ott ce

HELP WANTED

The 0 st 1et reserves the
pht to reJect any and or all

I

41

I

Nicely furn shad email house
Aduha onty Raf aqund No
pet1 Call 814-441!1 0338

J

3 BA AC carpet pool g.-.ge.
2 firaplec• fence Good loc•
tiOn can A 1 Raal Eetate
Brollar 304-117&amp;-5104

'
i

I
~----~),j

4~631

1t's

"It's not perfume
tartar sauce'"

Homes for Rent

Planu Sub 4 BA ful b•emant c•pat g• 111nge. city
achoolt; AduHs only one ch ld
No 'P•a. Dep
Ret Nql.lired
t32&amp; p.- mo C..ll &amp;14 446
0216 after 8 PM weekendl
any1me.

a

3 AnnoLrncements

LEADING INSURANCE COM
PANY aaekl. ndNiduel to own
~md open~te their own lnlurtlnce
agency We oft• up to t24 000
per ve• plus benefits to Stlr1
Ave·a~e
neom81 now at
160 000 All t111 n ng provided
Fo confidential nteMaw contact George Puchov dl 1114
776 1230

a••• "''"'

U Hau sFo Rent SidersEqup-

men Co US Rt 36 Hender
•onWV

4

WANTED Full t me employ
m .. t '" you own home 11 a
Home Serv ~ Worlwr with
Budt~JW"e Cor11mun ty S.rv C8l
We p ovida Alary pkls benfita
end a d•ly room and board rete
You Pf"Ovtde a home gu d111ce
and fr .-.dehlp n a fam ly
atmosph.,. Requna ability ID
teach pertonal llv ng skilla and a
commitm.m to the owth and
dewaopment of an nllvldual[l)
With m~tal reta dltton Con
at 446 7109
tact Sytvla
aftt 6 00 PM Appl cants muu
tHida n Galla Coumy Equal
Opportunity Employe

o

G1veaway

o.,.

0 ay It pped cat to giVe away
Make n ce Ch •tmaa p aaent
BaaJtrful makings Mala Call
614 446 4436
2 Dober mans male&amp; fam~lato
good home only Cal between 9
AM 9 PM 614 256 1443

Homeless kittens offer love and
c:ompan on ship Naed aomeona
o love and care to them
G14 992 7382
Sma I feme ehou• dog to good
home Reaemblea red laiC very
ow1ble A 10 small kltchMtab a
Cal 614 742 2507

2aduttcats Housecat• Ownere
deceaaad Naad home mmed ate y.. Chesh e 614 367
7677 o 304 675 2047

Lost and Found

6

HOME WORK
Spfta T me
Pa1nt lowly fo k art bu ldlng
shap• wh ch fo m toy wllaga of
hou•a I brary town hall etc
No axpe lenc:e nac••rv h•e
entire hmltr help vou We pay
you t20 for each set of 1 1 toys
parntad according to nstruc
ttens and r•mbu .... you lh pplng cone Send ua 5 •t•
-•lily a ern 1100 Sand us10
Nts weakly g« 1 check for
UOO Our homework atarter
package lnctud• alltha obJ.cta
n the toy vill~a and color
tcheme for each pllft To r.g atar
nto program eand you name.
addr•a and f20 reg l'trat on
faa ! .tunded on ncond set of
pa ntad toys you Mnd u~J ta
Dan el Aowan 3 Golf Canter
Suite 368 2608 HoffmM Eet
stu IL60196

I::::-:-:-::-:c=-::-:---TEXAS REFINERY CORP

naedl me1ufl!l person now n
Gall polla aru Rag•dl•• of
t a n ng Write F G Hopldne
Box 711 Ft Worth Tx 711101

a444

10 lldi• needed fo tetephona
wo k. Must ,.1111 wall 2 1hlfte
1111a llbla: 9 00 am 2 30 pm;
4 00 8 00 pm Good hou 1y
waga: paid weakly apply after
10:00 am Thurtd-r Dec. 1 at
104'1:1 !upete n
Man St
Pom.-oy
Job op.-. ng fo Sohool Age
Instructor Full time t.mpon1ry
Mull haYe cu renl M 8 P R
Ctrtlflca!e Valid Ohio Oep,art
mant of Educ .. ion CertlflcMe
Mates Degree Pnif..,.d S•
larybaginsat 116 400 Poet1:10n
begins J•nuary 3 1989 Apply
to Meigs County Board of
MR DO P 0 Box 307 1310
C.l•on St SyracuM. Oh;o
45779 Attant10n B.tt• Hoffman. P ogram D ador
Teach• tit Meigs JuniOI' High
nMdl babv•itter fo babjl Muet
eupply ret. .ne• be a nonsmok• •nd ltwa n Middleport
Pomeroy Cell Suzanne. 814949 23119
Wanted Full time employment
n you own home a1 a Home
SerlliCM Worq, with Buck.,.
Community S•'licaa We prov da 11lary plus bentflte and a
dilly room end board rata You
Pf"Ovtda a home, guid.,ca and
fr andlh'p n a famlty atmo•
ph . . Raqulr• ab lhy tD taac:h
p. .onal lrv ng aldlla and a
&lt;:ommltm••n to the growth and
d~Walopmem of an ndlvkluellsl
with mental a111rd.lon Contl&lt;:t Sylvia Day at 814 4411
7109af1er6 OOp m AppiiGintl
must •ida '" Gallla County
Equal Opportunity Employe

Certified Medlc81 A11ll1ant for
Fern ty Prect c. Phy Iiden 1 of

floe. Full t me, •mpon~ry b••
for 2 or 3 momha Exp•IMca
helpful but not nac••rv Sand
1'811umatoP 0 8ox468 . Reclna.
Oh&lt;o

AVON Le•n whMe you t•n
Fraa training Insurance avalla
bla F -lble hours. Reward and
NOOgnltk)n for 181• IUCC.IWant 10 know mora? Call Avon
D 1t ic:t Maneu• at 814 1198
7111
AVON

Yard Sale

Galllpohs
&amp; VICinity
MovngSae: 1 26 hu1212
New range. w &amp; 0 llv a.
bedroom suites guns tools
add era Ca l 614 266 66116

8

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctoon

A ck Pe•son Auct oneef I
cenaed Oh o and W8$t V g n a
Estate Jnttque farm qu dttton s.a es 304 773 5786

Wanted To Buy

9

TOP CASH pad to 83 mod at
and newer ueed clws Smnh
Bu dl Pont ac 1911 Eaate n
Ave Ga pole Cal 614 446
2282
Complete houaaho ds of furn
tura &amp; ant ques A fO wood &amp;
COlli hea a 1 Swan 1 Fu nrtu a
&amp; Auct10n Th d &amp; 0 lVII
614 446 3159

AVON all are• ISh 18l' Sp-•

Up to $15 hour p oc•s ng mail
weekly Check guaranteed. free
details wme SO 1057 w
Ph ladalph a. Surta239 GO On
ta o CALIF 917152
JOB HUNTING? NEED A SKILL,?
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBti
AS Auto Madlanit::ll C. pentan. Coemetologlats Olvera..
fad Madlcal Wo br., Elec:tn·
aans Food Service Wo lea's.
Elect on 1:1 Tedln dane lndu•
1 al Malnlenanca Worka a
Nursing Asaldlntl and Ordflf
I • Mach n atL OfflcaWorkera
and Wafders Rag Iter now fo
c •••• beglnn ng January 3rd
Cei/Tri-CountyVocat anal Adutt
Cente at 753 3511 P.1 14 A
var II!IIY o1 fund ng sourc• to pay
fo training ara IYallabla tor
those el g ble.
BUILD FOR YOUR FUTURE
Le•n both ough end finish
carpentry skills at the Aduh
Educat on Ctnte T County
Vocet anal School The Acluh
carp$1try p og am will provide
you with tn1ln ng to btooma a
c•p.,ter Ca ptntryeklllsareao
mpor111nt and ver•tla th•
carpentere make up the l•g•t
g oup of buld ng 1 ada worat..s
To reg ater to d a - beg nning
Janua y 3rd can 763--3611 ut.
14 Aek about our variety of
hind ng sou cnavalablato pay
fo tra n ng

2

In

Memor~am

In Memory of

Furniture 1nd •PP lf1C811 by the
p eca o entwe houaehold Fatr
p c:esbengpad Ca1814446
31!58
814 379

~
.l)sed furniture by tha p ec;e o
entire household a 10 selling
614 742 24515
Wanted to buy etand ng timber
304 675 632B

1

Card of Thanks

WILLIAM R MYERS
Who Passed Away
December 1962
Gone but not forcotten
Sadly mossed by w1fe
Mary C Myers and
Choldren

everyone who sent
flowers cards brought
fOOd VISited called
and

expressed

their

k'"dness and sympathy
upon the unexpected
death of my husband
Bnan Your thoughtful
ness will always be re
membered
Kathy K1uee

B II ng Clerk, Ayera Fam 1y
Health • •..Wng an tn•u• c
indlv duel fo pan t me position
of billing clark. knowlega of
madiCIII terminology • muat.
uper .-.ce p .tarred 304 675
6015 Ayers Family Htakh w II
be loc.ted n Galllpolla Farry

wv,

8abylittar naedtld Letart Point
Pl . . .nt areL 304 886 3870
LPN or RN nMded for Doctor'e
office. Send •uma with ef•
encea to P 0 Box
New
Hwan WV

ns

SM• Agents

Photographer
with 36 mm cam.,. naeded for
J'.Qmmllaion •l••rrltory Mue1
know Galhpol 1 M ddl.ort
01khll and Pt Pl .... nt wall
mult be able to work well with
people and work wHhout auperlll•lon S. unci• • daadllna
PI'HILIN For irit:arvtaw appo nt
m.,t call Gragg 1 BOO 366-3325
Wanted lady to ltly •t n ght with
tldwlv lady no work. phon•
304 676 6810
CompenMted volunteer for for
1 llf' •tudant axch111ge prog ama. Statwkla help needed
now Di.:aw u:callerace n
youth axch111ge wtth ABPECT
Found.r:lon 800 433 4678

12

In memory of
lawrence (Dobbie)
Manley and Julia
Mane Manley
took
you to be wrth hom and
th1np hm not been the
same w~hout them
here We strlt don t un
derstand why?
We love them and
m1ss them so We know
they are logether
Sadly m1ssed by
dau;rter RoSIIIIary
Hysell sons Alymond.
Roger and lawrence Jr
pandcholdren end

peat &amp;r111dchltdren

Sltuatoons
Want ad

N•ad Mon-.1 Needed mala o
famala to live in attendant
helping the h111dlcap In my
hom.-St Rt 180 Vlnton7dS¥s
• week Call 1!114 388 8568 a
3118 8711

W• h.,• room for 3 elderly
pertona n our personal c••
horne. Approved Call814 992
8516
Loving c•• for etd•ly and
handicapped UOO plue. Cell
1114 992 11873

16

5 years 110 God

I would IJ ke to thank

All arMI Call Ma •lyn

304-676 1429

LOST Ch huahua 165 Mu berry
A\ltl Ca1614 992 6836

7

T•a Townhouaa ap..-tment• 2
BAs
1 ¥l baths CA dis
hw81her dll~l privata endo•d patio poo~ plevi ound
Wat• •war &amp; tn11h nduded
Starting e1 f288 p• mo Call
814 3&amp;7 7810
Furnished apt Ne• HMC 1 BR
f235 Utlttl• pe•d Cell 446
4416afta 7PM
Call

Apartments for tha Eld•lv
Gall a Menor Apertmtnts 1166
Buhl Morton Road Des
to
the Serna Cnizen !62
older)
endHendicat:~PedP•IOnl Equal
housing opportunhy AppNc ..
ttone may bap du.t up It Spring
Vall.,. Plaza 529 Jackaon Pike
or c.al1114 448 4839

Cak• by Rhea Call 614 388

w...... 304 882 21146

lost n Rut and ne~ghbo hood
Sold G ay fema e c" Waar ng
white flea co lar If found eall
614 742 2073

Lou3monthodg t!l'lfamalacllt
with fou whtte feet 23 d &amp;
Jafi•sun 304 676 4234

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 636 Jackson
Pike from t183 a mo W.tk ta
•hop and mov •
614 44e
26e8 EOH

rod

Local bua.,•• nte.... tad n
c•eflf onentod ndiv dual wttnt
ng to work In f nlclll serv eel
nduitry
plus • I •
commlslion Needs to hiWa
computer and Ncret:ary skills as
wei Mu .. be aggrHsftla Send
esum• to P 0 Box 359
Gal rpola Oh o 415631
Need a M111te card V sa n a
hu ry? Gua anteed p ogram egNdlass of h story Fo manual
and app cat on ca ua 1 315
733 6063 En M2766

44

New complately tu n shad
apartment • mobile homt In
city Adutts ontv" Parking Call
114 448 0338

Apertm•ta and hou••
304 676 11104

b ds
!12) 11 18 25 (11 1 4tc

Announcement s

Apartment
for Rent

2 BFI 1pta. II clout .. kllchen
appl turnlahed Waah• Dryer
hook up n.w plush c•piL tile._
p.alnt.
Nlct good location.
R~ency lne. Apta. Cel 304675 6104 o 876 63811 or
15715 7738

P ofe..lon• lttng htu drhlet•
Sam Tankll., Truck ng Ia now
hi H'lg •PM" Mcltd ow the ra.d
dtftla a. We nMd fi It tecond •
••m d lven Exclll .,t bentfits
a w . .kly pay checks C. ltod.,
304 6152 155152 (I 1 800 627
teMYI Subject tad ug screen 6
EOE

Bab,osit1er need.cl weekdS¥1 n
ou home Holzer Hospita araa
Sand ftume to Box C s 183
e oGalllpohsDalyT bune,826
Th d A,.
Gallpo11 Oho

44

Schools
I nJtruct•on

RETRAIN NOW
SOUTHEASTERN BU81NES-$
COLLEGE 1129 Jackson Pille.
Call 441 43117 R•v No 88 1 1
1011&amp;8

3 Announcem111t1

-.w.

'lbdor's~....

BISCUIT

Will do babo(lltt ng In my home
Waekd..,s &amp; weekendl Any
ehlft Callll14 446 8&amp;47
McDanl.. Cuetom Butchtring.
15 day a weak. c.al1304 8823224

op~

Babyslt.. r avalable. fl• ble
hours full o part time. beh nd
Ordnance School h.,a ret•an
c• 304-876 2784

a••u•Pl.-e
on St Rt
eall

Nice hou• Ia
7 t260 a mo
814 4411 0038

Finan cral

21

3 BR weah• dryer hook up. 1
c• g.,.ga t300 • mo t150
dep Rodn~rt Y llaga II Call
614 4411 4636

Busoness
Opportunoty

NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH
lNG CO reoommandlthet you
do buain•• with p.,pla you
know •nd NOT to •nd mon.,
ttwough tha mall until you hwe
investAg•H the off.-ing
1000 SUNBEDS
TONING TABLES
SUNAL WOLFF Tanning Bad•
Slend•Ouest P... tve E•rc~•
en tall for FREE Color Cata
logua 81Yeto60% 1 BOO 228

6292.

Tabl• and dlapl.., c - for
fabr c shop Also hiiVe some
fabric.,.dnot ons Will tell all tor
tiiOOO Call 1!114 9115 3909 or
814-985 4202
Har S.ton. h gh tNffic high
voluma lllop Recl.lced for quick
ule. 304-8211 3011&amp; o 304
523 7277

23

Profu11onal
Sarv1ces

Mary Luc• P ano &amp;. o gtn I •
IOAI Call 614 4411 9787 Or
446 4428
Plano Le11ons in my home
beginning to intermediMa Call
614 441 0200

3 bedroom hou• n Mldclepart
bu It n kitch., t226
plus deposit Call 614 9112
3159

AC

Full b•am.-.t one end half
ltory quha location, II mil•
north of Po nt Pl. .ant 304
1176 1071
Hou• for tent t150 00 month.
no kG no pata. call 304 &amp;75
7443 after 6 00 PM
2 bedroom, fou room apt
•1 10 00 2 bedroom •mall
houu 1200 00 or will sllll on a
land contract 304 676 2722

Tuning and rap.al Lana
Din ala 614 742 2951 Alao
fo •le: K mball 67 nch Orand

.....
31

Homes for Sale

Vary att,.dl'la b lck4b.clfoom
2 b•h tamly room wtth fir•
place. iormal dining. t.gallvlng
oom 30 h cu11om oak kitchen
cabin . . oak woodwork,. flniah
b. .m.nt 2 c.- a•q&amp; lwei
l111dacapad lot 4 MJI• from
Holzer Hoephal off Fit 36
Porterbrook Subdivision. Cafl
614-448 4188

4 BR full baHm_,t S. garag ..
1ulty c•peted !aome new) City
schoole Utilltl• low Woodburn• Netu,.l a• furnace.
Pric»d to 111f Caff 814 4411
0276 attar 8 PM weakenda
anytime.

3 BR ttou• deluxe AC &amp;
poo, Sal eo Trade. 4 BR hOUM
good location C.ll 304-875
5104
Hou• to sale. Poe"ble land
contnu:t 822 Jacbon St V nton OH 814 388 93110
3 bedroom, 2 b•ha full finalhad
lt•emant new furnact and
cent,.l •lr u•aoe. fanc.d yard
2414 Mt V•non Aw Pt Ptt
priced on Inspection 304 675
1774

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1988 NawMoon 12di0 2 BR
81900 Callll14 448 0390
1970 12x60 Monarch mobile
home 2 8A C:.ll 814 388
8114
19&amp;8 Fl ....wood 1 2x!i4 bottle
hNt and hat water t3000
Call 1114 843 6310 or 1114
843 &amp;4011 anyt.me. Ask for
Danny

v•

Double w d• mobil• home, on
1ound•lon appro• 2 aa•
do• to town and achoola. lg.
klfchen. ,laundry 3 bedrooma. 2
blllh• naw c•P81 coM:r. .
poreh WllkL back dacka pe11o
afln ..hed cell• pump. •eelant condition Urge b•n wll:h
concr• floor 814 912 3218
avanlfttl after I 30 or

_.._

Mobil• homaand lot tiiSOO In
Middleport 2 bedrooms call
114 912-1!1111&amp;
2 bedroom 12x&amp;O
304-1171 2722

t

1~0

11878 layltlaw moWia hom.,
14x70 with 7x21 •panda.
phone 304-87&amp; 8141
1178 Liberty 1 4x70 3 bedroom t7.900 00 304 11711
1871 and87&amp; 1783

WORLD

Frlnhi11 b•' 'lr

MoW• for - ' • 117l Uberty
1 2a10 •Wna n aoo 304-

en 11410

N ca-2 BR apt 4'1:1 m I• hom
Gallipolis StOVII rllfrig &amp; wat•
fu niahed t225 • mo No JM~•
Call614 446 8038
1 6 2 8R apartment f300
month lnclud• 111 utitlt •
Adutta only no pate dep
requ red C.l 1!114 446 4222
between 9'6

u••a•

Unfu n ehed 2 BR
•1*1
ment In town Ca patad Adutte
only No pats Cel 614 448
4661
Furn ehed 3 room apt t226 per
mo
d"'l Utillt • paid No
children 94 Locust. Clll 1114
448 1340 448 3870

na

Furn ehed 1 Br mod•n apt
Oep Ia ref No pat1 9110 Fir ..
Aw Cal/614 446 1079
SHADY LAWN APTS 729
Seoond Aw Fu n shed efflden
CIM 111n1n9 at t176 a mo
ndud ng water • giJbage.
S ngla adutts only Cal 614
44&amp; 4e07 or 441 2102
3 BR 5 Court St Kllchen with
stove &amp; rtfr g t2150 p us dep 6
rv1 NO' pe1s CaU 614 446
49211

HOUM10 rent 304 675 6720

1 Br 7 Court Kitchen with
stove &amp; rtfr g $175 pluedep Ia
ret No pets Call 814 446
4926

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Small furnished apt 116 Stale
Nice fo one pereon Call 614-446 3356

Rr!al Esl.tll!
Mobil• Hom• fo
r$nt In
Kanauga a ea ConstructiOn
wo ker• -lcome Call 614
4411 0608
Newly dacon~ted 2 BR fully
c•peted See. dep required
Call 614 441!1 8558 or 446
4766
2 8R moblehom•.t EveJgreen
No Sundl'( calla pl ... • Call
614 379 2678
2 SA
fully fu nlehed new
c•piJI AC all utlllt .. pa d
except alec. &amp; g• Cable tv
available. Owner pays wata
Mwaga6 traahp dl.up Seourtty
dapoatt • ref Mua be employed Four tlnthlotmilairom
c ty I mlts Call614 441 7793
Fraa rent untl Janu•rv 111 2
bedroom 2 bllth. City eohoola
Ref•encee and dapollt Cal
1114-44&amp; 8890
14.&amp;6 2 BR t250 a mo Call
1114 215111293
3 bedrooms. centNI air •II
atectrlc. fully c•peted N ce
nailghbo hood n M dcleport
Call 814 892 6868
2 bedroom. hln111had W•her
and drya U26 month plus
depostl: and ut lh • 614 992
7479
Hom .. telld Realty Sei•Rent
trei lar 4 tots. etc t13 600 00
Nancy Cant• bury 304 876
6540

P••

3 bedrooms. na
multh8¥e
m ..nc• 304-468 1887
Trail•• uniurnllhed coup!-.
amall children accepted At 1
Locuat Road Pt.Pit behind
K6K 304-1175 10711
2 mobllt hom• fu niehtd 2
bedroom apt turnlahed 3041178 8512 or 8715 3900

11

Help Wanted

WORK
OVERSEAS
Major U S companl•
Interviewing now
for

TAX FREE High Income
Potttlona Construction
Oeta Prow. . ng Secur
lty Eng•n•er• Ex ~Ill·
Wry DIIMI Mechanica.
Weldert. M•dicel Food
lllfYICII and many meny
more Worldwide Loca

Lerga1 roomaffie~.,c:yapt With
be1h All ut liti• pad Call
614 246 6223
Newly remodeled 1 BR apt
Appl turn shad Ideal ocetion-1
block from downtown CaH
614-446 4638

8

Pubhc Sala
&amp; Auction

LARGE ANTIQUE AND
COUECTlBLE AUCTION
SUN. DIC 11-12 30 p.m
Howtl Grovt Park. ltlpra
Oh o on Wa1hington llwd
FURNITURE Oak ce box oak wa
te eplwlne (2) 1ouOO oak tables
cu ved gass oak ch na oak
pr ncess d esse w mr or ock
e s 6 n pte safe w cker couch.
dough ca~net oak h ghOO~
w m !J oak d esser w/mll' crs

(2) ca111ed Rosewood stands oak
flat wa cu filoard h gh back oak
s delna d cha s 01~ chilferoOO
oat h~t bo11 oak washstands
p essed back youth cha oak 3
d awEJ 1 doo bookcase em p!re
ches~ dove Ia led blanket OOx oak
2 doo OOokcase w des~ oak Lar
kns desk, maple sur~nt ne h gtlboy poplar washstand o gan stoo
wa nul s delx&gt;a d top, oak stands
b anket OOxes oak d opfront desll.
t unks sma pegged wa nut ca lj.
net doveta ed boxes wa nut
ocker and cha cockshe L ron
bed od wa d obe od benches
oldcupboa d pankt.Jttomchat
oa~ cha s ft lop ce bo• needs
epa pus othertu nltu e !needs
some rep a ) weke!' Sh f!'l Tem
p e dol buggy
COlliCliBlES &amp; IISC Tu n of
centurt Santa Claus-2ft sluffed,
quns and comforts, do Is sad
ons stone ars crocks ugs p c
tu es and frames old~ ntage c oth
ng to~s, lable and I oo lamps
postea ds stnw I Ued dol d aw
knit~ augers. bock planes too s
clocks square na ed co umn Dox
COPIB bo~er t cycle, granite
ware, g!asswa e I(Jep ess on, Fen
to~ p ""d ~"' ~tor glas~
ante ns I nens 1926 nd an Head
2~ do ar ~ld co n Claro porcela n
I fJnnes candlestiCk phone
coffee wnder 1957 Shrley Tern
p edol IT I 895 wood wheel COl
no~ h C~O')' 0111

basket, 3 ~~ Do-

Awt•n•

(lloploy...,t So"oa

I 0936 N 56th Str•t
Suite 205
Ta
Fl 33617

1114

Ona Month Fraa R111'11
Quallfl.:l rent•• pay f200
deposit and no rent for the
month Novamb• or 0.
camber only Village Manor
and Rlverelde APirtmant•ln
Middleport From t182
tl14 112 7787 EOH
New eHicl,.,cv 1 or 2 bedroom
apta nMiddltPOrt. Fu Nl:hedOf
unfu nlshed Call 6U 992
15304 or 814 892 27711
2 btd oom apartment In M ddl•
pon rscantly ramoct.led t..rga
room• t185 per month. deposit equir«&lt; Dav 1!114 9122381 o nighll14 992 21109
4 apartments n Pom•ov Dna
and two bedrDOrnS. perth' fur
niahed kitchen For mo elnior
metlon call 114 992 6216 or
614 992 37116
1 bedroom •pt n SyracuM
$125 p• month plus dapoftt
Cell 1114 992 5732 or 814
992 3612

Sucfl Stfeat M ddleport Ohio
2 bed oom furnished apanmMt
utllll• paid raf••ncea Phone
304 882-2 5116

45

Furnoshed Rooms

Fu nlahed room-919 Saooi'KI
Ava
Gall polla t75 a mo
Ut Ill • Deld S ngla male. 8h•e
bath Call 448 4418 etta 7 PM

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 112
Olrva St Oelllpolte
NEW 6 pc wood arou..- 1399
Uvlngrooml*ih.... t189 11599
Bunk badl with b.ddlnv- 1249
Full sRe m.ttreea 6 foundation
uarting Ul8 R•cllnera
ltllrtint- t91
USED ledl dr•..,• bedroom
suttee O..k:l. wring• wash• •
complata line of uaed tumtture
NEW W•tern boot• 135
Worllboats t18 • up. (lte .. 6
toft toel Call &amp;14 448 3169

90 Dsv• Ama •• c•h with
approwd credit
3 Mil• out
Bulavlla Rd Open Bam to lipm
Mon. thru Set Ph &amp;14 446

Used •wlng mach
Pr ced
irom •49 96 The Fabr c Shop.
Pom•ov Oh o Cell 614 992·
2284

For low priCel on Quality Cerpet
• Fumlture coma to Mollohan
Furnltu,.Upp• Rtver Rd 1114
44117444

Pool table Brunewu:k 1 11%
a lite ac. ndd p•fact cond..
liOn. t1 000 even ngl 30417153772

PH 304 428 7245
Noo ... _.., for lea
tl1r1t1 or loll of Property

lllol..UaWo
lPMS. Cash or Chock wliD

n•

TRS 80 color comp~~~ar 3 wtth
dlak drive 6 books t276
Contact A Kemper P 0 Box
1177 Gall•polle

pi••

Lad!• Kroal• redlnar newly
uphot118r«&lt; t250 00 Sing•
..wing machine w;th mahog.-.y
cabinet
00 304 675

Wauinghoute waahar t71S
Whirlpool wash• •95 Ken
more dryer t95 Fletrlg frost
fra1. Ull Ratr g. sid•by aide
coppertone t176 Kenmare
waehar like new f1711 Elactr c
ranga 30
11150
,.n 11 a
t711. G E dl•hwaehw t75
Skagga AppiiMQM-Uppar RiveT
Rd .. 114 448 7388

no

2002

a..

63

Cad• ch•t d•ka. C,_.anza
wood dlnnettaa full white po•
ter bad 4 pc bedroom autte
compltte line of beda bedding
twin ful •
k ng. d., bed
h d•e bed ch•ts. d •aara.
sofaa chwa. redln.._ Many
moraltama PckaneUMCIFurni
lure 304 &amp;715 1460 ev'*nga

Wh rlpool electric stove l•ga
aaw~ng sat. ward oba. plevpan
8
ktttan Call 1114 445
0065

am••

AntiqUH
Pomeroy
to&amp;pm
814-992

2621

64 Mosc Merchandose

FURNITURE
TOYS
TOOLS TV S VCRS STEREOS
GUNS COINS TIRES ANTIQUES
KNIVES

446-8444
Chriltm• Tra. .1 14 ml irom
Rodn., on Rodn~JW" Bidwell Rd
Call Rldl~ Fllch• 1114 246
15248
Firewood for 11la. Ul
Cell 814 256 9301
Christmas tniM

700 PM

CLEARANCE SALE
OVERSTOCKED
WITH NEW
MERCHANDISE
MARLIN WEDEMEYER AUCTIONEER

614-245 5152

AUCTION
HOUSEHOLD ANnQUES AND EQUIPMENT

SATURDAy I DEC. 17-1 0:00 A.M.

At the old form homoploce of the IIHbough Fom
rty located at Su_,, Ohio. Dredoons being: t••
S....Mr Rd oH Rt 7 near Chost•, Ohio, to Town
ship Rd 444 (Ketbough.follrod Rd ), turn left
and conhnue to form. Wot&lt;h for sognsl
Nce Pano wnh beoch llepress~n bed and dresser stands
sholgun Maylag w nger wash,. odcha s occas onal cha s
new Sears bug k 119' meal gr nd9' on stand noce hospla bed
oth9' beds youtll bed, cherry Eastlake dresser wrth rna be
nsl Emp e ch"'l Snger treoo e sewong machon~ laney
Fran ld n sew ng mach ne with oak cab net, moha r s!Xa, oak
drop lronl des~ fancy oak kotch en shell c ock Ed son standard
cyhnde phonograph Thomas A Ed son cyl nder playe sev
eral cyl nder rea&gt;rds oak ch n,.ooe Kellogg cand "'t c~
phooe wtth oak r ngedlOx early portab etypewnter old Ph ro
!battery type) upr iht rad o waterla d"'k and char n ceold
metal st olor lard press old books on dud ng McGuney and
Zane Gey Henry Koehl9' old or ~na pop botl ~ Ham ~on &amp;
Jon"' gallon tar 3gaJ A P llonaghho ~ I ga AP Oonaghho
1a several other st&lt;Jle tars p clu elrames chalk horse lrtl e
BoPeep chI d's desk old baskets woro Coca-Cola crate whal
nol sh~l cuckoo clock costume Jewelry oak hoih ch~ old
qu lis oncludong one gooo doub e wedd ng ngand a bueand
whrte but mo~~ cutte s rug bealer qu nong~am~ o dlll'fson
clud ng 18 metal greyhound bus (K ng&gt;bu yl rag ooll othe s
ch ld s rooong boaod ch ld s blacl&lt;boa d chold s tt cycl~ o d
pedal car and mo e old perfume botll"' washboard oneo
sheels lamps
ALSO FROM THE BUILDING 1948 Farmall H tractor
purchased new by lam ly John Deere Model 5 mow ng
mach n~ loader and ~ole lor tractor 1-43 McCulloch ch~n
sow lractor chans bind9's snach biocks ~ock and lac~la
son~etoee gambl n st clcs, old mowong machone sectron
gr nd9' I hemp r&lt;ll' old country store teed dolloa old teed
seal~&gt; metal wheelbarrow wooden wheelbll'row very old
shalc9' rock9'S corn dryers, prtch Iorio and mosc lools tackle
box w/lures wooden doveta led boxes and advert~ong b"es
2 luel ool tanks and smalls lro nume ous lo meol on
REFIESHMINTS SERVED IY EASTON lAND IOOSTI11S

bcolltnt salt for t¥1ry.nt tsptCially &lt;aiiKiors
TIIMSc Cuh or CIIHk wilh ID
PlENTY PAlliNG -

IRING YOUR lAWN CHAIR

RODNEY HOWERY-Aumoneer-698 7231

AKC Chihuehua pupa 6 wkl
old Call 614-446 7766

'

n2 00

304 937

Tanning bad tor cofmmarclal o
ham• uaa. 24 bulbt tim• II
fane t1 500 00 304 937
3291

REDUCED' REDUCED! REDUCED'

21 ACRE FARM -A must lose~ Includes a large ba n loo

CFAuotcshott halredP.a un
Spayed female, 1 Ill
old
Cameo ehada with copp• ..,es
1114 992 6837 aft• 4 :00

shed and cella Fences surround these beautiful ac es and
cemenl block home w/2 bedrooms I bath lovong room
w/new wood burner Ca I oH ce lor appo ntmenl to show
Localed near Coal Company

Flegilta ed Cock• Span a1 pupPI• Reg ete ad Himalll'{an kit
t•n• Caah, no checks Call
614 992 2807

I 590 ACRES more o ess 3 bedooom home 2 baths
krtcheo w/ apploances FR lormal d n n&amp; 2 lg covered

---Will hold until Chrlltmaa Norwe-

ailn Elkhound pupp e1 t40 00
2 male Beagi• runn ng 304

BLACKBURN

losd

and tag your 1raa. Newall•
Chrlltmtl Tree Farm on• mila
above Maaon on H1ng1ng Roc:k
Road 304-173 IS371 or 304
882 2888

GALLIA- Need lo settle an estate P ced only $14 SOD
N ce cottage srttong on 5 acres Qu e1 country sell ng

REALTY

462 2ND AVE REAR
J•m and Bonnoe Stutes - 448 4208
Tammy Moore - 367 n60
Crystal Rochoe - 446 3838

Fr~dalra

with ce maker May

tag dryer Call304-1176 4017 or

117&amp; 37153
Mlxedherdwoodalabtl •12per
bundle. Contain ng approx 1 Y1
ton Ohio Pallet Co Pom•oy
Ohio 814-992 8481
CHRISTMAS TREE S
Home grown Chrlstmu T " •
Scotch and White P ne.
We'*' 1 Farm n Rutland
614-742 2143

fc

MORTON
BUILDINGS INC

QO
56 9111 6CI E Hunhnglol\ WV
1:'&lt;

1!041 733 I bS I
Call Toll Free Morton. IL
t 100 4477436

Burld

to meet
Silt-

Cloooce of
colors
ESTIMATE on post
~lldas and pack•&amp;• d11ls
hundreds tviA thou
lsoonds of dollan

1

Locol Sales

Reprosontatove
Donna Cnsenbory
ES R Boll66
fllllopolos Ohio 45631
Ph 614 256 6518

WE HAVE JUST LISTED APPROX 15 ACRES ON LOWER RT
7 WITH RT 7 ANO OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE THIS TYPE PROP
ERTY S SCARCE IF YOU ARE NTERESTEO BETTER CALL
SOON
LAND FRONTING ON OHIO RIVER AND RT 7 APPROX 15
ACRES LEVEl TO GENTLY SLOPING All CLEARED EXCEL
LENT BUILD NG SITES

REALTY

Tanning • ton ng equapment 2
tanlng bedll 1 taning bed
J•cun
t3 600 614 4411
7121

111g automatic wash• and Mev

LOWER RT 1 - SMALL FARM HAS 3 BEDROOM HOME
LARGE 60X70 BARN TOOL SHEDS OTHER OUTBU LDINGS
GREAT RESIDENT Al OR COMMERCIAL LOCAl ON $45 000

514 Second Avenue
U-\~111\ HI A( KRURN Gallipolis Oh1o 45631
8rok• r
(614) 446 0008

Buck stove flrt place Insert. exc
cond plue ell extru b•t
re.. onable off•
304 675
7480

-snow allis 1 PI K 2 180 e.
wilh ake10 menaboataa. pol•
1 Pr K2 110 a. with size 8
WDmMIS boOtS 6 pol• 304
87&amp; 15909

TWO STORY
LUMINUM S 0
lNG 3 BEDROOMS fORMAl
DIN NG FULL BASEMENT
WOOD REAR DECK SPAC OUS
LOT JU ST L STED OWNERS
HAVE PRICED THIS PROPERTY
FOR QU CK SALE AT $35 000
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
PATRIOT- N CE 3 BEDROOM
FRAME RANCH HAS BRICK
i~f"ril~~fiAG~ TRIM 3 BEDROOMS EAT IN
KITCHEN All ROOMS ARE
SPAC OUS LEVEL LAWN TRE
MENOOUS BUY AT $29 500
CAR
JAY DRIVE- THE FLOOR PLAN
II~~:~~~H~ ACRE LAWN
N TH S HOME IS TERRI FIC
Ill
THE BEAUTIFUL STEP DOWN FROM FOYER NTO
DESIRABLE LOCA ~~i~~~:r~~cl~~f ~ r~3~~
BELOW CITY JUST 3 BEDROOMS 1 BATHS PAT IO
lll&gt;ltu! $SS ODO
2 CAR GARAGE $47500
n

IN CITY- I ll STORY HOME ON LARGE LEVEL LOT 3 BED
ROOMS POSS BLE FOURTH FORMAL D NING KITCHEN
HAS AMPLE CABINETS SNACK BAR CONVEN ENT LOCA
TION $29 900

REALEST~TE

com• •artr before cold we•h•

1 1150 Case dour
2018

Dar ng. cuddly teddy bear
pupp • % Chow 1150 Wonder
lui Ch 11tma1 g ft Call 1114
446 9382

A LOT JUST
water and

AKC ragistered Mlneturw Dachshund fernala8 montha old had
•II shote rad color hou• pat.
304 773 9111!11

Firewood for •I• t30 pidlup
deUwrad t25 U had Raccoon
Ad Call 814 448 4882

All

noo

g~~~D~~ lrl~sF~MA~[EN BFRUALAMVEI\,\EITHROAAO

SURVEYED PUBLIC WATER
AVAILABLE ON PAVEO ROAD
HANNAN TRACE SCHOOL 0 S
TRICT JUST LISTED CALL
SOON FOR FIRST CHOICE
YOU Will
0 ENTER
FAitiiYANOF
-

4158 1818 •ftat"7 00 PM

Ntar Jet. Rts. 35 &amp; 7

-L

FRIDAY DECEMBER 16, 1988 at

DENIM

BARGAIN LAND

Public Sale
&amp; Auctoon

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

ARMY

CFA Aaglate ad Cream Pont
Himalayan krt:tan Male. Sho1s.
&amp; wo mild Litt• train.t
Cllll!l14 388 8890

ve••

---.~~·:1=4=:38=8~977==3===--------

From Gallipolis take Rt 141 turn left onto
Rt 775 turn nght onto Patnot Road Watch
for s1gns

SURPLUS

CARHART Rental cloth ng
Small Army Equlpm.,t Ace•
sorl• SAM SOMERVILLE S
OLD ROUTE 21 NEW ERA
304 273-15&amp;515 Noon 8 PM
Nov Dec. (lnaulated Coveralla
t27 60) Jungle Boots U SA
Or glnal Army otolt,.ng Nonmil ta v camilauga pants
t1200

Antoques

Buy or Sell Riverine
1 1 24 E Main StrMI
Houra MTW10am
Sunda¥ 1 to lip m

peci••

AKC Min ature Schnauza
PUPP¥ famalt. 9 wk1 old Salt &amp;
papp• Shota t200 C1ll 1114
446 4180

14 k•at gold d amond duster
mdl1a I r ng 1 c•at total
weight Yz k•at match ng e.rings Tog 8th• or •p•ate Call
1!114-4411 0718 to detaila

Upp• River Road
Gall polle Ohio
614 44&amp;-7444

JUST A LITTLE BIT OF COUNTRY- 3 BEDROOM RANCH
HOME 2 BATHS WORKSAVER KITCHEN HAS OAK CAB
NETS SNACK BAR RANGE REFRIG UTILITY AREA WTH
WASHER AND ORYER CARPORT PLUS 24X30 GARAGE 5
ACRE LOT HAS FRUIT TREES GRAPE ARBOR CITY SCHOOLS
BEAUTIFUL COU NTRY SURROUNDINGS $68 000

Fo Sal a Dog hou•• 1 \"i m I•
out At 141 Call 614 448
0693 W-na Shoernak•

MOLLOHAN FURNITURE
Com
tinaofc•pet. congo1-..rn,. vinyla and c•pat rems
CarpM In lltodl only Vlnyle
...nne et t3 98 yard n stock
only Fraa ae11matn no )ob to
large or arnal Two loc..lona
122 Vlend 81 wt
Point Pl..,nt W Va
304 1!1715 8418

THIS BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME LOCATED ON SECOND
AVENUE N GALLIPOLIS SNOW BEING OFFERED FOR SALE
VERY NICE FLOOR PLAN FORMAL DINING DEN WITH
FIREPLACE 3 BEDROOMS 1 ~ BATHS LARGE PRIVATE BACK
YARD WITH POOL PERFECT fOR THE FAMILY WTH SCHOOL
AGE CH LOREN SHOWN BY APPO NTMENT ONLY
WANT PRIVACY? NEW LISTING WITH APPROX 2~ ACRESOf
BEAUTFUL ROLLING LAWN WITH N CE 3BR 2BATH RANCH
WITH FUll BASEMENT PLUS UNATTACHED GARAGE
FURNISHED K TCHEN WTH RANGE REFR G &amp; BU lT N
M CROWAVE VERY ATTRACTIVE PROPERTY LSTEO AT
$53 000 N KC SCHOOL DISTRICT
LOCATED IN THE VIllAGE OF NORTHUP - EXCELLENT
BUY ON TH S SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM RANCH LARo' fAM
llY ROOM EAT N KITCHEN BACK YARD HAS PRIVAcv
FENCE GALLIPOLIS CITY SCHOOLS $39 000

•eo

..

8

For •Ia. Panoeon c eta ao t76
Turnteb e ap-k•s and r•
cerver also Sz 10 brown luther
jack• from Wilsons Sueda and
Ieath•
L ken- Call M F
8 4 614-982 2087 after 4 cllll
814 192 11975

GARAGE ON STATE ROUTE

West Highland Whit• Terriers
AIIC puppl&amp; A Ch atmas G ft
that will laat ca 614 367
D624

Wh rlpool dryer Real n ca
work~ good t66 Call814 3117
015911

Good used ftoor model an~
portable color tv 1 for •I e. Call
814 4461149

Holld_. S

Comrnerc a1 Bu ld ng fo l . .a
PI Ple. . nt Call 304 1576
6104

BUY FOR THE RIGHT BUYER -End ess opportun es
and g eat potentoa to hunte s lo home bu Ides w&lt;h
ngenurty for the busmess m nded lflfrth ngenu ty o lo the
comb nat on Th s could be what you ve been look ng for 25
acres mi l lree ~as to 1 dwell n~ wrth the 2 wells on the
land Prced n lhe 20 s OWNER IS A WHEELER DEALER
Cur ous? Gve us a cal

0322

48 Space for Rent

For lease

NEAR THE COLLIGE - look ng lo a large oom"""home wrth
most eve yllo n~ B ock ranch 3 bed ooms 2 baths v ng
oom with wb fl ep ace lam y oom Compete kitchen
~Y/appl ances a so a mc owave oven Forma d n ng oom
stereo nte com Ve y n ce home A most 3 000 sq ft

ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL VIEWS OF THE OHIO IN THE
AREA- VERY COMFORTABLE FRAME HOME HAS LARGE
LIVINGROOM 4 BEDROOMS PLUS 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
BARN SHED APPROX 15ACRES PARTIALLY WOODED SEV
ERAL BU ILO NG SITES WIH EXCELLENT VIEW Of THE
RIVER ON OLD RT 1 JUST BELOW CTY $59 000 f RST
TIME ON THE MARKET

Maytag w lng• Wllsh• good
cond 6 galvanlited aqua a 1ub
w drain CJII614 379 2201

PICI(r;"No USED FURNITURt::
complete hou•hold furnish
inp 'h mile out J•rlcho
304175 1410

49

~·· 5121

Concrata blodl;s al s~ yard
ordalwary Maaoneand- Gal po111 Block Co 123\¥ Pine St
Oalllpolie, Oh o CaM14 441!1
2783.
WESTERN RED CEDAR
Channel Rust c
and hovel ad Lap Siding
Deck; Material•
Guarantaad Qualrty
Athena 614
CETIOE INC
694 3678

Sol• and chaire priced from
t396 to f995 Tabl• t6D and
up to 1126 H d•a badl U90
ta t&amp;lll Radin•• t226 to
t375 Lampa t28 to t125
OiniCtel t109 and up to t496
Wood table w 8 chairs U85 to
t795 Dalk t100 up to U75
Hu10h• t400 end up Bunk
beds compl•• w mllttrMaal
t285anduplot39&amp; Babybedl
t110 Mattr61 . . orboxsprnga
fill o twin 188 firm f78. and
t88 Ouetn aeta t250 • up
K ng 1360 4 d ewer ch•t t&amp;9
Gun cabinet• II 8 6 10 gun
lab¥' mitt,..... Ull &amp; t45
Bed frame~ flO t30 &amp; K ng
frame no Good •!action of
bedroom autt" m••l cabln•s.
h ...bHrdl t 30 and up to til&amp;

Sleeping rooma whh cooking
Aleo T al• apece. All hook-ups.
CAll attar 2p m 304 773
51151 M•on WV

Trail• lj)8CM Qatlipolil Ferry
aavng&amp; cttv water a•abage
P c'; up W\dudod In nmt t7!i 00
month 304-67! 6336

8u ldlng Mate 11 1
Block b ck. sewer p p• w n
dOws. I ntala. ate ClaJde W n
tera, Rio G ande. 0 Call 1114

• I

Realty
HOMES FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL P!!OPIRTIU
25 lOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45621
AUDU'f F CANADAY REALTOR
ROBERT GORDON REALTOR
IIAIIY FlOYD R£AITOA
25 IDCUST mm GAUIPOUS OHIO

lAYNE 8 FURNITURE

Rooms fo rent weak or month
Stlrtlng at t120 a mo Galla
Hotel 614 4441 9580

Country Mobile Home ,., ..
Route 33 North of Pom•oy
Lots rentals pans ules Call
614 992 7479

••r

0 5

446·3636cA~

55 Buoldong Supplies

GOOD USED APPUANCES
W•h•e. dryers. ,.,..lg . .tora.
ranoas Skaggs Appllanc•a
Upp• Rlvar Rd b•kl• Stone
Creet Motel 614 44t 7388

Vallt¥ Furnhure
New and uatd fumltura and
eppl canoe• Call 614 4411
7&amp;72 Houn 9 15

Commerc alapac&amp; 1400aqua a
feat. cotnar Seoond and P ne.
Ample parking n 611' Call
448 4249 4411 2325 0 4411
4425

Commodo e
dsc diva
ndudad
1160

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
Bentwood oeke 1 '49 95
He•y duty ultlc bunt! beds
t229 complata 4 pc. bedroom
su"e whh triple d
$499
Ruatic 4 dr wood Ch•t. tel 4
dr chan 144 915 &amp; d ch•t
U4 911 Sota6 ch• reg. U9D
now f281 Vaughn eofa• chal
rag f2400 now t1199 IS pc
wood group reg 1599 now
UBI Vaughn 8a1Mtt wall
hugg• rec:tln•s nag Rusth:
country tabla 3 ch•n&amp; beru:f'
t289 wtth mau:hlng hutch •5&amp;0
for both placaa

County AppHance. Inc. Good
uaed IJIPiilrlc. and lV Hte
Open lAM to IPM Mon ttwu
S.t 1114 4411 1e99 827 3rd
Aw Oall.,ol" OH

9696

3100 or tend r•ume to

Global

feci It • ~ail able. Call
912 3711 EOH

C•c- Noo- no .........

51 Household Goods

c•

eignmenu Serloua ap
pllcants call (8 1 3) 980

Benefit Package on all as

rent

663 Thi d Qalllpola Dupl- 2
BR upltllira. c:•pl1td applian-•her Ia drya hookup
U&amp;O plu• dap Call 614 246

noghf'o lone Rani"' • ndup loy
dukh boy and i' p!chO' wrth
sma I chtp. plus lots mora •.uriture
and Pf m~rves aodool ect1~es and
miSCe lanoous.
PATRICK H IIOSSER

tlont. Pe1dTraveland FuN

for

Unturn ehed apt one bedroom
al alectnc. new CII'Pet. naw
pant " ' at Gina 1 Pine
Mason W Va.

Fumi&amp;had downata ra 3 rooms
&amp; bllth Cl.., No pets Adulte.
Ret &amp; dap Off street p11 king- 1
c• tall614-4411 1519

Hou• with bath Na• Racine.
Nice yatd g.-clan apece. Call
1114 992 &amp;858

Apte

821 V2: See. EJicel cond 2 BR
equipped kitchen. • A,. labia
Nov 1st t225 plus dap C.ll
614 4411 01!103 or 448-2t58

HouM for rem t3DO mo plu1
He. dep 822 Jackson St
Vinton. OH Call814 388 9380

c•

bedroom

•

FURNITURE AND
APPUANCES
Open Dally Mon Sat 9 AM &amp;
PM
Sun 12 Noon-6 PM
Open atte
J'lou s by
appointment

Sunday Times Sent1nel6 mo1
U25

54 Mosc Merchandose

VIRA '

Modern 1 BR downtown. compl . . kitchen air c•pat. Dep
o1iL no pets Call 814 448
0139 ~•nlngt alta 6

n-

N ce spltt laval 2 ftraplac• 2
g . .ga. In country *390
plue deposlc Call 1114 446
4614

2

Oh10- Po1nt Pleasant W Va

51 Houaehold Goods

Apartment
for Rent

Now accepting appl c.t10n1 for
2 bedroom apartmenta fully
carpated •ppllanc.. water and
traah p dlupa p ovktod Mainten.,ce 1r .. llv ng do• to eho~
ping. bankl and achools For
mOtW nformatton cell304 882
3718 EOH

Pomeroy 2 BR remodeled
apartment off Spring Aw Sec.
dap 6 111f Call altar 8 PM
614 992 11881!1

3 b. .oom home on Rt 141
Green Elem t300 plu1
deposit Call 1114 448 6688

Pl~no

2 blldroom, 10xao mobil a home
In good 1hapa, t990 00 c•h or
own• will finance. 304 117&amp;
2722

304 343-4026

2Hou ... fofrwnt. 1 BR f175a
mo Ia 2 BR f175 a mo. In
Crown City Ref Callll14 4411
11111 or 2&amp;8 8880

December 11 1988

December 11 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport Galhpohs Oh10 Pomt Pleasant W Va

NEW LISTING - Roc~ Sprlnp Rood - Beaut fu ranch

type house n the county 3 98 acres with seen c v ew Two
W B FP lu I basement garag~ many othe features ASK

13 2 ACRES Ill NEAR MEIGS MINI Nl Older
two story home with v ny s d ne. storm wndows
two sma ba ns

All BRICK LOCATED ON ST RT 3S- lovely
home offers 4 BRs equ pped ktchen LR d n ng
rm I ep ace lu basement gas heat cent a r
satellite d sh attached garage, ca port and
storage bu d n&amp;, N ce !eve lawn oorwen enl to
HMC and shoppmg. Shown by appOintment
SPRING VAllEY $64 9001 - love y II love
otters 3 BRs 2 baths spac ous ktchen d n ng, LR
FR wth I replace gas heat cent a r 2 car
aHached

ga age. Ca I tOOay

EWINGTON- 119 000 - Four bed oom home
ncludes k!then v ng oom d n ng oom bath
NG schoo d st ct
KRISTI ORNE - BEAUTIFUl BRICK RANCH Th s home offers seven attractiVe feilu es
nc ud ng a 12130 lam ly room LR kitchen 3
Ded ooms llh baths
epace cent a
carpet ng. allached garage with e ect c door
opener Ca flo an appomlment

73ACIIS II~ PIRRY1WP -40•60b•nand
var ous othe I! m bu~d ngs Very n ce home
l~atu es 3 BRs 2 baths ktchen LR. n~ carpet
Gallo an "'"'
FIRST AVENUE - RIVER FRONTAGE- lovely
wo stcry home oflers a lo mal entry equ pped
k~chen beaut fu v ng oom with f rep ace
hm y oom 2 baths gas heat basement wth
1r ck firep ace summer po ch o~~e ~ eve area by
~er Shown by appointment o~

ONE ACRE Mi l AND AMOBilE HOME- 2 BRs
bath LR kitchen rea deck most lu n~ure stays
with mol) e home Ca fo an appomtment

RT 33 -llaontenance treo- well nsulated new w r n~
exce lent cond tan The wok s done You move nl2 bed
rooms. full basement, modern kitchen wth bar mce storage
shed and I ca&lt; garage Look at th s one• $35 000 DO

PLENTY OF ROOM FOR IVIRYOIU - La al
0 ve 8r ck anch 3 o 4 bedrooms 2 baths,
eqll pped krtchen den lam ~ oom LR sew ng
oom d n n&amp; aundr~ 2 firep aces gn heal cent
a attached ga age pus ca port pat o p Nacy
lence crt~ !!lhools Make an appointment tOOa~

MAX ENO ROAD - Mo~le home • h 3 BRs LR
kitchen I'h baths n ce eve lot

1WP onL ncoln Pke
11172 ACRES HARRISON
$12000

29 I ACRES M/1 VACANllAND - f onls on Rl.
160 Buld or put a rnobi e home here $16 900

CHAROLAIS HillS - 3 24 ac es mo e o
Owner fnancngava able. $12000!

22ACREC~URCH

2UCREIR.ICT COMMERCIAL SITEon Upper Rt 7 across from new shop~ngcenter

flucantland

MOBILE HOME lOT dose to lown
ava I able

1ppantmenl

MIDDLEPORT - 1978 modula home srthng on 2 ots n
town 2 ca gaarage, N GFA heat garden area Also has se!f
contaned A/C un t Many other n ce lealures ASKING
$39 500 00
TUPPERS PlAINS- Very neat 3 bedooom ranch wrth an at
tached garage I acoe levellol FMHA approved Ca llo ap
po ntmenl $39 000 OD

YOU ll WANT THIS ONE FOR YOURSElF
Lovely home ust mnutes I om town on lowe Rt
7 beaut lu ve v~ 3 bed ms. 2 baths LR
equ pped ~itchen lam y rm d n«&lt;e 2fi ep aces.
game room laund y m city schools Cal today

PRICE RmUCID 10 $39 900! - GRill
IEGINNIR HOI I - Th shome offe so I• ge LR
w th fireplace, kitchen d n ng a ea 3 BRs bath
full basement I car garage. deck, fencedya dJusl
m nutes to town on Rt 141 Cal lor an

POMEROY - Real y n ce 1982 doublew de 3 bedrooms 2
balhs deck ng and many other lealures All on good cond
I on WANTS $34 500 00

LEASE -LEASE OPTION -LANOCONTR.ICTYou name rt and we II dea Lo'fe y 3 BR anch n
ke new cond I on new carpet new pa nl ns de
and out Ready fo mmediate possess on

THIS HOUSE WAS MEANT FOR YOUR FAMILYLocated nan ce neghlxlrl'ood close to HMC th s
home olfers 3 SRs, 2lh baths equ p~d ktchen
LR fR d nng rm gas heat cent a
woodtll nng stove 2 ca garage, slrtage b dg.
City schools Ca today

CAIIP FOR SALE- Nume ous
bu din;; nclud ng d n ng ha careta ~8" s tra ler
cal)ns pool church bu Icing. I nte ested ca I for
more deta led nformat on

lNG $84 90D 00

lONiiBOTTOIII- Cab nalong the rove na great ocatoon 1
acreofgroundfulytu nshed rve bankuse TPCwate and
much more ONLY $1990000
POMEROY - Here sa bu s ness eady to go Cafts ol a
k1nds stock and equ pment and an operat ngbus ness Keep
th s ocal on or move to you own Ca I to deta Is
ROCK SPRINGS RD - Approx 80 acres ol vacant g ound
App ox 20 acres t lab e A m ne a! s water and e ec ava a
ble Good hunt ng land $29 000 00
MIDDLEPORT- 3 bed oom 2 sto y home Nce k tchen W
B FP and much more REDUCED TO $16 500 00
DANVILLE- L ke new modu ar n hecountry 2 ca ga age
with shed on a n ce ot Plus an add t on added on modu a
PRICED TO SELL $31900 00
POMEROY - 3 bed oom I aole usl ou ollown Wood
bu ne 1 car garage equ pped k tch en A C fenced ya d
Frurt tees MAKE OFFER $15 000 00

LETART- L ke new on side and out• Complete y remodeled 4
bedroom home garage new roof news d n~ f replac~ doo
p n range $27500 00 Make offer

RACINE- N ce I ~ story home w th w ap a ound po ch 3
4 bed ooms fa n11y room fl eplace pa basement Many
un que lealu es ONLY $29 900 DO

SYRACUSE - Real~ n ce ranch lype home 3 bedrooms
equ pped krtchen and a yard lor the kds Garage storage
buoldmg and many other features $45 000 OD

SYRACUSE- Real y n ce 1982 doub ew de 3 bedrooms 2
baths deck ng and many olhe featu es A n good co nd
loon WANTS $34 500 00

IIIDDLEPORT - Recently remodeled ncludrn gkitchen 3
bedrooms Ill baths part basemen! storage bu !dong and
much more $32 500 00

MIDDLEPORT - LANO CONTRACT - Ve y n ce &amp; neal 3
bedroom heme on a b g co ne lot N ce ktchen FA NG
heal and much mooe Call lor moe deta s PR CEO TO SELL
AT $31900 00

LETART - DEER COUNTRY- 29 acres ol mostly wooded
land buold ng srte lor a home o hunlrng cabon Mneras
ONLY $140DOOO
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ill story Ira me home wth 3 bed
rooms bath I car garagesitt ng on an ce double lol ONLY
$1790000
POMEROY - Very nrco noolhborhood - Noce 3 bedroom
mobile home garag~ sheds l&gt;at ~A C Other lealu es Wanl
$15 SOD 00
MIDDLEPORT- GOOD STREET- Ill story doll house ~
Cupola hand carved oonale exleroor woodwor~ and sto age
buoldm~ Nocely remodeled Wanl $19 SOD 00
RUTlAND - Noce ranch type home on a level lot 3 bed
rooms equopped koch en dose to scho~s Allrn good cond
ton ASSUMABLE LOANI Askong lor detaols $29 900 00

MIDDLEPORT - Gand ode homeona goods eel 3 bed
ooms age Iron! sttl ng po ch PRICED TO SELL
$23 900 00
MIDDLEPORT- 2 story home located on a good steel 3
bed ooms n ce Ia ge corns many n ce leatures ASKING
$27 900 00
HENRY E CLELAND
JEAN TRUSSELL
DOTTIE TURNER
JO HILL
OFFICE
w~h

We hove buyers for Meol'
us lor best resutts

�....

~

•

•

December 11, 1988 .
AKC registered mtlt

a.ega ..

63

T:~~:~:~y · S©RJJN\-LG~~S" ::~~
O words
Rea rrange the 6 scrambled
to moke 6

7

_ _ _ _ _:..:.__: Edited hy CLAY R. POLLAN _...:.__ _ _ __

months old. Good protpect.
1 60. 614-949 -2643.
Fl•h Tank. 2413 Jaekaon Ave,
Point Pl..,nt. 304·876 ·2063.
10 g• aet up $14.99 and 1 0 gal

New show •ddlewith pH, heed

br•••

ltall. •
atrtp. Mada' bV
Slfwr Royal. t 1 100 wlue now

b~low

s1mple .w or d~ .

U95. Colll14·281·1&amp;22.

Prmt letlers of , . -........,.,...--....,_,..--_

eo cM m 11s !1ne o f squores.

complate •43.25 .

Chri1tma1 puppi•. AKC raglatered Pom«ian•. Matti-. ShihShu. Siberl., Huslteva. Poodl-.
depo1it will hold your ohoice 1ill
Dee; 24. 304-875· 2193.

111 h . qooN n41Ck ltock t ...il.,
t1 000. Thoroughbred ract
hor.... All ag•. Call 8 14-441·
2107 · daya. 388 - 8&amp;04·

FENEDI
I

..,enlnp.

N0 RKEC
64 Hay &amp; Grain

3 banoh·leg Beagle. puntbred. all
femal• . us . ..ch. 304· 675-

Ground ahtU ti.OO p• 100 lb..
ltrwt U .&amp;O. Alfalfa fl .OO,
round bal• •25.00, 8 :00 till
12:00 dalty, Morgans WoodliMn Ftrm, At. 35. Pliny , W.Va.

5520.

Musical
Instruments

304-937·2018.

EGL I N

J

I 1I I

Lowry Encore organ w/ maglc
Genie. Excel. cond. Complete

7

w/ bench. Must 1811. $350. Call
614·245·9167.

I NT AVY

1985 Wurtlb:er organ. Model
545. f80Q . Call614-992-2084.

Trumpet,
3266.

phone 304 - 87&amp;-

~ II
et·

I I Ill
I 0

•

•

•

,
1
I

I•

I'

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1veslor:k

..,

~

,.,o·x40 ' x8'8" Clearance, 1·
,15'!dl' track door, 1·3' walk
door: 84999 ERECTED. Iron
Horse Bldr•. Call61 4-332·9745

71 Auto's For Sale
1984 Chwy Ch...,ette. Automatic, AM radio, almoat new
tirea. 80,000 miiM. Rew leal
nMdl replaced. t1 000. For
mort lnfornwtion call Paul at
614-448-2342. Mev be teen at
Th• G111ipolia Daily Tribuna, 8-15
weekdiV•·
·

by l t!l tng in the missing words
you develop l rom srep No. 3 below.
12.·11
...,_.,...s,.; ..

=

www-uww _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

.

Oyna Bounce mowing machin.,
late model No. 12 h., bill•·
•3796. LMe mod.. 1260 Oliver
tractorPS 31iHP, •2791.New3
pt. hitch wood splitter. Ull.
Own• will finenc., Call 614·
288·1622.

1---""-=------

hrm Equipment. ZGtorTractors,
Howard Rotavetofl, Bladet,
Feed• Rlng~. Buying old batterMorril Equipment. Rutland

i•.

Ohio 614-742-24156.

'

I

•aso.

1980 W20B Cue 11rticu!.ted. 4
WD, loaded with cab. located in

Point Pleaaant, W.Va .

02&amp;.000.00 O.B.O. 913-882·

0084 Mondav thru Fridar.

Gallipolis, Ohio

t"ord

power

JY:.

• , 5,&amp;00.00.

Gleener

mower

acre

Combine.

heodo. 304-937-2018.

379-2184

PHYUIS LOVEDAY
446-2230

BEAUTIFUL FARM SETTING- Seven room brick
home wrth 2\? balhs. Apart men! building used lor
canng lor elderly and handicapped people. Large
modern barn used as a Ieeder pig busin ess.
presenlly has 44 sows, potential for 100. Farm
located in Guyan township, 50 acres level bottom
land almost surrounds farm buildings. Call lor a
showtng loday.
·
. #2602 .
THIS BRICK &amp; CEDAR BI-L~VEL has a panoramic
view of the Ohio River. 3 bedrooms, 21\ baths,
fam ily room , livin g room, 2 fireplaces. central air,
2 car garage. Situaled on 2.9 acres more or less.
$64,500. Call lor more inlormation.
#267B
$24.000 - You can't beat the price of this . 3
bedroom r~modeled home. 2 full balhs, spacious
ktlchen, hYin g room , basement. Easy to maintain
lawn. Addil ional 29 acres with frontage along
Raccoon Creek, barn, pond, storage ttunding can
tie purchased wnh home lor $20,000. #2690

NEW LISTING - As you turn upon fh• concrete
drive-;ay you noticeI he manicured appearance of
thts 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Great room with
cat hedral ceiling. Aluminum sidin g Gas heal and
cent ral air. Close to city. Crty schools syslem.
$44,000. Call for appotntment tcxlay.

NEW LISTING - In addrtion to extra income
prov~ed by the separate 1 bedroom 1balh rental
un1t, lhts extensively rem odeled 1~~ story home
offers eQ uipped k1lchen tncluding dishwashet , 2
baths. family room. 2 tlalhs. Stl ualed wrthin city
Wtlhtn walkmg distance to schools and dow n! own
shoppmg
.
#2696
VILlAGE OF VINTON - You'll be amazed at the
ex tensiVe remodel10g that has been done lo
restore thiS slalely 2 story home. 4 spa ctous
bedrooms. 3 balhs, eat·tn kttc hen, lormal dining
room, lam1ly room, formal entry, aluminum sidin g
heat pump, central atr, cellar. storrage building
treed lawn. Corner lot. Call lor an appointment
today $55,000.
#26B5
COUNTRY SETTING WITHIN THE CITY! - Bmk
tanch, 2 car garage, full basement and all the
extras. The real surpnse to this home ts the
acreage that surrou nds rt. You can walk to all the
shops and st1ll walk lhrough the woods. REDUCED
PRICE' NOW $1 23,000.
#2656
PRIME DEVELOPMENT PROPERTY - Situated in
back and to the side df Pinecrest Nurstn g Home.
Over 74 acres. Ca ll for mme mformation.
#2651
REDUCED $1,QOO- NOW ASKING $22,500- A
pnce th at vou still can't beal. 3 bedrooms.
kttchen, liv1n g room , bath, enclosed porch
basement', nice lawn.
#2681
NEW LOG HOUSE well conslructed. The great
room conSists of fully e9u1pped ktlchen, din ing
and hvmg area With mce woodburning st ove.
Really an eye catcher. 3 bedrooms, 2 bat hs. House
ISnot co mpletely finished . Large wmkable garage.
42 acres olland and much more. Please call for
particulars.

mBB

$32,000.
ranch, I car
ed garage, living room, bath
and more. Located at Rutl and.
#2647
RIVERVIEW - Situated w1th10 3 mtles of city. 3
bedroom, Cape co d home, living room with
' fireplace, kitchen, dining room, bath, full
basement. Approx. ll acre lawn. Garage with 2
bedroom apartment for added income. C1ty
schools.
#2672
IN TOWN -Two bedroom one story·vmyl Stded
home wrth living room , bath, lamily room, formal
dining and krtchen on large fen ced·tn lot w1lh
storage buildin&amp; $38,900.
#2650

1978 Suburbtn 4&amp;4. Auto.
t8&amp;0. 1970 El Camino &amp;S.

. 19se Olda Cut.... Ci .... on•
own•. low mlleege. •c. cand.

1978 Ford Pinto. 2 door, nice.
Calf 814-985·3934 after 8 :00

1984 Buick Sky Htwlt, pb. ac.
am-fm. new brU•. Ur• &amp;
IXhMJit, P.S. . .9,000 mil•.
14,000 negotllbla. ax.t• sharp
c • . 304·882·3211 .

" and "tr&lt;tdem11rk• ot (t-nt un: Zl l&lt;cal Estatt- Corponnton Equal H

0

PPorlunny

304-878·1238.

'78 Manu. 4 speed. 304-175-

1374.

1880 Volltawagan D11h., dl•
good cond. •1,000.00.

HI.

304-876·2835.

\982 Pontiac BonniiVII., big
V-1 anglne. auto, PS. PB, PW. P

Phone ~46-7699 or 446-9539

venta. 4 door. nice al•n c•.

02,7&amp;0.00. 304-87&amp;-8758.

1983 Ford Rang• V-6, 4 apd.
overdrtve, AC. topper. A -1 condltion. 12396. Clll 114·268•

8889.

1984 Chwy C·30. Y·B. PS. PB.

4 lpd., 46,000 actuel mil•.

4PM.

280

Olds engine, 304·876·

wh"'•· C•ll 814·448·8820.

Rt. 31 Cycle Sal•· Southsid ..
WV. Ph. 1 ·304-876·41 30. Now
Selling New Pol1tl1 4 wheel••
and u•d 4 wh ....s.

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

5:00p.m.

1989 Ch..,rolllt pick up for

07&amp;0.00. 31!4·875-1724.

.ae.

1987 GMC pidl: up 8 · 16 with
topper . 24.000

•e.ooo.oo. c.n
1297.

73

mil••·

304·17&amp;-

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

1974 Ford window van. 2 Hlltt.
302 V-8 1ngin.. IUtan\ltiC
trana, AC. E 250 . 18,000actu.l

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·

rebuilt all typ••·
d8'f•· Prieta 199 &amp;
up. Uaed •
rebuilt torgue
converter•. Standerd clutch•.
preuure plltea. &amp; throw out
be•lng. War111nty-12 mo1. CVC
jointl·•ll typea . Cail 614·379·
2220 or 304-175-8768.

Uaed

&amp;

Waranty~ 30

1977 Ch•vVan, 12500. 1972
HI Per 402 Big Lock Chtwy
engin., •1200. 410 Poatf'llc
re~end, 8160. 814-992-7807,

lend

1181 Buick. 4 dr. One owner .
Be.ooo mil-. AC . EKcet cond.
New tlrel, AM-FM . *19915. Cell

• 814·448·0822.

both

SONNY GARNfS
446-2707

RON 'S Televltlon Servlu.
Hou• calls on RCA, OUI:ar,
OE . SpeciaUng In Z8tlith. Call

Fetty ·' Tree Trimming. ttump
Call 304·876·1331 .

rt~moval.

81

Home
Improvements

08700. Coll814·4411-4003.

1981 four wheel drtve D1taun
ph*· up. Run1good, bod¥ mugh.
•876. Calll14-992-2828 art ..

Carptntlr Wor•bv hour or job.
P•n.W..g. tMintlng.. dryWIIII, re·
modeUng. 0 .. 1 Fred Cox. 814448-7943.

304·578·2398 .. 814-446·
2454.

Services

Kawuaki 400. Good tor par1t.
'76. Call 114· 992-5952.

Rotllry or c~e tool driUin"Molt wells compiMeclllmeday.
Pump HI• •nd 1er.tice. 304·

816·3102

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditkmal llt .. ime guarentee. Locli ref•enc• furnlthtd.
Free atlmMu. C.ll dolled
1-814·237-0488, dw or night.
RogersBaaamant
Waterproofing,

SWEEPER and Mwlng rm~chine
r.epair. p•rt .. and suppll•. Pick
up and daiNery, DIY II V1cuum

Cleaner, on•
O.org•
Creek
448· 284.

half mil• up
Rd. C.ll 814-

Painting: Interior &amp; ,.Eirt~rior.
Frea ettimlltH. Call I 14· 441·

8344.

85

General Hauling

Real Estate General

OiiiM"d W.ter S•vic:e: Pool1.
Ciawrns. Wll4la. Delivery Anytime.. Call 614-441-7404-No
Sundav calla.

J &amp; J Water S•vice. Swimming
poofl. cltterna, walls. Ph. 814-

245·9285.

R • R )'later Service. Paols,.
ciuern&amp;-, wella. lmmadlate·
1 ,000 ori.l,OOO gallonadaltlery.

Coll304-875-8370.

.

Watt•rson's Water Hauling,
re•ontble 111t"' volum• di•
counts. 2 ,000 to 4,000 CIPacity, ciatern1. pool1. 'N'&amp;IIs, etc,
304-571-2919.

RON'B APPUANCE &amp;ERY·ICE.

houta call MrVIdng Q.£, Hot
Point, wa•h••· dryars •nd
ltovet. 304-576·2398.

Ak•• Tr•• Trimming •nd Stump
Remo'olal. Fr• fttimates . C.ll

304-17&amp;·7121 .

Ron' 1 Chimn., Sweep, apeeiM
thru December t38 .81. C.ll ·

87

Upholstery

Mowrey's Upholltering MrVing
trl coumyaraa23 y.an. Thea,.t
in turnitu;a Uphol1tering. Cal
304 - 876 -41 64 for tree
•tlmat•.

(FOR SALE BY OWNER)
3 bedroolll$, k~dt'", dining room. bath, utility room, completely ~~modeled, insulation, new shin&amp;te roof, aluminum
s.idin&amp; beautiful bllth, dryWIII, forced air heat. Concrete paltos •d pordtes, ca-pel, woodburmng fir~~t~lace in. mast«
bedroom &amp; living room. Also hea-th in dinin1 room for wood,
st!MI, and
All
m/ 1ol beautiful
for ivmocll or
Call 245-5204.

304-773-0348., or 773·6840.
Ronni• N•al.

G. OrMI"I and aons Concrllte 1nd
Cont111cting. lnt•ior an~ exta·
riCH' Ptinting. c•perrtery 1nd
m~aonrv .

C.pt1in st ..m•Cinn•a. gilt 2

mil•. Call 814·2&amp;8·1539.

avenge

•il•

rooma carp1t
cl•nad 118.00 111:h. with thl1

Real Estate

1887 Ch_.y Astro V1n, 9.800
mK•. •12,600. Call 814· 4•8·

od.

304·875·2295.

1420.

1987 Chwy Ast'ro Van, fuH
lo.,:ied. E•el, cond. Call after I
PM, 114·218·1 89,.
1978 Jeep Ch•okH Chi ...
197'7 Ch., F-W-D auto. 1978
Dodge 318, auto. 304·175·

&amp; Heating

R~SI DE NTIAL · INVESTMEN TS ·

1977GMC.4•4CR cla.. ic. 400
CID en gin .. TS. TB, air, PW 6 P
locka, automatic . needs trans
· worM end body work. '760,00.

304·875-1259 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

COMM ERCtAL · FARMS

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Galllpalla.·Ohio

450 2nd AVE.
446-6806

Phone 814-448·3888 or 814·
446· 4477

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER. 388-8826
RUTH GOODY. REALTOR, 379·2828
DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 256·8251
LEESA CLARK. REALTOR.'448·3038

..•

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
R•idential or eommercial wir'·
ing. New a.-vice or replllrt.
Li~ electridan. Eatimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304-

6711-1786.

1979 Plymouth TC-3, PS. PB,
AC, 1un roof. 8196. Call 814-

446·7848.

LOOK AT THE FEATURES
This attracttve lri·level home
offers 4 bedrooms, 3 full
baths, large living/dining
room, eat-in kitchen , extra
large familyr oom, storage
room and overs~ed 2 car
garage Located in a nice
subdivision in SPring Valley
area. The best feature is the
puce - $69,500. Give us a
call. we would love to show
you·lhis one!
#211

....

A-1, TOP NOTCH,
.CLASS
We could go on and on about
the condit1on of this tidy 3
bedroom home in town.
located on lhe river, it has
all the conveniences you're
looking for. All appliances
stay indudin g washer and
dryet. Full basement. Well
landscap ed lot. Maintenance free. Easy to heat. 1
car garage. $56,900.
#226 .

SUNDAV PUZZLER

MAINTENANCE FREE
RANCH
Ready for you to move into.
3 bedrooms, 1 oath, large
kitchen for dining room.
Ther mopan e windows and
attached insulated garage.
Level lot, nice. yard for the
kids. You r opportunity at
$38,000.
#BOl

ACROSS

m

lf354. 0111 fHE AVENUE. FIR Sf AVENUE!! Stop dreamtng- 'f!ill can ow nato·
vely historic home with breal:htakinK v1ew of the Ohio R1ver. This IIDme has
been restored, and IS m the Nahonal HIStone Regastry Owner his awards lor
restortng this beautiful bride Mme. Has screenedmpatio lor pr1vate viewing
ollhe rNer, also a RlgillliC sundeck o!l the upstairs. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. for·
mtl dining and basement. Call today to see inside.
NllQ. PROMISE NEI AMYININC- BUT BUY IMIS eharmtng $35,00n 3
bedrm. ranch with new vtnyl sidtng. new patiO, deck and other improvements.
Woodburning FP on Hlwer level w~h large family room. Located just at the

REALTOR•

CHERYL LEMLEY
742-3171

JUST LISTED - Freshly painled and newly
carpeted throughout. I 'h stories, 3 bedrooms,
basement. Attached carport. 21\ acr~s. Sttuated at
the edge of ctty. Immediate possession.
#2697

ORGAN CLIFF STYLE HOllEon
of Raccoon Creek, less than a mile from Rl. on
Raccoon Road . 3 bedroom~ 1 full baths. "1\ie
great room" consists of kitchen, dining area and
large living area wilh cathedral beamed ceiling
real ly sets it off. Attached garage, much more.
Pnced in the $30s. Buill in 1980.
#2683
I'IHAT A BUY!! Th is o~e is like new custom built
quality throughout. only 9 yrs. old. 'Full 2 slory, 4
large bedrooms, 2 full baths, equipped kitchen
and 11 closets 1n house. 3 car garage, workshop
and 3 acres land.
Broken down it can look like !his:
Approx. 2,684 sq. ft. in hou se
at $15.00 per sq. ft ............................. $40,260.00
Approx. 3,600 sq. ft. garage &amp; shop
al $5.00 per SQ. ft ................................ $18,000.00
~OT esrte and 3 acres land ................... $4,740.00
AL LISTING PRICE... . .. ...............$63.000.00
#2541
FARM/ 50 ACRES + -l 'h story vinyl sided
home, 3 bedrooms, full basemen!, liv ing room and
d1010g room, 2 large barns, corn crib, unattached
garage. Borders Raccoon Creek. Call for more
inlormalion. Priced upper $40s.
#2679
20 ACRES WITH HOMESITE - Partially wooded.
pond, well, electnc. Priced to sell at $10,000.
Hannan Trace Schools.
#2667
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 2 bedro om ran ch w1th
ltving room, bath, dinmg area utility room slorage
buildin&amp; covered patio and c~rport on 1.88 acres,
more or less. $39,900.
#2630
K.INEON DRIVE - · 3 bedroom ranch, spacious
kitchen, liVtng roomh balh, formal dining and
utthly rooms. Attac ed garage wrth electric
opener. fenced 1n back lawn. $39,900.
• ·.
#2666

Rarely do we have such a
sensational residence to
offer for sale. Adream home
priced well under today' s
con itruction cost. This out·
s1and10g 8 year old home is
. located in city school dtstn cl
on a densely wooded pictu·
resque 5 acr e tract. Wh en
you tour thiS 2400 sq. ft. of
elegant living space, your
heart will skip a beat.
Included IS a sensational
krtchen wnh all quality
appliances plus pantry.
family room wilh fireplace
and wooded view proVtded
by Ahdersen thermopane
windows. formal din tn ~ with
vaulted ceilings and huge
cork slone wall wnh see
through fi rep lace . . Step
down liv ing room , lormal
entry, 3'h gleamin g ba·
throoms. The master bed·
room is 18x19 wilh bath and
pal1o doors lo a privale
sundeck. You will not see a
more pleasing party or rec.
room. This large area has
solid, select cedar walls.
expensive new carpet, a
built·in bar with h/c water,
patio doors to ground level
and back deck. Outside you
will find flower beds and
shrubbery gardens of pro
fes sional quality which succeed in helpin g make this
· the outstanding properly lor
sale in Gallia County. Owner
IS anxiou s lo sell and has
· priced il below its fair
market value. We want lo
show you this breathtaking
home and are wail 1ng your
call!

mo

EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY! - Well lo·
cated restau ranllor sale on
Rl. 7. In clud es busmess
building and lot and ali
equipment. Great polenttal
for thriving business. Bar·
gain priced at $39.900.
#213

JUST MINUTES FROM
TOWN -This home offers 4
bedrooms, living room, large
eal·in kitchen plu s I balh.
Enclosed porch. utility bu ild·
in g on lh acr e, more or less
lor only $42,500. C1ty
schools.
#707

.,

OUTSTANDING OFFERING
First Time On The Market!
Beautiful 2 story brick and
frame on a 2 to 3 acre Iof in
the city. First floor includes a
formal entrance, living room
wnh ltreplace, fot mal dining.
wtle approved eat-in kif,
chen. a hu ge screened
porch plu s a mother-in·law
apartment which includes
ltving room with fireplace, 1
bedroom, ktlchen and bath.
On the 2nd floor. 4 more
bedrooms and 2 baths. The
basement has a finished
family room with firep lace, a.
rec. room. \? bath and
unfinished storage rooms. A'
2 car garage, ni ce landscap·
mg and a beauttful pool
round this out to be an
outstanding olfering for
$129,000.
.
#120

NICELY MAINTAINED,
QUALITY BRICK RANCH
for your big family . Eal·in
kilchen wrth lots of nice
cabmets.1V/stereo stays 10
the large family room . Full
linished basemen! with
workshop. Easy c·are lawn. 4
bedrooms, 11\ baths, lam·
ily neighborhood. Out of
town owner want s it sold!
$49.900.
.
#803
KEEP YOUR PROMISE TO
HER ....
Give her a beautiful new
house with acreage. Home
features 3 spacious bed·
rooms, I ~ balhs, large
lamily room, modern . k1t·
chen. dinmg aQd living
room, 2 car garage and
workshop. Your dream come
lrue al $79.500.

***********************
it
oft
oft

bUSIII5S p!ltenttal.

...

!:A, FA gas, gange-wDJkshop area, has 100 It road frontage on Rt. 35. Call us·
today for showlftg.

'
•

lt303. LAND CONTRACT available on thiS 37 acre larm on lOwer St. Rt. 218 2
stor~ farm house with 4 bdrs .• 1 bath, family room, 40x60ban~d barn. work·
shOp, and much more.

~

..

--:
•

•'
• ;::

and that you care enough about the contractual

,...$

"'••If

If

ftket, ca.ll us for a comparative market analysis ....

ftthat w1tl tell vou what your home witt b•ing .

•.

#806
A JOY TO SEE
A GREATER JOY TO OWN
This 3 bedroom. 2 bat h
home with dinin g toom and
2 car garage. New carpet
throughout. Insert 1n fire·
place. Ellicienl heat pump.
$55,500.
#104

David Wiseman, 446-3796
Pat Robie, 379-2288
Rae BeasJey, 446-8126

••
••
c.•
••
••
••
••
••
•• ~:~E:~~~NT,
••
••

'

!356. N!W 1917 SCHULTZ IOIILI 11011: 2 bedrltl$ ..

&gt;
~;
,_

_l; .-

.~;·

"FIXER·UPPER" HOUSE AND LOT just off 4th Ave. (Wi· •
bert's Alleyi . Loolring for a lot to bu ild or remodel existing •
slruclurelt located along the 100 block. Buy now for •

9

OR LIVE -IN. Oouble house located along.·
4th Ave. Good condrtion. Buy for $32,000.

EDGE OF TOWN - PORTSMOUTH ROAD - Attra ctiVe
2 slory 3 bed r bom home
leatu res liVIng room, famtly
room or den, remodeled
'bath and eal-tn kil chen.
V1nyl SldiOg. new Insulated
wtndows. new gas furna ce
and central atr. Nice parkm g
atea plus I car gat age and
play area 10 backyar d
$56 500.
#221

WE HAVE BU llDING LOTS 10 Rodney Village II, edge of :
Gallipolis (18 acres) and Mills Village. Call for more in for· •
mation.

.-.-

"

Loretta M&lt;Dade, 446-7729
B. J. Hairston, 446-4240
Phyllis Miller, 446-8346

•
•

HOW ABOUT A NICE RESIDENTIAL. or commercial, loca- ••
lion along Upper Rt. 7? $35,000.00.
:

•
•

2 LOTS·WITHIN GREEN ACRES S/D. One is 84'xl48', the.·
other 75'xl48'. Purchase either for $5,500.00.

•
•

DEER HUNTERS SPECIALS! 75 acres localed along .Gien.
Summrt Rd ., old~r 5·rm. house. $18,000.00'!!
•

••

._,.

•

• 21.5 ACRES, NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No slructures. •
· ·located along Frank Rd. $18,900.00.
•
. .3 LOTS LOCArtD NEAR TYCOON lAKE (50'1115'). Can.
purchase on land contract. $2,000 down. 10% Int., pay
• $129.69 for 6 yrs.

.,·.

.

e

--

•• 5.6 ACRES, lo101ted below Gallipolis Dam, along Hazel
Rd. $4,900. (Can purchase on land contract). ~1 ,,:&gt;W.'U"
down, IO%,pay $100.00 per mo.

·~-

........

-·

:~·

--------------------~- ~..._.,.
of'

~

•

:

e&gt;rpet lntoo·

!346. FINE HOME AND INVESTIEill OR 2 INCOIE PROPERTIES ot the
same location. Very well kept 2 story home w/7 rms , 1'h ballls, basement,
k~chffil w/lange, ret., disposal and dishwasher, &amp;as FA furnace, the 2nd home
is on the rear ot lot w/ 3 bedrms .. L bel h. carpet, ret., range, disposal. 2 car
gara11e Pr o~ lOcated 1n the cit~ and could be used for a fam1ly venture or
Mom and Oad cou ld lt'le m one dwelltnll or tet one property help wl1h pay.

PROPERTY IN PORTER- Grocery store, 3 bedrm. home, •
5·bedrm. home. Call for more inlormation.
•
•

...

~"~

ghout. Loads of storage, range &amp; ret . Located on beautiful Hat lot w/trees. 1Ac.
m/ 1. ali new water and septic system. Owner may help finance .

3 iEDRII. HOME within Vintoo Village. 1.5 acre, 6 rm.
house wrth garage. Now $28,000.00.
•

t+****************"'***• _,
COIIFY HOME THAT RETIREES OR YOUNG FAMiliES
can afford and ma101ain
econom1cally. features 2-4
bedroom s, bath plus ex tra
shower. kilchen, living room,
dining, bath. enclosed
porch, lots of storage, full
basement and garage. New
heating/c ooling syslem.
New hoi waler tan~ Beauti·
lui carpet and wal lpaper.
Ready for you to enjoy at
$36.000.

Close to sOO p·

m5. CONVENIENTLY LOCAUO on RL35, Spnng Valley . 4Bdrs .. l balh,LR.

_,

*aspects of selling tho home 10 uee a ticansed
ftprofessional. It also tells your prospective
buyers that they witt be treated fairly end hoj!nostly by an established company that ~rides i1on its reputation .
oft
ft
And i1also means your home will sell faster oft
ftbecause you are working with experienced peo~ ~
ftple who know their business well.
you're
*1hinking about putting your home on the mar-

ne~Rhbortxlod.

pin&amp; hospital 1 etc. On nice flat lol. Has 3 bedrooms. formll dinmg, family
room, 2 baths. 1 car garage, over sized deck leads to inwound pooL Ctly
schools.

••

ftis for sale.
It says you mean business, that the house is
correctly priced and worth what you are asking,

i

ed£e ol town.
•n1. LOCATED ON JAY ORNE- Excellent

13!6. ClOWN CITY on Rt. 7. Beauliful3 bdt. brte' 2bitt.. lui~ equipped kit
fam1ly room, w~h 3(ll60 garage. \-las 2 developed lots on Rt 7. 30 acres. Grea1

i :.

OUR SIGN SAYS A LOT ABOUT YOU
:
AND YOUR HOUSE
Our sign tells more 1hanjustthat your house

(614) 446-3644

!tl

·-·ff'
•"-t

#804

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

1•

1982 F-1150 2 WD . atd . tflna.
Auns good. *29915, C•ll•ft• 7 .

7858.

Real Estate General

Put Number 1 To Work For You!
1-.Al:ll on·' ICJ-: ,., I"JOt-:f•t-: 1\U~NTLYOWNF.DANDof.F.KATE~~~ns

one

8711-78&amp;8.

· LUDINGHAM REAL ESTATE

1981 Hond1 TAX 250 -G 4

3049.

-;1

Home

• , lmprovement11

1629.

MEIGS COUNTY
PROPERTY ·
HUNTERS' DELIGHT- Approx. 52 acres with gas
well and royally. Localed at Peach Fork Road. Ntce
building site.
#2646
HI STORY HOME IN . MIDDLEPORT - Large
spac1ous rooms wtl h hghl oak gr im. Exira well
cared for home on nice lot close to Village Par~
Atta~hed 1·car garage. Asking $39,900.
#2684
PRICE REDUCED! - This quality bu1ll home
features 4 bedroo~ s. 2 bat hs. formal dining area,
attached garage. Srtuated on 1 acre near Chesler.
REDUCED TO $70,000.
#12673
•
BUSINESS IN MIDDLEPORT- Downstatrs ts a
lounge wtlh 0-5 nightclu b licen se, restaurant
eq utpment and slock. Upsta irs has 2 aparlme'nts.
Sttuated on street w1th good lral11 c llow in
Middl eport.
N2677

••c

1980 Cutl•t Supntm .. 1978
Motnte Carlo. 1978 Pontiac
Leman1. 19711 Pomlac Cann•
vii., 1971 Mllibu Wagon. 304-

NICE ROOMY HOME
11 rooms - 4+ bedrooms. 7 rooms on main floor, 4 rooms
in t~e lin ished basement Natural gas forced air furnace wit h
central air. Interco m system, 16'x30' covered patio in rear of
home, lovely den with fireplace, bu in·in cabinets and range
with a snack bar in· main knchen . Asecond kilchen in basement You must see this home INSIDE tlefore you wrrtethis
one off. Phone now for an appOintment.
#672

1888' Hond• 70 4 wheeler.
•e21S. Call 814-«6·3820 ,,.,

c.n 814·388·9807 ott.. 5:30,

1978 Ford LTD II, auto .• PS. PB,
oir. low mileage. Call 814-268-

Real Estate General

PATRIU COCHRAN
446-8655

J. MERRill CARTEl!

Buidl. Le S.br.,

875·3431 .

1979 Ford Futura. 8 cyl., nW(
,.dial tlrn. good condition.
••so. CAll &amp;14-986· 4473.

PM.

POOR BOYS TIRES

448·8678.

446-6610
CktiJ amiL...

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
652 Second Ave.

1981

own•.
cond, 13,600.00 .
304-871-3030, 1711-4232 end

814-949-2085.

614-992 -2440.

81

Auto Parts

For Sal• 1984 BulckSkyhiiWk.
Excellent conditton. C.ll 814-

$2500 . 00 .

Real Estate General

1981 Olda OmegL Cruise conltol, tilt wheel, AM·FM 1tereo.

"-'"No ru81.

76

Moving to At. 36. H•nd•aon.
w.v •. into new bldv. by O.c:.
15th. C1ll 304·875·3331 .

1178 FMd 4•4 short bed aUip
llde. Too m.ny extrn to ll1t.
Exttl sh~tp. *31500 firm . Call
beto'r• 2 PM or •ft• 10 PM
114·441·8124.

304-875·3074.

1884 OodriJ• Ari•. SW. Auto ..
Air, 82499. John• Auto Sal•,
Below Holldav Inn. K1nauga.

8460.00. Large tank 2•h:6 ft •
• inch•. 20 ft c...,per. 304-57&amp;2328 or 576-2806. 4 room

M2

2585.

1977 Ford LTD . Llkenawlaather

Motorcvcles

1986 Hond1 2150 4 Trax. h•dlv
uHd . l•t oH•· C1ll 814-448·
1120 evaning1.

013,500.00. 304·882·2191 .

1979 Ford T·llrd. gold. Town
LlndMJ, tully IOided, new tir•
and b.nary. •1 .291.00. Chilly
motor, e eyL 48.000 mil•.

2237.

74

1978 Ch.,rol .. Step 1kt' 400
motor; auto .• PS , PB, AM -FM·
C•sMttilt. Runs •c... U400.

814·446-2099.

1984 Zze Cam•o. loaded, all
ellt,.a, 304--676-3248.

1981 Oldamobile Delta 88.
Royelt Brougham. Auto, Good
oondition. t1450. 114-948 ·

1977 Chwy Monte Carlo. Good
condition. 8800. Call614-742 -

TnJcks for Sale

1981 Uneoln Town C1r, low

mileage, tully equippld ,

Real

1982 Plymouth Ari• K. nioe*1696. 1981 Ch..,y Pickup
truck. V·8, auto. PS. PB. 81996.
c.u 614-286·8622.

Ford tractor:u live

houte

8335.

Cadlllac Sevilla. l011dtd. Fla. car.
No ruat. Tr-.:t•dump truck.
pickup. 1982 Eacort, 11200.
Call814·448-7019 .

1973 Oldo. 98, 0375. Colt

•

'88 Cutl••· PW. cruiM. tit,
AM-FM c•..tta, Y· 8 , :;404·6715·

814-448·1758.

miiM. Call 814-388·9811.
~977 Chwv CamptrVan.

1987 Ford Station Wagon. C11l

114·268·8898.

1882 blldL Tran•AM. loadad.
Low mil•· E11cet. !:Ond. Call

1983 Ponlitc 1000, 4 dr.,
•utoml1ic:. lots of ••t,.a. R un1
good Ia extra cl~~n . 39,000

Gowrnment Seil•d Vehid•
from •100. Fords, Merced•.
Corvattea. ChevyL Surplua.
~uyera Ouide. 111 8015 -8876000, ext. S-10189.

w_•

3:lN301:lNIOO
30Nin0
..'30N3QIONIOO
AJ./N'I/1
B 10 40nw 001 aq pjnOM
31DN1r
IB41, ·~oeq P9J9MSUe 9!PPBO 941
31&gt;10/.J.
,.'J!S ON,. ,,'PIJOM 941 U! 9!PPBO iSJOM
NO&gt;I:l31:i
941 eq jSnW nOA, :a!ppeo S!4 IB
3NI:J30
11aA J9II06 e p1ee4 1Jawwns 1se1
S131-W'II:!OS
OL 5113MSN,

Collect.

DE WITT -BROKER
388-IISS

IN ON A TRADE. C•ll d ...
814·448·7899. evenings 614""8-9639. Travel when you
want to.

1270.

p .m .

·Comple te . the chockle q uoted

~--

66 MF tf'llctor, Nice, w / MF

S pl. :

a•

1986 Chwette, 12600. 1979
C hlllftlte, 1700. Calll14-251-

72

&amp; Accessories

1969 Chfval• Imperial. 1988
Ford Bronco Wagon. Call &amp;14·
256·6558.

03000. Coli 814·949-3003.

___ ......I__I I I I I I I I I I I

bu. Jacks Fruh: Mkt. Fh. 35 ,
Henderson.

BLDG .

•

.

Transporlillion

rrrrra

Truck load Apples just in, $6.99

UTI LilY

v•

refrlg.. .vuhlr. llwpa&amp;. wm ..u
outright or •kea AUTOMOBILE

71 Auto's For Sale

1978 Ford Thunderbird. Auna
good. Good condition. t376 .
Calk1814-742-29&amp;6 enytime.

Numbtrrd

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

61 Farm Equipment

6266,.

Last summer I heard a
golfer yell at his caddie : "You
must be the worst caddie in
t~e world. " "No sir," the cad·
d1e answered back, "that
would be too much of a

_.;.U::._:N.;....:Q:L,:.l_E::y.,...:::C.,-11 0

Two Kimbell conaole pi.-aos,
repossessions, take over low
monthly payemont1. call 304463-1163.

58

Mixed htlf 11 .26 bala 304·676·

"

.

Kimball piano, $500.00 firm.
304-676-5726.

19811 Motor Hom..Only 4,1100
milea-like new Toyota 21 fl ,,
automatic tnm1 .. all •If t:on·
qined, b.th room wHh shower,
B.
eookstow.
orelebt:rlc

Sunday Times-

W. Va .

71 Auto's For Sale

71 Auto's For Sale

1988 Red hoc Camaro. Excel.
cond. Call aft•? PM. 814-379·
2o638.

5888.

lndivklual guh_ar la..ona, b•
ginners. seriou1 guitariat. Bruie•dis Music. 614-446-0687,
Jeff Wamslev in1truc::tor, 114446-8077. limited openings.

71 Auto 's For Sale

814-367·0141 '

AKC ugi1tered 8ug:le, 4
monthl old, male and f.m.le.
good Christmas glftl, 304-875-

57

Livestock

Ohio-Point

e

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS...
CALL AN EXPERIENCE~! WOOD REALTY SALI:SPEIRSO~

· t Sunaet 8T-'ry
1t Shovel
16 Units ol
phytlcal Ioree
21 Commonplace
22 Wild ducks
23Peels
24 .. _ 66"
25 Succor
26 Sorceress
28 "Being -"
30 Old pronoun
32 Guldo~s low note
33 Sun god
34 Female run
35 Antlered animal
38 Jump
37 Bother
38 Crafty
40 Caraelor
42 Foflowe Fri.
43 Enemlae
44 Hemoley series
45 Auellence
47 Minor Item
49 Ray of light
50 Southern
blackbird
51- quo
54 Trade for money
55 Female student
58 ''Rear-"
59 Sin
60 Parisian saason
82 Totte~ed
64 Ancient Persian
85 Again: prefix
66 Hebrew letter
67 Ethiopian tl1te
69 At no time
70 North or South
7t Tiny
· 72 Scottish cap
74 Nuisances
16 Cincinnati player
77 Choir
78 Wire nail
79 Clasallled facts
82 Moat pleasant
64 R-ardl
85 Decays '
66 Elactrlc catfl811 .
B8 Pitch
89 Dlpoelts
90 .. _of

Endearment''

92 Military units
94 Sovereigns
98 Toward shelter
89 Walk
100 To atrlke out
(baseball)
102 Speed contests
103 Stitch
104 Proposition
105 Falsified
106 Ceremonies
106 Haggard heroine
109 Artlltctollenguage
110 Hypothetical
force
1t 1 Drunkards
112 Renovation
114 Morsal
116 Title of raspect
117 Venerate
t t9 Sharpen
t20 Pitcher
122 Drank 'l[owfy
124 In addltiOK
125 Ufelesa
126 Attack
128 Game at cards
129 Force
131- Piper
132 Illuminated
133 Mine excavation
135 Couple
138 The flrsl whole
number

139 Hospital section
140 Evil
·
141 Employ
142 Sliver symbol
143 World org.
144 Tanned skin
145 Explode
147 Experletl'ce
149 Sesame
150 Start
152 Tiny opening
154 White popl'r
156 Disconnected
t58 Jogs
·159 Temporary.
stleltara
160 - knupkles
161 Encounte~s

DOWN
1 Plays leading role
2 Teat

3 Free of
4 That thing

5 Church bench
6 Be present
7 Falls back
SCheer
9 Mr. Paclno
10 Faat·flylng plane
1t Variety of wheat
12 Recreation area
13 Metric measure'
14 Down: prolix
15 Value highly
t6 Let fall
f7 Person
addressed
18 Greek lelt81
19 Musical study
20 Surglcal thread
27 Anger
29 Cure
31 Possaeses
36 Burden
37 Among
39 " A -In the
life"
40 Loyal
41 Cook slowly
42 " - .streak"

43
44
46
48
49

Give food to
Comedian Meara
Near
Wollhound
South African
Dutch
50 Assistant
51 Clans
52 Handle
53 Emphasize
55 Reputation
56 Shoe part
57 Mountain nymph
58 Nick Notte film
61 Orient
63 Uniform
64 Protective ditch
68 Mixed
. 70 Units of Spanish
currency

71 Takes from
73 Defaced
74 Frull seeds
75 Rascal
71 Spanl811 title
of respect
· 78 Phi - Kappa
80 Heavy volume

81 Capuchin monkey
83 "Beverly Hllltl - "
84 Shea Stadium .
occupants

87
89
90
9t

Explain
Scoffs
Ke1tledrum
Omit from
pronunciation

92 The sweetsop
93 Surfeit
95 Reverberation
96 Uncanny
97 Saber
99 Location
t01 Most racent
105 Jack of
" Hawaii-Five 0"
106 Tear
107 Carpente~'s toots
111 Dispatched
112 "- to Ball" .
t13 Meadows
115 Baked clay
116 Blemish
118 Weathercock
I t9 Pay attention
121 Ceremonies
123 Italian rlv81
t25 Lead
126 Helps
127 Defeats
t29 Be undaclded
130 Interior
13t Cushion
132 Singing birds
134 Fondle
136 Blouse
137 Eyes amorously
139 Emerges
victorious

140 Basaball term
144 Strike
145 Storage ·
compartment

146
t47
148
149
t51
t53

Flap
Oolong
Shade 1ree
Pedal digit
Proceed
- Man fstrong
person)
155 Reynolds ID
157 Faroe Islands
whirlwind

�Page

D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 11 • 1988

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

Farm Flashes
'Ohio teens' victory
First week Burley sales average· $162.25. per hundred
sends them to Scotland
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Simple advice from a veteran
helped Tony Reed and his team·
mates bring home to Ohio the top
troplly in the recent national 4-H
livestock judging contest
It will also send them overseas.
"Dick Smith always said don't
worry, do the best you can," said
Reed, an 18-year-old from Ashville In Plckaway County.
The words of wisdom that
helped Ohio 4-H'ers linlsh firs tin
the 36--state competition came
from Richard Smith, Ohio State
UniVersity assistant professor
emeritus, animal science.
Smith has coached Ohio 4-H
livestock teams for 24 years. It's
the third time this decade Ohio
4-H'ers have taken the top prize.
Smith will retfre from coac hing
after this year.
"I'm well·pleased; it was a
team effort,'' Smith said.
The team is now eligible to go
to Scotland next June to compete
against European teams.
Joining Reed on the team were ·
Tracy Dendinger, 18, Clyde,
Sandusl!x_ County; Chad McDowell, 16, Winchester, Adams

County; and Greg Raines , 16,
Seaman, Adams County.
The team finished first In beef
judging and third in swine
judging, sheep judging and rea·
sons, where' the youngsters
briefly defend their judging
skills.
Among 143 contestants, McDo·
well finished fourth , Raines liflh,
Reed seventh and Dendinger
13th.
"They're great teammates,"
Reed said. "We're all planning
on going to Europe. The cattle,
hogs and sheep judged there will
be different breeds than here.
We'll get to study them In the
days leading to t.h ecompetition."
The 4-H'ers will spend 17 days
In Europe. It's up to each 4-H'er
to raise the money to cross the
Atlantic. County 4-H groups will
work t6gether to raise money for
each teen 's trip.
Smith was one of three coaches
who traveled with the"team. The
others were Jodi Black, 4-H
agent in Ross County, and Jim
Chakeres, Ohio State graduate
student In animal science.

Roadside mar~eting
conference scheduled
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUP!) Ohio State University agrlcultu·
ral economist Kelso Wessel says
roadside marketers can put the
summmer's challenges to rest
and look ahead at the 29th annual
Ohio Roadside Marketing Conference Jan. 13-15 at Dayton's
Stouffer Plaza Hotel.
The conference offers workshops and sessions a bout market·
lng products and operating a
roadside market.
The opening session will feature John Holt of the University
of Florida, who will speak on ·
"Innovators
and
Entrepreneurshlps."
Fred Grim of Oak Harbor will
be back this year for a series ~f
workshops on advertising
concerns.
A special workshop on legal
options In roadside marketing
situatiOns Is planned.
The final session will feature
Bernie Erven, agricultural economist at Ohio State, who will
speak on "Managing Change."
A special function at the
conference this year will be
formalizing the Ohio Agricultu·

ral Direct Marketing Association, Wessel said.
Besides workshops, there will
be a tour of farm markets In the
Dayton area on Jan. 15. The tour
will visit Young's Dairy Farm In
Yellow Springs, Old Clifton Mill
In Clifton and Ulery Greenhouse
in ·Springfield, with an optional
tour of the Air Force Museum
afterwards.
There will also be a trade show
throughout the conference.
A break from conference activ·
!ties is planned Friday with an
evening of cinema racing, a
novel form of horse racing,
Wessel said .
Saturday, a njne-cdurse dinner
and play at the La Comedla
Dinner Theatre are planned.
Registration is $17 a day per
person with a maximum of $51
per market per day. Those
registering with payment before
Dec. 28 will recieve a 10 percent
discount.
The conference Is sponsored by
Ohio State's department of agrl·
cultural economics and rural
sociology and the Ohio Coopera·
tlve Extension Service.

GALLIPOLIS - Burley To·
bacco prices at the end of sales on .
Dec. 1 average $162.25 per
hundred tor the first seven days
of 1988 marketing.
This compared to $158.71 per
hundred tor the first seven days
in 1987. By latest crop estlma(l!,
an estimated 48 per cent of the
1988 crop was sold In the first
seven days or marketing.
The Burley Cooperative accepted only .8 per cent thru Dec.
1. The market news report
indicates a more desirable color
with second week runs of 54 per
cent classified as tan; 19 per cent
as tannish red and about 5
percent as red . .
The Southern Ohio Feeder Pig .
Sale, Dec. 1 featured nearly 2000
graded ptgs. The sale average
was $52.96 per hundred or $29.51 ·
per head on the sale average
weight of 55.72 pounds per head.
Top was $71 per hundred on a set
of 36 pound pigs. The hog corn
ratio for October was 14.5:1
compared to 30.4; 1 a year
earlier.
Corn quality is a big factor this
year with several reports of ear
or kernal rots. According to the
University of Kentucky, "Dlplodla'' continues to be the main
problem when observed by their
diagnostic Ia b.
Symptoms of "Diplodia" Ear
rot often Involve the prematu_re

drying of ear husk and a white
mold between the kernals, usually starting at the base and
progressing uniformly toward
the lip. Badly rotted kernals are
brown,
\
Not all species of firewood are
created equal. Rate of burning
'jlnd "a mount of heat produced
vary with species. Some of the
slow burning, relatively high
heat woods are oak, hickory,
locust and beech. Some of the fast
b)lrnlng, relatively low heat
woods are aspen, tuliptree and
willow.
Conifers, hickory, birch, and
cherry tend to pop and spark.
Knowing the species is very
important when comparing prl·
ces. In addition, a great deal of
heat will be consumed In evaport·
lng the · water In green wood.

held at the Dayton Convention
Center. The event will be held
Jan. lJ-15, 1989. Weshouldhavea
copy of the program and a
registration form in tile next few
days. This Is an excellent confer·
ence for those interested In
roadside marketing, direct marketing, or lnnova!lvt;
agriculture.
"Farmer's Tax Guides" will
be available free of charge again
this year. We are late getting our
supply, but hope to have them
available by Dec. 15.
Due to the cost of mailing we
will not be making a major
mailing of these publications.
Farmers wanting a free copy of
the "Farmers Tax Guide" should
stop at the Gallla County Extension Office located at 1502 East·
ern Avenue in Gallipolis;

Generally, pieces of firewood
larger than four Inches In diameter should be split. .
A unique class on timber
marketing will be held Tuesday
evening, 7 p.m., Dec. 20 at the
Hocking Technical College near
Nelsonville. Some of the topics
wlli Include: how to estimate
quality and volume; how to
advertise for and receive bids;
and what do you want In your
contract. With timber prices at
record levels, the Interest In this
class topic should be great. For
class details, call Peter Grlessman at the Vinton County Exten·
slon Office (614-596-5606) or Bill
Twarogowskl at the Athens
County Extension Office (614·
593-8555).
The 29th Ohio Roadside Mar. keting Conference wlll again be

"FREE"

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
SWCD has received word of
funds being appropriated for the
Multlfiora Rose Control Cost·
Share Program. The s lgn-up for
cost-share requests Is now open
and will continue through Dec.

30.

This is the third year for the
program . With thegrantof$3,900
for 1989 treatment this brings the
total of cost-share grants
awarded to the Gallia SWCD
$20,500.
.
This cost-share money Is given
to landowners for the purpose of
controlling Multlfiora Rose on
their property. One equivalent
acre of MFR Is the required
minimum to be approved on the
program. Participants reo:elvE

Hon1eowners insurance ·
discounts
from State Farm.
For qualified homeowners, we offer
discounts. which can make our already low
premium even lower. Call
Call,
CAIOll SNOWDEN
c... ..- of Third
bt. &amp; Stolo II.
Galipolil, Oh.
Phooo 446·4290
446;4511

L1/tce fl good netghbor State Farm 15 there

Stale Farm F1re and Casualty Company Home Offi ce Bloommgton, lllmo1s

browsing shop. It 's the kind of .
store you just walk through unti l
you find that unique gift ."
Francis said the store can.
customize upholstery furniture .
They carry such lines as Waverly
fabrics, Rowe pottery and Levalor blinds.
Among the " unique" gifts
scattered through the shop are
handmade wood puzzels, rockers
and animals, cross 'stitch novellies, hand-braided rugs, and
handmade stuffed animals.
,1

~

In the Chr ls.tmas spirit , there
are ha nd-c arved anim als, na tivIty scenes and Santa Clauses ,
Chr istmas tree ornaments and
" unique" gifts for those, hard-to·
buy-for people, F r anci s said.
At least seven Gallla -County
craft people sell the ir Items to the
store. Francis said she Is alw ays
on the look-out for new Items
made by area res idents.
Temporary store hours are
Tuesday through Saturday , 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.

.._......,.

•

Living with
deficits

POINSETTI
COME TEST DRIVE A NEW 1989 BUICK, PONTIAC OR
GMC AND RECEIVE A BEAUTIFUL POINSEniA FREE•••
OFFER EXPIRES 12/16/88.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 EAST MAIN

992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

PRESCRJPl'ION SHOP - In October, the
former VIllage Pharmacy was purchased hy the
Prescription Shop, a corporation operating stores
in ,'\thens, GloUAter and McArthur. steve Follrod,

GALLIPOLIS' - One of the
problems &lt;1 maintaining a deficit Is
that It costs
Debts
financed by bor·
rowlngs, and to
borrow one must
pay interest. Tbe
government bor·
rows by issuing
The store · also has a contact bonds, notes, and
_lenses replacement service of- bills. The Interest
fered to customers a~ 50 percent that must be paid
of the original cost for the purchase lhl!se Instruments is the
replacement, along with conva- cost, to the government, of these
lescent aides, both purchase and borrowings.
The only way for a government to
rentals, with billings to
reduce
Its debt Is to run a budget
Medicare.
surplus,
to take in more money than
Another new feature of the
It
spendS.
The surplus must then be
store is a catalog shop at home
used
to
pay
of! maturing debt
service featuring two day deliv(bonds,
notes,
etc.) rather than
ery on more than 3,000 products.
replacing
them
(rolling
them over)
Twenty-four hour photo finishing
with
more
debt.
_
Is available and the store now
The national debt Is thus the sum
features an expanded line of girts
of all the money the government
and toys .
has borrowed (and which is stUI
outstanding) to finance budget
de!ldts. Another way of looking at It
Is as the accumulation of all the past
decisiOns of the government to
borrow In order to pay debts rather
than to raise taxes.
' Deticlt flnanc!n&amp; - that is,
.,.. oontbllllnl"111 -pay·tor government ·
programs by Increased amounts of
debt - has become a way of life in
the United States. It Is hard to
'
reverse this trend when many
people strongly believe In what the
government is spending the money
for: defense, health care, highways, school lunches. It Is obvlou~
a matter of fiscal prlorttles. And
government spending Is not the
only reason for a defiCit budget.
Economic slumps also contribute
because revenues fall at the very
same time that the need for
unemployment benefits, fond
,stamps, and other social programs

registered pharmacist, Is pictured here with other
employes, I tor, Donna Glaze, Sandy Thompson,
&amp;tty Adams, and Scott Hanning.

Prescription Shop renovated
MIDDLEPORT - Renovatk!n
zle, another registered
of the Prescription Shop, forpharmacist.
merly VIllage Pharmacy, to
Beginning Monday the Presmake way for the addition of new
cription Sl)op will have extended
merchandise lines and services hours through Christmas, 9 a.m.
Is underway. 1
to 8 p.m. weekdays and SaturIn October the pharmacy was days. The regular hoursof9a.m.
purchased by the Prescription to 6 p.m. Monday through Frl·
Shop corporation which operates day, and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
stores In Athens, Glouster, and Saturdays will be resumed after
McArthur.
Christmas.
Steve Follrod, a native Meigs
Free delivery service on pres·
Countian and graduate. of East· · crtpllons Is being offered by the
ern High School and the Ohio pharmacy in the communities of
State University School of Phar- Middleport, Pomeroy, Brad·
macy, works in the Middleport bury, Minersville, Syracuse, an&lt;!
store along with •Robert McKen· Mason, Y{. Va.

and 55 percent, respecuvety.
Henderson noted that eggs and
chicken are highly Integrated
Industries.
Choice .beef Is next with a 54
percent return. About49 percent
of the price of milk goes to the
farmer. Only 7 P,erceni of the
price of a loaf of white bread
returns to the farm .

hooper equivalent acre to off set
the cost of materials.
There Is a maximum built into
the program too, but we have
never been able to service all the
requests to the extent of the total
problem.
what the program Is designed
to do Is encourage landowners to
try different methods of control
to see what works well for them
and not a complete eradication
with each and every landowner
in the county.
The cost-share will be paid at a
rate of 75% at the lime of Initial
control measures and the re·
malning 25% during the second
ye_a r of maintenance.
If you are Interested in receiv·
lng funds to help control MFR on
your property, please call our
office at 446-8687.

December 11. 1988

GALLIPOLIS - Country Inte·
rlors, 54 State St. , Is under new
management and Is bringing In
more local crafts ·and unique
gifts, many of them handmade,
said Ellen Francis, manager.
The store is probably best
known for its antique reproductions, customized furniture and
furniture accessories . But Francis, who has managed the store
form three weeks, said more
crafts made locally and more
handmade Items have been
placed throughout the shop.
"f want to keep the colonial
country look but add modern
country," Francis said. " It 's a

i.ocAL ART - Country Interiors sell arts and craft items made
by local residents. Manager Ellen Francis is .on the ,
lor
more "unique" gift Items or novelties made by
residents,
shown.
such as the paintings and some of the Items on

increases.

Funds approved for Multiflower
Rose control; signup hegins by SWCD
By William Wilson, Jr.
Di&amp;trlct Technician

E

Country Interiors is under
new management in G~Jlipolis

Farmers get 3()e pf consumer's dollar
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio State University agrlcultu·
ral economist Dennis Henderson'·
says about :JOcents of each dollar
the average consumer spends on
food gets back to the farmer.
Eggs and frying chickens return the highest percentage of
the retail food dollar, 63 percent

'iimts- ~mfinel Section .

Farm
Business
-

Money Ideas

I

'rou'll be flooting on o cloud with
!he buys yau'll find in the
classifieds.

)

,

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Melp SoU and Water ·
Conservation District, Is located somewhere in
Melp .County, Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
GaiUpolls, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win

a S5 cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries sheuld
be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery, Ne&gt;&lt;t week, a Galli&amp; County
farm will be featured by the Gallla SoD and Water
Conservation District.

Walters named to HMC post
GALLIPOLIS- By an appoint·
ment ·approved by the Board of
Trustees of the Holzer Hospital
Foundation, Earl E. Walters has
been named vice president for
fiscal service, according to Cha·
rles I. Adkins, Jr., Chief Executive Officer of the Holzer Medical
Center. He replaces Emil Janko,
who retired after 17 years of
service In this position.
The vice president assumes his
new role after 16 years as
Controller of the Medical Center.
He "came to Holzer from Union
Carbide Corporation's Putnam
Coal Mine In 1972, where he held
the position o! office manager.
For the five years preceding his
work there, Walters served as
supervisor of da~a processing
and payroll with the B.F, Good·
rich Co., In M~rletta. His record
also Includes two years with
Corning GI&amp;As Works and three
years of service with the United
States Army, !allowing his gra·
duat!on !rom college.
Walters received his Bachelor
of Science degree In Business
Administration !rom Marietta
College in 1960. Then in 1971, he
went on to earn his M.B.A. In
Management !rom Ohio

"'1:1

New ideas in
fanning to
he discussed

University.
A resident of Gallipolis, Wal·
ters resides with his wife, Char·
iotte, and children, Byron, 14,
Christopher, 13, and Lelsa , 9. All
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! )
three are students at the Ohio · New Ideas, Information and
Valley Christian School. In his technology will be presented at
spare time, Walters enjoys rals·
the Ohio Fruit and Vegetable
lng beef ca tile on the !amlly farm
Growers' Congress Feb. 7-9 at
In West VIrginia.
the Toledo 'SeaGate Convention
Center.
The three-day event will In·
elude guest speakers, workshops
and roundtable discussions on
fruits, truck crops, processing
crops and potatoes, said Ohio
State University "fruit specialist
Richard Funt.
This year's theme is "Systems
Management For Your
Enterprise."
Water, a major topic thls·year,
will be discussed in several
sessions, Funt said. Other ses·
slons Include pesticide updates
where growers can be re·
cerdfled.
Also, several short courses wlll
be held In areas such as sweet
corn, strawberries, apples,
peaches and tomatoes.
Other thrusts this year are In
disease conlrol, cu It ural practl·
EARL WALTERS
ces and computer software.

Many observers and experts
believe lhat a chronic deficit
combined with a rising national
·debt Is Inflationary and adds a
burden to future generations. On
the other hand, some economists
argue that the clrcumsiances of tbe
debt must be taken Into consldera·
tton. For instance, goverrunenl
spending to get the country out of a
prolonged economic depressbn can
be worlhwhUe if II resuhs in fuU
employment and economic
prosperity. Then incurred debt can
be paid back relatiVely Painlessly.
To many people, however, this Is
a ~no-win sltuatbn. The country
either goes on paying huge amounts
of Interest year upon year, ot It
raises,even larger amounts in taxes
to pay off the principal. The Ideal
solution Is Increased prosperity, a
period of fuU employment when the
goverrunent runs a surplus and can
assign the extra funds raised to
reducing the national debt.
(Mr. Evans Ill an lnVe&amp;tment broker
for The Ohio Company In their
Galllpoll!l offlre. )

Goebel promoted
at. Kyger
. .... Creek
GALLIPOLIS - Jeffrey P .
Goebel, 250 Spring Valley Drive,
Gallipolis, was promoted effective Dec. 1 from maintenance
engineer to senior malntenan~e
engineer at the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek Station, according to an·
nouncement by Plant Manager
Raymond H. Blowers, Jr.
Goebel joined OVEC In 1984, as
an associate engineer in the
Performance Department, and a
year IB.ter he was promoted to
performance engineer. In 1986,
he was promoted to maintenance
engineer in the Maintenance
Department. Goebel graduated
from Ohio University with a
Bachelor of Science degree In
mechanical engineering.

CotmtJ•y Interiors has
antique
reproductions, lumlture accessories, and customized upholstery.
New manager Ellen Francis has taken In more craft Items such as
hand-woven rup, hand-carved animals and figures, and pottery to
fill the shop.

Psychiatrist certified
GALLIPOLIS -

Dr. Charles

R. Dygert recently received his
certification from the American
Board of Neurology and Psych Ia·
try, Dr. Dygert Is employed as
the Medical Director of Woodland Centers, Inc.
Psychiatrists are licensed
medical doctors with specialized
training In detection, diagnosis,
and treatment of mental· and
emotional disorders. The psychl·
atrlsts at Woodland Centers use
their special training and assessment skills to add to the under·
standing of the client and his or
her special problems. Woodland
Centers provides a variety of
services staffed by professionals
like Dr. Dygert including:
Comprehensive psychiatric
services; psychological servl·
ces; ,Individual counseling; marriage and family counseling; the
. crisis Intervention unit; treatment for drug and alcohol
disorders and child psychology
and counseling.
. Beyond his dally responslblll·
ties, Dr. Dygert has a great deal
of Interest in working with the
treatment o! manic depressives
and chronic mental disorders.
His duties at WOOdland Includ
serving as staff psychiatrist to
the CrisiS Intervention Unit,
counseling clie~ts on an outpa·

lien! basis, and consulting patients in the Holzer Medical
Center.
Dr. Dygert received his bachelor of arts degree at Ball State
University and his M.D . at the
Indiana University School of
Medicine. He served his resld·
ency In psychiatry at the Maine
Medical Center, Portland, Maine
prior to his appointment to
Woodland Centers In 1986.

-

·····--DR. CHARLES DYGERT

�'

Page-E-2-Sundlv Times-Sentinel

•·
December 11 • 1988

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va. __

By

SUSAN GILL SPEL·
LMEYER
United Press International

you (and that may well be a
combination of style - an
eclectic look. 1
Another thing to do ls analyze
Q - I am moving Into my first
yor Inherent preferences. This
apartment and have no furniwill also help you and give you
ture, which means I have to start
direction. 1! you like mixing
from scratch. This may sound
many different patterns, are
ridiculous, but I have no Idea or
comfortable with a room filled
with furniture, accessories and
what style I want.
Some of my friends have
photographs, enjoy a warm, and
country, some have contempor·
possibly somewhat cluttered,
ary, others traditional. They all
look, your best choice woud be
have appeal. How do I decide,
country or traditional.
and what are some things I
It you like things sleek, sculptu·
should consider?
ral. more architectural In form
A - The most Important thing
- textures, not patterns - and
to keep In mind when decorating
an open feeling, you would
your apartment Is that It Is yours,
naturally prefer contemporary·
. not your friends'. It should be a
Next you want to. analyze the
space and how y:ou will be using
• reflection of you and your
II. A dining room doesn't have to
: lndbrlduallty.
be a dining room. It you don't
It It Is approached sensitivelY,
people should know more about cook, eat out, and never entertain
for dinner, why have a dining
you after seeing your furnished
room? Use It as a den, an office,
apartment. Your personality Is
·
evidenced In every single Item or a guest room.
It you ' have a one-bedroom
you select. Therefore, It Is
apartment. the bedroom doesn't
: Important that you do your
• homework, because not knowing have to be the sleeping quarters.
It could be your office, and your
' where to begin Is far from
"bedroom" could be a Murphy
' unusual.
bed In the living room. Where
Start by looking through decospace Is limited, It Is Important
rating magazines and ripping out
things that you particularly like . . that It Is utilized to Its full extent.
Now you must analyze your
: Go to the library and peruse
needs. How do you live? How do
· books on decorating. Make photo
you spend your time? What do
: copies at room scenes that appeal
you
do when you're at home? Do
: to you and note the colors that
you
have a pet? Do guests often
were used. Vis It stores that sell
come
to visit? All of these and
furniture and display It In varmany
more questions must be
Ious settings. Which of them
answered to determine your
would make you feel most
needs.
: comfortable- at home?
You'll see a, pattern emerge
If you llketoread. you will need
plenty of space for books, a good
: from doing all of these things.
reading light and a comfortablle
· While many styles are attrac·
chair, possibly with an ottoman.
tlve, there Is one that Is right for

How to strip the old ~
finish from furniture
By Reader's Dlgesl
Wrllten for UPI ·

working on Is horizontal.
5. When the finish bubbles about 15 minutes, but check the
Beneath that neglected and
label - scrape off the so!tened
damaged surface, many a piece
paint sludge with a blunt-edged,
of old furniture has beautifully
round-cornered putty knife or a
grained wood just waiting to be
Wooden scraper. Work with the
bared and refinished. Stripping
grain; be careful not to gouge the
softened wood beneath. Remove
orr old layers of paint or varnish
Is a straightforward job that no
paint from crannies with a stiff
do-lt-yourselfer should hesitate
toothbrush, . a pointed stick or
to undertake. The only drawback
steel wool.
Is that the work can be messy and
If a piece has many layers or
Is best done outdoors.
finish you may have to repeat the
Here are' Instructions for strip·
stripping process a second or
ping paint and varnish and
third time.
preparing wood tor a new finish.
G. After the entire surface has
Cboaellll the remover
been scraped clean, look for any
dark or glossy patches. Recoat
A chemical remover, used
correctly, Is the most effective
thse patches with stripper, walt
the required time, then scrub
way to remove old finish without
them clean with steel wool. To
damaging the wood beneath.
Sanding Is less efficient and may
make sure the new finish adheres
mar the wood. A heavy bodied,
properly and looks professional,
It Is crucial that the old finish be
semi-paste stripper Is the best
completely removed.
choice tor most projects. It
7. Immerse hinges and other
adheres better to vertical and
grooved surfaces and evaporates
hardware In paint remover.
Scrape of!the softened paint with
more slowly, giving the cheml·
cals more time to work.
· --·· steel wool or a stilt brush.
CAUTION: When using cheml·
8. Paint removers may leave
cal strippers, work In a wellbehind wax and other chemical
residues. These deposits must be
ventilated, shaded area, never
near an open flame. Don't cleaned away or neutralized
smoke. Keep children and pets
before refinishing. or they will
aW!IY from the work area. Wear
keep stains from penetrating
old clothes. cotton-lined neo·
properly. The final finish may
prene gloves and safety goggles.
also fall to adhere.
Store scrapings In a disposable
Apply turpentine, paint
can. Follow manufacturer's prethinner, or mineral spirits.
cautions exactly.
Leave It on for a few minutes,
Applylnc slripper
then wipe It oft with a clean
1. Remove all knobs, hinges,
cotton cloth. Water can damage
handles and other hardware
veneers and soften glue In joints.
from the furniture. Take out
When using a water rinse
drawers and do them separately.
stripper, It's safer not to hose It
2. Place the Item to be stripped off, as 1s sometimes recom·
on several layers of newspaper.
mended. Instead, remove the
Don't use a plastic drop cloth
loose finish with steel wool
soaked In one or the solvents
because the chemical may react
with it.
above.
3. Pour some paint remover
Let theplecedrythoroughly,24
Into a coffee can or painter's
hours or more, before
bucket; keep the main supply
refinishing.
capped.
The wood may retain tinges or
4. With an old, dlsposa ble
color from Its original finish,
brush, apply a thick layer of
even after It has been carefully
stripped and cleaned. This Is not
remover, going ln one direction
harmful and may contribute to
only. Strip a single section at a
time; otherwise the paint sludge
the beauty of the final finish.
may dry before you can remove
However, If these color traces
are undesirable, remove them by
lt. Whenever possible, adjust the
piece so that the part you're
sanding.

Home and real estate today:

t

WORK BOOTS
. &amp; SHOES

WEMRN
BOOTS

1

srARnNG AT

REG. S79.00

S18°0

Reg.,
Steel Toed,
IMulated

OUI PIICE

ENGINEERING BOOTS ·

WELLINGTON BOOTS

REG. 149.00·

REG. '69.00

• OUR PRICE

0
$30°
REG. OR STEEL TOED

$3Q00

OUR PII(E

REG. OR STEEL TOED

9.66

While

8.99'

LNI

Charge 8'" Battery
Charger for 8 AA, C,
0, or two 9-volt rechargeables! et·•

Supplies

REG.
$549.00

REG.
$499.00

SALE$29900_

SAu$299°0

ust

20-ln. Toolbox with
brass hardware, liftouttote tray. Weatherproof plastic. ,.,M..

QUANTTTIES LIMITEO

1

RECUNER

3-WAY
Supplies

OTHER RECLINERS,
ROCKERS &amp;
3-WAYS .
STARnNG AT

LIMITED

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTD

. sa goo

3·WAY

985-3301

REG.
$499.00

SAlE$29900
'

.

,,

'

.

' '

Certificate of D•posit
Rates
.

"

'

j

-

'

'

...

~

I

.. '1

•

..

··~ •

".,

.. . .

"

•Stated Rate

I

•· f

~

•
Compounded Rate

TRUCK &amp; AUTO ACCESSORIES
AND SERVICES
•TRUCK BED COVERS
•STAINLESS STEEL TRIM KITS
•BUG SHIELDS
•SUNROOFS
•TAILGATi GUARDS
•CUSTOM TAILORED CARPET
•BED MATS (carpet type)
•BED RAILS
•SEAT COVERS (custom made)
•DASH COVERS
•SUNaooFS (installed)
•ROOF RACKS
•LUGGAGE RACKS
•HEADLINERS REPAIRED
•CONYERnBLE TOPS - VINYL ROOFS

STAR BANK
Reach for the Star
Star Bank, N.A., Tri-State Gallipolis Office Locations

(614) 446-0662

•FAIM •HOME eJNDUSYIY
CAU. NOW FOIIIIE NICE ON OUI

•

*Silver Bridge Plaza
(614) 446-9300

Time &amp; Temperature: 446-STAH
446-BANK

FALL TANI SO SPEOALOPEN 8:00 A.M.·4:30 p.M.
niiii'GAS
614-992-5097

Spring Valley Office
(614) 446-1399 '

•

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

-

-..
..

••.•• '"'&lt;olfi

Mf'lnlll'r FUW

,•

College or university course some.''
requirements, however , are few .
Pressure for be tter educated
One exception is California, real estate reps in Texas actually
where · college courses are re- ca ine from · a need for better
quired for both a sales license educ;Ited appraisers, Floyd said.
'
and a broker's license.
' 'There were a lot of fra udulent
" For a sales license you must and bad loa ns made during the
have completed a course in real · boom period in Texas that ha s led
estate principles." said John to a renewed cry for higher
qualit y ap praisers ' and co ntinu ·
Li bera.10r, chief deputy of the
California Real Estate Commis- ing education," he said.
sion. " Then wi thin 18 months
Now , to be an appraiser, yo u
after you are licensed, you mu st must have a real esta te license
take two additidnai college first.
courses, on appraisal, manageBut despite calls lor more
ment , economics, law or office
knowledg~bl e real estate profes·
administration." 'Fo be a broker sionals, Floyd does not see
In California, the law requires 24 colleges filling that role In the
units of college classes.
near future.
1
Prior to the 1986 act that made
'You don't see much movesomP college mandatory, Libera - ment that to have a license in real
'tor said the law required little estate you need to have a collegr
degree," Floyd sald. "You don 't
more than that "you be 18, honest
and truthful."
hear that .. What you do hear is a
Not surprisingly, Liberator call for more and better educa·
said the number of people pas s• lion , as deflhed as through
lng the California real estate courses offered by the industy
exam has gone up since the and practitioner organizations ..
"Today, real estate is not a
stricter law was adopted.
"The implication Is that the primary discipline such as bank·
ing. Until that attitude changes,
principles are preparing them
better to enter the industry," he you won't see a broad·.based
appreciation of · real estate
said. " We are. getting more
education.
Informed people."
Nevertheless . "the time when
Texas, however. has in recent
years rolled back on pre-license . S3 and three friends vo~ch ing for
your character was all that was
college requirements.
Dr. Rick Floyd, director of the needed to get a license is long
Real Estate Center at Texas over."
A&amp;M University in College StaWeichert agrees .
"Real es tate is not a 'social'
tion, Texas, said in 1975 the state
Legislature haa "put the broker thing anymor·e. lt has been a
In the position of needing a two social th ing where whether peoyear college education." In 1981 , ple were successful or not didn't
however, "we backed off that make much difference.

" But people In real es tate now
ar e finding th is is a serious
business, and to be successfu I
you have to be serious. It's a
business tha t requir'es discipline .
"Just In the last two years we
are seeing more young people
comi ng in looki ng .for jobs, a nd I
enco urage our managers to give
them a chance.
"I fi nd it e ncouraging. They
have formal educations, and they· ·
see real es tate as a professio n.
They assimilate information fas··
ter. They are better trained and
tend to be more com!or·table with

their knowledge base. And the
customer senses that."
And if the customer has co nfl·
dence, "that means yo unger
people are going to be more
successfu l, qui cker."
But will that drive the seco ndcareer

m an

and

housewife-

turned -agent out of the business?
"No. There will always tJll a
place in I his business for women

·-

who have families at home. They
already are a ble to orga nize a nd
manage a home. II they ca n do
that, they can be a tremendous
succesS here.''

Benjamin J. Sol, M.D .
.

ObstetriCs &amp; Gynecology

'

"I believe that a woman should have a
continuing personal. and profe~;sional
relationship with her doctor from
· the beginning of her pregnancy to the llf'ld."

Offjce Hours:
Monday through friday 8:30a.m. to 5 p .m.
Suite 215
Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Office Building

(304) 675-3400
.. _ _ _ _
L-_ ___;;..

Point Pleasant, WV 25550

..:.;.;.;;;~;;.;;:_;,...;;;,;,;,;,_,J

-'

ON BRAND NAME
FILTERS!
DII'SncK HEATER

"

"for All Vour Prop••• Nee~•"

terlng the real estate Industry.
This explains the older real
estat~ work force.''
Putdltrerently: The Industry Is
largely populated by people who
have moved frail) one career to
another before settling on real
estate, and bY, people who got Into
It because they wanted to bring
extra cash Into the household.
"It's true, you don't have to be
a rocket scientist to be a real
estate agent," said Jim Wei·
chert, whose East Coast-based
Weichert Realtors Is the largest
Independent real estate company
In the nation with sales of almost
$10 billion per year.
"I was 19 when I started In this
business (In 1962). They said,
'There's the desk, there's the
phone. Go to work.'"
As the head of his own empire,
however, "We spend more than
$2 million per year justeducat lng
our agents ourselves."
Weichert Is proponent of more
formalized education for those
coming Into the business.
''Tlfe velocity of change In real
estate Is Incredible. There are
more regulations In communi·
ties. Keeping up With changes In
the mortgage Industry Is a big
job.
"And the customer has
changed. The customer today Is
not just out \here looking at
homes, but they are constantly
evaluating their agent, seeing If
the agent is comj&gt;etitlve enough,
deciding whether they want to
continue working with their
agent or get another one."
Despite that change of veloc·
lty, American colleges have not
responded with the same speed,
· leaving the Industry to fend for
Itself.
Courses to take the real estate
license exam are otrered prlmar·
ily by large real estate agencies
and typically by the variOus
Boards of Realtors, but not by
colleges. Costs tend to be
nominal.
And, as most agents freely
admit, what they learn In the
courses helps them pass the
exam, but Is useless In the actual
buying and selling of property.
Yet even while more pressure
Is being put on agents to take
continuing education courses af·
ter they are In the field, efforts to
formalize· and standardize their
education before they get there
- i.e., move the classe~ to the
college campus - have met with
mixed results.
"In general, more colleges and
universities are offering real
estate programs In their business
schools," said Dr. Donald Levi, a
professor at Wichita State Unverslty and head of the Real Estate
·Educator's Association.
"But that usually amounts to
five or six courses- principles of
real estate, real estate law,
finance, appraisal, real estate
Investment analysis.
"But the students are not
looking to become real estate
agents. They are usually prepar·
lng to work for developmen1
companies or contractors, mort·
gage banks or perhaps manage a
major real estate company.
NEW YORK IUPI) - Award·
"They will till jobs that didn't
winning authors ·Gloria Naylor exist 10 years ago. Like being a
and J. Anthony Lukas will join 'site location analyst' who wilt
the Book-of-the-Month Club's Ed- decide where .shopping centers
Itorial Board In January, It was should go. Thei;e things were all
announced recently.
'seat of the pants' decisions In the
Naylor, who won the American past. It's a lot more professional
Book Award for "The Women of now ." ·
Brewster Place," and Lukas,
. As for the everyday agent who
who ,won a Pulitzer Prize for works one-on-one with citizens
"Common Ground: A Turbulent making the biggest buys of their
Decade In the Lives of of three life: "You do see a trend toward
American Families," join Clifton greater education. In 35 states
Fadlman and David Willis there are mandatory continuing
McCullough as judges on the education requirements."
· 63-year·old board.

By FRANK COOK
United Press International
Let's talk about something else
for a second.
You didn't always have to go to
law school to be a lawyer In this
country, Nor did you have togo to
medical school to be a doctor.
There was a time when you
could study law books, -work as
ap apprentice and, when you
were ready, take the bar exam.
In a few state$ you still ca'n.
Likewise, medical education
was once a good deal less formal
than It Is now. Courses offered In
one place didn't correspond to
those In another. Quality or
ei:lucatlon differed, often
dramatically.
.• In both of those professions,
starting In the 1800s and culminating In the 1920s, practitioners ·
realized their disciplines were
becoming too complex to leave to
casual education. Higher quality
was a must. Tougher ~ulre­
ments were demanded.
And soon, preparatory classes
were moved from the mentor's
knee to the formal set.tlng of the
college classroom. Standardlza.
lion and accreditation became
paramount. Arguably, both professions improved.
Now lets talk about real estate,
and whether there Is a need for It
to become a ''profession," and all
that Implies.
Undeniably, you can make a
,c ase for the more knowledgable
agent.
Every day some mortgage
company somewhere comes up
with a new and more complex
way to tailor real estate loans to
specific buyers .
Every month or so the courts
hand down a new ruling - and
corresponding judgment - cit·
lng a real estate ageni for failing
to say the right thing, do the right
thing or even know the right
thing.
And consumers, it seem, Ore
more and more often testing the
analytical skills of the agent by
not only demanding a home to
live in, but an Investment that
will appreciate while at the same
time providing maximum cash
flow and a minimum of lifestyle
problems.
Being computer literate is
virtually mandatory.
In short, real estate Is becoming a more complex business.
A Nat lonal Association of Real·
tors poll notes that real estate
agents tend to be better•educated
than the average American
' · worker. Two out of 10 U.S.
:· workers have bachelors degrees,
while about 1 out 3 sales.agents
do.
Those degrees, however, are
not likely to be In real estate
because most of the people In real
estate today never Intended to be
there.
The same NAR poll found the
average sales agent to be 43
years old, and noted "the vast
. majority of real estate practl·
· tioners tried their hand at
· another occupation prior to en·

18 BEIGEl AVE.
GALUPOUS, OH. - 446-1968

•S~bstantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal

*Court Street Office

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- E-3

The edUcated real estate agent

AUTO TRIM CENTER

• $500 Minimum Deposit On All Certificates Of Deposit.

Ferrellgas
•Warm Morning Radiant Heaters
•Reliance Hot Water Heaters

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

They're booked .

1-Year and Up Maturities

rtJ·
ON SALE AND IN STOCK!

'

'December 11• 1988

Beginning to plan for first apartment · _
Once you have thoroughly
lfyou are a mus Ic buIt 'you wan , anal zed your needs, taketlmeto
to design the room to maximize graJ.- a floor plan of your
the qualil\ 0: 5 th~t so;:ud ~:: apartment. It sounds lntlmldat·
your spea e ·
.
1 but It really Isn't. Measure
overnlgh guests, you may n~t ~rooms wall spaces windows
s~eeper sofa. It y~u :n~~ th~ and openbJgs. Then take a ruler
0 ten, you may wan a ar
and draw it out to scale- %inch
living room. If you have a lot of
uals 1 toot. In other words, If a
cloth~ and the c~o~~ s~~i 1~ ::Jall space 1s 4 teet long, yo would
limite • you may ec c
draw linch
armoire w~~~ help alleviate the
Graph va~lous pieces or furnl·
st~g~ pr~t em.
elect must . ture In the same way and cut
e urn ure you s
k them out These are called
suit yo.u r needs and not just loa
tern lates. (they alsQ can be
pleasing. 1! you like to wa~~~ pu.:hased) It Is mul!h easier to
television, that shouldlobe tta desee dl!fer~nt possibilities for
Into :,onslderat1on pr dr tho TV furniture pla~ment on paper.
e
Youcanplilywithlt movepleces
sign &gt;g your room an
1
lt~ced ~ ~ ~~vcyg:~~~':t~tl~;~ around and decide ~hlch layout
s cruc a
works the best
through and plan anead.
·

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BATTERY

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PRICES
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DEC. t7, t988

Over BSO L0«1tions fiD Serve You.
Check Your L«t~l Di....,fiDry or Yellow Pages For Addresses/
•'

•

�Page-E-~Sunday

•

Dacamber 11. 1988

r.n-.Santinel

December 11' 1988

Chevrolet's Sprint reincarnated with
(Ecllton: For each car written
allout Ia 1111 Roadlalk column,
UPI Aule Writer .Jan Zverlaa lest
drives the velllcle lor about one
week, drlvlac lfbetweea zso and
1100 miles OB both city and rural
roadll.)

By .JAN A, ZVERINA
UPI Auto Writer
. DETROIT (UP!) -Chevrolet
has given Its smallest and most
fuel-efficient car a new name and
new look for 1989.
The Metro, really a relncarna·
tlon of. Chevrolet's Sprint, is a
. front-drive minicar built in Ja·
pan by Suzuki. It is part of
Chevrolet's new Geo nameplate,
Introduced for 1989 as a marketIng tactic to dlt!erentiate its
Imported vehicles from Its domestic models In hopes of getting
those bent on buylng foreign to
remember to visit a Chevy
dealer.
·
Three Metro models are offered. The base three-door hatch·
back starts at $5,995, bu I is not
available with an automatic
transaxle or air conditioning.
The fancier LSi hatchback coupe
starts at $6,895, and Includes

line carpet fashions by AnnStiOIIQ

It's Fun To Save On
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ATLANTA (upl) -A th r tv1ng New Agers may h ave 1O a d m It
community of "New Agers" that ' the mild climate and bus!that curious collection of health- . ness opportunities got them to
food
h 1
irl
·d h d So th
ent us asts, sp tua 1ists pack their bags an ea
u .
and dabblers in the occult- has
Once they arrive a myriad of
'
taken rootln the capital of ,the .meditative murmurlngs and
Bible Belt.
mind-expanding excursions
Leaders o! the movement that await them amid a landscape
h h I
mlxes religion with the sell- d otdte d wiIh Bap tl stc urct sptr:s
improvement obsession of the Can f dmonuments
o
e
'70s and the save-the-world
one eracy.
Ideals of the ·'60s say they've
"It's really quite hard to keep
found a mecca in Atlanta amid up with the growth. New people
are doing new things all over the
t he Christian fuodamentalists.
·•
.
place." Till sa1d, staring out
f
th
lila d f 1
h f
"Atlanta Is in the center of the
~~~m15-y
e
e~r-ol~e
in;l~~uJ:';cth~t
Bible Belt and very conservative
·
and·yet has become an open oasis
shares space with the local
for all kinds of Ideas," said
chapter of the Daughters of the
Durward Till, 66, one of the
Amer ic an Reva Iu tlon · The Un .
likely matchup Is something the
pioneering members of the
ultra-conservative DAR would
Atlanta New Age landmark,
like
to keep under its hat, Tlll
Foundation of Truth, which
·
said.
offers courses weekly on parapsychology and metaphysics.
The New Age News, a II)Onthly
'"II's interesting the number of
publication,
is perhaps the best
people who are drawn here,'' Till
of
the movement's
chronicler
sald. "They say, "1 don't know
growth
In
the
fast-growing
Sun·
why I came here. ·I was just
hub,
where
"Gone
With
The
belt
drawn lor some reason.'"
Wind"
author
Margaret
Mitchell
Like scores o! other emigres to
the booming Southeast, some of is remembered as one of the
the soul- and .IJ1ulh-searehing city's most famous citizens,

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In a tweed fabric, offer good
comfort except In the thigh area,
where long-legged occupants
may feel some lack of suppor1.
Head and leg room up front is
better than In many larger cars,
however.
The split rear seat, equipped
with rear should er belts, also has
adequate head and leg room for a
car this size. It also folds fl at to
nearly triple cargo space to 29.1
cubic feet. ·
The Metro 's dashboard has a
simple and functional design,
with the headlight and wiper
buttons on the outside of the
Instrument housing instead of on
signal stalks . Its large speedometer is flanked by the fuel and
temperature gauges.
.
Missing. however. is an engine
tachometer and oil level gauge.
On the road, the Metro LSi
displays a good blend of power , .
performance and com fort for
such a small car, not to men lion
Its frugal ways with a g allon o!
gas.
.
Its tiny engine growls on
acceleration - but has more
than enough power to make sure
this 1,600 pounder Is not banished
from the fast lane. Its shifter is

where anti -abortion protesters
feel welcome, and where Moral
Majority founder Jerry Falwell
sllll draws a crowd.
.
The paper Incorporates ca1 d 11 ttngs an
ncl g such
entlairt'- s .
ntaoulh nt 1 11
ac v orsasacrys
un ,au
moon· celebration and classes In
"aura work " dream lntepreta·
tlon medtta'tion and yoga Arti·
cles'in thelatestiss·~includeone
~

on Egyptian pyramids, the effect
of colors on perception and
healing AIDS through mind
control.
Display ads hawk everthing
fro~ therapeutic massage to
In
t lif
1
tr 11
cr~'n1s~:!r e sou por a s.
·
.
Publisher ~ary Prall IS
prospering.
The corporate -climbing
tycoon-turned-New Age idealist
launched the tabloid three years
ago as a four- page newsletter
that circulated 3,000 copies.
The 32-page November issue
circulated 25,000.
To skeptics the New Age is
infused with the strange, irrational and unbelievable. But
participants - at least such

look, new name

smooth and precise. It s ·ride,
helped by an independen't rear
s uspen slon, is very good despite
its short 89-inch wheelbase and
s kimpy P145-80R tires on 12-i nch
rims.
The Metro evaluated was an
early produ ction model. It had a
first class fi t and fin ish, e xce pt
for a buzzing radio speaker. Its
transverse-mou n ted engine ,
even with theexrraalrconditlon- ..
ing components, is easy to work
on when it comes to rou tine
main tenance lik e changing the
oil filter , drive be lts or hoses .
Those looking for an econom ical, nicely styled subcompact
car should consider the Geo
'Metro LSi. II scores some direct

GIFT
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moderates as Pratt who preach
about the healthful aspect s o!
.
f
adoptmg new ways 0 1ooklng at
things and bec.:&gt;mmg more aware.
_ contend the principles have
d ~ · b h
been passe uown y t e most
respected .contributor s to
.
ci~!h~alion.
.
II s all about takmg responsiblllv for your life - not
accepting dogma and !inding
"p tt 'd f
your own way, 1/a . s:\ ror;n
the ne~spap":o blcel~ t anta s
spraw ng su ur s, w ere one IS
. just as likely to see bumper
d'
"J
s
"
stickers rea mg esus aves
as New Apgeme~~ages promoting
"Global eace.
"Many people live that way
andJ'ustdon'tcallitNew Age It' s
·
really going back to the teac h·
Ch i
1ngsd of the mhasth~rls , h rs!:
8 ud ha ·· a11 t e P 1 osop ers.

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hils on the longer a nd wider
Honda Civic, the widely recognize d standard in subcompacts,
though it still lacks the Civic's
overall refinement and feeL
The Metro's bumper-to·
bumper warra nty, for Insta nce,
is good for three years or 50,000
miles, as oppos~d to Honda's
three year-36.000 mile plan . Its
fuel mileage Is superior. AI·
though the Civic has a larger,
16-valve fo ur-cy linder engine,
there is not a very noticea ble
difference in power.
T he Metro is also priced very
competitively with the Civ ic a nd
other models, especia lly when all
those extra -cost options are
tallied.

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Items like an upgraded fabf;ic mvclels have a slightly more
Interior, !lush halogen head· powerful version, recallbrated to
lamps and body-colored pla&amp;tlc · 55 hp at 5,700rpm. Electronic fuel
bumpers.
Injection replaces last year 's
Also offered in LSi trim only Is carburetor, which is fast becoma lour-door hatchback sedan: ing a dylng breed In the auto
starting at $7,195. It Is nearly 4 industrv.
inches longer than the coupe,
EPA fuel PConomy ratings are
!150 vs 146.1 inches) and about an among the best in the Industry,
inch taller (53.5 vs. 52.4 inches) . with the base Metro taking the
In fact it Is. olhaped more like a top spot, returning 53 city-58 mpg
mini-wagon than a sedan.
highway wh•n equipped wlth the
All Metros have a roundish standard five-speed manual. The
profile with sloping hoods and LSi model returns 50 clty-46 mpg
large windshields, a design eer- highway.
Ily similar to the widely proWith the optional threE'-speed
claimed benchmark of subcom- automatic transaxiP, mileage is
pact cars, the Honda Civic. Four still a respectable 38 clty-40 mpg
exterior colors are offered ' . highway. This gives all )'detros a
white, blue red and gray, with the cruising range of at least 400
Interior offered In gray only.
miles between fill -ups Of .their
" "
The Metro competes with mod· 10.6-gallon fuel tanks.
eis like the Civic, Ford Festiva,
Evaluated ·for this review was
Dodge and Plymouth Colt, Mltsu- a Metro LSi coupe with a
blshi Precis and Subaru Justy. It
live-speed manual, priced at
is also sold under the Swift $8,473, counting a $255 destinanameplate by Suzuki dealers. ' lion charge. Major options InThe Metro and the Swift are cluded air conditioning ($655)
virtually Identical, so this review· and a "prefer~d equipment"
applies to both.
package, which added AM·FM
stereo, rear wiper-washer and
The base Metro is powered by a
front .wipers with a delay feature
3-cylinder, 1.0 liter aluminum
engine, which musters 49 horsep-' ($476) . A stereo tape ·cassette
ower at 4,700 · rpm. Tl)e LSI
added another $122.
The MelroLSl"sseats, finished

~ew

New Agers find a home in Bible·Belt

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AGREEMENTS ESTABLISHED- Scoll Lucas, right, administrator of Veterans Memo·
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NuNIDg Home, Middleport, established service provider agreements under which the future
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