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12-The Daitv Se tlinel
Friday, feruary 26, 1988
Most of nation to get mild. weather
,.._.....[A)cal news briefs-Continued from page 1
session tor supervisors when the · board met rec.enlly. The
training session was on sol! loss calculations and crop rotations
In relation to farm planning.
.
Lease agreements for the Allis Chalmers no-till com planter,
Moo~ unl-drlll !!0·1111 seeder and Brillion seeder were
reviewed. A decision was made not to change the agreements
but to leave them as they were.last year.
The office secretary title tor Opal Oyer was changed to
district program administrator to more clearly cover her .duties
with the organization.
Multiflora rose applications were approved for those meeting
qualifications. Applicants approved will be notified In the near
· future.
The essay contest sponsored by the Ohio Federation of Soli
and Water Conservation Districts for grades 9-12 were judged
by the ladles auxiliary. Winners will be notified and prizes will
be presented In the near future. The f.l rst place county winner
will be sent on to the area level for judging.
Those attending the meeting were Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Chevalier, Alan Holter, Thomas Theiss, Mr. and Mrs. David
Gloeckner, Michael Duhl; Mr. and MRs. Gordon Gilmore, Blair
Windon, Robert First, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shenefield and Opal
Dyer.
·REV. AL SWAIN
REV. AND Mra. AI Swala
have beell mlulonaaiea for lbe
Cbarcll of llle Naureae slncle
1186. · Currently aaslpled lo
BoUvla, llle .Swains are aow
lurloulhln& and will be apeak·
ln1 al the Cheater Cllurcll of
the N aurene on Friday at 7
p.m. The special mlasloiaary
aervlce will le&Nre a meM&Ie
about mlasloaa today. Slides
will be shown and lland crafts
will be displayed. Everyoae
welcome.
HEAP deadline April 15
The Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency can provide
help for those experiencing a home heating-related emergency.
The Emergency HEAP . (Home Emergency Assistance
Program) was created to provide assistance to households that
have bad utilities dlsconected, face the threat of disconnection
or have a 10-day or less supply of bulk fuel. The program allows
a one-time paymenmt of up to $200 per heating season to restore
or retain home heating service.
Households applying for Emergency HEAP must report total
household Income for the past three months or the past year of
all persons 18 years old and older. Households whos gross
Income Is at or below 150 percent of the federal poverty
guidelines are eligible for the program.
Those households serviced by a PUCO-regulated utility
company must sign .up for the Percentage of Income Plan In
order to receive emergency bene!lts.
Applications are being taken at the Gallla-Melgs CAA
Outreach office at the cental of!lce In Cheshire; at 220 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis; and at 39350UnlonAve., Pomeroy.
For more lntormation, call 446-0611 or 367-7341 In Gallla
County, and 992-5605 or 992-6629!n.Melgs County.
jhe deadline for applying Is AprJ115.
Plan banquet
RACINE - The Southern High
School Athletic Department will
be sponsoring two alumni basketball games this coming Tuesday,
March 1 at Southern High School
beginning at 6:30p.m.
The first contest will be for
older alumni graduating from
1975 on back with a format of odd
years versus even years. This
format was chosen to give some
of Southern's veteran stars a
·g reater opportunity to get In
some competition.
Following that contest, Alumni
from 1976 on up will compete
against one another says athletic
director Howle Caldwell.
The same format of Odd years
vs. Even years will be In effect.
This wiJI ·be the second annual
Alumni event as last year the
team's of the seventies defeated
the younger eighties squad by 12
poln(s. Several graduates are out
for revenge against their elders,however, this year some may
end up being teammates.
A meeting for all Interested
Alum.nl who would like to participate will be hed Sunday evening
at 6 p.m. at the hjgh school. All
players should that db plan to
play should attend so · rosters
may be prepared and to give an
Indication as to bow many
· players will be Involved.
Concessions will be sold by the
Southern Athletic Boosters.
Admission will be $1.50 for
Adults and 75 cents for students.
EMS has eight calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Thursday; Middleport at 1:01 a .m. to Race St. for Hallie
Zirkle to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 3:59a.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Johnnie Nash to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 4:51 a.m. to POwell St. for Dano
Longstreth to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:07
a.m. to Horner Hill for Craig Howard to Holzer Medical Cenier;
Tuppers Plains at 6:21p.m. to Reedsville for Curtis·Hawthorne ·
who was treated but not transported; Middleport at 7:08p.m. to
Stonewood Apts. for Bessie Turley to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 9:50 p.in. to Route 7 for Bertha Griffin
who was treated but not transported.
·
Area
death$
Hazel Weslen
Hazel Crow Westen, 78, 43261
S. T. 124, Racine, died Thursday
at her residence .following an
extended Illness.
A homemaker, Mrs. Westen
was born April 13, 1909 at Navo
Ridge, W. Va., a daughter of the
late Melvin Clyde and Ella Dobbs
Crow. She was a member of the
. Daughters of America, the Pythlan Sisters and the Pomeroy
First
Baptist Church. She was
TRICKY DICKEY
reared In the Moimdsvllle, W. Va.
area.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs·
. Harry R. (Delilah) Wright,
EAST MEIGS - The Harlem personalities.
Sr.,
August!\, Ga.; Mrs. Ray:
The game was earlier postAll-Stars. world-reknown funmond L. (Augustai Welch, Marmakers of basketball. ·wm play poned do to Inclement weather.
lon; Mrs. James (Charlotte)
Tickets are available at a
the EHS faculty this coming
Marriner of Mercerville, and
Tuesday, March 1 beginning at 8 discount for all pre.sales at the
Mrs.
Robert (Sarah) Roush,
p.m . with a preliminary elemen- high school at prlces . of $2 for
Alexander.
Va.; a son, William
tary contest preceding at 6 p.m . students K-6,$2.50 for students
A.
Westen,
Woodbridge,
Va.; five
Led by veteran "Tricky 7-12, and $3 for adults.Ticket
sisters,
Opal
make,
Elizabeth
. Dickey", the touring basketball prices will be 50 cents moreflt the
. Crow, both of Moundsville, W.
stars feature a lot of action gate.
Involving good quality basketFor further Information please Va.; Alma Goldburg, Charlesball, combined with pracltcal contact Dennis Eichinger at ton. W. Va.; Daisy Canter,
Colorado Springs, Colo.; Mabel
jokes and skits that provide Eastern High School.
entertainment for ali ages .
The eveQ.t Is sponsored by the Doclns, Pensacola, Fla.; a niece,
Specializing In basketball Eastern High Athletlc Boosters. · Laura Blake, Moundsville, who
was reared In the Westen home,
comedy, this touring group has a
and several other nieces and
little something for all
nephews. Also surviving are 14
grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
Meetl.n r changed
preceded 'tn death by · her husDally stock prices
The meeting of the Rutland band, Thomas H. Westen In 1984,
(As ol'lO: 30 a.m.)
Township
Trustees has been · .a sister, Wilma Stout, and two
Bryce and Mark Smith
changed
to
Friday,
March4,6:30 brothers, Lawrence and Carl
ol Blunt Ellis ol Loewl
p.m., at the Ruiland Fire Station. Crow.
All meetings are open to the
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Am Electric Power .. .... .. .. .. .28'4
public.
AT&T ... .... .. ..... .. ............... .. . 29
Saturday at the Pomeroy First
Teen dance Saturday
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Ashland 011 .. .............. ........ 59'4
A teen dance will be·held at the Lyston Halley offlclat111g . .
Bob Evans .... ...... ...... ...... .... 15'4
Pomeroy Municipal Building this Friends may call at the Ewing
'Charming Shoppes .. ..... .. .... .14')8
Saturday
from 8 to 11 p.m.
Funeral Home from 6 to 9 p.m.
City Holding Co .. ..... .... ..... .. . 34
Friday and from 9: 30 to 11: 30
Federal Mogui.. .. ....... .. ....... 37V.
WIC pickup
a.m. Saturday. Following aervJ.
Goodyear T&R ..... .............. 57%
The
Meigs
County
De~rtment
ces here, the body will be taken to
• Heck's Inc.. ,....... .... .. ............ .2
of Health has announced the Grlsell's Funeral Service, Inc.,
Key Centurion ............ ....... .40\2
March schedule for the pickup Qf 400 Jefferson St., Moundsville,
Lands' End ............. ............ l9%
WIC program coupons. They are W. Va. where services will be
Limited Inc . .... ... .:...... ........ 20%
Feb.
29, March 1 and March 3. held at 1: 30p.in. Monday with the
Multimedia Inc... ........ ........ 58\2
Make
up date~ are March 7, 14, ·Rev. Frank Crow o111clatlna.·
Rax Restaurants ......... .. ... .... 3~
and 21. Hours are 9 to 11 a.m. and Grandclllldren will serve as
Robbins & Myers ..... .. ..... ..... 8'!4
1
to 3 p.m. Dates for March pallbearers. Burial will be at
Sboney's Inc. .......... .. .. ...... .. 22%
are March 8 and HalcyOJ! Hills Memorial Park In
Immunizations
Wendy's Inti ............. ........... 6%
22,
9
to
11
a.m.
a~
. l to 3 p.m . - Wheeling, ·w. Va.
Worthington lnd. ;-;.... .. ..... ;: ..19%
Harlen All-Stars play Tuesday
Announcements
Stocks
'
Micld1port, Ohio
'
By Untied Preu lnterilalloaal
Scattered snowshowers lin·
gered In the Northeast and light
rain fell over northern CalHornla. but mUd·weather once again
dominated much 01 the nation
today with mostly sunny or
partly clolldY skies.
·
• High temperatures will be In
the 50s or 60s across much of the
country today, the National
Weather Service said. Hlgbs will
reach to around 80 degrees
across the desert Southwest.
· Snowshowers wltl be scattered
across eastern upper Michigan
as well as the eastern Great
Lakes and upper Ohio Valley,
weather service .forecaster Hugh
Crowther said. Ralnshowers
were expected In the southern
Pacific Coast region during the
afternoon. Otherwise, . fair
weather prevailed across the
nation.
A snow squall warning re·
malned In effect today tor
counties east of Lake Ontario In
New York. A weak weather
Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admissions- Larry
Sigler, Rutland; Janet Jenkins,
Middleport; Heniy Beaver, Long
Bottom; Edson Roush, ~aclne;
Helen Rockey, Langsville;
Grace Gardner, Rutland; Dano
Longstreth, Middleport.
Thursday Discharges - Inez
Snyder, Charles Chaffee, Mary
Derenberger, Karen Hood, Lawton Templeton, Edna Lee.
·
Divorce granted
A divorce has been granted to
the defendant. In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
case of Esther Ward against
James T. Ward. The court
restored Ester Ward to her ,
former name Frecker.
Brenda Cloud has been granted
a divorce from Benny Ray Cloud
and restored to her former name
Fry.
dlsturbanl!e moving overnlthl
across Lake Ontario was ex· ,
peeled.to produce ~ to 6 Inches of
snow.
Clouds primarily . extended
from Texas to California, and
over Washington and Oregon.
Partly cloudy skies prevailed
from the Great Lakes region to
the rrtlddle and north~rn Atlantic
Coast.
Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 4·
degrees In Montpelier, Vt., to 68
degrees In Phoenix. The high for
the nation T!lursday was 88
degrees at Palm Springs, Calif.
Temperatures were below •
.freezing early today from the
middle · and upper Mls~lsslppl
Valley to the inlddle and upper
Atlantic Coast, with teens over
much of the area from Wisconsin .
through Michigan and Ohio to
northern New England.
Temperatures early today
were still In the 50s across
southern F1orlda, and over. much
of Texas and New Mexico.
Temperatures were still In the
50s and·60s In Southern California
and ,outhern Arizona.
While mostly sunny skies and,
dry conditions prevailed· over
much of the nation Thursday, up
to 2 feet of snow plied up around
the eastern Great Lakes.
During the early afternoon,
snowshowers lingered over
snowbelt areas of Oblb, Pennsylvania and New York nejlr the
.
.
Great Lakes.
· As much as 2 reet of new snow
was on the ground In Oswego :·
County east o1 Lake Ontario am! •:
north of Syracuse. · Sheriff's po- •
lice reported hard-packed snow :
and Ice on roads but no major ·
problems.
sOuth Central Ohio
Increasing cloudiness this af· •
ternoon, with highs In the mid ;
40s. Considerable cloudiness to- ,
. night, with a chance of' snow ;
flurries and a low between 25 and
30. . Variable cloudiness Satur' •
day, with highs between 35 and
40.
.
I
The probability of preclplta- t
tion Is near zero today,JQpercent .
tonight and 20 percent Saturday.
WindS will be from the southwest at 15 to 25 mph today, ;
becoming northwesterly at 10 tO •
20 mph tonight.
.
I
Extended Forecast
Sunday tbrourh Tue8day
·:
A chance of snow flurries In the ,
northeastern part of the state ~
Sunday, with fair weather else- ;
where through the period. Hlgl)s ,
will range from 30 to 40 Sunday, ;
40 to 50 Monday, and 45 to 55 :
Tuesday. Overnight lows will •.
range from 15 to 25 early Sunday, :
!rom 25 to 35 Sunday morning tmd :
from 30 to 40 early Tuesday.
F.AY,·FE.UAIY 26TH
TUNA AND IIOODUS DINIIEI ....................... *3.99
Our Dalld1vs r- _.lch Ea1Na1' In• Sanry Sauce SorvH with Hot
Golden 11H1 lrewo Pattie llllilllet lutt1nd P101 ¥" ,_ Choice of a Hot
Ill II
NOODUS & CIICIEN ALOJIE, lllltlll bowl "'"·····-····· s1.99
· Occasion
HI·3SS3
PERSONAL DISIGIIS 1Y OWIID,
DONNA AINOI.I, MAll\ .IAIIISON,
CAIOI. I'IOfJR.
EYDY SUteAY: lllioY Our Waltw, Waltnu T.... Service with Your
..... S..vlll on Cfalaia Plateo, aM Drl.. Y...- CoffM or Toa frem
China c...t
· HOURS:i 10:00 A.M.·6:30 P.M.-7 DAYS· A .WEEK
z .·i!\r~bnuf\~:au:!N~4ratrr -•om 7
WE GIVE
915·1132
CHIS111
10% DISCOUNT
.
Page B-1
Backstairs at the White House
A-2
VoL 23 No.3
CDIIf&lel*d '1188
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mt
tmts
•
mghs between 45 and
Chance of rain near zero.
•
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12 Stctiona. 72 P1ge1 ·
A Muttlmeclil Inc. tiiWIIPiper
Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point
Pleeeant, February
28,1988
.
.
OhiO HOUse ready to vote on solid waste bill ·
Secrest, O.Senecavlile, who' as chairman of the
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUP!) -A maier revision In
House Energy and Environment Committee
Ohio's solid was til disposal law Is expected to
presided over a lengthy series of hearings.
come~ to the floor of the state House of
' Representatives this week.
Rep. Joseph Haines, R-Xenla, said be voted
against the blllln committee l)ecause "It doesn't
HoUlle Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New
solve the problem."
J3oston, said he hopes to have the solid waste blll
Haines complained.that the blll merely calls for
ready for a vote Wedllesday. Backed by the
planning of future landfills and Incinerators for ·
administration of Gov. Richard Celeste, It
trash:' 'We've got to get rid of It Instead of burning
received 9-2 committee approval last week.
It," he said.
..
.
The Senate ~ec0 nvenes at 1:·30 p.m. Tuesday,
. The Senate Is to vote Tuesday on House-passed
but the House does not meet until '1\'edri~day .
leg_lslatlon providing for courts to make the
The .solid waste bill, . sponso~ ·, by ' Rep. .
Fre(ler)ck Deering, D-Monroevllle, Is a1rrted· at'
"Interlock" Ignition ·system a condition for
providing 'long-range p)aimlng tor garbage
proballqn for motorists conviCted of drl~lng while
Intoxicated.
disposal, and encouraging alternate forms of
waste disposal to alleviate Ohio's landfills which
With the Interlock system, a motorist must
·are rapidly reaching full capacity.
con.flf'1h his or her sobriety by blowing Into a
bloOd-alcohol measuring device In order to start
The measure also provides a way to discourage
the car .
.
,
receipt of out-of-state garbage by charglllg a
Rep. Ronald Mottl, D-Parma, said the·system
h"ber "tipping" fee at the waste disposal site.
"This Is a well-balanced bill," said Rep. Joseph
.
H~
will help ·keep drunken drivers off the road while
permitting them to drive under close s upervlslon
after conviction.
·
Hearings will continue Tuesday afternoon In the
House Economic and Small Business Committee · ·
on a bill authorizing casino gambling on an
experimental basis lit Lorain.
And a House Highways and Public Safety
subcommittee will hold Its first meeting Thursday
morning on legislation repealing Ohio's mandatory auto seat hell law.
Rep. ,Robert E . Hagan. D-Madlson, . the
cbalrman,has promised to return the bill to the
full committee for a vote and not kill it, despite Jhe
fact he favors mandatory seatbelts.
The Senate Finance Committee will meet
Tuesday morning to iry to Iron out the snarls In a
blll, sponsored by Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
establishing a trust fund to guarantee future
college tuition for newborns.
Pfeifer bad the bill on the floor two weeks ago,
.
but .was unable to satisfy fellow senators that a
specific amount of money Invested today would
guarantee the cost of a college education In 18
years.
.
Another bill sen.l back to committee - banning
corporal punl.s hment In schools - wlll,recelve a
hearing Tuesday evening In the Senate Education
Committee.
That bill, sponsored by Sen. Richard Schafrath,
R-Loudonvllle, allows school districts to reimpose
corporal punishment by vote In September 1989 If
they wish. Otherwise, It Is banned.
Senators were uncertain as to whether
Schafrath' s bill applies to private as well as public
schools.
A Senate subcommittee will continue to wotk
Tuesday afternoon on a formula for distributing
the proceeds of a $1 .2 billion, 10-year bond sale for
local government road and bridge repair and
replacement.
.
stays·in race; his chances 'remote' ·
hometown In southern Illinois Is
showing was 5 percent of the votf)
"closer to the south than It Is to
In South Dakota.
·
Chicago."
.
During his news conference,
And Massachusetts Gov. MIHart admitted that "the chances
of me becoming the party nomi- chael Dukakls, trying to downnee are remote, to say the least.·· . play his New England backHart. who nearly captured the ground, said, "North and South,
Democratic nomination In 1984 East and West, we all share the
by caltlng lor "new Ideas," said same hopes and aspirations for
he would present his Ideas m1 key ourselves and our children,"
With only 11 days to go before
Issues by appearing at the majo~
20
states hold primaries or
candidate debates and In a series
of !lve speeches In Richmond, cauc],!ses on "Super Tuesday"
Va., Raleigh, · N.C., Chicago, March 8, the 1988 presidential
Nashville, Tenn.. and Orlando, candidates were spread out
Fla.
.,
"
arDund. tlj.~.SOuth where most of
be-lie1d; · - ,
Several thousand people at- tM~iecH~s
On the Republican side, Dole,
tended the Jefferson-Jackson
Day dinner, where each of the who was endorsed ,by South
Democratic candidates, with the Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond
exception of Hart and civil rights
leader Jesse Jackson who arrived late, spoke for about 15
minutes.
They s,ll pushed lor support
from the powerful Southern
Democrats and blasted the Reagan administration.
.
"It's time to put the White
House. back on the side of
~orklng men anfl women for a
COLUMBUS '(UPI) - The
change," said Tennessee Sen.
Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation
Albert Gore, who also presented
the Ohio Farmer's
has
joined
himself asthe Southerner's best
Union
In
urging
the Departchoice.
ment
of
Transportation
not to
Sen. Paul Simon said his
change the classification of
anhydrous ammonia !rom a
non-flammable gas to a polson
gas .
"Anhydrous ammonia
John Donahue, assistant professhnply doesn't meet the definisor at Harvard's John F.
tion of a polson gas," said C.
Kennedy School of Government.
William Swank, the federaHe Is co·author, with Robert
tion's executive vice president.
Reich, of "New Deals: The
"Arbitrarily changing the
Chrysler Revival and the Americlassification would Impact not
can System" and Is working on a
only the cost of distribution, but
book.on privatization from which
International trade and liabilthe Institute's study was taken.
Ity Insurance costs, or availability as wen, " he said.
The study was published just In
Swank said the apparent
advance of the expected release
basis for the department to
next week of the report of
consider such a change was
President Reagan's Commission · because a number of European
on Privatization which, If It
nations generally classify anhfollows the J)anel's preliminary
ydrous ammonia · as a polson
recommendation, will call for the
gas .
.use of private contractors to run
''Europe doesn't utilize anhyfederal , state and local prisons
drous ammonia to the degree
and jails.
American farmers do," said
By United Press International
One-time Democrailc frontrunner Gary Hart acknowledged tC~~ay his chances o!
winning the presidential nomina·
· tion are "remote to say the least"
but he pledged to stay In the race
as a voice for change In public
policy .
At a news conference In
Atlanta, a fe)V hours before a
debate by tbe Democratic contenders, Hart announced he ·
would stay In the running. The.
. li:~~~:~ColdJ'IIdo senator was the
i.
for tWe-nomtn.Uon.untll
repcirts last May •uteesied a lie
scandal. He withdrew from the
l'll,fe but re-enter,'1d .• last fall
p~glng · "to let the people
decide."
On Friday, Sen.' Robert Dole
picked up another endorsement
and Maine Republicans ganged .
up on Pat Robertson in caucuses
Friday.
Ha·rt stayed away from the
. packed Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner In Atlanta on Friday
night, which helped spark speculation be again might leave the
race. Hart has fared dismally In
the four states - Iowa, New
ON
TRAIL - Republlcaa pretldenllal tudldate Robert
Dole told a rail)' at St. Loula Friday, the Panama Canal should be
Hampshire, Minnesota and
protected wllll mWtary foree If necessary In lhe lace !)f politic&!
South Dakota - ihat have held
unre~~IID the Cealral Amerltlan natloa. ( UPI)
primaries and caucuses . His best
.
..vn•
:Report ·critical·of .privately run prisons
'
WASHINGTON (liP!)- Turn. lng prisons 0\'er to private
management Is·generally a poor
Idea that will not likely save
. taxpayers' money and "will fully
· protect neither the Interests of
the pllbllc nor the 'prison Inmates," a liberal think-tank
reported Saturday·.
· "The evidence on potential
cost savings Is too weak and too
questionable to warrant so radl-
cal and risky an experiment,"
the Economic Polley Institute
said In a 32-page report.
The lni!tltute also warned:
···The cost of labor, moreover,
whl~h comprises about ' threefifths cif total prison budgets,
probably cannot be· reduced
much without lowering the qualIty o1 the workforce."
The repori cautioned prison
prlvatlntlon takes direct control
earlier In the week, scored again
when former Treasury Secretary
and Texas Gov . John Connally
announced his support Friday,
Bush and New York Rep. Jack
Kemp concentrated their campaigns on South Carolina , where
Republicans . hold a primary
March . 5, while Robertson and
Dole stumped In Texas.
A strange alliance began form ·
lng among Maine Republicans
who support Dole or Bush In an
effort to exclude Robertson as
towns and cities held caucuses
· thro~ghQ.l~t tht: wee~end to select .
representatives to the state convention which will pick
delegates.
Ohio· Farm Bureau
stand$ against change
of anhydrous ammonia
out of government's hands but
would not exempt the .government from " large and expensive
liabilities" .for lawsuits relating
to contractor-caused abuses.
"There Is a substantial likelihood that government contracts
wl th prison corpora !Ions will
fully protect neither the Interests
of the public nor the prison
Inmates," the report. said.
The study was conducted · by
Swank. "Their farms are
smaller and their crops generally are less nitrogen lnten'slve
than ours. These and other
factors have discouraged Europeans from using anhydrous
ammonia ·a s a fertilizer.
'
"Changing the classification
would cause higher transportation costs, Increase Insurance
costs or make Insurance unavailable, and cost the agricultural Industry at least $1
million per year. It Is questionable whether a polson gas can be
delivered to farms by truck and
delivering It by rail or by
pipeline would be Impossible,"
he said.
'
"The polson gas classification would also create labeling
problems between the li.S. and
Canada, our number-one anhydrous ammonia trading
partner,".. Swank said. "The<
Farm Bureau recommends:
that anhydrous ammonia b(.
classified as a corrosive gas:·
just as It Is In C<!napa. "
Meigs Seni~r Citizens Center
expansion, renovation to begin
.
.
.
POMERO);' - Contracts totalIng $200,000 for the expansion and
renovation of the Senior Citizens
Multipurpose Center have been
awarded and the work Is expected to begin next week.
Jilml!ll Diehl, president of the
Meta& County Council on A&lng, .
and Eleanor Thomas executive
director, announced that the
aeneral construction contact
went to KI:J Ccinakucton, Pomeroy, with CI:C of Athens being
awarded the plumbing and heatIna «::ntraet; Great Bend EleetrJe ot Racine, the electrical
~ contract, And Robart
.._. ilf Parlllrlbui'J, !he con-
c
.,
Along lhe River . .. .. ... B-1-8
Buainess .. ....... ......... .... E~l
Ccimlcs-TV ..............Insert
Claslllleds ................ D-!-7
DeatluJ ...................:: •.•• A-4
Editorial .... .. .......... .. ... A-2
B-8 .
SUNDAY~ FEBRUARY 28TH
HOMUUIE IIOODUS & CHICKEN DINIIIEI ••• S3.89
f11hlring a fanrltt, Our 'lllick .................. Si-H In a Gl'lvy
·. with Gooier- Port!- of ~ SorYH with" hd Pat.-. ..d Graq,
llom!<oollld o.- ._with .... ...,.. Gllll , _ Choicl oto·Hot loll or
llolnlmada lilcult, ...... llautll CofMt or Sanka Dtcaffeinatad, loth ·
,,...., ..... lA Snlil Saft ~ .. Net ... May .. !Wditutldl.
.
Inside :
Beat of the Bend, By Bob Hoeflich
IIKuit.
UIGI BOWL ALONE ·--.. ~•••••••••............................... 12.19
MIDDLEPORT
FLOWER SHOP
Flowers For Any
area
.
C-1
Cagers· capture titles
Coal mining:
Its importance
to Meigs
Weather
Thlt Week'• Speelelt
St-r W er H•1 I
50 cents
Sunday
treat tor IQIIOIIa equipment.
.
.....,.
aomplet10114ate ..
for a Gl8 lltory
........ of .. atH1511Y.~feet
at the rear of the building which will be Installed and another
has been occupied by a patio commercial refrigerator, a stea- ·
area. The exterior will be brick mer, convection oven, commellke the rest of the building, rial mixer and slicer wlll be
according to Mrs . Thomas. In added' to the current equlpr:nent.
that section will be a large
It Is anticipated that the
meeting room, one office, and kitchen will be closed for two
some storage area.
.
weeks during the renovation.
Both' the dining area and the Mrs. Thomas reports that the
kitchen will be enlarged by Center bas made arrang~ments
knocklllll: out a wall and Including wlth Veterans Memorial Hospla former hall Into that space. tal to serve the meals at the
Storaae and laundry area will be Center during that lime and also
en18rged, the woodworklnl room to t.andle the · home detlvered
size decreased, and ·a craft meals.
display area Included at the rea~
There should be no lnterrupor the acUvtty room.,
!ion In the dally activities at the
U money Is avallable, a couple center during the renovation
of the current 1arpr oftl~ will time, aceordlng to Mn. Thomas.
be divided Into emaller olfleet. · Some apeelal activitlee Javolvlna
A total or abOut .,.,1100 wt11 be Jarae numben or JIIOII)e will be
"""' on new kltc:Ma equlpmellt. curtailed, however, she 11111..
A eollllll&l'Clal type dllltwalber
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February 28,1988
Commentary and perspective
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Page-A·2
Police cite two in accidents
Febru&ry 28.1988
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GALLIPOLIS - The- Gallipolis cited two a
Gallipolis man In connection with an accident
Friday, at 7: 42p.m., at the Intersection of Third
.
Avenue and Pine Street.
John E . Elliot!, 30, of 701 Fourth Ave., was cited
. for running a red light after his 1977 Oldsmobile
Cutlass was hit In !he side by a 1979 Pontiac Grand
Prix driven by Deanna V. Parsons, 42, oi 86State
St.
Parsons was driving west on Pine Street when -·
, Elliott, who ,was driving south on Third Avenue,
went through the ·r ed light at the Intersection and .
was hit by Parsons' car. Elliott's car came to a
rest sideways In the , street, while Parsons' car
ended its travels on the lot of Hemsworth's Gulf
station:
A Gallipolis woman was cited in an accident
Friday, at 5:24p.m., at 20 Evans Heights.
Ruth A. Parsons, 24, of 20 Evans Heights, was
cited for Improper backing after her 1987
Chevrolet Cav~lier hlt a 1982 Chevrolet Caprice
. driven by Klm Y. Canaday, 34, o! 1802 Bell Ave.
Canaday was driving ·south on Evans Heights
when Parsons backed out of her driveway and Into
Canaday's car.
In other pollee news, Lloyd P. Hayden Jr., 53., of
Kerr , was arrested Saturday morning. He was .
charged with DWI and resisting arrest and cited
for driving a weaving course on the street.
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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 111 ('ourt St .. Pomeroy. Ohio
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(614) H&-2342
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(6H) 992·2156
ROB~RT
L. WINGETT
Puhli•h.r
•
HOBART. WILSON .JR.
Ex••••utivl' Editor
•
•
•
••
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant
Puhllsh~r-Controller
~ A MEMBER or The United Press International. Inland Dally Press Auocla·
tlOD an~ hie Aml!l'tcan Newspaper Publishers Assoclatl'?n.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than D) words
lona;. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wtth name, address and
telephone number. No unalgned letters wdl be published. Letters should be In
10_00 taate, _addressln_g Issues, not per~ooalltieS.
"
·
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catchall spending bill a para· It will Improve efficiency and
graph that could end whatever 'save money, but ·B evill's spokes·
Independence the Office oflnves· woman was hard put to say hQW
tlgatlon hal) been granted \ly the much It will save. Most NRC
NRC commissioners. Bevill watchers are scratching their
chairs the Energy and Water heads over Bevill's move.
Appropriations Subcommittee.
We asked Bevlll If It had
His provision has put the Office anything to do with his daughter.
of Investigation beneath the
Susan Bevill Is an Alabama .
office of the executive director of . attorney Involved in an Inquiry
the NRC. which directs the bulk begun by. the Ot!ice of Investlga·
of Inspection and llcenslng actlvl· lion In 1986 at the Farley nuclear
ties. That means the lnvestlga· .power plant near Dothan, Ala,
tors are now under the thumb of She Is not the' target of the probe,
the very officials that Congress but works !or the firm that
has criticized for hampering represents the plant owner, the
investigations .
Alabama Power Co.· In that
position, she has sat In ori several
The leglslative·language says
• heated meetings with NRC
WASHINGTON -An Alabama posed to. regulate.
Some lawmakers have been
·congressman, Rep. Tom Bevill,
has quietly spiked the efforts of trying to put more teeth Into the
hls colleagues to grant greater NRC by pushing legislation that
autonomy to Nuclear Regulatory would give the agency's Office of
Investigation complete inde·
Commission htvestlgators.
For some time, horror stories pendence. That office Is charged
have been turning up about how with examining wrongdoing at
the NRC thwarts Its own lnvestl' nuclear power plants. In the past,
gat<irs from probing wrongdoing · It has Investigated everything
from lying by utility companies
at power plants.
Three committees on ·capitol to drug abuse by power plant
Hill have examine!) this frighten- workers. The htvestlgators have
Ing problem at the agency that Is been reporting directly to the five
supposed to be the watchdog over NRC commis;loners, Instead of
the nuclear power lndusty - an the NRC staff.
. Just before Christmas·, Rep.
agency that has been accused of
boosting the industry it Is sup- Bevill, D·Ala.. tacked on!o a
""
Investigators~
:~ Backstairs
•
at
~ the White House
•
By HELEN THOMAS
•
, UPI Wblle Hou!lj! Reporter
• WASHINGTON ((.;PI - Former Defense Secretary Caspar
. ; . W~lnberger Is finding you can make more money on the·outside than
• • the Inside of government.
; .; Weinberger quit when the Reagan· administration had only one
• year to go. But he was not forgotten.
:•: The Queen of England bestowed a knighthood on him and President
; : Jteagan named him to two prestigious advisory groups, one on the
•: economy and the other appointment was to 't he Foreign Intelllgence
: Advisory Committee where he can review top secret cables.
•• But Weinberger also is hit.ting the lecture circuit, which is proving
• : lucrative, particularly since his audiences are In the money, such as
: banking and business groups.
: : With Harry Walker in New Y.ork as his booking agent, Weinberger
• Is getting$25,000 to $35,000 a clip to make speeches he used togivefree
; . when he ran the Pentagon.
.
~ · That's In about the same honorarium class as former Secretary of
-: state Henry Kissinger, former While House chief of staff Donald
; • Regan. for-mer Speaker Thomas O'Nelll and former U.N.
. : A:mbassador Jeane Kirkpatrick.
.
"...
• Nancy Reagan Is skipping the president's quick business trip to
Brussels, Belgium, to meet with NATO heads of state. And she passed
: up the four-liour trip to Matzatlan, Mexico, with her husband
: recently .
But walt until Moscow comes along. The first lady is defll!itely
· ; accompanying her husband to the fourth summit meeting with Soviet
: leader Mlkhall Gorbachev In late May .
• If protocol is strict , then it means that the Reagans will have only
• three days in the Soviet Union to match Gorbachev's vlslt to
• Washington.
• ·, .Nevertheless, Mrs. Reagan is hoping to see the Hermitage, which
was the czar 's winter palace in Leningrad. Now a m,11seum, the
Hermitage boasts some of the most beautiful and worltl renowned
• paintings.
• This time, Raisa Gorbachev will play hostess a nd Mrs. Reagan :will
be her guest. The two women apparently do not see.eye to eye on a lot
• of
things, but cultural differences may accou~t for their lack of
- rapport.
Jlm Hooley. head the White House advance office, is keeping his
fingers crossed In hopes that the s ummit meeting will indeed be in
May and not in early. June.
Hooley is getting marriep on June 4 and Is on tenterhooks that the
summit meeting date could spill over into June.
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·• The president is staying neutral in the presidential primary
• contests and watching the passing scene with amusement.
At a White House dinner In honor of the nation's governors recently.
Reagan saluted New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu and told the
audience: "He's feeling lonely right now . His state lost half Its
popula lion."
• • Reagan ·was . referring to the invasion of Republican and
Democratic cand idates. their staffs and the hordes of media
representatives who converged on New Hampshire before the
primaries.
Reagan Is not a hands on president . In fact, he rarely reaches out to
anyone to press the flesh in encounters, leaving the handshakes to
formal ·OCcasions.
But reporters noted and remembered that he put hls arm around
Attorney General Edwin Meese in the White House press center after
announcing the appointment of Judge· Anthony Kennedy to the
Supreme Court.
•
'l;he untypical gesture by the president as he left the room with hls
arm around Meese was a clear message to reporters that he intends to
stand by his old friend who made the long march with him from
· California, come what may .
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Our associate, Stewart Harris,
asked the congressman I! hls
daughter discussed the Invest!·
galion wl\11 · hlm. Bevill re·
sponded th~ugh his spokeswoman, who said the congressman
talks with all three ofhls children
about their jobs, "but they do not
lobby him on legislation ."
Bevill's spokeswoman said th.e
congressman does not · re·
member talking with Susan
Bevill about the Office oflnvestlgatlon and. Its activities at the
Farley plant. Susan Bevlll could
not lHi reached for comment.
The Office of Investigation was
folded Into the rest of the NRC on
Feb. 1: Congressional sources
privately worry that the NRC
wants to give the O!flce of
Investigation as much Integrity
as Mexican Federales. They say
that the NRC, which began as the
old Atomic Energy Commission,
charged With developing nuclear
p6wer, Is riddled with people who
never abandoned that' mission
eyen though their new job Is to
protect the .public health and
safety.
•
Gore: ·Dull, divisive, doomed ___ch_uc_k_st_on_e
The winnowing Is on a roll.
After "Super Tuesday,': (the
Southern-fried version of Iowa
and New Hampshire), the blpar·
tisan surviving "seven .dwarfs"
will · be; Democrats Michael
Dukakls, Richard Gephardt, Al·
bert Gore and Rev. Jesse Jack·
son, and Republicans . George
Bush, Robert Dole and Rev. Pat
Robertson,
Thin-skinned Rev. Pat doesn't
like having hls clerical title
mentioned, but he can't pretend
hls theological career never
e~isted. Nor can America pre·
tend that It Is not burdened with·
the most anesthetic group of
candidates ever assembled for so
rousing a challenge. Were It not
for the controversial twosome of
charismatic Jackson and
miracle·worker Robertson, vo·
ters could use the daily exercise
in telegenic tedium as a substl·
tute for sleeping pills.
Of all the candidates, however,
Sen. Albert Gore Jr. Is lackluster
suigenerls. He's dull, the ratio·
nate for hls can,dldacy is div·
fs ived, and his prospects for
nomination are doomed. My one
encounter with" the Gore cam·
paign recalls a ditty we sang with
sqeaky innocence in Sunday
school :.
·
"Jesus loves me, this I know,
"For the Bible tells me so."
In presidential . year 1988, a
reprise on my prepubescent faith
contends:
"Al Gore loves me, this !know,
"On black issues, I'm his pro."
The rtrst and only time I ever
heard from the Gore for President headquarters was a press
release last year In a handwritten envelope ( tnat got my allen·
tlon) announcing the appoint·
ment of Thurgood Marshall Jr.
as "deputy campaign manager
for issues." That was tokenism at
Its best. srnce then; I have
received no press releases about
hls positions on an~ Issue.
Gore has yet to issue any
tatements on civil rights or take
any positions that would offend
the conservative South. That's
understandable, since regional
roots are the on!~ rationale for
Gore's campaign. Gore Is run·
Southern candidate like Gore.
nlng as the Southern candidate,
He's a bright, nice and brll·
representing a region where
Uantly bland mediocrity - with
1,168 of ·the .,160 Democrat!~
all of the sincerity of a riverboat .
delegates will .be picked ori . gambler. And he's so dull that he
"Super Tuesday," March 8.
has received the least amount of
:'Iince the disillusionment o!
network , coverage ol all tile
Jimmy Carter's presidency, the
candidates, accordl!lg to · a
South has lusted for redemption .
monthly survey. Despite his
The region also has felt that the
Tennessee roots, the latest
Democratic Party was kow·
Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll
towing to "special interests" and
showed Gore running In third
ignoring the "good ol' boys."
place." (Maybe, the South will rise
Simultaneously, the Demo·
agail) after all! )
cratlc Party was witnessing a
Nobody . In his right mind
rebirth of the two,part)( system
expects Jesse Jackson to clean
In the South. Now t•:s as respecta·
up In the· SOuth and sweep ori to ·
ble. for white Southerners to vote
the presidency. His only chance
Republican as It Is to eat fried
to win the majority of Sut)er
Tuesday delegates depends on a
chicken on Sunday after church
services. ·
' · .
split In the '.'good ol' boy" vote.
During the past eight years,
But Gore epitomizes the div·
Ronald Reagan succeeded In ., lslve Southern notion that only
transforming the Republican
his region can· produce an accep·
Party into the "white party." In
table candidate. Until the South
turn, that threatened the Demo·
belleves It too can produce "the
cratlc Party as the .major na·
best and the brightest" .to run this
tiona! party and . the Southern
country as Americans, Instead of
majority party. Out of that
as Southerners, this nation will 1
concern, Super Tuesday was
be plagued by regional and racial
conceived apd tailor-made for a
divisiveness.
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Heavenly evidence _
__;.__---::;_____,;._.__B_.::..y_G_eo....:..::r8;;,_e_Plage.....:;;
':...._.:nz;__
Diane Keaton told an Inter·
was Karlls Osis, research dlrec· mony." And that was not a
viewer for Parade magazine that
tor for the American Sooleiy for . finding he was entirely prepared
she believes, "Heaven was
Psychical , Research In New for. '
.
,
created because everybody is
York.
"What the people of the East
afraid to die .. .. It's hard to say
The Latvian-born psychologist expect after death Is some forrp
goodbye to anybody. It's hard to
had studied the· evidence for
of reincarnation," said Osls.
think, 'I won ' t see my
life ·after·dea th , Including
"But this Is not something they
grandmother."'
Kubler-Ross' work. He was lm·
The president also will be packing his bags at the start of the New
look forward to. Reincarnation to
As lor hell: "lf there's a hell,
pressed by It, but not completely
them Is like hell Is to us. It Is a
Year and on Jan. 20. he will be moving out of the White House and
.then there's something desper- won over. One question kept
gloomy prospect, not a joyous
welcoming his successor.
ately wrong." She Ms hit the nail bugging him : "Is it all wish
But there are reports that Reagan is not going to reject the East
on the head there. But the Idea of fulfillment?"
Coast completely and may set up an office in Washington to keep hls
hell doesn't appeal to her, so she
Gallup polls had showed that
"revolution" going and his conservative supporters heartened .
dismisses it by saying, "I don't ·three out of !our Americans
belleve In that kind of believe ln .llfe'· after-death. was
punishment ."
the brain merely projecting
As for God ("if there Is a ·- these beliefs onto the screen of
God"): "!hope he is a nice God themlndatthemo~f!entoldeath?
!or all of us, one ·that will let us
There was one way to find out.
keep our personality."
If. the people in Eastern coun·
By United Press ln~ernatlonal
· .
·
It .would be hard to imagine · tries who have no wish for
more muddl.e d or shallow think· tminortality, who want to get of!
Today Is Sunday , Feb. 28, the 59th
of 1988 with 307 to follow.
lng than that. Presumably, Pa· "the wheel ol llfe" and whose
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
rade .magazine was interested In Idea 0 ' !IBradlse Is oblivion- not
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn .
The evening stars are Venus and· Jupiter. ·
Keaton's views oil these higher living forever - If these people
.
matters because she had dl- should turn out to hAVe the same
Those born on this day are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
French essayist Michel de Montalgne In 1533; Engllsh artist John
reeled a 1987 movie called death· bed visions as people in the
"Heaven," a collage of various West. that would tend to rule out
Tenniel, illustrator of " Allee In Wonderland," in 1820; Russian ballet
people's Ideas about heaven . (It ·the "wish fulfillment" theory
dancer Vaslav Nljinsky in 1890; American journalist and
\
screenwriter Ben Hecht In 1893; chemist and physicist Linus Paullng
was not a film that very many and add weight to the testimony
people went to see.) But the idea about' life after death.
twice winner of the Nobel Prize, In 1901 (age 87); movte dlrecto;
Osls decl<!ed to go to India to
VIncente Mlnnelli in 1910; actor·Zero Mostelln 1915; Svetlana Stalln, • of heaven creates enough prob·
!ems for really first-rate minds check out his thesis. What he
daughter of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, In 1926 (age 62); dancer
Tommy Tune In 1939 (age 49), and racecar driver Mario Andrettlln
without throwing the subject concluded after Interviewing
1940· (age 48) .
·
open to actresses.
h d eel f medl 1
1
un r a o
ca personne In
Heaven and life-after·death
~--have always been lar-Jy· mat· India concernina the experience
On this date in history:
•·
of !heir dytna patients ;wu that
ters of faith. Now, however. there there 11110 difference tn the 111ru1
In 1849, the first shipload of gold seekers arrived In San Francisco
after a five-month journey from New York City.
may be evidence to support the of deeth·bed Jmaaer)r a person
bellef in survival alter death. seea _ whether he Uvea In India
In 1942, Japanese forces landed In Java, the last Allied bastion In
the Dutch East Indies.
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, a psych!· or the United State&.
,
atrlst, &alned fame with her
"The basic death-bed expe. In 1983, the concluding episode of the long-running series
studles of. people who had been rience CIUIIICJ'OII cultural dltfei'·
·~M·A·S·H" drew what was then the large•! television audience In
cllnlcally dead, were later re· enca,"llld 0111. "It 11 tbeaame
U.S. history.
vlved, and to.Jdofhavlngvlalteda whether one Is Chrlltlan, Jew,
In 1986, Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was assassinated on a
place that w~ "beautiful beyond Moslem or Hindu."
street In Stockholm. The crime remains unsolved.
·
description.
.
He 181d the dytng, whatever
A !bought for the day: Michel de Montalgne wrote, ~'Saying Is one
Arnone those not !ully . con' L t)lelr rellg!ous orlentsUon, "tee a
thing and doing Is anolher.' ~ ..r-'
r
.,
vlnced by Kubler-Ross s findings world of great beauty and bar·
one.''
If the· last lmpresston.S of the
"dying are based on their expecta·
tlon of what awaits them at
d·eath, I( mtgh,t have been supposed that those at deeth's door
In India would see visions of
frightening proportions.
But that, said Osls, was not
, true In the majority of cases.
.
Middleport man injured
POMEROY- A Middleport man was injured in
a one-car accident Friday, at 3 a.m .. In Metgs
County's Salisbury Township on U.S. 33, accord·
ing to the Gallia·Melgs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
T!)omas R , Tobin , 29, was taken by a private
vehicle 19 Veterans 1Mrri6rlal Hospita l, where he··.
was admitted.
Tobin was driving north when he ran off the
right Side of the road, hi\ a guardrail a nd
overturned .
GALLIPOLIS- A car fire Friday, at 2:00a.m .,
at theK&K Mobile Home loton2145EasternAve.,
. · resulted in an estimated $2,000 loss ,. according to
the Gallipolis Fire Department.
The car, a 1983 Chevrolet Monte Carlo owned by
· Debra K. Wallaee of 2145Eastern Ave., sustained
·: damage when a fire in the passenger area burned
the seats, dashboard, nearby Wires and Insula,
tlon. The cause was listed as undetermined .
One truck and eight men were called to the
scene.
_ , .. ·
: Stolen gasoline reported
GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday , Brian
Mink, 28, of Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was
fined $100 for disorderly conduct
- while intoxicated.
Edward E. Borden Jr., 25, of
Rt. 2, Bidwell, was fined $12 for
improper backing.
.Speeding bonds were forfeited
, by Joyce A. Miller, 32, Bait!·
more, $40; Donald R. Johnson,
. 32, 554 Jackson Pike, $45; Ricky
. L. Kite, 36, Rt. 2, VInton, $41;
, Jolin
Vultaggio Jr., 24, ~t.
w,
Emergency runs reported
POMEROY. - Five calls were answered by
local unl,ts Friday, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports.
At 1: 20 a.m . the Pomeroy Unit took Walter
Haggy from the sheriff's office · to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:25a .m. took Iris
Norris from Harrisonville to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 9: 12 a.m. took Kathryn
Oliver from her home on · Mulberry Ave., to
· 'Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at10 : 30
·a.m., took .Bessie Turley from the Stonewood
Apartments to Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·
Racine at 8: 20 p .m., took Chad Wolfe. from the
Apple Grove -Dorcas Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
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OLDSrvDBILE QUALITY.
FEEL IT.'
JIM MINK Chevrolet-Oids.
.
'
TRUCI(S
446-3672
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
446-2000
"THE HEART BEAT OF THE OHIO VALLEY"
Clemens, Mich ., $43; Booker T. E . Neal, 49, Rt. 2, Bidwell, $85.
Darling, 56, Columbus, .$43; Rl·
chard . L. Brewer, 19, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, $41; Robert Frank, 18,
Rlo Grande, · $40; Janet M.
Knotts, 33, New Carlisle, $40;
Bessie J. Rinehart. 50; Gallipolis,
$43; Leona L. Clark, 20, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., $41; Joh~ C.
Poling, 28, Dayton, $39; Jack K.
Clark, 45, South Charleston,
W.Va., $41; Bobby J. Gray, 18,
C~ouse Beck Road, Gallipolis: ·
$41; • Shelley
A. . Halstead, 19,
.
CENTRAL SUPPLY CO.
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (UP!)
- Florida State University po: lice have arrested one of their
' own on drug ,violations, accuslpg
him of showing two coeds how to
smoke marijuana without get·
tlng caught.
.
Officer Don Beiiamy, 27, was
arrested Thursday. Police said
he also aiiegedly provided a
smaii quantity of the !Uegal drug
and smoked It with one of the
students.
The formal charges are official
misconduct and dellvery'ofmarl·
Juana. Bellamy was placed on
administrative .leave pending
review of the matter by unlver·
slty personnel officials.
If convicted of the charges, he
could be sentenced to slx years In
prison and fined $2,000.
NOTICE
In G.C. Murphy Co.
Circular Girls'
'·Rustler Jeans Are
Not Available.
•
•
nntversary
' .
i
ciny
1nconwenience.
•
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1616 EASTERN AVE,
CARS
court .- ------w-t-nf-te-ld-.-w-.~-·a"".•-~-47-:-an_d_J_a-ck-ie
Pleasant, W.Va . . and Kandi L.
Sayre, 33, Rt. 1, Cheshire; Alton
B. Crothers, 57, Columbiana, and
Libby G. Truesdell. 48, Eureka
Star Route , Gallipolis; Earl
Thomas Cook, 47. Rt. 1, Bidwell,
and Georgia Maxine Nenley, 44,
Rt. 1, Bidwell; and Christopher
George Patterson, 18, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, and Eliza beth Anne
Wood, 16, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
SUPPLY CO.
I
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T
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·· .FRONT ·WHEEL DRIVE
ALL NEW FROM THE GROUND 'UP!
MIDDLEPORT - \State and local officials
GALlJIPOLIS - Several cou- pies recently applied for mar·
, rl!'-ge J)censes in Gallia County
Probate Court.
·
.
Applying were Roger Keith
McDaniel, 28, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
and Teresa Leigh Wise, 23, Rt.1,
; Gallipolis; Robert L. Saxton, 35,
Gallipolis Ferry, . W.Va., and
Katherine Elaine Mumpower. 37,
. Eureka Star Route, Gallipolis;
Jeffrey B. Preston. 27. Point
'
'
d'ay
.•
1988 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME
Gambling raid conducted
Berry~s ·World
Today in history
ODAY!
--
.
'
:C~uples apply for licenses
<
DRIQE
IT
POMEROY - Veteran's Memorial Hospit al
has announced is admissions and discharges for
Ffiday .
Admitted were Thomas Tobin, Mlddleprt;
Kathryn Oliver, Pomeroy; Karen Bates, Rutland; Gloria McGee, Pomeroy; Chad Wolfe,
Racine; Teresa Pierce, Racine.
Discharged were Mark Beegle, Janet Jenkins.
Glenn Winland, and Larry Figler.
VINTON- An unidentified individual drove off
· In a llght blue Chevrolet plcJcup truck Friday
afternoon and failed to. pay for $10.85 in gasoline .
pumped from Hunt's Grocery, on S.R. 160 near
~_;...-Municipal
Gerard reported that about $13,000 wits
confisca ted as evi dence along with dice, car~
and a crap table. Ther e were 22 people In the
establi shment a t the time of !he raid and
statements were take n from all of them, Gerard
said. Charges against some of the individuals are
expected to be filed this week, Gerard concluded .
The fnves ti ga tion ·wrapped up about 3:30 a.rtt·.
Saturday.
tea med Friday night to co nduct a raid tocheck on
alleged gambling taking place jlt the Middle port
Pool Room. •
Representatives from th~ Bureau of Cri minal
Investigation, the Department of Liquor Cont rol.
the department of ~herlff Howard Frank and Paul
Gerard of the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's office, conducted' the raid on the establish·
ment about 1.0:10 p.m. with Mldu:Oport police
handling security measures near tt.~ b~ s ine ss .
Veterans Hospital report
'•
'
· $2,000 damage in car fire
(
VInton, according to the sheriff's department.
The complainant .reported that the truck headed
eas t on S.R. 554 . .
"
••
Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3
--Area news briefs--------------------------
J'fnbaf 1rimts· i'mtitttl
A Division of
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio;_Point Plleasant, W. Va.
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Pomeroy-Middlaport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plnunt•.w. Va.
p.ga A-4-Swldey limaa Sentinel
Bernice (Dickey) Dotson, 88,
died Thursday at Yorkshire
Health Care Ce nter, Columblls.
She was a lifetime of Dickey
United Brethren Church. Born
Feb. 21, 1900, tn Gallta County,
she was the daughter of the late
Ellsworth and Clara (Hauck )
Dickey.
She ts preceded tn death by her
husband, George H. Dotson,
whom she married Oct. 27, 1928.
Also prec~lng her Is one sister,
Thelma Gramling.
She Is survived by a daughter,
Mrs . Melvin (Clara) Hazlett; .a
son, George H. Dotson; two
granddaughters; four great
grandchildren; four step ·
grandchildren and seven ste p·
great-grandchildren.
Funeral will be Monday at 1
p.m. at the Schoedtnger East
Chapel, 5360 E . Livingston Ave.,
Coluinb11s, with Paster Philip 'H.
Barnhart officiating. Burial will
be at Glen Rest Cemetery,
Columbus .
Friends may visit Sunday from
2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
funeral home. In lieu of flowers ,
friends may make contributions
In her memory to Yorkshire
Health Care Center, 1425 York·
land Rd., Columbus .
..
--·
~
February
·,
28.1988
Februav 28.1988
I nttery numbers
--Area deaths------~
Bemice Dotson
-----~----
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Frl· '
day's winning Ohio Lottery •
numbers:
Dally Number
Robert G. Hall
Assembly of God plan to reassess Swaggart's punishment
953.
PICIH
Robert G.
Hall, 64, J.
4518.
effersonville, Ohio, formerly of
Masdn County, died at 10:10 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 26, .!988 at lhe
Springfield Community Hospital in
Springfield,C»tio.
.
Born Nov. S, 1923 in Henderson,
he was a son of the late John and.
Onla Patterson Hall Sr.
He wiL'l also preceded in death by
one son, Robert W.; one sister, and
one brother.
He is survived by his wife, Jes.iie
Barker Hall; two sons, Roger of '
West Manchesrer, Ohio, Donaltl R.,
Jeffersonville;
five daughters,
lf!BRAIN
~SHOWERS
msNOW
I 7
Linda Sue White, Point Pleasant,
FRONTS:
Warm
Cold
" ' Static
Occluded
Judy E. Hawkins, Springfield,
laitr 'I ' ' Plj I
Bonni~ R. Jarvis, Jeffersonville,
WEATHE;R MAP -Snow wiU be widespread aci'OH the euten
June Stover, Racine, Ohio, Diana
Great Lakes and much of New England. Ralnsb"era wiU be
Ryder, McCombs, Ohio; one
II c.trllltlkJ•
scattered across the lower Rio Grande Valley and ilouthen Texu.
daughler·in·law, Donna Hall, Point
CG!Mnlenl Crldil TtlllllS Available
Rain will also occur over lhe eeatral mountal118 of Arizona during
Pleasant; one sister, Bonnie Hall, J.
the morning. High temperatures ·wtu be In the 58& or 60s aci'OIIIl ·
effcrsonvilie; five brothers, Ralph
We Carry Our Own Accounts.
much
of
the
nation.
·
and John Sr., both of Charleston,
• • • • COUPON • • • •
Hubert of Houston, Te~as. Joe and
Clyde, both of Leon, and 17
grandchildren.
Ca.
~.OIIIo
. Services will be at . 1 p.m.
t; Pie- Nnd mo FREE bOcMclltl
fair elsewhere Tuesday and
Tuesday at the Crow-Hiisscll South Central Ohio
"'-'110 momolilla prtnled In 'fun
Sunday , with highs between 45 Wednesday. Highs will range
color wllh IIMI lftd pricealtllled.
Funeral Home with the Rev. Del·
from the mid 30s to the mid 40s
:· Klndlr , _ 111 authorized t._.
bert Clark officiating. Burial .will and 50.
1Monumenl Co. repreMfttetive aN
Monday and In the 30s Tuesday
The
protlabtltty
of
prectptta·
follow in Coilcord Cemetery.
and
Wednesday.
Over11ight
lows
11mr110rne.
lion Is near zero.
Friends may call at the funeral
PlnN Mild me dttOill 111au1
wlll
range
from
the
mid
20s
to
the,
Extended Forecast
home Monday after 4 p.m.
MIIIIOfluma
withOut aDitgatiOn • .
mid
30s
early
monday
and
mostly
Monday throur;h Wednesday
A chance of rain or snow In the 20s Tuesday and Wednes·
Candis S. Ord
Monday, with a chance of snow day mornings.
Candis Sue Ord, 33, New Haven, flurries in northeast counties and
died Friday, Feb. 26, 1988 in Ohio
State University Hospital, Coillm·
bus, Ohio.
• ••••••••••••
She was bam July 9, 1954 in
Fayetteville, N.C. to William L.
..NINUIUIIIIE,NTI
OUII ONLY
GALLIPOLIS - Donald K. partment. In 1967 he became a I71UMO
NOTARE
• IIDELINI
Zuspan of Cannichaei,· Pa. and · Evans, maintenance mechanic maintenance assistant In the
· "
.. ·
Shirley J. Gregory Christy, at Ohio Valley Electric Corpora· maintenance department, where
LOGIN MONUMDIT
Clarksville, Pa.
tton's Kyger Creek plant, re· he rema.Ined until his promotion
CO INC
Survivors besides her parents in· cently received his anniversary to maintenance mechanic In
VINTCIN. OHIO
cOirdudc hner hthrusband, CharleCshRadic~kd award for ~0 years' service, 1986.
w. -~~._
;
ee sons,
WIC
·
dt g to plant manager
He and· his wife Zenia live at
UB-1!103
Raben, Charlton Reid, Chase accor n
POMIROV. OHIO
Raymond H. Blowers Jr.
their residence on Rt. 3,
Zuspan Ord, all of New Haven,· one
Evans joined OVEC in 1958asa Galltpolls.
H2-2188 ·--
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (UPI)-
lJI the wake of · charges of
The
fl
W
'II
Weather
,.,, .............. c
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1:
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Loi••
I
····••nt
..
Parents sue dealers
who sold car to youth
ment was illegal.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Finance records showed Da·
The families of two teenagers
vldson secured an $8.388 loan
killed tn an automobile accident
through the dealership with no
are suing the dealer who sold a
co-signer. Davldson'·s father, Ha·
car to a 15-year-old boy and
rold, said his son used a $750
allegedly h;>lped him secure
rebate from the dealership for a
financing with no co-signer and
down payment. The boy's father
no down payment .
said
he did not know his son had
The parents of Jerry Davidson
bought
the car untij several days
flied a $17 million suit Friday In
after
the
transactfon.
Franklin County Common Pleas
The
suit
charged the dealer·
Court against Bob McDorman
ship. GMACm and a salesman
Chevrolet Inc. tn Canal Winches·
-ter. .a Ce ntra l Ohio community. . knew the youth could not huy the
car legally.
The s uit charges the dealership
"Due to unsatisfactory sales of
sold Davidson, 15, a I987Cavalier
General Motors automobiles.
In April and helped him arrange
these defendants lntentlonatly
financing through the General
embarked
upon a (lollcy to sell
Motors Acceptance Corp .. which
General
Motors
products to ·any
a lso is named tn the suit .
first
time
buyer'
regardless of
Davidson, who had no c!river's
age,
insurance
status.
operator's
license or car insurance, was
license sta tus, credit history, or
killed five months after he
employment status," the suit
bought the car when the vehicle
says.
cras hed , head-on , into a utility
Desmond Roberts, general
pole in downtown Columbus. The
manager of the dealership, told
accident occurred at 5:30 a.m .
and med ical reports showed the Cleveland Plain Dealer in a
Saturday story that the boy
Davidson had been drinking and
·:obviously misrepresented him·
using il lega l drugs.
self as an adult ."
The acc ident also killed one of
Davidson 's passengers and in·
jured two othe r people. Belinda
Wilson . 18, Columbus. died from .
severe head injuries. Her 16·
year -old brother and a 15-year·
iVSP I%1HiOO!
old boy also were injured .
Published each Sun<Jay, 825 Third Ave.,
• The suit said the deaths we re a
Gallipolis, Ohio, by tfleOhto Valley~~
"direct and proximate result of
llshlng Company /Multimedia, Inc. Second class postage paid at Gall1polts,
the negligence and 'willful and
Ohio 45631. Entered as second class
wanton misconduct " of the deal·
mailing matter at Pomeroy. Ohio, Post
Office.
ershlp a nd the credit arrange·
••
.
Don't eat the fish
COLuMBUS (UPI) - People
livin g in Sandusky and Seneca
counties should not eat fish taken
(rom the Sandusky River until
March 15 as the result of a
toluene ·~ plll last week, state
Health Department officials
warned. .
.
"Citizens should avoid even a
small exposure by not consuming
flsh from the Sandusky River,"
. said Dr . Ronald L Fletcher.
state health director.
About 84,000 gallons of toluene.
which Is · used as an octane
enhancer. sptl!ed Into a tributary
of the Sandusky River on February 17th. "The incident occurred
when an underground pipeline
ruptured north of Lima.
.
Officials said a "substantial"
number of !Ish, Including qull·
!back, carp, suckers, $mal·
!mouth bass, and channel catfish
died along a 20-mUestretchorthe
SanduskY River between Su~ar
Creek and Fremont.
ME'mber: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association, National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
SUNDAY ONLY
SUIIIICKIPTION RATES
By Carrier or ""otor Ro1M
One Week ........ .................... 60 Cents
One Year .......•...... ...... ... ,.... ..... $31.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Sunday .......... ... ..... .. ........ .... ~ . Cents
The Sunday Ttmes-Sentlnel wUl not be
reaponslble tor advance payments
made to carriers.
MAIL 8UII8CIIIl'TION8
S.lldll7 11114'.
One Year .. ...... .............. ..... .. f .. . $32.24
Six montht ............ ....... , ........... $16.90
DIIIJ' ud smv
MAIL 8tJIIIICIIII"l0N8
-c.-,.
13 Weeks .......................... ........ $17.29
a&
~~
w-.
w-. ........................
............ ........ . . .. ........
. ..... .SM.06
.56
a.a.. o.uidt CoaiJ
13 w..u ................................. $18.20
l6
S.l.UO
52 Weelu ........ .... ................ .... . $61.60
w-. ..................... .... ..... . .
Swaggart had made the .
charges against Gorman , who In
tum filed a $90 million defama·
tlon suit.
Deborah Murphree, 28, who Is
wanted on a prostitution charge
In Jefferson Parish, La., m et
Swaggart on a roadside tn New
Orleans, and they got together a t
a motel at $50 a meeting for a bout
a year, the Palm Beach (Fla .)
Post said Friday.
The scandal has rocked Swag· ·
gart's $150 mlliton-a-yeat broad·
cast empire with some television
stations lri the United States and
overseas canceling hts· show.
Swaggart has said his broadcasts
from the Family Worship Center
In Baton Rouge reach 510 million
people In 145 countries.
Swaggart, .who tearfully con·
Celli said.
followed an especially bloody. Departm~nl'$. anti-gang pro·
gram and to place more deputies
"Everybody. that was breaking day and rilght of warfare In which
on
patrol.
a gunman wounded four teenagLOS ANGELES (UPI) :.... Po· the law went to jail," Celli sa.id.
lice arrested nearly 'too sus- "They know we're out there now ers on a bus, brawling gang · "We are In a state of war, ' ·
Supervisor Mike Antonovtch said
and that we're looking for members stabbed a motorist tn
pected gang members during a
the neck and· two men were shot of the VIolence, which. · If It
crackdown tn South Los Angeles everything.'' .
continues at the current rate, will
that followed several major · 'Gang violence continued to to death In separate Incidents on
make 1988 the mast deadly year
gang-related attacks, some of mount In other parts of the city city streets.
tn the county~s history.
dl!rlng the pollee crackilowo, .
More 'than 50 people have been
them fatal, pollee said today.
According to Sheriff Sherman
A
man
In
hls
.mld-20s
was
shot
killed
or
wounded
In
gang
via·
The taslt force, which more
Block;
387 people were ktlled tn
.
'
and
kUied
at
about
11:
~
P·'1l·
'
lence
since
the
first
of
the
year,
than tripled ,the 60 officers
.
the
county
as a result of gang
Friday while driving with' friends . . prompting Los Angeles County
deployed last week tn a similar
violence
lasl
year. The toll this
east of Torrance, pollee Sgt. supervisors to· vote Tuesi!ay to
effort In the gang-plagued comyear
could
reach
450 or more, he
Jerry Jelentc said.
· • provide $1.5 mtllton In emer·
munity, was intended to send a
The . man; who had not l>een ge~cy !uriils ·fpr the Sheriff's said.
mes~e to gang members ;md
other ·residents, said Lt. Willie · identified, was riding with two
suspected gang members wllen
Pannel, ~ho heads an anti-gang
anti-gang unit known as CRASH,
several shots 'Were tired from a
passing car, Jelenlc said.
·
an acronym for Community
The man's friends drove him to
Resources Against Street
Hoodlums.
Harbor-UCLA Medical Center;
where he died shortly after
"We plan ori letting the gangmidnight, Jelentc said. No sushangers know we'~"' taking back
pects had been arrested.
South Los Angeles," Pannel said.
Detective Tony Celli said the
In Wilmington, two men In a
task force of 200 officers arrested
car
fired shots at a group 'of
93 suspected gang. members,
people
standing outside a fasttmp6unded 58 cars and issued 213
food
restaur,ant
at about 1:30
traffic citations between 6: 30
a.m.
today
Jelenlc
said.
p.m. Friday and 3 a.m. today.
FIIOMtH•
One man was struck tn the leg
• Police also seized eight guns ,.
In the shooting, which also
about 20 grams of cocaine and
appeared
to be gang-related, he
about 12 grams . of marijuana,
said.
Pollee set up a c<immand post
at Manual Arts High Sch601 to
direct the . massive task force,
which also included parole offlc:
ers from the California Youth
Authority, county probation off!·
,;la~bo~r~er~ln~t~he~la~bo~r=/j:a:n~lt:o:r~d~e=·~;;~~::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~:'
YOUR TICKET TO ALL-DAY COMFORT .
Come .aboard Commuters for comfort that goes the ·distance.
Lt. Pink, Peach, Turquoise.
~
AGENCY 1NC.
URANCE
)
I
John E. Pursley, 63, 543 East·
land Rd. , Berea , Ohio, died
Friday at Kaiser Hospital in
Parma, Ohio.
A Wor.ld War II G.S. Army
I
veteran, he was a retired auto
!P.!~~!
CUSTOM
. BUILT
HOMES
$32,500
3 bedroom, 1 Y2 baths
"
For more information
Phone
614-698-6189
FACTORY SA14E CLOSEOUT
Higher
speed·
limits
THE BEST
WE REG.
mean
SOLD FOR
$1 69' 5
S239" , NOW
shorter
response ·
time
.STATE
SPEED
·$
*~49.95
NO'
doWQ.oUe.r
Hlgliway
,
•
Assls(fnt Chief Robert'Vetnon
~ PITI'SBURGH (UPI) :.. Wtl· said gang members were
!Jam MIUar executive director Of ·checked for parole and probation
the Alleghe~y County (Pa.) POrt ' vtolattons and were subject to
Authority Transit, has . turned having their cars inspected and
down ajobasgeneralmanagerof Impounded fQr mechanical
!he Greater Cleveland Regional defects.
transit Authority.
.
"Their (CHP) officers have
: Millar 40 said Friday he unique powers to Inspect vehicles
!Vanted to end recent speculation that we don't have," Vernon said.
!hat he might be leaving 'the "It's hard . for them · (gang
l>ttisburgh agency. Miller was members) -to be Involved In . a
llorn In Cleveland and has family drive-by shooting if lh\!Y. don't
·
have a car to drive by tn."
ihere.
; The Cleveland job would have
Celll.sald gang member~ were
· paid Millar some $50,000 a year arrested for violating curfew,
fTIOre than his current position.
drunken driving, traffic war·
1 Millar has beenPAT'sexecu- rants, felony warrants and pas·
tlve director since 1983.
session of drugs, "even If they
had little bltty crumbs."
The task force deployment
'
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9
129
011.
)
I
!
1/
Bo• sOi
. W7plolla,OIIIe CI6SI
.,
••
.. ,
,,
WliN •••
Chapel HUl·Church ol Christ ·
.Bo~'•
65
.
ftH' , _ 81611 c-jJtntM~tee Coluw,
.
•
. .~ ;
USDA
FUSH
CHICKEN
LEG QTRS.
PORK ·LIVER
59~
49(
DELl
CHOPPED HAM
·.,POlK
:$129
II.
SHOULDER
STEAK
.
SIRLOIN
\ STEAK
$259
II.
. . ll'
$149
II.
SUPfRIOI
TAVERN
HAM
SLAB
BACON
$149 .
GUNNOE'S
II.
. -~~
$189
II.
HOT OR MILD
SAUSAGE
79<
39
ll.
-
· 4. The apostles. being in!pired of God, have given u~to us !h~ doctrine
(Acts 2:42). the gospel (Rm. 1:16,17; I Cor. 15:1·4), and there ts but one
gospel (Gal. t :8,9).
5. The.uni!J for which Christ prayed was also tauaht by the apostles (I
Cor. 1:tO: 2 Cor. 13:1 t: Eph. 4:3: Phil. 3:16), a~d. can be achieved ~your
accepting the oneness in the teachings qf the Sp1nt, walking accord1111 to
His instructlons.(Eph. 4:3).
·
·
b. There is one body (I Cor. 12: 13,14; I; ph. 4:4). The body Is the·church
(Eph. 1:22.23): therefore, there is but one chureh . Tbe chureh is not a fne·
tion. or a part of the whole. but t~e fulness ofChnst (Eph. 1:23): therefore,
it is not a denomination; Christ is the head of the b;:'!~ (Eph. 5:23; Col.·
t: 18). and He is tho savior of the body (Eph. 5:23); th ore, the saved are
in the chureh (Acts 2:47).
7. There is one faith (Eph. 4:5). Without this faith, we cannot be pleafing to God (Heb. 17 :6): we ~ive thio one faith by heari~lhe wold of
God (Rm. 10: t 7)(not by praying); this faith "!"tivates.us to
theppel,
God's power to save (Rm. I :16); repentAAce 11 the decision faldl (Lilke
confession is the declaration of tilth (ML 10:32,33; Acta 11:37);
ba1~tism is the demonstration of faith (Rm. 6:3,4); and this faith enabla ua
the riahteaumeu of God (Rm. 1: I 7), living and serving fattbftlll)'
totheend(Rev. 2:t0).
·
·
8 There is one 'baptism (Eph. 4:5). It Is of water (John 3:23; Acta
S:.lb-39: John 3:5); ills a burill(Rm. 6:4; Col. 2:12); it Is for the ,....,..iml
of our sins (Acts 2:38: 22:16): It puts us Into Chl'lst (Gat. 3:27); and it sa"'
(I Pet.-3:21)because it pull us into the bodyofCbrlst(l Cor.l2:53), wbelein is salvation 12 Tim. 1:10).
Bulawlll Road • P.O.
LIMIT
1543
PIE·SLKEII
Our f.lca is to ·restore the unity for., which Jesus prayed by returning to
the Bib cas our only Spiritual guide.
·
I. J<Sus prayed that we all be one, and this unity can only be achieved
through His word (John t 7:20,21 ).
2. The word is of divine origin: God aave it to Christ (Deut. 18: 18; !obn
t 7:8): Christ gave it to the apostles (John t7:8,l4)through the.Holy Sp1rit.
J. At'ter Christ. who was the aJ!Ostles' Comforter, BS<ended to the
Fathet. He sent them the Holy Spint to be their Comforter (John 14:26);
He wnuld not speak of Himself, but whatsoe'ler things He 'would hear of
God. guiding them into all truth (John 14:26; 16:13); and He speaks
through the truth. the word of God, by which we are sanctified (John
17: 17) and saved (Rm. t:16): therefore, the words are spirit and life (John
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Message From The Bible ...
"
. WI lEG. SOLD
FOI *19.95
fessed to a mora l fa ilure la st
Sunda y during th e broadcas t of ·
·his church service. has never
r eve aled the nature of the si,n .
The television evangelist ha s
publicly preached a gainst porno·
. graphy, from the pulpit a nd In a
newspaper column that wa s
dropped by one Louisia na news·
paper because of plagia r ism .
" Pornograph y, you see, Is not .
about sex, any more than rape ts .
about sex .': Swaggart wrote in a
column puhitshed In July 1986 ,by
the Baton Rouge Morning Ad vo·
cate. "Porn Is sex·out of control ..
sex without commitment or
passion."
He called those who m ake the ir
Jiving from pornogr a ph y .
· •wretched, d isgus tin g a nd ·
dangerous .·'
9.;25°/o
DAVIS-QUICKEL
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where motor carrier service 11
available.
member · .of the Assemblies of
God national council, has said .
Telephone operators at the
church headquarters have been
fielding as many as1;000 calls a
day from people wanting to talk
about Sw;;~ggart's fall from
grace, ·an official said. Many .of
the callers have expressed anger
a bol!,l the leniency of the punish·
ment handed down by the Louis!·
ana district :
Swaggart's secret life caine to
light when .the church was given
pictures of the flamboyant
preacher and a prostitute outside
· a New · Orleans motel. The
snapshots reportedly were taken
by a prtva te detective hired by
rival evangelist Marvin Gorman,
who was defrocked by the church
last year on charges of engaging
In adulterous affairs.
'sAT
John E. Pursley
body man In the Berea area.
Born Apr!ll7, 1924 , in Spencer.
W.Va., he was the son of the late
Blan and Bertha Pursely.
He ts survived by his wife,
Mar iam Danner (Watson )
Pursley.
Services wtll be Sunday at 1
p.m . at the Wtllis Funeral Home
with the Rev. Paul Voss official·
ing. Burial will be at the Ohio
Valley Memorial Gardens .
Friends may visit Sunday at
noon until the service.
a
to the any information or recommendations which have lleen
sellt to Louisiana," Carlson said.
"'A final decision 'on these mat·
ters could be several days or
weeks away . No further an·
nouncement will be made at this
time.'j ~
Swaggart was not present at
the two-day meetings, said Ju·
leen Tutnage, a spokeswoman ·
for the church.
Tl!rnage· said she did not know
whether the members of · the
executive presbytery would· hi!
reqbired to reconvene to issue a
final decision. , . • ·
The denomination's bylaws
require that active ministry by a
minister accused of wrongdoing
should be kept from the pulpit for
at least one year, the Rev. James
Hamill of Memphis, . Tenn.. a
. By TED APPEL
Po,.,.,....., ...........
CLEAN UP • Stauffer Plant Manager Bill Brady cleans. up a
small spill of Benzene Phosphorus Dichloride in .front o~ the American
Legion Post No. 23 in Point Pleasant. The chem.cal, wh1cb apparently
dripped from a parked trailer Thursday afternoon, was scrubbed
with detergent. Chlorine bleach was used to clean the street where the
puddle was. Brady said that the chemical posed no beallb problem.
leniency for television evangelist
Jimmy Swaggart's reported encqunters with prostitutes, the
Lilulslana district of the Assem,
bUes of God will reassess their
p~;~nishment of the preacher.
.The church's Louisiana dis ·
trjct council had recommended
tbat ,Swaggart be barred from
preaching for at least three
rnonlhs and submit to two years
of counseling after accusations
surfaced he picked up prostitutes
along a run-down strip of motels
tn suhurl)an New Orleans imd
had them perform "pornogra.
phtc acts."
,
That decision, however, ts 'not
binding on the national council,
and some members Indicated
that harsher punishment more In
line with · the denomination's .
bylaws would · be more
appropriate.
"No final decisions have been
reached," G. Raymond Carlson,
general superintendent of the
Assemblies of God, said Friday
fqllowtng a two-day meeting.
"The executive presbytery of
the general counsel of the Assem. bites of God )s. remanding these ·
· matters bilck to the presbytery of
the Louisiana district council of
the Assemblies of God for further
consideration, " he satd.
·
· . Carlson•.who would not answer
questions, read
statement at
the end of 11 hours of meetings
Thursday and Friday of the .
executive presbytery.
"We wtll not discuss the
content of our meeting nor.speak
Ta8k force arrests ·gang members in crackdown
OVEC honors Evans
michael,
·
brother, Pa.
Mark W. Zuspan,
CarShe was a fonnerly employed as
a clerk for the Miller Insurance
Agency, New Haven, and was a
member of the First Baptisi Church .
of Wonhington.
Services will be Monday at I :30
p.m. at Foglesong Funeral Home
with Luther Raine officiating.
Burial will follow at Sunrise
Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call Sunday from 2
to4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
·
home.
Suhday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-5
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In ·private practice, Cennamo
has conducted litigation and
appeals throughput the United
States and has flied over a
thousand court briefs.
As a legal scholar with technl~ al expertise, Cennamo conducted litigation that comprised
complex legal Issues and laws
pertaining to proprietary rights
and high technology. Particularly significant to. the 4th District are such laws pertaining to
sulphur polutlon!acld rain, environmental/chemical spills and
dumping, strip mining/ land reclamation, nuclear energy/ hazardous wastes , river and land
transportation, and utilities.
In recognition of his specific
knowledge, . Cennamo represented and gave hiS testimony on
Industrial, · peaceful uses of
atomic energy before ..a joint
committee of the Senate and
House of the U.S. Congress. He
has published papers on contractual rights in high technology
•
long·.the r1ver
..
Student demonstration continues ··
Cennamo files petition
for seat·· of judgeship
Anthony D. Cennamo, of Rio
Grande, !Ued his petition as a
candidate !or Judge of the Court
of Appeals lor the Feb. 10 term In
the Fourth District.
Cennamo has over 25 years of
court of appeals experience. He
h~.s appeared before tire u.s.
Circuit Court of Appeals In
Cincinnati, St. Louis, Wilmington, Del., several other states
and several district court of
appeals In Ohio.
His education background includes business administration
at Ohio State University, electrical engineering at Cleveland
State and Juris doctorate at
George Washington University.
Prior to entering the private
practh;:e of law, Cennamo was an
attorney !or the U.S. Government and represented the depart·
· ment of defense before the U.S. ·
Court of ·Claims. He became
counsel for a small corporation,
Accuray Corporation, In Columbus, and then cousel · lor the
Xerox Corporation In Roch'ester;
28,1988
flln•nt. W. Ve.
'
By ALISON
GRANT
Anthony D. Cennamo
law. He Is the author of a
t~xtbook used by the George
Washington University Law
School.
Cennamo is a veteran having
served in the U.S. Navy. He is
living 011 the family farm home
on Rt. 325 north of Rio Grande . .
He is the father of ten children.
Cennamo welcomes all inquirIes to be sent to Rt. 3, Box 372,
Bidwell, or'C,all 245·9591.
Sewral faculty members sympathetic to the 'protelters met
with Fttz later Friday, but !ailed
to obtain an agreement !rom Fltz
that satisfied the students.
The students said they planned
to continue the demonstration for
at least 96 hours, university
spokeswoman Valerie Calloway
said.
Calloway said the school.
which earlier · threatened to
charge the students with Irespassing, decided to "basically
walt them out." '
DAYTON, Ohio !UPI) -. A
group of 28 students upset about
-CIA campus recl'\lltlng at the
Cathol!c-church operated Unl·
verslty of Dayton said It would
continue to occupy the president's office at the school
throughout the weekend.
The demonstration · started
Thursday morning wl)en the
students occupied , the office of
Brother Raymond · Fltz. The
Incident began shortly after a
CIA recruiter arrived on campus
to conduct interviews. The students did not disrupt the
interviewer.
.
Fltz met with the demonstrators early Friday morning, but
refused to accede to their demand to declare l! one-year
moratorium on CIA visits to the
campus.
However, tbe school on Thurs·
day charged 33 students with a ·
university Infraction !or disrupt- •
hti ·schOOl operat1o111. Galloway.: .
said no further action 8Jallllt th~ •:
st11dents was lmmedlatel)l-::
planned.
• ; .:
The demollltr•tors said the~. :viewed the CIA recruiting as. ·
being In opposition to the Cat · ::
thollc university's stated values. • !·
. The grqup Initially InclUded ~ .students, but only 28 rernalned,by • ::
today. ·
. •:·
Section
28.1988
ROOF SUPPORTS - The Job of
lnstaUing roof supports baa always
been a dangeroua Job In the coal
mining IDduMry. Modern milling
maehinery, however, makes the Job
much. safer taday. Roof bolting
maehlnes such aa this one are
eqldpped wllh a hydra•llc t-bar
which temporarily supports the roof
while bolts are !118erted so that
miners ·never have to be under
unbolted sections.
Annual teacher convention will be .held::
•
CLEVELAND CUP!) - The - garten program, and legislative .
Ohio Federation of Teachers will recommendations !or repeal of ··
hold its annual convention In differentiated diplomas for high .
Cle\leland Thursday through school graduates; and requiring
high school seniors to pass basic
Saturday. ·
Issues to be discussed Include literacy examinations In order to '
•.,
AIDS In public schools, the ·net!d graduate. · ·
!or an all-day, every-day kinder'
.-
'
Stewart files for representative
Norman L. Stewart, of Gallipolis, !.lied his petition as a
Republican candidate for State
Representative of the 94th. ,District, which · includes Gallla,
Meigs and Athens counties.
• Stewart, a lifelong resident of
Callla County, is a long-time
JIUbllc school teacher and is
currently teaching air conditioning and refrigeration at Buckeye
Hills Career Center. Stewart has
owned and operated Stewart
Hardware from 1965 to 1973.
Since 1973 he has been selfemployed as a heating and air
conditioning contractor at The
Stewart Co. of Gallipolis.
' He and his wife, Phyllis, are
the parents-of three-children with
whom the youngest still resides
with them at their home on
•
Ohio House. What is In the best
Interest of Speaker Riffe of the
Ohio ijouse is not always In our
interest," Stewart said.
He cite the passage of the
Shaw11ee 'State College Bill
"without substantial opposition
from our current Representative
as a dreadflll lack of leadership
for our district.
Stewart said that having been
involved In education for 12 years
he believes the state should
.provide more funding for public
school education, especially in
our district where it is sorely
needed by teachers and other
educators as well as the most
important beneflclartes, the
students. .
·Coal mining-helped development
f Meigs, and is still important
Six -indicted. i~ fatal shooting
Greenbrier Dr.
XENIA, Ohio (UP!) ~ Court
· Stewart, whose family has appearances are exJ)ected next
been involved- in politics for week lor six men Indicted by a ·
generations. said he believes .Greene County grand jury in
leadership, education and roads connection with a shooting at
are the primary issues .
Central State University, Greene
He said he believes that the County Prosecutor William
94th District needs a representa- Schenck said.
tive who will take on the political
The men were charged in the
tnachine ry to insure that the Feb. 8 death of Stephan Johnson,
three counties receive their fair
23, of, Dayton. who was shot
share of state funds for roads and
during a campus confrontation
education. Stewart' said he be- . that Schenck described as a clash
ileves the failure lo complete the
between two gangs.
U.S. 35 bypass In Gall !a County is
Schenck said six members of
an excellent example of the
the Mad Dogs, .a renegade
current administration's failure
fraternal group at Central State,
)o deliver for the citizens in th
were indicted late Thursday on
(llstrlct.
charges including murder, vo· "The 94th District's interest
luntary manslaughter, aggra .should be actively pursued in the
vated riot and Inciting violence,
all of which are felonies, and
numerous
specifications.
firearms
Two of the suspects, Frank
Minor III, 20, of Detroit, and
Terrance Burgan, 20, of Akron ,
are in Xenia Municipal Jail,
Schenck said~
Two other suspects who were
jailed have been released because they turned state's evidence, Schenck said. They are
Randy Brown, .21, of Cincinnati, .
and Van Cox, 20, of Chicago.
An arrest · warrant has been
issued for anothe.r student. 'G ar rett Brandon, for felonious assault for an incident that oc- ·
curred the Saturday before the
shooting and is believed to have
triggered the gang fight, Schenck
said.
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CITY ..............·:..
mines in order to walk, ride a
By NANCY YOACHAM
horse, bus or stee1car, or row
. Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - The fact that across the river to get to work.
. minlng played a leading role
But by the early 1900's, aseoal
the development of Meigs veins began playing out, the
Is undisputed. Pomeroy, -county's population began to
county seat. was built around decline. Many Meigs County coal
mining industry and the mines were abandoned and
•sandstone cliffs from which the many new m lnes were opened In
:coal was· mined. Through the" other areas of the state, inclUding
:years, characters in the county's the Hocking Valley. Mining fami. •mining industry changed role~. lies moved on to build new lives
; but the Importance of the indus- around new mines.
!try remained center stage.
.
Coal mining received a shot in
In the past .. many mining tl)earm duJing World Vr' arl. due
operatiOns dotted Meigs Coun- to increased production de. .. ty's rolling htlls.
.
mands, and strip mining began
Today there ls only one mining slowly coming lnt.o view a·s strip
l rompany in the county, Southern mtners worked to recover · coa I
left l>Y th(! deep miners.
1 0hlo Coal Cam)lany, a part ot'the
; Amer-ican Electric Power sysDuring World War II, coal
' tem. SOCCO began operating in mining and related fields again
: 1972 and has three mines, Mine got a shot in the arm . Coal tipples
l No. 1 at Salem Center, Mine No.2 dotted landscapes and train
, at Point Rock and Raccoon No.3 loads of coal"were shipped out of
; at Wilkesville in Vinton County. Pomeroy continuously," said
' Now, rriore than more than 15 . Henry Bahr of the Chester area .
! years later. SOCCO remains the
In .i945, Bahr worked for a brief
: county's large's! employer with
time in a coal mine on Leading
• approximately I ,500 employees,
Creek near Rutland. His job was
primarily from Meigs, Vinton
t.o drive loaded coal cars, pulled
~ and Athens Counties . ·
. .
by pony, out of the mine.
i Through SOCCO, coal mining
''I'd get to the mine before
~ continues to bt> of vital lmpor- . daylight, harness the pony, take·
l lance to further development of him to the mine and h6ok him
! Meigs County . But sharing toonto an empty car . The cars ran
' day 's limelight with that lmpor- on steel tracks and each carried
1 lance are the techniques now
about a ton. I'd sit on the front
; ,used to mine coal.
end of the car and ride into the
! The first efforts in mining mine, which was about a quarter
i Meigs County's coal were made to half-mile back, unhook the
around the early 1800's , when
empty, ·hook on a full , and ride
picks·
and
crowbars
were
used
to
'
back out."
1
• extract the coal from veins which
Bahr said there were two pony
: cropped out from 'the cliffs along drivers at the mine where he
j the Coalport area of Pomeroy.
worked. The mine was owned by
I Any coal not sold locally was ''Tin" Neutzllng.
) ilsually floated downriver by raft
"One of the first things that
-: or boat . where it might sell lor as struck me," he . recalled, "was
• much as 25 cents a bushel.
that as soon as the coal cars were
But 'by the late 1800's, horizon· out of the mine and unhooked. the
1
: tal mine shafts honeycombed the
ponies would turn around and
; hills in the Pomeroy vicinity.
face back into the mine. I never
, Mines were also opened in
figured out if they were trained
; Minersville (note the name) and
or if the light hurt their eyes."
Syracuse and as far up river as
Bahr said he "didn't mind the
Condeevllle, between'Ractne and
work." espeCially since he was
I' Antiquity; with some mines etnmaking $1.75 an hour, "more
' playing ' 200 to 300 men or more. than I'd ever made before."
· The county's greatest populaNevertheless, shortly after he
; lion was in the 1890 census when
started in the mine, he had the
coal mining was in its height of
opportunity to buy a farm for his
glory . It was a time when mine
family and so brought an end to
employees had to llv~ close to the
his coal mining days, thatis, until
i
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MEMBER FDIC
wltll
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L.--------------_;..______..
ud David Ko-
·Mtlnllwe.''
4480101 .
~
..
blellta. lliclalled
.......
=··· . ....,
.. . . .
just recently .
.
Earlier this month, Bahr
toured Southern Ohio Co!!l Company's Meigs Mine No . 2, venturing down 310 feet and back about
three and one-half miles. Bahr
couldn't get over the modern
technology.
His memories of the actual
mining process Included· a cutting machine, "the only mechanized part" of the mine where he
worked. The cutting machine. he
says, ."worked something like a
chain saw laying on Its side" and
was used to undercut the coal
seam. Horizontal holes were then
bored in the face of the coal above •
the .u ndercut, and explosives
were placed In the holes to "shoot
the coai." The undercut alowed ·
space for the coal to drop down,
fracture and break up. Then
men, "loaders," would . shovel
the coal onto the cars to be driven
out of the mine.
Today , Meigs County's coal is
mined by multi -million dollar
longwa lis and · conti-nuous
miners.
Although tongwalllng was first
used in Europe in the early 1880's
and was introduced lri the UtHted
States in the early 1900's, It was a
long time •in coming to Meigs
County. SOCCO's first longwall
unit at Mine No. 2 began
TOURING - Southern Ohio Coal Co. occasion· sloners David Koblentz and Manning Rouah; _
producing coal in December
ally arranges a tour of Its facilities for Michael Holzaepfel, division manager for Athens'
1978.
ugreenhoms". Pictured are rnembCrs of a Columbus Southern Power Office; Nancy YeaIn Bahr's day. coal was
February tour group: Dave Zatezaolo, Mine 2 cham of The Sunday Times-sentinel; Henry Bahr
brought out of the mine on cars
superintendent, kneeling, and Bob Klatt, person- retired, and Brian Windon, an employee of th~
'
pulled by ponies. Today the coal
nel supervisor, Mine 2, far right, who arranged Meigs Soli and Water Conse!"vatlon District.
is brought out by conveyor belt to
the .tour, and froQ1 left, Meigs County Commisa preparation plant where It is
'
washed to lower sulpher and ash
•
. . . .. ··content, before final transport '
recalls
having
"a
fari"
in
the
:
pany,
safety
lsn'tjust
safety
.
It's
County
mines,
there
were
never
either by rail or by miles and
mine where he workf4, to get rid ::
miles of overland.conveyor to the any <large scale disasters, "as. S-A·F-E-T-Y, in capital letters.
of
the "black damp."
Safety
sessions
are
held
at
the
near
as
I
can
remember,
"
sa
ld
Gavin Plant In Cheshire.
..
Bahr
is right that coal mining
beginning
of
"each
shift,
every
Bahr.
Jobs
like
opera
llng
,
tpe
Mining in Bahr's day was
dangerous, although he says he cutting machine and shooting the day," according to Dave Zate- In Meigs County has come a lang
way since Its humble beginnings
''never felt In any more danger in coal were handled by experts. In zalri, mine superintendent at
when coal was sold by the busheL
·
Meigs
Mine
No.
2,
and
a
largethe mines than when' he was in Bahr's case, Neutzllng did the
With production of over live
scale
safety
sesslon·is
held
once
a
. the woods cutting limber." Rock cutting and shooting .
mllllon
tons of coal per yeaf,
of
the
three
week.
Also,
each
Unfortunately, Neutzllng was
!all was the greatest danger In
SOCCO's·
Meigs mining complex
safety
departmines
has
its
own
among those Individuals hurt in
the old mines.
represents
a $280 million investment and from six to. eight
.
"We didn't have roof bolts ," he the mines.
ment
in
the
economy of Meigs ,
employees,
both
supervisory
and
"I guess the training for my job
said. Wooden posts were set to
and
southeastern
Ohio. _.
County
hold up the roof. Andoncemlnlng probably lasted 15 minutes," ·union men, trained as· emerSuccessful .coal mining today : :
was finished, if the posts were Bahr recalled. Safety shoes and gency med leal technicians, are
requires
high tech, high produc- .
underground
on
each
shift
at
glasses
were
unheard
of
"and
still iii good condltion ,'they were
lion,
high
each
mine.
profit and higher ;you
wore
a
little
old
cap
that
·
removed to be used again.
education.
Bahr
was
also
impressed
wlth
didn't
amount
to
anything."
Although over the years, men .
"It's a whole different ball .
· At Southern Ohio ·Coal Com- · SOCCO's vent_\latlon ~ystem. He
were hurt · and killed in Mel~s
game," agreed Bahr.
··
TOOLS OF
THE TRADEfa longwall min·
lng, a mechan·
laed shearer,
lop, llhaves coal
from a wall
bundreds of feet
long wltb a baek
•· 1111d forth motion. Pictured
· above are tools
of the past
owaed by Henry
Babr, Paal Karr
L-----------------·----..-. ----------------------J
I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The Bank Tluzt Makes Thinp Happen.
.. . ..
B
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..
.
.
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Ohio-Point PIIISSM'l. W. VI.
Clark honored
byBBjBS
inCOLUMBUS.Columbus
Dr. Catherine
Remembering fighting black Gallia Countians
time how fast he had to run to
keep from being captured by the
The great majority of the black enemy. He ran so fast he burst
Civil War veterans · burled In the striplings of his abdomen and
Gallla County fought with the for a wblle had to be hospitalized.
127th OVI or the
·
It was not long before the army
511! USCI. In tact
was disbanded and he returned to
these were one
his home. When grandfather was
and the same,
nearing home he began to shoot,
the name
'I've been down In Wasblngtoh
change occurlng
flgh!lng for Uncle Sam, look out,
In 1863 just a few
loojt out, for I am going to shOOt.'
months after the
Then he fired his gUn. When his
127th became the first regiment mother saw him she shouted for
of black soldiers recruited In joy that lie was home safe and
sound...
,
Ohio.
.
Actually though blacks had
Mr. Miller later was a
served In the . northern army preacher at Pleasant Hill Baptist
from the start of the Civil War as Church and. Union Bap-t ist
laborers driving teams, caring Church. He became a grand old
lor the horses , performing man. The tombstone we picture
blacksmith duties and other such today marks the burial of Samuel
work. In many emergency sltua· . Wilson wbo was not so fortunate.
lions blacks were thrown Into the Wilson who Is burled In the
fray as fighters.
Morgan-Bethel Cemetery fought
For Instance Bessie Jackson In with Company K of the 15th USCI
her book "Born In Poverty" told and died at age 19. Wilson was .
about her paternal grandfather, about 15 when he joined the army
Powell Miller who ran away from and only 17 when the war ended
home at the age of 17 along with _but was In broken health.
Wyatt Mosby. The pair joined the · We do not have the records of
union army In 1861 near-Chatla· the battle history of the 15th USCI.
but 'the history of· the 5th USCI Is
nooga, Tennessee.
written
In Whitelaw Reid's ex" Grandfather told of va~lous
battles that he was In, and one
BY JAMBS SANDS
haustlve records of Ohio's part In the army but many roqbt In an
the Civil War. Tile 5th which had UDOftlclal capacity depending on
a number of Gallla County black who the commander wu. After ·
soldiers In It , distinguished Itself - January l, 1863 black& slowly
on a number of occasions lnclud- began to be officially reculted.
lni the capturlne or City Point, The 127th OVI wu Oblo's first
VIrginia and In the steee of effort at enlisting blacks. It was
Petersburg. On the 15th of June, orJanlzedlnthesummerorl863.
1864, the .5th user stormed the
Buried clc11e to Samuel Wilson
heights ot Petersburg alld cap- hi the Bethel-Mor11an Cemetary
tured two strong Confederate was a man wbole name was
earthworks that Included several Mlles. The stone does not give a
pieces of artillery. Ceneral clue as to whether this was his
" Baldy" Smith who commanded first _n ame or his lut name.
th~ 18th Corps, watched the black
The atone records that Miles
regiment with great anxiety. was born In Tennessee, that he
When he saw them carry the died In March of 1864 at age 30
works with bayonets, he ex- and that on January 1, 1863 he
claimed: "That Is equal to wa, set free by "The ProclamaLookout Mountain. No troops tion ol Pres. A. Lincoln.''
ever'dld better fighting!"
Miles was a free man for just
Later In the war at the assault over 1 year. One would guess that
on Ft. Gilmer the 5th ·USCI had 85 Mlles was likely freed from his
killed and 248 wounded out ot a plantation by Union troops, that
total In the ranks of 550. The be followed the trOOps north,
casualty rate s~ffered here by being used as what was called by
the 5th USCI was one of the tbe army a contraband worker
highest In the Civil War.
.a nd that somehow he got .to the
January l, 1863, the date the - Bethel community. Of Miles'
Emancipation Pr-oclamation Jl&rt In the Civil War we can only
took effect, Is often seen as the gUess but so It was foi' many
watershed date tor black partici- blacks who aided the north In an
pation In the Civil War. Prior to unofficial ·capacity In the early
that date blacks were used · years of the war.
mostly as laborers connected to
Bloodmobile.collects record -209 units during visit
The American Red Cross
Bloodmobile visited Gallipolis
Thursday, and shattered another
record. The previous blood collection record was set last
December, and at this visit, 209
units were received.
According to chairwoman
Thelma Shaver, 229 people presented themselves for donation
and 20 were defered for various
reasons. Of the volunteers, 38
were first time donors.
There were also 60 Gallia
Academy High School students
presenting themselves for dona tion; coordinated by teacher
Roger Brumfle ld .
Members of the clerical starr
were Mrs . Bruce · McDonald,
chairwoman, along with Mrs.
Kenneth Farmer, Mrs. Neil
Sanders, Mrs. Charles Webster .
Mrs. Roger Martin, Mrs. Lee
Rose, Mary Clendenin. Mrs.
Gomer Phillips, Mrs. Frank
Childers, Mrs. Faye Wright,
Mrs. John Milhoan, Mrs. Luther
Tracy, Mrs. Harold Stockman ,
Mrs. Wendell Rees , a nd Mrs. Don
Carruthers.
·
On the nursing staff were Mrs.
Keith Brandeberry, chairwoman, along with Mrs. Evalena
Williams. Mrs. Carlton Null,
June O'Dell, Mrs. Tom Skinner,
Mrs. Frank Cremeans, Mrs .
Wayne Munro. Mrs . Edison
Guinther, Mrs. Gene Ables, Mrs.
Raymond Jennings, Mrs. Gary
Geasley , Mrs. Merrill Johnson,
.Betty Koehler, Mrs . Tom Hysell,
Mrs. Edward Burklch, Mrs.
James Doubleday, Mrs. William
Miller. Mrs . John Saunders,
Donna O'Dell, Chris Smith and
Angle Lawrence.
The canteen staff consisted or
Garnet Hughes , chairwoman,
a long with Florence Willis, Helen
Murphy, Mabel Phillips, Katherine Little, Mary James, Janet
Pettus anCl Cindy Drummond.
Helping the Red Cross unload
the trucks and set up wereGallla
Academy High School students In
the OWE program. Todd Shang,
Junior Johnson and Keith Halley ,
Making donations for the canteen were McDonald's Restaurant of Gallipolis and the Gallipolis Ice Company.
Presenting themselves for donation were:
John Roush, Robert E. Odell,
Peggy A. Williams, John Adkins,
'Becky Cox, Nancy Cox, John
Cox, Kimberly A. Massie, Lance
Taylor, Teresa .Casteel;
Rosita H. Bauer, Mike Fielder,
Robert S. Davis, Lori P. Shane,
Angela Baird, David Walters,
Mark Eads. Jeremy Pitchford, ·
Tim Rfl~s. William Cantrell;
·Craig Wi'!ght, Henry K. Milan,
Vernon W. Burnhelmer, Hiram
J. Cox, Barbara C. Fulks, Roger
S. Brumfield, Joyce A. Davis,
James J. Mullens, Kelly S.
Hocker. Sard Thomas: .
C. Michael Null; Charles A.
Baker, Keith A. Sheets, Kevin
Byus, Robert Young, ·BretTabor,
Ricky Swain, Cheryl A. Masters,
June Miller, Cecil Cook;
Larry St. John, Gary L. Elsnaugle, Nicholas S. Johnson II ,
Brian K. Miller, Charles T.
Walters, Patricia J, Vaughan,
Mike McCormick, Brent Sheets,
Eric Blackburn, Brian Kell;
Lisa Hauldren, Amy Caldwell,
Shelly Skidmore, Teresa J . Tawney, D'avld L. Bloomer, Michael
L. Kimble, Timothy _J . Estep,
Jancls M. Hagy, Lisa R. Earles,
Charlton Armstrong;
Patricia A. Miller, Donna
Borden, Michael Trowbridge,
Angela J . Elliott, Minda L.
Miller, Karen Pratt, Jamie
Pierce, John R. Meeks, Jason E.
Montgomery, Di'eama Jividen;
Joan Heln, Milton E . Brewer,
Tabitha Drummond, Angle
Brannen, Joan Schmidt, Sea_n
Wolfe, Kathy Hoshi, Rodney
Clark, David Caldwell, Dan
Carter;
Kathryn J. Cameron, Tina
Degarmo, Lesa Evans, Peggy
Roberts, Pamela Franklin, Tom
Byers, Jerel Collins, John
O'Neal, Elaine Cllckenger, Pat
Saunders;
Samuel J. Juniper, Jr., Jamie
Chevalier, Brad Beaver, Shawn
Curry, Melinda Hood, ·. Wendy
Hood, Dennis Salisbury, Harold
Rumley, Pamela Matura, Paul
Hollingshead;
Lou Swisher, Paul Lasseter,
James Coonen, Amanda Darst,
Jason Call, Jon Lynch, Je~f
Sanders, Ivan R. Mayo, James
Lusher, Nancy Lusher;
Theresa J . Staley, Angela
Hitchcock Baker, Kim Canaday,
Chrlsto'p her Bailey, Cliff Wilson,
Robert Metzger, William Cannode, Cathy Nagy, Ruby Dray,
Jerome Barkey; . .
Roger Martin, Paula Saunders, Todd Black, ,James Comer,
Connie Meeks, Patricia Swisher,
Carol Belville, Julie Lynch, Lynn
Gardner, Romla Swain; '
· Beulah Mitchell, Glenn Sayre,
Farrell Betz, Debbl Stapleton,
David Nltzky Herman Mayo,
Cas by Meadows III, Lee Mooney ,
Allee Lasseter, ' Everett
Montgomery;
Helen Colvtn, Kimberly Polcyn, Earl Wonn, John Gill,
Donald Denney, Dorothy Meeks,
Patricia Anderson, Wesley
Meeks, Gregory Day, John
Gooldln;
Oran Barry, Brent Saunders,
REBECCA ELBERFELD
JACK R. HOGE
,will extend discounts to the
;volun teers a nd children who are
in the Big Brothers/ Big Sisters
program .
"The support that these bust-
--In the service - - TERRY L. ,JEWELL
Marine Sgt. Ter-ry L. JewelL
so n o! Pearlir F . Jewell Jr. of
Reule 1, Rutland . OH. ha s heen
promoled lo His pn·sen l rank
wh ile servi ng at Marine Cor ps
Base, Ca mp Lejeune , NC.
A I9RO gradua le of Meigs High
SchOol. Rock Springs. he joined
lhc Marine Corps in December
1981.
ALEX B. SOMMER
Marine Lance Cpl. Alex B.
Sommer, son or Arvllle E. and
Ruth B. Sommer of 100 Pond
Branch, South Side, WV. recently
reported for duty with 2nd Force
Service Support Group, Camp
Lejeune, N<;,.
A 1987 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, Point
Pleasant, he joined the Marine
Corps In May 1987.
Evans appointed to Academy
GRANVILLE - U.S. Rep.
Jonn Kaslch announced that
Wade Evans of Granville, Ohio
bas been offered an appointment
to the U.S. Naval Academy at
Annapolis, Md. ·
Evans Is a honor st-udent,
]llember of the National Honor
Society, Editor of the School's
Newspaper, and selected as a
Delegate to Boys State and
· Rotary Student of the Month.
He has lettered three years In
basketball, four years In baseball, and has • been selected
All-Licking County In both sports
and has played In the District All
· Stars Games. He Is a member of
the Newark Oilers LegloriPost 86
summer traveling baseball
team. While at the Academy, he .
will t.e a member or the Navy
.baseball team.
Wade Is the gra,ndson of Mrs.
Reva Evans and the Late Owen
· Wade Evans and the Nephew of
Clyde and Rosemary Evans of
Rfo Grande. He Is the sone of
l'
George and Mary Evans of
Granville.
nesses have given us Is fantastic" , said Judy Sofranko, executive director or Big Brothers/ Big
Sisters.
"These discounts wlll allow the
'Bigs' and 'Littles' to spend
quality . time together doing
things · they both enjoy wllhout
spending alot of money.
"We're also hoping to use the
Discount Program as a recruitIng tool to attract adult volunteers", added Sofranko. "There
are many children from singleparent famllles who are waiting
to be matched with a 'Big
Brother' or 'Sister'. We especially need male volunteers".
The businesses who are offerIng discounts to BB/BS In the
Gallipolis area Include: Bob
Evans Canoe Livery and Riding
Stables: Captain D's; Charlie's &
Co.: Domino's Pizza; Gallipolis
Halley-Speed
Morgan-Bethel Baptist Chureh lu GaWa Coualy whUe Sunuel
Wilson was a. member ollhe lith U.S. Colored Infantry (usCI). ·
Mo1t blacks from GaUia County fought with lhe 51h USCJ which'
was originally known as the 1271b OVJ.
ISenior Citizen Center
GALLIPOLIS - Ronald Eu- employed with Avis Rent-A-Car
gene Halley and Betty Sue Halley · ' In Myrtle Beach S.C. ·
of Gallipolis announce the enSenior Airman Speed Is statlgagement of their daughter
oned at Myl'tle Beach A,F .B. He
:Ronda Sue Hall~y to Robert Is the grandson of Sable Speed
[Michael Speed son_of L. Robert Hicks of Savannah, Ga.
Speed and Mary Lou Speed of
An April 9, wedding Is planned
Darien Ga.
at Trinity Presbyterian Church
· Halley Is a '
of Gallia In Surfside Beach, S.C.
School
.,
with oil and vinegar, whole grain
_bread, pineapple chunks.
,'
Tuesday - Beef liver, onion
rings, mashed potatoes, butter,
peas. biscuits, 'applesa!Jce In ~ ·
jello. ·
.
Wednesday -Baked ham sliCe'
with raisin sauce, sweet pota-,
toes, broccoli, whole grain bread,
cranberry dellte.
· ·
Thursday - Baked ·chicken,,
parsley butter potatoes, kate; •
with vinegar, rolls; Ice cream, : • •
Friday - Macaroni alit! ..
cheese, stewed tomatoes wttle'
crumb topping, pear half, whol,e
grain bread, cookies.
:· '
Choice of · coffee, tea, JelqQ~ .
nade, milk, or butte~Uk "lOt
each ineal.
·
. i.<-1
•
Gallipolis
Actfvitles and
menus for the week of Feb. 29
through March 4, at ·the Senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike
will be as follows:
Monday - Chorus, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - S.T.O.P.!physlcal
fitness , 10: 30 a.m. Lenten ser·
vice, 11:15 a.m. Rev. Luther
Tracy
.
Wednesday -Card games, 1-3
p.m.
Thursday - Bible study, 11noon; Herbalists, 12: 30 p.m.
Friday - Art Class, 10.noon;
craft mini-course, 1-3 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Spanish rice, sea·
soned green beans, tossed salad
..•
Gallia Medical Supplies i~ ·=
s3· coun STilET
GAWPOUS, _OHIO ~
614-446-6949
•Complete Ostomy Supplies - .
Convatec, Hollister, ·United, etc.
•Skin ~dre Products - Carrington,
Care-Tech, Swun, etc.
•Surgical Dressings and Tapes
•Home Blood Sugar Monitors and Supplies .
•Adult Diapers and Underpads
•Back, Nec:k, Knee Supports
•Mastectomy Bras and Breast' Prosthesis
•Compression Support Hose
. •Walkers, Canes, Crutches, Wheelchairs
•Ensure, Ensure Plus, Osmolite
to ·observe anniversary
~
• 1'
'
®
Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is thera.
,Back Problems
IN STOCK
Open house will be observed. ·
Reception following wedding will
be held at Church.
EVERYONE HAS
UNWANTED HAIR
You can rtptattdly lhavt it,
tw"zt it, wa1 or cream it away.
REMOVE FOREVER
Office 1304) 372-5067
Home (3041 273-4485
DR WIRE
CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS
114 W. Nartli StrHt, Suitt 2
Ri It , W. Va. 25271
WALLPAPER MILL OUTLET
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
. SPIING VALLEY PLAIA
IT'S OUR WAY OF SAYING "THANKS" FOR MAKING OUR FIRST
SIX MONTHS IN BUSINESS A BIG SUCC~SS!!
DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH COME IN AND REGISTER
FOR A ZENITH TV TO BE GIVEN AWAY ON APRIL 2, 1988
No Purchase Necessary - Need Not Be Present To Win.
(
*l
•
- The board of
!'i'lr~tors of "The Ariel Cultural
~nd- P!!f!ormlng Arts Centre,"
.Which was formed to renovate
~ restore the old Gallipolis
!theatre, · bas announced that
es or Incorporation have
· recel~ tram _}he Ohio
tary·(If State's omce.
'~ Accountants for the tloard are
the pi'OCfts of obtaining 501 (c)
) non-profit status for the
ganlzatlon.
·
The Gallipolis Theatre, orgllly conatructed In 1895 as the
lei Opera House, Is now owned
the Gallla Masonic COmpany
will be. leased to the Ariel
anlzation; Tbe historic theaonce bolted such luminaries
s Will Ropn and touring
tterlorm~nces of "Uncle Tom's
Cabin" . In 1931 the theatre
ed to show "movtna pic·
~· and eventually ciOied In
mld..lxtlM.
The board plana to turn the
atre tntci a multi-purpose
rtormlna arts centre for use by
aal II'OUPI both amatuer
p!Vfl shnal.
E
E
.
~
-IIIYIICAL MRA1'Y
X-MYUIIOM'RIRY
Hotri: 8:30 a.m.-a p.m. Mon.. Tuee., Wed., aFri. ·_8:10 a.m.·tl noon 'llul.~
Don 't F"l'' E11t11 Will Soon B• Upon U1/
Quality - Savings - Selection
,tl)tl)tll
•
b p•o....,u IIIII crtmo from hoppelling ro you, 1M OllUI
FO<me•. ~took! I~ a llmpt. CU!hlonbur lfs not# k b.., ~ .and
cc...rully consrructed !plnol IUpPOR
lhor enob1M you ro litcomlortQbly
In any choir (......., )lOUr auromablto teaM). lo don't let lhe
~ldtl9« lhe best of you:
!el'- 'IQUr ochtng bock with
OOUH"'"".
·
Avollobl•locolly:
Ji.Tbi• lntertlted In tbe proltct
·
41 Ceurt
446·6949
1, Lora LyllillllloW at
,,
',1
!I
• ••
l.owback]ioin- IM<:rim.of/MCMIIIry. "-poinlulaime
lhor will <*cl 80% of Nnerlcant "-«used crtmlnol, lhe
choir. 1M simple 0<1 ollinlng In o choir ... no mamor whor
shape, wt.lhe< wbe low bock a h191>. hold"' so~ ... moy
lead ro a crlmlnol orrock .of bock poin.
tact tbe board it P.O. Boa
polls, OH &11, In' eall
\
ON ALL
WALL COVERINGS
For private consultation without
obligation call
GLIMPSES: George Burns
will receive an honorary doctorate - the first honorary degree
he has- been awarded In his 93
years - on March 31 from the
University of Hartford . .. Ray
Charles, Dizzy Gillespie, Kenny
G.., King Sunny Ade, Spyro Gyra, .
Carmen McRae, Bobby McFer- ·
rln and the Fabulous Thunderbirds wUI headline the lOth
anniversary Playboy Jazz Festival at tile Hollywood Bowl June
18-19. Humorist Mort Sahl will be
the master of ceremonies, filling
In for Bill Cosby, who will be off
making a movie ... The National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration plans to name a
research ship after Malcolm ·
Baldrige, the late commerce
secretary. Baldrige was killed In
a rodeo accident July 26.
~~ALLIPOLIS
. Persistent of recurring aches in the
lower back and limbs may siigcst
a possible lower spinal or pelvic prob·
lem . This often requires a 5tructural
correction of the cause in order to re·
licve the condition. Althoush druas
may hide the pain temporarily, the sP,Ine
and sacroiliac must bt afi&ncd to their pro·
per position for na,mal function.
The doctor of chiropractic hu made 1 special study of condi· •
tions related to the sacroiliac, spine tllld ncnous ~tem. 'He seeks ·
to not only located the problem and live relief from aympeoms, but ,
abo to conect the fundamenlll cause u well u offer PICI(CIIt~e. re·
habilitation, tllld llllintmancc counacl.
WAI>E'-EVANS
)
GALLIPOLIS - Diana Witt
and William Campbell announce
the final plans of their upcoming
wedding.
The wedding will lake place
March 5, at 1: 30 p.m. at Harrlsburge Baptist Church on _St. Rt.
554. - Rev. _Ron Lemley will
officiate.
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•
~organtzauon
State Farm rnsuranceCompante. • HomeOfhcea: ,81001Tlingto~ . Hllf10t&
VINYL WALLCOVERINGS
Theater board
Sale• Rep
•
(SPill)
+
'•
'
'
Craig Is the son of Carolyn
Craig of Reynoldsburg and Ranald Craig of Gahaanna. He Is a
graduate of Teays Valley High
School. He Is employed as a
civilian federal employee at
Rlckenbacker A.N :G.B. as an
Electronic Commu"Dicatlons
Specialist.
The wedding will take place
May 21.
:o The Maternity Orchard
Bill Tillis
Nla< IIHCIULDIR IYNPROIIE·
DliiiMIE.WIIACIII
ICIAtlC·P" miiiiCIIIIGIRY·
. A11U1'1Cil.'U• •
INSURANCE
GALLIPOLIS - Cindy L. Ross
and Curtis D. Craig are announcing their engagement and up·
coming wedding.
Ms. Ross Is the daughter of
Linda Morris of Stoutsville and
Carl Ross of Gallipolis. She Is a
graduate of Amanda-Ciearcreek
High School and Hocking Technical College. She Is employed by
Equitable Savings Bank In Lancaster as an Operations Analyst.
Placement for the College of
Home Economics at the Ohio
State University.
Ross-Craig -.
:~on-profit
.
FARM
Kyger Creek High School and Is
employed at Bob Evans
Restaurant.
·
Stanley is in the U.S. Air Force
assigned to Lowry Air Force
Base In Dehver Colo.
An April wedding Is planned.
,
DR. CATHERINE CLARK
The Mother- To-Be
•
LOW IAa< PAIN PINCJIID IIEIIVa
sun
·
- GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie L. Lemley announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter Cindy
L. Lemley to Charles T. Stanley
son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Stanley of Patriot.
Miss Lemley Is a Senior at
•l GAj..LIPOLIS -; 1'4r. and Mrs. " March 6, ~-5 P-m·. at their home
~e Beaver will celebrate their on Sugar Creek Road.
4!Jth wedding anniversary _on
March 6.
~ They were . married on that
A Shop To Meet The Needs or'
Clate In 1948 In Ironton. The
cpuple !lave six children: Mike'
B,eaver. and Mrs. Barbara DonMaternity Fashions From Lingerie To Finer
rijllly .of Gallipolis, James (Bill)
Dre11es For Special Occasions.
deaver, Mrs. Allee Sanders,
· lrifaru Clollting 0-24 Month•
Mrs. Patricia Whitt, all of Crown
qty, and Mrs. Sharon Sanders of
Eureka Star Route. They have 14
&fandchlldren.
~ Their children are hosting an
Z30 Bt.,.dway, Jackoon • 288-2669
o"pen house In thtlr- honor on
Open Tuoo.-Wod.-Thuro-S.t 9:30-6:30
Mon. llo Fri. tilt 1:00
Fast Service
Free Delivery '.
Susan Elliott. RN
Manager
CINDY ROSS
CURTIS CRAIG
Hollywood
glimpses...
WE BILL FOR YOU
"I back the fc'JI.-.
insl111J11Ce I sel
with~ neighbor
setVlce. Call me.7
CINDY L. LEMLEY
Lemley-Stanley'
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs. She received her Bachelors DeStephan R. E)eberfeld; Gallipolis gree In Arts Admlnsltratlon from
announce the engagement and ·the Ohio State .University. She Is
forthcoming marriage of their employed as Company Admin'- ·
daUghter, Rebecca Bliss Elber- strator for Stuart Plmsler Dance
feld to Jack Robert Hoge, son or and Theater, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hoge, New
Hoge Is a graduate_ of New
Knovllle, Ohio.
Knoxville (Ohio) Local High
Ms. Elberfeld Is the gran- SChool. He received his Master of
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arts In Outdoor Education and
.Elberfeld, .Pomeroy, the late . his Bachelors-Degree In Business ._
Elizabeth Deem, Parkersburg Administration from the Ohio
w,ll'·and the late Charles Vandale State University. He Is employed
and Helen Adams, Spencer, WV. by the Adventure Education
Ms. Elberfeld Is a graduate of Center, Worthington.
Gallla Academy High School.
· THE TO!IIBS'JIONE can be round In the cemetery that adjolni
fteglstered Fitter
Private Fitting Room
Racquet Club; the McDonald's In
Gallipolis and Henderson; Pizza
Hut; Ponderosa; Rax; Skatesville USA; Skyline Lanes; Spring
Valley Cinemas; Taco Grande;
.and Wendy's. Several businesses
In Jackson County are also
Involved in this program.
For mqre -Information about
Big Brothers/Big Sisters, call
Sofranko at 446-0170.
RONDA HALLEY ·
ROBERT SPEED
Elberfeld-Hoge
Local businesses supporting Big Brothers
GALLIPOLIS - Several area
business establishments have
agreed to participate In the local
Big Brothers/ Big Sisters Agency's Discount Program.
The business · establishments
M. Clark has been recognized by
the Columbus Dispatch for service to the community.. The
award .c eremony was held on
Feb. 15. She has been a volunteer
for ttie Big Brothers/ Big Sisters
Association of Columbus and
Franklin County for six years.
During that time she has
simultaneously been a Big Sister
for two Little Sisters, J enlfer and
April France. She ha s also
served the association as chair of
the Public Relations Committee,
- President of the Board of Directors and was recently named to
the · Big Brothers/ Big Sisters
Foundation Board of Directors.
·Dr. Clark Is employed as
Director of Alumni and Career
1'1'
I \~
\
Faith D. Harris, Ernest W.
Wigglesworth, Ken R. Farmer,
Wlillam E. Wamsley, James E . ·
Fairchild, Raymond C. Weiher,
Jr., Dexter C. Kaltenbach, Leslie
K. Campbell;
.
Gina A. Rutan, John S. Foster,
James J. Enyart, CarlL. Boggs,
Wanda L. Boggs, DOrothy NIbert, Jack C. Simms, Ollie M.
Barry, Jan Coon, Robert C.
Muller;
Jimmy L. Skidmore, Ralph R.
Martin, Patty Dyer, Frederick
E. Burdell, Men Coen, Maxie
Oliver, Zat Salmons, Judy Siders, Richard L. Neal, Donna L.
O'Dell;
Kennison N. Saunders, Clarice
Waugh, Fred Dee!, Doris I.
Birchfield, James C. Saunders,
Kelly S. Halley, Andrew Lemley,
Paulette M. Saunders, Peggy L.
Rucker, Scheryl A. Saxon, Marvin L. Baird, Harlan Dean Jones,
Lawrence F. Beebe, Julia Pyles,
Woody Pyles, Kermit E . Brown,
Charles F. Pyles, Jr., Martha J.
Willis, Cheryl A. Swisher, Earl
Cllckenger, Jr.;
· D~vld A. Walker, MatthewS.
Bokovitz, Kevin W. Dennis, Jennie G. Darst, Raymond M.
Waugh,. Rosemary Remy, Tanja
M. Riffle, Ernie R. Meadows,
Jean Whitney, Ronda K.
....
Warren;
Carma Briggs, Donald W.
Schilling, Gary R. Taylor, Charles E. Huber, Matthew W.
Muller, Donald R. Howell, Ronald L . Allison, Brett Hutchinson, Jerry A. Myers, Dottle L.
Fellure;
·
Robert W. Fellure, Debra L.
O'Del), Harold M. Saunders, Scott W. Allison, Raymond Lieving, Paul S. Koch, Dwayne B.
Beard, Tracy L. Heni'y, Patrick
H. Tackett.
·
·-
II
$ tl'tl'•!])fl' i~
�a.ge · 8 4
s....y Tlmu ·Sentinel
Fe~~rur~
Pomeroy-Midclaport-GIIIipoh. Ohio Paint "raaant. W. Va.
·Philadelphia Flower Show·big;
considered·top event of the year
orchids In tush Jungle settings;
there wUI even be orchids clingFor UDI&ed PresslnleriU!&Ioaal
Ing to trees.
The pre·show hype Is, well,
"We have no idea" how many
"hyperbolic," botanist ~a~en orchids, Stephana said. ·'It would
Miles concedes, but there's no be very safe to say several
getting a way from the fact the thousand."
upcoming Philadelphia Flower
A major F'lorida grower Is
going to try to duplicate an
Show Is THE event of the year.
Everglades hollow, using many
During the first week of March
large palms. A New Jersey
an army Of W<irkers Will lr~nS·
form the· cold concrete floor of grower Is putting on a display of
tree-loving orcbids. The City of
the Philadelphia Civic Center
Frankfurt, West Germany, wlll
Into a living and diverse array of
include more orchids as part of
floral settings, Including lush
tropical jungles and rain forests , Its tropical pla.nt display, and
there will be further orchid
Japanese gardens, and period
exhibits from New Zealand,
g~rdens of all kinds.
·
All that wlll be left to do on Singapore and Hawaii.
But the one patch of formality
March 6 wlll be to open the doors
and Introduce countless thou· In what Stephalio calls this
sands of blooms, plants and trees "orchid extravaganza" will be
to· more than 200,000 garden· from (who else?) the Smithson·
·ian Institution, which Is using Its
starved human beings.
What mal\es the ,Phlladelphla s~ce to duplicate the 1876
show so special is not just!t$slze,
Centennial exhl'>ltion at Hortialthough It's billed (here ~omes cultural Hallin Philadelphia.
The backdrop for the display Is
the hype again) as the largest
indoor flower show on the planet. a photographic blow-up of a
For most visitors It will be what conservatory, to give the feel for
show spokeswoman Lisa Ste· the west end of the original at
phano called "a fresh breath of Fairmount Park (demolished In
.
spring." Actually, more of a 1954) .
blast, and there's no word In the
Botanist Karen Miles, a priliterature about where to get first vate consultant to the Smithson·
aid If the specatcles leave you ian, has been ·working with the
Smithsonian staff since last July
faint.
There wlll be 60 fllll-slzeci. readying f.or the Philadelphia
garden exhibits along with exhibit.
around 1,500entrles from (ndivid·
The centerpiece of the display
uals on such things as wlndow will be orchid displays In five
boxes to dining table settings. huge urns, Including the WarYou will also have to put up with wick Urn, modeled on an original
found during excavations of
lectures and demonstrations.
Fresh · on the heels of lhe Hadrian's villa. It will have 100
Reagan·Gorbachev summit, and cut stems of Cymbidium, one of
the Winter Olympics. the theme the largest ·Orchid genera, with
for the 1988 show is "The World Is stems 2 to 3 feet long, each with a
dozen or so sublime blossoms.
Your Garden."
The Smithsonian has one of the
The nucleus of thIs will be a
profligate diSplay of orchids largest collections of orchids In
from all over . the world. There the world - about 20,000 plants,
will be orchids ..In urns styled and most of them kept In green
after those of Hadrian, the houses In northeast Washington,
Roman Emperor: there will be D.C.
By AbKIAN HIGGINS
Orchids are well·known as
prima donnas that can protest
being moved from one room to
another. Moving them across the
world In late winter Is not a task
for mllquetoasts.
The Smlthsonlans' plants will
. be shipped In a huge tractor,
trailer with special climate con·
trol. A complicating factor Is that
orchids hate ethylene gas. Just
the slightest whiff of It, Miles
said, and they do a rendition of
the death scene from Romeo and
Juliet. Since ethylene Is the
natural byproduct of the Internal
combustion engine, Miles hopes
the show crew In Philadelphia
gets its motorized vehicles out of
the civic. center well in advance
of the orchids' arrivaL
· We wouldn't want to see the
largest display ever of camatose
orchids.
The Philadelphia shllw Is often
compared to the quinte_ssentlal
gardener's event, the Chelsea
Flower Show In London In May .
It's bigger than the Philadelphia
affair - 10 acres Instead of six
acres - but, as Stephana points
out, Its emphasisls more on
Individual flowers and plants, not
the Iavis!) settings In
Philadelphia.
There Is another difference.
· The Chelsea show Is held during
the growing season. For most
Americans, the Philadelphia
show Is a harbinger of things yet
to come In 1988, and an almighty
one at that.
The Phlladelpllla Civic Center
Is at 34th Street and Civic Center
Boulevard in Philadelphia. 'f.he
show runs from March 6 to
March 13, weekdays from 10a.m.
to 9:30p.m. and Sundays 10 a.m.--.
to 6 p.m. Tickets are available at
the door, at $8.51Hor adults and
$4.25 for children under ·12. For .
more Information, call the Pen·
nyslvania Horticultural Society
at 215-625-8250 'or the Phlladle·
phia Convention and Vlstors
Bureau at 215·636·1666.
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS:_ Richard"Steel
will speak at Providence MIS·
stonary S.ptlst Church, Sunday,
7p.m.
LECTA - Lecta Church of
Christ In Christian Union will
have the Gospel Tones, Sunday, 7
p.m., In service.
at 44S.2107.
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Regional Cancer Center suppc)rt
group for ~tients and their
families, meets Sunday, 2 p.m. ,
French 500 room, Holzer Medical
·
Center.
----
· Confidential Services:
Birth Contro_l
V. D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
'
r
Sliding fH sc1le. No -
rllfu!ld~~rvkH
btl-• of !nobility to pay.
PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTIUn OHIO
GALUPOUS:
236 E. Main St., 2nd flo«. 414 Secotld Ave~ 2nd Floor
446·0166
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Mondciy·Friday 8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Wednesday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
POMEROY:
Closed Thunday .
· AlSO: Jackson. 0t ''" nh, Alhlnl, Cltftcothl.
& MrArthur
•
•
ttonal meeting of 4·H dairy cluli,
Monday, 7:30 p.m., home of
Darrel Young.
RUTLAND - The Rutland '
Garden Club will meet at 1:30
p.m. Monday at the borne II(
Margaret Par&QIIS ..Marcla Denl~
son will be co-hostess lor thl!'
meeting. Members are reminded
to take sea shells suitable f~r usf:
M a planter.
~;
---
Ohio woman sues over ruined
chance for kidney transplant
''anemia''
I .
Ohio Sportsmen and the National
Wildlife Federation.
;stmpson, who Is wlldllfeeduca·
t(pn officer with the Department
of Natural Resources, Division of
Wildlife, received the award at
the League of Ohio Sportsmen
Convention held yesterday In
Akron Ill recognition of his many
conservation education accomplishments over the last 28 years.
As a state game protector, he
established the first firearms
safety course at the Ohio FFA.
Camp In Carroll County In 1959
and started Instructing the Wild·
life Division's first fishing clln·
1 ics, watercraft and water safelY
clinics at various conservation
c.ainps In Eastern Ohio In 1960 . .
He was selected as one of the
first two wildlife Instructors In
the Division of Wildlife's new
wildlife program that started In
1970.
.
.
During the past 17 years,
Simpson has conducted hunter
safety courses, fishing clirilcs
. and conservation courses at
cam~. schools and public semin·
ars throughout the State of Ohio.
He helped design and operate the
first wildlife display which go to
fairs, shopping malls and sports
shows
. . to. inform and educate the
BRIAN SIMPSON
public concerning wildlife
·
resources.
Simpson haS' helped keep Obio
citizens Informed about wildlife
comervation through appearances on television and radio shows
and by writing newspaper
·
articles.
He Is the son of the late Helen
and Chester Simpson of Racine.
A graduate of Racine High
S~hool, he Is married to the
former Bonnie Badgley, daugh·
ter . of Mr. and Mrs . Ralph
Badgley, Racine.
Book revieW COVe.rS gene.t_iCS
POMEROY - A Meigs Hlgb
School senior - David J . Beegle
- has distinguished, himself by
becoming the only high school
senior from Meigs Co\lnty to be
honored as a National Merit
Scholarship seml·flnalist.
The test was given last fall and
Beegle by his score brought
distinction not only to himself,
but to his school and Meigs
County. Comjleting again last
November In the National Merit
Tests, he placed in the top
one·balf · percent of the high
school seniors In the United
states and became a Nailonal
Merit Scholarship Finalist.
A member of the National
Honor. Society since his sopho·
more year, Beegle has main·
tained a 4.0 grade average and a
perfectattendancerecordforthe
past flveyears . He has twice won
the Meigs County Academic
Excellence Award, and in 1987 he
was a first·round winner of the
Ohio University American His·
tory Contest.
Beegle's musical Interests
range from classical plano to
trumpet to mallet percussion, He
Is a member of the Meigs High
s
chool concerti pep and march·
!rig bands and ne composed and
~~~~~~edH~rl;~:l fr::~:tc,:~~ tpeh~
DAVID J. BEEGLE
chair In the1987 All Meigs County
Band
In addition to his musical
hobbles, Beegle Is an avid
Quarter Horse racing enthusiast,
iravellng to several states annu·
ally wtth his tamlly to race their
springers.
The son of Jennings and
Barbara Beegle, Route 1, Ra·
cine, Beegle is presently consld·
erlng studying ctvll engineering
at Toledo University or engineer·
ing physics in the Honor.s Turtor·
lal College at Ohio University.
vites all elderly In the county to
take part in scheduled activities . .
Activities and menue for the
week of Feb. 29-March 4 are:
Monday - Physical .Illness
. 11: 15, round and square dance ·
1·3, exercise class 3: 15
Tuesday - Physical fitness
11:15, chorus 1·2; painting class
at 1 p.m. with Lois Pauley as
instrilctor, cost $10 with all
·
. materials furnished
Wednesday - Knitting circle
10-12, physical , fitness 11: 15,
bridge 1·3, bowling 1:30, AARP
program "Good Health With
E11ergy" at 12:45, bingo 1:15,
exercise class 3: 15
Thursday - AARP program
"Good Health with Energy " at
10: 30, Pbyst6ai Fitness 11: 15,
health maintenance program
1:00, the speaker will be Dr.
Mark Walker from Holzer Medl·
Leafy Chasten , I & R Coordlna·
tor, Is available to assist senior
citizens with flllng their 1987
Income tax forms. call the Center
at 992·2161 to schedule an
appointment.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday ..,. Fish sandwfch,
baked beans, cole slaw, coOkie
Tuesday - B"ked steak,
mashed potatoes, spinach, angel
food cake
Wednesday - Soup beans with
ham, . pineapple , with cottage
cheese, apple crisp
Thursday - Chicken, Pota·
toes, broccoli, fruit cocktail. and.
bananas
·
Friday - Beef and noodles,
wax beans, mashed potatoes,
orange sections
Choice of beverage available
with meals.
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ; , __ __
GRANNY'S CRAFTS
128 MULBERRY AVE.
By Ruth Powers
lions of certain polltlclans on the . - - - - - - - - - - - gamlblng commission. This sa·
Librarian, Meigs
tlsfylng novel offers glamour,
County Public Library
drama
and fascinating subject
MORTAL FEAR - By Robin
matter.
Cook.
QUICKSILVER ~ by Clark
Robin Cook's latest thriller, a
Howard.
foray Into the world of molecular
Seething with betrayal, forbid ;·genetics · features all of the
j ingredients that have made his den_love and family secrets, this
• previous books best . sellers. story of·a driven yet divided man
Is set It\ Nevada during the 1920's
~ When middle age men and
and
itO's .. a young state made
: women start drQpplng like Illes
wealthy
by silver mining in the
, only weeks after comprehensive
north
and
legalized' gambling in
· ~ checkups have determined them
the
so11th.
The
two diverse worlds
t to be In good health, Dr. Jason
are
woven
together
through Tony
' Howard, chief of service for a
. ~ Boston HMO, embarks on a Donovan, illegitimate son of a
: dangerous Investigation to deter- weathy , mine owner and foster
: mine the cause. What at first son of a union leader, who leaves
>looks like a frightening epidemic . his Virginia City home and mines
join the early gambling boom
:Is revealed to be a carefully Into Las
Vegas.
~ planned scheme to murder pa·
• llents whose unhfa lthy life style
will eventually make them
~At,t.o fl(lelety.
. · .
· THE PALACE .- By P.aul .
' Erdman.
( ''Erdman's engaging tale
' merges the worlds of casino
EL PASO, . Texas (UPI)
: gambling aild lnvdtment bank·
: lng. A nobody from Philadelphia, "Dynasty" star Tracy Scoggins
• Danny Lehman, whose father was attacked by a man who tore
:was a scrap dealer, leaves Ills off her dress in a hotel elevator in
: small coin shop behind to become El.Paso, Texas, Thursday night.
• the owner of the glitziest, wealth· Scoggins, who Is In El Paso to
; \est casino In Las Vegas. When he co·host the Miss USA contest ·
next Tuesday, let out a scream
-~ attempts to complete his dream
<of another gambleng palace In · when the man grabbed her and a
• Atlantic City, he Is nearly undone bystander came -to her rescue:
l by the g~ of his J)artners, the 'Fhe unidentified man was ar·
· 1queslloqable characters of some ' rested and charged with attemp·
ted sexual assault.
·
, former associates, and the ambl·
.,
..
HASKINS-TANNER
'
: 332 lecond Aw.
0811ipalill, OhiD
,.
"I have heard women say they ·
hesitate al!Out being stralghtfor·
ward toward men; they hesitate
• suggesting marriage or moving
In together," he said. "But
consistently, men say ·on surveys
that they love women to be
straightforward on the subject of
relationships."
March
M 'I
M .
I t .
'
art yn
eter, ns . tuctor
CALL FOR RESERVATIONS
MARCH SPECIAL:
BUNNIES AND OTHER EASTER ITEMS
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If HEARING is your problem- and you feel that
hearing aids are priced · TOO HIGH for your
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HEARING CENTER. We · have many referral
sources for assistance and you may qualify
whether you are regularly employed or not. It is
our hope that NO ONE who can be helped ahould
be deprived of better hearing. Let ua be your ad·
vocate.
CALL TOLL-FREE 1·$00-237-7716.
.,
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OFFER GOOD
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DILES lfiARING CENTER
'
· oau~W~ ... ·
.· ~ ·CoME To oua NEw
Tracy Scoggins
attacked in hotel
vl·ngs
992·2312
PAINT·A·SWEAT SHIRT CLASSES
TOLE PAINTING CLASSES
SYRACUSE -Carl Weese will
be honored Sunday at the Asbury
United Methodist Church. A
. carry·in
dinner will be held at
!2:30p.m. following the church
service. Friends, former stu·
dents and co· workers are invited
to attend.
"
tlfttoiuclttB
.I'!
__,wa¥
.
. , '6{!\~ . '
·:f...h.Jh,J Alt-u'' 1'',..,, .\i11w IH{rft''
We feature aids from:
HEARING TECH
STARnNG AT
$499 FOR A SOFA!
f81A@ilt!ll8""18····~&w18.a@li/l@.l8~1f..@oAJ8.!81AJ8..!81Al8..!8•18....13•
•
i
~
\•
Family Planning
It Makes Sense •••
~~~~28~·~19~8~8~~~~~~~====~==~~~~~~~~~~~~o~mo-~~~um.w~.v~a~.==========~~~~~~~~~~~~
Educator of the Year awarded
Meigs County
Meigs senior citizens
to former Meigs Co~J-ntian 1114n· youth scores
schedule acitivities
RACINE - A Iarmer Meigs
h } h•
Countlan - Brian Simpson,
a5 S( · Q ars lp
POMEROY - The Meigs cal Center on the subject
a<lmore. Ohio - has received
. County Senior Citizens Center,
the Conservation Educator of the
Seffit'
-.
f
m·
alt.St
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, In·
Friday -Quilling, games
Year Award from the League of
.
GALLIPOJ.IS - Artist recep·
•
. lion and plano recital, French
PT. PLEASANT
Grubb Art Colony, Sunday, 2-4 p.m,;
Family Singers will be at Jack· free ~nd open;o the public.
I
TUESDAY
of
son Ave. Baptist Church, SunGALLIPOLIS - Lenten set·'
TliFPERS PLAINS - There
day, 7 p.,m.
vice,
Senior Citizen Ceri~r, Tue~:
will be a youth group meeting, for
.
day,ll:15,
Rev. Luther Tracy. ;
' PORTER - Clark Chapel grades 3·6, at Orange Church on
Church will have singing by Sunday starting at 3:30 p.m. . GALLIPOLIS - Ga!Upolis Ro·
Willard Taylor and the Harbor Leader Is Teresa Davis.
.. tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m. ,'
Lights on Sunday evening.
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon Down Under.
CROWN CITY -Rev. Russell United Brethren Church In the
Galllpoll$
GALLIPOLIS Taylor will speak and the Taylor Texas Community will feature .'l'.lons meet Tuesday, 6: ;JO· p.m.;
and Johnson Families will sing at th_e singing of Wayne and Linda Oscars.
Big Four ChUrch, Sunday, 7:30 Rhodes during the 7:30 p.m.
Sunday service, Everyone
p.m.
TUPPER"S PLAINS - Orange'
welcome.
·
TowiiShip Trustees wlll meet In
CLIPPER MILLS--, Combined
POMEROY - Ter~ and Kim regular session at 7: 30 p.11J.'
church sing, Sunday, 7 p.m.,
Tuesday at the home of Clerk,
Christ United Methodist Church, Herdman wlll be singing In the 7 .Dorothy Calaway.
•
sponsored by the United Metho· p.m. Sunday evening service at·
dlst Interchurch Evangelistic Carleton Church on Klngsbu~
Committee. Singers should sign Road, County Road 18. Public . POMEROY - Tbe Ladles,
Auxlllary of Aerie 2171, Frater·
up between 6: 30·6: 50 p.m. Also welcome.
nal Order of Eagles, wlll meet at
congregational singing led by
7
p.m. Tuesday at the hall. A vice
MONDAY
Dan Evans, -chorister and Bob
GALLIPOLIS - A video se· · president will be elected and
and Vicki Powell, pianists.
mlnar on prayer by Dr. Larry members are to take Items for li
GALLIPOLIS- Reunion plan· Lea, will be presented MOnday grab bag.
nlng committee lneetlng, GAHS through Friday, 7: 30 p.m., at
class of 1979, will be. Sunday, 3 Calvary Christian Center. For Cemetery mee&lag
Those
p.m., at the home of Carolyn mor ·tnfcirmation,.call446-6308 or . CLIPPER 1/!ILLS
Interested
In
the
future
of
Clay
Smeltzer, Jackson · Estates, · 675·7324.
Chapel
Cemetery
shoudl
attend~
apartmentr 102B; for lnforma·
GALLIPOLIS Organiza· meeting T\tesday, 7 p.m., at
lion, call44S.4471 or Mark Haffelt
Christ United Methodist Church.
I
Lunar cycles and other events
this Leap Year will lead to more
marriages - and rnore women
wlll
. be doing the proposing,
This ts Leap Year, and Monday
predicts
Gerrl Leigh, a counselor
Is Leap Day. According to a 5th .
and
teacher
at the adult educacentury Irish custom, single
women have the right to propose tion and recreation oriented
to unmarried men on Feb. 29 and Learning Annex in New York.
Leigh, who has arranged 36
throughout Leap Year.
marriages, teaches a course on
. "If anyone leaped into my life
this year, I certainly would "Attracting the. Mate of Your
pursue it," says Susanne Ches- Dreams by Tapping Into the
son, 52, of Steubenvllle, Ohio, Universe." In Leap Year, Leigh
who drove two hours to Cleveland finds that women love to take the
recently to attend· classes on Initiative In developing relation·
"How to Find and Keep a Mate." .. ships - and menllke lt.
"Men don't mind hones!, upBut Chesson doesn' r feel com·
lortable with the Idea of propos· front women who take the first
step," says Leigh.
Ing·to a man.
Leigh's version of "tapping
"I was raised in the old school
where the girls let the guys do the into the universe" to lind true
love goes so far as emerald
asking," she said.
The motivational flrm Career- charms placed In the moonlight,
Track offered· the course re· a wlsh llst wrltlen during a full
cently In Clel(eland. Career· moon and strong beliefs that one
Track, of Boulder, Colo.; has wlll find the perfect sp<iuse.
Rick Kirschner, who also
offered the course in 40 clUes
throughout the country -wlth teaches a ''How to Find and Keep
attendance ranging between 100 a Mate" seminar. says that
and 400, with more women than because of AIDS and the current
men, and generally people be· . Impersonal society, "a lot of
tween the ages of 25 and 35, people are trying to get into
committed relationships.
attending.
''People are looking to escape
Gregory Shumate of Cleveland
didn't get a proposal through the loneliness and to avoid making
course, but he doesn't expect mistakes in relationships that
Leap Year to produce a windfall don't work as well as down·IO·
of marriage proposals or tender earth topics like 'Never·Fall
Conversation Openers', 'How to
offers for him.
"I met a few nice people." said Ask for Someone's Phone
Shumate, 35, assistant director of . Number' and 'Love in the Work·
economic development for · the place - the Agony and the
city of Cleveland. "There are lots Ecstasy'," says Kirschner, a
of people looking for someone "naturopathic physician" from
speciaL It's comforting to see so Oregon'.
Kirschner also sees changes In ·
many people who feel they are in
the
ritual of proposing marriage.
the same situation that I'm in."
aae
Gommtt:nity calendar
Custom gives .women advantage
for husband~seeking in leap year
By SANDRA LATIMER
United Press International
2a,1
'.l
ericare-Pomeroy
t4 •
f •
tf •
If ••
1
J
LARGEST
' SELECTION
OF
~ ATHUTIC
FOOTWEAR
. FOR THE
EfmiE
FAIULY IN
THE AIEA.
90 DAYS CASH ·AVAILABLE
A Skilled N~rsing and Rehabilitation Center
RUTLAND FUINI
Five Star Award of Jj:IUl!llieace .
Americare-Polrieroy received the
•
highest rating in a nationwidr qualitY
assurance survey of I to facilities by
Care Enterprises.
A loving care environment with an experienced, friendly staff
A decorator designed decor in a spotless modern facility
roi>d
Excellent
service with homestyle meals
Complete rehabilitation department offering physical,
occupational and speech therapies
Fully approved for Medicare & Medicaid
DON'T COMPROMISE: GO EXACTLY ·wHAT YOU WANT AT •••
Shoes
1
~
.
"
•)
742-2211
RUTLAND, OHIO
HOllE OF THE GillE GUYS WHilE YOU GO Gl'~" UYS_
·
'
HeW
,
,
·
We're yo~NeRWALK® Special Order Qallcry store.
I
'I
(
CO.
•••
•
�- ..
··• -
'\.;&."'a.,..,.........
•
~
-~ ._
.L
.. . . .
..
'
-~
,_
" ...
~
•
Rlbruary
Times-Sentinel
Lenten
Custom gives
women advantage
_... _
---
tant thing of all •· compassion. If I
see some, no matter what the color,
~-·
size or shape, I'm going to stock up
many examplrs. One ps
heavily, reprdless of the price. I ·
have run out of it so many times back to Leadville johnny Brown
and I always feel ashamed when it and his wife, the Unsinkable Molly.
happens.
One day, by mistake, johnny
I don't know why it has taken me burned a small fortune ·in ~
so long to get around to shopping money. A short time later he
for these items. They ·don't cost discovered one of the richest irvn
nearly as much as some of the ore mines in Colorado hiStory. He
frivolous things I've bought on. called it "The luck ohhe Irish."
impulse and I'm sure to get a lot
His wife, who survived the Sink·
more satisfaction from them.
ing of the Titanic (approximately
Second bookmobile in GaUia County
Yes, I am going shopping today 1,500 drowned in that disaster),
and I can leave my credit cards and attributed her good fortune to
checkbook at home. The things -I "Irish Iuck."
am looking for have no price tags.
The Irish are a Ramboyant and
Dear Ann Landers: A reader irrepressible people who enjoy celewrote to you recently, wanting to . bratin• life. lbey have _added much
GALLIPOLIS - Library ser· · ·· hours to the service schedule will ·
know more about "The Fighting
.
..,
vice
to .rural resld en ts of Ga111a allow the stafl to· add ad_dltlon,. ill
to American culture. Bless them. .
Irish" and "the luck of the Irish." I REV. KEVIN O' NEILL SHANLEY, County will expand In March stops 'a nd expand service time at
have taught Jrish·American history
With the addition Of more lime I
the most Used Curre· nt stops. The ·
for several years and would like to . CARMELITE SPIRITUAL CEN· the service schedu Je • secondo, additional bookmobile will pro·
enlighten that person and anyone TER. DARIEN. ILL
larger bookmobile and 8 ddl
vide about twice the selection of
•
·
' ced Be
DEAR FRIEND: Thanks "'or a tlonal st ff
else who is interested.
.
11
materials available.
to rural
'rse
,
·
n
Irish
hist'
ory.
One
.
a
'
announ
Y
Clarkson of the Bossard Memor.' li!Jrary users as well as provide a
The expression "Fighting Irish" Short COu
more comfortable, Jess crowded,
goes far back in history to when the reader wrote, "When someone says · ial Library.
The demand for bookmobile
setting for library service.
Irish honored warriors in thei.- ' Irish' I think of politemen, politics,
Anyo~te Interested In receiving
rulture. The expression came to the poetry and the president." Not bad. service has Increased over 150%
What
orr
the
signs
of
alcoholism?
slrice
1982.
When
Bossard
Ll·
homebound
service may ask for.
United States due to the large
How
run
you
tell
if
someone
you
lore
·
brary
hegan
a
full
time
communa
form
at
the
llbrary or on the
number of Irish soldiers who
bookmobile.
fought with George Washongton. is an alcoholic? "Alcoholism: How ro lty outreach service, · including
In order to expand the stops,
(The estimates range from a third to Recognize It, How to Deal With It, service to the homebound.
The addition of about llfteen
some stops have changed times.
a half of his regular troops.) It is How ro Conquer Jr" will give you the
·answers.
To
receive
a
copy,
send
$2.50
not surprising that Notre Dame
University adopted the name "The and a No. 10, se/f-Mdressed, suimped
Fighting Irish" for their football . envelope (39 cents postage) to Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chirago,
ream ..
"The lurk of the Irish" came /11. 6061 [.()561.
MARK C. BELL
LURELLA M. DEVITT
Marine Pfc. Lurella M, Devitt,
Air Force Senior Airman Mark whose husband, Monti, Is the son
C. Bell, son of Loran P . Bell oi or Henry and Reva Cutlip of
Point Pleasant, W.Va .. has been Mason, WV, has. been promoted
awarded the Good Co~duct Me- to her present rank while serving
dal at Tyndall Air Force Base, with 4th Force Service Support
Fla.
Group, Charleston, SC.
The award was pres·e nted for
A 1972 graduate of R.B. St.a ll
exemplary conduct while in the lllgh School, Charleston,'SC, she
active ·Service of the United
join~ the Marine Corps Re·
States.
serves in June 1987.
Bell is a jet engine mechanic
with the 325th Component Repair
Squadron.
He Is 1983 graduate of Liberty
University, Lynchburg. Va.
LARRY G. ROMINE
Marine
Lance Cpl. Larry G.
KE~A.SCOTT
Romine. son of Kenneth H.
Marine Lance Cpl. Keith A.
Romine and Avery . S. Searls,'
Scott ~ son or. Charles F. and
lioth of Rutland, recently de,
· Edwina Scott of 441 Beech St.,
parted on a six-month deploy·
Middleport, has ooen promoted
to his present rank while serving ment tot he Western Pacific with
with 2nd ·Marine Division, Camp 2nd Battalion, 2nd Marines,
Campk Lejeune, NC. ·
·
Lejeune, NC.
A
1984
graduate
of
Meigs
High
A 1983 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, he joined the School, Pomeroy. he joined the
Marine Corps' in September 1984.
Marine Corps In January 1985.
New service· offered ·
.
•
servtce set
Ann
Landers
.
--In the service--
POMEROY- Schedule for the ·
March Lenten worship services ,
by the Meigs County Mlnlslerilll.,
Association has been announced•. ·
. All of the services are held 011; ,
Thursday evenJngs, 7: ~ p.m.
with sermons on the theme, "T~:
Love Road to -Calvary" usin'g ·
scripture from lsi Cor. 13.
, ••
Thursday night's service will,•
be held at Grace Eptscop41; ..
Church and the sermon topic wilt
be " Love Is Not Arrogant
Rude." On March 10 the service .
will be at Sacred heatt Catholic"·
Church. topic, "Love Does No ~c.
Insist on Its Own Way"; the•.
March 17 service at · Trinity;
Congregational Church on·"Loxe,
Is Not Irritable or Resentful" •
and on March 2~. at Pomeroy ..
United Methodist Church, " Love
Does Not Rejoice at Wrong but
Rejoices In the Right. "
or,
Meigs plans ..
bookmobile
''
' "·
.'
'"'
'
POMEROY - Bookmobile··
Schedule for week of Feb. 29 ·
March 4.
.
'··
Bookmobile Service Is· pro·.
vided In Meigs County by the'
Meigs • County Public Llbracy .
under contract · with the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries (OVAL) .·
Monday - Chesler (Fire Sta;
_tion),2: 15·2:45p.m.; ,
Keno, 3': Q0-3: 30 p.m.; Bur,_
ling ham (Mobile Home · Park$. :
4: 30·5: 15 p.m.; Harrisonville
(Church), 6:15·7: 00 p.m.; New
LlgJa Roach (1 mi. South of Fort
Meigs), 7:15-7:45 p.m .
l>,
Wednesday - Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 5: 00·5:30 p.m.;
Tupper's Plains (Lodwick's), .
6: 35-7: 35 p.m.
,
The following stops have ~n
ellmlnated In 1988: Meigs ,
County, Carpenter.
- .'
one-person · CPR ., and the correct Heimlich
procedure to prevent asphyxiation by choking.
Sue Perine here teaches Sandra Whaley, a
·st~dent, in the CPR procedure. Others from St.
Joseph's instructing In the program were
Marcel.l a Will, De hi Wigal Lucinda Wiseman, and
Lioda Hinkley: (Times-Sentinel photo)
Bookmobile routes scheduled
GALLIPOLiS - Bookmobile
Sc hepule for the week of Feb.
29·Ma rch 5, 198ll.
Monday: Lewis Drive 9:4510: 15; Su n Va lley N~rsery 10: 2510:55: Pinecrest 11 : 00·11: 15; 35
West Apts. 11 :20-11:35; Scenic
Hills 11 : 40-12: 10: C&S Bank
12:15-12:30.
l si Truck: Kerr 4: 15·4: 45;
.Bidwell Old School 4: 55·5: 30;
Bidwell (Nolan's ) 5:"35-6:00; Bidwell (Phi llip's ) 6: 05-6:32: Bid·
well (He n ry ' s) 6:35 -6:5 5;
Hatcher's 7: 05-7: 20; Deer Creek
(Ful k's) 7:30-7: 40; Deer Creek
Church 7:45-8: 15.
2nd Truck: Cochra n's (Adamsvill e Rd .) 4:30-5: 00; Rio Gra nde
Village 5: 15·6: 30; Rio Grande
Estates 6: 45-8: 00
Tuesday: K&K Trailer Park
4: 15·4: 45; Kanauga 5th Ave.
4:50-5: 20; Georges Creek 5:· 406: 00; Georges Creek 6: 00·6: 20;
Addison 6: 30-6: 45; Cheshire 7: 008:00.
Wednesday: No Route Malnte·
na nce Day.
Week's top video sales
LOS ANGELES iU Pil -The
top 20 videocassette sa les. based
on Billboard's s urvey of sales :
1. Lady an d the Tramp- Walt
Disney Ho me Vid eo
2. Jane Fond a' s Low Impac t
Workout - Lorim a r Home Video
3. Ca ll aner'lcs - MCA Home
Video
. 4. An Am e rican Ta il - MCA
Home Video ·
5. Jane Fonda's New Workout
- Lorlmar Home Video
6. Star Tr ek IV: The Voyage
Home- Para mount Home Video
7. Dirty Dancing - Vestron
' VIdeo
8. Robocop - Orion Home
VIdeo
9. The Sound of Music
CBS-Fox Video
10._Platoon - HBO Video
ll . Pink Floyd-The Wall -
MGM-UA Home Video
12. Kathy Smith' s Sta rting
Workout - Fox Horne Video
13. The Godfa ther - Para·
mou nt Home VIdeo
· 14. Crocodile Dl!ndee - Pa ra mou nt Home VIdeo
15. Sleeping Beauty - Wa lt
Dis ney Home VIdeo
16. Scarfa ce - MCA Home
Video
17. He re's Mickey! - Wa lt
Disney Home Video ·
18. Playboy 198ll Playmate
Video Calendar Lorimar
Home VIdeo
19. Ma ry Poppins - Walt
Dis ney Home Video
20. Grateful Dead·So Far - 6
West l:lome Video
WESLEY W. WORUY
Marine Sgt. WesleyW. Worley,
son or Clarence and Rebecca
Worley of Rayburn Road, Point
Pleasant, WV, has been promoted to his present rank while
serving at Marine Corps Air
Station, aeaufort, SC.
lj:e joined :tile Marine Corps in
October 1982.
By MELISSA SONES
UPI Fashion Editor ·
NEW YORK · (UPI) - Deslgriers don't become stars in
menswear. the way they do in
womenswear. Nevertheless ,
three men's clothing designers ·
liave, In remarkably short peri·
ods of time, gained a cert;lin
relative stardom.
The three are Blll Robinson ,
Joseph Abboud and Cecilia Metheny, and they wer.e.amonglhP
nearly 100 menswear designers
and manufacturers represented
a t the DesignHs' Collective, a
first-rate trade show_of upscale
'men's clothing held twice a year
n New York.
Like overnight successes In
REEBOK
f
•: :SYDNEY, Australia (UP!)
.
I· I ···••· II· 1--J·
MEN'S II-lOP
Wllilo/114
Wlolto/thllr<MI
.
I
..:.
/ 'Waltzing Matilda" Is one of the
);atchlest tunes to ever come out
bf Australia, but If you don't .
s peak "Australian" you probably don 't know what It means.
; Written by A.B. "Banjo" Pai·
lerson and set to .an old l!cottlsh
~archliig tune in 1895, hE\fe is a
'rtnslatlon: ·
,,
~ •
Waltzing Matl.lda
, "Once a jolly swagman (a hobo
~ho carries his swag. i.e. gear '
and bedroll tied to the end or a
stick) ,
, . : •camped by a billabong (aboriginal word for a flood pool of a
river).
.
Z "Under the shade of a .collibah
ree (type of e ucalyptus tree) ;'
• "And he sang, as he watched,
! "And wailed while his billy (a
tin can used for making tea)
Lolled:
~ •'"Who'll
c·o me . a -waltzing
••
, ·•
llG. •l'.tl
llow $~2•1:
.
The Shoe Cafe·
DOWII10WII GAWPOUS
.
446-4222
.• '
OHIO
·''The incomparable''
VIENNA CHOffi BOYS
Memorial Auditorium
Tuesday, March _1, 1988 8:00 p.m.
When A Member Of Your
Family
Is. Ill ....
.
''AFTER ..OURS"
W•teh Fer
:~
II
Chorus again
" t;p came the squatter (Owner
of a sheep ranc)J)
1
"Mounted on his
thoroughbred.
"Up came the troopers (state
pollee)
.. One, two, three.
"'Who's that jolly jumbuck
you've got In your tucker·~g?
'" You'll come a - wal~ng Matilda with me.'" (Police tell the
swagman he's going to jail.)
1..
Chorus'again
" Up Jumped the swagman
"And · sprang Into the
billabong~.
"'You'll never catch me alive,'
said 'he.
'·
"And his ghost may be heard
"As you pass by the billabong
(presumption is he drowned)
"You'll come &·waltzing Ma·
tllda with me." •
Final Chorus
design at Ralph Lauren.
All three started their compan·
les. within the past two years.
This Is only Metheny's fourth
collection, . although she has
already been nominated for a
Cully Sack Awa~. the menswear
industry's "Oscar, " and her
retail accounts have tripled from
12 to 35. Robinson said his have
soared from 60 In 1986 to close to
200 now and he won a Cully Sark
last year.
,
And ali three started small
and expanded quickly. Me·
theny, for Instance, started with
loungewear, and has gr,own
feverishly to what is two years
later a complet!! but relatively ;
small collection of sportswear;
suits, eveningwear and coats.
The key challenge, acc:Ordlns
to these rising stars, Is to '
malnl!lin quality, please retailers and have the appropriate
backing to gro)l' but not to grow
too quickly.
Robinson, A\lboud and Me·
theny now show complete coliec·
lions of men's clothes - from
sport jackets and sweaters to
tailored suits that sell for $500 or
more. All basically champion
what Ab-boud calls his
"Milanese-Prepple" silhouette,
which Is a suit or jacket that falls
ln·between the boxy Brooks.
Brothers American shape and
the fitted wedge for which.
Italians are known .
.
The three are. also showing
suits and sport coats that are
Increasingly lightweight, ''soft,"
and g~ared to year-round wear.
"Everyone seems to want
lightweight fabrics," said Bill
Robinson, who, starting last
spring. Is showing rayon suits
and shirts.
CORRECTION
IN THIS WEEK'S N.EWPAPER INSERT
FISH 'N BATTER SHOULD HAVE READ:
SEA $TAR
.
Fish 'n Batter · SLa.
$599
·
Their very own life II)SUr·
ance plan will mean a lot
lo them later on. And it
will shoW how much you
care. It's economical to
start life . insurance "fQt
child ren.
NEIL MORRISON
P.O. Box 3461
Rio Grande, OH. 46674
Phono : (614) 245· 9319
~
Johnson's Supermarkets
MOO£AN W(X)OM[N
Of AMERICA
GALLIPOLIS & PT. PLEASANT
A FRATLANAlliFl IN~AN(l 'ioOCIU~
HOME OffiCliKXK llolANO. IlliNOIS
SIN([
1881
I
\I
· L--~...:...-__;
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-J_.,
't ocated At
HOLZER £LUI£
..'.'•
"
..~
~
c
-• .
RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
'
.
On R t. SIS In Gallipolis
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ·, - - #
'
'"
'
.
:>
••.:
"-
'
~
•,
OF THE
. NEW RACINE
.
DICAL·DINTAL BUILDING
, 5TH AND PIAIL STIIn, UCINI
.'
..
Y, MARCH 5, 1981
2:10
~- - ~M·
'• •
'
•,
:
~----------------~_.~
-
OPEN HOUSE
.,
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 15:00 PM TO 9:00PM :
WEEKEND • HOLIDAYS 1:00PM TO Q:OO PM ; _
. PHONE 446-15887
;"' ·
IACINE, 01110
Cordially Invite You To Attend An
~
~
"".
".
_;
, ...... IIWUIOI will be IMir1 more Important now that contributions may not be fully
deductible. Unless your current IRA offers you the-following benefits, you may have to
, be conten1 wlih just being a "saver":
li HICIJHIR RITURNS
• PUXIIILITY TO FINI-TUNE AI NEEDS CHANGE
• A81LITY TO DIOMIFY
'
• PRGIIIIIONAL INVISTMIINT ADVICE
• aiNQLI, CONaOLIDATID aTATEIIENT FOR EASY IRS
RDORnNG
If your current IRA doesn' provide these benefits. let The Ohio Company take the time
. to o11er you prolesslonal guidance. By consolidating your current IRA accounts irito
one, convenient plan you can develop a well-balanced investment portfolio and
become more than just an IRA "saver."
POMEIOY, OHIO
.
AND
.."
Main FacUlty
Since all IRA account$ still provide tax-free accumulatioil, the diffelence 811)0ng IRA's
can be the difference between being a "saver" or an "investor: That difference is
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
'
~
URGENT
·CARE
CENTER
f. Set - $4.95
o·.,
UPHOLSTERY
G'••d Oplfllng S1fs
. ·Life
Insurance
for children:
a sign of
responsible
caring
PI loiiiiliWICe.
t
CLIIVIC
'
lt. 160 1 . .
N. of Hob• Hospital
CROWN CITY
I
' .
Zone.l-$9.00
Zone Z-$7.00
Tickets - ·Phone (814) 593-1780/1780
TUESDAY IS
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
Cut - S4.95
Perm S11.95
Stop By or Call 446-6 J44
..
Lynn E. Angell
Your Famlly's One Stop Hair Salqn
· Shampoo
term -"big barney."
way) , send-up (spoof) stuff-up
Australians are " true blue." a
/botched) and . beat-up (some·
and starve the flamin' lizards " blue" · Is your friend, and a thing blown out' of proportion) .
.' " bluey" is also the swag you
It might sound unkind , but
That is, he .t rled to call (coo-ee) hump around In the outback. or Ozzles (slang for Australians)
his friend but had a look (Captain bush . .
call Americans Septic Tanks · Cook - derived from Cockney
You might be surprised to rhyming wjth Yanks - often
rhymtn~r slang) and couldn't find
know that Australia's unofficial shortened to just "Septlcs." But
a telephone (Eau de Cologne, national anthem, " Waltzing Ma- . most Australians like Americans
also rhyming slans) and had to tilda," has nothing to do with a and no malice Is Intended .
take It ali on the chin (cop It man dancing with .a woman
If you want to fight (Ire with
sweet). ·
·
named Matilda.
fire, lrl( giving t he Ozzies their
The 1890s Banjo Patierson own natlqnal salute. It's a vigor·
. He said there would be aggravation In the afternoon ( aggro In song refers to an unfortunate ous brushing action In front of
the arvo) whep their girlfriends jolly swagman, something like a
your face-a'S if to shoo away flies.
(shellas) found out. "Stone the hobo, walking along the road
the country's unofficial symbol. ·
bloody crows" and "starve the (waltzing ) with his bedroll, per- But don' t be surprised if the flies
flaming lizards" are expletives haps tied to the end of a stick salute bac k.
e xpressing his further (Matilda) .
unhappiness.
Australians love to shorten
Some Aussle words open a real words for their slang. and espe·
can of worms, such as 'blue,'" ' cially like adding endirigs with
A red· hatred male or female is ''o's'' or ''ies."
automatically nicknamed
In the " o's" there are yobbos
" Blue." If tlie American puppet (uncouth loudmouths ), garbos
Howdy Doody had been Austral· (garbage ' collectors), drongos
· Jan, he would be ~ailed " Blqey (Idiots ) and mllkos (milkmen) .
10% OFF A VARIETY OF
Doody " or "Little~ Orphan Postles are mail deliverers,
FABRICS; I 0% OFF LABOR.
Bluey ."
greenies conservationists, moz10 YEARS EXPERIENCE
A type· of sheep or cattle dogs zles mosquitos and brekkle
Located Corner Gallla
are called blue. Whe.n you have a breakfast.
" blue." 'y ou're having an arguThere Is a whole vOcabulary of
& Cliarlts In Crown City
ment. A "big blue" is a real "ups" ..:... nosh-up (for a feast) ,
PH. 256-1610 or 256-6091
"dust-up" unless you peeler the slap-up (something·done in a big
PrlcH Effective Fob. 221hru Mar. 22
Tax
Tip$
r~--~~~~~~~~----~To~u~c~h~st~o~ne~H~o~me~-V~I~~~~~ij.t;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~..f.
I
Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-S-7
aggrp this arto when the she lias
find out. Stone tlie bloody crows
(the
' !WJlnderlng)
aild swagbag)Matilda
With me?
'" stick r"A;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
i ~· ,
Chorus
t :·rwaJtzing Matilda. Waltzing
Most taxpayers can still take an
Matilda,
• ' 'Who'll come a·waltzlng MaIRA. deduction ... in some
instances
•
p!\la with me?
even if they be~ong to a qualif;ied
·~~ And he sang. as he watcheq,
:•!'And walled while his billy
employer pens10n plan.
'
.
6olled
; :~who'll come a·wa,ltzlng Ma- .
For complete, professional individual and business
tQ•a with me?
,
·
tax preparation assistance call
;•7Down ·came a jumbuck
tJ~Jmb)
.·
• •I'To drink at that billabong,
: : "t;p jumped the swagman and
grabbed him with glee.
. • "And he sang ;~s he shoved
Certified Public Accountant
: "That jumbuck in his tucker· ·
736 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
~g (food bag)
I.
•' "You'll come a·waltzlng Ma·
((?14) 446·8677
fllda with me."
Open 9-5 weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by Appointment
week'S tOp
video rentals
FAMILY
HAIR CARE .CENTER
womenswear, Robinson, Abboud
and Metheny have reputations .
rand award nominations) build·
lng at speeds far greater than the
tiny scopes of their businesses under 30 employees_ each and
sales· volumes of $6 million or
less. '
Metheny, 39, Is a former film
maker who said she suffered
from burnout after years or
on-location work and went after
fashion design Instead. Robin·
son, 39, came from Yves Saint
Laurent where he designed the
menswear collection for the U.S.
market and earlier, he worked as
menswear design director for
Calvin Klein. Abboutj. 37, was
assoc'late director of menswear
1 •
· Ma 'Ida "
!rrtv7
w aitzzng
. . tz · ...
I
Thursday:
1st Truck: Mudsock 3: 15·4: 00;
Patriot Post Office 4: 15·5: 15;
Cora 5:30:6: 00; Centerpoint 6: 30·
7:30
LOS ANGELES IUPI) - The
2nd Truck: Cadmus 4: J0.5: 00; top 20 videocassette· rentals,
Ga llia 5: 15-6: 15; Centerville based on Billboard's survey of
rentals:
6: 45-8: 00.
Friday:
1. Platoon - HBO VIdeo
1st Truck: Fulks 1: 15-1: 35;
2. Dirty Dancing - Vestron
.
Goodys 1:45-2: 00; Myers 2: 20- · VIdeo
3. Robocop - Orion Home
2: 35; Church's Store 2: 45·3: 15;
Mercerville Church 3: 20-4: 00; Video
Swain's Store 4: 15-4: 45; HOME4. Predator - CBS· Fox VIdeo
5. La Bamba -RCAColumbia
BOUND SERVICES 5: ()().6: 00;
Ohio Townhouse 6: 30:7: 15; Pictures Home VIdeo
Teen's Run 7: 45·8: 15
6. No Way Out- HBO VIdeo
2rid Tr.uck: Eureka 4: ()().4: 30;
7. Dragnet- MCA Home VIdeo
Crown City 5: 00-6: 00; Kenny's
8. Lethal Weapon - Warner
Carryout 6: 30-7: 00.
·Home VIdeo
·
Saturday: Crousebeck 9:309. Roxanne - RCA·Columbla
10: 00; Gallia Metro Estates Pictures Home VIdeo
Ol!lce 10: 15·10: 40; Gallla Metro
10. The Secret of My SuccessEstates Hill 10: 45·11: 15; Allee
MCA Home Video
1:00·1: 30; Vihton 1:45-2: 15; Mor11. Spaceballs - MGMUA ,
gan Center Road 2:20-2: 50; Mor·
Home VIdeo
gan O:?nter Church 3: ()().4: 00.
12. Outrageous Fortune
SYDNEY, Australia (UP!) onment forced the early convicts
"Crlkey, cobber, It's crook. Some ·and free settlers who tollowed
crlm nicked me clobber and our
Into a brotherhood of survival
co'zzles, chook arid champers . which continues today, known as
While I was having a cuppa under
mateshlp.
•·
tl\e coathanger."
Broad accents and laconic, dry
Some secret code? Perhaps a · and . witty speech developed,
language of spies?
stamping Australian English as
No, it's . Austra lian slang. a a language nearly unto Itself and
up.lque lexicon which has deve- spawning Its own dictionary.
lojled thousands of miles from Austr~llan slang. combined with '
til~ -rest of the Engllsh·speaking
a rapid-fire delivery. further
world since the landing of the · boggles outsiders' minds.
first fleet of convict ships from
To assist, let's translate that
Britain 200 years ago.
paragraph above:
More than 2 million foreign · · "Crikey , cobber, It's crook" is
visitors are expe~ted on Austra· someone telling a friend somell'a's shores for the nation's thins bad has happened.
Bicentennial this year. Many . The "crlm" (criminal) has
might think they have landed on stolen his clothes, swimming
a distant planet when they visit costumes (clobber and cozzies)
ari AUssle pub and discover they and also his chicken and chamcan't understand anything.
pagne (chook and champers)
1\ustrallaD$, ol course, speak while he was having a cup ·or tea
English, leaning more heavily on (cuppa) \Ioder the Sydney Har·
the . British variety than the bor bridge, nicknamed the
American Idiom. There Is a large i•coathanger.''
borrowing of colorful Cockney
His Irate recital, nasal twang
phrases from London's East accentuated by outrage, might
End·, birthplace · of many of the continue:
nation '• original convicts.
"Tried to'give you.a coo-l!e, but
Isolation from their British I had a Captain Cook and there .
homeland in a harsh new envlr· was no Eau de Cologne so had to
cop It sweet. Reckon they'll be
.Three menswear designers on the rise
a
FIRST AID INSTRUCTION - Five nurses
from St. Joseph's Hospital were at Meigs High
School Friday to Instruction Joy Bentley's health
classes on the techniques of CPR and the Heimlich
maneuver. Using seve.r al demonstration dummies, adult and infant, the team taught basic
Pomeroy7 Middaport-Gallipolia. Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Baffling Australian - lan~ge unravels in explanation
....·'·
•
....,. lANIJBMO
• Dear Ann Landers: I know a Jot
of people don't like it when you
run a letter they have seen before,
but certain things are worth repeat·
ina. and besides. not everyone sees
every column every day. I am
enclosing somi!!hing you publish~
in 1983 and I think you should run
it every year. How !lbout it? - A
FAITIIFULFAN
. DEAR FAITHFUL: I wqn 't
promise to run it every year, but ·
here it is for 1988.
Delle Ann Landers: I am nat
broke from overspending at Christ·
mas: But I need to go shopping
apilnoon beamse· I_am complete! y
out of self-respect. · I've said a few
things I wish I could take back, and
I am not feeling very good about
_
.
myself.
1· also want to exchange a caf'\on
of self-righteousness for an equal
amount of humility. I hear it is less
expensive and it wears better. And
while rm at it, I'm going to check
on tolerance and see if there is any
available in my size.
I must rememiJ!'r to try to match
my patience with the little I have
left. My neighbor is loaded with it,
and it looks awfully good on her. I
was told the same department has a
repair shop for mending integrity.
Mine has become fra yed around the
edges' from too many short-cuts and ·
too -much compromising. If I don 't'
get it refurbished soon, there won 't
be any left.
I almost forgot the most impor·
.
28.1988
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.... a ........., Cllll ;...... nN,..t afllce ar ,cell our toll-frN number 1..-oo·25S.1821 :
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1-
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-'-----~'------'.....,- 1 ii:i:jt:;;
:-··----lliiCI---1 .•
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GolllpOIII
44<4 Second Avenue
Ro. Box 328
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
t•t41 -:1128
�'
•
Pomeroy-Midclepon~O.polia, Ohio-Point Pln•nt. W.Va.
Beat of the bend ..
Who's been lost?
By BOB HOEFLICH
At one tlme there were 208
members of the 1973 graduating
clau of Meigs
High School.
' However ,
some of them
are lost and
that's bad because some the
class members
who stayed In the i31g Bend area
are planning the 15th class
reunion this summer.
The reunion will be staged In
the new Middleport American
Legion building and Is for class
members, ttie!r spouses and
guests. There Is no association
between this class reunion and
the reunions of the Meigs Alumni
Assoctatl()n.
The event Is set for .July 3 and
local committee members, Edle
King and Linda Faulk, are
planning to prepare a hook of
Information on all members of
the class and they will be listed
whether or not they are able to
attend the reunion.
However , with some of the
class members "lost". the local
committee needs your help so
that each member can be con·
tacted and that the book will have
Information· on all class
members.
If you, have the address of any
of the lost members, please call
Edle at 992·3821 or Linda at
992'2475.
And here are the problem
names: Diana Aleshire, Linda
~Atkinson, .Roger Atkinson. Deb'ble Barnhart, Mike Bolin, Linda
Brogan, Jon Bunce, Randy
Chafin, Martin Chasteen, Wanda
Cardillo, Victor Counts, Paul
Cunningham, Gene Davis, Robin
Duckworth, Donald Ellis, Patty .
Glaze, Terry George, Eddie
hayes, Melissa Hooper, Monda
Johnson, John Kauff, Kathy
King, Debbie , Jewett, Cheryl
Long. Charles McMillin, Toney
Manley , Nadine McMurra y,
Rick Mendenhall ; Donna Ml·
chael, Charles McLain , Martha
Miller, Phil Miller , Davi d Mit·
chell, John Nelson, Beulah
Priddy. Dean Pullins. Sharon
Reeves , Chris Robinson, Ava
Sayre, Connie Shultz, Kenneth
See. John Slavin, Connie Smith,
Paul Stewart. Mark Still. Jane
thomas , Debbie Triplett , Charles
Varian and Gary Warner.. '
And a couple more residents
who can enjoy the luxury of being
young because.they only mark a
birthday every four years due to
Leap Year.
They are Margaret Bl\leltnar,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, and Carol
Hupp, Smith Ridge , Long
Bottom.
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If watching equestrian performance Is your bag, you might
want to attend the annual spring
show and graduate at Meredith
Manor International Equestrian
Ce.ntre at the Waverly, W.Va. ,
campus Friday.
··
Students will compete In three
divisions, dressage, jumping and
western and highlighting the
activities will be rides to music
by members of the graduating
class.
Spectators are cordially In·
vited with ctivltles to
get
underway at 9 a.m. Friday. For
more information you can call
the Manor ai 304·679·3128.
. Anyone out therewant tohelp'a
Girl Scout?
,·
Leaders are planning on taking
the 10 members the Southern
Cadette Girl Scout Troop to the
SHver Creek Ski Resort on March
5and 6. However, funds are justa
bit short for the trip. If you want
to help Aprll Harmon, 43421
Dutchtown Road, Racine, will be
more than happy to accept your
contribution.
These days if your pet dies you
ca n have It freeze· dried ..and It's
with you forever. I look for the
same process to""'be""Us'etl on
peoplefor
any
dayfamily
now. Sure
will
make
great
reunions.
GALLIPOLIS- The Job Bank,
has many qualified applicants, 50
years of age or older, to fill your
job requirements.
As our society changes to
Include an increasing number o!
older people, the focus will be on
mature Americans . This pres·
ents us with a challenge and a
real opportunity to utilize the
talents and wisdom and expe·
rlence of the older worker.
Call 446·7000 or 446·8165 and
discuss your employment problems with the Job Counselors at
the Senior Citizens Center. '
-1
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calling area business and Individuals to take:
orders for the flowers, which wiD be deUvered to·
GaJUpoUs around March 18. This Is one of ,nany~
projects the Junior .Woman's Club takes on·
annually In performing community service to:
Gallla Counly-.(Times·Senllnel photo)
::
COMMUNITY SERVICE - Members of the
GaWpoiiii Junior Woman's Club are helping with
the sales ol daHodlls for the GaWa Unit of the
American Cancer Society. From left are Darla
Merola, Katrlnk!l Hart, Pam Wiseman and Diane
· Smith. They, and other n\embel'!i ol the club are
To place orders. contact Diane
Smith.at 44.6·5330, Katrlnka Hart
at 446·2050, or the Gallla County
Unit ACS office, 446·7479.
VETERANS
r:.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;------~'~
WHY WAIT
FOR YOUR
H&R BLOCit
Gallipolis
9·5 Sat.
9-5 Sat. .
,....
. ·.:.'
·... :.
·.,.
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Pomeroy, Ohio
and
The Racine Horrie National Bank
··
Racine, Ohio
Cordially Invite You to Atte~d an
CLINIC
HOURS
of the
New Ra~ine Medicai·Denta/. ~uilding
'·
DR. MARGIE LAWSON
D.D.S.
5th and Pearl Street, Rae~ne
Saturday, March), 1988
'2:00p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
HOURS: MON., TUES & WED.
8:30·5, 1HUI. 8:30-8:00
'
DR. DOUGUS HUNTER
ltD.
'
..
HOUISI MOl., liES.
'IIIUIS. AND fll. 9·5
f
[Jf~
Petro aid 8-0 1t111or l'llrd
fltdl to j\lchard SUttiCICrr•lll tilt pai.Dt,
Ud toolitilepoueaaton
· limply l'tiBcllecJ for tbe atara ~
--tiJnHUt.
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two minutes later gave Iowa an
84·83 lead.
.
.
'
and six In the fourth .
Gallipolis, behind back·tO· .
back three· point goals by Kim·
hie, Jed 16-6afteronepericid. The
}(}-point ·margin was the widest
by either team all ·night.
Bartrum, BIBSell Shine
, Behind the ou,t standlng play of
~sseII 11nd Bartrum, the Ma·
~;auderscaritetollfelnthesecond
period; . outscoring GARS 17·8.
Alter taking a 23·20 lead with 1: 34
left in the half, Meigs' biggest
spread of the game, big David
Todd !tit back·to·back Iayups to
give GARS . a 24·23 halftime
advantage.
The see-saw battle continued
throughout the third stanza.
Chris Smith's goal wltlt four
seconds left put MHS ahead 41.39
going Into the final period.
Gallia's Kimble . opened the
fourth with a three-point bomb
(7: 33). Thomas. · back In the
lineup after missing theflnal3: 41
of the firs t period and all , the
second with three personals, hit a
free throw (6:55) .tomakelt43·41.
Bissell made an unbelievable
layup (6:05) and It was 43-all.
Billy Evans , held scoreless from
Continued' on C·2
Wildcats edge ·Green
•
m OT, win sectional
·e ....
AP I
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Deat1l CIIDJc.
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Though the Wildcats never let
By GEOFF OSBORNE
the
game get ti!IO far away from
Tlmu-8enllnel staff
CHESAPEAKE - . hannan them (the Bobcats greatest lead . .
Trace's Wildcats sent the game was a 47·37 margin at the start of .
Into overtime and witnessed the fourth quarter), the first half
critical buckets from seniors saw them caken out of their
Grady Johnson and Mark Jen· up·tempo attack by · the ·
klns In the game's fin.al three halfcourt-orlented and taller
minutes to de'leat' Frankll.n Fur· : Bobcats. flefore the fourth quar·
nace Green 70-68 FrldaY nlg!lt ter the Galllans found them·
and win _tile Chesa>eake sec· selves making mistakes ai times
when they would tzy rurinlng the
Ilona! title.
Johnson, called from the bench ball downcourt and putting It In
to replace senior forward. Scott quickly. On the offensive boards,
Rankin, who fouled out eight the Wildcats didn't have the
seconds Into overtime, ellml· reach to .get missed s)lots', some
nated Green's 68-65 lead.wlth, In ol which were shot too sofily.
Keepa Green Honest
the words of Green coach Mike
Hannan Trace kept . Green
Hughes, "an NBA three-pointer"
from the right aide with 26 honest In the first frame, as the
Bobcats were only able to lead
seconds remaining In overtime.
15·13
at the end ot round one.
' lellklnl CU.Claea WID
,
Brumfield,
whose aggressive de· ·
Jmmecltately after Johnson's
tally feU li'om the nylon, Green;s .f enseandsmoothballhandllngon
Duaty Salyer&, a 5·11 trelihll'llin · ' the wings was Instrumental from
guard, played quarterback and keepl'ng the opportunistic Bobfired a long pass to 6-4 junior cats from firmly establishing
forward Randy Scarberry, who tbelr slow-down game, was refailed to coiiJII!cl oil a turnaround sponslble for the Wildcats' first
jumper. Ill the battle under the 'leadofthecoareat, whenhelbota
boartl that follcnnd, ·Green three-pointer frOm the riabt ilde
foulecl. sencllna Mark Jenkins to erase a one-point clefldt and
(tbe eoacb'a -~ to the foul Uae piat tile Wildcats up 17·15 at the
for the cm.and-onelhot. Jellklnl 6: 53 mark In the aecond quarter.
Tbat waa the JUt' that Hannan
sank bollletldl, ma-U.ico"*.
7o.e8. Tllit iccml ..... 1101 MC!IIft Trace WOII1d - ol tile blah road
uatU llUiklr pard Tim Brum114:14. for a wbue. Green, wben they did
stole tile ball from SC1111frnr, a now Wllltcats Rick Swain, Chris
OPEN HOUSE
·
·
·
.
added 18.
RIO GRANDE - Top-seeded
"I thought our rebounding and
Gallipolis held off number two
defensive
play In the last couple
seed Meigs In the closing minutes
of
minutes
really made a differ·
to post a 52·49 Division II
ence,"
said
a drenched Osborne
Sectional basketball victory beIn the Blue Devil · lockerroom
f,ore approximately 2,000
following
the hard-fought con:
scnearrllnl fans Friday niJIIt. ·
te&t.
"Meigs
forced us Into
, ~ . ,.... ·triluiiPII ll&ve ~b Jim ·,
several
tumovera
ln. the second
• Ollboii:lii':i.._ Dw¥lia t11etr first
IQAHS
1:\ad
four) al)d·,we ~
period
'.ICICIIOUI bllrdwqad title In •11
ye.ra and linprovd their season Jlljlde some sillY foulS alter o11r .
quick start.''
record to 17·5. · Coach Mlck
Hectic Conleat
Childs' Marauders, whoeaterred
The , veteran GARS mentor.
the· contest with a seven-game
continued, "We played with good
winning streak, bowed out at
Intensity for four quarters.
14·8.
Maybe
they (Meigs) were look·
Play Again Thursday
too
much
for Bartrum late In
lng
Gallipolis will battle the
the
game
and
the other people
winner of Saturday night 's
weren't
looking
to score. We
Portsmoulh·lronton game at
wanted
to
limit
Bartrum
as best
8: 15 p.m. Thursday. March 3, In
as
we
could"
and
stop
the
other
Ohio University's Convocation
four,"
Osborne
continued.
Center, Athens, ·In Its Division II
He concluded, "We were. not 1
·Olstrlct opeQer.
.
Four Blue Devlls finished ·1n , able to create a lot of pressure
most of the night. We did,
double.f!gures in scoring, led by
hOwever, force two or three key
Jason Thomas' 15. points. Mark
turnovers
late In the game."
Kimble came off . the bench to
32·mlnute contest,
During
the
tally 14; David Todd added 11 and
the
score
was
tied seven times
Mark Berklch finished with 10 .
(2,4,20,31
,33,39
and 43) and the
Mike Bartrum, Meigs ' all· time
lead
exchanged
hands 18 times,
single season scorer, finished the
game with 20. Brent Bissell .Including nine In the third period
' '
.
The Veterans Mem-orial Hospttal
.
·
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. FOR FURTHEI INFOIII4TION CONTACT
ADJ. HINRY CLATWORTHY
992-2434
446·0303
9 a.m.-6 p.m. Weekdays
~
. s·
FEENEY-BENNm POST #128
AMEIICAN LEGION-MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO
Second & Sycamore .
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI) . Roy Marble scored 19 points and
B.J. Armstrong, Bill Jones and
.Ed. Horton each added 16 Satur·
day, guiding No.13 Iowa to a 95·87
Big Ten triumph over No. 10
Michigan.
Marble and Armstrong fueled
a Ia te cltargt: thaI rallied the
· Haw keyes from ali 8·polnt deficit
and Improved their record to
20·7, 104 In the league. ·lowa,
which also received 10 points
irom Jeff Moe and 9 from K~nt
HIU, has won 20 or more games In
10 of the last 12 years.
Gary Grant led six Michigan
players In double figures witll24
points. Glen Rice added 20, Terry
Mills had 12, Rumeal Robinson
·• contributed 11 and Mark Hughes
and Loy Vaught chipped In 10
each.
The loss dropped Michigan to
22·5 overall and 11·3 in the Big
Ten. The Wplverlnes hit 56
percent of their shots, compared
to 52 for Iowa , but the Hawkeyes
sank 28 free throws and outre·
bounded Michigan 39·29 .
Iowa, which held a 54·43
halftime lead, struggled early in
the second half, scoring only 9
points In the first 8 1·2 minutes .
Meanwhile,
Rice's 11 points
·vlclol')'.lt was the school's first sectional title In 11
spurred
a
28·9
burst that gave the
years. Each member of the 1987·88 Blue Devil
Wolverines
a
71·63 edge with
squad and ,coaches took turns cllppll)g the nets.
11:30 left.
Iowa chipped away at the lead
until Marble's free throw knotted
e
.·
WE CORDIAU Y INVITE QUAUFIED
YOERANS TO JOIN ·us.
For m9re details or to see if you qualify call H&R Block now.
CAll f)iJ(j {liil:l
February 28,1988
Galll.poli..S edg'e·· s· Meigs :~=-~~eu~i~:::~~~~::e~~~l)~
. .. • · .aI tit• Ie
. : 2'. · .-4..9 0•. r section
t,
It's awdlahle whether H&R Block prepares
your tax return or not.
'
9 a.m.·l p.m. Weekday~
.
. 2.1 mllion ........,. stronll, who dedicate themstlves
to God and cot~nfry, trailltlonal. Amirican values,
stcurity for our nation, concern and IUflport for our
ntwans anti their families, guidance to our country's
our community.
youth and Hl'vice
Use.H&R Block's Rapid Refund Program.
Pomeroy
NET CEREMONY - Gallipolis' Mark Kimble
( 14) takes hla turn cutttn1 down nets In Rio
Grande'• Lyne Center Friday night foUowtnc
Blue Devils' Dlvl•lon II Sectional championship
THE AMERICAN.LEGION
WHENYOUCAN
:GETYOURMONEY FAST!
618 E. Main St.
992·6674
'
YOU AlE INVITED TO JOIN THE LARGEST
VmiANS OIGANIZATON IN THE UNITED
STATES.
.TAX REFUND
IT'S FAST!
' '
--
Dr. Margie Lawson, deuilli, and Dr. Douglas BUD·
ier, M.D., are plcilired 1D the aew RaciDe Medical and
Section
Iowa stops Michigan; ·.·
Bucks defeated, 78-77
GALLIPOLIS - The 11th an·
nual Daffodil Days In Gallipolis
Is being h~ndled by the Gallipolis
Junior Women's Clubon bebalf of
the Gallla County Unit 1JI the
American Can~er Society (ACS) .
It Is co-chaired by Katrlnka
Hart 11nd Diane Smith. All
prOCeeds go to the local unit and
are used for research, education
and patient service.
The daffodil Is the symbol of
hope, much the same as the ACS
according to Smith. It Is also the
first flower of spring ' and is
available for all who wish to
make a donation to the local
Gallta County Unit during the
weekend of March 18. Five·
thousand daffodils have been
ordered for Gallla County sale, so
to be sure of availability, pre-sold
orders are now ·being taken by
the committee.
Other members of the Daffodil
Days Committee of the Gallipolis
Junior Wpmen's Club working on
this project are Libby Wiseman,
Kim Deckard, Debbie Tipple,
Marty Cornett, Tammy Hawk,
Patty Bodlmer, Sue Allen, Darla
Merola and Pam Wiseman.
Pre·sale orders should be
placed by March 5.
Daffodils will be available by
the bunch at $4, 'and there are 10
flowers ln·eac.h bunch. Orders for
four or more bunches will be
delivered. . The. daffodils are
expected to arrive on March 17.
.
-Sports
I
Daffodil .
Days set
by ACS
"Yes, Aunt Maude and Uncle
Charlie are still with us. They
don't talk much anymore, but
don't they look great?" Do keep
smiling.
Local ]ob Bank
can hetp seniors
Februilry 28.1988
final desperation shot. Official
Gary Muncy ruled, however.
Burson was not fouled on the
play .
Ohio State scored the first four
points in the overtime to take a
72·68 lead, but the Spartans, led
by Smith , who scored six points
In the extra period, didn't fold.
Carlton Valentine scored 20
points for the Spartans, 14 of
them in the second half, George
Papadakos 13 before he fouled
out and Ken Redfield 11.
· Burson had 15, Gra~y Mateen
11 and Perry Carter 10 for Ohio
State, which had beaten ·Michl·
gan State eight consecutive
times In St . John Arena.
MSU 78 Ohio State 77 (ot)
COLt.:MBUS, Ohio (UPI )
Steve Smith hit <I pair of free
throws with one second remain·
ing In overtime Saturday after·
noon t o lift Ml c higao St a t e to a
78-77BigTenwinoverOhioState.
Smith, a 6·foot~ freshman
guard who led the Spartans In
scoring with a career·ltigh 22
points, was fouled by OhloState' s
c;urtis Wilson as he tried \0 get off
. · a .15·foot jumper from the right of
7
,., the basket.
Alter Ohio State called Its final
timeout of the game, Smith
c~nn,ed both free throws to bring
, the Spartans from behind.
Xavier 86, Dayton 73
Ohio State, which saw its
CINCINNATI
. ~UPI) - Stan .
record fall to 14·10 overall and 7·7
Kimbrough
scored
20 points to
·In the Big Ten , had taken the lead
lead
three
Xavier
players In
with 15 seconds to play In the
double
figures
Saturday
after·
extra period on a basket by Jerry
noon
as
the
Musketeers
rolled
to
Francis , the Buckeyes' leading
their 11th consecutive victory , an
scorer with 21 points.
Ohio State, which never led In 86-73 win over Dayton.
the first half and trailed by as
Bears Eye Title
many as 10 points to the Spar· .
SPRINGFIELD,
Ohio (UPI)tans, ·9·15 and 4·10, led only a
Ohio
Northern
battled
Muskln·
couple of limes In the second half
gum
Saturday
nigl)t
for
the
Ohio
but lied it at 68·68 on a free throw
Athletic
Conference
basketball
by Wilson .
A Michigan State ·turnover tournament championship.
The Polar Bears and Muskles
gave the Buckeyes the ball with
39 seconds left In regulation and took similar 20·7 records Into the
· title game at Wittenberg.
they held It for the final shot.
Ohio Northern downed Heidel·
Wilson missed from near the
free throw line, but It was berg, 73·64, and Musk!ngum
rebounded by Ohio State's Jay nipped Wittenberg, 62·59, In the
Burson, who' tried to get off a tourney semifinals Friday night.
had longer arms with which to
pull down rebounds In close.
However, shots that bounced off
the glass more than threfl or four .
feet beyond the paint or toward
the foul line were likely to be
picked of! by the Wildcats, who
would pr~eed to attempt to 'take
the ball qulcl!ly to the other end.
Green ended the ·first half on top
27·23, fn spite of the numerous
mistakes and (rultless trips down
the floor by both sides.
Bad Second Quarl!!r
"We played a ml~rable se·
cond quarter, while Green
played a good game through·
out," said HaMan Trace coach
Mike Jenkins, who witnessed the
younger Jenkins pick up three
tows· In the first 16 minutes and
only saw him ctnnmlt one foul
after halttlme.
If .the second qiJllr~r was
played miserably by the' Wild· ,
cats, the Bobcats' third quarter
didn't make matters any better
for the Galllans. Freshman
guard Shane Salyers tossed In
two long bombs In the first
minute of act three to double the
Bobcats' advantage to eight, at
33-25. Tb011Jh Petro sank a short
Jumper and Brumfield eli appld
In his laat three-point jumper of
the nllht ' - tlWl 30 NOO!lds
latar,cuttlnltblt8ollcatl'leadto
33-30, collleCIIttvf ahort jumpeh
&!arberry allCI Ull1te-polnter
by Dual\' IIIYIII'I uw Green its
Continued on C·2
w
CHARGING FOUL- Michigan State's Ed Wright busts through
Ohio Stale's Jerry Francis (right) during Saturday's Big 10 action
In St. John Arena, Columbus. He was charged with a foul. It was
68-all at the end of regulation play. The Spartans won 18·77 with one
second left to play In overtime on two free throws by MSU'.s Smltb.
(UPI.
Terps 10 Wake Forest 65
GREENSBORO, N.C (UPI)Keith Gatlln scored 17 points
Saturday to lead four Maryland
players In double figures and
pace Maryland to a 70·65 Atlantic
Coast Conference victory over
Wilke Forest.
,
Derek Lewis added 14 points
and Tony Massenburg and Rudy
Archer contributed 10 each for
Maryland, 15·10 and 5·7 In the
ACC . The Terrapins sank 10
J.polnters, Including 3 bY GatUn.
Sam Ivy led Wake Forest,10·15
and 5·7, with 21 points. Antonio
Johnson added 13, Including 4 ·
J.polnters.
Seton Hall 84 VIUanova 58
EAST RuTHERFORD, N.J.
(L'PI) , - Senior Mark Bryant
collected a career-high 38 points
and a season-best 18 rebounds
Saturday to power Seton Hall to
an 84·58 Big East rout of
VIllanova.
Seton Hall, 19·10 and 7·7 In the
league, led 36·33 at halltlme.
Bryant scored the Pirates' firstS
poinis to build a 44·36 advantage
4: 29 Into the second half.
Pitt 74 Connecticut 69
HARTFORD. Conn . IUPI) Jerome Lane scored 22 points
and grabbed 16 rebounds Satur·
day to power No.6 Pittsburgh to a
74-69 Big East triumph over
Connecticut .
DIP&'• .,..,....al flu! • Clleaapealce. Ballkla,.' '.
&houP lit oaJr _... ••• poll~W, Olldrllllltecl to ·
a ._ldefenllftellerilllll&lllllwecl llleWB"oa&e
to .u, ..- a.·
.1NI ill .....an...:
C'l'lma lsz'hlel ,.... br G. S,eaoer Oll11ne) . •
•••rna.
·.
''
�-- -
..
February 28.1988
Ohio Point Pin nm. W. Va.
Tmn Sentinel
·--
Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-3
Playoffs _start Tuesday _·
Pt. Pleasant . tops
RIO GRANDE- RioGra nde's ·
Redwomen enter District 22
playoff action Tuesday a t 7: 30
p.m . in Ly n~ Center against the
College of Mount St. Joseph .
Tickets fo r the game are $4 for
a dults, $2 for students a nd $2 for
Rio Gr a nde students showing
their ID cards.
. The Redwomen (19-8) are in
four th place in the district and
MSJ 's Lions (15'7) are fift h. Rio
Gra nde flp is hed the season with
a 7-3 sla te In th e Mid-Ohio
Conference. In second place
behind Mount Vernon Naza rene.
The La dy Cougars finished in
third place in the distr ic t.
For MSJ , Coach Jean Dowe ll is
expected to start Tina Siegel (5-5,
junior) as point guard ·and Ger r i
Crowe 15--8, sophomore) as shooting guard. At sma ll forward wlll
probably be Patty Seta (5 -JO ,
.: Milton five, 80-67
.·
By Matt Robertson
••
:;
What stan~ out as a run away
~I game Fnday mght, with the
Btg Blaclcs of Point Pleasant leading the Milton Greyhounds by as
much as 42-25 at the half, turned
; • Into one of the roughest games that
,.. P<?mt has played all season. The
·• ' B1g Black$ went on to win the
. game, 80-67.
· ·
·
> The officials called a loose first
•• half, not sending either team into.
-: the bonus situation until the end of
• • the first half.
•
If the first half was IQugh, then
• : the second half was out of hand.
:- On the inbounds throw, first
;: thing after the half, a Milton player
• ~ C3!De from down the COWl, IIC!QSS
:. m1d·cowt and body-checked a Big
• Blaclcs' player to the floor. That
started fight number one, which
was quickly ended by both t~s.
Milton was assessed a foul but no
: • players were.ejected.
The game rolled along for a
while longer until, with the Big
Blac~ . lea~ng 70-53 with 2:54
remammg m the game, there was
some bumping and pushing on the
courr and a fight erupted. This one
turned out to be a bench ~learing
brawl.
After aboul three minutes, the
coache~. ~orers, athletic officials,
noncombatant team members and .
game officials were able to clear
; the floor and get play underway.
: Again, no players on either side
• were ejected
•'
Things remained tense until,
• 'with :24 remaining in the game,
• another bench clearing brawl blPke
out on the coon with much the
• same results as the first brawl.
.Again, no players were ejected and
play resumed.
''The fights, I think, were a direct
result of the offitiills not calling
• fouls and letting the game get out
of hand," Point Pleasant Coach
,•
••
:;
•. •.
LOOJUNG TO SCORE- Haanan Trace ceater Rick Swain, with
!•. •· ball, looks lor an open spot In the paint to acore two of his 18 polnta
·: · : · Ia the eeeoad quarter of Frldll)''s seetlonal. flnat In Clleeapeake
::::: qatnst Fraaldln Furnace Green. Bobcat David Kaapp ( 31) hies to ·
: ·: •: stop Swain, who .was later responsible for seadlnJ the Jarpe Into
• •• ; . overtime with a layup that tied the game at 11 late In the-fourth
: . : ; : quarter. The Wildcats weat on to win 741-68. (Times-Sentinel photo
: 4•: •: by. G. Spencer Osborne)
·'
.
·
.
..
~
;;·:-wildcats win.
0 0
Continued from C-1
PASSING OFF-. Green cenler Zane DarneD, with ball, pusea
to a teammate as Hannan Trace forward ScoltRanldn (t) moves In
to play defense Ia the first quarter of Friday night's sectional final
In Chesapeake. The Wildcats had to take the JUDe to overttlne to
get the better of this catflght, defeating the Bobcats 7t-a and
moving on to district tournament play In Athens next Friday, at
6: 00 p.m. (Times-Sentinel photo by G: Spencer Osborne)
Gallipolis advances ...
Continued from C-1
the field be MHS, canned two free
throws, his only points of the
game, with 5:44 left.
Bartrum uncorked a threepointer to put Meigs back on top,
46-45 with 5: 20 to go. Thomas
CO\lntered with a layup (4: 26) to
give Gallla a 47-46 edge.
Final MHS Lead
Bartram got a tipln (4: 03) to
give Meigs jts final lead of the ·
game. 48-47.
Thomas popped In a short
jumper (3: lJ) to make it 49-48.
The final three minutes of
action kept the packed house on
its fee t.
After. Meigs missed under neath the Blue Devils returned
the favor. Then the Maruaders
'-Were whistled for a personal.
Tim Neville missed the front end
of a one-and-one (1: 10) . Meigs
got the rebound, came down
court , and again missed a golden
opportunity to go ahead; losing
possession on a turnover. ·
After a series of limeouts,
Neville was fouled again (0: 44)
and again the GAHS ace missed.
Again Meigs came down court,
but the Marauders failed to
connect with Todd being fouled
on the rebound.
Todd 'lees' Victory
Todd stepped to the line with 10
seconds left and despite an "lee"
effort by Coach Childs , the lanky
GAHS center connected on both
tosses to give GAHS ' a 51 -48
spread.
The Galllans fouled Bartrum
at half-court to prevent a threepoint shot attempt. Bartrum
made his first shot (0:08). That
made It 51-49. GAHS called time.
Bartram made his second shot,
first 10-polnt lead, at 40-30.
Jenkins fouled Shane Salyers,
but committed a lane violation.
After Shane Salyers sank two who proceeded to hit both ends of
After GAHS called time on an
one-and-one shots to ring up the the one-and-one with 36 seconds
lnbounds play, Thomas was
47-37 lead to open the fourth left to put the Bobcats up 68-65,
fouled immediately (0: 06). Tho- .
quarter, Hannan Trace went to thus setting the stage for Johnmas made the first to give GAHS
work on cutting the deficit. son's long-distance bucket and
a
52-49 spread. He missed the
Petro, who scored 11 of his Jenkins ' winning free throws.
second
with Bartrum getting the
game-high 26 ·points in the fourth
Hannan Trace shot 23 of· 38
rebound. Meigs got It to half
quarter , led the Wildcats' 7-of-9 from the field (60.5 pet.) and 20
court where Bartrum let go with
shooting performance on one- for' 28 from the foul line (71.4
what looked like a sure threeand-one shots In that · frame , pet.), while Green was 23 for 61
pointer. but It missed as time
sinking two with 6:51 left In round from the floor (37,7 pet.) and 17 of
expired.
four· to cut the Green lead to 29 from the stripe (58.6 pet.)
Petro led the Wildcats with 17
eight, at 47-39.
Statistics
Full-Court Press
rebounds , while Darnell had 11
Gallipolis connected .on 20 of 44
·
The Wildcats, who on defense for Green..
field goal attempts for 45 perHannan Trace will take on the
had earlier given Green some
cent. The Devils were'etght of 14
room to maneuver, began to North Gallla-Raclne Southern
at the line for 57 percent." GAHS
execute the full-court press and winner In the Division IV district
had 31 rebounds and 12 turnovat the least , double -team tournament Friday, at6 :30 p .m .,
ers . Todd led the Galllans on the
whoever had the ball. Though In the Convocation Center In
boards with 13. Berkich added 11.
Meigs hit 20 of 48 field goal
this left Scarberry open on a Athens.
number of occasions, he was only
a ttempts for 41 Iiercent. The
HANNAN TRACE (70) able to score five of his team-high
Marauders were seven of 12 at
Petro
7-1-9-26;
ft.
Swain
6-0-4-16;
the line for 58 percent. MHS had
21 points In the fourth period.
Brumfield
1-2-0-8;
Rankin
2-0·3·
25
rebOunds, 10 by Bartrum and
As time went Qn In· the quarter,
7;
G.
Johnson
1-1•0-5;
Stitt
eight
by Bissell. Meigs finished
the Wildcats lived up to their
1-0-2-4;
Cremeens
1-0-0-2;
Jen10
turnovers, six In the final
with
nickname, diving and clawing
period.
·
kins 0-0-2-2. TOTALS -19-4-20-70
• for the ball whenever anyone lost
GREEN 168) - Scarberry
Box Score:
• control of it. Such ballhawklng
GALLIPOLIS (52) - Mark
• was partially responsible fo r the 10-0-1-21; D. Salyers 4-2-1-15; S.
Salyers 0-3-5-14; Darne112-0-5-13:
Berklch 5-0-10; Jason Thomas
• Wildcats outscoring the aobcats
6-3-15; David Todd 4-3-11; Bill
Knapp 2-0-2-6; Young 0-0-2-2;
24-18 in that frame .
Evans 0·2-2; Tim Neville 0-0-0;
~
Swain . the Wildcats' 6·2 st>nior Vaughters 0-0-1-1. TOTALS 18-5-17-68
Mark Kimble 1-4-0-14; Todd
plvotman, bore his s hare of the
Team fouls
Casey 0-0-0; TOTALS 16-4·8·52.
• responsibility in the comeback,
Trace
20,
Green
19
MEIGS (49) - Chris Smith
Hannan
• as he followed Petro's threeFouled
outPetro,
Rankin,
R.
2-0-4; John Burdette 0-0-0; Brent
" pointer with a successful oneB.lssell 7-4-18; · Mike Bartram
- and-one shot that cut. the Gree n Swain (Hannan Trace); Darnell,
Vaughters (c:;reen)
6-2-2-20;. Bryan Qurst 2-1-5; Bill
advantage to 53-51 with 3: 24 left
Score by quarters
Brothers 1-0-2; · Scott Nelgler
In regulation . Though seplor
Hannan Trace 15 8 14 24 9-70
0-0-0; TOTALS 18·2·7-49.
center Zane Darnell increased
Green .. .. .. .. ..... 13 14 18 16 7-68
Score by Quarters:
the Bobcats' lead to 55-51 with
Galllpolls .. .. .. ..... . 16 8 15 13-52
two one-and-one tallies, BrumMeigs .... ............ 6 17 18 · 8-49
field connected on a turnaround
jumper 10 seconds late r to make
the score 55-53. Then on Green's
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
next possession; Petro stole the
Week of February 29, 1988
ball from backup center David
The- weather was wa rm . l! was postilon
DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
Knapp, who fouled Petro and
night., a nd the com pet ition treme ndous
Feb.29-Closed ...... ..... .................... ...... ....... .. ....... ...: .............. ..................... Closed
sent the 6-2 senior forward to the
Wednesday nl2ht. The- rlvE' from Up Th e
March 1- 7: 30 p. m . ~Redwomen vs .......... .. ..... .. .. .. ..... .. .. ...... ..... .. ................. Closed
R·lve r had a n oppQrtunlty to build a ve-ry
-Mt.St. Joseph iPlayoffs) ......... ..... .... ..... ... .. 12: 30-1: 30 p.m./Fitness Swim
line for the one-and-one. Petro hit
· comfortable lead as they took on second
Marc h 2-Ciosed ... ... .................... .. ............. .. ....... .... . 12: JO.l: 30 p.rri..!Fitness Swim
both shots, tying the game 55-55.
pla et> Tawney 's. but TawnE:>y's had other
.................................. . ............. ...... ... ......... ... .... ................... ............ .. ........ Closed
ld.:-as as rhey whipped th£> Up The River
March 3-:- ·, : 30·( p .amyo.1Red) men vs. TBA ................ .... ..... ..... . 12: 30-1:30 p.m./Rio Kids
Nip-And-Tuck Affair
bo_r s 6-2 behind Harold Blankenship's 224 P 1 115
The contest was nip and tuck
62n. Cral 2 Bar.ne-s It'd the losers with 199March 4-6-8 p.m./Open Rec ...... ,.................... .. ........ 12:30-1: 30 p.m ./Fitness Swim
551 .
.. .. .... .... ..... ....... ........ .. ..... ..... ........ ................... ........ .......... ... . 6-8 p.m./Open Swim
until Shane Salyers missed the
W!th ~ The River· ge tting knocked
.March S-1 ·3 p.m.!Open Rec ..... .. ..... .. ............... ..... ..... .. ...... .. . 1-3 p.m. / Open Swim
front end of a foul shot with 1:30
a round . a rchl's <lnd VFW stood to gain
March 6-1·3 p.m.rOpen Rec ................ .. ................. ~ .............. l -3 p.m ./Open Swim
left In regulation . Though he
some ground. pending the outcome of their
·
6-8 p.m./College Ref....... .... ........................... ... ... 6-8 p. m./Coll~e Swim
made the second shot, that se t the
match.
t! rch
Henson's
212-585was
the. differenct>
a s Ti
Ma
i's rolled
to a 6-2 win
Roger r::~~~~~~==================:J
stage for Wildcat junior guard
8t."'lv11\e- 1188-526) led VFW. And sounding
fair warn in,.-: tha i the first half win was no
Brad Cremeens to hit a long
fluke. Bobbv Tillis !259·6901 and .Jeff
jumper 11 seconds later. putting
Sommer~ i231 -661 ) It'd Legion as they de-moll~hed Bodlme r's Grocery 8-0. Merrill
the Galllans aheaq 59-58. After
Caldwe ll led Bodlmer's with a 192-568.
Petro missed the front en!! of a
T he E lks-107 bunch kept them!ie'lves al·
one-and-one 'opportunity with 55
Jve with a 6-2 win oVer Mitc hell's Appll·
a nces, a s T. I. Jones 1247·588) paced the
seconds left in regulation. Dusty
win. David Elliott topped Mitchell's wl1h
Salyers scored on a layup and
187-543. TedAdamsusedgames of268 219
and 236 e nroutt> to a super 723 series ~s he
' connected on the following foul
nearly slngle-handedly led Central Trust
'• shot with 44 seconds left in
Bank to a 6·2 win OV('r Kyger Dental, snap.
p i n ~ a seven ga·me win strrak'fOrthe Denregulation. putting the Bobcats
tal flw. Rick Tench (221 -623\ and Dennis
back on top at 61-59. Then Swain
Haner 12.16-61:1) .t urnedln solid perfor·
.
got in the paint, took a pass from
mances for Kyger Dental. Finally Eddk!
Ray's 175-501 paced Northup Dodge' to a6-2
• Brumfield and connected on a
win over S&J LUmber , led by Therrlll
layup with '22 seconds left to tie
Clagg's 169·49Q.
Here aJ'(' the complete s tandings ror the
the game at 61 and send It In to
week of Fe b. 17. 19Rll.
overtime.Petro. who eventually
Won Loll
Up The Rlwr ...................... .. .....48 J6
fouied out In overtime. as did
Tawn ey's St udlo ...... .......... ........ .46 18
teammates Rankin 'and Swain
Marchi's Ca r ry Ou t ................... .44 20
:: before him. left a ·mark on that ·t eglon...... .. ..... .. .... .. .. .... .... .. .. .... .40 24
VFW . ..... .......... .. ............ .. .. .... ... .39 25
three-minute period that illus- Bod\mer's
Grocery ................ ... .. :lO 34
trated Mike Jenkins ' comments
Elks-107 .... .. ..................... ........ .. 30 34
~e n1rnl Trus t Bank. ..... ............... 26
38
that "our kids kept after Green
Mitchell's AppllancPs ...... . .. ........ 26 38
and didn't give up."
·
,
Kyger Dental ................... . ......... 20 . 44
· At the 1: i2 mark In overtime, Northup Dodgo .... ..... .............. ... .. 20 44
· ':. Green sophomore Matt Young S&J Lumb~r ............................... l5 49
caught a long pass from . the
opposite basellne and, seeing no
• one around him, sets up for a
SK-YLINE IIOWUNG 1ANJ1:8
- layup from the left side of the
ALLEY CATS LU.Illlll:
; _glass. Petro rushes In, leaps
· r•
three to four feet In the air and
TEAM
. ·
Tlll'lo
•
~a! 0~ Resort .............. .. .......... . 124 •
bats Young's shot before It leaves
Jtm"l~bb
o~:!~.1.C~d.,.......................
lOT
, his hand. Petro fouled Young on
F
M
Chev . ............. 93
the defensive play. and Young
A!~ar:r:~r.di'··· · .. ·······--··--·--···-----92
• canned both one-and-one shots,
• whlch put Green ahead 66-63.
~~ora McKnight, :lOt; Brenda Higgy',
•
WUdcatl Close Gap
HIGH IND. SERIES: June Mowery
After that the Bobcats mlssed
VIckie Flak. aD; Doris Crueser 470'
three one-tlld·one shots before 538;
HIGH TEAM GAME: Royal Oak' ~
the Wildcats crept closer wlth a sort, 650; Codnrr Trucking, 628; Aardvark
jong jump shot from Johnson SOIUids, 612.
HIGH TEAM SERIES: Aardvark
with 43 seconds left in the game. Sounds, 111)5: Royal Oak Resort 1764·
'
'
With the score 66-65, Mark Codner Trucking, 1737.
~
weal howling
.......,.,,t..
r
.,
I
• Larry Markham 5llid.
: ·
•
:
~
•
,
,
~
i
.!
•
•
,
SMITH DRIVES- Meigs' Chris Smith (11) drives toward hoop
with GaUia's Tim Neville (21) In pursuit. GaUipolls edged the
Marauders, 52-49, to win the 1988 Division II Sectional Tournament
at Rio Grande Frtday.
'
'
"It's a shame when an athletic
contest has anything like that involved," he added.
The game didn't start wen for
the Greyhounds. Milton jumped out
to. a 2-0 lead, but Point quickly tied
it with two points from Casey HiD.
Craig Hensley hit two points to
give the Big Blaclcs the lead. Miltm tied the game at four and Scott
Vickers star!ed dismantling the Mil·
tm defense.
Vickers hit four quick points to
break the game open for the Bia
BlaCks, Sayre and Hill added twi)
foul shots eacb to extend Point
Pleasant's lead.
Milton called time-out With 2:44
remaining in the first quaner, trailing 16-8.
Milton tried to come back, but
Vickers hit four points and John
Roach hit a pair .of foul shots to
finish the quarter with Point leading, 22-14.
The Milton defense, in the
Nice
to have
around
the
house
:·
:. ,
•.. •
:; :· :
,·
'
Low spots turning
your yard into a soggy
mess? Downspoutwaler
seeping into your basement? For
quick. easy fix-ups ol drainage
problems around your house. l~~s::;:;:~i'ht
·
on lightweight ADS corru,.-.~
aaled polyethylene tubing. Use
it to solve excess water around
downspouts, low spots. window
weljs. swimming pools. and
more. ADS snap-on llttlngs. and
the FREE. easy-to-lollow HomeInstallation Guide make It
cinch.
I Sl1rona and durable ADS tubing won't rust. ·
, ...,,.. "resists rot. acids and alkalis ln the soU.
ol all. it's Inexpensive. Just pennies
.
~
•,~;
·.
; ::
:•
:'
j:
;,.
J
for the ADS green stripe.
n•s your sign of quauty4 100,.ROLL
# lin thelancl.
UIH~IB'
I
,
'
A!J.MCED IIRAINAGE IYSTEMS.INC. •
FOR INFORMATION
LEADING TO THE RETURN
OF MONEY, COINS AND JEWELRY
REMOVED FROM RESIDENCE AT
2101 MASON BOULEVARD,
POINT PLEASANT, ON NIGHT OF
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1988.
CONTACT VITUS HARTLEY, JR.,
AT THE PEOPLES BANK OF
POINT PLEASANT, 675·112~,
OR THE POINT PLEASANT
CAROLINA LUMBER
AND
SUPP-.,Y COMPANY
.
.
,
·.
tournament play ugainst Ripley.
'
I'
"notorl
Bearing•
PumpS..I•
Capacitors
Brush••
Couplings
Pulleyt
.
.
1ST GAME .-
2ND GAME -
---
.
This Memorial is a special .
multi-county event
sponsored by the Holzer
Regional Cancer Center
and various generous
co-sponsors .
TICinS
. AVAILABLE AT
Between Games Enioy A
· Sideline Sports
•Bengals Autograph
Third Avenue in Gallipolis
Session
and
•Hoop Shoot
And Other Audience
Area High Schools
Participation Activities. ·
or call ·
614-446-5330
alta•~
-'
!
.
P/1111 ~ontlnue
to
1upp11t go111 loe1/.
A"'"'~'" C1ne, So~letg :
Unltlln t6elt on going .
lund tilling •~flrlllt~llld:.
,.,,, ,;,,,,g,.
I
J7 ,... lt., ....... ....
}
9:00 P.M.
Ohio Valley High School
All Stars
vs.
Mason County ·
High, School All Stars
Troulllelhoot Wiring
,ll
100% Ticket Proceeds
and designated donations
to be distributed to area
non-profit organizations
to assist ·Cancer patients
and their families
including area county
units of The American
Cancer Society.
7:00P.M.
Cincinnati Bengals
Traveling
Basketball Team
vs.
Tri-State College
All Stars
Battery Chargers
Small Welden
Mator Contrail
\
'
Lyne Center, Rio Grande College
•
'·
••
.~:.%'~~~~:~LPINE
MARCH 25, 1988
7:00 P.M. TIPOFF
SINCE 1t33
Regulators
Gentoietorl
'\
UPPER RT. 7
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
FRIDAY~
AIIOIIOftVIJU(. Aitafnltlfl
' ltartera
I
675-1180
IHOUIIS: Monday:Friday 8:00 a.m.-5:00p.m.~ a.....
BILL'S
Elaablo Motofl
Water Pumpa
AlreatOn
·.
Bob 'g flee#oniet
,
The Big Blaclcs will be back in
~~~n
:yw~J· Jl~et1:;;
IUCTIIC BPAIIS:
·.
$599°0
SCOTT CONNELLEY .
MEMORIAL. BAS KETBAll TOURNAMENT
36
The
JV the
squad
shot
percent
from
floor
andonly
69 percent
from the foul line.
Industrial Y·Beltt
Lltwn Mowar V-Balts
AutOmativa Y·Belta
Electric Motor~
Fan Bladaa
Fu•••
.
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and~~;;~~~~~~~;~;;;;~=~~~~~;=~~~~~~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
10 rebounds
points. Jeremy
Blain,
with six,
in
wilh six
rebounds
led the team in assists.
·
SALIS:
'
...'•
•
LOGAN-A spokesm a n for the
Hocking County Common Pleas .
Court has a nnounced the May 2
h·as been set as the tria l da te for
. L_ogan Coach Kirk Hardman "
Hardman , 37, head c 0 ach of~ he
Loga n Chieftains, was indicted
earlier this month on 10 S:ex ·
related charges.
.
Hardm an, who has been suspended without pay from 'his
coachlhjl and teac hing duties ,
. has de nied all of the charges.
Aihletlc Director Ke lly StilWell
has been c.o achlng the SEOAL
champion Chieftains since Hard man's suspension by the Loga n·
Hoc_king Board of Education.
1------------------------l
far
ELEmiC SERVICE
. . GAWPOUS 4.46-tJ62
•
I • • W• •
Hardman trial May 2
BRAWL - One light and two bench-clearing b•awls occurred'
during the Point Pleasant-~llton basketball game Friday night.
The Big Blacks won the contest S0-67.
from
the floor while the
Greyhounds shot 38 percent from
the floor.
"It's a very fitting end to the
season for the seniors, they have
worked so hard and made every ef·
fon to win," Markham said. "I'm
reaDy happy they could go out with
a win in front of the. home fans," he
added. .
the most in:
"That was by
tense 32 ·minutes of baU we've
played all year. They really con·
cenuated until the end of the
game," he said
·
Sayre with six and' Roach with
five led the Big Blacks in assists
while Sayre and Hensley led the
team in steals, with three each.
The junior varsitY team fell to
the Mi1tonjunior varsity, ~1.
·· Shawn Foglesoni led the team in
. scbripg with 14 points and three
reb'ounds. SCOll Coen led the team
'
by and talk to us alJout your
lhoomedralnage problems.
312 6th street
'
Hensley and Vickers extended
the Big Blaclcs lead to 31-15 at the
5:18 mark of the second quarter
and ' Hensley finished with 14·
second quarter points to go with
Vickers' six and gave the Big
Blacks a 42-25 lead at the half.
The Big Blaclcs continued their
balanced attack in the third quarter,
as Hensley and Sayre each sank
two foul shots, Hill hit for six
points and VICkers hit four points.
The Big Blaclcs total scoring in the
third quarter was 14 points.
· Milton's offense, which had done
very little in the first two quarters,
continued ·to do very little. Mike
McCoy shot two points, Man: Os·
burn shot three points, Kevin Dorsey shot four points and AarQn
Chandler shot five po"ints.
The fOI!l'lh quarter saw very little
substitution on the pan of Point
Pleasant as the seniori on the team
basked in the warmth of the im·
pending victory. Hensley sank
seven points, Sayre and Hill hit for
six points each, Vickers and Roach
hit two points each and Sliane
Miller hit a foul shot.
Greg Brown hit seven points for
Milton, McCoy hit five, Greg
Lunsford hit five, Greg Spears hit
five and Chandler hit six points to
give the Greyhounds a 28-point
fourth quarter.
The Big Blacks shot 45 percent
CROSS LANES, W.VA. OVCS ends the season with a
Junior John Keenan scored a varsity mark of 10-11.
game-high 38 points and pulled
The junior varsity team was
down 13 rebounds ln taking Ohio not so lucky, losing 47-37 to Cross
Valley Christian School to · an Lanes Christian School Tuesday
82-68 win over Mercer Christian night. Freshmen Greg Wray a~d
School In tournament action Dax HID were responsible for the
Friday night.
Defenders' offense, scoring 19
The game, occurring on the . and 18 points, respectively.
last night of the West VIrginia Shawn Bellied Cross Lanes with
Christian Educational Assocla- 1 21 points.
tlon Tournament, also marked , The young Defenders end their
the finale for the Defenders, who season at 7-10.
witnessed senior Eric Keenan
OHIO VALLEY (82) - J.
play his last game for the Sky • Keenan 13·2-6-38; Johnson 7-0·923; VanMeter-4-0·0-8; E. Keenan
Blile & Gold.
Junior Brady Johnson was· the
3-0-0-6; Burgess 0-1·0-3; Hill
0-0-3-3; Call 0-0-1-1. TOTALS only other Defender to come
close to the younger Keenan's
27-3-19-82
offensive effort, scoring 23 of his
MERCER (88) - VIa 3·5·6-27;
own. Both were named to the
Crews 9-0-4-22; Farley 1-1-0-5;
all-tournament team. Mercer's
Smith 2·0-1-5; Ferris 2-0-0-4;
top scorers were Scott VIa 127 . Smiley 1-0-1-3; McKinl]ey 1-0-0-2.
points) and EJrlc Crews (22
TOTALS- 19-t-12-68
points).
.
Score by quarters
.
OVCS sank 19 of 29 from the
Ohio Valley ......, 25 12 22 2.0 -82
charity stripe; while Mercer
Mercer .............. 18 15 18 17-68
went 12 .9f 18 from the line.
.... '""'
x
$23.95·
tack.
OVCS wins last tilt
ADS·TUbing
Fight The Bug With ...
WM~~:~~c:,~~~:·;:;.;;;;·~~~;··~7·
,
EVANS FAKES - GatUa's Bill Evans (ll) lakea J18811 wltllt
Maraader defender Chris Smith ready to apply . . . - .
GaiDpolla outlasted Melp ~2-491a the Dlvlalon II Sectional flaab IIi
Rio Grande Friday night.
second quarter, concentrated on
Vickers and held him to only six
~ints.
This, however, didn't prevent
Hensley from proving that the Big
Blacks have a balanced scoring at·
senior) and Cathy Elle nbr~k ·
(5-8, se nior ) will fill in as power
fo rward . At thepost wl ll beLibby
Stephenson (5-11, fres hm an) ..
thla axcltt·ng opportunity to
alnet ear.
..
�~~
C-4-Sundlty Tine• Sentinel
Portl~d
Scoreboard ...
N8A results
NUL results
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scores
Ntw York 121, Goldeli Stale lit
su..aay'1 Gamt"
f. •~.._._vealt,
898&on at Detro"
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C•l So•ll U. Growe CHJ Sf
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Transactions
Ptd&H. . . . . SZ. HIUiard IS
...,
Plq• '75, Trey II
By Uallett Pfth -ll!ruUoru.l
Tec:um.elll8. 8prl.,.nel4 SoliD 53
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GaiU,.. It, M~lp II
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K.etfl!!rl ... Aller • • l...il!!mOft lllolti'W IM
Lfohuon Sl. IUIIIS fS
Ct atiMU I- SIJIII!'d plkller Pat P~ rry
' to a 1- y~ar co..eract; 1lped MCOIMI
' h~~~~emuol e ft'rn!adw11y .
Slptd owafle lder·IIMII
' huema• T11rry Francalll to a minor·
lea p contract.
SeMtth- - Sl~ned pltchel'll SeDU BaU·
hM d <d Mike Tr·.UIIIo tG l· yrar
fJenlud -
LGvelalld U , Clennont NE 4t
MadiAOII Pial• $11, W'atfall $1
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coatraeb .
SC . Lo•! - S lpe• rellf.nr Todd
Wom-1110 a I· ye ar eollf;rad .
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Trimble 'n, NebwnvUII!o fort; 17
Wbulenburr ii', FMiraalld 53
IMYilllon IV
Camph~ll
for one ~ame alld dl8ml88ed
forward !Wan Ty..oa for the remainder
ol th e hult'lb-.11 se&liOn tor vlolalln11
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Bol!ton - SIP£-d win,; Crall{ d it.riiK'f lo
multi-year contract .
NHL - Suo~ptnd P d Montn>lll 's .John
·Kordlc and Quebec ' Pi Gunl Donnelly 11~.
apiece; fiiW'd Mont real <.:oach
Jean P•rrun a.t Quebec L:oac h Ran
Lllpointt-11.006 aplect-.
jlpam e!i
Slpd wlftl
Ke: \'ln
Slt'Vf"n.ot to a mulll-yu r c:ontnu·l .
Col Ready 5I
Cardlncton ~7. Olentano U
Cln Mc Nh:holu 'n, Blanchef!Wr 85
fin Readlllllt 75, C1 n Dter Park so '
LA CIIPJMlMI - Acclvaied 11an1 Retu:ll'
Wlllbm111 from tllf' lnjurt'd lkt; pla('r d
D'ard Lll.nt,\Uk'r Gordoa on walwl'll.
olle.-•
t1 em110n - SultiM'ndt'd centt'r Eld~n
NCAA n! l{ulaUont~.
\lll'l{lnla Tet>ll - SirnPd bukr thllll
1:Uilt' h Fraakl~ Allen to a f-yf'ar cantncl.
FootlnUI
San Dl elfl - Allnouncrd head lrallll!r
Mark Howard reMIA"ntod.
.Jeft~I'IIOIIM ,
Wtlml-cton7-l, VaUe)' VIew a3
Dlvi1don Ill
Belpre 81, M'ellllton 8!
a l;,year toltt'*-d e x.lf'Nilon.
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17 U t
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Ill
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Friday '11 R.f'tlllts
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G.11Uon Northmor 15, Fairbank!! Iii
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Sld~y Lehman 71, SWIIH'y Fairlawn 6lt
1\ uoky (&lh Ill, J-f!tt Sclo 31 ·
" 'lllblmlibura 511. Rlple.t· -12
Glrbi Ohkl HIKh ScJ.ool llar;kcihidl
Fl'k!ay , Feh . ~ 6
Tournam e nt!~
Dlvl!don I
weweregolngtomakemistakes,
let ' s mak e them being
aggressive." ·
The Bulls made early mlstakes, and the Trail Blazers were
able to get 13 of their 17
ftrst·quarter points on layups or
dunks.
"That shocked us, " Jordan
sa ld of the way Portland handled
them. " It carried over. They had
the fastbreak and got easy
baskets. We found ourselves
fighting an uphlil ba!Ue. And, our
turnovers clldn'thelp."
The win was Portland's fourth
In Its last six contests. Drexler
added 9 .assist's and 8 steals, 7 In
the first half.
Elsewhere, Detroit demo!!shed New Jersey 137-109, Boston
blasted Milwaukee 132·96,
Atlanta upended Indiana 116-101,
Denver dumped Ph.lladelphla
120·104, San Antonio stopped
Houston 111-107, the Los Angeles
Lakers beat utah 112-105, Seattle
stopped Sacramento 133-130 and
New York knocked off Golden
Sta te 125-119.
·
Pistons 137, Nels 189
At Pontiac, Mich. , Rick )\'Ia"
horn scored a careei'·hlgh 34
ByCQUUNSYEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer
Portland's Clyde Drexler lessened the Impact of Mlcha e~
Jordan's 52·polnt performance
¥-dl!Ilverlng a career-high 42
Friday night and the Chicago
Bulls were too charitable to the
Trail Blazers.
Portland translated 22Chlca go
turnovers Into 26 points to gain a
1~ · 96 victory .
''We played 48 minutes of solid
basketball," Portland Coach
. Mike ~hul er said. " You have to
against this team because with
th11t guy (Jordan), they always
have a chance to' win.' '
Jordan flipped In an 8-foot shot
to tie the score 93·93 with 5: 27
remaining. But Portland scored
the next 5 points on baskets by
Terry Porter, Drexler and a free
throw by Kevin Duckworth to
open a 98-93 edge with 1: 38 left.
"I was reaiiy proud of the way
We came back after they tied us,"
~huler said. " We stressed be·
fore ·the game that we had to
make It a full court game and not
play t!tem In a halfcourt contest.
"We came In here with the
Intention of not being passive. If
points andAdrlanDantley, play·
lngforthefirsttimeln12games,
added 21 to lead the Pistons to
their third siralght victory. The
loss was the fifth straight for the
Nets, who dropped to 1-25 on the
road.
Celtlcs lft, Bucb M
At Boston, Larry Bird scored
28 of his 32 points In the first half
and Kevin McHale finished with
.29 points, leading the Celllcs to
their 15th consecutive hOme
'triumph.
Hawka 118, PaeenrlU
At Indianapolis. Dominique
Wilkins scored 32 points to send
the Hawl!s to their third straight
victory and hand the Pace!'$ their
third consecutive defeat.
Nucreta 110, 78enr UN
At Denver, Blair Rasmussen
scored 21 points to · enable
Denver's Doug Moe to"become
the 12th coach In NBA history to
win 500 games. Lafayette Lever
contrtbuted 1!1 points, 10 assists
and 9 rebounds for Denver. The
loss extended the 76ers' .road
losing stre_ak to 17 games.
8plll'8 '111, Rqeketa 107 ·
At San Antonio, Walter Berry
scored 30 points and Frank
Brlckowskl converted a :J.potnt
'
play with 23 seconds remaining: ,
to lift the Spurs. Brlckowsklf
finished with 21 points, and Greg . ; ·
Anderson and JohMY Dawkins •)
each added 19 for San Antonio. '
Lakenrll%, Jan 1!11
At Inglewood, Calif., Magic
Johnson scored the Lakers' last 9
points and broke a tie with 1:,53 •
left to lift Los Angeles to Its ninth 1
straight triumph, Johnson led the .
Lakers with 27 points and 17 ,
assists, and Byron Scott col· ·
lected 22 points. .
::
SuperSonics 133
.
KJnp ISO -.
••
At Seattle, Dale Ellis scored 37 !
points, Xavier McDaniel 31 and :
Tom Chambers added 30 to allow ~
the SuperSonics to move the ~ :
Kings to their sixth straight loss. ,•
KDicblZS
•·
Warrlonrlll
:.
At Oakland, Calif., reserve •
Johnny Newman converted all13 '
or his free throws en route to 26 •
points to send the Knlcks to their •·
third straight victory. The :
Knlcks _won for the second •·
straight night on the road after ·,
going 18 consecutive games •
without a triumph away from ••
Madison Square. G:~rden.
•
By GENECADDES
UPI8ports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Top· ranked Iowa saw Its unbeaten streak smipped at 22
Friday night by Ohio State, but In
the , Lady Hawkeyes' minds,
they re still No. L
.
"We believe that," Iowa coach
Vivian Stringer said after her
team's 58·54 loss .to the Lady
Buckeyes, who have now won 53
consecutive Big Ten games In
what has been very friendly St.
John Arena. ' 'We'll be alright. I ·
don ' t consider an y thing
devastating.
" We made a statement that
'nothing is as good as It seems or
as bad as It seems, just some-,
where In between.' We demon ·
strated some things to ourselves
beyond what the score ind.tcated .
This team (Iowa) Is ready for 56-54, with 35 seconds to play.
Ten standings. The Buckeyes are••
national caliber basketball. The
Lisa Cline was fouled intention· 12-2 a.nd the Hawkeyes 12-1 and •
score doesn't mean a whole heck ally with six seconds remaining 22·1 overall. ·
~
of a lot."
by Iowa's Robin Christian and hit
"It keeps our streak alive "- ~
Thegamewasplayedbeforea both free throws to clinch' Ohio saldDarschwhen ·a skedwhatthe ·
sellout crowd Of 13,200, the first State's 20th win In 2~ games.
- big wtn meant to her team. "I i
full house for a women's ga!lle In
- "We did a goqd job of finding think basically the mos.t lmpor- :
Ohio State history, and they the open player -In the second tant thing Is It helps us meet one. 1'
c_a,ll)e to make noise.
half," said Ohio State . coach of our most recent goals. That .
'For those of you who cover Nancy Darsch, "and we did a was to win the rest of our games •
the men's games here," saild good job defensively.
after the loss at IOwa (75·64). ·• · ;
Stringer, "Idoubtlfyou'veheard
_ "Any time a team like Iowa
Michelle Edwards led Iowa :;
that much noise."
shoots 36 percent ina half, I hope with 18 points and Shanda Berry ,:·
Iowa, after trailing 6-2 early, we had something to with it . 1 added 16 12 0~ those coming In o'
ran off eight consecutive points. think they bad to work as hard on the fll'$1 half Cline and Hall both >:
That gave the Hawks a 14-Slead their offense as we dld on our scored· 10fo~OhloStat,.,
· '
..
•,
and they held it until Tracy Hall's defense and that some of the
basketwlth }2: 53Ieftln the game baskets they like to count on _
put Ohio State up briefly, 37-36. . weren't there."
Nlki Lowry. who led both
The win still left Ohio State a
teams with 28 points, tied It at half·game behind Iowa In the Big
50·50 with a free throw at the 4:03
mark and Hall's rebound basket
put Ohio State ahead to stay,
f:
462 SECOND AVENUE, GAWPOUS
TEUPHONE' 446·1120
By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPJ Sports Writer
Fourth place Is a lowly place,
unless like the New York
Rangers you've spent three
months trying to climb there.
Mired In the,Patrlck Division's
cellar since Nov. 7, the Rangers
moved out Friday night wlth a 2-1
,victory over the New Jersey
Devils. The triumph moved New
York ahead of New Jersey and
the Idle Pittsburgh Penguins.
The Rangers had beaten PittS·
burgh 2·1 Thursday night.
"It's just great being in fourth
place," Ranger s Coach Michel
Bergeron said. "I'm very happy
abo)it lt .''
.
"Tomorrow, when we look at
the' standings and see ourselves
up a couple of notches; it's going
to feel good, " Rangers goalie
John Vanblesbrouck s a id .
"Ho(1efully It's going to make us
'
' rl
~
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Pettlnllle 15, Ploeeer N Ceatral ts
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Norm Maciver's goal off a
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each of the three losses and have
scored only once In their last 26
power plays.
The Devils are getting their
chances, as they've outshot their
opponents 118-51 during the losIng streak.
·
"We can't afford to get down ·
now." Devils winger Pat Ver·
beek said. "We're getting a lot of j-;;::::::::::::::==:;;:!;:;::;:;:;::;::;::;::;:;::;::~. ~
chances , but the puck 's just not
I'
going ln. We'r" showing a lot of
'
work ethic based on the shots.'_'
•
The teams battled through a
scoreless third period , with the
Devils holding a 10-4 advantage
•
In shots.
'I
The · teams exchanged first period goals, the Devils outshootlngthe Rangersl6·8. New York's
Marcel Dionne opened the scor•'
Ing with a power-play goal at
9:36.
•
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Sunday Tmes-Sentinei~Page-C-5
Pomeroy-MiddlellQrt-GIIHpolia, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.
Score board ...
Lady Bucks snap . Hawkeyes' 22-game win streak f ~
Now IN PROGRESS THROUGH MARCH 31,' 1988.
JOIN
TODAY
BE A SHAREHOLDER
~28,1988
.
Rangers move up to
fourth in standings
record they set In 1976.
The Soviet union wlll have a
chance to break that record In the
· final two days since It will be
favored to capture at least one
and perhaps _more medals In the
50-kllometer cross-country ski
race and the lour-man bobsled.
The Soviets had little trouble
defeating S"'eden in hockey. The
Swedes overcame an early 1·0
deficit to tie the score seven
minutes deep in the first period.
But the Soviets came up with
goals by 1gor Larlonov, Sergei
Jashin a nd Valery Kamensky
over a span of 1 minute. 41
seconds late 'in the opening
period to take a 4·1 advantage.
It was the Soviets 25th victory
in its last 26 Olympic hockey
games - the only loss in that
stretch coming to th e United
States when the Americans beat
the Soviets en rou te to the 1980
gold med al.
Only in biathlon relay are the
Soviets stronger . The Soviet
union has competed In six
Olympic bialhlon relays, and has
won every one. The four Soviet
skier s Friday missed only one
shot between them and that did
not come until the race already
was decided. West Germany took
the sliver and Italy won the
bronze. The biathlon combines
skiing and shooting skills .
The other gold Friday went to
Swit zerland 's Vreni Schneider In
the women's slalom.
Schne ider 's medal was the 12th
for Switzerland, the third best
total of the Olympics and the
most eve r for that country . The
Swiss have dominated the alpine
portion of the Games, ~Inning 10
medals to six for Austria.
setbac~ .
hands Chicago I 04-96
Ch1 Prl111:1't0n 53, Un Ollk Hlll1 12
Oxford T.Uawanda 44 , Franklin -13
,Olympic showing
worst m 52 years
CAL c;;ARY, Alberta (li P! ) The U.S. team has won only four
medals ai the 1988 Winter Olympic Games - its worst showing ln
52 years - and two of those have
been won by speedskater Bonnie
Blair.
Blair a dded a bronze medal to
t)le gold she won in the women's
500 meters by finishing behind
East Germans Christa Rothen.
burger and Ka rin Kania -Enke In
Friday night's women' s 1,000
meters.
" I don' t feel any disappoi nt ment ," Blair said. "Christa ,
Kari n a nd I ha ve alwa ys been the
top three in that ra ce. a nd I was
hoping just to get another medal
for mysel! and the u nited States .
It inade me ve ry h~ppy.
"Anyt ime you can jus t get one
Olympic medal it 's a great
accomplishme nt. I hea rd from a
lot of people who said tha t win or
lose you just have to be happy. As
for be ing a double medalist , it
will take a while to sink in , but for
now 1 feel very good ."
Ot her medals will be contested
toda)l ln men's s lalom , women's
1,500-me ter s peedskating and
men' s 50-kilomet er cro ss
country.
Friday was a superb day for
the Soviet u nion. The Soviets
won gold in hock ey and the 4 x
7.5·kilometer re lay to match a
reC'ord for the most medals ever
won at the Winter Games .
The Soviet Union defea ted
Sweden 7·1 to win the hockey
go ld . It was the Soviets' llth gold
of the Ga mes, a lthough it will not
officially be awarded until after
the final hockey contests are
pla yed SuJid ay, and their 27th
o!Jerall . That ties an Ol ympi c
Febn.wy 28,1988
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolil. Ohio-Point Plnunt, W. Ve.
Dl vialo n I
Bay Vlllare I S. Beck)' Rive r U
Canton Gle.Uak H. AIIL.Ial't! H
Cln Woodward 51, MJIIord 41
'
�Febn*Y 28,1988
•
''
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pia runt. W. Ve.
'-91 C-8-Sundey T1ma1 S..•IMII
LaValliere, Carter have·definite goals
for 1988 season
.
By ROBERTo DIAS
flnal33 games of last season, his
UPI Sporta Writer
first year with Pittsburgh after
Mike LaValliere and Gary beingacqulredlnatradewlthSt .
Carter, two of the National Louts. In 867 1-3 innings behind
League East· Division's top the plate, he allowed. just two
catchers. bave definite goals for passed balls and bad a fielding
the upcoming season. Pitts- percentage of .992.
burgh's LaValliere looks to drive
Carter , whose .235 average last
in more runs while the New York season was his lowest since 1973,
Mets' Carterjustwantstobeable said he worked hard In the
to run.
off-season to strengthen his all·
LaValliere earned his team- ing right knee.
mates' respect last year when he
"H0 pe(ully I won't have the
batted .300 and woil a Gold Glove, ·-- ilroblem this year, which I
but be wants to Improve on his 36 endured last year," Carter said
RBI total.
"I'm proud of hitting .300. It's a
magic number," LaValliere said
Friday at the Pirates' spring
training complex in Bradenton,
Fla. "But I think It would mean
more to the club if l hit .270 and
had 50 RBI than If! hit .300wlth36
RBI.
"The guys with the big RBI
totals have peOple on base In
front of them. So a tot of! I, I can't
do anything about. But I want to
be al)le to produce when I've got a
chance to knock in some runs."
LaValliere batted .374 In the
at the Me ts' spring training
facility In Port St. Lucie, Fla.
"I mean. six cortisone shots.
It's a lot of cortisone and It's
something I don 't need to do
again. ••
Carter, 34, said he has not had
to tape the knee In spring
training.
"That's why I feel ,very good
about going ·Into this year,"
Carter said ." "I feel I'm really
ready to go. I'm playing right
now without any tape and that's a
good feeling. I:m really excited
about lt."
Carter, a 16-tlme All-Star.
drove In 83 runs and belted 2Q
homers In 198'1.
"It wasn't a banner year.-"
Carter said. "I finl&hed first In
RBI for a catcher and second In
home runs. I just had the low
average."
.
Elsewhere, at West · Palm
Beach, FJa :. an Inflamed right
shoulder will prevent Montreal
Expos left fielder Tim Raines
from throWing for the first few
weeks of spring training. Raines
belleves he sustained the Injury
working out wltb hllb _school
players near his Heathrow. Fla., ~
home.
At St. PetersbUl'll, Fla., the St.
Louts Cardinals signed reliever
Todd Worrell, the 1986 NL Rookie
of the Year, to a one-year
contract worth $200,000.
m~·s
GIOUP OF MIN'S
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SEO standings SEO, OPPONENTS
(All Games)
TEAM
W L P OP
Wheelersburg ... . 21 0 1507 1169
PortJmouth ... .. .. 20 1 1594 1231 ·
ChesaP.,ake ....... 18 2 1417 1134 ·
Logan .. ... ........... 18 3 1227 1069
Southern .. , .. .. ..... 18 3 1804 1311
Gallipolis ...... .. .. . 17 5 1337 1138
x-Waverly .. .. ..... 14 7 1324 1172
x-Meigs ......... .. .. 14 8 1486 1418
Marietta .. ........ .. 12 9 1438 1348
Athens ......... .. .. .. 11 10.1428 1326
x-South Point .: .. . 11 11. 1507 1554
x-West.. .. .. .. .... ... 8 13 1895 1413
Pt. Pleasant ... ... 71414451572
x-Green!ield .. .... 6 15 1125 1225
x-Warren ......... .. 5 15 1138 1276
x-VInton , ........... 3 17 1086 1240
x-J ackson. , ........ 3 18 1105 1425
x-Completed season.
Friday's results:
Pt . Pleasant 80 Milton 67 ( regu lar season)
Gallipolis 52 Meigs 49
Wheelersburg 67 Fairland 53
Thu~ay's games:
(District Tournaments)
(OU Convocation Center,
Albens)
Dlvl&lon II
Athens-Sheridan winner vs .. Wa·
shington CH-Hlllsboro winner,
6:30p.m.
.
"Gallipolis vs . PortsmouthIronton winner, 8:15p.m.
Friday's games:
Division IV
Hannan Trace vs . SouthernNorth Gallia wlner, 6:30p.m.
Valley sectional winnver vs,
Hillsboro sectional winner, 8: 15
p.m .
SUITS & SPORT ·COATS
•COMPL.ETE STOCK OF WINTER JACKETS
•GROUP OF MEN'S SHOES
•GROUP OF MEN'S
.
>
OPEN FRIDAY ·&, MONDAY TIL 8 P.M.
PHOENIX (UPI ) - Gov . Evan
' Mecham's bid for a delay In his
Senate Impeachment trial failed
~~~·an Arli:Qna Supreme Court
b~tle that raised the question of
c#stltutlonal separation of pow"~' among the branches of
d!Ternmen I.
·
llustlces William Holoha·n and
Si4nley · Feldman repeatedly
a$~ed Mecham's attorney, Thorrtas Crowe, to explain their
pet;er over the Senate before ·
·tl\l!y joined two other justices
Ftlday lp denying a motion to
p~tpone · th'e start of the trial
Mnnday.
:•;•Even ·If we agreed with
e..ierythlng you say, what juttsdl~tlon does thls court 'have over
the Senate?" Feldman aske<j
c~we .
the justices took under advtse-
m~nt a second motion by Crowe,
cllri!Jllng that Mecham's constlt~onal rights would be lrrevocabl~. damaged If the Impeachment
trtrl is held before Mecham's
M)!rch 22 trial on criminal
clilorges of perjury a'nd fraud for
-~
NOBODY
WALKS
EVERYBODY
DRIVES
' GREENBERG
y ALLEN
OS ANGELES' (UPI) - The
d e . of York and h(s popular
r -headed wife greeted dlgnlt · ies and waved to weil·wlshers
u~n their arrival in Southern
C ifornia from London as the
r al couple began a 10-day
p motional tour .
miling and looking relaxed,
P nee Andrew and the mother! .!J.:! duchess of York, the former
SAllE!!
Sarah Ferguson,·, arrived at In- Naval Station.
ternational Airport Friday,after- ·
Dressed . In a navy blue suit
·with
matching gloves, the dunoon following an 11-hour flight
aboard a British Airways Boeing
chess, who Is three months
pregnant, stepped onto the air747.
The royal couple, accompan- port tarmac about 30 minutes
ied on the flight by the duchess's
later t~an scheduled, The duke ,
personal gynecologist, "We~e dressed in a gray suit, stood by
his wife a few moments chatting
greeted by Mayor Tom Bradley
before proceeding to their quar- with dignitaries before the pair
waved to well-wishers and
ters aboard the royal yacht
climbed Into a $130,000 Rolls
Britannia at _the ).-ong Beach
Royce Silver Spur for a freeway
trip 'to the Britannia.
'
Tl)e royal couple made no
comments to reporters and photographers, who were k~pt behind barricades by the Secret
Service.
The duchess was accompanied
by her gyneeologist, Anthony
Kenney, because of concern by
Buckingham Palace that she is
trying to do tbo much, sources at
Buckingham Palace said.
U.S. trip Isduchess,
the second
for
theThe
27-year-old
whose
appearance ln . New York City
last month for the Broadway
premiere of the musical "Phantom of the Opera," was marred
by a supporter of Irish nationalIsm who lunged at her with a flag.
She was not harmed.
28
I dL
Prince Andrew, 'vis 1~ ~s
Angeles lour y~ars a~o w en e
playfully turne a pamt sprayer
on reporters covering his trip.
The royal cougle':_;Los :~gele~
trip, which en s · arc•o
an
bll
h
Includes. ,more· t an. .• pu c
events, .Vas tlrned to promote
UKLA '88, a three-month .festival
1
I h
celebrating Br tis arts, cu lure
andhproductls.
h
T e roya coup1e were sc ed u1ed to beg in th e ir pu bli c even t s
1
1
1
todayw i1h a bigc Iv ewe come a
City' Hall and a visit to Chinatown. The pair wer~ a Iso expeeled ;0 have lunch with Mayor
Bradley at the Transamerica
Towers restaurant and hold a
d
h
news reception
aboar
t e
Britannia.
·
Amorig other highlights of the
visit will be an event thrown by
.
the British film industry and a
;oGREETINpS- The Duke and Duchess of York
lunch
aboard . the u .S. aircraft
Los Angeles for a len day vlsll to Southern
~) are greeted by Los Angeles Mayor Tom
carrier
Nimitz.
California. UPI
itadley and his wife Ethel (C) as they arrive In
After a week in Los Angeles,
!I "
•
. •
the duke and duchess will spend
two nights in the California
desert resort of Palm Springs as
guests of Walter Annenberg, the
'
u.S. ambassador to Britain from
1969 10 1975. ·
A day alter returning from
California, the duchess will fly to
:..":
Switzerland lor a 12-day skiing
.. !
holiday with her sister-in-law,
!)'CATHERINE GEWERTZ · with receiving more than
from hls. taxes as ''cost of goods Pr.incess Diana, a palace spokes'
$100,000 ,in illega I cash payments · sold."
woman said.
,lus ANGELES IUPI) - A in 1984 and 1985.
The Tashjtans, arresteq at
F-ergie's child, the !lrst for her
f~erat grand jury investigation
All three men and Tashjian's
their San Mateo home Thursday, and Andrew, IS ·due In August.
in~ payola in tlie recording ' wile, Valerie, 31, were. additionwere released on ball Friday in
Buckingham Palace coninaltstry has led to the indictment ally charged with tax evasion .
San Francisco .' Defense attorney firmed Jan. 25 that Fergie was
of~~wo prominent independent
The indictments , which
David Kenner
, called the charges expecting a baby . A commoner,
rE!f~rd promoters lor a-llegedly
Bonner said were the first payola
"ludicrous. '
Sarah Ferguson married Anpl~. g- radio station employees charges in the country in " many
Crowell and Craig could not be drew in a Westminster Abbey .
w , money and cocaine to get air
years,'' resulted from a two-year
reached. Bonner said they were
86
2
ti
fer their clients.
investigation by the Internal expected , to surrender within a . ceremony ~uly 3• 19 ·
lft,• here is and continues to be a Revenue Service and the Justice lew days in Los An!!eles.
PliWla problem In the (record- Department's Strike Force on
! .' industry," U.S. Attorney
Organized Crime. ·
R' rt Bonner said at a news
John .Newcomer , head of the .
c · erence Friday. "Here we J..os Angeles strike force, refused
two independent· ·record
to say whether the defendants
p ' footers making substantial had organize(! crime connec' ents In cash and cocaine to
tions. but he said the investigag
ecords played."
Mecham .also faces criminal
tion was continuing.
By HARRIETI' HINDMAN
nner said the two promoters
proceedings and a recall
·Between 1980 and 1985. Tashr .e sented ' 'virtually all" the jian allegedly provided cocaine
election.
PHOENIX (UP!) - Arizona's
cdll'lltry's major record labels. and g~ve $40,000 to Johnny Lee Mormons have unwittingly been
The crisis surrounding MeBll(lhe.sald there is no evidence . Walker of KYNO In Fresno.
.
cham
has put the spotlight on the
thrustlntothestormsurroundlng
thlt the record companies knew Call!.; cocaine to Edward Carey
200,000 to 250,000 members of the
Gov. Evan Mecham, the first
tht> promoters ' were making of KMGX In Fresno and $18,000 Mormon to hold the state's
Church of Jesus Christ of Latterllldral payments to radio and cocaine to Robert Brulte of 'highest office and the first chief
day Saints, known as Mormons,
s~ons.
·
who live in Arizona and comprise
KAMZ In El Paso, Texas .
. executive Jm_peached In Arizo_f!le indlctments returned late
5 percent to 7 percent of the
na's 76-year history.
Between 198~ and 1986, Craig
Tliitrsday . charjle Ralph Tashstate's
population.
allegedly paid $22,700 to Sidney . Mecham goes on trial Jlrfonday
11.:11! .31, of San l';Jateo, and Kenneqy of WCIN In Cincinnati; before Arizona's 30·memher Se·E ven though.Arizona Mormons
\\(.QIIam Craig, 42, of Scottsdale, $31,300 to Odell Rice, Jr., of nate, which will sit as an
are a tight-knit . community,
At!t.. with making Illegal .PaY· KPRS In Kansas City, Mo.;
leaders· contend their
church
impeachment court. When the
~ts to radio program dlrec- $61,550toLarryTtnsleyofWAOK · . Republican-dominated House of. religion traditionally has
101) tn·etght states.
shunned politics and that the
In Aflanta; and $97,150 to Chris ~presentatlves on Feb. 5 voted
:P•yments were
llegedly
church's role In the Mecham
Turner- of .three stations: WLOK 46-14 - to Impeach Mecham, all
mide to ensure broadcast of In Memphis, Tenn., WJAX In ilve Mormons In the House, four affair Is nothing more than
r~rds by such artists as Janet Jacksonville, Fla. and WGIV In RepuDUcaDs and one Democrat, media hype.
,
Jaelcaon, Duran Duran, Devo,
"I don't think Mormon · has
Charlotte, N.C.
opposed the move.
K~ and the Gang, the New
, Kennedy, Rice and Tlnsely
The governor 18 accused of anything to do with It,'' says
Ef;!lion, Robert · Plant, Culture
Crismon S. Lewis, editor of The
have cooperated with !be lnvestl· concealing a $350,000 campaign
Clllb and the Eurythmics, pro- . gallon, Bonner said.
La~-dJy Sentinel, an unofficial
.
loaD on lltate-requlred financial
5el!lltors said,
Mormon
newspaper published In
The Tashjlans allegedly forms, trying to block a death
ladlctlhents a110 charge
Phoenix
since
19'78. ''The media
evaded $1D7,n3 In corporate threat made by oae aide against
Wilson Crowell, 59, of
Income taxes for the fiscal years another .aDd lllelaUy lending
haa tried to make It an • - · "
, former vice president . ending In June 1983, 1!lllf and state money to bla !IUtomoblle
Lewis and others acknowledge
general manager ot, radlo
that Mecham's frequent referen·
1985. Craig allegedly deducf:l!d · dea~lp.
'
&!alton KIQQ In Los . Aqelel,
tile Illegal paymentll he IIWie
ces to a "bllher authority" and a
.
SA~EI!
SA~E!!
allegedly concealing a $350,000 separation of' powers barred the
"Because the Senate has the
loan on state-mandated financial Supreme Court from Interfering right to conduct Impeachment
reports, They said they would In matters delegated to the procedures doesp' t mean we can
rule on the second motion legislative branch.
,
throw the rest of the Constitution
Tuesday.
Under quest1onl11g by Feld· ·.out the window,'' Crewe said,
Senate counsel John Lundin, man, Eckstein said he believed
"There are fundamental notions
.who argued successfully against the Senate, If lt w'lshed, could
Of fairness attached \O every
the request for a temporary stay, convict or clear Mecham without
proceeding In our body 'of law. "
said h_e believes "the ultimate hearing any evidence.
d'eclsion will be consistent" with
Crowe went to: the Supreme
Responding to questions from
the denial F·riday ,
Court late Friday afternoon. two
Holohan and Feldman suggestCrowe protest.:!d that the Se- days after the Senate court of
lng that Crowe's anticipation of
nate has threatened to prevent Impeachment refused to delay
an unfair criminal trial might be
Mecham from presenting any Mecham's trial beyond ·a one" premature, Crowe said, "If the
defense if he invokes Fifth week postponement gran ted
Impeachment proceeding goes
Amendment rights against sel!- earlier.
forward before the criminal
incrtm ina lion . and refuses to
In addition to · the alleged trial, there is no way the bell can
an_swer questions during the hidden loan, the ·articles of be unrung. The damage Is done,
Impeachment trial. He sa td the Impeachment before the Senate the horses are out of the barn."
Impeachment trial will serve as charge Mecham with Illegally
.'a pipeline, .. furnishing criminal loaning $80,000 ·from ·his protocol
Lundin told the justices, " The
prosecutors wlth information fund to hill auto dealership and Senate Is committed to a fair and
they might be un,able to obtajn , obstructl_ng an Investigation Into just discharge of Its . consiiiu.
otherwise. ·
· an·alleged death threat by one of . tiona! duties ."
Lundin and Paul Eckstein his aides.
He and Eckstein said the
one of the attorneys for the House
Crowe said fundamental con- Constitution provides for no
board of managers , the tmwach- stitutional rights against sel!- judicial review of Impeachment
ment prosecutors - argued that lncrlmlnatlon and to due process proceedings, but leaves the mat the Arizona and U.S. constitu- of law and a fair trial cannot be ter to voters who can remove
tions give the Senate exclusive dented In favor of the Senate's senators l)y recall or election
authority over the Impeachment constitutional authority to hold defeat if they feel their actions
trial. They said the constitutional the Impeachment trial.
were unfair.
~ oyal couple begins tour of Southern California .
~
SARA MOORE
CAMBRIDGE - Sara Gayle
Moore. a senior at Meadowbrook
High School In Cambridge, was
recently chosen by the Interna' tio.nal Amageur Sports Program
to participate In a 19-day European volleyball tour this
summer.
The trip will take Moore to such
places as Great Britain, France,
the Netherlands and Belgium.
For her to make the trip, she
must raise $2,280 in donations to
cover expenses. Contributions
can be sent to Ed Wright, trustee
for Sara Moore, in care of
Cambridge Savings & Loan, 209
Seneca Ave., Byesville, Ohio
43723.
Moore is the daughter of
Ortan·d and Constance Moore,
formerly of Proctorville, and the
granddaughter of Carl and
Delma Moore of Proctorville,
Thelma Sheets of Athalia and the
late Vale Sheets of Crown City.
Among Moore's athletic accomplishments are honorable
mention, all-state; all-district;
first-team East Central Ohio
League and Meadowbrook's
most valuable player. Upon
graduation in May , she should
have a total of 11 varsity letters
from volleyball, basketball and
track. ·
BOYS .
WEAR
40•/o
60°/o
75°/o
S10. OFF · OFF
OFF
STANDARD EQUIPMENT:
Designed to prov1d~ ease_ot
handling under.a Wide vanety
of cutt1ng cond11IOOS, lhts mid·
range sa.w features a ~lui
3.3 cu. 1n: engtne. It shght 1n
weight woth a prolesptonal
. . that1nc·orporat- the
.des1gn
~~ .
- "' 1e f eaI ures WI
. 'th
most' UP'·1.,.,a
built·in performance and
. b'lily
·
reha 1 •
By HARRIETt' HINDMAN
..
Open Monday ~Night 'Til 8 P.M.
t
Court
refuses
·Mecham's
bid
for
impeachment
trial delay
.
.· SALE!
OF
YAWlS TO 145.o0
MOOEL33Q
•
'
'ederal grand jury indicts four
~ payola probe of record industry
.
..
..
'
DELAY DENIED- The Impeachment trial of Arizona Gov.
Evan Mecham (shown In May 1987 photo) Is scheduled to start
Monday when 30 stale senators convene aa an Impeachment court
to begin an historic trial expected to last six to eight w~ks. The · · :
senators will decide whether Mecham should be removed from
'·
office for committing high crimes, misdemeanors or malfeasance.
UPI
..
_:____y heiJ"'copter h~d
problems J.Ore erash
,l
a.I"Jfl
be~
CHICO, Texas (UPI) - The
Chinook helicopter t hat eras hed
in a field Thursday, killing 10
soldiers, suffered mechanical
problems as soon as It took off
from Fort Hood and made, two
unscheduled landings before It
caug h t 1ire and p1u.m met e d 1o th e
.
·
1
ld
ground, a surv vor sa .
Officials at Fort Sill, Okla .,
where the hellcopter was based,
Friday grounded the base's rematning seven twin-rotor · CH47D Chinook helicopters pending
tnspections, said spo kesman Ri chard Brown .
Officials at Fort Hood, in
Killeen, Texas , said none of their
Chinooks had been grounded.
Chinooks have been Involved In
some of history's worst helicopter d'tsasters.
The crash of an Army Chinook
CH-47 helicopter at a Manheim,
West Germany, air show on Sept. ·
11, 1982, killed 46 people, and 37
American soldiers died on Aug.
18, 1971, when their CH-47 exploded and crashed during a field
exercise near Pegnitz, West
Germany.
Forty-five people died ·on Nov.
6, 1986, when an LR-234 Chinook
helicopter carrying offshore oil
workers plunged into the North
Sea off theShetland·Islands north
of Scotland in what the Ir\ternationa! Civil Aviation Organiza' tton termed the world's worst
civilian helicopter cr~sh.
' The Fort Sill t;htnook, which
was ferrying 13 soldiers from
Fort Hood to Fort Sill for training
exercises and carried a five-man
flight crew from Fort Sill, caught
fire and crashed Thursday afternoon in a field near Chico, about
50 nilles northwest of Dallas.
·. ham' S
. . na· Momto,·ns say· M
_ ec
Arizo
Problems a.re not their problems
=
'*'
II
'
j
'
l
Six men died In the crash and
lour others dled In hospitals
Thursday and Frida••.
, Eight
others remained hospitalized,
mostly with burns and fractures,
at Brooke·Army Medical Center
in San Antonio and hospitals In
Da II as, Fort Worth and
Bridgeport.
Capt. Calvin Turner, a survi-.
vor who was Interviewed In his
hospital room by the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram, said a fire broke
out before the crash.
"There was a lot of black
smoke and that's all I remember," Turner said.
A Fort Hood spokesman. LL
Col. Mike Miller, said the pilot of
the helicopter, Chief Warrant
Officer 4 Ronald W. Bender. ~_
reported a "fault light" on his ·· '
instrument panel Immediately ~ ·
after takeoff and returnedto Fort :
Hood to check on it.
Twenty-one minutes alter :~k ..
ing off again, Bender radioed the ·
port Worth air control tower and ,
requested permission to make a
"precautionary tanding," said
air control center manager Jim
Howden.
'
"Our controller asked if it was
an emergency and the pilot said
it was not," Howden said . .
Rancher John David Abdnor
said he watched the helicopter
land in a pasture near hls house, .
near the town of Cranfills Gap
and about 15 miles north of Fort
Hood.
"I was kind of stunned," he
said. "I figured that maybe they
had some engine trouble or some
kind of emergency wlierl! they ·'
had to stop."
Abdnor said the helicopter's ·,
engines stopped when it landed ·
and the craft was on the ground ·
lor about 20 minutes before
taking off again.
When he heard later In the ,
afternoon that a Chinook had ; ;::
crashed near Chico, Abdnor said,
~~;~~:~r~:hz:f;;~ ~~~d~h~~ •
Mille said precautionary landGod who will mete out vengeance lngs are not unusual.
to his foes has helped interject
Turner, his voice muffled by
the church Into the controversy.
his oxygen mask. said the pre"When you're In the LDS cautionary landing was caused
Church, it becomes a way of life. by mechanical problems .
It's not just something you
"They opened up the engine on
believe," says Lewis . "It really the right side of the back end,"
very much is a lifestyle. That Turner said. "We got back in.
·comes .through with Mecham- strapped up, starled flying and
the way he talks to people, ·an of a sudden we heard a lot of .•• ,
•
sometimes he uses scriptures . noise."
That's how we are. That's our
Turner said all the men aboard . •
life."
rushed to the cab when they : '
Mormon leaders also say the . noticed the smoke In the back or •
church's ideology e,nphasizlng the helicopter.
:
brotherhood, family life and ,
"Smoke started coming out," :
clean living leads people to he said. :·we all ran up to the ~ ·
wrongly assume that all Mor- cab.' •
.: ,\
mons are conservative RepubllBruce Jay. a spokesman for .-,
cans who blindly support the Boeing Helicopters, which : ,;
governor.
makes the Chinook, said a :."·,
"The natural question is, 'Are sudden shift In weight when all •, ·
Mormons out there blindly folthe passencers rushed to the ·:
lowing tbls man?' There are front "would make It more •
some out there, but I don't think difficult'! for even an expe- :,, :
they're doing It because he Is a rleneed pilot to land safely.
· :-:,
Mormon. I think they're doing It
Jay said Boeing had no lnfor- •·.•
becau&e of his stand on moraL matlon to su,gest thole events • ,
1
Issues," Lewis said.
occurred.
• ·;_,.
•
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'
Page-D-2-Sunday Tmes-Sentinel
:Authorities
Pomeroy-Middleport-~
re-~est
Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.
1988
Februlry 2&.198il
,
Ohio Point .Pieellnt. W. Va.
_suspect of attacking. pageant co-host
Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992.. 2156
Register - 675-1333
'
!i=L PASO. Texas. (UPI ) Authorities Saturday re-arrested
.a man who gave a false name and
address when he was released on
$100 bond on a charge or trying to
sexually assault Miss t;SA page·ant co-host Tr!lCY Scoggins, a·
performer on television's " Colbys " $Cries.
· Scoggins' co-host Alan Thlcke,
meanwhile, had his commitment
·to animal rights challenged Friday at a confrontational news
conference by activists who
oppose the awarding or fur coats
to contestants, the Issue that
prompted longtime Miss USA
host Bob Barker to quit the
pageant.
.
The Incidents were the latest to
knock the pageant out of Its
.J!ormal routine since two contest·
ants from Minnesota . earlier
withdrew In succession because
of shoplifting charges.
Contestants underwent pers onallntervlews before a panel of
celebrity Judges Saturday and
Sunday In prepar,ation for Tuesday's pageant.
Scoggins' alleged assailant,
now ldentllled as Pedro Concepcion Padilla, 35, was back In jail
Saturday In' lieu of $100,000bond.
"In the early morning hours of
(Saturday), when we were about
to bring him In, having found out
where he lived, his attorney
called and said he would bring
hhn in," El Paso County sheriff's
Capt. Paco Aguirre said: "His
a llorney turned him in at 8 this
morning.
" He had given us both a
.
fictitious name and address, "
Aguirre said. "His name Is, as
tar as know now, Pedro Concepcion Padilla, 35, ·a U.S. citizen
living In El Paso. "
Padilla originally was arrested
Thursday night after being
subdued by the actress, aided by
Miss Nebraska -USA Kellle
O'Neil of Omaha · and several
other bystanders.
Associate Municipal Judge Ro'dolfo Romero Initially set his
bond at $100, but It was raised to
~100,000 Friday night by state
District Judge Brunson Moore.
But when sherltt'·s officers
armed with an arrest warrant
went to the El Paso address
Padilla had given police, they
learned he did not live there,
pollee Lt. J .R. Grijalva said.
The visibly shaken actress said
she was " shocked and outraged"
the bond was originally set at
$100.
"The low bond tells men that
they don' t have totak~ a woman
· dining and dancing. The low bond
says you can pay $100 and have
your way with the woman of your
choice. " said Scoggins, 34, who
seemed to be fighting back tears
at a news conference Friday
afternoon .
l'lomero defended the $100
bond, which Grijalva said was
the lowest he had ever seen lor a
felony crime In his 13 years as a
pollee officer.
"I am sorry she (Scoggins)
thinks the bond Is supposed to be
used to punish somebody."
Romero said. "That comes
later."
The judge added, though, that
he might have set a higher bond
had he known about the false
address.
Moore said he heard about the
Incident and the $100 bond on his
way to his bank Friday
afternoon.
•'I went directly to my ofllce to
do something about It," he said.
If convicted of attempted sexual assault, Padilla could face
two to five years In prison and up
to a $5,000 fine.
Scoggins said the assailant
ripped off her evening dress,
leaving her naked from the waist
up, and pushed her sh.;mlders
against the wall of the elevator at
the Marriott Hotel.
O'Neil and the others came to
her rescue and held the suspect
until hotel guards ariived, Scog- '
gins said.
·
Scoggins said she has changed
hotels and Is being !'IIOre careful.
''The people of El Paso and the
Miss USA Pageant have been
very cooperative and sensitive,"
she said .
El Paso City Councilman Jethro Hills said he hoped the
Incident would not reflect badly
on the city;
"I would hate to see this
Incident detract from our goal of
showing the rest of America that
we have a· great city here," Hills
said. "It contradicts something
that I know, that El Paso Is a
friendly city. ;,
Thlcke defended himself Friday at a news conference Inter-
•
States . We know and Mr. Thlcke
knows there' ~ a great deal of
cruelty Involved In the production of fur coats. His hosting of
this pageant Is an endorsement of
that Industry," Young said.
Thlcke re~ponded that before
,he agreed to be Involved with the
pageant, he Investigated Its coat
suppliers and made sure they
compiled with humane execution
of their animals,
'·
Public Notice .
PUIUC: NOTICE
--
WHERE'S THE STRIKE - Claudia Bush·
baum, secrelary-treasurer of Teamsters Local
Z747 hurries lo her car with a picket sign outSide of
the Northwest Airlines headquarters Saturday
where negolla&lottA have. been In session IInce
yesterday momlng. UPI .
fundi for Galle end
Mefto
Countleo.
CAA
(21 Tho Golllo-Moifto
•
will deliver progrom octivl·
tieo for tho following JTPA ·
.Tltlot: Tide .11A 78%: Title
1.1A 3%; Tltlo .11A8%: Title
1 18: ond 8% Incentive
!31 The Ohio lu-u of
wUI
Employment provide i n - ond relonol
- ....,, to determine ond
vorlfy tho ldoMiflcotion of
oliglblo oppliconto. ·
14) GoHio·Mofgto CAA 0.livero ito PI'Dtlrotnl in occordonee with tho policyin Ito' Fobruory 28 • .1888
publilhod EEO/ AAP Stole·
or
ment. All Foclwolorld Stote
or h1ndicap.
Lowo concoming Civil
~:: E..O~ner, 'JTPA Righbl ond Equol Opporluti·
.Wflh-tho-•11 ity oro f<lllowod ond odhorod
!!!Jipo_.lty of odminlltor- to. ·
~ progr~m. tf • pUNfiian•
(I) Oollio· Moigo CAA uooo
~t ; 1nt or opplic:ont foelo
o doubio-entry occountlng
M/""" .heto been dloorim- ayotom to lnouro oound flo·
lnotod ogolnot in ornptoy. cal control. eacounting. eu~
........ ·- - . employment dlt. ond debt collection pro..,t/.. training with lhio - u - oncl tho proper dio·
11•ncy. he/lhe llhould lm. bu-1 . end accounting of
niW!otoly corrtoct D - .E. fundo received In occor·
SloodcMr. JTPA D i - dance with required law1
1114131!7-7342/(1141.882· end regulltlona.
11828 to pYI'IUO , the prop(8) Progrom octlvitiel por
or diRrimlnotion comptoint title oro oo followo: (IIIOTE:
procedur11.
All opplicontl/porticiponto
FEB. 28
receive ......ment •• pilrt
of tM JTPA outrooch effort.
Public; Notice
AO-IfiiOnt II Ulld to help
ooch client plan the achievoPUBUC NOTfCE'
. ment of corwr/job go1olo;
Tho
City ·Pion.
nina Co~n wHI hok11. ond 01 1 flrot step to tM
· public heorlng on Tuoodoy, county cl•s.,oom tr•ining
Morch 1&. 1..8 ot 7:30 p. -lting llot. Aooeooment io
· ln. in tho Municlpel Buitdlng. uoed to help op~!iconto/ eli-'·
•In 8 Second Avonuo. Oolll- em. eccea other turlding
aourcu end eervicea in the
pollo. Ohio.
JTPA funding 11 une·
, , Tho rMOtlng will be hold event
ble
to
help
duo to fund limit·• o~ ~" of,lho Wough-Hol- tiona.)
•ley-Wood Funerol Diroctoro.
Longth of Time.)
• Inc., 810 Second Avonuo. (Activltioo.
.
A.
Ti~o 11 A 78%: 11 I Job
· OloiNpolo, Ohio.
.• VThl Plonning Corpmiolion Club, 2·3 ·wooko, 121 Clo•·
aroam Tr•ining (CRT). v8riH
will tho propoood to o moldmum of 12 ... i i ' E i o
f
not to
.... _ l o t . per _.m
.. a I I d' 101 WMII,I. Flnt
conoldorotion will be given
_ polio.
OhiD. ·
1
The oomml... on wHI con- to funding cil,nto · _ . .•.
thM • Boci:lllou·
....,; ,..nddng o condltionol ling (3) Dn·th•Job Troln-- u. onc1 o licle ond - r yonl controct. 141
oleerance in an Urban Bull- ing.
Youth Try-Out. 210 houro
-'~••• Diltflat.
(ill Pro-Employ·
JomuT.a-. moximum,
•
Coordinotor mont Jldll Trolning for 14OoHipolio City Plonning 15 yur oklo. whon oppropri·
Commi~ •••· per IIChool .C81end•r.
•
BIMI!=itll conolclerotion wHibe
'FEB. 28
8'-' to dropouto. voterono.
ond hondlcoppod inclividuolo
: 1 Cerd of ·Thenka
through tho "1 0% Wlildow"
•
with oligibllity verified by
OBES.
B. Title 1 1 A 3%: Tllio pro·
CARD OF THANKS
grorn
will- QklerWorkWe wauhllke to
.,. ogu 61 ond over with
eXprftS OUf heartfelt
octivifloo oimilor to thooe for
tllln*s to our
11A 78% but with tho·addl·
tion of Work Experlonco oc·
rtlotiYII, frifntls, and
tivity.
flllthllotsforthtir
C. Titto.11A 8%: Thio prok~s, lon, and
grim will Hrve •dulta In
sympathy; for the
long term troinlngot pubUcly
funded otoiO inotitution• for
floral arraogements,
poet-high ochool troining.
, toed. and car4s; and
Porticlpento In thlo trolnlng
to those wha han
prOilrom muot be in long
term trolning or pertlcipot·
helped us In •Y way
lng in lite,.cy trolnlng
ilurlttg- .....
S,•daltlialtks to
ototo
fun~od
throuah ABE
the staff at Care
ochoot training
llnH for !hair lou
conjunction with lilil
lng. ·Four (4) .,.., dogroe
atlll ..W ,.. they
- · o r o procludod.
pt to Peerl; to lill
D. Tillol11 B: Thlo progrom
Carttr for his peecefvl
MrVft eligible youth 14·21
.,..,. of oge during tho oumIMIAIJII, and to the
lawUngs·.Coats·llo- . mor OGhool bro.. through
Work Experlenc•. Job Club.
fUMral lt.mt for !hair
other ca..., planning eanry effidMt •wkt.
plorotlon octivltleo. Md ro-
i,.
.
CHICAGO IUPI ) - John
Wayne Gacy, on death row for
~he homosexual: related murders
of 33 young men and boys,
reportedly has proposed mar, r!age to a 43-year-oid mother of
· eight wl)o says she believes he Is
Innocent.
The revelation surfaced In a
copyright story In the early
Sunday editions of the Chicago
Sun-Times, which obtained do· zens of bizarre love letters
: written by Gacy since October
; 1986 to Sue Terry ot Centralia, Ill.
In the letters, typed from his
, death row cell at Menard CorrecIlona! Center at Chester, Ill.,
Gacy wrote about a wide-range
of subjects, Including his plans to
, be released from prison, and
displayed his temper as well as a
strange sense or humor.
'"You · asked me what I'll do ~
had been kidnap~ and sexually
to that of the deep So'uth befoFe
assaulted by six white men,
Integration. ·:You have .Miss'f!;.
POUGHKEEPSIE;, N. Y. Including one who flashed a
sippi circa 1954 right In your
(UPIJ-Hundredsofdemonstra- pollee-type badge and Identified
midst," Mason said.
~
tors chanting "No j,ustice, no himself as a law officer.
Mason and Maddox refused to
peace" marched on. the county
The case has fueled tensions In
allow Brawley to cooperate with
sheriff's offlc,e Saturday to pro- the county, with many' residents
state Attorney General r:to~rt
test the handling of the case of a 'of the predominantly white area
Abrams, the state specla1 prosecblack teenager who says six accusing Brawley of being a liar.
utor In the case named bv Gov.
white men raped her.
. ·
· "I've appealed to-the people of
T>farlo CUOJIIO.
'
.
'
About eight buses loaded with · the county to respect their right
protesters, some from other lo protest and to march, In spite
Hudson Valley communities and · of the fact that we may not like
New .York Cl ty, converged down- everything 'that Is said. and to be
James Jaooby I '
town to rally to the cause of tolerant, rational and polite,"
said Dutchess County Executive
16-year-old Taw ana Brawley.
>
The marchers, Waving signs Lucille Pattison.
with slogans such as "Racism Is
Pollee Chief Stewart Bowles
Ndln'H
1-1'1-11
apartheid," made · their way said he had put about 50 officer's
+QJ107
slowly up the street under the on duty, compared to the usual •
•• 11
watchful eyes of some 50 pollee seven or eight, to "escort" the
+KtU4
''
marchers on their 1-mlle route
officers and a few onlookers.
"No justice, no peace," the from the county courthouse to the
war
EAST
crowd shouted, many carrying sheriff's office. "I don' t .antici+tn
·+AKUZ , •
umbrellas to ward off the light pate trouble," Bowles said.
.KI093
• t02'
+Q713
The Rev. AI Sharpton, a black
snow falling on the city 70 miles
+KQII5
+A7
minister from Brooklyn working
north of New York Cl ty .
Brawley, from , the nearby with the Brawley family, Wl\8
'.
SOUTH
•
vlllage of Wappingers Falls In leading the demonstrators In
+4
• AQJSZ
Dutchess County, was found near ·what he described as a nontAJ
vtoleni
protest
her home dazed and wrapped In a
+J1064Z
Civil · rights lawyer Vernon
plastic l)ag Nov. 28, her body
Vulnerable: Neither
smeared with feces and the Mason, who Is representing
Dealer: North
words "nigger" and "KKK" Brawley along with attorney
Alton Maddox, compared the
scrawled on her torso.
Nardo Eoll
The girl told , authorities she racial climate In New York state
Pass 1+
3•
Pus
BRIDGE
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'
t
.-..d...
•a
..
Canadian convict's
transfer approved
TRENTON, N.J (UPII- Gov.
Thomas Kean has approved the
transfer to Canada or a Nova
Scotia man whose conviction In a.
controversial murder trial
prompted a waveofprotestvlglls
In his homeland, a spokesman
said Saturday.
The transfer of Bruce Curtis,
24. was the state's first approved
under an International prisoner
, _
exchange t,reaty the ....,gis1a,ture
enacted last year · primarily
because of the Curtis case, Kean
spokesman Carl Golden said.
With Kean's approval, details
of the transfer npw need to be
negotiated between American
and Canadian a uthorltles,
Golden said.
"It's wonderful," Curtis's sisler, Carol said In Hallfa.x , Nova
Scotia. "We've been waiting a
long lime for this."
Curtis was ~onvlcted of shootIng the mother of a school
classmate, but Canadian oft!clals maintain he was railroaded
and hundreds of people In five ·
Canadlan cities have held candlelight vigils on his behalf since
1985.. The latest such vigil was.
held Jan. 23.
Curtis already has been lmprl·
soned five ye~rs and Is scheduled
to serve another five years at the
Wagner Correction Center In
. · Boi'dentown, N.J., before he
becomes eligible for parole.
However, under Ca nadlan parole
regUlations, Curtis could be
released as early as next year.
:
Opening lead:
+9
A costly ·
opening lead
\
•
By Jomes Jacoby
WJIIIIo••·and
Jap
:rJ
••Ill·
:0:.
t.
v--
C!f\.~~~Erho;~~~,t~
'·
lt's too bad 'fhen !allure to make
the kllllng lead cosll two tricks and
the contract. In this it11tance I reaJIL
alladl 00 blame to West. Aker al •
since East bad opened with one lpltde,
it certainly seems normal to lead part·
ner'uult, but the diabolical holding·in
dummy makes that lead a disaster.
Eut won the· king of spades and returned a heart. South .won the q~n
. and played a low club. Eul took t1te
club aeven and played another beatt
Decllrer won the jack, nolinl that lie
had a trump loser. He ruffeil a qt+;
the ac:e falling, and led d1111111y's
of 11pades. East covered, SOuth rutflit,
andSouthnowcashedlbedlunondate
and led bls diamond jack to dumm;:s
king. Caahlng the spade 10 pllinfd
A Monmouth County jury had Weel'a etpt, and decllrer wu . _
con¥1cted Curtis In 1983 of abletocaabdummy'aHftllofs~.
aggravated manslaughter In the That wu nine tricks In, with the lea.S:
shooting Cleath of Rosemary atiU ill dummy, A diamond 1fti
Podils at her home In Loch ~and there wu no way to~'
Arbour, N.J..
tb from ICOring 1111 !all llltJe
Curtis had been visiting the trump for 10 tricks.
·
~
home with Podgls'il son Scott
How dlff-t If Well bit& updn .a
Franz, a classmate at 'King's ~:!i~~~yA~:·
. EdphUI, a private school In will be -.:~ Ellat, wbo will !lad' a
Windlor, Nova Scotia. Curtis trump 1o
nr'a jlcl1 Now~
saldbothheandFranzhadbeen canttlmp.aclllb,buUheiellatllaltl.
sleeping with rifles at their sides , or Wlf to IIDJG11be lilra trlalia
durlqthe 'J ulyFourthweekend .able from dwntny'a atnllltlu In':
because they teared Franz'$ lfldU S..ltiiDy ~Will-I'
slepfather, Alfred Podp.
beln,alpldeandtllrMcluhtricbf..,_
Curtis said he awQtce to the don-.
'
sound of Scott Fraauhootlqhll
'
stepfather In an upstalra bedroom. He Aid he ll'&bbed 11tJ
rifle lnd bepn 1o l'ltll, but
coUJded With Rotemary Poclllf,
aceldently dtaehartiDI the
weapon.
-·but
··~
~:
.,
"I like John and he trusts me. I
sllovehlm Yes"
•
gu~!rry said sh~ gr~dually bec me aware of the details of
G~cy's criminal past of the
multiple life terms 'he was
serving and the death sentence
Terry, In an Interview with the h r ces She read two books
Sun-Times, said.she Initiated the
e 8 ti~g hla crimes and trial
relationship because she became, ~:!'ll as various newspape;
curious with Gacy after readini
ountl
·
abrlefnewspaperarticleonhlm ace
·
and then writing him a letter.
She said she Is not Impressed
Gacy wrote back three days ' wilhthecaseagainstGacyandls
later. Since then, Terry has made certain he is Innocent.
a regular Monday trip to Me"I don't beUeve hardly any of
nard, a 140-mlle round trip from
It," Terry said. •'I really don't.
her home.
'
H!!re's how 1 look at lt. From
Divorced twice and the mother what I've read and everything, It
of eight children, Terry saki wasn't lnvest1Jated very good.
Gacy proposed marriage to her They just got him because It was
and admitted she would marry hli property. He doean'l thlnk
hlfn.
.
1
he'apllty. To me be don't seem
"We're real close," Terry said.
like be could hurt anyone."
lo build. "I amgolngtomakelta
halfwayhouseforhornyglrisand
party my butt oft In orgies. can
you dig It?"
Gacy wrote 411etters to Terry
from Oct. 5,1986, toFeb.16, 1988.
01111=
By HOLLY PLANELLS
)
when I get my treedom, " Gacy
wrotetoTerry.
' 'I don't deal In fantasy that
much. It will be hard. Don't
forget It may be as long as 10
years before I gel this monkey off
my back. And that's a lot tpmake
up for as I have eight years or
more done already.
''I think I have been out of
service so long I would like togo
off somew.here aod hide for a
while In the North Woods . ... Hey,
youwanttoUveonanlslano:l?"he
asked.
In another 'letter, Gacy, who
will be 46 on St. Patrick's Day,
said, ·:of course, we could
always move lo Alaska. If the
kids get out of line, just put them
outside. Alid they would get the
message, right?"
In yet another letter, he descrlbed the Jilnd of house he plans
...'
,..
~
·
)
was captured when hotel guests heard her
screams and came_to her rescue. He wu,charged
with agpavaled auault and released on$1011 baD;
but only paid $10.011 bond. Scog~~D& vows to Pre!ll
charges lo the tun extent of the law. UPI
Demonstrators protest sheriffs
.
.
handling of case of racial victim
e ove etters from . d ea'th row pu bJ•18bed
8 ~'7~....
~ .1.
CAA
om.,._..
MISS USA PAGEANT CO-HOST ATTACKED
- Tracy Scoglbls co-host of the 1988 Mlu USA
Pareaatto be alred March 1 on CBS, w1111 sexuaDy
attacked after .the preaealatlon show· of the
pageant In a hotel ele~ator. Her alleged IUlsaOaat
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - A airline," Tyler said. "There Is no
But Genoese said the company
Teamster official said Saturday picketing, no s lrlke-related actl- would not bend on wages and
flight attendants would strike vites at airports. We are urging length of contract.
Northwest Airlines but several employees to report to work as
"The company said they wlll
hours after thEY announcement schedul<>d."
not .give on these particular
there was no sign of a strike.
WilHam Wren, a company
Items," he said. "We're saying
William Genoese. director of . official, described the situation
Northwest Is going to have a lot of
lhe airline division for Teall1S· as simply a break In the talks
trouble flying and commanding
te rs International, broke off 'a dding Northwest does not ex: their alrcrafts to all the major
negotiations after a 22-hour ses- pee! a strike.
cities In the United States and
sion, saying the union was forced
" We do not have a strike,"
overseas."
to strike.
Wren said. "We have a recess In . The union, representing 6,500
"We are declaring a strike ," he negotiations. The 'o ffer Is still on
flight attendants, called a strike
told reporters.
the ·table and the door Is open for
for 1+: 01 p.m. Friday but exBut he apparently didn't send re sumption of the talks at any
tended the deadline a11d negotla·
the message to strike headquar- tim~ . "
lions continued through the
ters where union members were
Genoese sa id he would develop night.
·
prepared to hit the picket line.
a strike "str ategy" after returnBob Gibbons. Northwest spoJeff Musto, a.unlon spokesman ing to union offices. Also, he said kesman, had expressed optim·
at strike control, said there had he would meet again with off!· Ism earlier that an agreement
been no ortlclal announcement of clals or the pilots and machinists could be reached before the
a strike and no pickets had been union, seeking their support lor strike deadllne set by the union.
dispatched.
.
the strike.
Contract talks continued unIn fact , he said, those waiting
The talks apparently broke abated throughout the day and
·for picketing duty had been sent down on the issue of wages after night.
' home.
agreement wa s reached on sev ·
·'The last three times we've
Northwest spokesman Red era I otMr Issues.
negotiated wlth the Teamsters.
'Tyler said a check of125alrports
" We are extremely disap· it's gone just like this.· As the
turned up no sign of• strike· pointed the Teamsters recessed deadllne approaches, the negorelaled activity. A United Press negotiations." Tyler said. " After tiators become more diligent,
·International survey of major four days of hlgh·quality negotia- more creative and more agreea a irports confirmed I here were no tions we had agreement on more ble. We're going to get there."
signs of a st rike.
than a dozen issues and we felt we
Both sides disputed what pro"We are still running the were near agreement on wages." gress had been made. ·
Public Notice
In accord•nCII
with therePUBLIC NOTICE
qultomento
of
tho
Job TroinJTPA prog,.m io -itod
to oquol opportunldoto for oil lng PortMt ohlp Act of 1182,
Soctlon 104, the following
opPIIcorno, portlclponto end Job
T,.inlng Prog,.m lo
in oil'-- of Ita ovoiloble
fo. public...-.
PY •8, 189
.,.;.irotlono: ond whore dllfi·
clen- ON noted to tou ofGALLIA COUNTY •
flrmotive octlon to col'rect
~~~~~ COUNTY PLAN
ouch cloficlencilo. In odell·
ln>nton-Lowrtion. it io our. policy
tho
Adminlotncruit, hire ond
I·
E1otitw
of
BOA
U\1 JTP-Ohio
lob
The GoiHo·Mefto
It tho Subreciplent of
The O.llo-Molgo
.
Northwest flight attendants' threat
shows no sign, .of strike happening
.
rupted by Bob Young, president of the El Paso Civic Center
of the Sangre de Cristo !lnlmall Tuesday night, said . he doubted
rights organization of Las Cru- Thlcke was truly committed to
ces, N.M.
·
animal rigl!ts .
Thlclie hosts a Saturday morn"(Thlcke) claims to belong to
Ing chUdren's program on ABC eight humane ortanlzatlons and
called "Animal Crack-Ups" and In .effect said he's In favor of a
closes the show each week by phase-out or cruelty to animals,"
saying "Here's hoping you'll be · Young said. "I doubt that very
seriously.
kind to animals."
"A fur coat Is a very potent
Young, who said he plans to
have about 25 protesters In front symbol of beauty In the United
..,tdotlen.
,.........
The Fllllily tf
1
•.
Card of Thanka
Notice
E. ·
II
!'~~~;~;~;
funding In
to thooe
Gerald
E. licUtl wisllts to expros their hurlftlt
thlllb to NCh ltld tvtr·
YIIH wbo IUpportld and
The f111ily of
contfot1ed Ul Drill tht
dell~ of 011 lluslllnd,
tither and &rantlfathtr
DIU tht lOll af Ollr
hollt.
To all our friends~
ntl&hbors an4 rtlltlvts
for th flqwers, food,
clotllllll and lifts of
-··
. AIPICill
Ill the
Ml*lllflra
~ Sl1i-~:&.1:e'l';; or811tby.
"I
Government Jobs. e18,040'·
169.230 year. Now hiring. Your
area. 1· 806·&87·6000 b1 . R·
880&. for curtent Federal lilt.
Auctioneer hiring pert-time
clerk~, cuhiera and ringmen.
Call 61111·985·111396 from 1 :00·
9 :00 prn. for appointment.
Eam excellenl money. In home
, ...mbly work. Jewelry, toya.
and others. FT end PT aYIIil. Cell
today! 1-618-459·31536. !toll·
rlfundablel Ext. 8·1622, 24 hrs.
9
3 Announcements
Kupid's Ne1t and Connicdons
Dating Service of Huntington
joins 1ogether eharing proflhls.
For infannlltlon wri1e: Kupid's
Neat, P.O. Box . 619. Ironton,
He.-t of aoklllf..ime"ofcommlt·
"*"
o.W,M. 315 yra In making,
carriee hla hurt on hla siH'Ie'.
Ohlo4H38.
I
MARINES: We' re looking for •
law good men. for more infor·
iNtfon. ulll•rge.nt Mikl A bill
at 3Q4..420·1018 collec'l.
Anention Electroux cutto"*''·
F,..nk Fultr ia now your authollld';'.middle~O'aoroiMtohelp ' rlzed factory ulee ilnd aervlce
bUild lf'!d 1hare quiet country life reprnentetkrti .. Far lal'\lice cell
11y1e. Small chHdNn welcome. 304-937-2272 anytima.
co,..ndence will be returned
If • ....,_, Reply with letter,
Giveaway
phone number. Plioto if pottlbl•
4
toP.O.Box317,PolntPieeNnt, - - - - - - - - W. Vo. 25150 .
Bentem ' Chickena-frea. Some
&14-44e-3&72
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and niiWer ullld c••· Smith
Buk*·Pontiac:. 1111 Eaatern
Ave.. OaHipolia. C.U 614· 446·
2282.
I
Complete houHholda of furniture 6 sntiques. Also wood ~
coal hHters. Swain's Furniture
• Auction, Third 6 Olive.
614-448-3159.
Want 10 buy: Used furniture and
antiqun. Will buy entlra household turniahing. Marlin Wede·
meyer, 614-246·6152 ,
Coli &14·379·2180 "' 379·
2423.
Ad. Coli814-448-a'841 ,
Want to buy atandlng timber &
pine. Pav TOP DOLLAR . 6 ecres
Part Golden RatriWtH'·Pir1 Mel·
amute. • mo1. old. HouM
broken. Free to e good home.
Call 114·441· 1228.
or more. · E11cellent r.tarencaa.
Call l.Mry Strickland loggina.
814-182·7823.
Wanl to buy
Coli &14-379-2788.
10 puppl" from e wb to 10
wlla. 4 long hMred and e short
lwat!tJ • liallt Pit·
tlran, and -.1 nlat:es
Inti nephawa.
' She 1M her heir! to
1111 Lord wly in )Ita and
••lllltllblraftllt
AlfNd llllllodlst Cluch.
ltt.ltled the
Clala Cludl af .....
IIIIW. Site fiiiiM Sun-
'* ,...
day Sclloolll Ahlllll
also II Cllldar .......
blltlr ...
la!IJ"flw
=:..1.::-r.:
...._ . . 11
.....
lllllllllllt. llllt .ltlbs.
•..., t10 IIIII far._
Ill ....... of tlla
.lat .... lllriiiiiD
~::;
limber.
Fumiture refinist'!ing and repair,
quality work and reasonable
rat8s. free ettimetes. 304-8757991
..
Real EstatP.
UNCI 1 ton ,- truck In good
condittoll. Contact Village of
Mlddlepart ilt81·-812-6711 or
.14-912-1424.
Jllftlr. Autot 6 trucks. Call for
prlcoo·
FOUND: Large dog. Long haired.
Ylclnlly of Vin1on. Call &
Identify- 814-381-17112.
2784.
814-379·2&18 or 379-
992-3478.
Found: female Beegle Hound.
Horae Caw Creek 1re1. Cell
114-141-2210.
?: .
I llipi11VIIIPIII
VICE JOBS . 119,146 to
$19,891 . yaer, now hiring c:all
job· Une 1-518-469· 3611, ext
F2284 tor Info 24 hra.
50 acrn, newer house. county
water. elec:tric &·phofl• hooked
up. Thompson Rd. $36,000 or
bttt offer. Call 614-446·6980.
Telephone solicitors and light
delivery. call betw"n 10:00 am
and 15:00 pm, 304 · 876·6~68 .
2 SR . house on 13 1 / 3 ecnt1
with lull baaement. 2 batha.
hardwood floors . Outbuildlnga,
new fence. pond 6 pine trees:
Call 614-446·2107·daya, 2465600· even . ·
an
304-875FEOERAL STATE l!o CIVIL SER·
Convenient ttore moldy evenIngs and weellends. Call for
•ppointment 304-676-6421 .
Parson or couple to house tit,
must have good referencea,
write Box P 28. cera Point
Pleeunt: Register. 200 Main St ..
Point Pleasant. W. Va. 25650.
12
11
Ne... single; penon to •hare
expenses in large house in city.
Calll14·446·0494.
Sanlor chlren . Room and board
for one lady. Special care in my
home. ReUonable. Call 614-
992-8873.
8 yean eaperience caring tor
eldarty and medicaltY di11bled
peopae wants to worll evanlng•
from 1:00 pm.lo 12:00 pm, Cell
614·742-2288 lifter 8:00 pm.
Reference~ awltable.
·
Vecency. Board room or total
care for elderty. 814-992-7204
or 614·992·3863,
Help Wanted
&Vicinity
~
A• .. March 1, 2, 3. 9· 7. Many
dishe1, amal &lerae appllancea,
potl, • pana •._llent dolhlng.
fyrniture. aewlng mechlna,
drapes • much. much. mOfe,
Call ua lor your mobile home
inturance : Miller lnaurance.
304 -882-2146 . Alto: au10.
home. life, health.
· ·
18 Wanted to Po
Wldem.;,er·l' Auction SerYic•
eweilable al your convenience
and locadont. Marlin Wed•
meyer Auctioneer· 114-241-
8152.
Energetic, intetlegetlt penon for
office work CMedk:lll,. Mu11 be
motiYI1ed, . .Y lumer, work•·
hollc. Medlul billing. nursing
aldlla a plui. Cell 304·671·
6972. E'l8nings.
GOVERNMENT JOBS .
-::::::::::::::::::.1
Tti•·•~Marlletlna·
t
In
tovlpl memory of
CHARLIE FRYE
Ladles to
mike ·~• far Ohio
ry Gardona, 5·9
wtnfnat, 13.10 a hr. plua
bonus. C.R 10 AM·1 PM only tor
appolntmen!·114·441·3115.
Volley
who PISSed IWIY
two ye1rs 110, March
3, in Daytona Beach.
Fla., durin1
Bike
2
In Memoriam
·
Week.
In
Fly on. fly on.
Memory of Wanda
Guinther,
who
pused away on
February 28, 1987.
Pistilli speed af sound.
I'd rather 111 you up.
Than 111 you tlolp".
If I had all the world to
' live.
I'd aive it, yes, and more
To hur htr voice. 111
her smile
And 1111t her at the
So tun me
If you Mill to.
I will stillre11ember.
'
A111tl flylnl too close
To the pound.
door.
in
1111 pUt two ,_.,
wt'vt lllcl btltll IGOfl
tlll1ll and bid IIIII Jliu'w
But all I cen do, dar
IIIOiher.
Is 10 and tend your
arave.
And luve be~ind tokana
I II, to COiofa1t Ill
To tilt best 110ther God
............
w-. •
...
of love. .
....... 1m 1111111
01 tlru-'
..... - . Yau'lflir·
-
tvtr lllflt.
I likt to thlnt whanlift
II••
111......., till
dant, '
.. In 011' '-1111111
IMYbe
..'U love you llweys
Jo, Fltlllr 11141 Frlltlda
1984 10x60 Elcono Houae
Trailer with e~~;pando. New fur·
nece. new hot wa1er ;tarlk, fully
carp.-ed, furnished, porch and
window awnings. Exce..nt con·
dltion . After 5 :00 814-9927102. 814-992-6072 anytim•.
12x66 Gregory house trailer. 2
bedroom, refrigerator and stove.
new carpet. 18.000 BTU air
conditioner, washer •nd dryer.
3254.
new 7x14 porch. Bx10 11oreae
Priced to aell feat. owner mOving buUding, natural gaa furnace.
out of alate. 3 bedroom houte · 614-992-6672 or 61 4 ·992·
with 7 acrn in Laurel Cliff. 2221 . .
Diahwalher, refrigeralor. stove,
walher. dryer included. Call 1982 Mansion. 14x70. 3 bed·
81•· 992-8;110 after 6;00 pm.
room. 2 full baths, metal build·
ing, central air, porch and
sPaciou• 1 room h·ouse. 1''h awnings, vinyl underpinning.
bath. 770 Ash St. Middlapor1, Set up on rented lot in Middl•
Ohio. Quick pos•euion. Call port . Price reduced. Call 614&14-992-6714.
992·613, after 6 :00 .
7 rooms. 3 \ bedroom, g•age.
axcellent location. many extras.
Loc.ted in Middleport. Ohio .
614-992-2353.
1987 Clayton mobile home
14.1180, completely furnished
with washer &· dryer. Take over
payments. 304-678-2108.
306 N. SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE OF DR. DAYO
REVISED OFFICE HOURS
21
.Business
Opportunity
1000 SUNBEOS
TONING TABLES
Sunii·WOLFE Tennlng Beds,
Slenderqunt Pa..W. E11ercls. .. Cal for FREE Color C.te·
Iogue. I..,. to 15~. 1-800·228-
8292.
s..rter Oenlflltor repair shc;tp.
Owner retiring. For infor. cell
114-210-1434-weftenda • after I PM weekdaya .
-I
EFFECTIVE MARCH 1, 1988
MON.-TUES.-THURS.-FRI.
9 A.M.-1 P.M. and 2 P.M.-5 P.M.
WEDNESDAY-3:30-7.:30 P.M.
CLOSED SATURDAY
NEW 'PRODUCTS I
SESAME CRUNCH
FIG$, DRIED PEACHES, RAW SUGAR
New Easter Molds
Chocolate.for EQlfer Conely
Dolry
a..ak the lkllll1 We train people
for jobs 11 machlnlets In our
machine tNd" program. NeMiy
awry product Df lndul1ry. from
~tiM• to turbine~, 11 made
el1h• uelna machine toola or
Ulfng mecNn .. m-. wtth me·
chMe toolt. In · tha mecliine
tred• progrern you will le.rn
haw to u• various 1VPH of
rnechiMrY euch a: '-the. drill
prwa. miMing m.chlne. grinding
rMOhiM and punch preu. We
have a wrlety of funding aources
evallabte for ellglblll appllcenla.
Call the Adul1 Eduo.tlon CeNter•Tri-County JVI ot 753· 3111 1
14. Spring q111rter begins
4th.
6
Happy Ada
FlEE EASIER CANDY CLASSES
Showing Filled Eggs. Hollow
Molds. Etc.
I
MARCH 3 and 4
Co'm a In or Call to Sign Up
Night Clasoea Available
WILTON 1981 YEARBOOKS
NEW CAKE SUPPLIES WEEKLY
OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
Sl4 EAST MAIN
POMEIOY
11
lMI
FULL TIME AND PART TIME IN'S
7:00 A.M.-3:30 P.M. SHIFT
PAmiME LPN'S
3:00·11 :30 A.M.
11:00 P.M.-7:30A.M.
76 BED ICF/LONG-TERM
CARE FACILITY
Laalcltlfl for e (.w good nun. to join our
cllciGtlllld ltllff who - ~ltted to providhg quelty care. If you feel you lhere thil dedla.dolt lnd OOIIWiiRbiMil 10 qUIIily geriablc
csreencl t.m-", phnn 018 or Wl'b: ·
Pa:s;:ard; R.N .. D.O.N.
for an In ·
• WEW wage ale and
eaoellent Mneflt package .
ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Boa A. Main St.
1·114-H7-311111"'
.
I
992-6910
We Ampl
Food Stompt
Help Wanted
Caolvlk, Ohio ~6723
C. D.
.' .
MIDDLEPORT
FAMILY PRACTICE CENTER
local flnan<HI. pert-dme clerk·
teller. Send reeume 10: lox Cia
Ohio 4H31.
1974 Holly Park. 3 bedroom,
70x14 . Excellent high grade
carpeting, nice appliances, new
hot water tank . Gu heet .
58000. Call614-742- 3033.
2 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 car
gerege, ·tevel lot on At. 33 ..
Swimming pool, satelite. close
to Meigs High . Call 614·992-
Fodorolllot.
131. c/o llaiHpolio O.lly Trlb·
uno. 121 Third Avo .. Gaftlpolla.
.,-,,-,-.,-,,--,--,--:--:-·lc-
F1nanml
$18,040 . *51,230/ yr. Now
h:g. YDUr aru. 805-6876
bt. R·101•1 for•cunent
Stondlng dmbor. Coll814·742·
2321.
1976, 12x60 gas. A-1 shapo,
furniahed e~tceptlivingroom . Air
in kitchen, washer and dryer.
Call 814·949·2663 efter five.
992-3333
3067.
"'' MEARI·MAC'S 100% GUA· .
FREE NOW 1-100·182·1072.
Public Sale
8o Auction
2 BR . mobile home fully furnished . Eastern Ave. Water and
sewer · paid. $22'5 . Adults only.
No pets. Reference• 6 depoait
requil-ed. Call 614·448·3871 .
Small enulne repairs, 304·896·
TALOGI Eam ••• and bonuMI
on your lime aohedulel Aepres-
RANTEEO line. Oriel progr1m
for Hott.. MI end Demonstrators. C.r • Phone needed. C.ll
2 RR. home. ,A acre lot. Ail new
vinty aiding. new drivwly, new
doora. c8binats. Acrou from
Gallipoli• locks on Rt. 7. Call
614· 266-6813.
.
Insurance
Get a free cologne - Sell Avon.
Make big bucke. Cell 614-448·
... -..... ...... -------- ....... .. -. 3358 .
Warm in lid a yard Nl• 218 Third NEW HOME OECOR CA·
Ouplex apartment. trailer &
ameli carry·out. $45.000· In
Cheshire. Call after 6:30 PM ,
614·367-0181 .
0175.
'
····--·Gallrpons···-------· - - - - - -
8
S ituatioos
Wanted
Sl:l 'JILI:S
Yard Sala
4 BR .. fireplace. full basement. 3
1972 Caatle Mobile Home
1411.65, 2 BR., 2 hths, 2 .
expando rms. Lovely living room
w/ woodbumer. lerge kit . • ,...,
2 storage bldga.. c8ble TV .
Ren11llot or move. Willlrade for
a home. Virginia L. Smith, Real
,Ettate. 61 4·388· 8826.
Shirley Spears.
A~o~on
13
·Buying dally gold, allver coins,
ringa, jewelry. sterling ware, old
coina, latge currency. Top price.. Ed 8wkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Mlddlepon, Oh. 614·
Homes for Sale
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12d0 Elc~rla , 1971 2 BR ., gas
heat, washer & dryer. air cond .
Completely furn ished . Extra
Nice. t5450. Celt 614-446·
ProfiUk)nal medical and eldMiy
'
bedroom, 1 bath, wilh
bQement Upper Point Pleuanl,
$42,000.00. pt"ice negotl.ttte.
614-367-01221fter 6:00pm.
Two
FOR SALE OR RENT: 3 BR .
house wilh attached g~rage
centralair-NO PETS · O.poait &
reference required. 39 Chilli·
cothe Rd. Call 614 · 446·268~
9-6 daily.
ear• work wan~. Female with
holrod. Coli &14-117-834&.
-•nlty
~khn and two
pelt • pelt • &Jaidt:IIU·
~ding
038.500.00. 304·876·5884.'
3 bedroom. 2 battts. full finished
basement, new furnace & central air, gerage, fenced yard. Low
60't , 2414 Mt. Vernon Ave.-Pt.
. 304-676-,774,
Professional
Services
31
Home for ule. Gallipolis Ferry, 4
bedrooms, four car ga,..ge,
10x&O mobile home, 1969
M1rtene. 2 BR . $1600. Call
614·266· 6248.
Would like to buy junk cars.
wrec*ed cars and motorcycles.
FrH puppiea-6 wka. old. Aac<OOn
Wanted To Buy
We pay celh for lale model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chw.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene John1on
loylng. Coli 614-388-1943.
in-11111 ..... Gaul Sarpnt. Son-in-llw Kenneth
W. lllltley. Alto, 1111111 in
1111 holM 10111 anti Rod"" Gaul at LoNtta (Sis)
lurphy. Allo IUMvi..
ll*tlan pldclllthn,
I NQTICE t
THE OHIO VALLEY PURLISH'ING CO. recommends th81 you
do buaineu with peopla you
know. and NOT to send money
lhrough the meil until you heve
lnveatlg81:11d the offering.
Homes for Sale
mi . 10. of Gallipolis. t29.900 .
Call O.ya-614-448·1816. after
5:00· 446·, 244.
AVON · All ereea. Cell M.uilyn
Wnver 304-882-2645 .
3 Announcements
Lucy
Smith Gaul.
dau&hter of the tate Josiah L. and Ella Kimes
Smith was born April 25.
1896, in lleip County.
She sptnt htr tntlr. life
In the
wlltrt
sht was born; only 1
mile and 1 half from har
birth place. She passld
away February 5, 1988.
11 the Pomeroy Hulth
Care Center.
She was precedld in
death by her father and
mother. J.L. and Ella
Smith. six sisters and
two brothers. llrs. Samuel (Ida) Eastman,
llrs. Joseph (lyrtlt)
Bowles; llrs. Porter (EI,
sle) Midkiff; llrs. Harley
(Jessie) Midkiff, Irs.
Frank (Daisy) Gaul, Irs .
Ernest (Orma) Bttzin1.
llr. J_ames (Dell) Smith
and llr. Herbert (Bert)
Smith.
She was united in
marriap to Jacob (Oris)
Gaul, January 4, 191('
who also pncldes her in
tluth aton1 with three
dauattters. infant Mary
flith Gaul, Irs. James
(Dorris) Spancer, Mrs.
Kennth (Avis) Hartt1y.
One son, Leverett Cecil
Glul. 011t lranddauattter, Jackie Sptncer
Bricktes, and one ·son11-law. James Spancer.
She is survived by two
daiiii!IIIS and sons-inIIW. Mr. and IllS. Plut
(llulne) Hoffman. llr.
and Irs. Howard (Mar·
Caldliatl.llauahW·
31
Business
Opponunity
Wanted : llcenlld tutor to teach
7th trader. Celll14-982· 3842.
A11111111111.1: 1111~ nt s
In Mem,oriam
21
23
fBI All progrom funding
Ieveii and
perlormance
otondordo oro oubjKt to Fodorol, Stote, ond SDA #24
ditectW... •
The obovo oa,ooummory of
Gollio-Moigo CAA JTPA pro·
~ for "PY'BI/89".
progrommlng de.,. ovolloble for review
by tho l'llbllc. For furtMr lnfonnotlari, ploooo call tho
Golllo-Moigo CAA JTPA Adminlotr-IOffico in CheohIra 387·7342 0< 992·6829.
FEB. 28
.
2
applications for
and Summer
and Aide
the Perk
ol1he
1 00
perform~~nce atllndarde.
Newr had time for the aoclal
ecene, no children. neet. quhlt,
courteaua, lincere. hll'dwork·
lng, energetic, famly ortenuted.
.tt1a · MCure employment end
property owner. Worked hard to
MoUre future. woukl now like to
ltert en}oylng ":;~:~~~::!;~;;
meet aln... or ~I
wqrtdng
Help Wanted
0 .0 . Mcintyre P,ark Distrl~
obovo thot io umod booed
upon tM performonce oftho
lou
p ·
prey 1 ""'r. rogr~mming
io contingent upon IIMI!=Hiod
guldolinoo.
·
(7) Golllo-Meig1 CAAwill
.,bmit otec:tronlcolly to tM
SDA 24 Admlnlotrotivo
Entity tho chorocterlotico of
oppllcontl ond p'ortlciponto
to tho extent to which tho
octivhiel _meet tM relevant
->.
.
11
'I
,
�- ........,
•
.
'
.
.
.
Ohio-Point
51 Household Oooda
LAFF-A-DAY
w-..,__--·
0000 UIEO APPUANCII
1114 ..._
14.170. 3 · room , bath , woode to •e ,
: f!J.IOO.OO. Coli 304-1711317 ........... 1 :00 ..... 7:0C)
rena•• · lk1111 Ap•ll1nnt.
RwRd. - • c-M-.814-UI-73M.
u-
pm.
: .33
Farm• for S1le
Now
term; Moetly tihbla.
Nler Rio GrMde. Pond. bernl,
good home. Cell 114-241·
~
~ere
: 11171.
I
.
J
I-
. II ~en~ . I nMI• 80Uth on 218•• 31R. houoo,4yro. old. T • b-. eon 114-211·13114. .
34
I
1
Bueine11
Buildings
: · Lo<otod 4 mlloo....., of Gollipo. Itt kJCkl end dam on W.Va.lide.
• _Bldg. 50x100, 1,000 oq .,. on
· . llec:r•. til lit-'- buUdlng 11 ft
high. For, .... Or llle. 304-171·
• 5332.
_.
14A~MI'TH
'
35 Lota 8& Acreage
~
•·n
"When the real estate guy
said 'superior basement,' l
didn't think he meant Lake
. ." .
Supenor
3 acr• gf'ound t
Downtown ground floor epert·
ment. 4 nnt . • bath • b....-nent.
Newty decorated. Off ltreet
parlcing. For more infor. e1l
114-441-0111.1 AM -4:30PM
' weekdeya.
....
..,
•
"'
·
~ 27 ecra and more I mil• out
Sond Hll Rood. 304-171-7111.
..
• 36
.J.
,,'
Real Estate
Wanted
Renldls
•. 41
Homes for Rant
•
Nicety fumithsd emell houH.
:. Adults only. Ref. required. No
: - pots. Coli 014-441-0338.
...
full beaement.
t225.00 month. C.mp Conl.y
• · 1ree, evelleblt March &, 304676· 1371 or 176-3812.
• 6' room• .
42 Mobile Homes
.
_
for Rent
2 BR ., water, HWige furnished .
Beautiful river view. No city
tax11. Foster'• Mobile Home
Po<k. Co11114-U8-1802.
• 2 -BR
ho"uae
wkh stove &
•· ~ refrig••tor. t221 mo. depoah
• ... requir..:i. Vinton. OH Call 814~ . 388· 8121 .
Near W1tertoo. 2 BR . t1215 •
. . mo. Ad..,lte·. Gerden 1pot. Ret. •
dep .
#
114 - ~& -n54
Call
or
643-2644.
Nice 2 ~A . traiier, large yard- in
Kenaup. Cell 814-'"1· 7473.
2 BR . lreller With expando living
room. Cell814-379-2409, tfno
. .. . answer call - 114-441·1721.
_
..
for Rent
Brooktlde Apertmente; 1 BR.
apenmentt with lerge kitdlen
end leundry room wtth walher·
dryer hookup. All eiKtriC; Call
114-U0-1932.
Nl~ 2 lA apt. Water. garbegs
Ptld. Stove a refrig . furnlthed.
COli 114-441-7025.
One and two-bedroom epart·
menet for 1..... Stove end
refria••tor fumllhld:. *200 .
122& per month. Ref1r1nc.
end d-.,oah required. Call14·
441-4249, 441 -4425 .. 4412325.
2 BR . untumilhed apartment •
811 Third Ave., t250 1 mo. plu1
dop. C.lll14-245-951&.
2 BR.. 2 bathe. All utiUtiM
included. t400. Coli 114-4414222 tt.IWMn 9-6.
Mobila home for rent- Private
: : lot. 10 min. from Glllipolls.
8200 1 mo. plu1 dep. & ref. Call
114-448-0382.
ment. Two ~ult1 only. No pels.
Call 114-441-4571 .
Fumllhed efflciMicy 1p1rtment.
Carpet throughout. Prhlete a
quiel. Single working pereon
only. C.U 814-,..1-4107 or
441-2102.
Downtown ground floor tpertment. 4 rm1 ., b1th • b... mant.
Newly deCorated. Off ttrest
parking. For more intor. call
814-448-0865, 8 AM -4'30PM
weekdeyl.
Grecioue living. 1 tnd 2 bed·
room •panmenu et Vlll~ge
Menor and Rivsnide Apartment• in Middleport. From
t2 1 6 . including utillti•. C. II
814-982-n87. EOH.
2 bedroom apartment on Uncoln
Hill, Pomeroy. Call 814-992-
8539 .. 814-992-3489.
Cottage efficiency, total elect·
ric::. . rehigtrelor. .ltove. . nic::e.
HOD •pproved. 2216 Mt. V•r·
non Avt., Pt. PleeNnt: 814·
982-58&8.
1 b~room epertmenta. Furnilh"ed end unfumithed. 1200.·
*2215. per month. Utlliti• furni•hed. Call614·192-1724.
•• &ret. 1300amo.Calll14-441-
2 bedroom 1p1. tor rent. Stove
end refrigerltor ere furniehed.
Carpeted. Nice Ntting. Ctll
114-992· 371 1 ~.O.H.
• • 4824.
2 BR . mobile home. 1175emo.
Farm for rent. 11150 a mo. No
c;lep. Children welcome. Call
614-258-1576 .
12xl0, 2 BA .. unfurnished. HeH
· : mile Pill Holzer Medical Center.
· ; Call 814-446-43&9 or 304676-9760 . 1 2x10- In Chahire.
·.
:•
.•
.:
.·
·
:
..
2 bedrOom 70a14 mobile home.
Washer, dryer hook-up. Will rent
furnished or unfurnished . Call
614-992·6722 .
:~
;·
:·
':
2 bedroom in Middleport. Nice
loc::etion, utilitin included. Call
614-992· 6949 or 814-992·
9903.
· : 2 bedroom, furnished, ••tre
~ 1 ele1n, 1 child, no pMt: New
: 1 Haven. 304-882·2418 .
. '• 2 bedroom mobile home in
. • Middleport, Ohia. Reference
· : and Security dspoeit required.
.. 304· 882·3287 Of 304-773·
: . 5024.
44
..
.
Apartment
for Rent
-----2 BR . 1pt1. 6 closet1, kitc:hen·
appl. furnished, Weaher· Dryer
hook-up , ww carpet, newly
painted. deck. Regency, Inc.
Apts . c.n 304-876-n3a or
676· 5104.
.. • New completely furni1hed
epsrtment • mobile home Ill
... city. Adults only. Perking. Cell
814-448-0331 .
•
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 53t Jec:kton
Pike from t183 a mo. Wllk to
shop end moviH. 8U·oMI·
2588. E.O.H.
: ' Newty-remodeled IPirtrMI'Itl,
~ : unrurnlahad, one -bedroom,
• 4
ttOve and rafrigeretor, weter
• • Included.
~
•zoo. . ezz&. "'
• monlh. Referenc" and depoait
: required . Meximum occupiJncy:
• 2 aduhl, 1 child. Cs11114·441• . 4241. 44!1-2321 .. 441-4428,
SW... IN
AUCTION 8 FURNITURE 12
Olive St .. Galllpolio.
NEW- I pe. W<ICid group- 03H.
Uving room sUit"· *1811-I&H.
Bunk beda with bedding· t189 .
Full lin mettrna & foundetkHI
lterting · til . Recliners
ltlning· t99.
USED·· Bed1, dr....rt, bedroom
'"it11. t118 -e2as. D11kl,
wringif w11her, ••complete line
of uMCI fumlture.
NEW- . W•tern boot1- 130.
Workboott .1 18 • upl (Steel &
soft toel. C.ll tl14·448-31&9.
County Appliance, Inc. Good
uNCI eppliencee end TV Mtl.
Open 8AM to IPM. Mon thru
Sot. 114-441-1188, 127 3 ....
AYS. Oellpollt. OH.
Sot• end cttairt pricld from
t396 to t995. Tlbln *ISO and
up lo •121. Hid•a·beds *390
lo tl595. Rac:llners t225 to
*37&. Lemp• eza to ·sue.
Dlnettee t109 end up to t495.
Wood table w -1 chelra t285 to
1795. oe,k 11oq up to 1375 .
Hutch" 1400 end up. · Bunk
bed• complete w-meHreaeet
tZIIand up to t395. B•bybede
1110. M•ttr ..... orbolllpringe
full or twin •ea. firm *71, •nd
188. OuHn lll'hl -•226. King
13150. 4 draw~r chat t89. Gun
cebinetl 8 gun. G11 or elictric
range *371 . Baby mattreeHt
036 a 045-. Bed lnm" 020.
130 • King fr1me lliD. Good
Mllttlon of bedroom· tuitsa,
mete! ceblnetl, heMiboards 130
end '-'P to II&.
............
90 D1y1 Nme •• cash with
8PProved credit. 3 Mil• out
Bu'-llle Rd. Open 9am to lpm
Mon, thru Sat. Ph. 114-4410322.
PICKENS USED FURNITURE .
8edt, dre. . .e, cheet, dlnnlrtte,
cowcht, chairs, odd challrt, r•
frigerstort, stowe. •
.
304-17&-1460.
53
Antiques
.
'
f
&I go!. -toM. · tiood.
llghto, pump Olld - Good
cond. Col I 14-371·2210.
-..
____... ,.... .
....,. ......... bob'/clo_..,.
............
_... ...........,. - '
HIAI' No. 7047 ..,.-od.
114-742-2421.
_..,duo•.
Weclcllnv drsn. Tee-ltngth
Mlxod
honl__, ...... II 2""
. . , _ ............. 1178. Hlto· .
chi In••••· t71, lot~nd••~an.
I aamllox.
Ol'l"''lla electric
tf'Piwrlhit, *110, . . . . Lobo,.
•ao,Cukt•lt.. 1 KoJtCIFd, •10,
QyoolilllnahT.V. 1110,-
· -.-~ne
· C011tolnlng
·· Co.
I l'o
-- - FOI.
O!No PPornetoy, Ohio. 114-H2-1411 .
I 1
- 5 0,
"'""'· - IH. Nototi-.
.....
oblo. Coii14· 141·27H.
o~e.a
:...::lidMMti-··Colll4-
!Ill . . . . -.....,. Couaor.
IIOOd cond.. 1700. 10,000 ITU
AC; rune on 110. •eo. C.ll
114-441-8121
Celi1han'1 Ulld Tire Shop. Over
1.000tlrn.lizn12, 13,14, 16,
11, 18.&. 8 mil• out At. 211.
Coli 014-251·8251 .
·
SWIMMING POOLS - f919
New left , ovar 1987 Modal
Poole. Hugh 151124 ft. twim
ar11, 4 ft. deep. lnclud11 deck,
fence. filter a we"eRty. lnetelle·
tlon & flnencina aveilabte. (:all
24 hrs. : 1-100-341-0841.
a;g 3 BR . t~rm ho,... bulk on
your tot, n &.HI end up. c.•
1·814·888·731 1 .
-
m-.
Commercialepace, 1400 aquare
fest, corner Second · tnd Pine.
Ample pei-king in ' reer. Cell
441· 4249, 441 ·2325 or 441·
4425 . .
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pm.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Atntal trllllre. Cell 114-8127478.
8peCfl for tmlll uailert. AM
hoolt-up1. Cable. Alao sHidency .
roomt.. air end Cllbfe. MelOn.
W.Vo. Call-·"3·1151 .
For Leaaa
flulldlnO, iiOOd 1-n. lorvo
loU. 200 : ft road fron•ee.
304-178-1431.
,.,..
.
....
.
)
.'
--~
·,-
1.- t._..
Ml
Garagis
E. Moift • I ...,U&
Starage
Buildings
V~al Calf
POMEROY. OH.
992·22119
.' .
LOW.
LOW
.. PRICES
.•
. FREE
ESTIMATES
.
. D9uble-\ Construction
-..
G.E. rolrig., Whirlpool--.
dryer, ••eel. cond. Couch •
chair. boXIprinp • mllftrsl1,
ch... of drawer.. recfin•. C1N
114-441-3224.
SALEM TOWNSHIP ..,.. Approx. 130 acres of vacant
land. Old barn, old log
house, sheds. 25 acres hayland.- approx. 40• acres paslure. ASKING '39,900.
llriW
QUALITY
WORKMAN·
SHIP
LETAIIT - 3 bedroom frame
lrlme with alumilum sidin~
Large rooms. workshop, car·
port. NiCe big kt ASKING
$23,1XXJ.OO.
It Auction
MIODLEPORT - Beautiful
colonial home. 4 bedrooms.
level lot 2 car garase. ornate
llim, leaded glass Windows &
door. Attic studio w/skylight
Well insulated. PRICE REDUCED, $62,000.00.
..•
•
54 Misc. Merchandise
sm:u. Aim TRill
sians.
SPECIAL-AUCTION
----.
/,,Y
• When you
b1m
package at the same time, the trim package prtces
will be frozen for 90 days.
. . . . . .O . . . . . . .
wiD_,.., qt?
..,.IChalpdoo
20x24x8
24x24x8
24x30x8
30w40x10
POMEROY - urge olde1
_
home in town. 4 bedrooms,
fuU basement large lol
PRICED TO SEU $14,900.DP.
From Gaflipolis, take Rt. 141, tum left onto Rt. 775.
turn riaht onto Cadmus · Patriot Road. Watch for
PACKAGE
I
·-·-''
.-
Cted,
SeeM wmher All Delete for detaDI.
.
.
. MIDDLEPORT - 2slury home
with 3 bed!ooms. dining room.
1 and 1/3 baths, 1M lot, nice
kitchen. lois of clo!sl space.
REDUCED TO $26,900.00.
FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1988 at 7:00 P.M.
I
/
EVERnHING NEW
Tools. Household, What-nots & much . much more.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER - AUCTIONEER
.
(Pieateprinl~
'1795.00
1995.00
2295.00
'3195.00
A3
~
.. ...,.•'
P.O. Box 8484
Eighty Four, PA 15384
Lot Owned? _ _ _ Phone No. ~._ _ _ __....._
1
1
• •
'
84lumber Nearesl You? _ _ _-'---~---
locai .Sales
Representative I
Donna Crisenbery
E.S.R.. Bow 166
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
•
Name _ _ _ _ _~----------
' ''
Address _ _ ____,_ _ _ _ _ _:____ _ __
Ph. 614-Z56-6518 .
State
.
Zip
w
Estate
·•
614·245-5152
· PUBLI AUCTI N
SATURDAY, MARCH ·s. 1988
10:00 A.M.
"TRACTORS - COMBINE"
1967 John Deere 4020, 1964 John Deere 4010, New Idea
701 Uni System with-701 Combine Unit, 723 com head and
711 arain table.
·
.
"EOUIPMENT"
.
·
7100 liu. 24l7'rihg bin with suck-up stirrer, 7~ h.p. fan and
'bottle gas heater, 52' Mayrath 8" auger, J.D. 4x14 semimounted plow~ J.D. 12' 110 disk, J.D. 10' Cultimalcher, J.D.
494 com planter, Gehl 65 JUinder mixer, N.l. manure
splelder, 119 J.D.3 pt. mower, 56 N.H. hay rake. 24T J.D. baler,
round bale 3 pl. spears, John Blue sprayer 300 gal. booms and
nHrogen knives, J.D. 709 rotary cutter, bush hog 7' 3pt. blade,
3 pt. hay ledder, 11' hyd. auger lor gravity ,wagon, 1065 J.D.
running gears wHh 8xl6 flat bed 3 pl. lilt pole, 2" lransfel
pump yeUe1 8xl6 flat bed wagon, 13x6x38 duals with axlemount' hubs, seti.H. suilca5ll weights, hubs for 4010 J.D. 3 pi
12" auge1 shaver post hole. dilllfl', Kelly 3 pt. log splitter;
McCunly 10 ton gravity "!_lOllS a~d gears with wide li1es etc.
. :,
.
bull.
Terms: Cash
Positive I.D.
,DAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER
JEAN TIUSSEl ...... 1949·26&0
DOTTIE TURNER ...... 992-5&t2
TRACf RIFFLE ........ 949-3010
OFFICE .................. 992·2259
6 Sllringing purebreed. He•~ord cows, 1 purebreed Her.eford
•
AFFOIDABILITY PRICED AT JUST $29.900
-Close to city on Rt. 141this home offers
kitchen. LR. family room, dining room and
full basement.' urge unattached block
garage. Call for an appointment.
COMMERCIAL SITE FOR SALE ~ located at
2206 Eastern Ave. All utilities available:
EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - $39,too Ranch style home just 5 minutes fr,om town
offers 2 BRs, bath, kitchen w/slove and
side-by-side 1efrig., LR, carpet and hardwood, carport and covered patio. Trailer pad
on lot next to house. City school district. Call .
today.
YOU'll WANTTHIS ONE FOR YOURSELF! lovely home just minutes from town on
lower Rt. 7, belut~ul riv11 view, 3 bedrms.,
2 baths, LR, equipped kitchen, family rm.,
dinelte, 2 fireplaces, game rm., laundry rm.,
city schools. Callloday.
- .
RIO GRANDE AREA - 20 acres, m/1, very
nice home has been remodeled and offers 3
BRs. I~ baths, kitchen wrth oven, range,
woodburner, family 1oom/dining combo, LR,
heal p!lmp/cenl air, 30x30 garage, laundry
.rm. , 12x65 mobile home on prOperly. SW
school district. Call for appointment.
3 BEDROOM .ANCH NEAl HMC - Other
features include eat-in kitchen. LR. beth,
laundry, attached garage, utility building.
nice ftat yard. Call for an appointment.
· CHAROIAIS HILLS - 3.24 •cres more 01
· less. Owner financing available. $12;000!
PRICE REDUCED BY $5.1111011 ASKING
$54, too ~ This home is sHuated in a very
nice neighbolhood al the edge oltown and
offersapPfOX. 2,000 sq. 11.4 BRs, II! balhs,
kitchen, dinllle, LR, FR., woodbumer, aas
heal cent. air, attached garalf. City schools.
Make us an offe1.
·
GREEN lWP. - 2.5 acres m/1, very nice
home offers 5 BRs, 2 batlls, k~chen, dininr
rm., LR, carpel and htrdwood, woodbu~nlnr. ·
new fu~ntce. Cllllar an tppointment. .
YOU'Ll LOVE COMING HOME TO THIS - A
bealltifulloe ad~ition has been added to this
home and .it is lovely. 3 BRs, bath, formal
dmmg, k1tchen, family room )¥/loft.
woodburnll, stone chimney. This home is
situated on 10' acres m/1, wilh quiet J
•
· '"
surroundin¥s. ·
,·
Wnt Vi11ini1 license
' ·515·88
. . OWNERS: JOHN &.ELMER· NEWELL
Elmer 614-985-3537
John 614-985-4131
8
Public Sale
8& Auction
THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU Ranch style home and approx. baH an ac1e 3
BRs, LR, k~chen , FR. balh, fireplace, WB
stove, 2 car attached garage, 16x32 pool,
chain link fence.
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVEI VIEW- 40 acres,
more or leis, home siles. city schools.
.
RODJIEY CORA RD. - Beautiful home on 12
acres m/1. This lovely home is surtoundec! by •
trees and oflen 1 unique floor plan, livina
. room ftltui'IIS woodburner, Open ceiUna
, design, kitchen, lormal dining. 3 BR, 2\!
· batlls, II. Pllio off dinlna artl, 26x40 barn
and 151124 pralf. Cllllor an tppaintmenl.
$21,0001 - 3.5 acres, m/1, 2 story llame. 3
bedrooms, living rm., krtchen, dming rm.,
stoJmwindows and doors. basement · Very
mce.
located on Jay
•.. ·c:·•. _.
otlers everything you .
. ·
comfort. KHchen _w/DW, d1s~l., ranlf, r~fna..
hv.mg room, lam1ly rm., dlmna ,rm., carl)tl.
'gas hea~ cenlatr and wOod and coalbum1na
stove, 2 car garage. 12ll6 storaae buildinr.
city schools. Call today. and make an
appointmenl to see this pice home.
ONE YEAR OLD RANCH style home offers 3
BRs, II! bitlis, kitchen w(relrig., ranlf, DW,
lo1mal dining. LR, carpet; heat pufllp, cent.
air, utility blda., nice !!fighborhood. Cll
today for an appointment.
J.:·:
AN EXCEPnOIW.LY NICE ~~ri:.;~c~
- 12.43tcres, IA/1, Ill flll :ill
Grttl inveslment lor lh~
buYif. Lacalld on Graham •School Ad. Each
un- ofle11 2BRI, llyina ~a~, bath, ldtcllen
tnd stM. relna.. fit( and disll;. llundry,
larlf CII'JIOII, C111lrll lir lnd sfori11 well. .
DUPW 4SALE -
ri.
AID OIIE HALF ACII Fill SAUlt. of li¥III.LSJ*t. LR, Mlcllln;
bill, tiO.IGO. Clll llr 11111t
25 ACIES M/L, 011 STATE
110 - Old
bam lnd concrell block praae on property.
Rurll water mHIIIII. Cllllldiy..
.
•
..
-
~
from G1lllpoll11 teke Rt. 141 I turn left ohto Rt. 778. turn rijjht
onto Cldmua·Patrlot R01.d. Watoh for !ligna.
·CARPET & UNOLEUM AUCTION
TUESDAY, MARCH 1, ·1988
AT 7:00 P.M.
'
'
56
Peta for Sale
Groom and Supply- Shop-Pet
Groomlna . All breede ... AII
otyloo. l•m• Pet Food Ooolof.
Julio Wob~ Ph. 114-448-0231 .
Dr~~gonwynd C.ttery Kennel.
CFA Hlmtleyen, Perllen and
Sil!mDH hhttina. AKC Chow
puppln. Coli 114· 441·3844
efter7PM.
Reg. UKC·Toy Fo11 Terrien. 3
mal11. 1110 each, Firm. Call
eU-317-n7o .
Rl!t Terrier Pupi, n1t'urtl bobtail.
Callll•-448-3413,
'
R~eterH bfeck male Cock1r
Sponlol, 5 _._ old. 071. Coli
114-317-0248-4 PM .
AKC reglttDNCI llberien Husky,
8 WMIII Old Feb. 28, lkC femity
,.., UISd to children, 304·171·
1800. '
2 yur old male Pe~lngiH, all
lhOII, houee broken, 304-175·
4881.
JUDY DEWITT
J . Merrill Carter
Becky Lane
Phyllis Loveday
Patrick Cochran
Sonny Garnee
Cheryl Lemley
®
3$8-8156 .
379-2184
446-0468
446-2230
446·8655
446-2707
742-3171
BFJOKER
R~ALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
' 446-6610
NEW LISTING • • : LOVELY HOME - Start with
double lronl doors to enlry, tri-level home with 3-4
bedrooms, open livmg and dining room, kitchen
with breakfast nook, large family room, 3 baths, 2
car garage, all newer tarpet A very nice home in
good location, conven ienl to shopping and
hospital.
'992-6191
S-0-L-D
' \
0&7&.00. 304·17&·20,5.
net space. MUCH MORE!
ONLY_$42,900.00.
IF YOU'VE BEEN THINKING OF LISTING YOUR
HOUSE ANI? YOU WANT TO GET IT
'"'""1~s. US OR STOP IN OUR OFFICE
AND LET US HELP YOU .'
•
THIS HOME OFFERS A VIEW OF THE OHIO
RIVER THAT JUST DOESN'T QUITII - The
front of this home faces the river and the
owners have used glass torts full advantage.
Beautilul living room with mirrored wall
reflecting the river view, beamed ceilings,
stone fireplace, dinette, equipped kitchen, 3
or 4 bedrooms. family room. rec. 1oom, 3
baths, .2 .car garage, central' air.
'71 Ford OrenHe 302. V·8
'"glne, ove"rheul~. runs good,
'
Broker
514 Second Avenue
Gallipolis~ Ohio .45631
(614) 446-0008
••c
'
NEW LISTING -
RAN'MY BLACKBURN
iiiijiCEii TO SlUOOII! Nice home
in the Vinton area offers LR, kitchen, dining
room. bath. I car unattached garage.
wlpe;e, hu epedll LE Interior.
11,100 mill,
coneS. l!lklng
01.2oo.oo. 304-171-1&47 ofu r 4 :00pm.
Nice neigh·
bolhood! 4 bedroom home &
2 ca1 prage. W.B. fireplace,
fuH basemenl oak trim, work,
shop over garege. lots of cabi-
949-2033 or 992·7301
Jill CARNAHAN: AUCTIONEER
REALTY
1881 Grond AM L_E, PS, P8, AC,
tNt. AM·FM ca....... delay
MIDDLEPORT - Unique 3
bedroom home in good condf
lion, Equipped kilthen, washer
& dryer included. fireplace.
11! balhs.OWNER.Will SACRI·
ACE AT $18,500.00.
' E. CLELAND, Jl.
HENR'I
•110TE: All Equipmlllt is in Good Runnin& ConditionI
FIELD READY
.
"Not Rtsponsiblt fiX 'Accidents loss of
1877 Mercury ltltlon wt~gen,
power windowt, power net1,
tlh et_.lng whMI, 4&0 motor,
good cond. 1800. 304-571·
2731.
.
.
ST. RT. 143 - A·frame and
2~ ac1es of _
ground close to
town. 3 bedrooms, full basement woodburner hook-up.·
Looks good and has a great
location. $29,900.00.
"CATTLE"
"EATS"
-
•
RACINE - A neat 4 bedroom home w/large modem
krtchen & dining room. Family 100111 w/woodburne1, f.A.
gas heat1 nice . carpeting.
carport, 11111 lot MUST
SEE! $31,000.00.
As WI ere qulttin& flrmina. WI will sell our equip·
m111t end Clltlt et Keno Hill F,arm IOCIII!d 8 miles
north of Pomeroy, Ohio on•Stete Route 7to Chester,
Ohio - like stlte Route 248 five miles )o Rd. 28
,l(eno Road. Follow sicns.
Ohio License
•57-&8-4131
*••Z5 UIQfSl STRm.'GAlliPOUS.OHIO
•
Stock tank. gates. creep feeder, round bale rings, chain
saws, 3 sets of J.D. weig!lts, etc.
TEN ACRES IN THE COUNTRY- 3 bedroom
YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOYTHIS HOME -A
home with 2 baths, kitchen, range and
BRs. 2 baths, equipped kHchen,LR, attached ·
refng., LR, carpet, woodburning stove
garage, heat pump/cent air, whi~POOI in
Call
masler bath, above ground pool. Shown by
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._ _ _ _several
_ _.farm
_ _buildings.
___
_lor_an_appt.
_ _' • , appointment.
AUOIIEY F. CAN..,AY. R~lTOII
*IOI(IT QOIDON. REAlTOR, 446-6216
HYSELL RUN ~ Really nice
ranch w/gorgeous kitchen,
huge family 10om, big living
room with fireplace, plus a
trailer hook-up. Quiet & pea·
ceful on approx. 20 acres.
MAKE OFFER $49,900.00.
.. '
"
Realty
•
cYt
I •
'
1170 N... 88. 310 four opood,
oond, 01.100.00. 304871-IU7.
-
.•..
.•
.~
71 FOrd Monarch, I
new
1>.-y •nd tl-. U71. 304171·2457.
"'i -"
/
1881 PlymOuth Voyog•." coli
(104.17&-7431 ·1:00.
2401.
Uood fumlturo, opplloft- ,..
IU . fl• lnc"s ....
Food '"" c304-171-&104.
rM. auto
••.eoo.
··71·1338- 3:00pm,
1179 Ford Fairmont, 4cyl. eut.o.
air ~ good ttr... 11,000
mil••· eno .oo . 304-175-
t"d':."""...;.!~~-~-~~-
GREEN TOWNSHIP - S38.000 - Ranch
style home offers 3 aRs, bath, kitchen, LR,
carpet; 1ca1 attached garage, close to Green
Elementary.
·
l~otikf
46 Space for Rant
Building M•terlell
lkM:k. Mtck, .ewer"'"'· win·
dow1, llntllla. •c. C..ucle Wintara. Rto Grands. 0 . CeU 114·
245·1121 .
-----------~·~-
'MISC.
---------------MOB
for your future. Learn both
Aoorftt tor rent. Refriger..or,
microwev1, lhower. cable T.V.•
P.riwte entr1nce, oft atrMt perk·
10g, rDIIOnlbtl. 114•992· 7791 .
s..owilloows•OFJICES ' 514MS
Yll"'·
Real
Furnished Rooma
rough and finilh ctrpentry 1kill1
et the Adult Educ•tlon C.nter-Tri-County Vocational School.
The Adult Carpentry progr•m
will provide you with training to
become 1 c.wpenter.· Clrpentry
lkilla •rs 10 impottlnt end
v.netlle thel cerpsnlerl mike
up the 11rgeet group of building
ulde warken. To rsg6eter for
cle"" beglnnift9 April 4th, ceH
763·361 t ext. 14. Atk 1boU1
our variety of fu~lng IOUrc"
evtilable to pay. for trelning.
WAH!100SE5 • IIOAI~·· ST~AGI:
•zo.
Price
·Spec:ializin~
1114 Fo"' Tompo. 41.000
rnllat, 11ntod wl-..........
now rodlolo. 02,100.00. - 171-7431.
1 Ill Ford Tempo, uc cond,
loedDif · with eat.-...
-114-111-12154.
'
Apenment for rent, one bed·
room. furni•hed. very 1;1leen. no
pets, phone 304-676· 1388.
45
.
C - IBM PC Junior pluo
. A - - o r o. C.H
• 14-441-7313.
.
...... . . . . . . . . C<N •••••
" N~e" nu,.. mo. tin 7
, _ , ozo.oo. ..........
Wllter bed lheste • 1&.00. 304171-7431.
.
Mlley ' lw · 1200 1-.
....... 111. Dollwry pol- .
..
90 DAY*
70voOmof. _ _ _
wtth ...... Good
Wll
M1 for IN. CoM 114-4412143.
..,;
1
ZO·ZZ. toftopoodblllo.._
ho ........ Ht.111nah-1V
with lllnd. 11110 .. AM·FM
· 12 Dooloni.--IAIOIC.
_,;, Col 114-141·11 31 .
·-Ina . ..
. .....
u """'
........ ond. t . . ... .
304-171-7411 .
Forlolo:-h~.
w
..::•::-::·:.:.""::.·...:•:..:.14_-.:.
•4.:..3.:..
· 154
- 1o.
·lc-
Package Specials
2 bedroom furnithecf apt, utllitia ptlid. rsferencnand dtpo-'t.
304-882-2688.
Far 1. . . ar lila. le,.. bualn...
,: ModamOnoBR. o p -. C.II
:: 114· 441-0310- .
_ , . , . _ , ._
10-1 " · . - t 2 0 o p r. 1 - · c.1 e14-JU.I713. ·
in Pole Build·
inp. Dtsl&ned to m"l
your needs. Any size Clloide of 10 colors.
1 ~ld.&s. ESTIMATE. on post
••
. •nd packare deals.
hundreds, even thou·
of dollars.
54 Misc. M'erchl!ndiie
Antiqu11, ~ or .e1. Rlvlrlne
Antlquet, 1 124 East MMn lt.,
Pomeroy. Houn: Mon., Tun ..
and Wed.- 10:00 e.m .-1:00
p.m .• Sun. -1 :00 p.m. -1:00 p.m.
By chence or appointment. Ruu
Mooro- 8t4-992·2628.
- Col 1114·441·
,.. --•ao.
D.C. Metal Silas, lnc.
Cannelbura, Ind. 47519
Beech Street, Midclleport, Ohio,
11 C"""' St.· 2 Bedroom, 2 Tre._ loti, At. 1 loaud Ao..t.
..} betlwa. kitchen fumlehed, w / w beak ot K • K Mobile Homee. .
• , c........ U21omo.pluou11Ntloa. . .:.-:..;_1::.:78..:....·1_;_0_71::.·_ __ _
~ . No - · d-'< • rot. Col
~ -· 114-441-4121.
~4~9~~~~----
..0. HMC.
d.......
CoN
- t o r -. Uio!Ood.
Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va:
IS4 Mlec. MerchlndJii
BLACKBURN
;!
1 BR. opt•
;; 8t-. ....... a
.., 114-441-4782.
misc.
.. REO TAG SALE
Oinnettea; wood 2 cheln
t31.00. wood drop teet 2 c:hlin
*11.00. butch• block 4 chein
tiO. OD, chrome 3 chain
*10 .00, wood dinning & chain 3
lwfe pacta t190.00. CoftM
tablll t10.00. End tablll
•1.oq. Fu·u. queen end kl~g
mmrau, box eprinaa '71.00
aet. Wood burning etove
•ea.oo. Lott More. Pick.na
Ulld Furniture, 304·175· 1410.
j d.;j,;,~;.t-
lpacloua mobile home Iota for
Wllter ...,t, Family,_
.a...m--o.. E..i.M - Home
Perk. _..,.._. ..-.rfY, W. Ve.
l--- ·_1_71-_30_7_2_
. ----
: ; Coli 114·-8038.
.
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51 Household Gooda
1
2 f t . - · -, _ ....., ......... lor-
.......
2 bedroom 1pt. In Syracuae far
rent. ·Eidtfly preferred, Re1aona·
ble renl. c•n 614-992· 2749.
• Nice 2 BR. 4 Y! mil• lrom
<
:. ... "·INpoll
_
' · Itove. :':1. l
• • fumilhed. No pet~ . • 115 • mo.
•
~·
Mercll<lllillsl~
54 Miac. Merc.handiH
2 pc. living room tultft· ltlrtino
It t300. I pc. dining room
-otortineot *221. 7pe. fl-·-honiWood.AY.
dining room euile · t310 . _ . pleil·up --021. you
AKIIner•sunlng It *111. New hN. •U dellnNd loc.l. CaN
Phllc:o 21' "oolo<1V-0410. I pe. 014-441·. . . ..
living room tuit•• · t400 ..
lldwoll C.ah fHd Ito,. Now
Clrpet0 1tllrting at *4 1 yd.
Kitchen • b1throom vinyl . hendllng pro ml• for urtv
linoleum· n.rtinget"*4.1• • yd. QOidoo- along wtth ~
lnttllletion • flnencing meat, nltrete of lOde. 34%
nltmo.arobblt8dog...,.,...t.
ewUebfe.
CIIN 114-3M·IIII for lotoot
MoUoNm Fumltu,.
.
403 4th.- A...-KMR
GoiUpolio. Ohk>·I14· UI-7444.
Moyn- Quilt Sllop-.locbon
Plllo, Woot of R-.,. Fobrlc by
tho
Qu_ltlng - b y tho
& bu•kbod MU, oN """"'· duty.
beg. QuHtlng tram• &. -*•·
Nic. mettr""' InclUded.
Houit· 10 AM · I PM , Cloood·
por "'· Coli 014:742·3033.
Sun. • · Wed. Coil 114· 24!1·
1112.
Maple llbte. 8 cheire, 3 lute,
good ehtiPI. t _1liiO. Avec*
. r.trle-etor, workt good t121. HALF PRICEI Flolhing orrow
IIana t2881 Uglltld, non-arrow
114-H2-1183·.
t2HI Unllghtod 02411 F,.. .
New ll&ectric Hotpolnt dryer tor lottotsl Boo - , .. C.H todoyl
foctory: I 18001 423·0113.
Mil. 304-17&-2130.
enytlms.
2 lA . mobile home tor rent
Private lot. Adults only. Ref.
Dep. No peu. Cell •14- ~87·
7743.
· : Mobile Home for rent- 5 miiM
, . frOm G•llipolls on At. 218. Cell
: . 114-251·6009.
•
awn....
&• Miec. Merch1ndise
Nice 2 bedroom apl. in Middl•
port. 1181 pw mon-m. O.poeh
and reference reQUired. Day
814-992· 2381, Wsekendel14·
992· 2609.
14~t 70 with 7x24 lxptnd0, 3
"'!>
BR., 1\lz betha. tppliancea furnithed. Pav only One utility. All
:: elec:tric. 2milesfromtown. Dep .
':1
7172. - ·-· · .
J a I FURNITURE
IFormolly,.,_'ofufftltufol
14111EootomAw.
I.MngroOm-- 01718
up..- hdroo." eun. .........
up. Complslemicroweve ttlftdl
031.118 up.
Come In end mMt the new
28.1988
W. Ve.
_
.. 2100.
a ... Rx _
Y....,. fumttu,.
•es.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Two bedroom furniehld: lpM't·
- 3 BR . howe for rent or rent ,
·•
44 · Apartment
1 BR . apartment with ltOW a
rlfrig. No pets. Call 8 14-,..8·
3117.
10-20 acrH owrtooklng Ohio
Riwr for hou• site. Clay or
Addison Twp. C.ll 114-317·
0593:
Goo *'tor
a Fur2101
1w 441- ·
Coli
114-441·
..
1371.
Olld hlmlhuo Olld
lppllclncst. Cell 814·4-'1·
,--------30
~
THREE BEDROOM RANCH~ like new condition.
Very neat. Hutchmson Subd ., Rutland,
$33,500.00.
.
.
112531
ONE FLOOR, I 01 2 BR, ~ith partial basement
Really neat home. Would.make anice first hom~ or
retirement home. In Pomeroy. Sells for $18,000.
112536
2 BEDROOMS_with large attic. living room has
fireplace, full basement with drive-in RaraRe. nice
carpet located in Pomeroy. Asking $29,900.
.
. '
· N2537
$25,000- lovely 2 bedroom 2 story home with
I ~ baths, full basement, 1 car garage and more.
N2470
FARM - Approx. 41 acres with older 2 story
home. Barn and several buildings. Mineral rights
include\:1.
N2530
MORE THAN YOU'D EXPECT! Very pleasant and
spotless. 3 bedrooms, I bath frame and brick
ranch. Bright kichen with formal dining area large
12'x 26' family room and attached p11ge. Located
minutes from Silver B1idge shopping lor
convenience. · Take a peep and you'll be
impressed.
112542
LIKE NEW - Contemporary home. 3 or 4 large
bedrooms, 2 full baths, office, large entertaining
1oom for the family or executive. Well equipped
kitchen and formal dining area. Wrap-a1ound
deck facing beaulilul valley. Mulli-Juel system
(coal, wood, 01 propane psi. 3 car garage and
workshop with appro~. 3 acres of land.
112463.
HOUSIN8 YOU CAN AFFORD - Rio 611111de .:;_ 7'
room house near Qlllege and grade school. large
living 1110111, formal dilng room , eat-in kitchen with
lots of cabinets, nt.wer floo1 covering. lhe resl is
carpeted. lnsulaled tnd shows lots of care. Large
storqe buildin~ beaulifullrees an~ shrubbery on
a corne1 lot. Pr1ced in the low $30s.
.
.
.•
112497
FORCED SALE ~ Approx. 39 acres, 3 bedrooms,
2 bath !ram, Ill-level, unallaohed prage. Owner
needs quick sale. Priced It $52,900.
11253i
UMLY 2 BEDROOM HOllE WITH SPACIOUS
LIVIII8 110011, dinina area and k~chen. Mud
, _ lo the covered patiO. l4 basement, I car
attaclled praae.lilhled closels. lronl porch, lie.
lawn. loclltd i~ tinton.
u.f::t
.
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I,
:
· •,
"OUTSTANDING" ~ Approx. 114 acre
$46,000. Older 1~ story remodeled home.
bedrooms. large bam plus sheds and other
oirtbuildings, 2 ponds, haylields, recently
reseeded. Take time to view th1s farm today!
.2557
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES! - Rio Grande -
East Collqo St.: Large 4 rental unit apartment
building, separate 1 bedroom apartment, 2
bedroom mobile home. Central Avenue: Frame 3
bedroom house with attached 1 bedroom
ap&rtmenl. frame 2 bedroom house. Excellenl
rental income. Call today.
H2526
lOOKING FOR SOME PEACE & QUIET? - Then
come and see this cozy log cabin nestled on 42
acres mo1e or less. 3 bedrooms, living room.
partial basement, electric heat pump. Owner
willing to help with the financing. lnqutre today!
'
112544
NEW LISTING! - YOU.RE GONNA LOVE THIS
HOME. This is not your typical ranch. Owner has
done extensive renovation. Custom built 'oak
cabinets with work island. Great room. free
standing li1eplace, 3 bedrooms, bath, all situated
on appr01. 3 acres. Be lh'e first to see this new
listing.
H2555
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - 3 bedroom [Inch,
spacious kHchen,·livin& room, bath, formal dining.
utiUty. Attached garage wijh elec. opened. Fenced
back lawn. ln·lown location. Price reduced · to
$43,000.
112534
FAIRFIELD ACRES is yo~r place to Ill - Good
location off'Failfield-Centenary Road in ·Green
School Oi&trict. Attractive 3·bed100111 brick and
alum. ranch, larlf lamlly room with fireplace1
woodburrier, plus 2 nice lois at end . or
development for added privacy. The best part is
the price. $42,500. Clll today.
112494
IIEW'USTIII8 - LIVE II OIIE MD
I \It STOIY FIAIE HOlE with 3 bed100111s, living
2 two-bed,_ lumitlled mobile
lloiMI lflllltld on I! ec:re lat Wftllin 3 milliS of 1'1111111, balh, dinina room. Htnlwood ,floors.
·, l..ocat8d in Porter. Cllllllr more information.
town. $19,500. .
112501
112553
OTHEI -
BUY! - Well maintained · 4
bedroonr, 3 bath home. Brick frame bi-level,
spacious equippeil kitchen. living room, lamily
room , attached 2 ca r garage. forced air furnace,
cent. air. IApprox. 1,900 sq. ft. living space!. 35
West area. $5~ . 900 .00. Won't last long!
CABIN & ACRES & ACRES! PRICE REDUCED!
Now asking $9,900.00. Hunting cabin approx. 5
years old, well insulated. Secluded ·and nestled in
the wood. Rural water available.
112488
NEW LISTING - HOME PLUS RENTAL INCOME
~ 2 story aluminum sided home wih efficiency
apartment and 2 betlroom garage ap~ rtment
Second Avenue location. Call for details.
12554
' DONT WAin to see the character and charm ol
this special 3 BR ranch. Spacious lam1ly room
fealunng cathedral ceiling and fi~eplace, nice
carpeting throughout. Attached garage, storage
building. easy mainlenance lawn. Priced to sell.
$55,500.00.
'
12417
FARM- 147.5 acres more or.less. 2 story frame
home with 4 bedrooms, living room. lamlly room,
fireplace, 31arge rms., mineral rights and tobacco
base included. Hmison Township.
.z469
CALLIIOWI Buys like this a1e few and far between.
frame one story home. Spacious ·krtcilen, family
room with fireplace. Basement, unattached 2 ca1
P._~ll. 11! acre lawn. Price reduced to
$35,000.00.
.
.
112546
$43.000.00 -like new 3bedroom situated al SR
160. Owner his moved and wants to seM! Clll
today and make appointment to ue this one.
.
112541
VACMT AC:IEAGE - Over 36 acres. Developed
sprin&- Several Ill! of lOIII llontllf. Cllllor RHI'e
In~. $12,000.
'
.,I
�'
Pig a 0.8-Sunde~ Tmae Sentinel
II
--·-···-·
AKC ' I ' auld ..... ,......
57
pup~.
Muaical
lnairumenta
FebruarY 28,1988
Ohio Point PuRnt. W.·'Va.
Pete for Sale
1000 bolol,
..
COIIdlliooiOd
'::~~~~ scr:\\~~-~r.~se
.....,:...;.:.:.;..;....:......;......;;; 1411o4 ~, CLAY R. I'OUAN
Ford E....... 2 dr.
"OIChbocjl. 4 IPd. V... Good
11tl~
mixod
hoy lor-. ~114·812· 1313
Conctltlari. Call 111•-388·1171.
ar.I14·141·27M.
M~"'
u.-.. round •nd ....-. bllel of
...., lor ..... Coli 114·117·
11M.
v..., "'-'· IIO'Itl kopt. L whh IX1f81. Priced right. 114-
182·1117.
•us
Hoy 1ar ulo. LMw• INioo.
· Cd 114·742 ·21 23.
I
1975 Ponti.c: VMtUra. Good
c:vndltian. UOO flrm . 114-MI·
22.1 .
1112
lr ,Ht:-.ptlll.llltlli
februlry 28.1988
STRUHT
I
••.t
1978 Food F110. VI. - · P8,
N. etr.
AM·fM tape
declko roll bar, lllidlnO rMr
eaue•·
01 SIIMSNY
t!- l
Fonl
Muttong. Good
New 4 cyl., air.
coRdltion.
59 For Sale or Trade
For Slle or Tr1de for pick· up
truck-1117 Chevy., 4 dr., hltir,
new paint. No ruP . Tt!ltl_l elf.
PMedt upholtterv work. Call
114-441·7844.
1981
Ford Eacort Station
tr1de tor pick·up
w..,. WIM
tNCk or c.nte of e.qyal velue.
11•·MI·2179.
1984 Hond1 V -30 Megn1. C. II
after 4 p.m. 304-17&-3142
1988 Buick C.ntury, 4 'd oor.
18.000 mH•. Many ext,."s.
E..,_, condklon. Call 114·
992·1293 or 114·912·1331 .
71 AutQ'a For Sale
1983 Chevy. Cltltlon. Am radio,
auto. trana .• PS, PB, 19,000
mltN. 116150. Cenbel...,.atthe
Ga.Uipolil O•ity Tribune or tor
more in1ormatlon calll14-448·
2342.
II I I l I I
1917 Iuick Grond Notlanol 3.8
IHer, SFI Turbo. All - Power1
Real Eatatii General
NEKRUJ
5
~td
with evtry ev•!leble
uption. plus t1000 add .an
perfo.-mence peck~ge. Ablolutly
one of few in circulation.
1983 Cheoo~atte. *2000. Cell
.81•·2111·1121 .
Good work whicH. New like
th-... Call after a PM-114-258·
1941.
.
fmn SuppliES
t~ liV~SIIilk
Faim)Dnt. 4 cyl. IUIO,
· 81 Farm Equipment
CROSS & SONS
U.S. 31 W•t. J1ckson. Ohio.
114-211· M&I . .
Met'" Ferguton. New Holland,
BuM Hag SeiH • Service. Over
40 uted trector~ to choo.. from
• complete line of new & uted
1971 Chevy Impala . Goodcond .
Coli 114·379· 2878.
410 Int. trar:tor w / plows. cuhl·
v.tort, gr~der bl1de. mowirig
mechine & baler. 14750. Cell
1988 Cllmaro-red with •~tra
strip ptckege. V-8 fuel injected,
AC . cruiae. tilt, pluJh interior,
rear louver • spoil or. *8500.
Coli 614·367·0619.
H..aton 154.00 ro~nd baler.
11,2915. 1988 16ft. hHvy duty
stock trailer. 12495. Call 614281·0522. . .
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT ·
441-9777
3 Pt . hitch, fertilizer 1preader
with,PTO 1haf1. S199 whila they
l..t .
Ford Dexter Oienl tr•ctor· Nice.
• with plow•. cultivetorl, 2 row
~- ~Inter. t2950. Ownltf will
• finance . Cell 814-288,8622 .
8000 Ford Oi...l tractor with
"eavv duty loader. t69&0. Late
model 2400 International ;ound
baler, t3960- Owner will finance. Cell 814-288-8&22 .
Maney Ferguso" ·1 80 OiiJ!sel.
New rubber an rear. All weather
cab with heater, PS, dh Wheel,
dual remote . hydraulic line1,
front weights. New Hollilnd 273
Heyliner. Hay Baler with lUper
IW"P pickup. Call 614-949 2237 .
2409.
75 Ford Monarch, I cyl. new
battery ttnd tirt1. 1375. 304-
1981 Cavalier AS- 20,000
miln. auto .. 1ir. PS, PI, AMFM-Cau, tih. f5800. C.ll614388·8240.
..,ipment. LArgut Nlection In
S.E. Ohio.
11.· 288· 1&22.
•ir concl. .eood ti.-.a. 81.000
miles. •750 .'00 . 304 · 175·
Pontiac Flrebird. New
~int & MIQine. e.cet cond. Call
614·441-00411 ofterll PM .
1982
675-24&7.
2738.
Want to buy. Yellow locust
posttd, call 304-675 -2130.
.1 973 Plymouth. *326. 1981
Livestock
1·978 Fotd Fsjrmont Wagon.
Aunt & looks good. 6 cyl., auto.
$100 or beat offet". Call 614446·6357.
197&" Chevy pickup wlth 327
engine. Good cond. 1860. Baa,.
woodburner, 176. ' Call 81 ...
446·8158 .
198:2 Old1. Cutte11 Sierr.: LS. 2
df-.• 2.5-4 cyl., auto., PS, PB. air,
cruise control, tilt, AM-FM-
1984 NisNn King Cab olx4.
wrecked but illlvagable. Cell
614·"6·9334 tftor &'30 PM .
C•••· 615,000 mile1. U49~ . Call
614·"6· 8697 .
Hay & Grain
64
600 bales of conditiOne;d hay.
Call 614 -448-43ol4 .
Conditioned Timothy or mixed
hay tor sale. Call •fter 5 PM.
614· 446· 3968.
-0.
•
'74 Motorcycle• .
'
441· 0RI.
79 Motore Homes
& Campers
.
Butltlt Tren8mlukHI•
UNd- Starting at , ttt. ••change, •llo-rebulli trenamls·
••
-,917 Hondo CR 280, •1800.
l:o11114-381·el71.
...... chang•owr llhl for OM
.-.lrtvoto~IOTurbo, 2 -
• 4 whMI drhle, custom built
lodi·up CIM t-.... G.r•ntMd Ul)toOM ,.•. Clrlh. C8rTY
or lnololl. Cal 11•·371·2220 or
304-171-030.
y-
,1 917 210 K_ ...l T - 4
.wlloolor. t1800 . 114·912·
o7U7.
'
1881
,1_100 ~~~.
1ully-.12ooo...,.llllllol,
llko ._. UIOO. Aloo 1171
,Hort.y C.vldoon. UOOO. Mu ..
.-. bottl to eppreclete. can
... 14-812·7008.
Uood .-lh ropoirocl tron~mlo·
ojano. Calle14-441-3134.
"The hardeat pert was loaln,g enough
weight to fit back Into my armor."
19751H 1700.312 eng .. l5spd.
trans. 2 spd. rear. 18,600, air
brakes. PS. good 10x20 tires.
Nice truc::k. 1978 Dodge lA
pick-up, 318 eng., 4 spd., new
tires. Very good cond. Celt
HANDLED WITH CARE.... Prideful home lovingly
maintained by particular owners. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, huge kitchen with dining area, toasty
fireplace. Make .up your .mind to see 11 today!.
$6~.900 .
SHUT YOUI EYES...and imagine your family
enjoying this 3 bedroom ranch located in an
excellent neighborhood. Eat·in kitchen, fireplace
in family room, 2 baths. No.y, add a refreshing
in·ground pool. It's not adream...it's a new way'of
life. $69,500.
. ·
8444
N221
Sopood1Htroll0.; 4.,..., DOdgo
tr...... air ·tllg ..... Call 1142111-1141 .
defroJter. 61 4· 949-2,90. ·
NEEDS RESUSCITATIOIII . life into this fine old 2
for many, many years.
i
frame, good wood~brk, i1 has . .or 4 bedrooms.
walk·in closets, hvmg room. d1mng room w1th bay
window, . kitchen w~h breakf1st nook, full
· basement and enclosed back porch. Front porch
wi1h columns overlook a lafge sloping front lawn
and the new modern elementary school across the
street in Vinton. Possible loan assumption.
$29,000.
#401
1982 Oauun DieHl. Regular
bed.' 6 speed, silver color. New
battery end many extras. Cell
810. 992·7466 .
1971 Nova Eurostyle. V -8, auto.
trJns .. new PoJthe red paint.
new Eagle ST' s on rally wheelt.
lots of new parts. S1400 . OBO.
Must tell. -1969 Chevelle Cali·
fornia Car. No run. rebuilt
motor, alum 1lots, new uhJuat.
SBOO. 1976 Bierer . Rancho
Suspen1ion . 6 in . lifl. new
shocks. alum. s101s. 38 in.
Gumbos, new trans. front end
and transter case good shape.
$1000. firm , Call 614-992·
1974 Chevrolet "I!J ton 4x4 ahort
bed. Good condition. 614 -986-
1980 F 260 ~ton Ford. 71.000
original miles. Engine rebuilt at
-~3.000 . Aunt grelt, body good.
61 4-949·2&87.
.
ALL CRAIIIIEDTOGETHER? - Stretch out in ·
sizable 3 bedroom bi·level with backyard made for
kids. Across lrom North Ga\lia High School. You've · ·
got to see it today!
8207
y,~
Ml,d At Ee11.
FOR SALE
CALL: 388-9031 (Evenings)
5467.
..
VICTORIAN IN CIT'I - There is square
galore in 1his 5 bedroom home on 2nd AVenue,
even a laundry room upst~ifS! From. the foyer
through the living room, fam1ly room, dmmg room
with bay area to the 3 car. paved parking area. 1n
rear it ofters accommodations for any SIZe fam1ly.
House and grounds do need work, but could be an
oystanding home. Make us ap offer!!
400
*
NEW HOllE :.... Loca1ed in lhe counlry on almosl
an acre, this llOO sq. ft. vinyl-sided ranch was
built with good matefial an.d craftsmanship
throughout the 3 bedroom, II? balh, living room,
dining room, and kilchen with custom buift
cabinets. Let's take a drive and see lhis one!
$43,000.
Real Estate General
LOAN ASSUMPTION ..:_ The. Seller is doing
everylhing possible 10 make 11 easy .to bt! the
owner of this brick/frame 4 bedroom bl·.level neat
Clay Elementary School. He wil co.mbine a low,
low down payment, loan ass~mption •. and will
· even finance the difference. with speoal :ann~
This is an excetlenl opporlllnily. espec!IIIY or .
first time buyet. Home also mcl~des kitchen tth
set·off dining area, large unfinished tower eve1
room, above gfound pool and 2car aarage. Call for
. more information. $46,900.
. 4140&
Cell Todey/
'.
WON'T LAST LONG! -Priced in the mid 40's. very
well maintained, quiet location only 4-5 miles from
town. This well deco1ated 3 bedroom brick is
perfect for small faiJiily.lncludescozy family room
with pass·t~rough to attractive ea1·in kitchen,
screened in porch gives you adddional room in
·summer. Frenced in yard. Outbuilding. Give us a
call, we'd love to show it to you!
#236
IF YOUR FAMILY COMES FIRST...You'JI cherish
this attraclive bi·levellocaled nell to Clay School.
3 bedrooms, 211 baths, fireplace in·living room,
family room. Could have 4th bedroom in ·tower
level. Priced within your me•ns .... $56,000.
8302
PRICED REDUCED! Grut Rlv11 Vllwlt -'Only a
minute from town, this II? story home has lots of
potential to be your dream home. 2 bedrooms with
room .for 2 mo1e, lafge dining room, living room
with fireplace. eat·tn k1tchen and bath. N1ce back
porch. 2 separate garage buildings plus carport.
Reduced $9,000 1o $59,500. Don't let this one
pass by!
NEED A LOT OF 1001, but don't have a tot of ·
money? Here's the solution. For $44,900, you can
have 4 bedrooms, II? baths, eat·in kitchen with
appliances, full basement wilh family room.
prage. Give us a call, we'll solve all your housing
needs.
Best Farm Buy in the Aru!!! - Owner Is Very Anxious To Sell.
.
was a ood buy al $95 000 IT'S NOW REDUCED 10 $80,000!! The limber value alone IS
worth \25 to $40,000. 18G acres of beautifully rolling countrys1de along Raccoon
eek Approx. 65 acres of pasture and tillable ground, 121 acres of woods With good
ti~be; value, 2 streams and 1 pond. Well built brick chalet style.home about 20 years
ld wilh 2·3 bedrooms 2 baths and outstanding countryside v1ew from the eleva!~
~overed deck. New heat pump, Garage. 2600 ft. air strip with 30x40 hanger bUIH 1n
1986 40x26 bi·level barn burl! 10 1985. plus 1200 sq. ft. shop {msulated, w1red for 200
amp All mtnor righls. It's a perfect residence, or if you want to farm, ra1se ca~e,
horses use it for a retreal hunting preserve, summer home. Broker's Nole: Tilt VI ue .
is heni. It's worth a great deal more than .the $80,000 uked.
. 8242
i
TE
,
Hl2
BEST BUILDING SITES IN GAUIA COUNT'/ "Early Birds" will cat tht btst siteltl - We are
subdividing a 110 acre farm into small, medium
and large bujlding sites. From 5 to 30 acres of
gently rolling meadows and hilltop land offering
wondertul counlryside views, cle~n. fresh aromas
and quiet peaceful surroundings. Located on stale
high!fay, Rio Grande Elementary and Gallil
Academy High School. Gallia Coun1y Rural Water.
Excellent neighborhood. Financing available. NO
MOBILE HOMES PERMITIED.
·• NEIGHBOR FIIENDLY... .Join acircle oflriendsin
LeGrande Boulmrd when · you buy this 3
bedroom ranch. Eat·in kitc~en, firePlace in livinJ
·room, utility ·room, garage, Efficient gas heat.
$51,700.
. •.
t307
MEIGS CDUNll -'- 100 ~~res on Rt. 124 near
·Racine. Buiiding'sites, rich farm land and approx.
500' of river frontage. Southern schools. $67,000.
.
.M40
-
446-3644
;
"
RIVER VIEW - Balcony, 2 cozy fireplaces, 3 extiting bed·
rooms, roomy rec./den ., hearty hardw.ood floors, carpet. 21?
baths, full 2 car garage, opulent oak tnm, grat1tymg, pnme 3
aeres.
I •
IIEW LISTING- 7 room home along 4th Ave. Can be modified to make 2 apts. Near downlown area and schoo.ls.
Priced now $45,000.00.
.
COIIEICI~L
IMVESTIIEMTS - . 50 . unit
residential mobile home commumty can be
expanded to 86 lois. Paved slreet, .sidewalks,
street lighls. Stays over 90% ottup1ed. C1ty water.
City schoois 1nd community sewage plant. Call for
more details.
·
Loretta McDade. 448-7728
B. J. Halmon, 448:4240
-SPECIAUSTS IN i:u!&IDENTIA,L, FARMS.• COl-'•
CARRY OUT - BAIT BUSINESS ..!.. DRIVE THROUGH Also clean new home, living room, fireplace,lg. family room,
3 bedrooms. 2 baths, every1hing kitchen, Kyger Schools.
NEW LISTING - 1 ACRE'- LIKE NEW liou•Lt WIDE24'!52'. Also a rental mobile home 20x50 · 2 bedroom, Re.nts
for $180.00 per month and other trailer pad. Ooublew1de IS 3
bedrooms 2 baths master features garden tub. Complete
kijchen wfbar and 'appliance. Cathedral ceilin&.living room,
family room, cenlral au. 10x20 wooden.deck. Can buy var~
ous ways. Give us a call for more deta1ls! · · ,
'
E. M. WiMinCin, lroktr
'
FLAT 1.4 ACRES - UnaHached 2 car garage, 1500 sq. ft.
ranch 4 bedfooms modern living room, 2 wafm woodburn· ·
e!S, comforting family room.
.
42 ACRES OF BAlE LAIID.- Wy wood~ with
some SIW· ti~r. 4 1cres m/l .ol bottom land.
Good plac~ to bllilcl. Water tap paid tm:. Located 1n
Vinton 01 Glenn Summ1t Road, '.4 m1le south of
Vinton. Asking $20,000.
(614) 446-3644
David Wiseman, 448-9666
Clyde B. Walker, 246-6278
SHADY WOODED LOT - .34 acres, survev.ed, water tap, 2 ·
miles from city. $2500.00.
-11137
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE ·
c
REAL
. 11310
EASY ON THE POCKETBOOK .- . Here's an
affordable home in city schools you'll enjoy living
. in. Complete with jargri eat·in kill;hen, dining
room, large living room. 3 bedrooms; 11 balh and
partial basement. 1.6 acre lot includH garden
space, 2 outbuildings, large front pot'Ch. Well
insulated, easy lo heat. $36,000.
11130
'
BIG PRICE REDUCTION!!!
34 Meadow
I '
HISTORIC MIDDLEPORT HOllE - Decorative
woodwork. Stone and brick in good condition. 21?
baths, 4·5 bedrooms, 9 rooms plus aUic and
partial basement. Gas forced air furnace 13 yrs.
old). Large kitchen. well planned. Step-saving
laundry, pantry, walk·in closets, garage. Asking
·$55,900.
8308
"AnENTION LOGGERS"
Good miud hay . Cal1614 -245-
84
Electrolua ut. and 111rvice;
vacuum repairs, shampooing
and steam c...nlng c•ptts kJw
Electrical
8o Refrigeration
Watterson 's W1ter H1ullng.
r..sonable rataJ, l"'mediet:e
2.000 gallon deiMNv, cl••ns.
pools, wetl , etc. ca!l 304-6782919.
Relidentlel or. commet"cill wirIng. New Mrvice or repelu.
UcenNd 'electrh:l•n . Estimate
frH. Riditnour Electrical, 304-676· 1188.
.
85
Oumptruck hauling service.
Co'al, stona, aand. gravel, dirt.
304·876 ·3, 90 .
87
General Hauling
Upholstery
Mowrey't Upholstering urving
tri countyeraa 22 ye1rs. Thtbnl
Dillard Wlter Service; Poolt,
Ci1terns, Wellt. Oeli\lery Any·
In fumlture upholstering. Cell
time. Call 614-446-7404-No
Sunday cells .
304 - 875 - 4164
e•tim•tN.
for frae
Concrete SIPIIo Tonkl· 1000
gal., 1500 g... and Jtt "-ration
1'18tlm - Faet:ary lrlllnad .'r•p.olr
ohap. RON EVANS ENTER·
' PRISE&, Jaclceon. Ohio . 814281·1930.
.
21 Great Lake
22 Learning
23 Lealhermaker
24 !'lolsy, rough guys
26 Rest
28 Sharp; shrill
sound
29 Sum up
30 Deposits
32 Gaiters
33 Moroccan native
OLD TillE
- This
home
doesn't show its age al all. Very well maintained
home offers character of a 1930's 2 story bulwith
all the modern day conveniencH. 4 bedrooms,
I II!
t "\ \
, baths plus I? bath in full basement, farce hvmg
rbom w~h llagstone fireplace, large lormal 01mng
'room and eat·in kitchen. Large closets, plenty ol
storage, vinyl siding. insulation - good tight
home. Central air. PLUS 30x42 metal building
IDEAL for hundreds of uses. 3 miles from town.
City schools. River view. $70s:
:i'
1975 Ford (9000) semi, 1975 International (4200)
semi, 1974 Mack tri·axle with 1983 F90 Prentice
loader. 1978 Chevy Malibu Classic, 1986 Pitt log
trailer, 1973 Fruahauf flat log trailer, 19681.JCrosse
lowboy (25) ton; Kentucky pup loa trailer, 1987
Prentice 180B knuckle boom loader mourrted on
tandem frame. 1987 F.E.C. saw buck, 1983 240A
Timb~rjatk skidder, 1979 «C John Deere skidder,
1979 5408 John Deere skidder. 1980 350 J.D. do·
zer-wench, (1985 250 Bic Red Honda, 3 wheeler).
(1984 70 Honda, 3 wheel1r),larp air compressor~ 4
cylinder, approx. 500 locust posts.
Pools, cisterns, w.!ls. Cal 81._
··6 ·3171 .
SUNDAY PUZZLER
y,,, H•••1 W1'1/ Put
1986 Chevy $-10 truck with
1984 Grand Prix. 39,000 miles.
Paul Aupe. Jr. W.ter S.mce.
SWEEPER and IeWing m.ahlne
repair, .,.,.,, •nd eupptiM. Pick
up and delivery, Davia Vecuum
Cleener, one h•lf mile up
0..... Crook Rd. Coli 114·
446-0294.
·OwiH!I financing. with down paymenl •.P.Prox. 1 miles from
'Gallipolis. ldeallocltion. Excellent condition, overlooks Blue
:Lake and Raccoon Creek, 23ft. travel trailer, sundeck, rural
water, septic system, and electric. Fishing. boating, hunting
or just relaxing. '·
8584
w,,,,d A'"" s.m,l·
3828 or 814·9a6-31&4.
topper. 10,000 actual milea. 4
cyt.. • apeed standard. One
owner. 16700. 614-992-2313.
Mil, b. .m.ms. free utlmaiH
coll304-111· 7413.
R • A Watet Service. HorM
cisters. wells. paola filled . Formerly Jemn loys Wften.C.I
304·875·1370.
WaiMp;ooflng.
women
time at 156 Diamond St., acro11
from Dairy Queen, upper end of
MiddlepOrt, Ohto.
luggage rack, ,.ar wiper end
Experienced Plint8r. exceftent
referenclll·, quality work . lnt•
riOt, ••terior, texturing, thoro
pools, ~isterns, wells. f'h . 11...._
2•&·92a6.
BASEMENT
WATERPRQOFING
Uncondhlanll llflltime guaran tee. Lac.. ref.-.ncea tumiMed.
FrM tetimltea. Call collect
1·114-237·048a. doy or night.
Ragaral•••ment
1
1976 'f ord pick-up . 150 auto,
black with red Interior. No
phone, cen be seen most ·any
19"6 Etcort l Station Wagon. 5·
speed. 34.000 mlle1, PS. PB.
remavel. 304-178•2842 or
171·2803.
J & J Wa1ar Service. Swimming
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Oh io .
Phone 6,4-448 -3888 or 614446·4471
89&·3802
&tar.. Tr.. and laWn Service.
lMvn care, llndseaplng,. stump
General Hauling
Home
Improvements
1 Pari of flo6 Pinochle 1erm
10 Porllco
14 Smalle9t number
1.9 Withered old
1987 NisNn·Truck. Ten, a ... E,
FM-AM CUHtte. 26.000 ml\n.·
Call 614-992·6537 or 114·
448-2519. uooo . '
.
Reposussions, Call 1 -806-887 ·
6000 Ext. ·oH-9806 for current
Moat w,llscompiMed aameday.
Pump ul .. •nd •ervic.. 304·
00 ••. 71. 304·175·2295.
ACROSS
814·256· 1141 .
Goverriment Home• from t1 _
. (U
repair) . Dellnquenl tax propeny.
304·571-2398 or &14- 4<11 ·
2414.
85
Plumbing
a. Heating
Reel E1tate General
1t78 Chavy. ·Bieftr reer·end.
t121. Cloor rotlo 11·'3. Call
114·441·4031.
614·3Ba-9628 .
1984 Mercury Lyn~ GS . 2 dr ..
PS ., PB, AC . Metalic blue, 4
speed tra"s., ,atchback. 4 ely,
1978 36 rt. Tropicana Trevll
TraM.- wlttl tip out. air, bit nth,
ldtchWI, bedroom. Good condi·
tlon. Prlcocl to Nil. •3100. Call
114-981·•340.
HouN calla on RCA, OueZIIr,
OE . Specialing in Zenft~ . CIH
82
Roofing. romodllloltr>oddltiono,
electriel. drywell, ptlntin'!i &
plu111blng. Call Gory 114· 88·
8UZ.
614·441·47&1.
Registered Palled Heretord Bulls
for ule. 614-986 -3374. weekdays after 5 :00. Weekend any:
time
··
-
AM.fM
wll toll<. -·171•
tlll4,00 pm .
and Carry 3000 ...._or 30 diiYs
wtnanty, [whlc:hevet occurt
flmJ. We can help with hlrd to
lind 1r0n-.1ono. Coli 114·
1977 Ford pick-up, F-250.
Automatic, V-8 with topper. C.ll
Ho.-..s for sal• Standardbred
and Tennessee Welk,ers. Call
614·286· 6522.
K.C.
point
.
Coli 114· 387·0&41.
E11cel. cond. Must '"td' appreciate. Call614-367-76&6 .
Registered Quarter Horse Brood Marea from t250 to
11000. A~istered 5 yr . old
Stallion · Shown &: pieces in
western ploaure clastes . Call
11i711 1-. CJ7, """""'·rov""'
onct lllklnl, now
lab.
11-.000 ......
c-1111.
Auto Service.
Ripley, WMt Virginia. StMcdlllll·
5nt in Honda parte and ...-vice
linco 1878. Phano 1304) 372·
1117. Nina to five .
UMd • rebuilt tr•ntmiiHns.
UNCI .,. lnternarlly intpected
'
19n Ford Pick-up. Cell 1144•&-211 & after • PM.
Datsun -% ton pick-up. 81476.
2969.
63
Jim"a
Vans 8o 4 W.O .
8RUHAIIILY 10011 W/COI!TEIIPOIIIRY WOODEN CEIL·
IIIGS and designed walls, Pella windows, lot &fimmering
Rlass, living room, sizzling fir~place, formal dining, complete
iitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full basement, 2 car garage,
flat 20 acres,caUie·horse barn, new fences, city schools.
1986 F-160 XL, AC, AM-FM
Stereo. trei'- towing pkg. Low
milt-we. C•ll 614-441·1928.
repo lilt.
2986.
Import
Rotary or cable tool drilling .
8o Acce1soriaa
72 . Truclui for Sale
lnternationell 1060 grinder
miur. New Holland 467 hat
Now buying 1hell cOm or ear
corn. Cell forlatestquote1. River
City Farm Supply, 614 -446-
Fetty TrM Trimming, llump
removal. Ct11304-1715-1331 .
'711 Ford Granada 302, V· 8
·engin•. overhiuled. runs good.
1987 Chevrolet Celebrity, 4 dr ..
PS. Pl. tih. cruiH. air. AM -FM
stereo. Cell 614-441-4960 or
448-0652, anytime.
Cell 814-448-2297.
62 Wanted to Buy
Auto Repair
2222-days, 446-7205-evan.
Colll14 ·669· 3995.
800 Ford farm tr.ctor, 1981
D1tsun pickup for parts, alto
other farm equipment. 304676·232a or &76-2806 .
77
AutQ Parta
•aoo.
8576.00. 304·676·2046.
Home
Improvements
78
11.800 miles, exc c~. alking
.9.200.00. 304·67&·1147 If'
cond. 15100. Call 814-992-
81 .
1 1'78 food hoff ,.;, INC~ will!
302 Y· 8 lnOIOf, rlrieo •110.00.
- - 6 7 1·1&11.
1981 Grand AM"LE, PS, PB. AC,
ter-4:00 pm.
Auto Pans
8o ACCIISOriel
wl-. wldoopoN-i.
HD
u.no.oo.
tilt. AM -FM canette, deley
"wipers, hu tpec:ial LE Interior.
1986 VW Jette GL., dia1el, air,
AM-FM-Cess. 60 mpg . E11cel.
engine. Very good cond. t33QO.
FOf 11ieeCEEF Farman tra.ctor&
p&aws dlac. cultivator1, mower.
304-937-2206, Pli-,y, Route.
'
78
RON ' S Tel•vlaion Santlc• .
1 9n Mercury station wagen,
powet' windows. power seats.
tilt steering whMI, 4SO motor,
good cond.
304-&71-
1986 Honda Wegon. t4800 Firm . Cell 614-446-8874.
Far mall Super M tor •le: Rebuilt
engine in ' 84 . Good condition.
bind. Ferguson six bar hay rake.
New Hollend707 foraga harvuter. 304-273-4216 .
•
FOR SALE BY OWNERS: Large split·l~vel and tennis '
court.
·.•
(
·
.
4-5 BEDROOMS: 3 baths, forma living and dining ·.
rooms, gourmet kitchen. fam,ily room, game foo.m, ,.
study.. mud/laundry room, intloor storage room w1th .
additional laundry facilities . 2 car garage, 2 fireplaces •. •
ceiling fans. ·wooden deck, full length of house. Many
extras.
BREATHTAKING VIEW of Gallipolis and Ohio River, full •
length windows for maximum view. Secluded for total •
privacy. City school district. Located 1\? m1les from
downtown Gallipolis. Only 8 miles . from Locks and
Dam.
·
EXCELLENT home and grounds for family and/or en·
ter\aining, Must see to appreciate Quality.
HOUSE, TENNIS COURT and 25 ACRES- $173.000 '
Will consider house. court and 5 acres for $15~.000
Call for
- 614-446·3386
ua.HI.II Notolloblo. 114742·221 1 ... lor H-o. AIW
1 '00 coli 114·&&7·1111.
19711 Qodeo ~t~on- Von.
.
\
Boeta and ·
Motors for S..e
Foi ....12 Merced.. 110EEngine, rebulkhtbt. body, ln.._
rD •a.c.a.t. Cell 304-175·
n48.ttarlp.m.
73
U500. Coli 114-H2· 2n2.
75
11 ft . Flborgloot boot. 40 HP
JohnJOn, tleotrle start motor on
trail.-. •noo or Met offer. Call
614--· 1121.
•. r n 1 '· No run.
304-182·3UI.
SJ.:t1·1¥1fi:I~S
Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-D-7
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
True~• for Sale ..
72
3J. V!J !J:IJ.SV;i
:t1J.S3N
·3.L Wl:l 1:13.1SV~
AI:I!JVJ.S
~tiiU!III!UOIII ua 1• DuDJM eq
- 33>1NV/.
IJW:) 1M 'IIIJeWnJIIU! ~1'\111!11 MIU
1:13>11o1nr
Hllll 01 lliUI\U ·elle J11ndwoo 8111
31:/:IVB
10 ~ JllllOUV ~!P
J.Sn!JHJ.
Rear range fhe 6 acrambled
• words below to make 6
aimple words. Print letters of
each in its line of squores.
1113 FGnl E-o.
10ftl
....••••
•••
IRIC~
4 bedroom home ovet·
River. Lower River Rd. Galli·
acres. Buy now for $110,000.
NICE IUILD!NG LOT 'in Mills SO, near Holzer Hospital.
City water 1nd sewer. Pnce $12,500. , . '
TWO BUILDING LOTS IN RODNEY II
the olher $5.000.
•
sp: I hlr $4,300,
,
NEW USJIIIGlll- 41 .51cres, located alon4.Hamilltin
Rd. Ollie Twp. No stfUCtufes. R~ral water 1V11Iable. 500
ft. irantaae. Buy .llll'lf. $11,500.00. .
IDEAL FOR A FAIIIEI- 12'h acres more 011ess. Very productive land. located 13 miles from city. Plus 876· lb. tobacco base, could also be used for grazina. Totally afforrla·
ble. Call for mote infprmalion.
w......
tlful
other
~tuallty
........
cet~~trudlen wltlt beau·
aetthlp. Glwe us I! call f• MOn
hlt:lt cal••r
.........ue....
'
'
35 Equal
37 Baker's products
39 Three-toed sloths
40 German title
41 Grant use ol
42 Strong, low carl
44 Mend
46 Highway
47 Rabbll
48 Remain
50 Typify
52 Capuchin
· monkeys
53 Sforzando: abbr.
55 Periods of lime
57 FuKUI
58 Pigeon
59 Heroic eyent
60 Ed.'s concern
62 Cover
64 A Barrymore
66 Earlh goddess
68 Concerning
69 Arabian chieftain
70 Ocean
7t Actor Holliman
73 Tidier
75 Earlhquake
77 Bridge
78 Entreaties
80 Aclr888 vera 81 Indian weighl
82 Experimenting
84 Enthullasm
86 Female relative
87 Shine
89- Vegas
92 Muse of poetry
95 Getup
98 Was borne
99 Terrlfled
·101 Units of light
103 Shorllacke1
104 Poem
105 Small island
106 Thertifore
107 Exists
108 Pealed
110 Follows Fri.
111 .. _ ~re the
World"
, 112 Site of RPI
· 113 Weary
115 Steamship: abbr.
117 Entice
119 Hebrew letter
120 Ache
121 Declaration
124 Long, slender
fish: pl.
126 Alehouses
127 Decree
128 Schoolbook
130 ''Tile Love -"
132 Roberl Wagner
TV role
133 Young salmpn
134 Mountain pass
135 Name for Athena
137 Soft mud
139 Emmet
140 Goddess of
discord
141 roues
143 Tibetan priast
145 Chinese pagoda
146 Colorful bird
148 CloSe-fitting
undergarments
150 Own
152 Power '
153 Comfort
154 Willis of
basketball
156 Jets forth ·
157 Arrows
158 Table scraps
159 Slelk·
160 Judgme~l
DOWN
.,
1 Fragment
2 Wom away
3 Dusts
4 In addition
5 Hawaiian wreaths
6 Coroner: abbr. ·
7 Sin
8 Falsehoods
9 Hopelessness
10 Narrow openings
11 Small children
12 Native metal
13 Diphthong
14 Den
15 Abstract being
16 Deer's horns
17 Goddess of the
moon
18 Walk on
20 Leak through
23 God of thunder
· 25 Mix
27 Coupled
28 Promise
31 Prophet
33 Flesh
36
Evaluate
38
40
41
43
45
46
47
49
Hurried
Sharpen
Secular
Distance measure
Culmination
Venerate
Fllamenl
Slory or
adventure: colloq.
51 Classiflas
52 Sleeples
53 Walk
54 Young horse
56 Apparently
59 Arousing joy or
grief
60 Conlemptlble
61 Warbled
63 Hold chair of
authorlly
65. Linger
67 Bitter vetch
69 Printer's measure
70 Alcohol
72-o Fall Into disuse
74 Thallium symbol
76 Teutonic dally
77 Cubic meter
79 Perch
83 Music: as written
85 Cause
86 Type of sliver:
abbr.
87 Flourish
88 Mine vein
89 Nole of scale
90 Help
91 Accumulale
92 Mr. Wallach
93 "From - With
Love"
/
94 Forenoon
96 Cleansing
subs1ance
97 He'raldry:
grafted
100 That man
102 Serenely
comfortable
105 Goddess of lhe
rainbow
109 Snalch
112 Acidulous
113 Former Russian
ruler
114 "A Comedy of
..
116 Soft drink
118 God of love
120 Mate
121 Ventilates
122 Bank employees
123 Carler of TV
12 5 Place where sail
is made
126 - split
127 Comely
129 Harvest
131 Browns. as bread
132 Delestod
133 Commit
depredallons
134 Heal~
136 Boot< of Old
Te9tament
138 Oul of date
.140 Urges on
141 Vast throng
142 Let II sland
144 Snakes
147 Skill
148 Vehicle
149 Diocese
151 Pellllon
153 A, ......... , I, -, U
155 Declmeler: abbr.
.I
�......., ...-10-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel
Pometot
MlddaJ~rzt-GIIMpolll. Ohio PW1t P'
February 28,1988
nm. W. Ve.
Shultz encounters diplomatic turbulence in peace travels
By .JIM ANDERSON
'DAMASCUS, Syria (UPI)
Secretary of State George Shultz
met some expected diplomatic
tiU'bulence today as he traveled
to two key Arab capitals to seal
hll proposals for a Middle East
peace.
After hearing some signs of
flexlblllty from Israeli Prime
Minister Yltzhak Shamlr on the
Issue of convening an interna·
Ilona! conference on the Mi,ddle
East, Shultz went to Amman,
Jordan, for talks with Crown
Prince Hassan and encountered
stiff resistance.
"We believe that the only way
to arrive at a peaceful settlement
Is through the convening of an
lnter9attonal conference attenC!ed by the five permame 0 t
members of 'the (U.N.) Security
Council, as well as all the
lnyolved parties to the conflict,
including the Palestine Liberation Organlza tton," Jordanian
Foreign Minister Taber Masri
told reporters.
The Jordanian formula, which
.would presumably also include
Syria, would not be acceptable to
the Israelis, who have refused to
negotiate with the PLO.
· The Syrians are expected to be
equally tough on the U.S. prop·
osal for an international peace
conference that would precede
direct negotiations amon11 Israel, Jordan and Palestinian
Arabs to grant autonomy to
Palestinians living In Israel's
occupied territories.
. Sbamir, who has. opposed any
International conference on the
Middle East on grounds It would
put unpredictable pressure on
the Jsraells, appeared to soften
his po,sltlon slightly after meet·
lng with Shultz Friday.
Israeli officials said .Shamlr
might drop his total opposition to
such a conference If he was
assured Its framework would be
mainly symbolic and not Involve
the power to Impose a negotlat -
lug formula on Israel.
Jordan's lnslstance on Including the: PLO would not be
acceptable to any segment of the
Israeli political spectrum.
·
Bank and Ga~ Strip, and · "workable proposal" that could
sometimes-brutal Israeli sup· lead to making 1988 a "year of
pression. Four more Palestlnl· peace," put he and his spokesc
ans were killed Friday, bringing men declined to describe the
'
.
to ,nearly 70 slaylngs since the plap.
A senior Israeli defense offl·
protests began Dec. 9.
Shultz, who was to meet Syrian
CBS News film showing Israeli clal; declining to be ' Identified
President Hafez Assad late to- forces methodically breaking the further , said Friday, "There Is
day, Is to return to Jerusalem for arms and legs of children had a no American proposal, but there
further meetings with Sham\!' powerful Impact In the United Js an attempt to hear Ideas."
and Forelp Minister Simon States, officials said.
The official sa ld the success or
Peres. He 18 to retul'll to .Ani man . A senior Israeli official said the · failure of Shultz's mission will be _
for further talks and Is to fly to Palestinian uprising has created judged by his ablllty to bring the ·•
Cairo for talks with Egyptian a new political situation because various parties - I$rael, Jordan
,President Hosnl Mubarak.
of the Impact on opinion In the · and the Palestinians living In the •
The Shultz trip takes place Western world.
occupied West Bank and Gaza ::
against the backjrround of conHe described the disturbances Strip - around the same nego- ·:·
tinued violent Palestinian dem- as silontaneous, locally led, and tlatlng table.
..
onstratlOI)S In the·occuPied West far more effective In political
Once at the table, the official :
terms than past Arab ml11tary said, the Camp DaVId formula ':
would. be a starting point for any campaigns or terrorism.
Shultz went to East Jerusalem discussions. Camp J;>avld, the :
Friday to plead for Palestinian 1978 meeting between· the United ·
Delvalle's ouster "a crude at· strike as buses ran normally and democratic way of Ute, then we cooperation and open the door to States, Israel and Egypt; laid out :
tempt at a coup d'etat" and
shops remained open · for as Panamanians will have .to peace negotiations. While none of ·a formula In which Israel would
called for an Immediate nationbusiness.
·
suffer.' '
the 15 Palestinians Invited to gradually give up the occupied
wide strike.
In Washington, President ReaThe Reagan administration, meet with , him showed UP; U.S. · territories over a transitional
"We are Hying through a
gan said "there are limits" to which considers Panama a ma- officials said the occasslon gave · period during which the Palestimilitary coup d'etat" said one of what the United States can do jor U.S. national security Inter- Shultz the opportunity to make nians would be give limited self
the crusade leaders, Carlos Erabout the governme'llt crisis In est becaU$6 of the Panama Canal hiS plea for cooperation on Arab rule. ·
.
nesto Gonzalez, In news conferPanama and added no U.S. and the U.S .. military's Southern television.
The official said, "The looser
ence at a downtown hotel. "We mill tary action was planned In Command, . has urged Noriega,
As he arrived In Israel Thurs- Shultz's proposal, the better the
have two presidents, one legal
the country.
50, to step asldeslncedeinonstra- day, Shultz said he had a chance he will succeed."
'
and one Illegal."
Delvalle, meanwhile, said Fri- tlons broke out last summer over
day he would support a U.S. trade · corruption allegations.
Gonzalez said the strike would embargo to put pressure on
' Three weeks ago federal co'lrts
culminate Monday with a com- Noriega.
.
In Florida Indicted ·Noriega on
plete shutdown of business and
"I do not like a total trade charges he took bribes from
commerce, but he urged Pana· embargo," Delvalle saki. "Butlf International drug leaders In
·manlans to avoid street demon- we realize the country . has to exchange for allowing them to
strations and violence. Friday suffer for a while to rid Itself of operate freelY and l.a under bll.~
afternoon there was no sign ol the · dlctatorslllp and return to a llons of dollars In Panama.
Business
Section
February 28,1988
Dr. McNeill to head staff
•.
r
Police protect Delvalle's ho~e, says govemment
By DOUGLAS TWEEDALE
PANAMA CITY, Panama
. (UPI) - An opposition co&lltion
called a nationwide strike this
weekend to protest Gen. Manuel
Antonio Noriega's "crude" mllltary coup against President
Eric Arturo Delvalle, whose
l)ome was guarded by pollee
today.
Pollee , set up barricades at
each end or the residential street
where the deposed preside nt
lives. About six policemen
manned the barricades a n~ a
dozen plainclothesmen guarded
the front door.
A government spokesman denied Delvalle was under house
arrest and said ihere were no
plans to detain hlm . Pollee said
the blockade and the guardswerc
to protect him.
A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman
said she co.uld not comment on
reports that u.s. Ambassador
By WILLIAM B. RIES
the arm. The tape ended wl th the
Arthur Davis and U.S. Rep. Dan
youths, appearing dazed , being
Burton, R-Ind., were denied
The
JERUSALEM
(UPI)
driven
away In the back of an
entry to Delvalle's house.
Israeli
commander
of
the
West
army
vehicle.
·
Cable News Network reported
the
beating
of
.two
Bank
says
Mltzna
called
the
assault
an
today that Davis and Burton
Palestinian
youths
by
four
soldi"exception."
The
practice
of
were twice rebuffed · trying to
ers, captured on film by a using physical · force against
enter Delvalle's home, suggesttelevlson crew, was an exception Palestinian protesters to reduce
Ing that the president was indeed
to the army's policy of using casualties, has drawn severe
under house arrest.
physical force to crush Palesti- criticism.
·
In Washington, State Depart·
nian protests. .
Several
of
the
69
Palestinians
ment spokeswoman Sondra
Maj. .Gen Amram Mltzila, killed since the anti -Israel uprisMcCarty said, "We're aware of
commander
of the Central Dis· Ing that began Dec. 9 have been
the reports (but I don 't have
trict, which Includes the West beaten to deatjl. Three soldiers
anything on It ."
The power struggle between Bank, said Friday the soldiers are under arrest for allegedly
had been arrested and the two burying alive four youths of a
the military strongman and the
Arab youths released.
West Bank vlllage. Vlllagers
president entered Its third day
"I
watched
the
whole
film
and
later
rescued the youths.
today with Noriega and his
was speechless the whole. time,"
Twelve people have died In the
supporters holding control of the
Mitzna said. "I dropped every- week of "national outrage" that
government, police and military.
thing, canceled my schedule, and began Sunday. 'Since the start of
but with international. support
weni to the scene Immediately to the anti-Israel uprising Dec. 9, at
apparently behind Delvalle.
hear what happened, why It least 69 Palestinians have been
The capital was calm early
happened, how It happened."
killed and hundreds have been
today with pollee patrols in ·
On one of the bloodtest days wounded In clashes with soldiers.
evidence but no large numbers of
·si nce tthe anti-Israel uprising
On Tuesday, Lt. Gen. Dan
trool's seen In the stre~ts.
began 11 weeks ago, four Palesti- Shomron, the military's chief of
Panama's current government
nian were killed Friday in staff, Issued a clarification to
crisis arose when Delvalle, a
protests against Secretary of soldiers that they can 'only use
civilian, .tried to fire Noriega as
State George Shultz's Middle "reasonable •amounts of force"
chief of the country's politica lly
East peace mission.
during riots and to subdue
powerful Panamanian Defense
At least 49 other Arabs In the suspects.
Forces.
occupied territories were·injured
Israeli Attorney General Josey
The mllltary balked and the
12
of them by army gunfire, Harlsh, In a Feb. 19 letter,
National Assembly, dominated
by Noriega supporters, voted in Palestinian sources said. Health cautioned that beatings must end
officials said 17 people from the after a suspect Is arrested ·and
emergency session ea rly Friday
Jabalia refugee camp In Gaza should not be used to punish or
morning to depose Delvalle,
Strip had bee n 'beaten during a humlllate. ·
claiming he exceeded his powers Friday protest.
As part of . a week of prates ts
as president.
.
The .CBS News footage aired against Shultz's visit to the
Delvalle refused to accept the Friday on Israel Television ,'
Middle East, the United National
assembly vote and remained
shows Palestinian youths throw - Command of the Uprising, a
holed up In his Panama Cit y
ing stones and Israeli troop_s clandestine Palestinian commit·
home with supporters late Frl·
trying to disperse them Thurs· tee reportedly directing the proday, reportedly planning to name
day in the Wes t Bank city of
tests, called foF a "day of popular
a new Cabinet to r eplace the Nablus.
·
demonstrations''
Friday.
government ministe rs who sided
Four soldiers then surrounded
Leaders
of
the
uprising have
wlth Noriega and Manuel Solis two Arab youths sitting on the
Shultz
Initiative
denounced
the
Palma. 'a former education mingrou nd with their hands lied
as
Inadequate.
Ister named as Interim preside nt
behind their backs and one with a
The U.S. proposal calls for
by the assembly .
hood over his head. The soldiers
self-rule
for the 1.5 million
The opposition Civic Crusade.
kicked and bea t the youths with
In the West Bank
Palestinians
a coalition or bu siness groups
their helmets and rifles.
and Gaza Strip and talks later on
that spearheaded s tree t protes ts
One soldier used a rock to
the final status of the territories.
against Noriega last year, called
methodically strike one Arab on
Palestinians say they wUI settle
'
.
Orllt
Buya
. At
Ora at
Prlea•
Filmed beating of two youths was
exception, says Israeli conun81J.der
for nothing ,less than the creation
of a Palestinian state.
Western
Boots · ·
In the U.N.-run Jaballa refu·
gee camp In Gaza,. Israell soldl·
et;s shot and killed Iyad AI
Ashqar, 12, and wounded three
others. health and U.N. relief .
offlcl<ils said.
sssoo
I ,
EXOTIC STYLES
MOSCOW tUPI) - Tens of
thousands of demon strat ors
marched in Armenia despi te
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's appeal !or an end to two
weeks of nationalist street dem·
onstrations tha t have shak en the
Kremlin.
On the main sq uare in the
Armenian capital of Yerevan ,
the demonstrators ga thered Fri·
day to listen to speec hes under
the wary eye of pollee, Armenian
journalists said In telephone
Interviews.
Communications to NagornoKorabakh, center of the dlsco nt·
ent, have been cut, reporters and
Armenian activists said .
Banners In Yerevan demanded
Nagorno,Karab~kh, a' mountain·
ous enclave of more than 100,000
Armenians Inside Turklc speaklng Azerbaijan, be returned to Armenian control.
Gorbachev's appeal for calm
_was read on Armenian television
Thul'lday and Friday by PoUt·
buro candidate-member Vladimir DoJelkh who had been sent
to the region In an attempt to end
the disturbances.
Hoping to ball the demonstra·
tiona, which flared In NagornoKorabakh two weeks ago and
then spread to Yerevan, Gorba·
.. STOlE HIS.:
'I
'
I
and some changes to the exterior and we want tp preserve It,"
appearance, but people seem Frazee said. "Our menu wlll
really pleased that many of the . carry" a picture of the 'old' Steak
features will remain the same."
House which started as a 12-stool
Some of the unseen changes diner. We still have 10 of the
are In the kitchen, Including a stools. The opening has really
new .stove and charbroiler : The been a family affair with eve·
outside changes , such as the red r}•one pitching ln."
aunlng, are to give .the place a
Kirk and Bill Frazee and their
tittle "face lift."
wives, Jan and Suzanne. respecSome of the traditions which tively, hold regular business
will return with tl)e opening will meetings to discuss, conduct and
Include fried, grUied, broiled and operate the business.
charbroiled foods. Returning
menu Items are chicken llve~s.
prtine rib and 1'-bone steaks.
~onuiatyie, breallfas~ ;..u,t begin .
"'at $.. a.m. ' with·. iuncq · specials '
carrying Into the day. Closing
hours are 9 p.m. during the week
and 10 p.m. on weekends.
''There's a lot of history here .
List other l:?hari.ges
\
Jay Caldwell named.
•
Sat: 9:30 to 5 P.M.
EA. PC.
FULL
EA. PC.
KING
EA. PC.
EA. PC.
(SOlO AS 3 PC. SET)
· EL
· STOlE HOlliS •
9:30 Ali-5!00 PM '
MON.·SAT.
. .
(
' Tutt., Wtd.. Thur.&
TWIN
.QUEEN
.l·'f!: · II
F-M plant manager
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis with Federal Mogul Corporation
as Employee Relations Repre·
Plant · of · the Federal Mogul
Corporation Saturday . an · sentatlve at the Gallipolis facil ity. For the past three years Joe
nounced the recent changes and
E. JAY CALDWELL
has been employed by the Square
additions to Its manufacturing
faclllty.
.
0. Company In Oxford, Ohio.
· E . Jay Caldwell has been
Kremer graduated frOlJ'! Ml"· ,l't~
promoted to plant manager for ' ami University with a Bachelor
'·"
of Science degr.ee ln Business
the Gallipolis facility. In· this
Administration. Joe and his wife,
capacity he will assume overall
resr)onslblllty for the plant operaKatie, have relocated In the
Gallipolis area.
tion at Gallipolis. His Most recent
Federal Mogul's products
position has been operations
range from a variety of.precl,slon
manager.
A graduate of Marshall Unlver-, parts for the transportation,
farm equipment, cc:instructton
slty Caldwell has been employed
by Federal Mogul Corporation ' and manufacturing Industries to
components for the aerospace
since June, 1987. Prior to coming
Industry. The Gallipolis facility,
to Federal Mogul, he was emas part of the General Products
ployed by B.F. Goodrich In
Phoenix, Ariz.
Group, Precision Forged Products Division, produces forged
· Caldwell and his family reside
In the Gallipolis area. ·
components for the automotive
Industry. .
·
·
Chuck Roney was promoted to
Federal Mogul Is headquatengineering manager for the
Gallipolis facility. His . most retered In Southfield, Michigan and
operates 47 plants, 50 distribution
cent pQs!tlon was as plant
centers antl four maJor research
e~glneer.
.
·
··Roney, a graduate of West
facll!lles thro11gbout the world.
CHUCK RONEY
VIrginia University, began his
employment with Federal Mogul
In i978 as an Industrial Engineer.
He will be replacing Don Kell ·
who has accepted the position of
Manufacturing Engineering
Manager at Federal Mogul's
Swfthches facUlty In Logansport,
IN.
.
Terry Ferrell has accepted the
COLUMB.US ...,. Paula A. bus, which she stlll maintains.
position of maintenance superviSbe's a director of Society
Spence,
a Pomeroy native and
sor. He will have the responslbll·
Bank,
vice president, director,
1950
graduate
of
Pomeroy
High
lty of supervising the mainte·and
partner
In National TeleIt
trustee
ot
School,
was
elected
nance department on night shift.
Info,
Inc.
and
a prlnt;lpal, vice
.Na.tlonwlde
Investing
Founda·
Fer~ell joined F.e deral Mogul.
of Global
president,
and
director
tlon
(NIF)
at
·tts
annual
shareIn August 1981111 General Malnte·
Sales
&
Marketing.
Inc.,
all In
holders
meeting
today.
nance and has .m ost recently held
Columbus.
Spence
bas
served
on
The Foundation Is a trust
the position of Elet!tronlc Techninumerous
boards
lind
commit·
consisting of four mutual funds,
cian In the Engineering
whose shares are distributed tees of ciV1c. educational, and ·
Deparlment.
nationally by Nationwide F,lnall· .professional organizations.
Mike Wollermail recently acShe apd her ·hU•baD.d, Paul
clal
Service., Inc. (NFS), an
cepted a promotion to the posiNorman
Spence, haVe a son,
atttllate
of
the
Natlonwlde
'Inaution of Area StlperviSOr tor the
Bradley
WIJm
Spence, who's 24.
rance
group.
m.tnteDance dePartm~nt. Mike
They
llved
at
5191 Colt Ct. In
Spence
Is
pl'l!lldent
of
and
will have overall re~ponalhiUty
WeslerYllle,
a
suburb
of Colum·
.
partner
In
Hameroff/Milen·
lor the matntenucedepartmellt.
bul.
SpeJICe
Ia
the
claUJhter
of
thai/Spence,
Inc.
She
joined
the
ll'aduated frum
Mr4.
Vlfllnla
Dill
of
Columbul.
larp commulllratlolll firm ' In
Oblo Ulll. .lty aDCI Jollied
Tbe NIF fundi Include Nation1.180 as vice preeldent, and
~*raJ Mop! Corporation In
wide
Fund, one of the oldnt
bec~me HIIIOt viC~' prulclent ill
1981. Mite'• 111011 recent position
MUtual fundi ID the United
hu •
· PlanaiDi/SCbeduJIDa 1988. She prevlolll1y bad been States.
The otblrl ar. Natlon• Pre&ldent illld awner ablle18118oC'
Staiiii'\'IIOl'. .
Conthlued 011 E·2
J.. ·Kremer nceatly hired Spence a Allodatea or Colum-~
a
\
30°/o.B!e~
Mon. I Fri•. IU 1, P.M.
·~
chev promised that a special · Gorbachev as saying.
Communist Party plenum In
In an article that Indicated
March would look at the Soviet there had b,een widespread walnationalities problem.
kouts, Tass quoted Armenian
The patriarch of the Armenian Central Committee member S.
Apostolic Church also proadcast Petrosyan as saying "a number
an appeal for an end to the of industrial enterprises In Yere·
demonstrations, sources at the van have been In a fever of late as
Yerevan newspa per Soviet Ar· people were leaving' their work
men ia told United Press places to take part In demonstraInter national.
tions and meetings In connection
An editor at the newspaper with the events In Nagornysaid there were pollee In the Karabakh ."
,
s treets of the capital Friday but
Radio Moscow blamed the
denied reports of the presence of demonstrations on . "nationalist
Soviet soldiers.
·
elements." In response to grow·
· "The demonstrations are go- lng unrest that !Iegan Feb. 11, the
Ing on now at the theater square, local Nagorno-Karabach re·
but they are peaceful.'' said the . glonal councll passed
resolu·
editor, who gave Ills name as tlon Feb. 20 demanding urllon
Khatchlg Khltlrlan.
with neighboring Armenia.
He said the gatherings, have
Armenia and Azerbaijan, In an
been going on for . six days In area on the northern border Iran
Yerevan.
and east or Turkey, were ab"In his appeal to the people of sorbed Into the Czarist Russian
Azerbaijan and Armenia, Mik- empire In the. 19th century and
hail Gorbachev called on them to Incorporated Into the Soviet
strengthen the traditional friend- Union after the Russian Revoluship of peoples that was shaped tion In 1917.
over the years of Soviet governArmenia Is Christian and Azer.
ment and display civic maturity bljan Is predominantly Shiite
and restraint," Radio Moscow Moslem.
said after the Gorbachev
The demonstrations were the
broadcast.
most sustained and m~merous In
"The kindling of strife and memory, dwarfing those In the
mistrust of one people to another Baltic republics of Estonia, Latonly hinders the solution of the via and UthUanla, which were
outstanding problems," the off!· absorbed Into tl!e Soviet Union In
clal Tass news agency reported 19i0.
'
REDUCED
.
The original Bob Evans restaurant building will reopen as The
Steakhouse under the ownership
of the Wllllam Kirk Frazee and
William F. (Bill) Fraze~ family.
The· ribbon-cutting opening ce·
reinony Is tentatively scheduled
for March 14.
, The Steakhouse has been a
gathering place tor the people of
Gallipolis ·since 1946 and later
became the . roots of the Bob
Evans Farms restaurant
franchise .
"The restaurant
hometown traditloot,,
"loFmi!'r •
"
Bob E\la·ns. lfarms
be managing the·res tau·
rant. "We havt> made some
changes with new equipment.
NOW
SPECIAL
.
~
REG. $79,00
The army said the 12-year-old
was killed by a rock or chunk of
concrete thrown during the
demonstration:
In Hebron, 20 miles south of
Jerusalem, a Palestinian was
killed In a clash betv;een soldiers
and protesters, but the cause of
death was not Immediately
known, mllltary officials said.
During an antl-Shuitz demonstratton· at the Arrub refugee
camp north of Hebron, soldiers :
gunned down Hassan Abu Khl· .
ran, 22, the Palestine Press
Service said. Military officials
said a body had been brought to a
hosplta:t and the .· army was
Investigating.
management of the Fraz~e fainlly, (L toR) Kirk:
Bill, Suzanne and Jan. The steakbouse Is
tentatively set lor . opening March 14; (Times·
Sentinel photo)
Steakhouse opening brings
lhe. .return o~ many traditions
MENS .
As the riots raged In the
occupied West Bank and Gaza
Strip, Shultz. met with leaders of
Israel's divided coalition government to discuss a u.s. peace
Initiative designed to revive the
moribund Middle East peace
process.
TRADmON RETURNS - The original ·Bali
Evans Steakhouse will reopen .under one ol the .
orlgiDal names, "The Steakhouse." The faQllly
.owned and operated business In under the
Prlee1
LARGE
.GROUP
Armenian demonstrations
continue
.
Ii.y JACK R,EDDEN
No·fooling!- Oraat
Tough boots. . Buya
At
t
·at grea .prtce~ . Ora at
POINT PLEASANT - The
Pleasant Valley Hospital Medl·
cal Staff, In Its first meeting of
the new year, elected Samuel P.
McNeill , M.D., chief of staff for
1988. Dr. McNelll, chief of emergency services at PVH, succeeds
Young I. Choi, M.D. , who had
served as chief of staff since 1985.
Other officers elected were
John A. Wade, M.D., vlcechlefof
.staff, and Ismael 0. Jatnol'a,
M.D., secretary-treasurer.
These officers, along with Dr.
Chol, Mark C. Chenq, M.D., and
John b. Credico, M.D., comprise
the Medical Staff Executive
Committee.
·
.Dr. McNeill, .who Joined the
Pleasant. Valley Hospital Medl·
cal Staff In 1978 In the private
practice of family medicine, was
named chief of emergency services ln 1982. He previously served
as chief of the medical staff from
1983 to 1985, and was vice chief
from 1985 to l988 and secretarytreasurer from 1982 to 1983.
Board certified In family practice since 1978, Dr. M.cNelllls a
Point Pleasant native who recei ved his Bachelor of Arts
Degree from West VIrginia University In ·1967 and his Medical
Degree from West VIrginia Unl·
verslty Medical School In 1975.
Befor,e returning to Point Pleasant, he completed his Internship
at West VIrginia University
Hospital and his residency In
family practice . at the WVU
Medical Center .
Dr.. McNeill and his wife
Camllle reside In Point Pleasant
with their children, Evan and
Maren.
Dr. Wade, who joined the PVH
Medical Staff In 1978, Is board
certified In both otolarynglc
(ear, nose and throat) surgery
and otolarynlglc allergy. He has
served on the Medical Staff
Executive Committee since 1986. Western Pennsylvania Hospital
A 1969 graduate of West VIrgi- In Pittsburgh.
He and his wife Susan reside In
nia University, Dr. Wade earned
Point
Pleasant with their three
his Medical Degree from West
children,
Raymond; Eugene and
VIrginia University Medical
.
School In 1973. He completed his Michelle.
Dr. Cheng, who joined the PVH
residency In surgery at Charles·
ton Area Medical Center and hls Medical Staff In 1970, served on
ENT residency at the West the excutlve committee from
1975 to 1978 and 1982 to 1983. He
VIrginia University Hospital. .
Dr. Wade and Ills wife Sarah was secretary-treasurer from
reside In Point Pleasant wl.th · 1975 ~o 1976, and again from 1983
to 1985.
their children, Emily and Alex.
A 1959 graduate of the National
Dr. Jamora joined the PVH
Defense
Medical Center In Tal·
Medical Staff In 1973 and has
wan,
he
completed rotating In·
been a member of the Medical
ternshlps
at First Army.Generai
Staff Executive Committee since
1976. He y,;as vice chief of staff Hospital In Taipei, Taiwan and
from·1982 to 1983, and has been Grey Nuns' General Hospital In
Regina, canada.
· · ·
secretary-treasurer·since 1985.
He did his residency Internal
A 1966 graduate of the Unve ·.
slty of the Phlllpplnes College of medicine at the Mayo Clinic In
. Medicine, Dr. Jamora did rotat· Rochester, Minn., and his resld·
lng Internships at the Phlllpplne ency In hematology and cancer
General Hospital In Manna and chemotherapy at the University
St. Joseph Hospital In Baltimore, of Iowa an~ V.A. Hospital.
Dr. Cheng •and his wife Diane
Md.
are
the parents of two chlldren,
Dr. Jamora completed residenCies at St. Joseph Hospital In Monlque and Jason, and reside In
Internal medicine and the New Point Pleasant.
Dr. Credico joined the PleaJersey College of Medicine In
l•ternal medicine and sant Valley Hospital Medical
Staff In 1985 In the practice of
cardlc:Hogy.
He and his wife Deanna are the obstetrics and gynecology.
A graduate of the University of
parents of three chlldren, DenKansas
where he earned his
nis, . Gina and Anthony, and
Bachelor
of Afts Degree .In
reside In Point Pleasant.
'
Chemistry,
he earned his MediDr. Chol joined the Pleasant
cal
Degree
from
the University
Valley Hospital Medical Staff In
1970, has served on the executive of Kansas College of Health
·committee since 1975, was chief Services In 1978.
He completed his Internship In
of staff from 1985 to 1988, vice
chief of staff from 1983 to 1984 and obstetrics and gynecology at a
secretary-treasurer from 1973 to New Mexico Hospital, and his
residency In ob/ gyn at the
1974.
Dr. Choi, who Is board certified University of New Mexico and
In general surgery, earned his the St. Francis Hospital In
Medical Degree from the Medl· Evanston, Ill.
Dr. Credico and his y,;lfe TE!llila
cal School of Seo)ll National
reside
In Point Pleasant with
University In 1965 and completed
their
sons,
Justin and jason.
a rotating Internship at the
992·1671
Paula Spence named
Nationwide trus•ee
won.rman
. ~
th"
' , __.
NEW MEDICAL STAFF OFFICERS- Samuel
P. McNeill, M.D., center, was recently elected
chief of stafl of the Pleasant Valley Hospital
~
Money Ideas .
Wall Street
By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - The dirt
took Its name
brush and mud
built alongside it
shortly after
New York was
.fo,unded as a
Dutch trading
post In 1609. The
wall, later Improved with a wq<id4ill fence, was
bUll! to tkeep cows In and Indians .
out. Although little Is known
about Its success with cows, by
1626, Indians were certainly
allowed to enter the early busl·
ness community, at least long
enough to sell Manhattan for $24
and some beads: The street,
however, quickly became a cen. ter of Commercial activity because It connected the docks
·serVIng the Hudson River trade
on one end with the East River
importing business at Its other
end.
Early merchants had many
Interests. They bought and sold
commodities such as furs, .molasses and tobacco; they traded
In currencies; they Insured cargos and they speculated In land.
They did not, however, formally
Invest In stocks and bonds, for
even as late as George Washington's Inauguration, Wall Street
had no securities exchange. In
fact, this country's first stock
exchange was established In
Phlladelphla In 1790.
In 1789, the first Congress o!the
United State• mat 111 Federal
Hall on Wall .S treet, tht ~
Where Georae Walhllliton bad
beeJt 1nl11111rallld earlier. that
year u Pneldellt. 'l11eflntorder
,,.~
· Medical Staff for I988. Other officers elected were
John A. Wade, M.D., left, vice chief of stall, and
Ismael" 0. Jamora, M.D., right, secretarytreasurer.
· of business ;..as to authorize the
Issue of $80 million In government bonds to absorb. the cost of
war. Two years later, bank
stoc.ks were added to. government bonds when Alexander
Hamilton, then Secretary of the
Treasury, established the nation's tlrst bank, the Bank of the
United States, and offered shares
to the public.
'Now there were securities to
trade, but still no organized
market exhlsted on Wall Street.
Investors, by word of mouth,
Indicated their Interest In any
avallable Issue through Wall
Street coffee houses or by advertising In newspapers. As the list
of securities grew with more
bank stocks and newly formed
lns~rance companies, a need for
·an orkanlzed market developed.
By early 1792, Wall Street was
enjoying Its first bull market.
Several merchants, encouraged
by the Increased activity, kept a
small lnventocy of securities on
hand which would be sold over
· the counter !Ike any other of
there wares. Today's Over-The,
Counter market got Its name
from this early form of trading.
Buslne88 was booming. Some
day1 as many as 100 bank shares
would be traded.
Wall Street buslnesamen begall to schedule stock and bond
auctions, ,as they had tot commodities. Soon, several leading
merchants oraanlzed a central
auction at 22 Wall Street where
securltle. were traded every day
at noon. Customen of the newly
formed "St~k Excbanae Of·
f~e." or thj!lr apnta, lett secur!ConUnued on E-3
NAMED REPRESENTATIVE - Karen Phalln, Pomeroy, has been named as
representative In the admiRslons department ol Sou·
tbeutem Business College,
Gallipolis,
Mrs. Sharon
Drain, dl~ctor ol lbe coUege,
announce..
Mrl. Phalln and her husbaDCI, Doug Ph.alln, reside In
Pomeroy with tbelr two c-lld·
ren, Joeh, t, aad Cbrlaty, 8,
Mrs. Pballn Ia a gradate of
Melp Rip School. and Sou-
tlleaal 1 n Bulin- CoUeae'
wWI 1111· u.oclate depee ..
exeealtve secretarial allld....
Mrl. Pballn, u weU u Ron
Plltcllhnl, are available In tile
........... de,artmeat .....
.• ., t1uwg11 FrldQ from at•
a.m. le 1: • p.m. 141 dllopnpama offered by the
10llaol. Eanflm.at IDtentewa
......
. . beflll ~-for
... - . . . , . wldala . . . .
�February 28.1988
It's time
for spring
planting
Attendance good for
Ohio Park CongrC&&
'
'. MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallla and Water
:COIUiervatlon District, Is located somewhere In
: GaJUa County. Individuals wishing to participate
: In th~ weekly .contest may do so by guessing the
·farms owoer. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
:the Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
. :'5768, or the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
:i\ve., Gallipolis. Ohio 411631, and you may win a S5
cash prize from the Ohio Valley PubllshiDg Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone nwnber
with your card or letter. No h!lephone caila will be
accepted. All contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. eaeh Wednesday.
In case of. a tie, the winner wiD be chosen by
lottery. Next week a Meigs County farm will be
featured by the Meigs Soli and Water Conserva·
tlon District.
.Hybrid poplars
versatile hardwood
By Constance S. White
GalllaSWCD .
GALLIPOLIS - This variety
of popular has the advantage of
growing at a rapid rate. The
average is five to eight feet per
growing season. They provide
excellent shade in a short time.
This can be beneficial when
establishing a new home site.
Along with these hybrid poplars
other hardwoods should be
planted, so that in thirty to forty
years the slower growing ha rd·
woods will be well established .
Planted along lot lines , hybrid
populars fo r m iln e ffe ctive
screen for privacy and buffer
noise. Fields can also be pro·
tected from wind erosion and
excessive loss of moisture by the
use of windbreaks. It is well
documented that good wind·
breaks can add significantly to
profits through increased yields
and higher quality crops.
Many residents in the area
have put wood burners in their
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) -AI·
tendance at last weekend's OhiO
Pork· Congress was more than
7,000, with more than 207 exhlbl·
tors renting space during the·
annual Trade Show, the Ohio
Pork Producers Council said.
T
he phlo Pork Industry Excel·
lence Award. honoring a pro·
ducer for his Involvement In the
Industry and his community, was
given to Homer Watts of Hills·
boro, one of the founders of the
Ohio and National Pork Produc·
ers councils.
·
Dr. Bill Ingalls, . Extension
swine veterinarian at Ohio State
University, was given the coun·
ell's Service Award, which 15 .
awarded each year to a non·
producer who helps promote the
Industry.
•
Tony Bornhorst of Fort Lora·
mlew won the AII·Amerlcan
Award, which honors young
producers for their involvement
in the Industry and the commun·
tty. Bornhorst works In partner:
ship on the 43l·acre family
operation, which has more than
3,000 hogs.
The Belle Ringer Award,
which recognizes a· Pork Council
woman, was given to Phyllis ·
Barr of Xenia. Barr, president of
the Greene County ·council and a
director of the state, organization, has developed seve ral .
promotions.
Windbreakers
just the·thing .
Do you have that area around
your
home or buildings where the
homes and these pilplars offer a
cold
winter winds blow? Have
relatively quick way to Insure a
you
thought
it would be nice to
· future wood supply. Using a 2.5 ·
break
those
winds?
A farmstead
cords as an average, 4 acres
windbreak
may
be
just
the thing
planted to hybrid poplar should
yield approximately 10 cords of .to help deflect .those cold wlnds
from your home or buildings.
firewood per year. Also, sprouts
Windbreaks consist of three
will develop from the stump
of !ast·growing pine trees
rows
when cut. This means no replantrow oflow growing shrubs.
with
a
ing after harvesting . .
The·
shrub
row provide protection
When planting remember to
near the · ground surface: The
· mix the soil that was dug out with
are planted perpendicular
trees
some peat moss. It should not be
to the prevailing winds so as to
only peat moss. around· the roots.
protect buildings from direct
In our clay soil when watered,
wind.
Trees are spaced six to ten
there is a kettle effect and the
feet
apartln
the row, with ten feet
moisture stays around the roots.
rows
.• This means a
between
Eventua lly this will kill the tree'
windbreak
would
coyer an area
since the roots simply rot.
about
25-30
feet
wide
and be as
In addition to this hardwood
long
as
necessary.
the Gallla SWCD· has a selection
Windbreaks provide prptectlon
of pines, spruces, hemlock, fruit ,
a distance of 5 to 15 times the
nut, and flowering tree packets
for purchase. For more lnforma· · height. Thus a wfndbreak with 10
foot high trees would protect an
tion contact the Gallla SWCD at
area 50 to 150 feet from the trees.
446-8687 or stop by our office in
It Is preferable to establish the
the Spr,ng Valley Plaza. Dead·
.
windbreak about 75 to 100 feet
line to order tree packets is
from
the area to be protected.
· March 16, and pick-up date Is
The
time' to plan your wind·
Aprill & 2.
'
·
break Is now. The windbreak
area should pe marked out, trl!€l
type selected and amount of trees
and shrubs needed. Tl-eeplanting
should be done the first week of
APril. Maintaining fertility lev·
els and caring for the newly
planted seedlings will ensure
7574 Canfield·Columbia na Rd.,
maximum growth and plant
Canfield ;
·
,
-Muck Crops Branch, 4875 vigor.
The windbreak is a low cost
State Route 103 South, Willard:
practice
that can provide an
-Nor th Appalachian Wa·
energy
savings
once It Is well·
tershed , Route 621, Coshocton;
esta
blished
.
-Overlook Fa rm, 3525 Picke·
Soil Conservation Service
ringto n Rd., Carroll :
(SCS)
persqnnel are available to
·-Nort hwestern Branch 4240
plan and answer questions about
Ra nge Line Rd., Custar· '
windbreaks.
,
·
-So uth ern Branch. 7283
the Meigs SWCD Ladles Auxll·
Gardner Rd. , Ripley ;
lary has available White Pine
-Vegetable Crops Branch
Norway Spruce, Scotch Pine, and
1165 County Road 43, Fremont: '
blue spruce tree see·
Colorado
-Western Branch, 7639 S.
dUngs
at
a
cost of $6 for a packet
Char l eston · P ik e, So uth
25
of
a
·single
variety.
of
Charles ton.
For more Information of tree
packets and ground cover plants
·available, or for assistance In
planning a windbreak, contact
the Meigs SWCD Office at
992-6647, or stop by the second
.floor of the Farmers Bank
Building In Pomeroy .
IOI·IIITIH -IC1IOIIS eve 'f
d 't et
·b
n I you on II a new JO •
Hut Jou bNn lookin& for a new
job? I you han, you mly be able
to deduct Ill your job.huntin&tX·
penses tven if your search is un·
successful. ,
You must be looking for a job in
your present line of work. If you're
tryina to change occupations, the
. 8XpenstS aren't deductible.
..
Examp1e: If·you •rea bookkHper
'
and you're lookin& for a job
as • ~omptrol.ler, your expenses are deductible. But, if you were
huntm&.for aj(!b as arul estate broker or a m11azint circulation
ntlnage~. y~u d 1et. no deduction. If you are unemployed, yolfr
occupation IS the kmd of work you did at your last place of employment.
. ·
Job huntill&lliPif!S8S IAI claimed as amiscella~us deduction on '
Schedule A. Total miscellaneous deductions includina job hunting·
costs, must be reduced to 2% of
·
your adjusted &ross income. Be·
'I
cause of the riew 2%flooron mis· W1 .liam 0. Smeltzer
lla
CEIIIFIID PUIUC ACCOUNTAIIt
~e neous deductions, it is more
126 -First Ave.
,mportant than ever to keep re·
Gallipolis, Ohio .
cords of everythina you speed.
· 446-4471
. HOMEOWNERS .
1
1951
446-0404
HEALTH
GROUP
'
·COMMERCIAL & PERSONAL
DOWNTOWN GlWPOUl
. .,.
4222
Mon: -Tues.-Wed.-Fri.-8:30 till 4:30
Thursday & Saturday - 8:30 till 12 Noon
"
JOHN H. SAUNOERS - BETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
HOWARD BAKER SAUNDERS - CONNIE HEMPHILL
~:::::::;===+~=========:=::::::=:d.
.
..
'
~E 0
..
,
,I
wide Growth Fund, Nationwide
Bond F und and Na tlonwlde Mo·
ney Market Fund. NFS also
issues shares In Natlonwide
Tax·Free Fund. Shares In tile
five. funds are offered by Nationwide agents licensed to sell
securities.
l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
II
LARGE SELECT_ION
setecfion and find out how
oflordoble lrue rood cor
"'cnementconoel
.._..
-.--.-..... !:. ··•w----I
CUTLASS
. SUPREME
•-~· ..;.
REGAL UMITED
~_.~
IOITHAVE
· --...
$9,999
·•-·--·--...
·--......... $8,888
·--...
·-==
···111-.
(16 In Stock)
a. ZP ·~~~-·-·
.,._...
.~
1988 2·DR.
CHEVROLET BERETIA
. .4AIJ
-o-t987 2.JlR.
-.
OLDSMOBILE C~LAIS
·--
:::",.::0
.,._..
•!iloi&U bO I
. , ·-- $7,222
IOITHA'IE:
.,.._..
---.
......
---~ ·
t981
[ ' ;'
CHEVIICILiT NOVA
I . · ..,,
....
filE~~·
·em alii Come see our
•.
0
1~
The new PontiOC Grand Prix
, is ovoltoble in three disHnc·
Hve modeo and wave got
1987
Continued from E·1
I.
'
•
Paula...
PAULA SPENCE
I
II
OSU surveying use
of OARDC branches
, WOOSTER, Oh io (UPI} Ohio State t;niversity officials
are requesting letters from people living near any of the 11
bra nches of the Ohio Agric ultu ,ral Research and Development
Center to be used ina comprehen·
slve review of the units.
"We must examine periodically the va lue of the agricultural
and agriculturally related re·
· search at these branches to be
sure we give the people of Ohio,
t he research programs, and the
communities where the units
exist the best return for their
tlollars," say·s Kirklyn ·M. Kerr,
director of OARDC research at
Ohio State campuses in Wooster
a"nd Columbus and at the
branches.
The letters will be used to help
evaluate the operations and help
determine directions of research
for the next 10 years, Kerr says.
Comments to the review committee ca n be sent to: Garth A.
Ca hoon. chairma n. OSU ·OARDC
Branch Response, 102 Gourley
Ha ll, OARDC. Wooster , Ohio
44691.
·'Response is essential as we
try to 11rovide the best research
system possible wi thin our re·
sources ," Kerr says. He notes
ttiat some of the branches were
established because land was
provided to Ohio State, often to
suppor t solving local agricu ltural problems.
The review committee, whic h
includes Ohio State personnel
from a wide cross-section of
disciplines, requests exa mples of
how OARDC research has influ·
enced j1eOple and their busi nesses. They also wa nt to hear
ideas for fu rt her research.
.
They solicit comments from
growers, cons umers, processors.
manufacturers and others who
may use bra nch research results. For example, a tomato
grower says he's made $100,000
.over the years using research
from a branch near Fremont
abOut uniform ripening of com·
mercia! tomato crops.
OARDC branches:
-Eastern Ohio Agricultura l
Research and Development Cen·
ter, 16870 Towflship Rd . 126,
Caldwell:
-Grape Researrch Branch.
Route 84, Kingsville:
-Jackson Branch, 19 Stand·
pipe Rd., Jackson;
. - Mahonlf!g_ c;ounty Farm,
'.',
SINCE
AUTO
&FARM
......._ $
NEW1888~1500 ~ar==--
LWB2·WDTRUCK
.
•-SUT<I51-
.,._..
'I
8,967
··--- $9,969.
... -..
·-....
·-j~$14,955"
arm
;:y.::·,
. , . ...........
' IWif -.tlg
NEW1988
-
.
I
.'
'
.'<
h
"'
,.,
·Rolr·Tio.....
4-.DR. CELEBRITY •ii.IC<lo
·--...
.·Roor._Oiil
·FiaaJ•AWM·Il.t: p.a
.,.
"·
•
Wall
PH. 44..2317
01.
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
'
POMEROY, OH.
. PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., FEI. 28 THRU SAT., MAR. 5, 1988
BUC~ET
~
·
Cube Steak ••••••~.. 219
BULK SLICED
.
FRESH FROZEN
;
.
CHICKEN
leg. Quarters •••~..... 39<
·
Whiting Fish ••~~L.~!. $449
HOMEMADE .
. .
.$
Pork Sausage ...!!-•• . 12.9
Fryer Parts ......~•••• 39<
14R S Bulk
.
. $
Chopped Ham ••~.. )29
LINKS. LB. ROLL BALLARD~S
Sa~ge ............... $)29
10 OZ.
OR
Bananas •.••..•••..• ~••. 39<
•
BROUGHTON
2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• ~139
GAL.
NABISCO FIG NEWTONS OR
Ritz (rac'ke.r·-s···~····
16·oz. .;,x $1·· 59
1
ARMOUR VIENNA
. ·.
.
•
BANQUET
Sgusage ........~e~.. 5l$2 Pot Pies ••••••••••••• 4/$1
an f
CIOCIEI
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
CAKE MIXES
-
69(
'::;oz.
411.
lAG
lAG
• • •l . . ..
•
Ill
79(
HI.
....... J
lllllt 1 r. Cllfa tt '
.
~.
ta
MIXED
6 oz.
CANS
~
.
19
Bacon................... .1
''
,
WINTER HOURS: Friday 9:00·3:30
Other Hours by Appointment-448-2327 or 693 -8&88
'352 Third ~we.
•••
; Conttnuect from E ·l
ties with the auctioneers who
retelvect a commission for each
stock or bonq sord. A CUIJtomer's
agent, or broker, would also
receive a commission for shares ·
purchased.
With predictable Ingenuity,
some businessmen came .to the
auction Ol\ly to listen, They noted
the prices and, after the auction,
would otter the same securtiles
bu~ at reduced commission rates .
Ev.en aljction members traded In
th~ afl\!r' hours market.
. On Mlp'ch 21, 1792. concerned
WAll Street leaders met ' at '
Corre' s Hotel to establish an
Improved auction market which
would also be!ter serve their own
Interests. On May 17,. 1792,
twenty·(our men signed a docu.
ment In which they agreed to
trade· securities only among
themselves, · to maintain fixed
commission rates and to avoid
other auctions. These men are
considered to be the original
members of the New York Stock
Exchange, .
F'or a while. the new broker's ··
uillon met u.nder an aging button·
wood tfj!e facing 68 Wall Street,
but they soon moved Indoors
when the Tontine Coffee House
was completed In 1793 at the
northwest corner of Wall and
Wlplam Streets. They prospered
and moved to larger quarters In
what Is now 40 Wall Street. On
M~trch 8, 1817, the members
adopted a formal constitution
c~ating the New York Stock and
El¢hange Board. Every morn·
lnl! a list of all the stocks to be
1\UCtloneCI was read to the as·
selJlbled boatd members who
would then make beds and offers
whJie seated.· Only 'm embers
were allowed to lrade and tbe
prl\'ilege to sit at the auction cost
$4(V. To this day, a member oft he
NYSE Is saki to own a "seat,"
although he IS never seated while
tnolln&(Mr. Evans Ia ao IIIVeetment
brOker for The Ohio Compall)' Ia
: ·tltelr GaDlpolll office~)
·Rock of Ages offer• you a choice of 8 different colored granltea
Whatev~r your requirementa may be, complete 1atisfaction Ia .,:
aured woth Rock of Ages.
STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
Umit Quutities
't
'
REMAINING
FALL &
WINTER
The Shoe Cafe
'
'We Manage Your Risk"
ALL
$2 490
'
)
rr:==========:;l
SELBY'S
·,
-;
HOWARD BAIER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.
437 Second Avenue, Gallipolis
Opposite the Post .Office
We Reserve The Ri&ht To
D!Mrtct eo_,atloalal
USDA..SOU Co111ervat1oa Service
PALLIPOLIS - Spring seed·
lng time Is rapidly approaching
as. evidenced by the number of
phoQe cans .a nd questions 1 have
been getting.
· ThiS years pasture renovation
questions seem to be falling Into
two categories. The first Is an
attempt to eliminate fescue from
an existing stand. The second
category of renovations Is
mainly an attempt to Improve
existing stands by controlling
weeds and Introducing legumes.
wl! take a look atthe methods
a~allable to eliminate fescue
!rgm a stand we ·may find 11
d~lr.able to go to an alternate
cr,op such as one year of no·tlll
co,rn on.slopes which will permit
crop production. This method
gives us a couple of chances to
kUI the fescue before going back ·
In with our desired forage -mix·
lure, while protecting our soli
from erosion at the same time. A
kl!y to success In this method Is·
g!JOCf chemical application to kill
the fescue.
On slopes where one· year of
crop production Is not practical
the · chemical weed control Is
more critical to suppress the
fescue long enough to get other
sJiecles e~tabllshed. For specific
chemical recommendations you
should contact the Cooperative ,
ExtensiOn Service at m.71J07.
For pasture or ha,yland renova·
lions where you just want to beet
up the stand a M -till seeding
followiDg chemical weed coll'lrol
and suppression of the existing
stand Is an excellant method.
Trying to save money by skip· .
Pi!lg the weed control practices
may doom your seeding to !allure
before Ills even planted. ·
For more Information about
using a no·tlll drill you may
contact the Gallla Soil and Water
Cqilservatlon District at 446·8687.
They have . a 10' Vermeer drUI
wl)lch needs a 50 plus horsepower
tractor and a new 6\7 · Tye drill
which' needs a 35 plus horsepower
tractor. Bill Wilson, the District
Technician wlll work ·with you on
selling Ul> the callbratiDg the
drills to your particular needs.
Pointanent,
PI
W. V•·
·•
By Patty Dyer
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J;
•
PJl
Ot-110'
,.
lilllit 1 .. C.,l•~~,,,. . . . . . s, .....
~
ftlu.21 .... "'~ ... s
.......
s...
�'
----- ---------------------~----~--------------~----~----~--------------------------------------------~---------------~
FebruaiV 28.1988
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-. Point Pleasant. W.Va.
•
•
•
Dental health month
<
WARRENTON, Va. (UPI) - ·
Some 200 hO!IlOsexual activists
from · across the country gath~d In ~arrenton, Va. fora ·
three-day Confe~ence to discuss
national strategy to.ge't effective
AIDS legislation passed •and to
fight what their leaders called
growl ng homophpbla in
America.
The meeting, dubbed a "War
Conference" by !~organizers,
was the most expansive national
. ·gatberlng of gay rights leaders
since AIDS became an epidemic,
said Vic ·Basile, executive dlrector of the Human .Rights Campalgn Fund, a vyashlnglon-bas,ed
political action committee.
1
•·•
•'
•
••
•
•'
••
•
•
stock mouth protector, the least
GALLIPOLIS (Editor's
athletic training and competiexpensive,
is also the least
Note) -Tile mo•th of February
tion , but also act as a buffer
satisfactory
because
little can be
1188 marb the 4eth observancl'
against more serious injuries
to'
adjust
the
lit.
done
ol tile N.tloul Clllldrea's Dental 's uch as concussions, jaw fracBut all three types do provide
Rellltll Moalb wltb tbe nat~nal tures. and neck injuries.
adequate
protection. Even the
Though traditionally asso·
theme, "A Healthy Smile Shows
least expensive mouthguard Is
your S&yle." .
.
' elated with football, mouth·
better than none at all. Mouth
guards can prevent injuries In a
Throa1b this ·anaual obserprotectors minimize sports Injurvance, stale and local societies · wide variety of athleti~ and
Ies regardless of thelype used. So
locus atteallon oa the lmpor· · recreational sports activities.
••'
The Rehwil!kel Dental Society before you buy your- youngster
lance of deat.l health throu1h a
•
recommends that players of ail that new skateboard or hockey
variety of.c'lmmimlly-based pro·
•
•
sports, particularly contact · stick, invest in a mouthguard. It
IJ'UD8 aacl activities. This Is the
may be the most important piece
sports such as hockey, boxing
Rehwlnkel Deatal Society's first
of
sports equipment you buy.
and basketball. wear mouth
lnstBIDeat Ia a serieS of deatal
•
protectors at all times during
!lealth IU'tlcl~ lor children In
•
••
training and competition.
observuce of National Child·
•
Injuries are ' not limited to .
rea's Denial Health Month.
•
involving direct body contact.
•
Each year, parents carefully
Almost ·any vigorous activity
BLOOMINGTON,
ILCaroll
:
outfit their child athletes in full
such as gymnastics or welghtllft· A. Snowden, an agent for State
DRIVE-IN FRANCHISE- Johnny ·Mathew!!,
chlseoutofNew.Jersey,lsexpectedtoopenAprll
: sports · uniforms , including
lng can result In injuries to the Farm Insurance Companies In
Rio Grande, announced thai a Stewart's Hot Dog
15. 'l'he drive-In franchise Is more popularly :
: helmets, pads and special shoes.
teeth, lips, cheeks, tongue and the Gallipolis area, has earned
Drive-In will be opening on S.R. 7 In front of the
knoWn In Huntington, W.Va. (Times-sentinel •
· But one essential safety factor is
jaws, This is because sudden
' Gallipolis Parts Warehouse. Stewart's, a fran·
photo)
!
' too often overlooked - the falls and accidental colllslims membership i!l the firm's Milito·
nalre
Club.
~
·athletic mouthgard.
with objects or people can lead to
This dlsthigulshed sales honor· .----~----'--..__:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
When faceguards and mouth dental injuries.
is based primarily on the quallty
protectors are worn , about
Of the three types of mouth and quantity of Ufe insurance
200,000 injuries are prevented protectors currently available,
each year In high school and the custom-made protector, lab· sold and serviced by the agent.
: college football alone. Even rlcated from a cast of the Only · about one . In four State
Farm agents attains · member•
; more injuries could be prevented
athlete's upper teeth and fitted ship tn the Club. Snowden joined
· U inouthguards were worn In
by a dentlst, is outstanding in State Farm ln 1964. He has been a
otlier sports too. Mouth protec·
terms of fit, comfort and overall Millionaire Club member H
tors not only sharply lower the
quality. The mouth-formed .Pro- times.
.
.J ncldence and severity of lnju ries
tector, made of a soft material
State Farm is one of the
to the teeth and mouth during
that easily molds to the athlete's wof ld's largest insurance com·
teeth, is less expensive than the j>anles and sells Auto, Fire, Life,
custom-made protector but may and Health insurance. With Cor·
not fit as well or last as long. The porate Headquarters In Bloo·
1Tiington, IL., the company
serves customers with over
GALLIPOLIS - Barry G.
16,000
agents and more than 800 .
Sheets, the son of Morris and
claims
offices throughout the
VIrginia Sheets of Patriot Star
United States and Canad!J..
Route, Galllpolls, was recently
been elected president of the Ex
Lege chapter of Phi Alpha Delta
Pre-Law fraternity at the Ohio
To co-sponsor event
State. University. ·
Phi Alpha Delta Is an lnterna·
·HUNTINGTON, W.VA.- The
tlonallraternal organization that
Southern
Qhlq Coal Company's
R~~g. 1995.00
Is dedicated to the promotion of
Meigs
Division
wUI
co-sponsor
awareness of the legal profesSatellite Dish
the sixth annual National Safety
sion. The Ohio State Chapter was
Secu
Conference, which wlll be held on
chartered in 1983.
March
10
and
11
at
Marshall
Sheets, a 1986 graduate of
University.
Hannan Trace High School, is a
Bob Teichman of Southern
Valuer
junior majoring In Political
Ohio
Coal wlll speak on "Remote
Enjoy movies, sports, news-up to t50 channels!
· Science. He will graduate in the
Printer 35% Oft
Miners" on March 10, at 1: 15
Install it yoursell-includes a "how-to" video tape.
spring of 1989 with a Bachelor of
p.m., in Room 2W~7 In the
With B'l2 ft. dish and remote. Descrambler ready.
: Arts degree. He is currently
university's
Memorial
Student
employed at the Ohio State
Center.
.Digital-Ready 3-Way Speaker
University College of. Law.
R~~g.
BARRY SHEETS
459.16
Mach Two®by Realistic
•
~
..
Eoch
. , A!l9· 249.95
1:~ins
•
••
'.
• Bell·Ringer
R~~g.
39.95
43 Ranges
Super lor home or car
electronics testing! Wim
probes. #22·214
• Ughted Dial
Tone/pulse dialing', last
number redial. White,
almond, brow.n. ·.
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419.95
Low AI 115 Per Month •
Batteries extra
j
40 watts total power
and EO really improve
your autosound. ·
111
•
LowAat15
Per·llonth·
Stereo R~ord/Piay System
Clarlnette"-121
By Reallstlp
8800 Save
'
. R~~g ..139.95' ,
Record personal cassettes from phono, FM
stereo or AM. Mike jacks.
With 17" -high speakers.
1113-1225
•
•
•
A driver's best friend!
Alerts you to !< and K·
band radar-even pulse!
#22-1616
•
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•
LESS THAN ACOMPARABLY-EQUIPPED
CHEVY CAVALIER SEDAN.* · .
.•
•
•
•
•
•
To arr you Cheity buyers who bought a new Cavalier with options like por;er steering, cloth
bucket seats, intermittent wipers and tinted glass. we 'd just like to say we're sorry we didn't get
this message out soone~ Because, for over $900 less, you could have gotten a comparablyequipped Dodge Aries America . And not only would you have gotten the same equipment on an
exciting Dodge car, but you'd have better protection with Dodge's famous ·7170 protection plan'
So, •I you paid more for that other car because we didn't ger this out soon enough, our_
heart goes out to you.
AND ARIES STARTS AT
II you ~bought a new car yet, you'll be happy to know ·
that you can get a new Aries America lor as little as $7424.'" So
come an in and get the right Car and the right price, at your
Dodge dealer today.
**
• Comparably equipped sticker pnce comparison . • • Base sticker price e)(cluding tax and opt.io~s . tSee a
copy of this limited warranty on powenra1n and outer body rust-through at your dealer. Restnct1ons apply.
AT-YOUR DODGE DEAUR,
WE fEEL CHARGING MORE IS,
WELL •• ,HEAtm.ESS. .
"'u~ 71!UOC~f IIMI'OilTS
Norris·.
Northup
Dodaa
Inc.·
300·11111D AVE.
OHIO
You'll LilctFOur Quality Way of Doing Bu•int:.,
99.95
Handy priority switch
for instant access to
emergency channel 9
or highway info chan-
,IWPOUS,
IIN:MLEIII!....,mAIEIMNE&IIEL'
.·
; {
Take your music with,
you! Record FM ster110,
AM or "live." 1114-784
R~~g,
All Blank
Computer
•n;et~ts~·~*:.21~-1sijt1rc;u;;r·l Diskettes Y.t Off
1
Antenna
.. SPECIAL PURCHASE
1588
easy to lnstalll Just
Dllce on metal surlace, 121·1005 .
Not iGr 11lnvl
1
L-As
By Tandy
25%
as~ · R~~g. 19.95
Off .
Standard or "mlllta "
time dltplay. 1183-751 ·
; ·Krenzler granted a preliminary
'· Injunction Wednesday to Hy'' 'Point Technology Co., which had
1
~Ued suit agal~st Hewlett! Packard last Selltember, accus' •!ng the com11uter giant ol unfair
; : business practices.
· ~ - HyPolnt · services Hewlett: ~Packard mini-computer~ at prl: ces at least 20 percent below
• those of Hewlett-Packard.
: ' Michael Mason, president of
:~ Jfy-Polnt, said Friday Hewlett·
• Packard eliminated a program
; 'called / 'fou~-hour uplift" Aug. 1,
' , leaving Independent computer
: .• repair firm~ out In tl)e cold.
; . Under the arrangement, Hy.• Point held service COl\ tracts with
; several area companies to ser; vice their Hewlett-~ackar!l
•. computers.
·
~
"The way it worked was that
· our customers, If they had minor
• problems, wetookcareofthem,"
; Mason said. ''If there were major
• problems, we had HP come in
' and fix them."
The "four, hour uplift" allowed
businesses,- for ail extra fee, to
''7 have' major problems addressed
, by HP technicians within four
' hours.
• With the elimination of the
C3MC:TRUCK
IT'S NOT JUST ATRUCK
ANYMORE.
*'
Auto Worbwtll
lldwrttaed
I)I'10e or~··
IIIW you
DOUILE THE DIFFERENCE IN
CASH! Ancllhat'a QUIIrantMd•
-lltlo-.
Ofllr--a.:-••tLMIId .........
•Up~ea.Cotd
·~"""'
2988
IRUft Ill'
EXCH.
1111111 eo
·
..GO 2 SETS OF
·. KODAK ,COLOR
PRINTS FOR THE
· PRICE· OF 1!
WIRE
SETS
-IWOIID
FOR MOST
CA.RS
1'011 AI t.ONCI AI
YOU OWN '101111 CAR
3~
All of Our Photo
Finishing is Doni by
Kodak ·
s.. the DiHerence
1 DAY SERVICE
TAWNE·Y ,STUDIO
-'2• 2nd Awe.
,
Gallipolis, OH.
:·;a~rr~a~n~g~e~m~e~n~t,~M~as~o~n~s~a~ld~m~a~n~y~~~§~~~~~;;;;~~
I'ROTECI'S
'lO II'
IELOW
DRO
•Mercury
•Lincoln
Clock Radio
Chronomatlc'l-253
ByRNlladc
~
•r-
21~ 41111..11
'81 Crown Victoria 4 Dr.
Calculator
38~
Off
EC-444 by
Radio
*•
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wire whtll """" AM-FM
lftrN, detli ipllt INII.
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Just ask for Herb Smith
Located at 133 Pine street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-2632
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cut
PRICE4995
Only
Mike Northup, Pete Somerville, Tommy Sprague or Dale Hill
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Fa ctor y Reba tes are srill in effect and we're having a Winter
White Sale. You' ll find spec ial saving s o n GMC Trucks of ever y
. style and color that we have in srock. Walk in and yo u jusr mig ht
walk out wi th a g reat deal on a GM C Truck. •Save fr om
$500.!)(J.S750.00, de pendi ng o n modeL We'll p ut you tn the truc k
· you' ve always wanted.
WE BEAT ANY
PRICE It TOWNI
.,.j
Hy-Polnt customers deSI!rted . . ·
"In .actual dollars, hard con·
tracts lbst, we lost close to
$500,000," Mason said. "In potential business; who ·knows? We
· may have lost $2 million, $3
mllllon, $4 mllllon." · ·
·.The · (!rellmlnary Injunction
means Hewlett-Packard must
keep prpvldlng the service until
the lawsuit is decided, which
could take years.
_BA
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· CLEVELAND (UPI) ~ A
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: llfewlett-Packard Co. from ellml! fliating an arrangeent by which
for word processing! .
Car Stereo Power Booster & EQ
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injuction against ·
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Prints up to 200 words
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29915
Sa~
,
plagiarized a story and wrote a
column Easter Sunday, 1987
relating to Dartmouth College
distributing a "safe sex" kit.
Editors did 'not discover until
afte r ft had been published it was
.
a plagiarism, he said.
"We did not catch that one. It
struck me as very peculiar that
he wanted to run that column on
Easter Sunday,'' the editor said .
"In his next column we ... ran
an explanation apologizing to the
original writer of the story.''
Hughes said a couple of weeks
later the paper canceled its
agreement-with Swaggart and no
further ~olumns appeared.
DON'T MISS OUR
WINTER WHITE
SALE.
'
••9-44•
\11100
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Save '180
.
" We're looking !or ways til
Basi le said. " How do we dea l
Ault sa id the conference is ''st't
pass pro-active types of leg!Sla·
with child custody iss ues when
in th e con text of an incredible
tlon ;md get money released to de
lesbian mother s and gay fathers · crisis. Perhaps that's what
t·he job, " BasUe said. "One of the
continue to lose their kids.?"
makes It un ique."
things that needs to be decided Is ~----"--------------=------
what are th e appropriate ways to
face the problems facing us?
How do ·we get affirmative,
progressive kind s of public
health measures passed?"
. Basile said related issues affecting homosexuals will also be
discusl;ed .
"In the midst of having to deal
with the AIDS crisis, how do we
deal with the other issues paramount to the gay coml)'lunitY ,
SIERRA
S-i SJIMM Y 4 X 4
such as anti-gay a nd anti-lesbian
violence, which is epidemic? ".
--------------:.,.----------...L-----=-------------------
.
gggoo ::.~
14995
there had been an adequate
response much earlier, peri1aps
people wouldn:t be dying now, "
Ault said. "But it certainly goes
beyond that . AIDS • is being
manipulated to (ellmlnate) civil
rights" of homosexuals.
The conference, about 50 miles
west of the natl on's icapltal, is to
last until Sunday, as gay right s
activists work to consolidate
their political power .
"It's the first time in the era of
AIDS that a ml;'eling like this has
been held ," Basile said. "We
want some type of strategy on
how we can get the community
organized nationally.
The national Assemblies of
' 'Twice he plagiarized mate·
God on Friday continued to
rial," Hughes said. "The first
consider whether that punish· occasion we caught before it got
ment was strong enough.
in to the paper.
According to published re. "There was a story in Parade
.ports, Swaggart paid a prost(tute Magazine in which a reporter
had .gone to Atlantic City. The
to per~orm· obscene acts behavior he repeatedly de- story began with him saying he
got.lri a cab and asked the driver
nounced In his columns.
'.' Pornography Is now cons!' what effect gambling had on the
dered as addictive as drugs , cl!Y.'' Hughes said. "The driver
leading, as with a~y addictions, said , 'It made a whore out of my
to a need tor escalated. 'doses' daughter and a pimp out of my
son.' That same lead was In a
and Intensity," Swaggart wrote.
Swaggart
column the next Sl\n·
''That, In turn. breeds desensitday
but
presented
as If Swaggart
ization, which leads to the acting,
had
been
there
in
Atlantic
City.' '
out of the roles that have been at
said
Swaggart
later
·Hughes
the heart of the nation's most
sensatioiial serial murder and. : r
serla.l rape cases. Women and.
children, portrayed as nothing
more .than de~msed objects on
screen and In print, pay a
particular!~ high price when
fantasy turns Into reality."
In another column, Swaggart .
wrote that Americans live in a
"society that has substituted
promiscuity for faithfulness and
safety for sanctity."
Jim Hughes, executive editor
of the Morning Advocate, said
Swaggart plagiarized other wrl·
ters' stories · on at least two
occasions.
• BATON ROUGE, La. (UP!)Disgraced evangellst Jimmy
Swaggatt, facing discipline by
"the Assemblies of Qod church for
. •reportedly consorting with a
·'prostitute. · regularly railed
against pornography in a news·
·paper column ' subsequently
dropped because of plagll!rlsm ,
·; •an editor said Friday.
.
"Pornography, you see, Is not ·
! about sex, any more than rape Is
' abou.t sex. Porn· Is sex out of
j· control, sex Without commitment .
• or passion," Swaggart wrote in .a
; column published In July 1986 )ly
• the Baton Rouge Morning
; 1 •Advoeate.
, · ~ He called those.whomaketheiF
) living h'om.· pornogrl!phy
• l 'wretcl!ed, 1 c!lsgusting· and ·
• · dangerous. ·
; · . "You see, the laws of God
• cannot by abrogated with lmpun: ·· lty. Yes, we can dolt: weare free
: moral age~tts . To do so, however,
· means that we 'pay the piper,'
:· land we're now stadl.ng to do so."
• · ' Swaggart tearfltfiy
admitted
.
·- Sunday he had committed a sin of
: · moral failure. H.e has been
: .recommended for a th~ee-month
• ·suspension from ihe pulpit and a
>~two years of rehabilitation by the
·· -'Louisiana Assemblies ot'God.
Barry Sheets to
· head fraternity
•
"Those who put this together
feel like war is being deelared on
the gay community," said Ba· .
slle. "With the Introduction and
lrl... some cases passage of very
repressive legislation on AIDS.I'm talking about quarantine and
mandatory testing- h feels like
a state of siege."
Steven Ault, of the human
rights group Co~lition for SurVI·
val . In New York, also said
homosexuals "feel they're almost in a state of war" over the
Issue of a_cqulred. immune dell·
clency syndrome.
"When you look bac.k on the
history .of the AIDS epidemic, if
Drop Swaggart column for plagiarism
Snowden honored
I ·BONUS!
2915
Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page--,f-5
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Gay rights leaders have "War Conference'. on homophobia
•
•
••'
·Mouthguards-score
points for ·c hildren's safety
February 28,1988
--~---
·
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IIUto. PS. 1'1. *• l!lhhl,.. wii.law,
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'12 Ford Estort
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Mon. thru Fri. I to I
Saturday I to 6
Suntlay .9 to 5
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�F*'-Y 28.1988
Ponwov Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plu=nt, W. Ve.
Pill•
February 28.1988
ore women now Ford to expand .two Cleveland plants ..
selecting trucks
By JAN A. ZVERINA
UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT !UPI) - Three
recent trends In the auto industry
have combined to create a fourth
that carmakers are just begin·
ntng to track: the growing
attra"Ctlveness of truc~s to
women.
These are l)OI the large IS.
wheeler semis that appear In
highway drivers' rear-view mlr·
rors ju·st in tlmeto warn·them to
scoot their cars out of the way.
Instead, women are drawn to the
smaller trucks, such as. pickups,
vans, minivans, and sport uttllty
vehicles popularized by Jeep:
Light trucks, as they are
called, account for 95 percent of'
overall U.S. truck sales. They
have been taking an Increasing
share of the overall vehicle
market, rising to about 31 per·
cent in 1987.
Volume as well as Share -hasbeen high in that market. Last
year, abo lit 4.7. mlllion small
trucks found new homes, many of
them driven away from dealer·
ships In place of cars. One reason
for the migration may be that
trucks offer car-like rides and
.comfort.
That Is the first trend. The
second is the mQvement of
women Into the car market: Last
year, 44 percent of principal
owners of new cars were female,
compared with 36 percent In 1980.
The third trend is the dee!lde·
long overall reduction of car
sizes. Mirroring that develop·
ment has !Jeen the Introduction of
compact pickup trucks, like
those from Mazda, Ntssan and
Toyota.
"Compact trucks were the
turning point of moving women
Into the market. as high·volume
truck buyers." said Louts E.
Lat;~if , head of Ford Motor Co.'s
· North American sales
operations.
Lataif, whose company has
been tracking women In the truck
market for two years. noted that
besides their smaller sizes,
trucks became more appealing
through car-like features such as
air conditioning, stereo radios
and other comforts.
.
CLEVELAND !UP!) - The Hills Stamping Plant, which wtll .
president ~f Ford Motor Co.'s produ<:e major exterior body
automotive . group · announced components for the new cars," he
Friday expansions at two said.
.
Those trends have combined to
Cleveland-area plants totaling
Regarding reports Ford denied
boost truck sales to women. Last
$320 million· tor unspecified earlier this week that a second
year, women purchased an esti·
changes In the Thunderbird and plantwouldbebutltlnLoralnlna
ma,ted 755,000 such vehicles and
. Ford·Nissan joint venture, Ben·
Cougar models.
accounted for 17 percent of the
" Work already has started to ton said the next phase of a
light truck market, compared· equip the Lorain Assembly Plant feasibility study wlll consider
with 15 percent In 198jj,
to produce a new generation of. possible plant sites It tllere Is a
Compact vans, or minivans,
the highly successful Ford Thun· Joint venture.
have largely been credited with
derblrd and Mercury Cougar car
He said Ntssan officials have
attracting women to · the tr11ck . lines this fall." Phlllp Benton Jr. toured the Lorain plant, as well
revealed.
as . other Ford operations, and
market. Introduced by Chrysler
"In conjunction with the Lo· Lorain would be considered.
Corp. In the mld·l980s, minivans
now have the highest percentage
rain program $90 mtJJion ts
Ford now employs 5,600 people
and volume of women buyers.
being invested dt our Walton in Lorain and 2,400 in Walnut
·
Among the more popular
makes, 35 percent of the buyers
of Chrysler's Plymouth Voyager
are women, according to Marttz
Marketing, a Toledo, Ohio, re·
search firm. Ford's Aerostar has
a women buyers' rate of · 32
percent, which Is the norm for
this segment. while Chevrolet's
lnoac, will be headquartered in
MAUMEE, Ohio (UP!) Astro an«j Safari vans are 29
Mt.
Clemens, Mich.
Sterling Engineered Products
percent, probably be<;ause they
Inoue Is a $1 btlllon producer of
Inc. and a. Japane&e · company
. are more popular In their com·
rubber
, plastic, polyurethane
announced
Friday
they
have
mereta! versions than the Ford
and
composite
products. · Steformed
a
Joint-venture
to
start
a
and Chrysler models.
rling,
a
division
of
the Trlnova
new
plastics
business.
"Women use the small vans for
Co.,
Is
a
$358
million
manufac·
Sterling
and
Inoue
MTP
Co.
of
shoppiPg and for car-pooling
turer
of
molded
and
laminated
.
Nagoya,
Japan,
will
use
Japa·
.children," Latatf said. "The
nese technology that Involves products for the transportation,
small vans are ;~lso maneuvera·
ble and comfortable enough to' reaction Injection molding and building, and construction
blow molding for plastic pro·. markets.
drive to work every day."
Sterling employs over 4,000
ducts that will be used in the U.S.
Other compact trucks also
people
at 40 factlltles . .
automotive market.
attract women. Compact utility
Douglas
Allen. a former vice
vehicles, like the Ford Bronco,
president
of
Sterling, was named
is
The
plastics
technology
had a 30 percent rate of female
president of the new company.
buyers last year. Those vehicles currenllx used In Japan by the
Sterling
owns 51 percent Of
.auto
Industry.
are usually equipped with four· .
The
new
company.
Sterling
·Sterling
lnoac.
wheel drive.
Women do not seem to be r-----------------------------------------------~
deterred by larger trucks. Full·
sized utility vehicles, like the
Chevrolet Blazer, garnered 17
percent of tts buyers from the
female ranks, whlle among full·
sized vans, the Ford Econollne
was slightly less at 14 percent.
But those models sell In much
fewer numbers than compact
trucks.
It seems the deciding factor for
women ts passenger space, not
cargo space. As the people·
Ohio company signs
deal with Japan finn
diminishes,
so does ·Its
to
of appeal
a truck
carrying capacity
women. Women buy only 5
percent of full-sized pickup
trucks, which are known for
hauling things, not people. ·
THE LIGHT SIDE
There once was a man driving casually down the
scree!. Suddenly a police car was behind him, lights
flashing.
....
· "Yes officer'" the man said. "What did I do wrong?"
ALL PIPES & ACCESSOIIES
NOW
\
Slul~ to Ch09H From
Available Now at......
Many Styln and
TAWNEY
JEWELERS
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Cb
t
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"Sir, did you kt'low your wife fell out of the car about
·
eight blocks back'"
"Whew'" the rpan said, " I thought I was going deaf!"
, --
8
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''
OHice Hours ly lppoint•nt
Phone: (614) 592·2163
rr
Jane Ann Karr, M.A.
60l Wesr UnioQ _ ..
a
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:
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•
By Edward M. Vollbom
"' Coimty'Exteaston A1ent,
·~
Agtlculture :AI CNRD
! GALLIPOLIS - The Annual
· O,iillla County Tobacco Produc·
\ibn meeting w111 be .Thursday,
March 3, at Hannan Trace High
Sehool, starting at Sp.m. Mr. Jim
'liells will lead the discussion on
Growing and Marketing Tobacco
llj 1988. I will be presenting a slide
series on "Fumigating -Tobacco
BMs Safely with Methyl Brom·
lt!e". This will be an Introduction .
t~ the class to be held a ' f~w. days
later on Pesticide Certification.
'J'11e meeting will conclude with a
r~port from the local Tobacco
ASsociation and light refresh·
l!lents. This meetl~~g Is always a
true fellowship activity with a lot .
of time before and after. to visit
10th friends and neighbors.
'•Beware - The Farm Crisis Is
N'ot Over! This Is the title of a
recent article published by
0\S.U. Extension Economics,
l)r. Carl Zulauf and Dr. Allan A.
L)nes. Although some farmers
are In hard times the current
t~nd seems to point toward an
optimistic future. The professors
say that . declining expenses,
.government price and Income
support-programs and profltabll·
tty In the livestock sector have
~aused this optimism.
· They feel these effects are
temporary. Their analysts suggests farm asset values could
decline as much as 20·30 percent
from current values,' and farm
l!ebt could decline as much as
4p·50 percent from current
•
BMW528e
MerCedes:Benz 260E
$31,500*
$3?,250*
.• By the early 1990's· net farm
Income In the U.s. could decline
as much as $10.15 billion from
1~. The next phase of the farm
crisis could be more difficult
because both asset value and
Income could decline, Implying a
much wider Impact on all types
of farms, regardles of their debt
structure. Failure to consider the
worst while hoping fcir the best tn
management by blinders.
'
'· Both economist hope their
(orecast do not come true. Call or
· 4top at IJte County Extension
Office for a copy of the article.
.. Capitalization of 'Preproduc·
tive Expense ts a major declslo!f
as farmers complete their tax
returns. Should I capitalize? It Is .
difficult · ~and dangerous) for
anyone other than the taxpayer
to answer this question. Each
farmer shOuld review the tm·
pacts of electing or not. :niere Is
still a chance It will be repealed.
Capitalization decisions do not
affect your right to use the$10,000
expensing provision. It Is avatla·
ble, whtcheverwayyoudectdeon
capitalization.
.
Weed c;ontrol In Forages ·District Extension Agronomist
John Underwood says good weed
control In 'forage crops can
Improve both forage quantity
and quality. Like a lawn, prop·
erly fertilized pastures and mea·
dows often will crowd out unde·
slrable weeds. Mowing or
clipping will control others. But,
use of 'the herbicide may be
necessary to. suppress or eradl·
~~te more competitive grassy or
broadleaf species. Now Is a good
time to Inspect 1987 alfalfa
seedlings, especially. those
seeded last August, for presence
of~ damaging Infestations of
chickweed, henbtt, mustard, 11nd
o.t her winter annuals·. · ·
Underwood says aeveral dormant sea10n alfalfa herbicides
are available. Later In the sprlntr
Banvel and/or 2. f.D can be
sprayed on grassy meadows and
. ~stures to. control m01t annual
and perennial broadleaf weeds.
·other herblctdel auch aa Eptam and 2, f.DB are labeled for
use with conventional for41ge
&$dings, Roundup, Gramoxone
Super, and 2. .4-D are uled In
no-UIIap l)'ltems. Croubow,
apPlied between late JUDe and
early AIJIIIIt,
control lroJI.
weed In pastures. A 111111Jner·
tl8le application of Pout per:
I
And that's only the beginning.
Vv'hen compared to the Mercedes~Benz
260E or the BMW 528e four-doo~ sedans,
Eagle Premier ES has more passenger
room. More trunk room. Greater length.
Greater width. A longerqruising range. Plus,
rack-iind-pinion steering is standard with
Premier.. Not so for BMW and Mercedes.
'·
'
E
Ill,
\
(
Ironton, OH
Expect the Best
lilmplke of Gallipolis .
I
lkMI c.is•tr Jeap/fa&te
' (606) 329-9775
Your Greater Ohio/
•
Portsmouth, OH
(614) 354-3151
•
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:
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'•
.•
••
•
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Jeep/Eagle Dealers
'·'
,
,,
I •
c.itol Jaap/fa&le
· 148 Hibbard Street
Pikeville, KY
(606) 432-1471
~.KY
Wltll GriiiiOXIIIIIt Super
(614) 532-7533
Dasldils Motor Co.
21ii G.nup Mnue
emllf!:ilalltroiJad
·uaual
.. .
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1oo2 washington Street
195 Upper River /Ohio Route 7 Rd.
GamPQIIs, OH
(614) 446 9800 .
I llllqt CID
apPikld IDllowilll a IW'Velt.
\,
Prestonsburg, KY
413 S. 3rd Street
(606) 88&3811
aelectlve removal llf
IIUICJcar• ·or Jollll·
....... 1114 UDiltll lfUIIII
re Julllh!p Glalfalta.
o1
Schafer Motors, Inc.
430 S. Lake Drive
'·
ptmm1a1
Audiologist. CCC·A
• Arhens •.ohio 45701 ••
Ed Walters Motor Co.
."
.'
..
.
~~~
•
Then there are the individual comparisons.
Cloth seats are optional for Mercedes. Standard for Premier. BMW offers a 121 standard
horsepc:wer engine. Premiers is 150.
Plus, Premier is backed by Chryslers
famous 7/70 Protection Plan:* and costs
'
thousands less ..
'a-1 on MSRP awd.title, taxes, and destlnallon charges.
,
'
"Praacts mg1ne 8nd powerllain !or 7years or 70,000 miles IWld against outerbody rust· through !or 7 years or too.ooo mi""! See lirnoed warranty at delllef. Restrictions apply.
Comparieone bMed on EPA IA:llume IndeX and Estimated H1g1way Mileage and primed cornpelitiVe material. Your mleage may vary. See dealer !or·details.
.
'
wm
udloloay
earlng aidS ;J
strong quality control system, gets more complicated there's a
but it's not 100 percent monitor· greater chance for error," Budai
lng which is Impossible because said, pointing out · that IRAs ,
earned income credits, exemp·
we handle over 1 mlllion calls."
Each day, officials review the !Ions and child care credits are
reponses given by the service's now the most complex areas.
"We have real concern that
employees and provide special
training for any area of wea· people don't lose confidence in
· the system," she said. "But
kness , Budai said.
.
"Obviously, with the changes among the returns that have
we've had problems keeping up been sent to us , the error rate \s
no greater than is previous
to speed."
The IRS's own monitoring years;" she said. "The bottom
system has ·found that correct line is that people are getting
answers are given 75 percent of their returns together as well as
the time, "and as the area of law any other year."
~alues.
I
'I
percent).
Budai said the IRS hired about
100 additional people In Cincin·
nati this year, bringing the total
ciose to 300, to answer questions
from taxpayers from 41 southern
Ohio counties and ali of West
Virginia.
And despite the fact these
employees-go through five weeks
of classroom training and six
weeks of on-the-Job training,
mistakes do occur, she said.
"As for giving wrong answers,
certainly that does· happen,"
Budai said, "We have a pretty
processes returns from Ohio ,
Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky
and West Virginia , anticipates
handling a total of about 10
·mmton returns this season .
While the local IRS offices are In
Cincinnati, the Immense process·
tng center is just across the Ohio
River In Covington, Ky.
Broken down by ihe different
forms, about 1.49 mlllion of the
returns !tied so far were of the
1040 long form (down 6.5 per·
cent), 707,000 were the 1040A
/down 8.7 percent) and 849,000
were the 1040EZ (down 3.9
-~'
40°/o OFF
COLUMBIA GAS
'
gapts narrowing. Therateforthe
past couple of years Is for people
to file slower, so the trend had ·
already been there," Budai said.
"But all the changes this year (In
the tax laws) have been a
factor."
So · far, 748,000 of the returns
Jtave quall!ied for refunds total·
lng $630.5 mtllton. But tt Is likely
the average tefund figure will
drop some because people ex·
peeling large returns ~sually file
earlier than people expecting
smaller or no returns.
·
The Cincinnati center, which
~~Thursday
CLOSE-OUT
A gas furnace stands by itself as a source of welcome,
winter-long warmth. Because no matter how cold it gets ovtside, a gas furnace keeps your whole house feeling cozy .
· and comfortable ... without the addition of a heat pump.
You can also feel comfortable about your budget. Toclay's
high-efficiency gas furnaces and low gas costs mean you
can save money over a heat pump, too:
For more details, check with a heating dealer. Warmth,
savings and ...
There are lots of reasons gas heat, alone, is your best
energy value.
CLEVELAND (UPI) -union
now $17,678 with a bachelor's
and public school o!ftctais· re· . degree and $18,600 with a mas·
turned to the bargaining table · ter's degree. with top scale after,
Friday in the second day of a 35 years being $30,916 with a
reachers' sirtke with the sys·
bachelor's and $35,795 with a
tern's 72,639 students locked out
master's.
The school had offered pay
of their classrooms.
" We' ll stay our as long as
ranging from $22,050 to $48,900
necessary. but we hope there is
tor 1988·89 and escalating to
not a long strike. Strikes are not $24 ,311 to $51,100 for 1990·91,
pleasant." strike coordinator Ri· contingent on passage of a levy.
chard Farmer said just before
What angered union officials,
the latest round of negotiations however, was that future raises
would be based on teacher
began.
Cleveland teachers struck for evaluations and the school sys·
55 days In 1979, forcing students
tern would only guarantee a
to attend sc hool until late July to $1.500 raise over current salaries
complete the required number of for each teacher .
The district dropped the
class days.
.
Superintendent Alfre!) Tute la
career-ladder plan in its offer
said there was no way classes rejected by the union Thursday.
could continue for. all students In The proposal called for a 2
the absence of the rt'gular percent raise retroactive to Sep·
teachers, but plans were being !ember, another 1 percent raise
made to allow the 3,000 seniors retroactive to January and 5
expecting to graduate in June..to percent raises. tied to the pasreturn to school Monday.
sage of a levy, In the second and
The 5,000 teac hers , who had
third years of the contract.
been working without a contract
' 'All we· re doing is tryt·rg to
since Sept.. I. threatened to strike seek a competitive salary sche·
Thursday but classes were can· dule tn· our county," Farmer
celed that day beca use of snow said. "Most of the teachers In
a nd Friday was the first day of other districts are paid much
sc hool lost because of the labor more than ours. Even if we g<:r
the 2 percent ... it wouldn't rr 0v
dispute.
.
.
Farmer said startmg pay ts us into position."
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Income
tax ~turns are arriving at the
Internal Revenue Service processing center In Cincinnati at a
slower rate than last year, and
taxpayers lucky enough to re·
celve a refund are getting more
money.
Spokeswom;~n
Linda Budai
said ~riday_ the center had
received slightly more than 3
mtllton returns as of Feb. 19,
down 6.3 percent from the
· comparable 1987 period. The
average refund so far this year,
she said, Is $843, up from last
year's $764.
"Whatwe're seeing Is that (the
return rate) was aboutlO percent
(down) a little while ago, but the
'
THE
;
'
Taxpayers slower this year with .tax retun1s
'Tocacco
meet
.
~;:::::~::::::::::~::::~~~4~2~4~S.C~~ond~~A~v~•·~;~~~~~~~~~~W~~~~~~~.
Cleveland teachers'
strike talks resume
.
America In addition to the
Hills. Benton said he did not!OC:k
Thunderbird and Colliar. tt also
for any Increases or decreases n
manufactures Ford Econoltne
the employment as a result of the
vans and Club Wagons. · .
plant expansions for Thunder·
The Lorain Assembly Plant
bird and Colliar.
h . manufactured 295,971 cars and
"II .Is highly significant t at
236•622 trucks In 1987.
such a large Investment asso·
elated with thl;! new $1.1 billion r--::===::;;;;;;;;::::==~Thunderbird and Cougar Is being
spent In the Greater Cleveland
area," Benton .said. ,
.
"Ford' Is Cleveland s largest
private-sector employer (with
17,000 workers) and this Invest· ·
.mentis a tribute to the hard work
and dedlcatlop to quaUty shown
by our employees In Lorain and
Walton Htlls.''
•
The expansions ar,e expec.ted to
be completed late his year.
The Lorain facUlty Is Ford's
largest assembly plant In North
Sunday T.mes-Sentinei-Page-E-7·.
Pomeroy-Middlepon-Gellipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.
t
I
�rzrrt. w. v •.
01.. Pant "
. 28,19ia
Southem
· advances to
·. district
COINEI OF GENEIAL HAlTINGII PKWY. & PEAII! 51·
MIDDUPOIT- 992-3471
'
Ohio Lottery .
Daily Number
890
Pick 4
0363
Page 3
Super Lotto
44-13-30-8-33-27
,J.
.
' '
•
aty
Vol.38, No.204 •
Copy'Jhted 1988
· '
· Tonight, partly cloudy,
colder. Low 20 to 23.
en tine
2 Sections, 12 Pages 26. Cents
A Muttimecli• Inc. Newll)eper
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 29. 1988
Developers plan new Gallia shopping center
MARCH 1ST THROUGH MARCH 5TH
.
1
'
SUPERIOR
Ftanki&Stt o~. PICO.
End Cut Pork Chops •-
CRISPY SER~E
Bacon
MOUNTAINEER
Sausage
1 LB. PICO.
$799
•
10 Lb.
Bag
1LB. ROLL
49 ••-
BOX
SEA STAR
BAnER DIPPED
5 LB. BOX
YELLOW COOKING
Onions
YELLOW COOKING
Onions
2HB.
5 LB.
$
$149
.
.
Per Lb.
Carrots
-
•
+
5Lb. ·
00
$
Flour
$ 00
oz.
00
Kidney Beans .
$
00
Corn
oz.
00
Filled Milk
PILLSBURY
$ .49
TOlllfoec
LB.~
49
Navel Orang;i " ·
- · ~~lllllli:!llllll!"'.iill~~llll!"'.iilll. . .
CALIFORIIIA SEEDLESS 10
89
$3
RED FLAME SEEDLESS
White
i "
•• Orapea
20 lb ..... $1 99
PER LB•
•- Potato
·Sale! 10 lb..... $1 29
SIIOWFLOSS
.Tomatoes
GEISHA
12116
THOROFARE
SNOW FLOSS
-•
•-
12116
Oz. Cans
Pop
REITER
Chocolate
Drink
I GAL.,_
SUNNY DELIOHT
tz. .'f
Citrus Puncn
6164
ORADE A
5 DOZ.
Large E~gga
.
.
r
$
59
00
·
•
SNOW FLOSS
Pork 'n Beans
•
JUMBO 3 LITERS
·*1·0
· oo ·
$
oz.
$
t
I
1211 (B• .
$ ·oo
00
$
Potatoea · ~:o~.
1214
'
. ~~!~.. .$700
Beef St.awoz.~ ·
! .'IUIIIl 10' CIIERR1
Corn Muffin Mix
24/
?1/2 Oz.
tsoo
tt!to oz
00
$
Pie Filling · · .
JIFFY
MARTHA WHITE
~
CASTLEIERR'/S 121 .
9 oz
Cake Mlxa•·
PILU8URY
Blaeult•
1417.5 oz..
II.VT
,..,
"' Ll.
Adama signed u option for approximately 26
acrea of CIC lud for piau of a new GaWa County
Shopping Ceater to be located on S.B. 7, providing
the laad Ia rezoned from Industrial to commercial
uie. (OVP plloto by Margaret Caldwell)
•
•
Paw ·
CleveIand, C. mcmnati motonsts :~~.~~?~~~"It's =~unty,"
e
d
die
·
od
·
testmg
ea
me
t
ay
f ace
1
·
•
00
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Ohioans with last n;~lJleS begin·
nlng In · "C" and "D" face a
deadline today to re'lew vehicle
license tags, but that cannot be
done In the Cleveland and Cincinnati are11s without first having an
.emissions test.
February Is the first month
1980 and later model cars and
light trucks In Cuyahoga, Lake,
Lorain, Hamilton and Butler
counties are required to pass an
emissions system test before
license tags can be' reneWed.
Federal officials forced Ohio to
devise a testing program In an
attempt tQ improve air quality In
the state's two largest metropcili·
· tan areas.
In addition to the Initial confu·
slon of having the $5 test, state
officials were able to convince
Just 600 service sta lions to
perform the tests . . They had
hoped for 1,000 testing centers.
Many deputy regiStrars, a,t·
tempting to avoid a last·mlnutir
rush of people trying to meet
today's deadline, were open for
business Sunday and planned to
remain open today until 8 p.m.
By Friday In tbe three-county
Cleveland·area, for example,
35 000 vehicles were still not
registered, 20,000 behll!d the
. normal number. ·
Pa trlcla Madigan of the OI)JO
En vlronmen ta I 1Protec:.tlon
Agency, however, said there W..
nothing. wroq with lbe testla&
proaram.
''The leltlJIII ..... lODe nraJ
smoothly," Mac!laan 1ald ..
"We're pretty much oa tartet.
PeDIM Melli to beptt~qtbetat
..., We're aot beldad u far •
we
Ill the teaUq."
collllltl of a vtnal
of the emllllolll COD-
•
··
·
oz.
u1hrooma
THOROFARE
••
-
LOOKING OVER PLANS- DeiiDIJAdama, ('L)
developer from a NuhvUie hued shoppl... cenfer
development partaenblp, looks over a map of the
. 100-year flood plain area with CIC Pretideat Jeff
Smith ud CIC executive director Mike Harford.
..
THOROFARE WHITE
24/13
LOTSA
Saltines
Tomato Juice
THOROFARE WK OR CS
GENERIC
1211•
,.
.
so lb ....
tending the meeting in the Sun· simply the unwitting recipients of a
nyside Elementary School · arm· danger so grave that everyooe else
Individuals fighting a proposed nasium were also told there will be is too afraid tO touch it"
·
hazardous waste incinerator in AP:- a rally against out-of·state waste
· Manchin said the advent of
pie Grove held a summit con~ being brought into West Vuginia on hazardous waste incinerator comfetenee Sunday afternoon, planning Wednesday in Qwleston. Nancy panies· wanting to locate in West
sblllegies and comparing notes with Andenon of MACE said the rally Virginia has caused "a cloud". to
members of the Mason Association begins at I 0:30 a.m.
hover over the state. ·
for a Clean Environment who have
At Sunday's meeling, reacbers at
"And it is coming directly from
been fighting hazardous waste in- SUMyside school spoke up oppos- · the metropolitan monsters of the
cineralor JliO!XlWs since the fall of ing the incinerator. Nelson en- East and the South," he said.
last year.
.
couraged people to write to AP:- "Hundreds of thousands of tons of
The Apple Grove organization is palachian Power Co. Aptus has garbage each day must be disposed
called MACE II.
taken an option on a 2(X).acre site of and nobody wants it in their city.
~ of lhe ~.lear N~. w~ ,.it il! . -. SIP"
"Let people know you don't
...... ........ yaWl dNiifDUIIity," ·
)t
41Ul*.Dtd Chit
lS ~- \t-at altsowltlnme
MACE II spokeswoman Donna owned by the power company.
mighty voice they shouted, !Let's
Nelson Sliid of the plans by Aptus
"Lord knows, they (APCo) don't take it to West Virginia.' And a
to construct a $25 million to $.30 need the money," Nelson said.
convoy of trucks began rolling that
million plant just feet away· from
Grayson "Pat"
Williamson, very night bringing garbage from
the Sunny~ide Elementary School representing State Treasurer A. every direction to the Mountain
which would bum 50,000 tons of James Manchin, said Manchin is Stale,fl Manchin said.
The possibility of pollution that
materials a year.
· "110 percent against the incineracould get into the food chain and
"We just want to do everythjpg lion DI01lClSals for Mason County"
we can to defeat this," Nelson S81d.
Williimson dislributed copies of harm Mason .County's thirving
"The riSk of this just scan:s us to press release from Manchin, which farm industry has people worried.
dealh. We're fighting a multi-bil- vehemently opposed the incinentor One project being planned by the
Apple Grove group is to fill ballion ,cOrporalioo. We have everyth- idea.
ing to lose."
" ...I am voicing my strong and loons with helium, set them off in
"I. don't think that PyroChem unreserved protest against the the air, and place on the balloons a
(Inc.) or Aptus will tome in here if proposed toxic wasre incinerator tag which would say, "If this was
we all stick together," said
that Aptus wants to try ~ ~t !J1 from Aptus, it would be in your
front yard."
.
MllllChm said ID - The MACE environmental
Washington said a meeting is
"We will no~ sit by while out"'?f- group and others in West Vilginia
scheduled at Wasllington Elemen- state corporaUoos try to b~1ld have seen several bills introduced
in the state Senate which deal with
tary School in Gallipolis on Sunda
.. y m~tains of ~fit b~ hauling,
at 2 p.m. for those acorss the n~er ~ng and b~··~g theu .~ge · out-of-state ~bage and hazardous
fighting the hazardous waste m- m our mountams, he wd. 'We wasre. They 1nclude:
-Senate Bill 482 provides for
cinmltor. ''We'yc JOl to have must be assured· that the lives of
the
establishment of the West Vrrneighbors
wodring
with our children and our children's
ginia
Emergency Response_ Comneighbors," he said. •
children are not endangered. We
The mae than 100 people at- must be assured that we· are not
Continued on page 12
il
.
QT. BASKET
10/5 LB.
SNOW FLOSS
s La. •A•
lED RIPE ULAD
$649
U.S. NO. 1
-WE HA~E
SEED POTATOES
ONION SETS
Steak ·
Spare Ribs
"COUIITR1 ST1LE"
of CIC, said the optioned land
e ncompasses a sufflcent size of.
land for scrapping dirt for ftlltng.
Adams said he has considered
raising the land one foot above
the flood plain with an approxl·
maie 2 to 2 ~ percent grade.
Although ' the KMart Department
Store across from the optioned
land Is one foot above the flood
plain, the proposed shopping
center wlll not be as high because
It is further from the Ohio River.
Ezell and Adams own and are
developing shopping centers in
Ohio, Kentucky, Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, VIrginia and
Missouri. .
By Chlirles A. Mason
t LB. OR MORE
TENDER SWEET
and create local jobs as much as ,said Smith. Most lndustrlalliusl.
possible.
nesses want to.b eaway from high.
Adams said they have tenta· traffic areas. This Is one reason
tlvely planned for constr11ctlon to · why commercial interests were
be underway by this summer. considered for the CIC property.
Some perspective tentants have
The optioned land includes
expressed interests of beginning approximately 45 acres, with
rent·paylng as early as Dec. 1, Airport Road on the northside,
1988
S.R. 7 on the east, privately
The l7·page option is under the owned property facing the south·
provision that the approximately,, side, and theGallla-MelgsMetro26 acres owned by CIC w111 be 1 polllan Airport and hangers
rezoned from light industrial to cutting off the westside.
commercial. The rezoning w111
The next step for Ezell and
be proposed to the Gallipolis City Adams w111 be to fill in the
Co mm 1s s 1one r s Tue s il ay approximate 27 de'l(.eloplng acres
evening.
.
. to above the lOO·year flood plain.
The market Is driving away Mike Harford, executive director
from industry to commercial,
MACE ,II fights Aptos; state
rally scheduled Wednesday
99
6 LB.
·BOX
Pattie a
..
U.S. OO'IT. INSP. PORK LOIN
~
3 LB.
•- Sltl~»ln
Cuhe~
$ 99
$ 59
YELLOW COOKING
Onions
•'
jected to produce annual retail
sale of approximately .
$15,000,000. Construction related
employement Is expected to
Involve 200 employees with an
estimated payroll of $3,000,000.
"We are proud of Gallla
County. Our proposal will do
very, very well and create a lot of
jobs for the area," said Adams.
"We will use local jobs and
tentants as much as possible.
Local people will be used on the
·project wherever available."
Jeff · Smith, president of .the
ere. emphasised that the shop·
ping center will use local tentants
CI«»PPEDS
Boneless "Comho" Pack
. Steaks
Roastt
Ground
Chuck .
.
$
1o Lt. OR MORE
Ground .Beef
Sausage
Fish
6-7·La.
5
. · USDA CHOICE B.EEF CHUCK
6 LB.
Po.rk Loin
KAlil'S SLICED .
~
Slah.8ae dh'Ko..~ .
FRESH
BALLARDS
LINK OR
PATTIE
$
'lo .... IIISPECTEt
U.S. 80~T. INSP. PORK LOIN
shopping tentants, Adams said.
The 162,000 square foot shop·
The Gallla County Com~unlty ping ce!lter will include approxl·
Improvement Corporation ·final- mately 20 stores . Major tenants
Ized an option Monday for will Include a 65,000 square food
approximately 27 acres to be discount store and a 35,000
developed for a shqpplng center, square foot food store. Other
providing the land will be re· · tenant commitments will Include
zoned for commercial use.
an addltlonal37 ,000 square feet of
·w. Gerald Ezell and Dennis specialty store space.
Ezell and Adams, have est!·
Adams, a Nashville based shop·
ping center development part· mated the total project develop:
ment cost to be approximately
nershlp, announced plans ·for a
new GalUa County Shopping $10,000,000. The project Is creal·
Center to be located at the corner lng 250' permanerit Jails with an
of S.R. 7 and Airport Road. The annual payroll of $1,500,000.
·The shopping center Is pro·
center Will ln<;lude tWO major
By MARGARET CAWWELL
·
. trol equipment to see that about Bill Sisley of Spremulll's Tire In
eight different pieces are In place Rocky River.
and working. A certificate of
Most of the service stations
inspection must be presented at also reported finding few probthe deputy regiStrar's office. ·
lems with emissions equipment.
David Jacobsen of , the Ohio
"With the new cars, the emlil·
Oj!partment of Highway Safety sions are so tied Into the comp11·
said law enforeement agencies ters of the car that very few
wlll. not give special treatment people are tampering · with
next week to motorists driving them," Sisley said.
with ~plred tag!l': The.penalty is
Duke Jackson, co·owner of
$35.
Button Road SOhio In Concord,
Most testing centers required _ said the testing might not make
appointments for the inspection, much of a difference In pollution.
which takes 5 to 20 minutes, with
"My personal opinion is that
some stations not ltavlng .any the late '70 cars are the ones most
openings until late March. Oth- tampered with when unleaded
ers said they made ~lans for gas first came .out," Jackson
extra staffing on today.
said. Thelastmodelyearforcars
"Retirees and senior citizen using regular f11el was 1974 .
people who really can't ge,t
. Til«: service station operators
around are e~Ctremely nervous,
frightened that they won't be agree thl!t the $5 does not cover
able to drive (Tuesday)," said the costs of conducting the test.
"It's more of a burden then
Matthew Lopiccolo of Cedar·
Green SheU In South Euclid.
anything," Sisley said. "But we
But most service stations con. do it to help Increase the now of
tacted by United Press Interna, business and as a service to
our
0
tiona!, Including Cedar·Green regular customers."
Other station managers said
Shell, said they had not expertenced much panic.
that when some people have the
"l was expecting a lot more tests done, they alao request
than what we're getting," said other work such as oil changes.
· Mother,
so~
both born on Feb. 29
I
le betldiU&e. We'NIIelllldlldof ·
,.,...... &o ...... - . • !'~.
........... mtll11r
lllle
-::-~. otl lit .......... hp
..w.
Mz *1.
...tlllllltflll ......... 1111111
•*•~=.::
• ..-carr
e
&: '
l•hb.
..., tile Norll Galla Pllat•ltl& !q 111P11 Ill
... ...... BlaUellulgm. leal' .._,.....
�
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Title
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02. February
Text
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Dublin Core
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February 28, 1988
carmichael
dickey
dotson
hall
ord
pursley